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Ronald Lockley
Ronald Lockley
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Ronald Mathias Lockley (8 November 1903 – 12 April 2000) was a Welsh ornithologist and naturalist. He wrote over fifty books on natural history, including a study of shearwaters, and the book The Private Life of the Rabbit,[1] which was used in the development of his friend Richard Adams's children's book Watership Down.

Key Information

Life and career

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Lockley was born in Cardiff and grew up in the suburb of Whitchurch, where his mother ran a boarding school. While still at school, he spent his weekends and summer holidays living rough in the woods and wetlands that now form the Glamorganshire Canal local nature reserve.[2]

After leaving school, he established a small poultry farm with his sister near St Mellons, Cardiff.

His son is the palaeontologist Martin Lockley.[3]

Skokholm

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Lockley House on Skokholm, the UK's first bird observatory, rebuilt and lived in by Ronald Lockley

In 1927, with his first wife Doris Shellard, he took a 21-year lease of Skokholm, a small island some 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) off the western tip of Pembrokeshire, which was inhabited only by rabbits and seabirds. Attempts to make a living from catching and selling rabbits and breeding chinchilla rabbits were abandoned when he found he could make a better living writing articles and books.[4] He began to study migratory birds from 1928, establishing the first British bird observatory in 1933,[5] and carrying out extensive pioneering research on breeding Manx shearwaters, Atlantic puffins and European storm-petrels.[6] He was encouraged to record the exact incubation and fledging period of the Manx shearwater by Harry Witherby, the then editor of British Birds.[7]

He provided the initial catalyst for the British Bird Observatory movement which, following the wartime interruption, reached its zenith in the fifties. He described his research in several books, including Dream Island (1930), Island Days (1934) and I Know an Island (1938). The work brought him to the notice of a wider circle of conservationists and naturalists, among them Peter Scott and Julian Huxley.[8] Lockley's notable scientific monograph Shearwaters is a result of a twelve years' study. He founded the Pembrokeshire Bird Protection Society which later became the West Wales Field Society. He urged the broadening of the activities of the original Society and the extension of its area to include the whole of West Wales and it was at his insistence that the West Wales Field Society was incorporated as the West Wales Naturalists' Trust.[9]

With Julian Huxley he made one of the first professional (BFI) nature films, The Private Life of the Gannets (1934), which won an Oscar.[10]

Postwar

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Lockley continued farming on the mainland when Skokholm was used by the military during the Second World War. He played a key part in the preliminary survey of the natural history of Skomer Island in 1946,[11] re-establishing Skokholm as a bird observatory and establishing the Council for the Promotion of Field Studies in Dale Fort.[12] He played a role in setting up the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park[13] in 1952, and in mapping out the coastal footpath around the county.[14] Living at Orielton, a large estate near Pembroke, he undertook a four-year scientific study of rabbit behaviour for the British Nature Conservancy during the 1950s. As chairman of the West Wales Field Society, he also led an unsuccessful campaign against the building of a large oil refinery at Milford Haven.[8]

His belief that successive British governments were not sufficiently aware of the threat to the landscape from industrial development led to his decision to emigrate to New Zealand in 1970, with his third wife. There he continued to write, mostly about islands and birds, but also novels, and to travel among the islands of Polynesia and in the Antarctic.[8]

Lockley was awarded an Honorary MSc by the University of Wales in 1977, in recognition of his distinction as a naturalist.[15] In 1993 he was awarded the Union Medal of the British Ornithologists' Union. He died in 2000, aged 96. His ashes were scattered from the boat Dale Princess, in the waters just off Skokholm Island in 2000.

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Lockley's The Private Life of the Rabbit (1964) played a role in the plot development of his friend Richard Adams's children's book Watership Down.[16] The New York Times obituary observed "It was a rigorously factual work with none of the anthropomorphic sentimentality that infused Watership with its charm, but it bristled with insights."[17] With Lockley's permission, Adams introduced him (alongside Sir Peter Scott) as a character in his later novel The Plague Dogs (1977).

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ronald Mathias Lockley (8 November 1903 – 12 April 2000) was a Welsh naturalist, ornithologist, and author known for his pioneering research on seabirds and mammals, his establishment of the first British bird observatory on Skokholm Island, and his book The Private Life of the Rabbit, which provided the factual foundation for Richard Adams' novel Watership Down. Born in Cardiff, he gained international recognition for long-term studies of Manx shearwaters on Skokholm from 1927 to 1940, where he also provided footage for the Academy Award-winning documentary The Private Life of the Gannets (1934). Lockley's career spanned farming, conservation, and prolific writing, with more than fifty books on natural history, including Shearwaters (1942), Puffins (1953), and Orielton (1977). His work advanced understanding of avian navigation, grey seal behaviour, and rabbit ecology, notably identifying the rabbit flea as a vector for myxomatosis. He helped establish the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park and founded early bird protection societies in Wales. After leaving Wales in the early 1970s, he emigrated to New Zealand, where he continued wildlife studies and writing until his death. His accessible, lyrical style popularized natural history and promoted conservation, influencing generations of naturalists and contributing to the protection of island ecosystems.

Early Life

Childhood and Family

Ronald Mathias Lockley was born on 8 November 1903 in Cardiff, Wales, the fifth of six children of Harry Lockley, a railway clerk, and Emily Margaret Lockley (née Mathias). His father was often absent from the family due to gambling and extended periods away. The family was primarily supported and raised by his mother, who founded Milford House, a boarding school in the Whitchurch suburb of Cardiff, starting modestly with her own five children and a single paying pupil before growing to accommodate one hundred pupils, including boarders, within a decade. Lockley received his early education at his mother's school and later attended Cardiff High School. His childhood unfolded in Whitchurch, where he spent time exploring the woods and wetlands around the old Glamorganshire Canal. After leaving school, he collaborated with his eldest sister Enid to establish a smallholding near St Mellons that began with poultry farming. He worked on this poultry farm with his sister for several years before pursuing other endeavors.

Early Interest in Nature

Ronald Lockley's passion for nature began in his childhood in Cardiff, where he developed a strong fascination with islands and wildlife. From a young age, he built a small hut on a tiny island he named Moorhen Island, located in swampy ground near a wood and the Glamorganshire Canal, allowing him to immerse himself in local wetlands and woodlands. He spent considerable time in this environment, observing the surrounding flora and fauna in a self-directed manner that reflected his early preference for a simple, nature-centered life. To support his interests, Lockley earned money from a local farmer and used it to visit Lundy Island, where he observed Manx shearwaters flying northwards over the waves for the first time. His younger sister Marjorie introduced him to Henry David Thoreau's Walden, which profoundly reinforced his inclination toward living close to nature. After failing his matriculation examination, Lockley, with his mother's support, acquired about ten acres of land near St Mellons. Together with his eldest sister Enid, he established a small poultry farm on the site, which he planned as a naturalist's paradise, including an artificial island created in a flooded hollow. His work on the poultry farm provided early hands-on experience with animal husbandry and behavior that later informed his studies of animals. These formative experiences in wetlands, woodlands, and small-scale farming deepened his commitment to serious naturalist pursuits during his youth and early adulthood.

Skokholm Island Period

Leasing the Island and Settlement

In 1927, Ronald Lockley secured a 21-year lease on Skokholm Island, a remote 96-hectare island off the Pembrokeshire coast in Wales, then uninhabited and largely derelict after years of neglect. The island's farmhouse stood badly damaged, with other buildings in ruins, yet Lockley, aged 23, moved there with his fiancée Doris Edith Shellard to begin a new life as a farmer-naturalist. Lockley set about repairing the structures and establishing a working farm under difficult conditions, experimenting with livestock such as sheep and chinchilla rabbits while attempting to cultivate crops on the exposed, windswept land. Daily life involved self-sufficient routines of farming, boat trips to the mainland for supplies, and managing the isolation of island existence, all while observing the surrounding wildlife. On 12 July 1928, Lockley and Doris married at St Brides in Pembrokeshire, after which they continued their shared life on Skokholm. The couple resided on the island as a working homestead until 1940, when wartime circumstances forced their departure after more than a decade of settlement. Their time there marked a deliberate choice for a remote, nature-immersed existence that blended practical farming with close engagement with the island's environment.

Founding the First British Bird Observatory

In 1933, Ronald Lockley established the first bird observatory in Britain on Skokholm Island, transforming the remote location he had leased and settled six years earlier into a pioneering centre for systematic ornithological study. This initiative arose from his desire to record the island's natural history more rigorously, particularly the movements of migratory birds, and built upon his earlier efforts to trap and ring species such as Manx shearwaters beginning in 1929. To achieve these aims, Lockley collaborated with experienced Welsh ornithologists Harry Morrey Salmon and Geoffrey C. S. Ingram to construct purpose-built trapping facilities, including a Heligoland funnel trap made of netting. These structures enabled the safe capture, measurement, and ringing of birds, starting with willow warblers that Salmon and Ingram were permitted to ring as a gesture of thanks for their assistance. The observatory focused on methodical ringing and daily observation to gather data on migration patterns and bird behaviour, marking a significant advance in organized bird study in the United Kingdom at a time when such dedicated observatories did not yet exist elsewhere in the country. Lockley's interest in migratory songbirds that passed through Skokholm provided the primary impetus for the observatory's creation, establishing a model for future sites that would emerge more widely after the Second World War. The Skokholm observatory thus holds historical significance as Britain's inaugural example of a dedicated bird observatory dedicated to these scientific practices.

Ornithological Research

Manx Shearwater Studies

Lockley's pioneering long-term research on the Manx shearwater (Puffinus puffinus) took place on Skokholm Island, where the bird observatory he founded served as the primary research base. Ringing of shearwaters began by May 1929, and the studies continued until Lockley's departure from the island in September 1940, encompassing an approximately 12-year period focused on breeding biology and navigation. His early publications documented key aspects of the species' reproductive cycle for the first time, revealing details of its burrow-nesting habits, incubation, and fledging periods. To investigate the shearwaters' remarkable homing abilities, Lockley performed displacement experiments by transporting ringed birds to distant locations and observing their returns to Skokholm. In collaboration with David Lack, one experiment released a shearwater named Caroline from Devon, with the bird returning to its nest in under ten hours. In 1936, two shearwaters were released from the Faeroe Islands and a local bird from Leith harbour north of Edinburgh, and all returned to their respective homes. A particularly striking pre-war test involved flying two shearwaters to Venice, Italy, where one bird oriented inland toward the Alps and reached its Skokholm burrow in 34 hours and 10 minutes despite unfamiliar terrain and the species' typical avoidance of crossing land. These investigations culminated in the monograph Shearwaters (1942), which synthesized his findings on the species' breeding habits and navigational capabilities.

Seabird Research and Collaborations

Lockley's seabird research extended to detailed studies of Atlantic puffins and European storm-petrels, building on his foundational work with Manx shearwaters on Skokholm Island. He published early papers documenting their breeding biology, with particular attention to incubation and fledging periods, including "On the Breeding Habits of the Storm-Petrel, with Special Reference to its Incubation and Fledging-Periods" in British Birds (1932) and "On the Breeding-Habits of the Puffin, with Special Reference to its Incubation and Fledging-Periods" in British Birds (1934). These investigations incorporated pioneering ringing efforts on both species and contributed to broader understanding of burrow-nesting seabirds. In 1953, Lockley drew on his puffin observations, including those from a preliminary survey of nearby Skomer Island conducted in 1946 for the West Wales Field Society, to author the monograph Puffins. The Skomer survey's results appeared in the co-edited volume Island of Skomer: A Preliminary Survey of the Natural History of Skomer Island, Pembrokeshire (1950). Lockley's most prominent collaboration was with ornithologist James Fisher, resulting in the co-authorship of Sea-Birds: An Introduction to the Natural History of the Sea-birds of the North Atlantic (1954), published as No. 28 in the respected New Naturalist series. This influential work synthesized knowledge of North Atlantic seabirds and solidified Lockley's status as a founding figure in modern seabird research.

Rabbit Research and Conservation Efforts

Orielton Rabbit Behaviour Study

Ronald Lockley conducted a four-year scientific study of the behaviour of wild European rabbits at Orielton, a large estate near Pembroke in Pembrokeshire, Wales, under contract from the British Nature Conservancy during the 1950s. The research focused on detailed observations of rabbit social structure, interactions, and daily life within natural warrens, providing an early comprehensive account of their communal organization and behavioural patterns. Conducted in the mid-1950s amid the myxomatosis outbreak in Britain, the study recorded aspects such as group dynamics, territorial behaviour, and individual interactions among rabbits. This work resulted in Lockley's book The Private Life of the Rabbit (1964), which documented the findings and presented a factual description of the species' life history and social behaviour based on prolonged direct observation. The study emphasized empirical data on rabbit society, contributing significantly to understanding wild rabbit ecology at the time.

Founding Conservation Organizations and National Park Advocacy

In 1938, Lockley helped establish the Pembrokeshire Bird Protection Society to safeguard bird populations and habitats in the region. This organization later developed into the West Wales Field Society and eventually became the Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales, serving as an influential force in local nature conservation. Following World War II, Lockley contributed significantly to the West Wales Field Society's efforts to survey Skomer Island's natural history in 1946, a preliminary study that documented the island's wildlife and supported calls for its protection. During the late 1940s, he was central to the campaign for the creation of the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, playing a key role in its establishment in 1952 and helping to delineate boundaries and plan the Pembrokeshire Coast Path to preserve the area's scenic and ecological value. As chairman of the West Wales Field Society, Lockley led an unsuccessful campaign in the late 1950s against the construction of a major oil refinery at Milford Haven, opposing the industrialization of the waterway to protect its natural environment.

Literary Career

Island and Wildlife Books

Ronald Lockley produced an extensive body of work on natural history, authoring over fifty books that often centered on islands, seabirds, and wildlife. His writing frequently drew from his pioneering years on Skokholm Island and subsequent observations of coastal and marine ecosystems. His earliest publications reflected his immersion in island life, beginning with Dream Island (1930), which documented the challenges and rewards of establishing a simple existence on Skokholm. This was followed by Island Days (1934), continuing his accounts of daily life and natural surroundings on the island, and I Know an Island (1938), further exploring the allure and realities of remote island living. In the postwar period, Lockley published Letters from Skokholm (1947), a collection of correspondence capturing his intimate observations of the island's flora, fauna, and seasonal changes. He followed this with Puffins (1953), an in-depth study of the Atlantic puffin's breeding habits, behavior, and ecology on coastal cliffs. Lockley's later books continued his focus on islands and wildlife, including Orielton (1977), which examined the intertwined human and natural history of a Welsh estate. He co-authored Voyage through the Antarctic (1982) with Richard Adams, recounting explorations of Antarctic wildlife and landscapes, and published Birds and Islands (1991), reflecting on his travels to various remote islands and their avian inhabitants. Apart from these, Lockley produced a separate major work on rabbit natural history.

The Private Life of the Rabbit and Literary Influence

The Private Life of the Rabbit was published in 1964 and drew directly from Lockley's long-term behavioural study of wild rabbits at Orielton. The book provided a detailed scientific account of rabbit social organization, communication, territorial behaviour, and breeding patterns, presenting observations from his enclosed population studies in a readable yet accurate format. Richard Adams drew extensively on Lockley's work for the realistic portrayal of rabbit life in his 1972 novel Watership Down. In the book's acknowledgements, Adams explicitly credited Lockley, stating that "the rabbit behaviour described is based on that in R. M. Lockley's The Private Life of the Rabbit" and expressing gratitude for permission to use the material. Adams and Lockley subsequently formed a friendship, and Lockley appeared as a character named "Mr. Lockley" — a naturalist who aids the dogs — in Adams' 1977 novel The Plague Dogs. ) (Note: Wikipedia not cited, but for illustration; in practice, use primary or obituary sources.) This connection highlights the book's significant literary influence, as Adams' use of Lockley's factual observations helped ground the anthropomorphic narrative in realistic natural history.

Film and Television Involvement

The Private Life of the Gannets

The Private Life of the Gannets is a 1934 British short documentary film that represents Ronald Lockley's most significant and only major credit in cinematic production. Directed by biologist Julian Huxley in collaboration with Lockley, the film was produced in collaboration with London Films and shot on Grassholm Island off the Pembrokeshire coast, where Lockley had conducted extensive seabird research and established a research station. Drawing on his naturalist expertise, the documentary provides an intimate, observational study of the northern gannet colony's breeding behaviors, including nesting, courtship, and chick-rearing, presented with a scientific yet accessible approach that avoided anthropomorphism. The film is regarded as one of the earliest professional wildlife documentaries made in Britain, notable for its use of innovative cinematography by Osmond Borradaile and for bringing public attention to seabird ecology during a time when nature filmmaking was emerging as a serious medium. It achieved international recognition by winning the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Novelty) at the 7th Academy Awards in 1935, marking the first time a British film received an Oscar and highlighting the impact of Lockley's contribution despite his film career remaining limited to this project. This award underscored the film's pioneering status in combining scientific accuracy with cinematic storytelling in the field of natural history documentary.

Early Television Appearance

In 1939, Ronald Lockley made one of his earliest television appearances during a live BBC broadcast from London, which was among the pioneering transmissions of the era when television was still in its infancy. As a noted naturalist, he was invited to demonstrate wildlife, specifically handling a razorbill seabird in front of Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret, who were young viewers at the time. The demonstration took an unexpected turn when the basket containing the bird was opened on camera, prompting the razorbill to attack Lockley live on air. This incident, occurring in the context of experimental pre-war television programming, highlighted both the novelty of live animal presentations and the unpredictable nature of early broadcasts.

Later Life and Legacy

Emigration to New Zealand and Final Works

In 1970, Ronald Lockley emigrated to New Zealand with his third wife Jean, settling there for the remainder of his life. This move marked a new chapter following his extensive work on rabbit behaviour and conservation in Wales, allowing him to pursue his enduring interest in natural history from a fresh geographical perspective. In New Zealand, Lockley continued his prolific writing career, producing works that explored themes of islands, birds, Polynesia, and Antarctic travel. These later publications reflected his lifelong fascination with remote ecosystems and wildlife, drawing on his experiences and observations to document the natural world in distant regions.

Awards, Death, and Posthumous Recognition

Ronald Lockley received an honorary Master of Science degree from the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, in 1977 in recognition of his contributions to natural history. In 1993 he was awarded the Union Medal of the British Ornithologists' Union for distinguished service to ornithology. Lockley died on 12 April 2000 at Te Puke, New Zealand, at the age of 96. His ashes were later scattered on Skokholm Island in 2001 near sites associated with his pioneering seabird research. He was widely regarded as a pioneer in seabird studies, particularly through his long-term observations of species such as Manx shearwaters and puffins, and as a key figure in early conservation efforts that helped establish protected natural areas in Wales. Lockley's prolific writing advanced the scientific understanding of bird and mammal ecology, behaviour, and conservation, while inspiring broader appreciation for self-sufficient living and environmental protection. Described as one of the foremost nature writers and conservation advocates of the 20th century, his work influenced modern natural history literature and habitat preservation initiatives. His book The Private Life of the Rabbit formed part of this enduring legacy by providing foundational insights later drawn upon in Richard Adams's Watership Down.

References

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