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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Colin Malcolm Donald 1910-1985
By R. Knight and J.P. Quirk
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records
of Australian Science, vol.10, no.1, 1994.
Introduction
Colin Malcolm Donald
was born in Colchester in England on 21 March 1910, the son of
a retired army Colonel. He had one sister and four brothers of
whom two had careers in the army, one was a Professor of Medicine
at Edinburgh University and one a forester. He spent his childhood
with his parents on a small farming property and received his
early education at Dover County School.
In 1926 he came to Australia as a boy migrant, under the Wembley
Scheme, to Hawkesbury Agricultural College in New South Wales.
The scholarship was for one year but he did so well that he continued
for a second year and received a Diploma of Agriculture with first
class honours. He won a scholarship to the University of Sydney
and four years later graduated Bachelor of Agricultural Science,
again with first class honours. While at Sydney University he
met his future wife Margaret Voysey through a cousin who was also
studying Agricultural Science. They were married in 1935.
Early research
As a young graduate in 1932, Colin Donald was appointed as an
agrostologist to the New South Wales Department of Agriculture.
However, a vacancy occurred in the CSIR Pasture Research Group,
then located in the Department of Agronomy at the Waite Agricultural
Research Institute, and in 1934 he moved to Adelaide. There, he
worked initially on strain variation in subterranean clover (Trifolium
subterraneum L), prairie grass (Bromus uniloides HB &
K) and strawberry clover (Trifolium fragiferum L), and
the soil and environmental factors that affected the distribution
of different strains. These species are not indigenous to Australia
and this caused him to wonder about their variation in their overseas
centres of diversity in the Mediterranean region. Some of this
research was carried out in collaboration with C. Neal Smith.
In separate expeditions, and over a decade later, both were to
play a major part in collecting and introducing pasture species
from Mediterranean countries to Australia.
In the late 1930s Colin Donald was also interested in the mineral
nutrition of pastures and worked with Professor H.C. Trumble
(the Waite Professor of Agriculture)on phosphorus and David Riceman
(CSIR) on trace elements. With Riceman he made the first discovery
in Australia of a trace element deficiency of pastures. This was
the copper deficiency that occurred in a region of calcareous
soils near Robe in South Australia. The deficiency causes 'coast
disease' in sheep. Although it was first recognized because of
the symptoms in sheep, farmers of the region were unable to grow
leguminous pastures or cereal crops and this alerted Donald and
Riceman to the fact that the copper deficiency was affecting the
growth of many species of plants as well. They found that supplying
copper alone did not overcome all the problems and, in collaboration
with C. Piper, established that there was an associated zinc deficiency.
When these two elements were provided, there was a spectacular
response in plant growth and the sheep disease was overcome. These
discoveries led them to undertake many multi-factorial field experiments
with trace elements.
In 1939 Colin Donald submitted four of his papers to the University
of Adelaide to meet the requirements for the degree of Master
of Agricultural Science. Two were concerned with strain variation,
one with the response of pastures to phosphorus and the fourth
was the discovery of the copper deficiency causing the disease
of sheep.
Donald's interest in pasture nutrition, which began in the 1930s,
was long-standing, and focused especially on the combined effect
of phosphate and subterranean clover in increasing the productivity
of pastures. It was a subject to which he returned on several
occasions in his own research and later with post-graduate students.
He drew attention to the effect of this combination on soil fertility,
the magnitude of the contribution from the clover's nitrogen fixation
to million of hectares of southern Australia, and the increase
in yields of the cereal crops that followed. The historical trends,
which he highlighted with the diagram reproduced as Figure
1, have been the subject of several reviews.
Figure 1: click on this image to see a larger version.
In important studies undertaken with C.H. Williams in the early
1950s on podsolized soils in eastern Australia, he also showed
that the clover's requirement for sulphur was being only partially
met by the sulphur present in superphosphate fertilisers and additionally
that the soils under clover pastures fertilized regularly with
superphosphate showed a progressive decline in pH with time. They
suggested that an alternative source of sulphur should be considered.
Both these matters subsequently have gained national significance.
In Western Australia notably, but also elsewhere, farmers have
been applying very high rates of superphosphate fertiliser to
obtain good clover pastures. The high rates have led to run-off
of phosphorus from the pastures to waterways and the occurrence
of blue-green algal blooms with resultant environmental damage.
Research in Western Australia has shown that good clover growth
could be obtained with a lower level of phosphorus application
if it were combined with timely applications of sulphur. The problem
is most prevalent in Western Australia because of the sandy nature
of the soils which readily permits leaching of sulphide. Elsewhere
in Australia, and particularly in large areas of New South Wales
and Victoria, the soil acidification resulting from long established
clover pastures has led to problems of reduced cereal production
which could only be ameliorated by expensive applications of lime.
In 1958, Donald co-authored a review paper in Advances in Agronomy
with C.G. Stephens (CSIRO Division of Soils) on Australian soils
and their response to fertilisers. Donald and Stephens had known
each other from the early 1930s when both were working for CSIR
accommodated in the Waite Institute. They remained close family
friends. By 1958 both had had extensive experience of their respective
fields; Stephens the pedology of Australian soils and Donald fertilisers
and plant growth. Their review drew the attention of a large number
of overseas workers to the origin of the soils of Australia, many
of which were of great antiquity and had severe nutritional deficiencies
for plant growth. These latter soils occurred over extensive areas
and 'were considered almost sterile and worthless'. However, by
applying superphosphate and trace elements and fostering subterranean
clover, 'They are now being converted to soils of satisfactory
productivity by what is possibly the most extensive fertility-building
program in the world'.
Being aware of this, Donald was concerned not only with the nutritional
effect of phosphorus but with Australia's phosphatic resources
and requirements and the government bounties that affected the
cost and use by farmers of phosphatic fertilisers. Many papers
were published in Australian and overseas journals over a thirty-year
period the last was in 1969, on the Northern Territory on
the contribution to the national economy of a pasture fertilized
with phosphorus.
During 1939 Colin Donald was awarded a Pawlett travelling scholarship
from the University of Sydney to study pastures in Britain, the
USA and New Zealand. It was a study tour severely affected by
the outbreak of war. However it did provide him with personal
insight into pastures in these countries and he was able to compare
them with those he knew so well in Australia. He lectured on the
subject on his return and wrote a small book based on his lectures,
published in 1941 by Sydney University Press, entitled Pastures
and Pasture Research. For many years it was essential reading
for anyone wishing to understand and compare the pastures of southern
Australia with those of temperate Europe and the USA, where most
of the previous work had been done. Writing the book was for Donald
an introduction to a form of writing different from the concise
phrasing of the scientific papers he had written previously. It
shows he had a flair for this type of communication at an early
stage of his career. It has several most apt quotations. One deals
with a proposed Eleventh Commandment, an oversight of Moses. It
was first suggested by a person who had witnessed soil degradation
in the Middle East and in America. The Commandment deals with
soil and water and the protection of forests, and could be as
much a stricture today for proponents of sustainable agriculture
as it was fifty years ago. While in America, Donald met J.E. Weaver
of Nebraska who had studied the habit and size of individual plants
growing in communities and therefore in competition with each
other for resources. It was a meeting that was greatly to influence
Donald's interest in plant competition and the growth of plants
in communities.
Division of Plant Industry
On his return to Australia in 1941 Donald moved from Adelaide
to the CSIR Division of Plant Industry in Canberra. During the
war years, from 1942 to 1945, he was seconded to the Department
of War Organization of Industry, at first with J.G. (later Sir
John) Crawford in Sydney and then as Assistant Director of the
Department in charge of the Rural Industries Division in Melbourne.
His contact with Crawford was to be influential at a later time
when the role of Australian scientists in agricultural development
in the countries of South-East Asia was being considered. At the
end of the war, in 1945, Donald returned to the Division of Plant
Industry and became Assistant Chief of Division, responsible for
pasture work right across southern Australia.
During this period, Donald carried out research on competition
among annual pasture plants that has become classical. In the
Mediterranean type of environment of southern Australia, seeds
germinate in the autumn, plants grow during the winter and set
seed before dying in the summer. The repetitive cycle depends
on the reproductive capacity of the species involved. He was aware
that many annual pasture species such as annual ryegrass, barley
grass, subterranean clover and the annual medics were capable
of high seed production in this environment. He was interested
in the dynamics of competition that occurred when all the seeds
germinated in the autumn and progressively formed a competing
sward of plants. There could be as many as 60,000 plants per sq
m. The interpretation of this competition that Donald was able
to provide with his clear analytical mind was based on careful
quantitative analyses. One seminal paper was published in 1951.
It was followed by another in 1954 in which Donald drew attention
to the inverse relationship between yield per unit area and yield
per plant. These papers were classics and inspired much subsequent
work, particularly in Japan and the United Kingdom. He highlighted
the fact that to achieve rapid growth of a pasture in the autumn,
plants needed to be at a very high density so high a density,
in fact, that each plant suffered intense competition. As a result,
individual plants in productive swards were far smaller than a
plant growing at a low density in a less productive sward. These
papers also illustrated that, later in the year, seed yields rose
with density to an optimum, beyond which seed yields would fall
with further increases in density. In contrast, biomass rose with
increasing density to a point where further increases were slight
or the relationship reached a plateau. Donald suggested that light
was the principal factor limiting growth when nutrients and water
were present in sufficient amounts. This was not the first time
he had drawn attention to the importance of competition for light,
as he had discussed its significance in his book published in
1941. Then, however, he had referred mainly to interspecific competition
such as occurred between a clover and a grass species in a mixed
sward, whereas now he more fully considered intraspecific competition.
This led in the late 1950s and early 1960s to his consideration
along with colleagues and students, mainly J.N. Black and W.R.
Stern, of the optimal leaf area of growing pastures and the concept
that with increasing leaf area and progressive canopy closure,
the lower leaves were shaded and a balance developed between the
upper exposed leaves and the lower shaded leaves of the canopy.
Although these initial studies were with pastures, Donald was
later to apply similar analyses to competition among plants in
grain crops.
During the late 1940s and the 1950s, Colin Donald's thinking about
the appropriate species to grow in pastures was influenced by
the research he had seen at the Welsh Plant Breeding Station,
Aberystwyth, Wales. The results of this work had dominated the
literature on pastures before the Second World War. It emphasized
the part played by perennials in providing stability of production,
preventing erosion and the infestation of weeds. Although carried
out in Britain, it was claimed by its protagonists to have general
applicability to pastures. From his own work, however, Donald
was aware of the role in Australian pastures of plants of Mediterranean
origin, many of which were annuals such as subterranean clover,
strawberry clover, annual medics and annual rye-grass. The introduction
of these species to Australia until that time had been largely
accidental. In 1951, Donald led the first Australian plant-collecting
expedition to the Mediterranean countries and with J.F. Miles
collected extensively in North Africa. The expedition was co-sponsored
by FAO. It was the forerunner of many other collecting expeditions
that have followed. His collection, together with other material
collected by C. Neal Smith in 1954, was the foundation of several
large research programmes in CSIRO, the universities and state
Departments of Agriculture carried out during the late '50s and
the '60s. They resulted in many new cultivars. In retrospect these
programmes were far more successful with annual than perennial
species. Although many perennial pasture species were found in
the Mediterranean countries, they survived as scattered plants
often in protected areas. When the species were sown at densities
appropriate to a pasture in Australia and constantly grazed as
is the practice of Australian farmers, the plants thinned out
during the first summer and were not capable of the high yields
obtained from annual pastures that persisted through the summer
as dormant seed at a high density. In general, only where the
environment favoured plant growth for nine or more months of the
year could perennials survive at a sufficiently high density to
be as productive as annuals. This took some time to demonstrate,
but was fairly well defined by the late 1960s by persons working
with Colin Donald.
The Waite Institute years
In 1954, in succession to H.C. Trumble, Colin Donald was appointed
the Waite Professor of Agriculture and Head of the Department
of Agronomy at the Waite Agricultural Research Institute in the
University of Adelaide. It was a position he held until his retirement
in 1973, during a period of very rapid expansion of academic staff
and post-graduate student numbers. For some time during the '60s
his department was the largest single-chair department in the
University of Adelaide, with seventeen persons with academic status.
He rebuilt the plant breeding group and fostered sections concerned
with crop nutrition, animal nutrition and pasture utilisation,
as well as supporting the strong core theme of agronomy and crop
physiology. As a result of his farming background, his tertiary
education at Hawkesbury College and the University of Sydney,
his research in a state Department of Agriculture, CSIRO and the
University and his perceptive intellect, he was able to make significant
intellectual contributions to all sections of the Department.
Understandably, his personal research and major interactions were
with those staff concerned with plant competition and crop nutrition.
Within a few years of his arrival at the Waite Institute and the
necessary expansion of his interests to crops as well as pastures
he began applying his knowledge to competition among crop plants,
notably in wheat or barley crops. In 1961 he wrote a review on
competition for light in crops and pastures, and in 1963 another
in which he considered all aspects of competition. It was the
latter review of 118 pages in Advances in Agronomy that
brought world-wide recognition of his clear exposition of the
factors that influenced yields of plants when grown at the high
densities of our commercial crops and pastures. This review arose
out of a series of lectures he gave at Cornell University during
a sabbatical leave. It emphasized, as had his earlier work on
pasture plants, that the individual plants in a crop were severely
limited in size and were often less than one-tenth the size of
plants grown more widely spaced. But to obtain maximal yields
per unit area, dense crops were needed. During the sabbatical
in the United States, he saw the development of single-stalk maize
crops producing single cobs under a high-nitrogen fertiliser regime
and he was able to contribute to discussions of plant competition
and growth.
In 1962 Donald was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science in
Agriculture by the University of Sydney for his collected papers
on 'Studies of the growth and ecology of pastures'. The collection
had three main parts: pasture species in southern Australia, plant-soil
interrelationships, and competition in pasture plants.
Colin Donald was aware that the person who had first encouraged
farmers to grow subterranean clover in Australia was a farmer,
Amos William Howard, who had lived at Littlehampton in the hills
above Adelaide and had died in 1930. Donald had been curious about
Howard and what had first caused him to recognize the merits of
subterranean clover and to popularize its cultivation. Howard
had found subterranean clover growing naturally on his property.
It had probably arrived there as a contaminant in imported hay,
as the plant is not indigenous to Australia but occurs extensively
in the Mediterranean region. Howard had seen how its presence
improved the productivity of his pastures. He wrote about its
merits in the press and did everything he could to foster its
adoption by other farmers. Howard's task had not been simple for,
as the plant's name suggests, the seeds borne by the plant are
subterranean and this presents difficulties to anyone wishing
to harvest them. In 1963 Colin Donald suggested to the Australian
Institute of Agricultural Science that Howard's name should be
commemorated by a trust bearing his name. The Trust would disburse
funds for research that would relate to the development, management
and use of pastures. A public appeal for funds was launched and
the Howard Memorial Trust came into being. It continues to be
highly successful and more than a hundred research workers in
Australia have had the benefit of its Fellowships since its inception.
Donald's ideas on competition led him to develop in 1968 the concept
of the ideotype. This was a term he coined to be analogous to
phenotype and genotype and which described an 'ideal' type. The
concept was first introduced at the third International Wheat
Genetics Symposium held in Canberra in 1968 and was received coolly
by cereal breeders at the time. He believed it was possible to
define a set of characters the ideotype which a crop or pasture
plant should have if it were to perform well in the dense communities
used by farmers when cultivating crops (see Figure 2).
Figure 2. The Design of a Wheat Ideotype. Click on this image to see a larger version.
He had noticed that cereal plants, early in the growing season,
develop many tillers (branches), not all of which become culms
and bear a head of grain at the end of the season. One of the
characters of his cereal ideotype was that the plant should not
tiller. He regarded the non-bearing tillers as a waste of resources
and suggested that if uniculm plants could be produced by breeding,
collectively they should be capable of a higher yield per unit
area when grown at an appropriate density. The uniculm character,
in conjunction with other characters, was the ideotype he proposed
for wheat and barley. He suggested that the methods used by conventional
plant breeders, when selecting for yield, would not select uniculms
and were therefore inefficient in selecting plants that would
give high yields in dense communities. For some years after his
retirement, Donald worked on a programme to breed a cultivar of
barley that conformed to his ideotype. He published one paper
on this in 1979 but unfortunately ill-health terminated the work
before there was any definitive outcome and comparisons with conventionally-bred
cultivars of barley. His concept has remained contentious among
breeders, many of whom believe the small loss of resources is
not significant in relation to other issues such as the need for
a higher seeding rate when sowing a uniculm. They also believe
that an ability to tiller provides a plant with a degree of resilience
or opportunism, given that growing seasons differ in their duration.
They accept that if the growing season is abruptly terminated
by dry weather, many tillers will die before they develop grain,
but argue that if the season is prolonged, late tillers will develop
grain. In 1991, a special issue of Field Crops Research (volume
26, part 2) was devoted to a review of the ideotype concept and
touched on some of the aspects mentioned and evaluated its applicability
to a wide range of crop and pasture plants. The term 'ideotype'
that Colin Donald coined for desirable plant characters has earned
him a lasting place in the international literature in crop science.
One of the other characters that occurs in Donald's ideotype for
cereals is that they should have a high harvest index, by which
he meant that the grain should represent a high proportion of
the above-ground biomass at the time of harvest. In simple terms,
there should be a lot of grain relative to the straw, which is
not usually an economic product. The use of such an index was
not new; it had been proposed by Bevan in 1914 and Niciporovic
in 1956. Whereas Bevan thought the material in the grain was the
result of transmission from the rest of the plant, more recent
research had shown that a large proportion of it is the result
of photosynthesis in the head itself. The consideration of photosynthesis
in communities and competition among plants for light, and the
idea that the lower parts of a plant could be a drain on the photosynthesis
resources of other parts of the plant, were all part of Colin
Donald's ideas on plants growing in communities. It was natural
that a notion such as harvest index, despite its simple evaluation
of a complex set of circumstances, should attract his attention.
He believed that plant breeders should select those plants in
their segregating populations that had a high harvest index. Again,
as with the uniculm, the matter was contentious. Breeders did
not deny that modern cultivars of wheat, barley and oats had a
higher harvest index than cultivars produced 50-60 years before,
but they were not prepared to accept the proposed physiological
interpretation of this change. They had, after all, been breeding
plants of shorter stature during that period to overcome lodging,
which is the laying over of the crop that occurs near harvest
if it is exposed to excessive wind and rain. Shorter crops were
likely to have a higher ratio of grain to straw.
Colin Donald was very much a father figure in the department he
led, with nearly all his staff being much younger in age, members
of the expansion of the University in the 1950s. He was highly
respected for his clear analytical mind, breadth of experience
and ready wit. This wit always lay beneath the surface and could
emerge even in the most serious moments of a university committee
meeting. When an academic argued the value of assaying for weed
seeds the filtrate coming from the Murray River's input to Adelaide's
metropolitan water supply, notorious for its poor potability,
Donald remarked that he thought the only objects filtered out
by the Engineering and Water Supply Authority were the dead sheep.
During his busy period as the Waite Professor of Agriculture,
Colin Donald only found time to write during the weekends. It
was then he wrote several review papers that are notable for their
insights and clarity and remain classics today. He encouraged
his staff to publish, and would say to many that if they wrote
just one sentence a day they would improve their rate of publication.
No matter how busy he was, if asked to do so he would edit papers
in a critically constructive way. Some were at first affronted
by his suggested changes to their creations but they quickly realised
that he had an exceptional flair for concise exposition of scientific
subjects. Any paper he reviewed was unlikely to be rejected by
a journal on editorial grounds.
Colin Donald was influential in several overseas programmes. In
1958, four years after his appointment as the Waite Professor
of Agriculture, he was asked by the Bovril Company of the UK to
provide an agronomist and to advise on pasture development for
beef production in South America, especially Argentina. In 1959,
he advised on pasture development in Sri Lanka during part of
a study leave in that country. During the 1960s, several influential
Australian agricultural scientists and economists suggested that
Australia should be making a contribution to the agricultural
development of the less developed countries of South-East Asia.
In 1963 Donald led a mission to Indonesia and in 1965 he surveyed
agricultural faculties in Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines
for the Department of External Affairs. The recommendations of
these missions led ultimately to the formation in 1969 of the
Australian-Asian Universities Cooperation Scheme (AAUCS) which
became the Australian Universities International Development Program
(AUIDP) and then the International Development Program (IDP) of
Australian Universities and Colleges. The delay between the missions
and the implementation of the scheme was due to the political
unrest that occurred in the region during the mid-'60s. The aim
of the scheme was to foster agricultural development through the
upgrading of the agricultural faculties and staffs of South-East
Asian universities. The initial co-operation was in agriculture
and demography as food production and population numbers were
vitally important to these countries, but it later expanded and
now covers all faculties of the universities. The missions realised
that Australian aid was unlikely to be successful if targeted
directly at farmers of the region. They were too numerous and
there were cultural and language barriers to communication. On
the other hand, if Australian scientists became involved with
the academic and research communities of the countries in question
and helped in their upgrading through higher degrees and specific
courses, there would be a filter-down effect that would eventually
improve farming practice. This has proved to be the case. Because
of his own commitment, Colin Donald was strongly supportive of
his staff who became involved in the programme in South-East Asia,
and at an early stage he acted as supervisor to post-graduate
students from the region. One of these, the late Professor Soetono
of Brawijaya University in Java, developed some of the attributes
possessed by Colin Donald and had a profound influence on agriculture
development in east Java. From 1969 up to his retirement in 1973,
Colin Donald was on the Standing Committee of the Australian-Asian
Universities Cooperation Scheme. He hoped that after his retirement
he would be able to be more deeply involved in AAUCS and over-seas
aid programmes, but regrettably this did not occur.
Donald served on many committees during the 1960s and 1970s. The
most notable of these were the Advisory Council of CSIRO (1961-1966),
the Australian Research Grants Committee (1967-73) and the Wheat
Industry Research Council (1973-75).
In 1961, Colin Donald was appointed a Fellow of the Australian
Institute of Agricultural Science and in 1962 he was president
of the Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement
of Science (ANZAAS). He was a member of the Australian delegation
to the United Nations conference on the application of science
and technology in the less developed countries, held at Geneva
in 1963. He was awarded the Farrer
Memorial Medal in 1964 for outstanding service to Australian agriculture,
and was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science
in 1968. In 1984 the Australian Society of Agronomy, to commemorate
him, instituted the C.M. Donald Medal which is awarded to persons
who have made major contributions to agronomic research in Australia.
One of the recipients described Colin Donald as the ideotype of
an agronomist, a person with the ideal attributes and characters
for agronomic investigation.
In 1979, Colin Donald was appointed by Her Majesty the Queen as
a Commander of the British Empire.
On 13 March 1985, at the age of 75, Professor Donald died in Adelaide.
He had profoundly influenced pasture development in Australia
by understanding the limitations to pasture growth imposed by
soils and environment, and had advanced our understanding of competition
between plants when grown in communities. Because of his open
nature and friendly disposition, he inspired many young researchers
in agricultural science. He is the only agronomist yet to have
been elected to the Australian Academy of Science.
R. Knight, Waite Campus, University of Adelaide.
J.P. Quirk, Nedlands, Western Australia.
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