N. W. SimmondsNorman Willison Simmonds FRSE FIB FLS (5[1][2] or 15[3][4] December 1922–4 January 2002)[1][4] was a British botanist. He was a world authority on the cultivation of bananas. He was the first non-American to be awarded the Bronx-based Society for Economic Botany's Distinguished Economic Botanist Award.[5] LifeHe was born in Bedford on 5[1][2] or 15 December 1922[3][4] the son of a civil servant. He was educated at Whitgift School from 1934 to 1940. He won a scholarship to study natural sciences at the Downing College, Cambridge, and then in 1943 won a further scholarship to study at the Imperial College of Tropical Agriculture on the island of Trinidad. In 1945 the college invited him to begin lecturing in botany. He was later Senior Cytogeneticist at the Banana Research Section on the island. He received an M.A. in 1948. During this time he collected banana samples in East Africa in 1948 and further samples in Asia and Malaysia in 1954/5.[5][3] From 1959 to 1965 he was the head of the Potato Genetics Department of the John Innes Institute.[3][4] In 1965 he became Director of the Scottish Plant Breeding Station which was then in Pentlandfield, a suburb of Edinburgh.[3] The University of Cambridge awarded him with a doctorate (DSc) in 1966.[3] On March 2, 1970, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.[1] His proposers were Sir David Lowe, Sir Stephen John Watson, Hugh Paterson Donald and Noel Farnie Robertson.[6] In 1975 he was made an Honorary Professor of the University of Edinburgh.[3] He died in Edinburgh on 4 January 2002.[1][4][2] PublicationsBooks
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The standard author abbreviation N.W.Simmonds is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.[8] References
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