Year |
Lecturer |
Subject
|
1968 |
Arthur Landsborough Thomson |
The sub-species concept[3]
|
1969 |
David Lack |
The number of bird species on islands
|
1970 |
H. N. Southern |
Tawny Owls[4]
|
1971 |
E. M. Nicholson |
Geograms[5]
|
1972 |
Peter Scott |
Species extinction in birds
|
1973 |
Beryl Patricia Hall |
Speciation and specialisation[6]
|
1974 |
Desmond Nethersole-Thompson |
Greenshanks
|
1975 |
J. C. Coulson |
Ringing as an ecological tool
|
1976 |
Geoge Dunnet |
The ages of birds – adolescence and senility
|
1977 |
David Snow |
The relationships between the African and European avifaunas[7]
|
1979 |
Stanley Cramp |
Ornithology and bird conservation
|
1980 |
Derek Ratcliffe |
The Peregrine falcon
|
1981 |
W. G. Hale |
The biology of the Redshank
|
1982 |
Janet Kear |
Some thoughts on eggs
|
1983 |
Chris Perrins |
A study of the Great tit
|
1984 |
Patrick Bateson |
Imprinting in young birds
|
1985 |
Ian Newton |
Individual performance in Sparrowhawks
|
1986 |
C. H. Fry |
The Bee-eaters
|
1987 |
Fred Cooke |
Natural selection in Snow Geese
|
1988 |
P. R. Evans |
Migration strategies of shorebirds
|
1989 |
John Krebs, Baron Krebs |
Food hoarding in tits
|
1991 |
J. D. Goss-Custard |
The importance of scale in the study of bird populations
|
1992 |
Dick Potts |
Is there a future for farmland birds?
|
1993 |
Peter Berthold |
Some new developments in bird migration research
|
1994 |
John Lawton |
All change? Numbers and range in the field and in the mind[8]
|
1995 |
A. Watson |
Thinking, practice and people in bird population ecology
|
1996 |
M. Owen |
Wildlife and water: partnerships for effective action
|
1997 |
M. P. Harris |
Individuality in a densely colonial seabird: the Common Guillemot
|
1998 |
J. P Croxall |
Albatrosses, Fisheries and Futures
|
1999 |
D. T. Parkin |
Birding and DNA[9]
|
2000 |
David Harper |
The public and private lives of Robins
|
2001 |
Franz Bairlein |
The study of bird migration: where to go?
|
2002 |
Nicholas Barry Davies |
Cuckoo versus host
|
2003 |
David Murray Bryant |
Swallows – life in an uncertain world
|
2004 |
Pat Monaghan |
Bad beginnings and untimely ends: Life history trade-offs in birds
|
2005 |
W. J. Sutherland |
Science and Conservation
|
2006 |
Theunis Piersma |
What is it like to be a Knot? Towards a cognitive ecology of shorebirds
|
2007 |
Mick Marquiss |
Case studies with predatory birds
|
2008 |
Peter Grant |
Evolution of Darwin's finches
|
2009 |
Fernando Spina |
Birds and rings across the Mediterranean: the role of ringing for science and for conservation in Italy
|
2010 |
Tim Birkhead |
Sperm and Eggs: Promiscuity in birds
|
2011 |
Rhys Green |
Birth, death and bird conservation
|
2012 |
Sarah Wanless |
An Exaltation of Auks
|
2013
|
Graham Martin
|
Through Birds' Eyes
|
2014
|
Kevin Gaston
|
Birds in an urbanising world
|
2015
|
Jenny Gill [Wikidata]
|
Migration in space and time
|
2016
|
Ben Sheldon
|
Coping with a variable world: plasticity and social learning in Great tit
|
2017
|
Stuart Bearhop
|
The ups and downs of an extreme migrant
|
2018
|
Jane Reid
|
Ringing, Birding, Migration Ecology & Evolution
|
2019
|
Bob Furness
|
What have the ringers ever done for us? How amateurs make British ornithology great.
|
2020
|
Caren Cooper
|
Flock Together: Innovations Migrating Across Citizen Science
|
2021
|
Claire Spottiswoode
|
Coevolution as an engine of biodiversity: insights from African birds
|
2022
|
Professor Peter Marra
|
Studying Birds in the Context of the Full Annual Cycle[10]
|