Witherby Memorial Lectures are named in memory of Harry Forbes Witherby, a notable British ornithologist and author who was a founding member of BTO.
- Learn more about Witherby’s contribution to BTO and how you can follow in his footsteps by becoming a Witherby Custodian.
1968 | Sir Landsborough Thomson | The sub-species concept |
1969 | Dr D Lack | The number of bird species on islands |
1970 | H N Southern | Tawny Owls |
1971 | Dr E M Nicholson | Geograms |
1972 | Sir Peter Scott | Species extinction in birds |
1973 | Mrs P Hall | Speciation and specialisation |
1974 | D Nethersole-Thompson | Greenshanks |
1975 | Dr J C Coulson | Ringing as an ecological tool |
1976 | Professor G M Dunnet | The ages of birds – adolescence and senility |
1977 | Dr D W Snow | The relationships between the African and European avifaunas |
1978 | Ill-health prevented the lecture being given. | |
1979 | S Cramp | Ornithology and bird conservation |
1980 | Dr D A Ratcliffe | The Peregrine |
1981 | Professor W G Hale | The biology of the Redshank |
1982 | Dr J Kear | Some thoughts on eggs |
1983 | Dr C M Perrins | A study of the Great Tit |
1984 | Professor P P G Bateson | Imprinting in young birds |
1985 | Dr I Newton | Individual performance in Sparrowhawks |
1986 | Dr C H Fry | The Bee-eaters |
1987 | Dr F Cooke | Natural selection in Snow Geese |
1988 | Professor P R Evans | Migration strategies of shorebirds |
1989 | Professor J R Krebs | Food hoarding in tits |
1990 | No lecture took place due to severe adverse weather conditions. | |
1991 | Dr J D Goss-Custard | The importance of scale in the study of bird populations |
1992 | Dr G R Potts | Is there a future for farmland birds? |
1993 | Professor Dr P Berthold | Some new developments in bird migration research |
1994 | Professor J H Lawton | All change? Numbers and range in the field and in the mind |
1995 | Dr A Watson | Thinking, practice and people in bird population ecology |
1996 | Dr M Owen | Wildlife and water: partnerships for effective action |
1997 | Dr M P Harris | Individuality in a densely colonial seabird: the Common Guillemot |
1998 | Dr J P Croxall | Albatrosses, Fisheries and Futures |
1999 | Professor D T Parkin | Birding and DNA |
2000 | Dr D G C Harper | The public and private lives of Robins |
2001 | Professor Dr F Bairlein | The study of bird migration: where to go? |
2002 | Professor N B Davies | Cuckoo versus host |
2003 | Professor D M Bryant | Swallows – life in an uncertain world |
2004 | Professor P Monaghan | Bad beginnings and untimely ends: Life history trade-offs in birds |
2005 | Professor W J Sutherland | Science and Conservation |
2006 | Professor T Piersma | What is it like to be a Knot? Towards a cognitive ecology of shorebirds |
2007 | Dr M Marquiss | Case studies with predatory birds |
2008 | Professor P Grant | Evolution of Darwin’s finches |
2009 | Dr F Spina | Birds and rings across the Mediterranean: the role of ringing for science and for conservation in Italy |
2010 | Professor Tim Birkhead | Sperm and Eggs: Promiscuity in birds |
2011 | Professor Rhys Green | Birth, death and bird conservation |
2012 | Professor Sarah Wanless | An Exaltation of Auks |
2013 | Professor Graham Martin | Through birds' eyes |
2014 | Professor Kevin Gaston | Birds in an urbanising world |
2015 | Professor Jenny Gill | Migration in space and time |
2016 | Professor Ben Sheldon | Coping with a variable world: plasticity and social learning in Great Tit |
2017 | Professor Stuart Bearhop | The ups and downs of an extreme migrant |
2018 | Professor Jane Reid | Ringing, Birding, Migration Ecology & Evolution |
2019 | Professor Bob Furness | What have the ringers ever done for us? How amateurs make British ornithology great |
2020 | Professor Caren Cooper | Flock together: Innovations migrating across citizen science |
2021 | Professor 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 |
2023 | No lecture | |
2024 | Dr Norman Ratcliffe | Ashmole’s halo and Hutchinson’s hypervolume |