Charles William Mason

Charles William Mason (13 May 1884 – 28 November 1917) was an Agricultural entomologist who served in British India. He conducted a pioneering study on the role of birds in Indian agriculture which he published in 1911 along with Harold Maxwell-Lefroy, making him one of the early contributors to the field of economic ornithology.

Mason was born in Surbiton, Surrey to engineer William Joshua and Eliza Emily née Walters. He studied at Haileybury College and went to work at the Agricultural Research Institute at Pusa in 1906. From 1907, as first supernumerary entomologist, he conducted studies on the food of birds in India,[1] examining the gut contents of 1325 birds. This was used to classify the birds as harmful, beneficial or neutral in terms of their role in agriculture. He made use of numerical counts of food items eaten, following a system of Robert Newstead , rather than quantify them by biomass.[2] He identified that birds did not play a role as destroyers of weeds through seed eating.[3] The report was published in 1911, coauthored with the Imperial Entomologist, Harold Maxwell-Lefroy.[4] He trained at the Southeastern Agricultural College, Wye in 1910 and in July 1913, he went to study entomology as a Carnegie student at the laboratory of parasitology of the Bureau of Entomology of the United States Department of Agriculture at Melrose Highlands, Massachusetts,[5] before moving to Nyasaland (Malawi) to succeed Edward Ballard as Government Entomologist. He also served with the Nyasaland Volunteer Reserve. He died of black-water fever (malaria) at the Government Farm, Namiwawa, Malawi.[6]

A memorial plaque exists in the St. James' Church, Shaftesbury and his name is included in the Cann War Memorial, Shaftesbury and in the Haileybury College War Memorial.[7]

References

  1. ^ Mason, C.W. (1907). "The food of the Mynah". The Agricultural Journal of India. 2 (3): 280–282.
  2. ^ Evenden, Matthew D. (1995). "The Laborers of Nature: Economic Ornithology and the Role of Birds as Agents of Biological Pest Control in North American Agriculture, ca. 1880-1930". Forest & Conservation History. 39 (4): 172–183. doi:10.2307/3983958. ISSN 1046-7009. JSTOR 3983958. S2CID 130825517.
  3. ^ L., R. (1912). "Bird Notes". Nature. 89 (2218): 231–232. Bibcode:1912Natur..89..231L. doi:10.1038/089231a0. ISSN 0028-0836.
  4. ^ M., W. L. (1912). "The Food of Birds in India" (PDF). The Auk. 29 (3): 413–416. doi:10.2307/4071081. ISSN 0004-8038. JSTOR 4071081.
  5. ^ "Current Notes". Journal of Economic Entomology. 6 (5): 432–436. 1913-10-01. doi:10.1093/jee/6.5.432. ISSN 1938-291X.
  6. ^ Fletcher, T. Bainbrigge, ed. (1920). Report of the Proceedings of the Third Entomological Meeting. Volume 1. p. 7.
  7. ^ Shaftesbury Remembers the Great War. Gold Hill Museum

External links

  • Mason, C.W. and Maxwell-Lefroy, H. (1911). Memoirs of the Department of Agriculture in India. The Food of Birds in India. Calcutta: The Imperial Department of Agriculture in India.
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