Dear Forpathers
I'm writing to say that Peter Gadgil passed away over the weekend. I know many of you
won't know Peter but there are some of you who do. Until very recently Peter was
working at Scion in a mentoring role as well as fulfilling his lifetime passion of
describing new fungi. As late as last week he expressed a desire to return to work as soon
as his mobility improved. Sadly that will not happen, but his legacy will continue.
Peter started here in 1964, when he was recruited to work on dothistroma needle blight, a
new disease of Pinus radiata in New Zealand. His fundamental work in the 1960s on the
infection process of the pathogen and its epidemiology was critical to the development of
a successful control programme that is still in use today. Recent research using advanced
molecular techniques that weren't available in the 1960s have demonstrated Peter's
findings in his 1967 publication "Infection of Pinus radiata needles by Dothistroma
pini" were correct. In the 1970s Peter and his wife Ruth published two papers on the
interaction of mycorrhiza and other soil organisms that is still described today as the
"Gadgil effect". In 2005, Peter published a book describing over 700 fungi
associated with woody plants in New Zealand. This book was hailed as the first
comprehensive reference book ever produced on fungi that live in New Zealand's
forests.
Peter, as Research Leader of the Forest Health Group, was a pioneer of the transition from
a purely Government funded research programme to one funded by industry and Government.
Peter was the main driver behind the development of the New Zealand forest grower funded
surveillance and diagnostic services, and the Forest Health Research Collaborative which
was a precursor to the Biosecurity Technical Steering Team we have now.
Peter was never afraid to voice his opinion, often in a forthright manner, but those who
worked closely with him understood this and developed strategies to work around that. We
were also never left in any doubt about what his view on a specific matter was! For all
that, Peter helped me and many others develop in their careers through his helpful advice
and mentorship and he will always be regarded as one of New Zealand's eminent forest
pathologists.
Lindsay Bulman
Lindsay Bulman
Science Leader Forest Protection
Acting General Manager Forest Science
Scion
49 Sala Street, Private Bag 3020, Rotorua 3046, New Zealand
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