John Veron
John Edward Norwood Veron , credited in research as J. E. N. Veron, and in other writing as Charlie Veron, is an Australian biologist, taxonomist, and specialist in the study of corals and reefs. He has described 173 of the world's coral species.
Early life and education
John Edward Norwood Veron was born in 1945 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. He attended Barker College in Sydney.He won a Commonwealth scholarship as a gifted student and went on study at the University of New England. His main interests were in the natural world, especially marine life. He participated in the scuba club while at university.
His honours thesis was on the behaviour of gliding possums. He took his M.Sc. with a study on the temperature regulation of lizards. Veron completed his PhD with a study on the neurophysiology of dragonflies, awarded in 1971.
Career
After completing his PhD, Veron was offered a postdoctoral position at James Cook University to study corals. He was the first full-time researcher on the Great Barrier Reef and the first scientist employed by the Australian Institute of Marine Science. He participated in 67 expeditions to all the major reef provinces in the world. He credited "Red" Gilmartin and John W. Wells from Cornell University as key figures in clarifying his interest in taxonomy in the 1970s.Veron has named 173 reef corals and built a taxonomic framework for corals that is used throughout the world.
He founded the Orpheus Island Marine Station. He introduced the concept of reticulate evolution to the field of coral taxonomy.
Recognition
In 2009, Sir David Attenborough introduced Veron's lecture to the Royal Society.He was featured in the 2017 documentary Chasing Coral.
A sculpture of Veron, called "The Godfather of Coral", was created by Jason deCaires Taylor for the Museum of Underwater Art as part of the Ocean Sentinels above the surface exhibition in 2022.
He has received many professional awards, including:
- Scientific Diving Lifetime Achievement Award
- Darwin Medal
- Silver Jubilee Pin
- Medal of the Order of Australia for "service to marine research", 2021
- Ocean Sentinel sculpture
Other activities and achievements
He has campaigned extensively on climate change, mass bleaching of coral reefs, ocean acidification, and related environmental issues.