James Meadows Rendel (geneticist)


James Meadows Rendel was an Australian agricultural scientist who specialised in animal genetics and was Chief of the CSIRO Division of Animal Genetics from 1959 to 1976.

Early life

He was born the son of Col. Richard Meadows Rendel in Farnham, England and educated at Rugby School
and University College London, where he completed his PhD as a student of the geneticist J. B. S. Haldane. During the Second World War he was attached to RAF Coastal Command, where he was involved in experiments on escape from submarines, one of which left him with permanent lung damage.

Career

After the war he moved to Edinburgh to do animal genetics research at Edinburgh University, where he was jointly in charge of a project on dairy research, establishing the fundamental principles of artificial insemination in dairy progeny testing programmes.
In 1951 he travelled to Australia to join CSIRO and establish a team at the University of Sydney to teach animal genetics and develop a research programme into animal breeding methods for the domestic fowl, sheep, dairy and beef cattle. The team became the Animal Genetics Division of CSIRO in 1959. During this period he was a joint founder of the Genetics Society of Australia. In the 1960s he established a molecular biology group within the Animal Genetics Division, which later became the CSIRO Molecular and Cellular Biology Unit.
His personal interest was in breeding cattle to build up the livestock industry in the tropical and sub-tropical regions which led to the Belmont Red. When a new tropical beef cattle research laboratory was built in Rockhampton coincidental with his retirement it was named the James Rendel Laboratory to recognise his contribution to the cattle industry.

Later life

After his retirement in 1980 he moved to live at Drinkstone Green in Suffolk, England, where he bred Booroola sheep imported from Australia. However seven years later he returned to continue his retirement in the Blue Mountains of Australia.
He died there in 2001. He had married twice, firstly the poet Joan Adeney Easdale and secondly Marie Tresham Davies. He had two sons and four daughters.
He was awarded the Macfarlane Burnet Medal and Lecture by the Australian Academy of Science in 1981.