John Douglas Tothill DSc, CMG[1] (February 1888 - 1969 Anstruther), was an English-born entomologist, agriculturalist and civil servant, whose career took him to Canada, Fiji, Uganda and the Sudan. He was the son of Walter Tothill and Frances L. Williams.
In 1923 he was transferred to the Forest Insect Division in Ottawa, and in 1924 was sent to Fiji by the Imperial Bureau of Entomology to study the problematic levuana moth. The moth was finally brought under control by the release of the tachinid flyBessa remota from Malaysia. In Fiji he soon became the country's director of agriculture, later holding similar posts in Uganda and Sudan. Although he spent only about 12 years in Canada, he is regarded as having established biological pest control in Canada and for placing forestry on a sound scientific footing.[3][4]
Publications
The Coconut Moth in Fiji: A History of Its Control by Means of Parasites - Ronald Wood Paine, Thomas Hugh Colebrook Taylor and John Douglas Tothill (1930)
Report of the Soil Conservation Committee - John Douglas Tothill (1944)
Agriculture in the Sudan: Being a Handbook of Agriculture As Practised in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan - John Douglas Tothill (1948)
A Report on Nineteen Surveys done in Small Agricultural Areas in Uganda - John Douglas Tothill (1938)
Agriculture in Uganda - John Douglas Tothill (1940)
Agriculture in the Sudan: Being a Handbook of Agriculture As Practised in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan - John Douglas Tothill (1948)
The Natural Control of the Fall Webworm (Hyphantria cunea Drury) in Canada - John Douglas Tothill (1922)