After National Service in the Royal Artillery, he joined the University of Edinburgh as an assistant lecturer in 1956.[3] His main research and teaching interests were on animal behaviour, development, and evolution. He was involved with environmental issues since 1966, and with the Centre for Human Ecology since its inception at the University of Edinburgh in 1970.[5] He was Professor of Natural History at the university from 1973 to 1997.[3] In December 1997, a gallery in the Natural History Collection of Edinburgh University was named in his honour on his retirement. He later became Emeritus Professor.[6]
He wrote An Introduction to Animal Behaviour (1967) published by Cambridge University Press, which is now in its sixth edition (last three editions co-authored with Professor Marian Stamp Dawkins. His television broadcasts included: BBC Two's Earth Story, Landscape Mysteries and Talking Landscapes. His radio broadcasts included The Rules of Life for BBC Radio 4 and the Open University in 2006.[9] He also broadcast five series of Radio 4's Unearthing Mysteries, Sounds of Life and Origins: the Human Connection.[6]
Family
In 1959, he married zoologist Margaret Bastock (d. 1982) with whom he had two sons. In 1985, he married Joan Herrmann, a child psychotherapist, with whom he had another son.[3][6]