British forester
Sir David Ernest Hutchins FRGS (22 September 1850 – 11 November 1920) was a British forestry expert who worked around the British Empire .
Hutchins was educated at Blundell's School and the École nationale des eaux et forêts (National School of Water Resources and Forestry) at Nancy , France . He then joined the Imperial Forestry Service in India , in which he served for ten years, then served for another 23 years in the South African Forest Service , where he recommended that a Forest Service be started in the Transvaal and that certain Mexican pine species, such as Pinus patula , be cultivated. He finally served three years in the British East Africa Forest Service , from which he retired as Chief Conservator of Forests . In 1908 and 1909, he explored the forests around Mount Kenya .
After his retirement, he reported on the forests of Cyprus in 1909 for the Colonial Office , toured the forests of Australia in 1914–1915 for the government of Western Australia , and in 1916 toured the forests of New Zealand to compile a report for the Dominion government.
He was knighted in the 1920 New Year Honours.[ 1]
Brachylaena hutchinsii , a species of African tree in the family Asteraceae , was named after him.
^ "Colonial Office List", The Times , 1 January 1920
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International National People