Fry Medal

The F. E. J. Fry Medal is an annual award for zoology given by the Canadian Society of Zoologists. [1]

It is presented to the Canadian zoologist who has made an outstanding contribution to knowledge and understanding of an area in zoology. The recipient is expected to give a lecture to the next annual conference.

The award was established in 1974 in honour of Frederick E.J. Fry, the Canadian ichthyologist and aquatic ecologist.

Recipients

  • Source [1]
  • 2019: Robert Shadwick, University of British Columbia. Adventures in zoology with rorqual whales.
  • 2018: Jean-Guy J. Godin, Carleton University. Sexual selection and male mate choice: insights from a small tropical fish
  • 2017: Céline Audet, Université du Québec à Rimouski. Ecophysiology, a unique and exciting—but challenging—way to study adaptations of fishes to their environment.
  • 2016: Brock Fenton, University of Western Ontario. The endless allure of bats.
  • 2015: Patricia Wright, University of Guleph. Living on the edge – The physiology of amphibious fish in and out of water.
  • 2014: Glen Van Der Kraak, University of Guelph. The sex lives of fish: Science, policy and beyond.
  • 2013: Miodrag Belosevic, University of Alberta. Life is PIE.
  • 2012: Steve Perry, University of Ottawa. Reelin’ in the Years: A Retrospective Look at Fish Ionic Regulation.
  • 2011: Kenneth Storey, Carleton University. Exploring biochemical adaptations: synthetic intuition on a family farm.
  • 2010: Joseph S. Nelson, University of Alberta. From Kokanee to Suckers to Sticklebacks to classifying the world of fishes.
  • 2009: Anthony Farrell, University of British Columbia
  • 2008: Jeremy McNeil, University of Western Ontario
  • 2007: Nancy M. Sherwood, University of Victoria. The evolution of brain hormones that control reproduction: Genomics to the rescue.
  • 2006: Richard E. Peter, University of Alberta. Neuroendocrine control systems in the goldfish.
  • 2005: John Youson, University of Toronto, Scarborough. A life of research with fishes of ancient lineage.
  • 2004: Thomas W. Moon, University of Ottawa. Fish metabolism: the good, the bad and the ugly.
  • 2003: William K. Milsom, University of British Columbia. Adaptive trends in respiratory control: A comparative perspective.
  • 2002: Robert G. Boutilier, Cambridge University. Mechanisms of cell survival in hypoxia and hypothermia.
  • 2001: Frederick William Henry Beamish, Burapha University. Axioms and anecdotes of a zoologist.
  • 2000: John Philips, University of British Columbia. Pumps, Peptides and Pests.
  • 1999: Chris M. Wood, McMaster University. Physiology of The Lake Magadi Tilapia, a fish adapted to one of the most extreme aquatic environments on Earth.
  • 1998: Geoffrey J. Eales, University of Manitoba. Thyroxine – hormone or vitamin?
  • 1997: Harold Atwood, Toronto. Adaptation in the nervous system.
  • 1996: Charles Krebs, University of British Columbia. Vertebrate community dynamics in the Yukon boreal forest.
  • 1995: Peter Hochachka, University of British Columbia. Regulated metabolic suppression in surviving oxygen lack: a conceptual mirror to Fry’s “scope for activity”.
  • 1994: Brian K. Hall, Dalhousie University. Development and evolution of the vertebrate skeleton.
  • 1993: David Randall, University of British Columbia. Fish gas transfer: conflicts and compromise in design.
  • 1992: Dave R. Jones, University of British Columbia. Cardiovascular dynamics of the alligator.
  • 1991: Roger Downer, University of Waterloo. Exciting insects and other biological diversions.
  • 1990: William C. Leggett, McGill University. Understanding variations in fish distribution and abundance; is the answer blowing in the wind?
  • 1989: George Owen Mackie, University of Victoria. Aggregates or integrates? Aspects of communication in animal communities.
  • 1988: Dennis Chitty, University of British Columbia. Beautiful hypotheses and ugly facts.
  • 1987: Kenneth G. Davey, York University. Blood, guts, sex and affairs of the heart in insects.
  • 1986: D. R. Idler, Memorial University of Newfoundland. Fish hormones: my personal experiences.
  • 1985: J. R. Brett, Pacific Biological Station. Production energetics of a population of sockeye salmon, Onchorhynchus nerka.
  • 1984: No award.
  • 1983: William Edward Ricker, Pacific Biological Station. How to draw a straight line.
  • 1982: F. J. Rigler, University of Toronto. (No lecture because of illness)
  • 1981: Keith Ronald, University of Guelph. Life and death of a seal.
  • 1980: D. M. Ross. University of Alberta. Illusion and reality in comparative physiology.
  • 1979: Maxwell J. Dunbar, McGill University. The blunting of Occam’s razor, or to hell with parsimony.
  • 1978: Peter Anthony Larkin, University of British Columbia. Maybe you can’t get there from here: A foreshortened history of research in relation to management of Pacific salmon.
  • 1977: Helen I. Battle, University of Western Ontario. A saga of zoology in Canada.
  • 1976: Ian McTaggart-Cowan, University of British Columbia. The sociology of carnivores related to their use of resources.
  • 1975: F. R. Hayes, Dalhousie University. Quantitative and aesthetic factors in the definition of an ideal environment.
  • 1974: William S. Hoar, University of British Columbia. Smolt transformation: evolution, behavior and physiology.

See also

References

  1. "F.E.J. Fry Medal". Canadian Society of Zoologists. Retrieved 19 September 2019.
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