James Meadows Rendel (geneticist)

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James Meadows Rendel (16 May 1915 - 4 February 2001) was an Australian agricultural scientist who specialised in animal genetics and was Chief of the CSIRO Division of Animal Genetics from 1959 to 1976.[1] He was the grandson of Lytton Strachey's sister Dorothy Bussy, and the nephew of Frances Partridge.[2][3]

Rendel was 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. His research was on the relationship between the size of duck eggs and their hatchability. He was interested in how selection pressures reduced the variability of a trait around a mean. 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.

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