Interview with creationist biological control
expert, John Mann M. B. E.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
In 1969, John, you were awarded the M. B.
E. by the Queen for the major part
you played
in the development of a biological
solution
to the cactus problem. Most people
today
have no idea how bad the actual situation
was. What was it really like?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Well—the cactus invasion of Australia was
probably history’s greatest recorded
invasion
of a country by a plant weed in any
part
of the world. A single, yellow flowering
prickly pear was brought to Australia
in
1839. By 1914 it had covered 60 million
acres
so densely, that it was impossible
to do
anything of value with the land. Families
were driven off their blocks. They
had attacked
it with everything they had, and any
special
machinery or chemicals that they could
invent.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Where was this?
DR. JOHN MANN:
It was in the good grazing, dairying
and
grain growing country in Queensland.
In fact,
to try and solve the problem the Government
was offering people blocks of land
on the
condition that they could maintain
a 2m (6ft)
wide strip free of prickly pear around
their
boundaries. But this proved virtually
impossible.
Men broke their hearts over it because
it
was growing up behind them as fast
as they
were getting rid of it. They were in
absolute
despair.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
How was this problem solved?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Well, our actual concept was, and still
is, that since the plant in its native
country
generally doesn’t increase to pest
proportions,
it must be controlled by either organisms
or conditions. So in 1913 researchers
were
appointed to go around the world to
each
place where cactus grew to see if there
were
any creatures that could be used for
the
likely destruction of cactus in Australia.
They actually came back bringing with
them
some Cactobastis cactorum which is
the insect
that did the spectacular work eventually,
but they could not get them to breed.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Was this idea of insect control an
original
idea, unique to Australia? Had anything
like
that ever been done before?
DR. JOHN MANN: Yes. In 1902 some insects had been imported
from Mexico into Hawaii for the control
of
lantana, but this was only on a small
scale.
In 1914 a few insects found by a Mr
A. Kobele
in Mexico were introduced from Hawaii
to
Australia for lantana control, however
it
was the success of our campaign against
the
prickly pear which has given the impetus
to later efforts in entomological control.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Did this suggestion of biological balance
have any evolutionary concept behind
it?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Not that I have ever heard about.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
One of the chief roles you played in
this
area was being the person who actually
got
the Cactobastis to breed in Australia.
Was
this a problem?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Well, I’d been breeding insects since
I
was 15, so no, there weren’t really
many
difficulties with Cactobastis, although
we
were working under very spartan conditions.
All we had was an old wooden building
with
wooden floors, lino, and one antique
telephone.
The techniques we had to devise were
necessary
because there weren’t any push-button
methods
in those days. I had to run an electric
light
cable from the main house down to the
quarantine
cages. I then put whatever number of
electric
light bulbs inside the insect cages
that
I estimated would give the warmth that
they
required to breed. As long as I kept
them
properly warm, they bred quite easily.
People
working with the sophisticated glasshouses
and quarantine insectaries today, probably
cannot conceive the trouble we had.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Were any safeguards necessary?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Oh yes. Once we started getting Cactobastis
eggs under quarantine conditions, we
bred
them in untold millions. It was necessary
to test them on all sorts of plants
to prove
they would eat cactus and nothing else.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
How long did this take before you knew
it
would work?
DR. JOHN MANN:
It was obvious within 12 months that we had
a winner, the more discerning men on
the
land saw it too. All those abandoned
or empty
pear leases were suddenly ‘acquired.’
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Do you remember any humorous events
in the
research program?
DR. JOHN MANN:
To be honest, the problem was so urgent that
we were too dead serious about the
job to
have anything funny to say about it.
Skeptical
landholders would come and look in
our cages
and make caustic remarks about whether
a
couple of insects were going to do
anything
good. They poked all sorts of fun at
us,
even in print, but those men lived
to regret
the day that they didn’t own several
thousand
acres more of the prickly pear country
we
cleaned up.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Since that time, you have received
much
recognition for your work apart from
the
M. B. E. What else resulted from it?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Many things I guess. I was appointed Entomologist
to the Government Department of Lands
and
made a Fellow of the Royal Zoological
Society.
The Entomological Society of N. S.
W. made
me a Fellow and I served on many government
committees amongst other things.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
But isn’t it also true that you had
your
work published by the Smithsonian Institute,
were made a life member of the Entomological
Society of Queensland and appointed
as State
representative on the Australian Weeds
Committee,
becoming eventually chairman of the
Noxious
Weeds Committee, a member of the Agricultural
Chemicals Distribution Committee and
a member
of the Interdepartmental Committee
for Woody
Plant Control and had a genus in your
honor—amongst
other things.
DR. JOHN MANN:
Yes—amongst other things.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Have you addressed many science conferences
since your success with Prickly Pear?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Yes, I have given many lectures on the work
of biological control at science conferences,
to almost every local government authority,
many grazier and primary producers
organizations,
and on ABC radio.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
John, when you retired in 1970 you
were
the Director of the Alan Fletcher Research
Station, in charge of scientists doing
research
on insect and biological control, but
you
don’t have a university degree.
DR. JOHN MANN:
No, it was quite humorous really. When this
was announced at my farewell dinner,
I could
see the intrigued look on the face
of some
of my scientific colleagues. One professor
leaned over to me and said, ‘Well it
never
showed.’
CREATION MAGAZINE:
In the 1930s what was the influence
of the
concept of evolution on society in
Australia?
DR. JOHN MANN:
The concept of evolution at that time was
not as universal as it is now. There
were
lots of debates about it, a lot of
questions
asked and being answered. In the 1920s
I
used to get copies of the magazine
put out
by the Victoria Institute in England.
They
were men of high degree and they wrote
against
evolution. Their magazine influenced
me greatly.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Were there any Australian men of science
who influenced you?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Yes, one man who influenced me was the Professor
of Anatomy at the University of Adelaide.
He wrote the Progress Prize Memorial
Lecture,
‘The Ancestry of Man.’ He wrote about
the
discovery of an exceedingly early fossil
anthropoid in America. This fossil
animal
was named ‘Hesperopithecus.’ Not only
was
it named but its complete form, both
male
and female, were shown as a whole page
illustration
in an English illustrated Weekly, as
part
of an article on ‘The Early Humanoid
in America’,
by Professor Elliot Smith. But the
anatomy
professor pointed out the only evidence
on
which this was based, consisted of
a single
water-worn molar tooth, and that there
were
other learned authorities of the day
such
as Dr Smith Woodward, had suggested
that
it was the tooth of a bear. When I
read that
in 1923, I thought to myself, ‘Well,
evolutionary
theory appears to have been built upon
99%
imagination and 1% fossils’ so I maintained
that as a Christian I would believe
in the
Bible until somebody could come up
with any
definite proof that men had evolved
from
animals.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Did the concept of evolution worry
you at
all?
DR. JOHN MANN:
No it did not! It had no practical effect
on my work.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
But surely people had already begun
to produce
evolutionary family trees for the insects,
which must have affected your work.
DR. JOHN MANN:
They had, but they were so practically useless
that in my publications I made no reference
to them. One gentleman had built up
a key
for flies. It was a fine looking tree.
However
after he had sent it to the Linnaean
Society
in Sydney for publication, he found
more
insects which altered his whole concept,
so he sent them a telegram and told
them
not to publish his key until further
notice.
Finally he almost turned it upside
down with
his next key. So I said to myself,
‘Well
I believe God; and I believe the Bible;
and
these men are not producing anything
concrete
that would make me disbelieve. Until
they
do I am just going to go on as I am.’
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Has there been any time in your life
when
you really considered yourself as an
evolutionist
of any sort?
DR. JOHN MANN:
No, I have really never felt that way. Although
when I got deeper into scientific work,
I
did think about the possibility that
God
used evolution and I went along for
a time
with that in the back of my mind …
In my
work with the flies I thought that
theistic
evolution was a possible answer to
the theories
that were put forward by some of my
colleagues.
But in later years I threw that overboard
because I couldn’t see that it was
consistent
with the Bible. At one stage I accepted
the
Gap Theory (as it became known later)
but
as I advanced further in my work, not
only
as an entomologist but as a Christian,
I
couldn’t see that this could be tenable
either,
so I rejected it as well.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
So you rejected evolution for both
scientific
and Biblical reasons?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Yes, to my thinking, it wouldn’t fit either
way.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Did your schooling influence you in
any
way about creation?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Well one man did. He taught us astronomy.
He had a model which showed the movements
of the sun and the moon and certain
stars
and planets. I remember distinctly
one day
he stopped his machine and said, ‘Boys
never
let anyone tell you that these things
happen
of their own accord. There is a Supreme
Being
who guides these things in the way
they go.’
I have never forgotten that, even though
it is over 65 years ago.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
When you look at the relationship you discovered
between cactus and the Cactobastis,
do you
see it as an example of a system created
by God?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Yes, I certainly believe it is. When God
created organisms He created their
food too.
If they are deprived of that specific
food
they die. Our specific tests on Cactobastis
showed that. The list of plants that
we tried
to get Cactobastis to eat was absolutely
enormous, and I would say that 85%
of the
plants that we had to test were almost
a
waste of time. Firstly because cactaceae
as a group of plants are quite separate
from
most other groups. It was fairly safe
to
say that insects feeding on cactus
would
not eat any other type of plant and
secondly,
we fairly well knew that the insects
wouldn’t
be able to live on most of them, simply
because
the Cactobastis was a gregarious internal
borer. To begin to test it on wheat
and oats
and things like that was simply ridiculous,
but we had to do it, just to prove
it was
safe to use them. Our results showed
without
a doubt that these insects had a group
of
plants which they could live on and
nothing
else. And that’s usually what is found
right
throughout the insect kingdom. Organisms
keep to one group of plants for their
feeding.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Didn’t they attack any other plants, even
when they were starving?
DR. JOHN MANN:
They did crawl over some and they made a
few small marks where you could see
that
they had made an attempt to feed on
such
things as potatoes and melons, and
tomatoes,
etc., but they couldn’t live on them.
They
never even began to breed on them.
To me
that was overwhelming evidence that
they
had a particular group of plants to
live
on and would not live on any others.
We also
found they were confined to certain
types
of cacti. There are quite a lot of
groups
of cactus that they will not feed on.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Throughout your life you have given talks
on God as Creator and the importance
of creation,
particularly using your butterfly collection.
Why have you done this?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Well, a long time ago I took a stand that
I believed in Creation and so whenever
I
spoke to a meeting of people, Christians
or non-Christians, I often brought
up the
subject of Creation and the contrasting
philosophy
of evolution. I would tell them exactly
where
I stood. At the conclusion of one meeting,
a chap came to me and said, ‘Look I’m
glad
you said that about evolution and creation
because you are the only person I have
heard
publicly say that sort of thing.’
CREATION MAGAZINE:
Are you pleased then to see the various creation
science movements throughout the world,
and
one very much on your home front here
in
Australia?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Oh, yes very pleased indeed. When I saw Dr
Carl Wieland’s advertisement about
his Creation
Science Society in South Australia,
I wrote
to him. I have a copy of his first
magazine
here [Ed. note: this was the first
Creation
Ex Nihilo ever produced—June, 1978],
the
one he told me he had typed out himself
and
stapled together. I wrote to him and
I joined,
because I was so delighted to think
there
were people of position who still believed
in the Word of God.
CREATION MAGAZINE:
How do you personally view the effect of
the increase in evolutionary thought?
DR. JOHN MANN:
Devastating! Young people in schools are
being taught it as a straight-out fact.
It
is not a fact. It is a tragedy. People
who
are brought up as evolutionists, cannot
be
brought up to believe in God.
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