The body of work by Watson over 58 years (1944–2012) includes 23 books, 287 peer-reviewed scientific papers, 178 technical reports, 40 book reviews, and many articles in newspapers and magazines. His editorships include: • 1956–64 Editor,
The Scottish Naturalist • 1969 editorial board,
Journal of Animal Ecology • 1970 Editor, British Ecological Society's 10th Symposium Volume,
Animal Populations in relation to their Food Resources,
Blackwell Scientific Publications • 1981–89 editorial board,
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment The Place Names of Upper Deeside The Place Names of Upper Deeside is a 1984
toponymic book by Watson and Elizabeth Allan about the
Gaelic place names in the upper part of western
Aberdeenshire known as
Deeside. Watson started his research in 1971 and collected over the next 13 years more than 7,000 place-names largely based on interviews with 260 local people. Interviewees included the last surviving native speaker of Deeside Gaelic, Jean Bain in
Crathie, Aberdeenshire. A contemporary review said about the book: "There have been many place name studies published in Scotland during the course of the present century but none can match in detail and usefulness
The Place Names of Upper Deeside by Adam Watson and Elizabeth Allan." Professor of Celtic at the
University of Glasgow Derick Thomson described the book's detail and breadth in ''
The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies. A review in The Scots Magazine called it "a remarkable gazetteer of the topography running to 220 large pages in a beautifully-presented work". The Scotsman'' upon Watson's death in 2019, called the book "magisterial". Watson continued his toponymic studies later in life, and published
Place Names in Much of North-East Scotland about place names in
Angus and
Kincardineshire in 2013, and, with Ian Murray, the book
Upper Deeside and the far Highlands in 2015. == Testimonials ==