Rural science , the original facility of the University of New England, photographed in 2009McClymont's appointment to the University of New England Faculty of Rural Science took effect in March 1955, one year after the university's independence. Upon arrival, McClymont was surprised by the school's humble facilities. He had to borrow a chair since his office did not have one. Madgwick had assumed that it would take at least two years to get the new department up and running. McClymont, however, pointed out to Madgwick that the program could begin accepting enrolments in 1956 because the existing faculty of science could already offer first-year courses in several basic science topics needed for the degree program. On 11 July 1955, McClymont gave the degree program's inaugural address in the auditorium of nearby Armidale Teachers' College, titled "All Flesh is Grass" after a passage in the Biblical
Book of Isaiah. In the speech, McClymont explained his vision for the goals of the rural science program, saying, "The economic health of this country, and so the standard of civilization which it will support, rests on the fertility of its soils and on the resultant productivity of its pastures, livestock and crops." The degree program was the first of its kind to implement a multi-disciplinary approach to farm animal production science. It combined elements of agronomy, biochemistry, physiology, veterinary science, soil and agricultural ecology (agricultural science), biology, economics, social sciences, and animal nutrition and husbandry to teach students how all these elements interacted to create a productive agricultural ecosystem. Graduates from the new program were more generalists than specialists in order to help them find and implement original solutions to varied problems with Australia's livestock production, then still struggling with output and sustainability issues. The impact of the resulting improvements in Australia's livestock production was seen in Australians becoming among the world's biggest per capita meat consumers. Classes in the degree program began in March 1956 with an initial enrolment of 17 students. Five hundred students had graduated with bachelors in rural science by the early 1980s. One hundred sixty graduated with honours. Seventy had attained
master's degrees in the discipline. Graduates included
Bridget Ogilvie, director of the
Wellcome Trust, Hugh Beggs, Life Governor of the Australian Sheep Breeders Association and Chair of both the Australian Wool Corporation and the
International Wool Secretariat, I Made Nits, Professor of Nutrition and Tropical Forage at
Udayana University, and Robert Clements, Director of the
Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research. As of 2005, approximately 1,700 students had passed through the rural science program. As chair of the department, McClymont advocated and helped establish functionally autonomous agricultural education community centres around the New England area. The centres, supported by both the Departments of Rural Science and Agricultural Economics, were patterned after university external agricultural centres in the United States. The centres were financially independent and so avoided control by the university's central administration. McClymont's writings and lectures while at the university emphasized the importance of sustainability in agricultural ecosystems. He is considered to be the originator of the term "
sustainable agriculture". McClymont diagrammed the key elements of agricultural ecosystems into a series of flowcharts which were often used by other agricultural instructors. He alerted the agricultural community to the issues involved with feeding
grain to livestock while the world was experiencing a shortage of grain.
Further activities During the 1960s and 1970s, the University of New England became a prominent international centre in
ruminant research. McClymont published a series of articles in academic journals on biochemistry and animal nutrition, including pregnancy toxaemia in sheep, poultry nutrition, and mineral deficiencies in dairy cattle. He promoted an original approach to researching metabolic diseases in livestock, utilizing radioactive tracer methods to identify "the quantitative importance of various metabolites including glucose, volatile fatty acids, B-hydroxybutyrate and long chain fatty acids in ruminant metabolism, and the metabolic interactions between these materials". McClymont and Professor R. B. Cumming established the Poultry Research Fund Group at the
Tamworth Adult Education Centre to facilitate the exchange of ideas between the university's rural science and agricultural economics departments and the poultry industry. The group first met on 1 July 1963. In 1967 McClymont was awarded the Australian Poultry Award for his work in poultry nutrition and with the poultry industry, particularly in the
Namoi River region. In 1967, McClymont proposed the establishment of a School of Biological Sciences at the university because of expansion of the topic within the Department of Rural Science. The school was founded the next year. McClymont served on the advisory standing committee of eight for the independent but university-affiliated Kellogg Rural Adjustment Unit. The formal commencement for the unit was on 1 July 1976, with operations beginning the next year. The name of the organization was later changed to Rural Development Centre. The purpose of the centre, among other objectives, was to provide education on rural issues and policies, play a role in the development of rural policies, and assist rural communities in adjusting to changes in their cultural and economic environments. While at the university, McClymont consulted to the
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. In 1975 the organization published a booklet he authored, titled
Formal Education and Rural Development. On 26 January 1978, citing his "service to veterinary science and to agricultural research", the Commonwealth of Australia designated McClymont an Officer in the
Order of Australia. McClymont retired from the university in 1980 and was appointed an
emeritus professor. Professor
J. S. Ryan said, "Fifty years on, he is widely recognized – and acclaimed – as being so far ahead of his time in recognizing the vital interaction between animal and plant production and in the importance of a healthy ecosystem." ==Retirement==