
Entomologist Marlin Rice, who interviews "living legends" for the American Entomologist, a publication of the Entomological Society of America (ESA), uses a question-and-answer format in his popular Legends' column to connect with and draw out his subjects.
In the winter issue, Rice features UC Davis distinguished professor Walter Soares Leal. He earlier spotlighted UC Davis entomologists Bruce Hammock, Frank Zalom and Robert E. Page Jr.
Rice interviewed Leal last August in Kyoto at the International Congress of Entomology (ICE 2024), where Leal was chairing the International Congresses of Entomology Council and serving as a volunteer “citizen of the world” ambassador. Leal speaks Portuguese, Japanese and English.
Rice tells the story abut how Leal soared from a self-described “rough childhood” in his native Brazil to an internationally recognized scientist celebrated for his research on chemical communication and olfaction in insects.
But in his early childhood, Walter disliked insects, especially the cockroaches that crawled into his mouth while he was sleeping, and the mosquitoes that wanted his blood.
The Leal piece, titled “Walter Soares Leal: For the Love of Teaching,” zeroes in on his career accomplishments in Brazil, Japan and the United States, all of which led to his election to the prestigious National Academy of Sciences (NAS) in April of 2024.
Leal, who joined the UC Davis entomology faculty in 2000, advancing to professor and chair of the department, has served as professor of biochemistry with the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, College of Biological Sciences, since 2013.
Highly honored by his peers, Leal is the only UC Davis faculty member to receive all three of the Academic Senate's major honors: the 2020 Distinguished Teaching Award for Undergraduate Teaching, the 2022 Distinguished Scholarly Public Service Award, and the 2024 Faculty Distinguished Research Award. His teaching honors also include the 2020 Award for Excellence in Teaching from the Pacific Branch of ESA.
Elevator Bunny on High. “Walter is the elevator bunny on high, a full-time teacher, a full-time scientist, and he is engaged in multiple projects that make the university community a better place, all at the same time,” commented UC Davis distinguished professor and longtime NAS member Bruce Hammock, in a 2024 UC Davis news story announcing Leal's election to NAS.

Walter, the youngest of five siblings, related that his father was a baker and pastor, and his mother, a seamstress. “My dad passed when I was twelve,” Leal said. “It was a hard time in my life. He got sick when I was six and could not do too much…Basically, my mother ran the whole family without any income. But it's part of my life.”
Neither parent received a high school education, but it was his widowed mother who encouraged him to attend college. “She knew that technical school was not for me…She never went to high school, but she had a vision. Some people have little education, but that doesn't mean they have no vision.”
In high school, Walter began earning money--and prestige--as a radio-broadcast journalist, covering soccer and other sports. He went on to cover the USA Open Cup in the United States.
And he went on to receive his bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from the Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil; a master's degree in agricultural chemistry from Mie University, Japan; and a doctorate in applied biochemistry from the University of Tsukuba, Japan. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship in entomology and chemical ecology at the National Institute of Sericultural and Entomological Science, Japan.
Offered a Scholarship. Rice, a past president of ESA, began his Legends piece with: “When Walter Leal was offered a scholarship to leave his native Brazil and begin graduate education in Japan, he was required to become proficient in both Japanese and English--two languages he had never spoken--within six months. He accomplished this challenge, eventually earning both his master's and Ph.D. degrees. He was then offered a research scientist position with the National Institute of Sericultural and Entomological Science in Tsukuba, Japan, eventually becoming head of the Laboratory of Chemical Prospecting for six years. Leal was the first foreigner to be granted tenure at that institution.”
Leal's research accomplishments, Rice wrote, include “the identification of the first receptor in mosquitoes for the insect repellent DEET; the first isolation, cloning, and expression of pheromone-degrading enzymes in moths; and the identification and synthesis of complex pheromones from many insect species, including scarab beetles, true bugs, longhorned beetles, citrus leaf miner, navel orangeworm, citrus fruit borer, and many others. Synthetic sex pheromones for some of these pests are now being deployed via mating disruption in projects that have saved producers in Brazil and California hundreds of millions of dollars.”

The Legends' article includes an image of Leal sharing a laugh with noted chemical ecologist Murray Blum (1929-2015) of the University of Georgia, recipient of an ESA outstanding award in 1978, and the International Society of Chemical Ecology (ISCE) medal in 1989. Blum's daughter, Deborah Blum, is a Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist (formerly with the Sacramento Bee), an author, and the director of the Knight Science Journalism Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
“The image is from the ISCE meeting in Prague,” Leal recalled. “Murray said that he wished to speak as fast as I do, but he had to pronounce all the words, including verbs and prepositions, so he couldn't. I rebutted that I don't speak ‘fast.' He heard that as ‘slowly.' We all had a good laugh. Murray always had praise for my work and encouraging words when I was at the beginning of my research career.”
And about his dislike of insects in his early childhood? “I didn't like insects—the cockroaches and mosquitoes,” Leal told Rice. “Once, a cockroach walked on my lips when I was sleeping. What's with that? A kid who wakes up in the middle of the night with a cockroach in his mouth? Anyway, this was a bad entomology interaction in the beginning.”
That “bad entomology interaction” is now a distant memory.