Born in Morrinsville on 18 July 1923, Morton was the son of Ronald Bampton Morton.[2] He was educated at Morrinsville District High School, and went on to study zoology at Auckland University College, graduating with the degree of MSc with first-class honours in 1948.[2][3] In 1952 he completed his PhD, followed in 1959 by a DSc, at the University of London. During this time he was also a lecturer in the zoology department at the same university.[4]
On his return from London in the early 1960s,[5] he became the first person to be appointed to the chair of the School of Zoology and Biological Sciences at the University of Auckland,[4] a position he held from 1959 to 1988.[1] He was considered at this time one of New Zealand's most talented up-and-coming academics,[6] and was later regarded by many as one of New Zealand's greatest marine biologists.[7]
His teaching style and influence have been well-documented in A History of Biology at Auckland University 1883–1983.[8] He believed in "humanising" complex scientific issues, and presenting them in laymen's language.[1]
Morton was also regarded as one of New Zealand's leading Christian academics and believed in a unified view of science and religion.[9] He told The New Zealand Herald upon his retirement in 1988 that "I find that my scientific work has confirmed my Christian convictions. To me biology and theology complement each other."[1] In his 1984 book Redeeming Creation[10] he acknowledged the influence of the French palaeontologistTeilhard de Chardin in forming the teleological view he expounded in his academic life.
He served on the Auckland Regional Authority from 1971 to 1974 for Takapuna, losing his re-election bid after switching his party affiliation to Labour.[11] In 1989 he became a founding member of the New Labour Party, which in 1991 formed a coalition with other parties called the Alliance.[6]
The shore ecology of Upolu – Western Samoa. Issue 31 of Leigh Lab. bulletin. John Edward Morton, Andrew Jeffs, Leigh Marine Laboratory. University of Auckland, 1993.
Shore life between Fundy tides. John Edward Morton, J. C. Roff, Mary Beverley-Burton. Canadian Scholars Press, 1991.
The shore ecology of the tropical Pacific. John Edward Morton. Unesco Regional Office for Science and Technology for South-East Asia, 1990.
Marine molluscs: Opisthobranchia, Part 2. Richard Carden Willan, John Edward Morton, John Walsby, Leigh Marine Laboratory, University of Auckland, 1984.
The sea shore ecology of Hong Kong. Brian Morton, John Edward Morton. The University of Hong Kong, 1983. ISBN962-209-027-3.
Marine molluscs: Amphineura, archaeogastropoda & pulmonata, Part 1. Issue 4 of Leigh Lab. bulletin. John Walsby, John Edward Morton, Leigh Marine Laboratory, University of Auckland, 1982.
Molluscs. John Edward Morton. Hutchinson University Library, 1979.
Seacoast in the seventies: the future of the New Zealand shoreline. John Edward Morton, David A. Thom, Ronald Harry Locker. Hodder and Stoughton, 1973.
Man, science and God. John Edward Morton. Collins, 1972.
The New Zealand sea shore. John Edward Morton, Michael C. Miller. Collins, 1968.
^Foster, Brian; Rattenbury, Jack; Marbrook, John (1983), A History of Biology at Auckland University 1883–1983 (Research Report), Department of Biology, University of Auckland
^Croxall, John (1971). Digestive system, feeding and ecology of some New Zealand intertidal ascidians (Doctoral thesis). ResearchSpace@Auckland, University of Auckland. hdl:2292/772.