Cyril Clarke

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Sir Cyril Astley Clarke (22 August 190721 November 2000) was a British physician, lepidopterist and geneticist.

Cyril Clarke's school education was at Wyggestson Grammar School in Leicester and Oundle School near Peterborough. His interest in butterflies and moths began at school. His studied natural science at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge University and then medicine at Guy's Hospital, London. During the Second World War he worked as a medic in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve.

Clarke is well known for his work on Rh disease of the newborn. He helped to developed the technique of giving Rh-negative women inter-muscular injections of anti-RhD antibodies during pregnancy to prevent Rh disease in their newborn babies. This was one of the major advances in preventive medicine in the second half of the 20th century.

Clarke answered an advert in an insect magazine for swallowtail butterfly pupae that had been placed by Philip Sheppard. They met and began working together in their common interest of lepidoptery. From 1959 they started running a moth trap in Caldy Common near West Kirby, Wirral, England. They studied the peppered moth, the scarlet tiger moth and swallowtail butterfly. They published papers on the genetics of lepidopera and also on Rh disease. Clarke continued research in his retirement and in 1988 he rediscovered a Scarlet Tiger Moth colony on the Wirral Way, West Kirby, that had been started in 1961 by Philip Sheppard. The colony was useful for study of the genetics of changes in populations.

He was married Frieda (or Féo) in 1934. Lady Féo Clarke died in 1998. Cyril Clark died in 2000. They had three sons.

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Peppered moth
Biology
Overview, ecology, and genetics | Evolution of
Writers and researchers
Bernard Kettlewell (The Evolution of Melanism) | Mike Majerus (Melanism: Evolution in Action)
Cyril Clarke | Bruce Grant | E.B. Ford | Philip Sheppard | J.W. Tutt
Jonathan Wells (Icons of Evolution) | Judith Hooper (Of Moths and Men)