David Keilin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Keilin

Born March 21, 1887
Moscow
Died February 27, 1963
Cambridge
Fields entomology and parasitology
Alma mater University of Liège
Doctoral advisor George Nuttall
Known for cytochrome

David Keilin (March 21, 1887, MoscowFebruary 27, 1963, Cambridge) was an entomologist, among other things.

His family returned to Warsaw early in his youth. He did not attend school until age ten due to ill health and asthma. Only seven years later, in 1904, he enrolled in the University of Liège. He later studied at Magdalene College, Cambridge and became a British citizen.

He became research assistant to George Nuttall, first Quick Professor of Biology at the University of Cambridge, in 1915, and spent the rest of his career there, succeeding Nuttall as Quick Professor and director of the Molteno Institute in 1931. He retired in 1952.

He made extensive contributions to entomology and parasitology during his career. He published thirty-nine papers between 1914 and 1923 on the reproduction of lice, the life-cycle of the horse bot-fly, the respiratory adaptations in fly larvae, and other subjects.

He is most known for his research and rediscovery of cytochrome in the 1920s (he invented the name). It had been discovered by C. A. McMunn in 1884, but that discovery had been forgotten or misunderstood.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1926. He won its Royal Medal in 1939 and its Copley Medal in 1951.

[edit] External links