Samuel Rickard Christophers
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Sir Samuel Rickard Christophers (November 27, 1873 – February 19, 1978)[1] was a British protozoologist and medical entomologist specialising in mosquitoes. He was born in Liverpool.
An expert on tropical medicines, Christophers studied many diseases, particularly malaria. His work on the research of this disease won him the Royal Society's 1952 Buchanan Medal for "outstanding research" on the Anopheles mosquito that transmitted malaria. In his career he also contributed to the taxonomy of other parasites.
Christophers was also an honorary physician to King George V from 1927 to 1930.
[edit] Biography
See http://www.mosquitocatalog.org/pdfs/MS11N01P055.PDF pdf for a very full account
[edit] Works
- A summary of the recent observations upon the Anopheles of the Middle East. Indian Journal of Medical Research 7, pp. 710-716 (1920).
- With Shortt, H.E.: Malaria in Mesopotamia. Indian Journal of Medical Research 8, pp. 508-529 (1921).
- Fauna of British India Diptera Volume IV (1933).
[edit] References
- ^ Service, M.W. Obituary* Sir Rickard Christophers: A Tribute Mosquito Systematics Vol. 11 (l), 1979, 55-58
- Obituary- Antenna (Royal Entomological Society Bulletin) 2 (2)