Dr Russell George Wilkinson Collection (Bio)

Russell Wikinson2Dr Russell George Wilkinson (1/2/1939-2/7/2019) grew up in Perth, WA. His undergraduate degree was in the Zoology Dept at the University of Western Australia, majoring in Entomology.

This was when the bulk of his collection was made. It is possible that some of the specimens he collected at this time, particularly in the area of Perry’s Lakes, are now extinct since this area has long since become a housing estate. His Professor advised him to get into ‘this new molecular biology’ and he won a scholarship to get his PhD from London University at the Lister Institute.

(These days the once famous Lister Institute is a private hospital specialising in IVF and cosmetic surgery.)

He followed this with Post-Doc work at Johns Hopkins in the US. He was offered a lecturer position in the Dept of Microbiology at the University of Melbourne and that is where he remained until his retirement as senior lecturer. He specialised in anaerobic bacteriology.
Although his career took him away from entomology, it remained a life-long interest. On a work trip to PNG in 1982 he bought some specimens to add to his collection, it being illegal to collect them himself.

In retirement, his interest came to the fore. He ran a silkworm project which he took to local primary schools, having mastered the art of spinning the silk off the cocoon without harming the chrysalis. Thus the whole life cycle could be observed with the population controlled by the number of eggs one kept. After making the ‘tree change’ to Hepburn Shire and becoming a Foundation Member of the U3A and joining a local garden club, he gave talks on insects and helped educate both adults and children on differences between types of insects, which insects were beneficial in the garden, which to be wary of etc.

He was something of a local expert and people would leave insects in jars in his letterbox for his opinion on whether they were ‘good’ or ‘bad’ on the particular plant on which they were found (or does this ‘bite’ and is it poisonous?). His expertise stretched to the arachnids and he was the ‘go-to’ man to rescue people at all hours from the mythical ‘tarantula the size of a dinner plate’ found in their home. This was despite his explaining that Australia lacks tarantulas and Huntsmen are indeed useful.…

R Wilkinson Drawer 2Dr Wilkinsons collection now resides with the C.V.R.I.C thanks to the generous donation by his wife Peppa..