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Harry Wallis Kew

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Name
  
Harry Kew

Died
  
1948

Fields
  
Zoology


Known for
  
Work on pseudoscorpions and molluscs

Harry Wallis Kew (1868-1948) was an amateur English zoologist.

Wallis Kew worked as a bank clerk in Kent who devoted his free time to the study of pseudoscorpions and molluscs. He is best remembered for his book entitled The dispersal of shells; an inquiry into the means of dispersal possessed by fresh-water and land Mollusc, which included a preface by Alfred Russel Wallace. In this work, Wallis Kew was tracking the phenomena that is now referred to as invasive species in relation to molluscs, and in particular the zebra mussel.

Wallis Kew was the grandson of woodcarver, Thomas Wilkinson Wallis, and in 1884 founded the Louth Naturalists’, Antiquarian and Literary Society.

The gastropod Ameranella kewi (Dickerson, 1915) was named in his honour.

Works

  • 1893 The dispersal of shells; an inquiry into the means of dispersal possessed by fresh-water and land Mollusc
  • 1901 Lincolnshire Pseudoscorpions: With an Account of the Associations of Such Animals with Other Arthropods
  • 1911 A Synopsis of the False-scorpions of Britain and Ireland
  • 1912 On the Pairing of Pseudoscorpiones
  • 1914 On the Nests of Pseudoscorpiones: With Historical Notes on the Spinning Organs and Observations on the Building and Spinning of the Nests
  • 1932 Thomas Johnson, Botanist and Royalist, Etc.
  • References

    Harry Wallis Kew Wikipedia