Bernard Skinner (entomologist)

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Born1939
Croydon, England
Died7 February 2017 (aged 77)
Croydon, London
Bernard Skinner
Born1939
Croydon, England
Died7 February 2017 (aged 77)
Croydon, London
EducationSt Joseph's College, Upper Norwood
Known forThe Colour Identification Guide to Moths of the British Isles
The Skinner moth trap

Bernard Francis Skinner (1939 – 7 February 2017) was an English lepidopterist known for the Skinner moth trap and The Colour Identification Guide to Moths of the British Isles. The book made it easier to identify moths and the portable light trap made it easier to catch moths, thus encouraging the recording of moths as a hobby.

Early life

Bernard F Skinner was born in Croydon in the September quarter of 1939; his parents were Cecil Frank Skinner, a laundry van salesman and heavy labourer,[1] and Ellen M. Honeybul.[2] Following the death of his mother,[3] when he was three years old, Bernard was brought up by two aunts in West Norwood, London. His father, who preferred to be known as Frank,[4] lived nearby. His first school was St Joseph's College, Upper Norwood, and with a friend Terry Dillon, they visited nearby bombsites to find butterflies. Later they cycled to Streatham and Mitcham Commons and to Selsdon Bird Sanctuary. A life-long interest in moths started with the publication of R.L.E. Ford's The Observer's Book of the Larger British Moths.[5]

Family

Bernard married Jacqueline Wood (known as Jackie) at Newton Abbot in March 1967.[6]

Skinner trap

Publications

References

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