Malcolm Wilson FRSE FLS (1882 - 1960) was a 20th-century Scottish botanist and mycologist. He was an expert on the identification of dry rot and its remediation.
Wilson studied science at the University of London, graduating with a BSc in 1905. In 1909 he became Senior Demonstrator in Botany at Imperial College, London. He gained a doctorate (DSc) in 1911. He was created a Fellow of the Linnean Society in 1910.[1]
He joined the Botany Department of the University of Edinburgh in 1911 as the first lecturer in mycology and bacteriology.[2]
During the First World War he returned to London to serve as a pathologist at the County of London War Hospital. He returned to the University of Edinburgh after the war.
In 1920 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir Isaac Bayley Balfour, Frederick Orpen Bower, James Hartley Ashworth and Robert Wallace.[3]
His students included Dr Mary Noble (1911-2002)[4] and Douglas Mackay Henderson.
He retired in 1951 and went to live with his son Graham in Sheffield, dying there on 8 July 1960.
He was father to Graham Malcolm Wilson and Cedric Wilson.