In 1908, Yevgeny Pavlovsky graduated from the St. Petersburg Academy in Biology. He became a professor at his
alma mater in 1921. In 1933–1944, he worked at the All-union Institute of Experimental Medicine in Leningrad and simultaneously at the Tajik branch of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union (1937–1951). Pavlovsky held the post of the director of the Zoology Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union in 1942–1962. In 1946, he was appointed head of the Department of Parasitology & Medical Zoology at the Institute of Epidemiology & Microbiology of the Soviet Academy of Medical Sciences. Yevgeny Pavlovsky was the president of the Soviet Geographical Society in 1952–1964. Under Pavlovsky's direction, they organized numerous complex expeditions to the
Central Asia,
Transcaucasus,
Crimea,
Russian Far East and other regions of the
Soviet Union to study
endemic parasitic and
transmissible diseases (
tick-borne relapsing fever,
tick-borne encephalitis,
Pappataci fever,
leishmaniasis etc.). Pavlovsky introduced the concept of
natural nidality of human diseases, defined by the idea that microscale disease foci are determined by the entire ecosystem. This concept laid the foundation for the elaboration of a number of preventive measures and promoted the development of the environmental trend in parasitology (together with the works of parasitologist
Valentin Dogel). Yevgeny Pavlovsky researched host organism as a habitat for parasites (
parasitocenosis), numerous matters of regional and landscape parasitology, life cycles of a number of
parasites,
pathogenesis of
helminth infection. Pavlovsky and his fellow scientists researched the
fauna of flying blood-sucking insects (
gnat) and methods of controlling them and venomous animals and characteristics of their venom. He was a deputy of the
Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th convocations. ==Publications==