- Lewis Stadler
Infobox scientist
name = Dr. Lewis Stadler
image_size = 150px
birth_date =July 6 ,1896
birth_place =
nationality =United States
field = Genetics
work_institutions =University of Missouri U.S. Department of Agriculture
alma_mater =University of Missouri University of Florida
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for = His research pertaining to radiation on crops
prizes =Lewis John Stadler (
July 6 ,1896 -May 12 ,1954 ) was an American geneticist. His research focused on the mutagenic effects of different forms of radiation on economically important plants likemaize andbarley .Background
Lewis John Stadler was born in
St. Louis, Missouri , in 1896 and, after taking a B.S. in agriculture at theUniversity of Florida (1917), earned the A.M. (1918), and Ph.D. (1922), at theUniversity of Missouri . He joined the Department of Field Crops faculty in 1922, and remained at Missouri until 1954, acting as visiting professor at theCalifornia Institute of Technology (1940), andYale University (1950). Beginning in 1930 he simultaneously held an appointment with theU.S. Department of Agriculture . Academic honors included the presidencies of theGenetics Society of America ,American Society of Naturalists , andSigma Xi .While Stadler spent almost all his academic life at the
University of Missouri he was also involved in activities with a wider scope. During the 1930s Stadler was involved in efforts to bring European scientists to the U.S. to escape Nazism. In 1948 Stadler was appointed a delegate to the Eighth International Congress of Genetics, meeting in Stockholm. TheU.S. Department of Agriculture , however, rejected his passport application and conducted a loyalty investigation; Stadler at first thought it was a State Department action.Stadler married Cornelia Field Tuckerman in 1919, and they had six children: Maury Tuckerman, Henry Lewis, David Ross, John Brandeis, Eliot Tuckerman, and Joan.
Stadler's work in
genetics concentrated upon the study ofmutation incorn . He did much work on the effects ofX-ray treatments, and did comparative studies of mutation caused by X-rays and byultraviolet rays . [cite journal | last = Stadler| first = L. J. | authorlink = Lewis Stadler | coauthors = G. F. Sprague | title = Genetic Effects of Ultra-Violet Radiation in Maize. I. Unfiltered Radiation | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 22 | issue = 10 | pages = 572–578 | publisher = US Department of Agriculture and Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station | date = 1936-10-15 | url = http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/22/10/579.pdf | doi = | id = | accessdate = 2007-10-11 ] His work earned him an international reputation.He died of
leukemia in 1954.In his honor, the
University of Missouri holds the Stadler Genetics Symposium every two years. [ [http://muconf.missouri.edu/stadler/information.html Stadler Genetics Symposium] - University of Missouri]References
*Smocovitis, Vassiliki Betty. 2000. Stadler, Lewis John. "American National Biography Online"
*Biography was taken from [http://www.umsystem.edu/whmc/invent/2429.html This Archive]
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