Leonard Machlis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BornApril 13, 1915
DiedMarch 26, 1976(1976-03-26) (aged 60)
CitizenshipUS
Education
Leonard Machlis
BornApril 13, 1915
DiedMarch 26, 1976(1976-03-26) (aged 60)
CitizenshipUS
Education
PartnerGertrude Therese née Rafferty
Children4
Scientific career
Institutions

Leonard Machlis (April 13, 1915 March 26, 1976) was an American botanist. He was best known for his research on plant hormones involved in sexual reproduction. He was the editor of the Annual Review of Plant Physiology from 1959 to 1972 and received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1957.

Leonard Machlis, who went by "Len", was born on April 13, 1915[1] in Seattle, Washington to parents Beatrice and Samuel, both immigrants from Russia.[2] He had two younger siblings, Miriam and Jack.[3] He first attended Washington State University, graduating in 1937. Next, he went to the University of Hawaiʻi to complete a master's degree with Harry Clements, followed by a PhD at the University of California. Berkeley under Dennis Robert Hoagland in 1943.[4]

Career

Machlis's early career was spent on war-related projects. He first worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture for propagation of guayule plants for rubber production. Next, he worked on a guided missile project. After the war's conclusion, he briefly taught botany at the University of Illinois before accepting a position at University of California, Berkeley in 1946. There, he researched the nutrition of fungi, as well as chemical signalling between fungi gametes. He and Berkeley colleague Henry Rapoport discovered sirenin, which was "the first-known lower plant sex hormone or pheromone".[4] He was made the chair of the botany department in 1962, and remained thus until 1968. He was the editor of the Annual Review of Plant Physiology (now the Annual Review of Plant Biology) from 19591972.[4]

Awards and honors

Personal life and death

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI