Peggy Lemaux
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peggy Goodenow Lemaux[1] is an American plant biologist. She won a 2003 Dennis R. Hoagland Award.[2]
She graduated from Miami University, and University of Michigan,[3] She studied with Stan Cohen. She was a research scientist at DeKalb Genetics. She is a Professor of Cooperative Extension at the University of California, Berkeley.[4] She won a grant from the Gates Foundation to study sorghum.[5] She developed genetically modified varieties of barley, wheat and sorghum.[6] She opposed an anti-GMO ballot initiative in California.[7][8] She has several patents.[9]