|
|
|
|
PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Amy Steigman
American Phytopathological Society
Phone: +1.651.454.7250
Web: www.apsnet.org
E-mail: asteigman@scisoc.org
Discovering Women Scientists:
The Legacy of Effie Southworth
St. Paul, MN (March 16, 2001) It’s a renaissance of sorts. In
science, art and literature the once unknown contributions of women are
receiving more and more attention. Most agree the benefits of this new
publicity are significant. These stories empower women and give us all,
both men and women alike, a new perspective on the diversity of our nation’s
history-makers. As a respected scientist and the first woman researcher
hired by the USDA, Effie Southworth’s story is a perfect example.
Born in New York in 1860, Effie Southworth was well educated, studying
foreign languages, mathematics, zoology, chemistry, astronomy, physics,
geology, botany, and physiology. After earning a Bachelor of Science
degree in 1885 she accepted a two-year appointment as Fellow in Biology
and instructor in botany at Pennsylvania’s newly-established Bryn Mawr
College.
Her reputation as a gifted scientist and skilled researcher led the
USDA to offer her the position of assistant mycologist for its newly-created Section of Mycology (the first research position the USDA ever
offered to a woman). As assistant mycologist, Southworth played a critical
role in helping growers combat significant diseases affecting such crops
as grapes, apples, and oats.
But by far her most significant and lasting contribution was her 1891
discovery of a previously unknown fungus (Colletotrichum gossypii)
causing cotton anthracnose which was responsible for killing thousands of
acres of cotton each year. “This was an enormously important research
finding,” states Jean Ristaino, a plant pathologist at North
Carolina State University. “At the time there was real concern. This was
a deadly disease and once it struck a field of cotton, it easily wiped out
75% of the yield. And since cotton was a major economic crop, the
inability to identify and get this disease under control raised the real
possibility that a significant portion of the country’s businesses could
be devastated.” Not only did Southworth identify the culprit, but she
provided growers with measures for its control as well.
“It’s interesting to note,” states Ristaino, “that her fellow
scientists believed the disease was caused by another fungus. But
Southworth persisted, despite the doubts of her colleagues, in proving her
theory that it was a new, previously unknown fungus. You have to admire
that kind of professional courage in anyone, man or a woman, but
particularly a woman during a period of time in which women’s abilities
were often considered questionable.”
Effie Southworth’s life and research is the subject of this month’s
feature story on the APS website. For
more information, visit it at
www.apsnet.org/online/feature/southworth/. The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a
non-profit, professional scientific organization dedicated to the study
and control of plant diseases, with 5,000 members worldwide.
|