Society for Developmental Biology Honors Course Faculty Members

Scott E. Fraser. Photo courtesy University of Southern California.

Three affiliates have been honored by the Society for Development Biology, including longtime faculty member of the University of Southern California, who was awarded the in Developmental Biology.

"Fraser helped define our understanding of stem cells, cell lineage, and morphogenesis through development of tools that changed how developmental biology is studied," said the Society for Developmental Biology (SDB) in a .

The Conklin Medal recognizes a developmental biologist "who has made and is continuing to make extraordinary research contributions to the field, and is an excellent mentor who has helped train the next generation of outstanding scientists," according to the SDB. The award was established in 1995.

Fraser is a current member of the Society and served as director of the Embryology course form 1997 - 2001. He was also a faculty member from 1990-1995, 2002, 2004-2008, and in 2011. Fraser first came to the as a Whitman scientist in 1979.

Edwin G Conklin

Conklin at the

Edwin G. Conklin (1863-1952) was a celebrated developmental biologist and educator. He spent the majority of his professional career at Princeton University, and had a long history with . Conklin taught in the Embryology course for many years, was an Trustee, and owned a house in Woods Hole. He visited the every summer from the 1890s through the 1930s, according the History Project.

Also honored by the Society for Developmental Biology this year wasof Harvard University. Srivastava, who was a faculty member for the Embryology Course from 2017-2019 and is on a number of Committees, was awarded the. Srivastava was selected "for her work developing the acoel worm, Hofstenia miamia as a model to study whole-body regeneration and uncovering its gene regulatory network," said SDB in a.

of the University of California, Los Angeles, was awarded the 2021 SDB Lifetime Achievement Award for his work studying the molecular basis of the Spemann organizer and his work identifying goosecoid, Chordin, and others as key regulators of dorsal/ventral (DV) patterning, said the. De Robertis served as Embryology course faculty in 1979.