Peter J. Davies


Peter John Davies is a professor emeritus of Plant Physiology in the Departments of Plant Biology and Horticulture at Cornell University who is notable for his work on plant development, plant hormones, and in educating the public on agricultural technology and genetically-modified organisms as a Jefferson Science Fellow from 2011-2014. As a Jefferson Science Fellow Davies monitored developments in agriculture and food security, monitored the status of biotech crops in Europe, and provided input to promote the acceptance of these crops on a scientific basis.

Personal life

Peter J. Davies was born in Harrow in London U.K. in 1940, the son of William B. Davies, an Anglican vicar in Edmonton and Enfield U.K., and Ivy D Davies. Peter Davies married Linda DeNoyer. They have two children: Kenneth Davies and Caryn Davies.

University life

Davies earned a B.Sc. in Agricultural Botany and a Ph.D. in Agricultural Botany with an emphasis on herbicide physiology in 1966 from the University of Reading in England, and an M.S. in Plant Physiology from the University of California at Davis in 1964. He did a post doc with Arthur Galston and an instructor in the Biology Department at Yale University. At Cornell University, Davies became an Assistant Professor in 1969, an Associate Professor in 1975, a Full Professor in 1983 and retired in 2016. A Mini-Symposium Celebrated Davies' 46 years in Plant Sciences at Cornell.

Research

Davies research has been on the role of plant hormones in whole plant physiology, including stem growth, whole-plant senescence, tomato ripening and potato tuberization.
In 1866, Gregor Mendel, the father of genetics, demonstrated that height in peas was controlled by a single factor. More than a century later, Davies discovered that Mendel's stem length gene in peas encoded a gibberellin 3β-hydroxylase. This enzyme converts GA20, an inactive form of gibberellin to GA1, the form of gibberellin that stimulates stem growth in peas. The conversion of gibberellins results in the tall phenotype that Mendel observed. The mutant that was observed by Mendel is shorter because it is unable to convert sufficient GA20 to GA1.

Awards and honors

Davies was the Potato Grower Researcher of the Year for 2008. He was a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies, Università di Bologna, Italy in 2010, an OECD Research Fellow at the Università di Bologna, Italy in 2010, a Jefferson Science Fellow in the United States Department of State from 2011-2014 and was made an International Professor of Plant Biology at Cornell University in 2013.

Video lectures on Genetically-Modified Organisms (GMOs)