David E. Davis | |
Birth Date: | July 18, 1913 |
Death Date: | October 31, 1994 (aged 81) |
Birth Place: | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Death Place: | Santa Barbara, California, U.S. |
Discipline: | Ecologyzoology |
Education: | Swarthmore College (BA) Harvard University (MS, PhD) |
Workplaces: | Johns Hopkins University Pennsylvania State University North Carolina State University |
Sub Discipline: | Wildlife disease |
David E. Davis (July 18, 1913 - October 31, 1994) was an ecologist and animal behaviorist noted for being the "founder of modern rat studies".[1]
Davis was born in Chicago and raised in Wilmette, Illinois. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Swarthmore College in 1935, then a Master of Science and PhD at Harvard University in 1939. Davis completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Chicago, where he studied the behavior of chickens under L. V. Domm.[2]
From 1941 to 1943, Davis investigated the hosts of yellow fever in Brazil for the Rockefeller Foundation. He also spent two years studying typhus in Texas.
For 13 years, Davis worked as an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, where he started the Rodent Ecology Project. Through systematic research, he debunked the myth that there was one rat per person in New York City and placed the rat population at around 250,000.[3] Davis also researched the spread of the bubonic plague through rodents.[4]
He later became a professor at Pennsylvania State University, then chairman of zoology at North Carolina State University. During his career, he published three books and 230 papers.