Rita Rossi Colwell (born November 23, 1934) is an American environmental microbiologist and scientific administrator. Colwell holds degrees in bacteriology, genetics, and oceanography and studies infectious diseases. Colwell is the founder and Chair of CosmosID, a bioinformatics company. From 1998 to 2004, she was the 11th Director and 1st female Director of the National Science Foundation.[1] She has served on the board of directors of EcoHealth Alliance since 2012.[2][3]
Early life and education
Colwell was born on November 23, 1934, in Beverly, Massachusetts. Her parents, Louis and Louise Rossi, had eight children, Rita being the seventh child born into the Rossi household. Neither her mother nor her father were from scientific backgrounds. In 1956, Rita obtained a B.S. in bacteriology from Purdue University. She also received her M.S. in genetics from Purdue in 1957. Colwell obtained her Ph.D. from the University of Washington in aquatic microbiology under the direction of microbiologist John Liston in 1961.[4][5] She participated in a post-doctoral fellowship at the Canadian National Research Council in Ottawa.
Career
Colwell is recognized for her study of global infectious disease spread through water sources and its impacts on global health.[6] Through this research, she has developed an international network that has brought attention to the emergence of new infectious diseases in drinking/bathing water, pertaining mostly to its role on the developing world.
Cholera research
During early research and study of cholera, Colwell discovered that cholera can lay dormant in unfavorable conditions and then resume normal functions when conditions are favorable again.[1]
Many of her research papers have focused on abating the spread of cholera in the developing world by improving ways to track its spread and researching inexpensive methods for filtrating out the infection agents of cholera in water systems. Some of these tracking methods include observing weather patterns, surface water temperatures, chlorophyll concentrations, and rainfall patterns. Colwell's findings of correlations between these phenomena showed that the infection rate of cholera is connected to water temperatures. This rising temperature causes algae blooms that host cholera bacteria, and rainfall and extreme weather patterns aid in spreading cholera among water systems.[7] Colwell also concluded that climate change will have a profound impact on the spread of cholera.
Colwell has proposed ways people in the developing world can use inexpensive methods to filter water when water treatment facilities are not available. In one study spanning about 3 years, 65 villages in rural Bangladesh comprising 133,000 individuals, participated in an experiment in which they used folded sari cloth or nylon mesh filters placed over water pots to acquire safe drinking water from their local waterways. These inexpensive and readily available materials yielded a 48% reduction in cholera, when compared with the control: absence of any type of filter.[8]
National Science Foundation
Colwell was the first female director of the National Science Foundation (NSF) and held this position from 1998 to 2004.[9] In a presentation to members of the foundation in 2002, she detailed what the foundation should address in the future. She explained that an educated society is critical not just for developing technology, but for supporting that development, both by the public and by the government.
Colwell is interested in K-12 science and mathematical education, and she is a proponent of increasing the number of women and minorities in science and engineering.[10] Rita Colwell was responsible for doubling the funding to the NSF initiative ADVANCE, which supports the advancement of women in academic science and engineering careers. Colwell also pushed to invest $60 million as part of a new priority area in mathematical and statistical sciences.[11]
In 2004, Colwell completed her term as director of the National Science Foundation.[12] She then became the chief scientist at Canon U.S. Life Sciences, a division of Canon. She served as chairman of Canon U.S. Life Sciences[12] until 2006 when she was named as Senior Advisor and Chairman Emeritus.
Colwell founded the company CosmosID in 2008, and she currently serves as global science officer and chairman of the board.[9] CosmosID is a bioinformatics company that develops various types of equipment to identify microbial activity in a variety of ecosystems.
EcoHealth Alliance
Colwell was elected to the Board of Directors of EcoHealth Alliance in November 2012.[3]
Colwell has authored or co-authored more than 800 scientific reports and publications, along with 19 books.[14]
In 1977, Colwell produced the award-winning film Invisible Seas. In this 26-minute film, the microbiology department at the University of Maryland, College Park demonstrates what types of methodology are required of marine microbiologists when studying microorganisms in the ocean. They emphasize the importance of marine microbiologists studying microorganisms in the ocean in order to determine the impact pollution has had on our oceans.[15]
Colwell is the founding editor of GeoHealth, a journal of the American Geophysical Union. Colwell recognized the increase in published Geohealth research due to the advancement in our understanding of how Earth and space science provides deeper insight into health and disease in both people and ecosystems.
Colwell's memoir "A Lab of One's Own: One Woman's Personal Journey Through Sexism in Science",[16] written with Sharon Bertsch McGrayne, was released in August 2020.
Colwell is a co-author of a letter published in The Lancet titled "Statement in support of the scientists, public health professionals, and medical professionals of China combatting COVID-19" in which the authors declared, "We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin."[17] Her link with EcoHealth Alliance was not reported as a conflict of interest.
Columbus Center in Baltimore was renamed Rita Rossi Colwell Center in her honor in 2022[32]
Personal life
Colwell met her husband, Jack Colwell, when he was a physical chemistry graduate student at Purdue.[1] They had two daughters and three grandchildren. Jack H. Colwell (1931–2018) was a scientist at the National Bureau of Standards.[33]
^ abAyala, Christine (2016). "Rita R. Colwell". National Science and Technology Medals Foundation. Retrieved 29 October 2016.
^University of Maryland, College Park; Department of Microbiology; University of Maryland, College Park; Office of University Relations (1 January 1977), Invisible seas, The Office, OCLC19548735
^Colwell, Rita R.; McGrayne, Sharon Bertsch (4 August 2020). A Lab of One's Own: One Woman's Personal Journey Through Sexism in Science (First Simon & Schuster hardcover ed.). New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN978-1-5011-8127-6. OCLC1124524054.