Samuel Ottmar Mast
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Samuel Ottmar Mast (5 October 1871 – 3 February 1947) was an American zoologist who studied behavioural physiology, particularly the response to light in protozoa. He also proposed the tail-contraction model of sol-gel based amoeboid locomotion. He served as a professor of zoology at Johns Hopkins University. Mast was born in
Washtenaw County Washtenaw County () is a county located in the U.S. state of Michigan. At the 2020 census, the population was 372,258. The county seat is Ann Arbor. The county was authorized by legislation in 1822 and organized as a county in 1826. Washtenaw ...
, Michigan to German immigrants Ferdinand Friedrich Gottlob and Beata Agnes née Staebler. He went to local schools before joining the State Normal College, Ypsilanti, Michigan where he received a teaching certificate in 1897. He received a BS from the University of Michigan in 1899 and worked on a PhD in zoology at Harvard after which he was involved in teaching, at Hope College, Holland (1899-1908) followed by Goucher College (1909-1911) after which he was invited to join Johns Hopkins University by Herbert Spencer Jennings, directing the zoology department in 1938 just before retiring. Mast's major contributions included a study of locomotion in amoebae. He suggested that the cytoplasm underwent changes in their qualities in different parts, coining the terms plasmasol and plasmagel. He also examined reactions to light in protozoa and invertebrates including analyses of the spectral sensitivity. He published a book on the topic of light and phototropisms in 1911. Mast received the Cartwright Prize of 1901 and a M.Pd. degree from Michigan in 1919. Mast married Grace Rebecca Tennent sister of
David Hilt Tennent David Hilt Tennent (28 May 1873 – 14 January 1941) was an American biologist and professor at the Bryn Mawr College. He was a specialist on cytology and embryology, particularly based on fertilization studies of echinoderms and made numerous st ...
in 1908 and they had three daughters.


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* Light and the behavior of organisms (1911) {{DEFAULTSORT:Mast, Samuel Ottmar 1871 births 1947 deaths American zoologists Johns Hopkins University faculty University of Michigan alumni Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni Hope College faculty Goucher College faculty and staff