She received her Ph.D. from the
University of Munich, Germany in 1930. She worked at the university with Professor
Karl von Frisch, who shared the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1973 for his work with bees. After completing her education, Berta and her husband, Ernst Scharrer embarked on a remarkable scientific career together. Their journey began at the Research Institute of Psychiatry in Munich, where Berta focused on the study of spirochaete infections in the brains of birds and amphibians. Berta Scharrer was forced to emigrate at the onset of the
Holocaust in 1937. She arrived with Ernst in the United States with a total of eight dollars. Ernst had secured a
Rockefeller Fellowship at the
University of Chicago and Berta continued her research, initially working with
Drosophila and later with cockroaches and related species for the remainder of her research career. The couple's academic journey took them to various institutions, with Ernst accepting academic appointments that determined their locations. Throughout their career, they conducted groundbreaking research on
neurosecretion, investigating the connection between the nervous and endocrine systems. Berta specialized in the study of invertebrates, while Ernst focused on vertebrates. She continued her research until her death in 1995 at the age of 88. Berta received numerous awards and honors throughout her career, including the
National Medal of Science from President
Ronald Reagan in 1983. Her work left a lasting impact on the fields of neurobiology and endocrinology, and she continues to be respected and influential among anatomists. ==Personal life==