Agricultural
Economics and Rural Sociology (AEC)
•Henry Thompson , AEC professor, has been awarded a Fulbright Senior Specialists grant in Economics at the University of Zagreb in Croatia. The Fulbright program offers two- to six-week grants to leading U.S. academics and professionals to support curricular and faculty development and institutional planning at colleges and universities in 140 countries. Thompson will present lectures on topics of international economics and microeconomics and a research seminar, and will travel to present seminars at another university in Croatia as well as one in Slovenia. He also will collaborate with colleagues at the University of Macedonia in Thessaloniki, Greece and the Athens University of Economics and Business. Thompson also plans to finish work on the new edition of his textbook in international economics.
Thompson, who teaches international economics, mathematical economics and resource and energy economics in the College of Agriculture, has a Ph.D. from the University of Houston in International Trade and Energy Economics. He has been at AU since 1987. Although he is based in the College of Agriculture, Thompson's grant assigned him to the economics faculty at the University of Zagreb's Graduate School of Economics and Business. •AEC Professor Joe Molnar has received a $50,000 SARE grant dealing with adoption of sustainable practices among farmers in the southern region. •Professor Bob Goodman received a SARE grant to analyze economic impacts of crop rotations on nematode populations with Austin Hagan . •Assistant Professor Diane Hite has been appointed to the Editorial Council of The Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics .•Norbert Wilson was recently approved for Level II Graduate Faculty status. •AEC Professor Walt Prevatt just returned from a tour of Brazil and Argentina.
Biosystems
Engineering (BIO)
•Exciting research is under way on precision agriculture and precision forestry. A new project was initiated during the fall of 2003 at the Tennessee Valley Research and Extension Center to examine the combined benefits of precision agriculture techniques and subsurface drip irrigation systems. Researchers involved in the project are BIO Assistant Professor Jim Baier and Professor Larry Curtis ; Randy Raper of the USDA Soil Dynamics Lab; and Joey Shaw, Charles Burmester and Paul Mask of Department of Agronomy and Soils.
•BIO Assistant Professor John Fulton is starting a new project to examine the techniques and benefits of variable rate applications of nitrogen on corn and wheat. Cooperators on this variable rate nitrogen project include Shaw and Burmester and Shannon Norwood from the Alabama Cooperative Extension System. They will be testing a variable rate applicator with input from the “GreenSeeker,” which is a real-time sensor that detects variations in nitrogen levels. •BIO Associate Professor Tim McDon-ald , BIO Professor and Head Steve Taylor , and Fulton are working on adapting many of the techniques developed in precision agriculture to what is becoming precision forestry. Projects currently under way include developing new sensors and systems that can be installed on forest harvesting machines to develop geospatial maps of forest growth and yield. •BIO and the USDA National Soil Dynamics Lab are hosting two visiting scientists this spring. Charles Duruoha , who is conducting research on management and alleviation of soil compaction, will be here for several months. Duruoha is originally from Nigeria but comes to Auburn by way of Brazil. Jeff Tullberg , who hails from the University of Queensland in Australia, is sharing the results of his research on controlled traffic farming and precision agriculture. Tullberg visited the Soil Dynamics Lab during March.
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•Students and faculty from BIO recently participated
in the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering’s annual E-Day
recruiting event at Foy Student Union. This is the largest single
engineering recruiting event in the state of Alabama. Hundreds
of junior high and high school students visited the BIO exhibits.
BIO students also showed off their quarter-scale pulling
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High
School students visit the BIO exhibit at the Samuel Ginn College
of Engineering's annual E-Day recruiting event.
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team tractor alongside a new Agco Challenger tractor Yancy Agricultural
Proucts of Albany, Ga., gererously provided a tractor for the event.
This rubber-tracked was a real croud pleaser and encouraged many potential
students to stop by and talk about BIO programs.
•Students in BIO Assistant Professor Diran Fasina’s
thermal process engineering course recently visited the international
poultry expo in Atlanta.
•Professor Kyung Yoo and students in his land and water
conservation engineering course attended the WaterQuest and Nonpoint
Source Watershed Forum meeting in Birmingham.
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•The American Society of Agricultural Engineering
(ASAE) student branch quarter-scale tractor pulling team, dubbed
the “War Eagle Pullers,” is working hard on its
entry in the 2004 international quarter-scale tractor design
competition. This competition is sponsored by ASAE, the society
for engineering in agricultural, food, forest and biological
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members serviced 142 lawnmowers during the one-day Annual
Spring Lawnmover Clinic.
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systems. Students design and build a quarter-scale tractor, present
their design to industry judges and then compete in a tractor pull
competition. This year’s team received grants from the AU Concessions
Board and from the College of Engineering to purchase tools and equipment
to help fabricate their tractor. To help sponsor this team, please
contact ASAE Student Branch Advisor Tim McDonald at 334-844-3545.
•Student and faculty members of ASAE conducted their
annual spring lawnmower clinic in March at the Tom Corley Building.
Students serviced a record 142 lawnmowers during the one-day event.
Their service includes changing the oil, sharpening the blade, cleaning
the air filter, cleaning the spark plug and washing the mower. A dedicated
group of 20 students and five faculty members worked hard on the project,
which generated funds to be used for the quarter-scale tractor team
and for travel to regional and national ASAE student events.
•BIO’s geospatial technology (GPS and GIS) course
continues to be a popular course across campus. This spring 21 students
from majors such as forestry, civil engineering, fisheries and BIO
were enrolled in the class. This course, which was developed by Baier
and Taylor, is the only course on campus that lets students learn
how to use GPS for mapping and surveying and then use those data in
geographic information systems. Baier is currently teaching the course.
•Students in the geospatial course and in other BIO courses
are enjoying new computing equipment this spring. Last fall, the AU
provost’s office awarded a grant to BIO for upgrading computing
equipment and for distance learning equipment. With these funds, BIO
has created a new 20-seat teaching computing lab in what was the old
senior design room. It is considered “temporary” because
heating and air conditioning, electrical, data and other utilities
need to be upgraded. BIO is soliciting help from alumni and friends
to make these upgrades and, ultimately, provide a first-class GIS/CAD
computing facility.
•BIO selected Buddy Cox, a 1979 AU agricultural engineering
graduate, as its Outstanding Alumnus for 2004. Cox was honored at
the Ginn College of Engineering Honors Reception in March. He is chief
geotechnical engineer and environmental compliance engineer for the
Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT). He began his career
with the Alabama Department of Public Health and served in the Alabama
Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) as the head of the Hazardous
Waste Branch of ADEM’s Land Division. Within ALDOT, he served
as head of the Hazardous Materials Program before becoming the state
geotechnical engineer.
•Sara Johnson also was recognized at the Honors Reception
as the Outstanding Biosystems Engineering Student. Johnson is a BIO
senior from Watkinsville, Ga. In addition to having an exceptional
academic record, she was awarded a Birdsong Fellowship from the College
of Engineering in 2002. Through this fellowship, Johnson spent a year
in Morocco learning about engineering and the Moroccan culture. Her
career interests lie primarily in ecological and environmental engineering.
•Two BIO faculty members received significant recognition
from their peers and from their students. Professor Clifford Flood,
who retired last year after 32 years of service to Auburn, was named
the Outstanding Faculty Member for 2004 by the students in BIO. Flood
also received the Engineering Student Council’s Outstanding
Faculty Member in the College of Engineering award. BIO Professor
Larry Curtis also was honored. The Alabama Section of ASAE presented
Curtis its Distinguished Engineer award in March.
Horticulture
(HF)
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•HF welcomes Wheeler Foshee to the faculty. Foshee
joined the faculty in fall 2004, transferring from the Department
of Entomology and Plant Pathology where he served as an Extension
pesticide specialist. Before coming to HF, Foshee conducted
fruit and vegetable IPM research and taught a class entitled
Insecticides in the Environment. Foshee’s new position
focuses on vegetable crop production research and instruction.
He will teach Sustainable Vegetable Crop Production and another
course yet to be decided. |
HF
Professor Wheeler Foshee
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•HF’s student chapter of Associated Landscape Contractors
of America (ALCA) recently worked on the beginning stages for construction
of two 18x14-foot greenhouses at Auburn Junior High School. This project
is a result of the combined efforts of math teacher Cynda Fickert
and HF professor and ALCA sponsor Joe Eakes.
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ALCA
members gave out trees for
Arbor Day.
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Fickert believes in exposing
her students to math in innovative ways. Her latest idea was for her
students to grow plant material, take and record measurements of the
plant’s growth and then compare different treatments using various
statistical procedures. She received a Toyota-sponsored grant that
provides the money to build two greenhouses in which her students
could grow the plant material necessary for their experiments. Fickert
asked Eakes, whose son had previously been in her class, if he would
assist in preparing the grant.
•The HF department is currently accepting applications
for participation in an eight to 10-day excursion to Europe. This
learning opportunity, provided by the Henry P. Orr Endowment, will
send two to three students and one faculty member to tour public and
private gardens of London, Southern England and Paris.The trip will
occur in late May. Watch for a detailed synopsis of our students’
unique learning experience in the next issue of Ag Illustrated.
Orr was a distinguished professor and mentor who believed in
supplementing students’ classroom education with experience
in the horticulture industry. This endowment fund was established
to support undergraduate horticulture education beyond the classroom.
Contact the department if you are interested in contributing to the
endowment fund.
•The four cornerstones of ALCA are professional, social
and community development and fundraising. ALCA students flexed their
professional muscle in March while participating in the ALCA Student
Career Days. This is a national competition that HF students attend
annually. The three-day event was held in Columbus, Ohio. HF students
competed against students enrolled in horticulture and landscape contracting
programs from colleges and universities across the country in several
different categories directly related to skills necessary in the horticulture
industry. The event offered the opportunity for students to meet prospective
employers in the industry to discuss both internship and full-time
positions.
•HF hosts two receptions annually that provide a chance
for fellowship among alumni, faculty, staff and current students.
The most recent event was held in Mobile at the Gulf States Horticultural
Expo during January. Highlights of the gathering included a top 10
list of horticulture highlights and an open forum on where our graduates
are now. The next reception will be held in August at the Southern
Nurserymens’ Association Trade Show in Atlanta, Ga.
•HF Professor Dave Williams participated in the USDA
ESCOP/ACOP Leadership Development Program.
•Mark your calendars for two big fall events: the Second
Annual Henry P. Orr Golf Classic, to be held Oct. 22, and the AU Fall
Landscape School, to be held Nov. 4-5. Look for more details on these
events in future issues of Ag Illustrated.
•HF alumnus Bryson James was inducted into the AU Ag
Alumni Association’s Hall of Honor. For more details see the
story on page 14 of this issue of Ag Illustrated.
Agronomy and
Soils (AY)
•AY graduate student Rasanthi Wijesinghe recently won
third place in the 14th annual Graduate Research Forum’s Session
C Poster Presentations. The forum is a multidisciplinary exhibition
of student research sponsored by AU’s Graduate Student Council
that allows graduate, professional and undergraduate students an opportunity
to present their research in a public setting.
Entomology
and Plant Pathology (ENTPLP)
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LINNAEAN
TEAM. (left to right) Jason Forster (captain), Nathan Burkett,
Whitney Qualls, Elly Maxwell and Laura Cooper (alternate)
will compete at the national competition in Salt Lake City,
Utah, in November 2004.
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•ENTPLP
was well represented at the 2004 Annual Meetings of the Southeastern
Branch of the Entomological Society of America, held in Charleston,
S.C., in February. Several departmental faculty and students won awards
at the meeting.
•The
department’s Linnaean Team was runner-up champions in the Linnaean
Game Competition at the annual meeting and will represent the Southeastern
Region, along with the team from Clemson University, at the national
competition in Salt Lake City, Utah, in November 2004. Auburn’s
team, coached by ENTPLP Professor Gary Mullen, is composed entirely
of master’s degree students. Members are Nathan Burkett, Jason
Forster, Whitney Qualls, Elly Maxwell and Laura Cooper. Auburn defeated
teams from the University of Florida and North Carolina State University
before losing out to Clemson in the championship round.
•In
other annual meeting competitions, master’s student Nathan Burkett
placed second in the Photo Salon, and graduate student Huqi Liu placed
first in the Poster Presentation Competition.
Mullen also was installed as the incoming president of the
Society, replacing ENTPLP Department Chair Michael Williams, who presided
over the 2004 meetings. This is the first time in the history of the
society that back-to-back presidents of the Entomological Society
were elected from the same university.
•Recent
promotions in the department include Kathy Lawrence, who was promoted
to associate professor with tenure; Bill Moar, who was promoted to
professor; and John Murphy, who also was promoted to professor.
•In
this year’s AU Graduate Student Research Forum, ENTPLP master’s
student Nathan Burkett took second place in Session 3 Science Oral
Presentations, and ENTPLP Ph.D. student Qiang Xu placed first in Session
A Poster Presentations.
Poultry Science (PH)
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Teaching Excellence
award winner Roger Lien, center, with John Heilman, left,
senior presidential advisor, and Owen Brown, president of
AU Alumni Association
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•Two
PH graduate students were winners in the AU Graduate Student Council
14th Annual Graduate Research Forum competition held in Auburn in
March. Nancy Joseph won first place in the competition’s Science
Oral Presentations section and Brigid McCrea won first place in the
Session B Poster Presentations. The forum provides graduate, professional
and undergraduate students an opportunity to present their research
in a public setting.
•PH
Professor and Undergraduate Program Coordinator Roger Lien received
one of two Teaching Excellence awards presented by the Auburn Alumni
Association this year. Since Lien came to Auburn in 1989 and assumed
primary responsibility for the teaching program, PH’s undergraduate
enrollment has doubled. Lien coordinates PH’s recruiting, advising,
teaching and extracurricular activities, and assists with scholarship
and internship programs. He has been instrumental in initiating, funding
and conducting the statewide high school FFA Poultry Career Development
Event program through which many PH students have come to Auburn.
He also developed PH’s Teacher-Counselor Education Program and
Poultry Industry Shortcourse series. These summer workshops introduce
high school and junior college counselors and science and agribusiness
teachers to the educational opportunities in poultry science and career
opportunities associated with the poultry industry that are available
to their students. As advisor to the student Poultry Science Club
he has guided the club in arranging industry and alumni speakers at
all biweekly club meetings and organizing popular smoked bird sales,
which fund all club activities including their trip to the U.S. Poultry
& Egg Association’s International Poultry exposition and
the renovation and maintenance of a demonstration poultry house at
the Alabama Sheriffs Girl’s Ranch in Tallapoosa County.
Fisheries
and Allied Aquacultures (FAA)
•Several
years ago, Alabama catfish producers came to FAA Extension Aquaculturist
Gregory N. Whitis looking for help. They needed to find farm workers
who were responsible, dependable and had an interest in fish culture.
Recirculating aquaculture systems were popular teaching tools in high
schools, and two systems were acquired for the Marengo and Hale county
school districts through a grant from the State Catfish Committee,
a commodity group of the Alabama Farmers Federation. These systems,
albeit small—only 1,000 gallons in size—were used for
two years and were successful in teaching aquaculture principles in
an agriscience curriculum. (One graduate, Ryan Clary, went on to become
an FAA student.)
About
two years ago, Whitis heard about a commercial-scale aquaponics system
that profitably markets lettuce and tilapia, and he recognized that
this system had potential as a teaching tool for west Alabama. Whitis
worked with Frank Stegall, superintendent of the Hale County School
District, to build a state-of-the-art aquaponics facility at Hale
County’s vocational school, which was funded through a $50,000
vocational grant. Whitis and aquascience teacher Kristie Howell arranged
the construction of a 100-foot-long greenhouse and functioning aquaponics
system, stocked with fish and plants. FAA staff members Len Vining
and Jesse Chappell assisted in the planning and construction of the
facility. By late fall 2003, the 10,000-gallon system was up and running,
stocked with koi, tilapia, tomatoes, basil, squash, mint, bibb and
romaine lettuce. Whitis continues to offer technical assistance to
the program.
•FAA
Professor Mike Maceina recently was asked to serve on the Alabama
Aquatic Resource Committee, which will serve as an advisory committee
to the commissioner of conservation and the Conservation Advisory
Board.
•FAA
Professor Rex Dunham just published Aquaculture and Fisheries Biotechnology,
Genetic Approaches, which provides an accessible overview of fish
genetics advancements. The book addresses such issues as polyploidy,
sex-reversal and breeding, gene mapping and commercial applications.
•Two
FAA students, Chris Miller and Laban Lindley, recently received student
awards at the annual meeting of the World Aquaculture Society.
•An
Alabama Water Watch program under way in the Philippines has been
highlighted in the United Nation’s Department of Economic and
Social Affairs success story Web site. The project, entitled “Catalysing
Community Participation: Water Quality Monitoring Programme in the
Philippines,” was conducted in Lantapan, Bukidnon, Mindanao,
the Philippines, and was a U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID), Sustainable Agriculture and Natural Resource Management Collabor-ative
Research Support Program (SANREM/CRSP) project that involved Auburn
University, Heifer Project International, Central Mindanao University
and the Municipal Government of Lantapan, Tigbantay Wahig.
It involved freshwater management, technology transfer, awareness
raising and capacity building around water quality. Details of the
project and the success story highlight can be found at
www.un.org/
esa/sustdev/mgroups/success/phil_pro.htm. The USAID is writing
up other aspects of this project and the SANREM CRSP program in an
upcoming publication.
•FAA
Professor Bill Deutsch, who heads Alabama Water Watch, recently submitted
a chapter, co-authored by Jim Orprecio of Heifer International, entitled
“Community-based Water Monitoring in the Philippines and Beyond:
A Decade of Investment and Potential,” to be published in the
SANREM/ Southeast Asia sponsored book entitled, Land Use Changes in
Tropical Watersheds: Causes, Consequences, and Policy Options.
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