Agricultural Economics and Rural
Sociology (AEC)
Jolly
Interim Head
Curtis Jolly, a professor in the Department of Agricultural Economics
and Rural Sociology (AEC) for the past 25 years, will be spending the
next two and half years in a new position. He was named department
interim head in February, a position he will fill until July 2007.
Jolly's vision for the department is to continue to
address issues related to traditional agricultural production, and
broaden the department's reach to embrace such issues as the greater
use of the environmental and natural resources for increasing the
welfare and quality of life in Alabama and beyond.
"Our clientele encompasses students, farmers, rural
people of Alabama and others who inhabit the universe and compete for
the world's resources", he says. Hence, our vision in the department
should involve the development of a teaching, research and
extension/outreach program that will satisfy the needs of our
clientele, given our human and physical resource capabilities.
"We must put in place a sound, competitive and dynamic
program, and develop a strategy to meet our short- and long-term
goals," he continues.
"Our goal should be to design and execute a program with the
utmost precision to meet the most pressing needs of our clientele while
allowing opportunities for the growth and development of the careers of
our faculty, staff and students."
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In the department's teaching program, Jolly hopes
to increase undergraduate and graduate student numbers and increase the
diversity of the student body while continuing to prepare students to
be productive and adaptable in the workplace and be creative and
sensitive to the needs of the nation and the world. The research
program will be developed with greater coordination among other CoAg
departments and an emphasis on greater networking with other colleges
to gain assistance and inspiration.
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Curtis
Jolly named AEC Interim Head.
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"In order to use our resources effectively, we must work
cooperatively with Alabama A&M and Tuskegee universities," Jolly
says. We have to be creative and innovative and encourage new ideas and
ventures This, he adds, will also help reduce any duplication of
research efforts in Alabama.
Extension and outreach efforts will be expanded so that
they engage all AEC faculty, staff and students. Jolly hopes this will
speed up the dissemination of new ideas discovered through research.
Jolly sees his role as interim head being part
leadership and part team-building. He hopes to form a true team of
academic players in AEC by stimulating and encouraging faculty and
staff while ensuring good governance at all levels.
Jolly, who joined the Auburn faculty in 1980, received
his bachelor's degree in animal science (business option) from Tuskegee
University, his master's degree in agricultural economics from Auburn
University and his Ph.D. in agricultural economics from Louisiana State
University.
In his role as a professor, Jolly conducts research in
the areas of sustainable aquaculture, natural resources and the
environment and trade policies.
Faculty
Accomplishments
Robert Taylor, an AEC professor who specializes in
industrial organization in the livestock sector, has accepted an
appointment as an economics fellow for the Lincoln, Neb.-based
Organization for Competitive Markets (OCM).
In his research, Taylor, the Alfa Eminent Scholar of
Agricultural Policy at Auburn, conducts econometric market power
analysis in the cattle, hog and poultry sectors. As economics fellow
for OCM, he will focus more on research regarding the price, power and
market access problems within the agriculture sector.
The OCM is an agricultural free-market think tank that
advocates honesty, prosperity and economic liberty for farmers,
ranchers and rural communities.
Agronomy
and Soils (AY)
AY Hosts Soil
Judging Competition
Neither showers nor downpours nor floods nor out-and-out
gulley-washers managed to derail the 45th annual National Soil Judging
Competition, which AU's Department of Agronomy and Soils (AY) hosted in
Auburn the first week of April.
Some 150 students from 23 universities across the U.S.
converged on Auburn for the event. Sponsored by the Soil Science
Society of America, the contest evaluates student's ability to describe
and classify soils and interpret how the soil properties would affect
land use.
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During the contest, the first
ever held in Alabama participants evaluated the soils in several pits
that had been excavated in the Auburn area, competing both individually
and as teams. The eight-member team from Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and State University took top honors in the competition. As host
school, AU's soil-judging team could not compete.
Despite heavy rains totaling more than a foot
during the weekend before and the week of the competition, and despite
dire predictions by AU agronomy professor and contest organizer Joey
Shaw that the event would be "a disaster," a great deal
of hard work by a number of agronomy students, staff and faculty made
the event a success instead of a washout.
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Kevin
Holland, AU agronomy program assistant and recent Auburn agronomy
graduate, and AU agronomy senior Taylor Boozer monitor the time on one
of 23 teams com-peting in the National Soil Judging Contest.
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Shaw gives a special hat's-off to Piedmont Substation
Superintendent Vic Jackson for his assitance throughout the week and to
Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station Land and Facilities
Management's Robert Hensarling and Glen Terrell for providing equipment
and manpower for digging pits and keeping them pumped out following
heavy rainfall.
Turfgrass
Field Day Spotlights
Research
More than 60 golf course superintendents, sports
turf managers, sod producers, landscape professionals, lawn care
specialists and industry representatives from across Alabama gathered
at the Auburn University Turfgrass Research Unit in early April for the
Department of Agronomy and Soils' 2005 AU Turfgrass Field Day.
Members of Auburn's turfgrass
management team,including Beth Guertal, Harold Walker, Edzard van
Santen and Dave Han,updated attendees on about two dozen research
projects now under way at the unit. Those projects are focusing on such
issues as cool-season species that allow faster transition back to
bermudagrass in the spring, heat-tolerant bluegrasses, annual bluegrass
control and phosphorous fertilization rates.
Following the field day, several attendees
participated in a fishing tournament to raise money for the Alabama
Turfgrass Research Foundation.
Udenika
Receives Fellowship
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R. Udenika Wijesinghe, a
master's student from Sri Lanka who is working under AY Associate
Professor Yucheng Feng, recently received the Ivanhoe Fellowship.
Wijesinghe research focuses on bacterial source tracking
of fecal contamination in surface water.
The Ivanhoe Foundation grants Fellowships to needy and deserving
students from developing countries.
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AY
Department Head Joe Touchton presents Ivanhoe Fellowship to R. Udenika
Wijesinghe.
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These students must be studying for a practical master
of science degree in engineering or science, with an emphasis on water
resources. For more information go to http://www.theivanhoefoundation.com/
Biosystems Engineering (BIO)
VIP Tour at
Caterpillar ForestPro Training Center
Interim Auburn University (AU) President Ed Richardson and other
administrators from the College of Agriculture and School of Forestry
and Wildlife Sciences (SFWS) recently visited Caterpillar's ForestPro
Training Center.
The visit, which was hosted by SFWS and the Department
of Biosystems Eng-ineering (BSEN), was the first opportunity to show
off the new facility to Auburn's president. The ForestPro Training
Center, located on Alabama Agricultural Experi-ment Station property
north of Auburn, is used by Caterpillar Corporation to demonstrate and
test its line of forest products equipment and to educate users of its
equipment.
E-Day
2005 a Big Success
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Nearly 2,000 potential
engineering students visited the AU campus on Feb. 25 for the annual
E-Day engineering recruiting event. BSEN students and faculty worked
hard to have a highly visible presence at the event. Their displays
inside AUÕs Foy Union included exciting hands-on exhibits for
bioenergy, food engineering, GPS and other geospatial technologies,
ecological engineering and forest engineering.
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BSEN
senior Kate Roberts explains biofiltration principles to high school
students attending E-Day.
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Poultry
Housing Conference
Attracts Global Audience
BSEN, in cooperation with the Department of Poultry
Science, hosted an international seminar on planning, construction and
economics of modern poultry housing March 8-10. More than 70
individuals attended the seminar, which was coordinated by Jim Donald
and Jess Campbell of BSEN and Gene Simpson of the Depart-ment of
Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology.
Nine major poultry companies in the United States sent
representatives to attend. The three-day seminar is the first of many
poultry housing workshops that are being offered as part of the Auburn
University outreach and extension program to serve the Alabama poultry
industry. The seminar was co-hosted by the Alabama Cooperative
Extension System and the Alabama Poultry & Egg Association.
Outstanding Student, Faculty and
Alumnus Recognized
BSEN bestowed its 2005 Outstanding Student, Faculty
Member and Alumnus awards at the Engineering Honors Reception and
Awards Ceremony held March 18 in Auburn.
Sarah Sanders was selected by faculty as the Outstanding
Student.
Oladiran Fasina, assistant professor of BSEN, was
selected by the students as the Outstanding Faculty Member.
Eldridge Collins (BS Auburn '62; PhD Auburn, '71), of
Blacksburg, Va., was selected as the Outstanding
Alumnus.
Department
Hosts Alabama Section
ASAE Spring Meeting
BSEN hosted the spring meeting of the Alabama Section of
the ASAE on March 18-19. Biosystems engineers from across Alabama and
surrounding states participated in the meeting that included continuing
education sessions on biosecurity and bioenergy.
A highlight of the meeting was a presentation by AU at
Montgomery BSEN graduate Danny Holmberg ('80), who now works for
the consulting engineering firm of Paul Krebs and Associates.
New
Efforts in Ecological
Engineering
BSEN's expanded group of faculty is initiating
new research and outreach projects in ecological engineering. Four new
multi-disciplinary projects are under way on campus in cooperation with
faculty from a variety of other AU, Alabama A&M and Tuskegee
departments, schools and colleges.
Horticulture (HF)
Annual Alumni Event Planned for
August
The annual Department of Horticulture (HF) Alumni
Reception will be held at the Southern Nurserymen's Association trade
show, to be held Aug. 11-13 at the Georgia World Congress Center,
Building C in Atlanta, Ga. More information will be available in the
next issue of Ag Illustrated.
>
International
Experiences Abound
Thanks to HF's Orr Endowment Fund, five HF
undergraduate students are traveling to Costa Rica May 14-22 to tour
different areas in Costa Rica's horticulture industry.
Another 10 students will be traveling to
England for a Study Abroad session June 1-July16. They will study at
Myerscough College, where they will take courses in Herbaceous
Ornamental Plants, Landscape Gardening, and Garden History and Design
(see related story).
New Space
Renovations of the former Soil Testing Laboratory
and HF Student Services Center spaces in Funchess Hall are underway and
are expected to be completed in mid-May. These renovations will provide
five offices, a large conference room and a new student services area.
Floral Design
Short Courses Offered
The Alabama Cooperative Extension System and the
Alabama State Florist's Association will hold the Leroy Black Basic
Floral Design short course and an Advanced Floral Design short course
from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on July 16-17, 2005, and July 23-24, 2005,
respectively, in 160 Funchess Hall on the Auburn University campus.
The short courses provide hands-on basic
and advanced training to improve the design skills of florist shop
workers throughout Alabama. For more information contact Kathie Yenulis
at 205-989-8001.
Student
Accomplishments
Joshua Smitherman, a CoAg sophomore majoring in
horticulture and minoring in agricultural economics, has been elected a
2005-06 undergraduate director of Alpha Gamma Rho, the national
agricultural fraternity.
Entomology and Plant Pathology (ENTPLP)
Entomology
Graduate Students Shine
At the 2005 Auburn University (AU) Graduate Student
Council Research Forum in March, there were 104 poster or oral
presentations entered from graduate students throughout AU. Six of
those entries were by Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology
(ENTPLP) graduate students. Four of these oral presentations by
departmental graduate students received awards. The oral presentation
part of the competition was divided into nine sessions. Winners in the
oral presentation sessions from ENTPLP were:
Session 3
1st place, John Styrsky, PhD candidate
3rd place, Whitney Qualls, MS candidate
Session 8
2nd place, Laura Cooper, MS candidate
3rd place, Beatrice Dingha, PhD
candidate
In the day-long competition, ENTPLP
faculty members Art Appel, John Murphy and Nannan Liu served as judges
in some of the sessions.
Faculty and Staff
Accomplishments
Wayne Brewer, entomology professor, received the
2004 Alabama Cooperative Extension System Extramural Funding Award.
Scott Parsons, ENTPLP's accountant,
received one of three outstanding AP Awards from the College of
Agriculture and the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station.
Art Appel, entomology alumni professor,
and Austin Hagan, plant pathology alumni professor, were recognized at
the Spring Alumni Association awards reception.
Gary Mullen, entomology professor,
recently received the 2005 Academic Freedom Award of the Auburn
American Association of University Professors (AAUP) for his decades of
leadership in AAUP and the AU Faculty Senate.
Student
Accomplishments
John Styrsky, entomology Ph.D.
candidate, was recognized by the Auburn University Graduate Council as
one of the top 10 outstanding Ph.D. graduate students at Auburn
University for 20042005.
Stan Usery, plant pathology
master's (MS) candidate, was selected by the Graduate Council as
one of the top 10 outstanding MS graduate students at Auburn University
for 2004-2005.
Whitney Qualls, MS candidate in
entomology, was awarded a $500 graduate travel award from AU Graduate
School to present a paper on her master's thesis research at the
meeting of the American Mosquito Control Association in Vancouver,
British Columbia.
Laura Cooper, another MS candidate in
entomology, placed first in the oral student paper competition at the
Southeastern Branch of the Entomological Society of America Annual
Meeting in Tunica, Miss.
Williams
Assisting
with Agricultural Biosecurity Workshop
Michael Williams, professor and chair of
ENTPLP, served as an instructor in a First Detector Homoptera Workshop
organized by the Southern Plant Diagnostic Network (SPDN).
SPDN is hosted by the University of
Florida in Gainesville, Fla., and provides diagnostic networking and
support for 13 states in the south and southeastern U.S. and the
territories of Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands. The workshop was set up
for entomological diagnosticians and covered endemic, introduced and
exotic species of Homoptera with a focus on species that may become
pests and which may threaten U.S. agriculture.
The workshop enrolled 32 participants.
Attending the workshop from ENTPLP were Charles Ray Jr., and Debra
Carey from the Plant Diagnostic Laboratory and Laura Cooper, a master's
student in entomology.
Poultry
Science (PH)
McDaniel Inducted into
Poultry
Hall of Fame
The late Gayner McDaniel, Department of Poultry Science
(PH) professor emeritus, was posthumously inducted into the Alabama
Poultry Hall of Fame in December 2004 at a reception held in his honor
at the Hotel at Auburn University and Dixon Conference Center.
Alabama Poultry & Egg Association (AP&EA)
Executive Director Johnny Adams presented McDaniel's widow, Sybil, the
award and a portrait of Mac, as she lovingly referred to him.
McDaniel is the 47th member of the Alabama Poultry Hall of Fame.
HACCP
Roundtable Held
PH hosted a hazard analysis and critical control point (HACCP)
roundtable in February in the new Poultry Science Building. This event
brought department faculty and HACCP and quality assurance (QA)
coordinators from various poultry processing plants in Alabama together
for an interactive discussion on the rigid inspections of the Food
Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).
Because of the success of this roundtable another one
has been planned for May 17, 2005, at 10 a.m. at Auburn University. For
more information and registration contact Regina Crapps at
334-844-2610.
Auburn
Poultry Science Has Global
Impact
In collaboration with the USDA, Auburn University's
poultry science department developed a two-week hands-on workshop
designed to train international audiences in poultry further processing
HACCP and food safety.
During February, PH Assistant Professor Shelly McKee
hosted six guests from Montenegro and Serbia who participated in the
workshop. The attendees were introduced to the U.S. poultry industry
and were given basic knowledge of poultry processing, further
processing and HACCP. All six guests also received their HACCP
certifications.
The workshop included seminars and hands-on laboratories
where attendees participated in formulating and processing value-added
poultry products. In addition participants were able to tour the
poultry industry, from local retailers to an entire poultry complex in
Georgia.
Fisheries
and Allied Aquacultures (FAA)
Faculty Accomplishments
Fisheries and Allied Aquacultures (FAA) Professor Dennis
DeVries served on a National Science Foundation Graduate Research
Fellowship review panel in February. The panel on which DeVries served
was one of some 20 panels that met during February in Washington D.C.
to review approximately 9,000 graduate research fellowship applications
received from across the nation for the upcoming academic year.
Water Workshops
Abound
FAA is broadening the scope of water education in
Alabama through a variety of projects.
One such venture is the Tallapoosa Watershed Project (TWP), which is
funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Cooperative State
Research, Education and Extension Service. The project teams up
scientists from Auburn University, the University of Alabama and the
Alabama Department of Environmental Manage-ment with Extension agents,
teachers and citizen volunteer water monitors in the Tallapoosa River
Basin. Project partners are conducting research, extension and
education activities related to environmental conditions of lakes
Martin and Wedowee, and the overall health of the watershed.
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Citizen
monitors at Lake Martin .
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A two-day TWP State of Our Watershed
Conference was held in early May at the Camp ASCCA Environmental Center
in JacksonÕs Gap to increase awareness of the TWP and the health
of streams, lakes and rivers that comprise the Tallapoosa River Basin.
For more information on the TWP, contact Eric Reutebuch,
TWP coordinator and a research associate in FAA, at reuteem @auburn.edu
or visit the TWP Web site at www.twp.auburn.edu.
FAA personnel are also helping organize a
Community-Based Water Monitoring for Watershed Management workshop to
be held in Auburn May 16-27. This first annual workshop is sponsored by
Global Water Watch, a program that provides training and technical
support for a worldwide network of community-based water monitoring
(CBWM) groups.
The two-week workshop is open to anyone interested in
learning more about CBWM.
The workshop is expected to draw at least 15 foreign
participants from five different countries. For more information, send
an e-mail to gww@auburn.edu or visit www.globalwaterwatch.org.
Animal Science (AS)
Faculty/Staff
Accomplishments
Russ Muntifering, an AS professor, has been invited to
make a presentation at the Third International Conference on Plants and
Environmental Pollution, Nov. 29ÐDec. 2, 2005, in Lucknow, India.
He will present some of his work on air pollution (ground-level ozone)
effects on forage quality for ruminant animals at this meeting, which
is being sponsored by the International Union of Biological Sciences
(Paris), The Academy of Sciences for the Developing Third World
(Trieste, Italy) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO). He will be supported by a block grant
from the Joint U.S.-India Science and Technology Forum along with four
other U.S. scientists.
Muntifering also was chosen by the AU Ag Ambassadors as
their faculty adviser for 2005-2006.
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