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The
following is news from our AAES-affiliated schools and colleges. For
more information on the teaching, research, outreach or development
activities of any of these academic units, contact them directly at
their
respective phone numbers or Web sites.
COLLEGE OF HUMAN SCIENCES
June Henton, Dean
334-844-4790
www.humsci.auburn.edu
Human Sciences Dean Gives
Keynote Speech in India
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Dr.
June Henton.
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June Henton, dean of Auburn
University's College of Human Sciences, discussed Auburn's role in the
global "War on Hunger" in the keynote address she delivered at a United
Nations-affiliated conference in India on March 8.
Henton spoke at the inaugural session of the Global
Compact Regional Conclave in the Indian city of Jamshedpur.
Launched by United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan
in 1999, the Global Compact brings together business leaders from
around the world to discuss initiatives such as human rights, labor,
environmental responsibility and anti-corruption. The Global Compact,
with more than 1,800 participating companies, is the largest
corporate-responsibility initiative in the world.
The theme of the conclave was "Key to Business
Sustainability: Reducing Poverty, Fostering Entrepreneurial Development
and Employment."
Henton's remarks on corporate social responsibility and
business sustainability focused on the role of the college, university,
state and nation in fostering social responsibility and sustainability
through educational, research and outreach programs. A key component of
her presentation was the AU/UN World Food Programme partnership
featuring Auburn's student-led World Food Programme Initiative.
"We face a great challenge in higher education to help
students better understand the issues of sustainability facing us today
which have the potential to do irreparable harm to us as individuals
and to the world community," Henton says.
"By participating in this international forum focused on
corporate social responsibility, I had a unique opportunity to showcase
to the world what Auburn students have worked so hard to achieve in the
"War on Hunger" campaign and what they hope to accomplish in the
future," she adds.
Hunger is perhaps the most pressing of all
sustainability issues, and the "War on Hunger" campaign provides a
context for students to learn why they should and must care about
seeking solutions to global problems that impact the natural
environment as well as the health and well-being of current and future
generations.
Last fall, the World Food Programme, the Rome-based
United Nations organization that assists 80 million people annually
through feeding programs, selected Auburn University as its lead
partner to establish a comprehensive model for a student-led "War on
Hunger" campaign.
Auburn's initial contact with the U.N. agency came
through the College of Human Sciences, which presents its International
Quality of Life Award to a global leader each year in a ceremony at the
U.N. headquarters in New York.
2005 Grisham/Trentham
Lecture
The 2005 Grisham/Trentham Lecture was held on April 21
at the Auburn University Hotel and Conference Center featuring
internationally acclaimed designer and branding consultant Marc Gobe.
Gobe is chairman, chief executive officer and executive
creative director of Desgrippes Gobe, one of the world's top-10 brand
image creation firms. Over the past 25 years, Gobe has created
breakthrough design strategies for such industry giants as Coca-Cola,
IBM, Godiva, Saks, Victoria's Secret, Versace, Reebok and Lancome. He
is also the author of several books, the latest of which is entitled
Emotional Branding. Gobe lives in New York City and is a featured
speaker in the areas of marketing and design at universities and
conferences worldwide.
According to Michael Solomon, Human Sciences professor
of consumer behavior and coordinator of the Grisham/Trentham Lecture
Series, Gobe is recognized the world over as a leader in design
innovation. His creative ideas have been translated into vibrant brand
concepts in many categories ranging from beverages like Gatorade and
Coca-Cola to retail stores such as Victoria's Secret. His insights on
the role of design will be a true inspiration to all of our students,
and we are privileged to have him as our guest at Auburn.
The Grisham/Trentham Lecture series was established in
1986 by Consumer Affairs Professor Gary Trentham, who is now retired.
Its purpose is to give students exposure to internationally respected
experts in the fields of design and fashion. In addition to Trentham,
the lectureship also bears the name of sponsoring benefactors Betty
Grisham of Huntsville and her late husband, Charles, an Auburn
graduate.
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Cedar Bluff Native Earns International Design
Award
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Jay Morris, a native of Cedar Bluff, took top
honors in a design competition held by the International Textile and
Apparel Association (ITAA), a group of academic professionals from
around the world.
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Jay
Morris
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Morris, a May 2004 graduate of AU's
College of Human Sciences apparel merchandising, design and production
management program, took the Winter Award for sustainability of design.
Morris design called "Recyclable Rainbow" used recycled cans cut and
pieced together to form a flapper-type dress. The designs in the
competition were not meant to be worn, but rather to be viewed as art
pieces.
Morris, the son of Hoppie and Pam Morris of Cedar Bluff,
is currently employed as an assistant designer of men's wear for
Dillard's Store Services in Little Rock, Ark.
While at Auburn, Morris earned a 3.96 grade-point
average and was a member of Phi Kappa Phi and Kappa Omicron Nu
scholastic honoraries. He was also active in the student chapter of the
International Textile and Apparel Association.
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COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE
Timothy Boosinger,
Dean
334-844-4546
www.vetmed.auburn.edu
Tiger Joins Alabama Animal Hall of Fame
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Golden eagle Tiger joined the
Alabama Animal Hall of Fame in January during a banquet sponsored by
the Alabama Veterinary Medical Association.
The 26-year-old eagle that has represented Auburn's school spirit since
1986 was inducted into the class of 2005 along with Jack Tipp, a dog
that saved his owner's life, and the deceased Miss Baker, the first
monkey sent into space in 1959. Officially named War Eagle VI,
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AU
education specialist Marianne Worley holds Tiger during the Alabama
Animal Hall of Fame induction ceremony.
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Tiger helps promote wildlife conservation as a part of the educational
efforts of the College of Veterinary Medicine's Southeastern Raptor
Center, where she is housed by permission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service.
War Dog Tribute Dedication to Highlight Detector
Dog Conference
The College of Veterinary Medicine's Fourth National Detector Dog
Conference, held April 28-May 1, featured a War Dog Tribute dedication
and an address by retired U.S. Marine Commandant Carl Mundy.
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On April 29, the War Dog Tribute was dedicated in
honor of 25 dogs that gave their lives to help American soldiers
liberate Guam during World War II. The bronze structure by artist Susan
Bahary of Sausalito, Calif., will also be a monument to all of Auburn's
veterinary alumni who have served in the military.
It is being donated by Betsy Putney, wife of the late William Putney
(Class of 1943) who was the commanding officer of the 3rd Marine War
Dog Platoon and played a key role in establishing a similar monument on
the U.S. Naval Base on Guam in 1994.
He penned his experiences into a book titled Always Faithful. |
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War
Dog Tribute by artist Susan Bahary was dedicated on April 26 at the
College of Veterinary Medicine's Fourth National Detector Dog
Conference.
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Serving as the guest speaker was
General Mundy (Ret.), former commandant of the Marine Corps and former
member the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He graduated from Auburn in 1957 with
a degree in business administration and a commission as a second
lieutenant.
The conference provided education and training for many
of the world's leading experts, including veterinarians, research
scientists, handlers, trainers, law enforcement agents and
administrators.
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UAB and Auburn Awarded $18 Million Heart Research
Grant
The University of Alabama at Birmingham and Auburn University's
Colleges of Veterinary Medicine and Engineering have been awarded a $18
million grant by the National Institutes of Health to continue their
studies of heart disease.
Ray Dillon, principal investigator in the veterinary
college, says the research is significant to both humans and dogs
because there has been limited understanding of how the heart responds
to mitral valve disease. In his combined work with University of
Alabama Birmingham over the past 10 years, they have discovered that
the heart remodels differently in mitral valve disease than it does to
hypertension or coronary artery disease.
Thomas Denney, professor of electrical and computer
engineering, has developed techniques for quantitatively measuring how
much the heart muscle contracts and other indicators of cardiac health
from cardiac MRI data. This analysis, combined with serial MRI scans,
is expected to revolutionize the understanding of the heart's response
to disease.
Bush Nominates AU Veterinary Alumnus to be FDA
commissioner
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President Bush has nominated
Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine alumnus Lester
Crawford to be commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration.
Crawford, 66, a 1963 AU veterinary
graduate and Demopolis native, has been acting commissioner since March
2004. He previously served two years as deputy commissioner, including
nine months as acting commissioner in 2002. Pending Senate approval,
Crawford will become the first veterinarian to serve as FDA
commissioner.
" We've known of Dr. Crawford's ability for many years because he has
been very active in supporting the College of Veterinary Medicine,"
said Timothy Boosinger, AU veterinary dean.
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Fort
Dodge Animal Health recently donated $10,000 to the AU College of
Veterinary Medicine to equip and maintain a stall dedicated to horses
with neurologic diseases. The stall, part of the Vaughan Large Animal
Teaching Hospital, will have specially padded floors, walls and doors
to provide maximum protection for horses. Pictured (from left) are
David Pugh, Fort Dodge veterinarian; Glen Kimmorley, Fort Dodge senior
territory manager; Vet College Dean Timothy Boosinger; and David
Whitley, head of Clinical Sciences. Pugh recently joined Fort Dodge
after 14 years on the AU vet college faculty.
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"He was awarded our Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1989,
and he was kind enough to speak at our 2004 annual conference. He will
do an excellent job leading the FDA."
The FDA is responsible for the safety and regulation of
drugs, most foods, biological products, medical devices, animal feed
and drugs, cosmetics and radiation-emitting equipment. The nation's
food safety efforts are conducted by the FDA and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, which oversees meat and poultry.
SCHOOL OF FORESTRY AND WILDLIFE
SCIENCES
Richard
Brinker, Dean
334-844-1007
www.sfws.auburn.edu
Awards Abound in Forestry and
Wildlife Sciences
Numerous faculty and students in the School of
Forestry and Wildlife Sciences (SFWS) won awards this spring.
At the AU Graduate Student Council (GSC) picnic held in
April, three SFWS students were honored. They include Melissa Reynolds,
a doctoral student in wildlife sciences who was selected by the GCS as
one of Auburn's 10 doctoral outstanding students for 2004-2005; John
Hogland, a master's candidate in forestry who was selected by the GSC
as one of Auburn's 10 master's outstanding students for 2004-2005; and
Jon Schoonover, a doctoral student in forestry who was presented the
Harry Merriwether Fellowship for 2006 by the Graduate Fellowship
Committee.
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The Harry Merriwether Fellowship,
presented to Schoonover, is based on academic achievement. The
nomination is presented by the SFWS Graduate Policies and Procedures
Committee (GPPC) to the SFWS Dean, who forwards it to the AU Graduate
School. The AU Graduate Fellowship Committee makes the final decision.
The Top 10 awards that Hogland and Reynolds received also are
determined by the AU Graduate Council.
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Outstanding
graduate students, from left, Melissa Reynolds, John Hogland and Jon
Schoonover.
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Nominations are submitted to the Council by SFWS. These awards honor
student's academic accomplishments but also demonstrate the high
quality of each student's adviser and department.
Several other students were honored during the SFWS
Awards Banquet held on April 14 at the Robert Trent Jones Grand
National Lodge and Conference Center in Opelika. There were
approximately 200 guests in attendance.
Guangshang Chen, a doctoral candidate in forestry
working under the direction of SFWS Professor Hanqin Tian, won the
Westervelt Fellowship, which is given each year by the SFWS dean in
recognition of excellent graduate work. The award is for $2,400 per
year for a period of three years. Chen won for her project entitled
"Modeling Nitrogen Cycling and Its Interaction with Carbon in the
Terrestrial Ecosystems."
Laura Hanson, a master's candidate in wildlife sciences
working with SFWS Assistant Professor Mike Mitchell on the project
"Demography of Feral Pigs at Fort Benning, Georgia," was awarded the
George Crenshaw Moore Endowed Fellowship. This fellowship is given
annually to a student pursuing a master's degree in wildlife game
management. The selection is made by the Wildlife Sciences Selection
Committee and submitted to the SFWS dean. The dollar amount is $2,400.
Rachel Jolley and John Lhotka both received James Floyd
Goggans Graduate Fellowship awards. The Goggans Fellowship is given
annually to an exceptional SFWS graduate research assistant who is
pursuing studies and research in some aspect of forest biology and
includes a $750 cash award. This year the GPPC was so impressed by
Jolley and Lhotka that they awarded Goggans Fellowship to both
students.
Lhotka is a Ph.D. candidate in forestry working with
SFWS Assistant Professor Ed Loewenstein on a project titled "The
Influence of Forest Canopy Structure on the Understory Light
Environment and Growth of Forest Production."Jolley is also a Ph.D.
candidate in forestry working with SFWS Professor and Associate Dean
Graeme Lockaby on a project entitled "Effects of Sedimentary Deposition
of Riparian Forest Health and Productivity."
"Of all the events that occur throughout our school each
year,"said SFWS Dean Richard Brinker during the banquet, "I look
forward to this event, as it has become one of my favorites. I enjoy
the interaction and appreciate that the students and often their
familiesÑcan meet the individuals that make these student's
academic dreams a reality through their generous financial support.
Without the donors, there would be no need for this event."
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Artwork Adorns New Sciences Center Classroom
Building
Work on a frieze was recently finished on the
College of Sciences and Mathematics (COSAM) newly completed Sciences
Center Classroom Building, one of three buildings in the College's new
Sciences Center complex.
In April 2004, COSAM Dean Stewart Schneller met with AU Art Professor
Gary Wagoner to discuss a major architectural, artistic and scientific
statement for the two-story building then still under construction. In
January 2005, the final touches were placed on the decorative band,
which is more than just a visual enhancement. It begins with swirling
gases and progresses into more complex biological designs encompassed
by the double-helix pattern of DNA.
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Wagoner, who worked with former
student, Joanna Blake ('99), currently of Washington, D.C., said he
views the work as, "a narrative, it begins with simple matter, but ends
with images of neurons and blood and muscle cells that describe the
human organism. It is intended to represent the progression that is
evident in our physical world while at the same time alluding to the
progress of our exploration and understanding of the progression. "
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Rick
Oates of the Alabama Forestry Association teaches young Arboretum Days
participants how to identify different types of trees.
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He also said the work links a similar mission that art
and science share, "to unveil the unseen. "
The following are
brief mentions of the latest results of research under way in the
Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station (AAES).
Pellet Fever
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Every year, Alabama's poultry
industry produces 1 million-plus broilers, 2 billion-plus eggs and 2
million-plus tons of poultry litter.
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But now AAES scientists have identified a way to put that litter to
use: They're converting it into pellets that possibly can be used to
heat poultry houses and greenhouses.
In research led by CoAg biosystems engineer Oladiran
Fasina, the scientists have pinpointed at what exact temperature and
moisture level litter must be to form the pellets, which they're
producing using a laboratory-scale pellet mill.
In the current phase of the project, the scientists are
determining whether the pelletized poultry litter as well as pellets
made from peanut hulls and bioenergy crops such as switchgrass will
burn in a specially designed furnace to provide an efficient source of
heat for poultry houses and greenhouses. If successful, this process
would give poultry growers and nursery owners an extremely economical
alternative to propane and natural gas.
It also would be an environmentally sound and highly
efficient way to manage agricultural by-products. Pelleting reduces
three cubic feet of poultry manure down to one cubic foot, which makes
those 2 million-plus tons of litter easier to store and transport.
Fasina says pelletizing the litter and finding
value-added uses such as bioenergy help the AAES meet a new, Alabama
Legislature-funded agricultural initiative that calls for the
development of new products from and new uses for poultry litter.
Exploring the Consumer Psyche
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Apparel and home furnishing
companies spend millions of dollars a year designing and developing new
products they believeÑor hopeÑconsumers will buy.
Unfortunately, though, they usually don't know whether they've got a
winner or a loser until a product hits the market.
And all too often, customers give the products a thumbs-down,voting
"no" with their pocketbooks.
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AAES scientist Michael Solomon is convinced that if
companies would bring customers into the design process from the
get-go, they could realize significant savings by producing products
that are exactly what customers say they want.
To that end, the AU professor of consumer behavior is
developing a Web-based system that will allow home textile
manufacturers to present prototypes for products online to their most
likely customers and get almost instantaneous feedback via the
Internet. The idea is to bring likely customers into the loop in the
early stages of design, giving them prototypes to evaluate and
redesigning as often as necessary to get the product that consumers
will buy.
Solomon contends the streamlined design process will cut
product development costs, give customers the products they want and
ultimately enhance the market competitiveness of Alabama's home textile
industry.
Reasons to Rotate
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Years of rotating peanuts and
cotton in a conventional tillage system on southeast Alabama farmland
have depleted soil organic matter, compacted the soil and increased
disease and pest problems, taking a serious toll on yields and dealing
an economic blow to many small towns and rural communities throughout
the Wiregrass.
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But AAES scientists are finding that by adding Bahia grass into that
rotation, and by grazing cattle on the grass, farmers can realize
dramatic increases in productivity and profit.
In a long-term, multi-state, USDA-funded study that in
Alabama is based at the Wiregrass Research and Extension Center (WREC)
in Headland and headed by AU agronomist Dallas Hartzog, researchers
have developed a four-year rotation cycle that includes two years of
Bahia followed by a year of peanuts and a year of cotton. The crops are
planted using minimum tillage.
"The goal here is to improve soil health by increasing
the organic matter in the soil, and so far, results have been nothing
short of phenomenal," Hartzog says.
The deep-rooted Bahia grass is working wonders at
breaking up compacted soil, a fact evidenced by earthworm populations.
"Earthworms are the barometer of healthy soil," Hartzog
says. In the absence of organic matter, you won't find them.
"In our conventional plots, we had zero earthworms,"
Hartzog says. "But after the first cutting of hay in the Bahia
rotation, we had over 64,000."
As for water perculation, the numbers speak for
themselves. According to the data collected thus far, it takes 22
minutes for one inch of water to infiltrate the soil in the
cotton-after-peanuts planting and 13.6 minutes in the
peanuts-after-cotton field but just 2.2 minutes when peanuts follow two
years of Bahia.
Less soil compaction also means less runoff and
subsequent loss of topsoil, which translates into more sustainable
farming.
On the pest and disease front, the Bahia grass rotation
significantly reduces nematode populations, white mold and leafspot,
resulting in a decrease in pesticide use.
As a part of the study, researchers are harvesting the
Bahia grass as hay in the summers and overseeding it with winter
annuals to graze stocker cattle on it each winter. Results show both
practices pay off, with the summer hay yield off the Bahia field
totaling almost five tons and with cattle grazing in the winter gaining
just under three pounds per day, says Kris Balkcom, a research
associate at the WREC.
The experiment, which also involves Georgia and Florida,
will generate hard data that farmers can evaluate to determine whether
the rotational system is right for them.
Peony Blues No More
Within three years, Alabama nurseries should have
a slate of hot new products to offer the state's gardeners: peonies
that can take the heat of the South.
Peonies are extremely popular in northern gardens, but
Alabama's mild winters and extreme summers have stymied generations of
gardener's attempts to grow them here. In the AU Peony Project, though,
50 Asian cultivars direct from China and Japan are showing big
potential for this region.
In addition to identifying the heat-tolerant cultivars,
AAES scientist Ken Tilt and others are working to define the ideal
growing conditions for successfully establishing peonies in Southern
gardens.
Around the AAES News from the
Headquarters and Research Centers
AAES Faculty Win Alumni Awards
Bill Moar, CoAg professor of entomology,
and Christine Sunderman, professor of biological sciences in AU's
College of Sciences and Mathematics, recently were awarded
Undergraduate Teaching Excellence awards from the AU Alumni
Association. Both have AAES research projects. Moar has been on faculty
for 14 years and Sunderman has been at Auburn 21 years.
The awards recognize Auburn faculty
members for their quality of teaching, knowledge of their subject,
interest in and availability to students and influence within the
university.
Stakeholders Weigh In on Issues
at Regional Listening Sessions
Finding value-added products and
alternative crops that Alabama farmers can produce sustainably and
market successfully should be a major thrust of agricultural research
and extension efforts at Auburn, according to the 250 farmers and other
stakeholders who attended listening sessions the Alabama Agricultural
Experiment Station (AAES) and the Alabama Cooperative Exten-sion System
sponsored around the state earlier this year.
At the same time, however, they said
such research should not come at the expense of continued work on
traditional row crops, including searching for new varieties of cotton
and peanuts and for ways growers can lower production costs.
The meetings, held at seven locations
across the state, were designed to update stakeholders on AAES and
Extension System activities, to outline the status of regional
agricultural initiatives and research priorities that were developed
based on citizen's input at a similar series of meetings a year ago and
to collect feedback on future programs, focus areas and directions of
agriculture at Auburn University (AU).
Similar listening sessions were held on
campus for faculty and current students.
At the regional meetings, stakeholders
voiced support for continued work on the two regional agricultural
research initiatives established last yearÑone at the Black Belt
Research and Extension Center (REC) in Marion Junction centered on
developing new aquaculture and business opportunities in west Alabama,
and the other, at the Sand Mountain REC in Crossville, which aims to
find ways to convert poultry waste into new products and more jobs.
Other feedback indicated that
stakeholders perceive of AU ag scientists as concentrating too often on
"safe," repetitive research that primarily serves to generate journal
publications, and they recommended that researchers break new ground
and define areas in which AU can become the research leader.
Students and faculty, too, stressed the
need for more flexibility and academic freedom to explore emerging
fields of study.
Overall, the majority of stakeholders-
including those at the regional sessions as well as current faculty and
students,rated the future of agriculture in Alabama as "sustainable."
They noted, however, that for it to be sustainable, the recruitment of
more young people into agriculture and forestry is a must.
As for current active farmers and forest
owners, they expressed strong interest in distance education courses
through which they could acquire certification in specific areas and
even two-year, four-year and master's degrees via computer.
Stakeholders at the meetings also called
for easier navigation, one-stop answers and greater access to experts
on AAES, Extension and College of Agriculture Web sites; supported more
research into the production and marketing of vegetables and fruits and
into biofuels and alternative energy sources; and encouraged greater
multidisciplinary linkages between the College of Agriculture and other
colleges at AU, particularly business and marketing.
Gulf Coast REC Wins BCIA Award
The beef cattle herd at the Gulf Coast
Research and Extension Center (GCREC) recently won the 2004 Top
Adjusted Weaning Weight Herd in the Beef Cattle Improvement Association
(BCIA) awards held in Auburn in January.
BCIA is a cooperative agreement between
the Alabama Cooperative Extension System and the Alabama Beef Cattle
Improvement Association, Inc. Headquartered in Clanton at the Chilton
Research and Extension Center, BCIA's mission is to promote, educate
and facilitate the use of performance data, record keeping and
marketing opportunities for BCIA members, while providing a leadership
role to improve the Alabama cattle industry.
The GCREC won in the category for a
30-99 head cow herd. GCREC staff members have kept BCIA records since
1992 and the center participates in the BCIA record-keeping program
using the Red Wing Cow/Calf computer software. They won the top weaning
weight award for the medium herd category for two years in a row. In
2004, the GCREC produced 75 calves averaging 660 pounds at 205 days of
age. In 2005, GCREC produced 77 calves averaging 703 pounds at 205 days
of age.
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