Agricultural
Economics and Rural Sociology (AEC)
Call to Agricultural Economics and
Rural Sociology Alumni!
Want
to know what's happening with fellow AEC alumni and faculty? Or,
maybe you'd like to exchange information about job opportunities
or network with others who have similar professional interests. The
alumni advisory committee recommended the creation of a listserve
to improve communication among alumni. This listserve is now up and
going, and is available to all alumni with an email address.
To
subscribe, send to majordomo@ag.auburn.edu the
following one-line message: subscribe agec-rsoc-alumni (note that
this must be in the body of the message, not the subject line.)
. Department faculty and interested alumni are also making plans for
activities around CoAg Roundup/Taste of Alabama weekend on Oct. 9.
We would like your suggestions as to the type of activities you would
enjoy. Give your suggestions to AEC Professor Patricia Duffy at 334-844-5629
or pduffy@acesag.auburn.edu.
Fields Off to Boot Camp (the academic
kind, that is.)
Deacue
Fields, assistant AEC professor, has
been accepted as one of 20 participants from across the nation
for the upcoming Entrepreneurship Boot Camp. Program participants
work with other faculty members from institutions across the United
States who have research interests in minority and women entrepreneurship.
The
camp is sponsored by the Ewing M. Kauffman Foundation and the Frank
Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise at the University of
North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Howze
Commended by Alabama Legislature
Glenn
Howze, AEC
professor emeritus, was commended earlier this year through a resolution
from the Alabama Senate. The resolution, which was sponsored by Sen.
Ted Little of Auburn, cited Howze for his contributions to rural
development in Alabama and Africa and for his work at Auburn as a
member and also as president of the AU Faculty Senate.
Howze,
who retired in December 2003, received many prestigious awards during
his career, including the American Association of University Professor
Academic Freedom Award, the Auburn Black Caucus Faculty Leadership
Award and a Fulbright scholarship.
Biosystems
Engineering (BIO)
Poultry Engineering Assistance Offered
. Need
engineering help for poultry housing? For the last three
years, the Biosystems Engineering Department has been operating
a world-renowned Web site on engineering issues in poultry housing.
The Web site, was developed by a team of engineers, poultry scientists
and economists led by BIO Professor and Extension Engineer
Jim Donald.
The
Web site makes available in portable document format all pertinent
publications on poultry housing and ventilation that have been
produced and published by Auburn University faculty working to
serve the poultry industry. In addition, the Web site offers
an extensive library of annotated photographs focusing on common
poultry house problems and solutions.
Innovative Waste Management Practice
Field Day Held at Ching Dairy
. Ted
Tyson, BIO professor and Exten-sion engineer, recently
participated in a Juniper Creek Clean Water Partnership Field Day
held on the Ching Dairy in Mobile County. The field day highlighted
an innovative method of separating dairy manure solids from milking
parlor waste before the waste enters the waste treatment lagoon.
This
installation may be the first of its kind in the United States.
Geotextile bag work at the Ching Dairy is part of Tyson's larger
applied research program dealing with geotextile bags and other methods
of manure and wastewater handling to help address animal waste management
challenges faced by Alabama's dairy, swine and poultry farmers.
. Donald
and CoAg Extension Economist Gene Simpson are workingon a project
in North Alabama that could have a major impact on reducing the costs
of heating poultry houses. Working with inventors, poultry growers
and the Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries, Donald
and Simpson have implemented a heating system for broiler houses
that utilizes recycled motor oil rather than propane or natural gas.
Graduating Seniors Win Honors
. Out
of the 10 BIO students graduating this past spring, 40 percent graduated
with honors. Jennifer McMullen of Woodstock, Ga., and Matt
Wilson
of Troy, Ala., received Cum Laude designations.
Trent Hughes of Rockville, Md., and Michelle
Herrmann of Huntsville,
Ala., received Magna Cum Laude designations.
International Student Experiences
Planned for Summer
. Two
BIO students are traveling to Brazil this summer to work with CoAg
Professor Kyung Yoo. They will be assisting Yoo in a project sponsored
by Christian Children's Fund to develop ways to improve the quality
and quantity of drinking water in rural villages in Brazil.
. Three
graduate students will present papers at the International meeting
of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers in Ottawa, Canada.
Jon Davis will present "Assessment of Soil Ammendments
for Erosion Control on Off-Road Vehicle Trails". Christian
Brodbeck will
present "Background Water Quality Analysis for the Kentuck Off-Road
Vehicle Trails;" and Layne Owen will present "An
Optical Method for Measuring Yield on a Tree-Length Harvesting System."
War Eagle Pullers Compete in International
Contest
The
American Society of Agricultural Engineers (ASAE) Student Branch quarter-scale
tractor pulling team, dubbed the "War Eagle Pullers," is
working hard to complete their entry in the 2004 International Quarter-Scale
Tractor Design Competition. The War Eagle Pullers team is sticking
with a two-wheel drive design this year with an improved drive train
and structural frame.
In June, students presented the engineering,
safety, manufacturability and cost features of their design in John Deere's world
headquarters. Sponsors of this year's team include Auburn University's Concessions
Board, College of Agriculture, College of Engineering and BIO department,
Bush Hog Corporation, Knox Kershaw, Tiger Tire and Dyas Nissan. To
help sponsor this team in the future, contact ASAE Student Branch
Advisor Tim McDonald at mcdontrp@ eng.auburn.edu.
Advisory Committee Meets
. BIO's
Advisory Council met in May to review the biosystems engineering
curriculum and results of recent program assessment activities. This
review by the Advisory Council is an important part of ongoing activities
to maintain engineering accreditation for the biosystems engineering
degree.
Members
of the Advisory Council include Perry Oakes, state engineer for USDA
Natural Resource Conservation Service; Glenn Stephens, vice president
of Poly Engineering; Frank Corley, president of Woodlands Specialists,
Inc.; Tony Ellard, director of engineering for Hired-Hand, Inc.;
Shannon Vinyard, president of Vinyard Technologies; Ron Blaschke,
director of quality assurance for Tom's Foods; Marc Ivey, product
engineer for Bush Hog; and Buddy Cox, state geotechnical engineer
for the Alabama Department of Transportation.
Also
participating in the meeting were CoAg Interim Dean John
Jensen and School of
Forestry and Wildlife Sciences Dean Richard Brinker.
Faculty from BIO and the School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences
also participated.
Alumni Invited to Fall Tailgating
Event
. If
you are a graduate from agricultural engineering, forest engineering
or biosystems engineering, please mark your calendars for Oct. 23,
2004, to join us a tailgating event at Ag Heritage Park. Last year's
event was attended by a great group of alumni, faculty and students.
Highlights included attendance by an alumnus from Auburn's first agricultural
engineering graduating class and alumni from as far away as Wisconsin.
Send your contact information to BIO Department Head Steve Taylor
at staylor@ eng.auburn.edu.
Horticulture (HF)
Second Annual Henry P. Orr Memorial Golf Classic Planned
Join
us Oct. 22, at the state-of-the-art FarmLinks Golf Course on Pursell
Farms in Fayetteville, Ala., to participate in the Second Annual Henry
P. Orr Memorial Golf Classic.
FarmLinks
is Pursell Technologies' championship 18-hole research and demonstration
golf course. By partnering with industry leaders such as Toro, Syngenta
and Club Car, this golf course is a place where golf superintendents,
horticulture professionals and the public can gain firsthand knowledge
of product performance.
The
registration fee is $250 per golfer, which covers a round of golf,
golf cart, boxed lunch, tee prizes, beverages throughout the day, driving
range utilization and dinner. Golf tournament sponsorships are available
at designations of Platinum ($1,000), gold ($500) and silver ($250).
Cost
to attend only the dinner and silent auction is $50. Items to be sold
at the auction include a David Pursell print, plant material, weekend
hunting excursions and tickets to the Auburn-Alabama football game.
To donate items to the silent auction, contact Jeff Sibley at 334-844-3132.
All proceeds from the tournament, dinner and silent auction support
the Henry P. Orr Endowed Fund for Horticultural Excellence. The registration
deadline for the golf tournament is Friday, Oct. 8. Contact Mark
Wilton (344-844-1198) or Katie Hardy (334-844-1475) for more information.
ALCA Students Compete in Ohio
Twenty-eight
members of the AU student chapter took part in the 28th Associated
Landscape Contractors (ALCA) of America Student Career Days event
in Columbus, Ohio, in March. CoAg's Landscape Tigers took on 52 other
schools from around the U.S. in 24 events. Auburn University placed
21st overall and less than 1 percentage point from landing in the
top 20. That finish was good enough to place second only to Mississippi
State University among the five Southeastern Conference schools that
participated.
 |
Kathy
Crowley finished in third place in Interior & Exterior
Maintenance Cost Estimating, which represented Auburn's best
performance in an individual event. Eight other students finished
in the top 20 in their respective events. They include:
Jeremy
Robinson , sixth place in Skid Steer Operation; Ellis
Bullock, 10th place in Irrigation Design; Tom Warren,
11th place in Irrigation Trouble-shooting; |
Students who participated in the 28th
Associated Landscape Contractors of America Student Career
Days included Justin Young and Robert Clifton, inset, and
Jeremy Robinson driving the skid steer.
|
Robert Clifton, 12th place, and Ben
Berry,
20th place in Safety Management; Josh Clark,
17th place in Compact Utility Loader Operation; Justin
Young,
18th place in Sales Presentation; and Justin Koen, 20th place
in Woody Ornamental Plant Identification.
In
March 2005, the team is headed to College Park, Md., for the 29th
ALCA Student Career Days.
Thanks
to the following who contributed to the students' travel to the
event this year:
| Advanced Mowers
|
Landscape Creations, Inc. |
| Alabama Nurserymen's Association
|
Lott Nurseries |
| Blackjack Gardens
|
McCorkle Nurseries |
| Brickman Group, Ltd.
|
Minus Vinus Nursery |
| Davey Tree Company
|
Moore and Davis
Nursery |
| Dixie Green, Inc. |
Pike Family Nursery |
| Dodd and Dodd
Nursery |
Plant World Nursery |
| Flowerwood Nursery, Inc. |
Shore Acres Plant Farm |
| Greene Hill Nursery, Inc. |
TruGreen |
| Green Thumb Nursery |
Valley Crest landscape
Development |
| Greenway Plants |
Pursell Technologies, Inc. |
| High Grove Partners |
Wright's Nursery and Greenhouse |
| Hunter Industries |
|
| Kinney Nursery |
|
Undergraduate Students Receive Recognition
Congratulations
to Rebecca Bond and Melissa Steinhauer who were both recently inducted
into Gamma Sigma Delta, the honor society of agriculture. Nominations
for membership are granted to graduating seniors who scholastically
rank in the upper 15 percent of their class and show promise of leadership.
Christopher Bagents, Kyle Creamer, Ginger
Norman and Joshua Smitherman
were also recognized at the ceremony when they were each awarded
the Freshman Scholarship Award of Merit.
Alumni and Friends Reception Planned
If
you are planning to attend the Southern Nursery Association meeting
in Atlanta, Ga., please join us at our HF Alumni and Friends Reception
on Friday, Aug. 13, 2004, 4-5:30 p.m. in room C302 of the Georgia
World Congress Center, Building C.
Master Gardener News
The
Alabama Cooperative Extension System has established a hotline for
your gardening questions. Trained volunteers-Master Gardeners-answer
these lines and offer advice from research-based information.
The
hotline will operate throughout the state at the following locations
and times:
Etowah
County Extension Office (serving Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, DeKalb,
Etowah, Jackson, Marshall, and St. Clair counties); Monday through
Thursday, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; 888-574-2451.
Madison
County Extension Office (serving Madison County); Monday through
Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.; 256-532-1578.
Lauderdale
County Extension Office (serving Lauderdale, Colbert and Franklin
counties); Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.; 256-766-4846.
Baldwin and Mobile County Extension Offices (serving Mobile and Baldwin
counties); Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; 866-855-1909.
Fall Landscape School Date Set
Plans
are currently being made for the Second Annual Fall Landscape School.
This year the event will be held Nov. 4-5.
Agronomy
and Soils (AY)
AY Graduates and Faculty Moving Ahead!
Looking
for a major that will lead to a job? Try agronomy and soils (AY).
Every single one of AY's spring 2004 graduates landed a job in their
chosen area! Chris Steigleman will be the first
assistant superintendent at the Landings Golf Course in South Carolina,
and Brad Beard will
be a second assistant superintendent at a golf course in New Jersey.
Darrel Scott has a position in South Carolina with
NatureChem, a company specializing in custom pesticide application.
. Wilson
Faircloth, a doctoral candidate in AY, passed his final
oral exam for the Ph.D. and has reported to work as a research agronomist
with the USDA National Peanut Lab in Dawson, Ga.
. AY
Alumni Professor
Wes Wood served this summer as a reader for the
Educational Testing Service (ETS) college board's 2004 advanced placement
Environmental Science Reading. As a reader, Wood reviewed and judged
the essays of high school students seeking advanced placement in
environmental science programs across the nation.
Wood
helps teach a course for the interdisciplinary environmental science
major, which is based in the AU Samuel Ginn College of Engineering
in collaboration with the College of Agriculture and the College
of Sciences and Mathematics. Wood developed the course he teaches,
fundamentals of environmental science, which drew some 90 students
during the spring 2004 semester. This collaborative effort with engineering
has brought many nontraditional students to Ag Hill, many of whom
have gone on to develop a keen interest in soil science.
. The
Southern Conservation Tillage Conference Service Award was presented
to AY Deparment Head and Professor Joe T. Touchton and
AY affiliate professor
D. Wayne Reeves in Raleigh, N.C., at the 26th meeting
of the Southern Conservation Tillage Conference for Sustainable Agriculture
(SCTCSA). Touchton has been a leader in conservation tillage systems
in the southeastern U.S. He organized the first
meeting of the SCTCSA in 1978, in Griffin, Ga., and has contributed
to the movement as teacher, researcher and administrator. Reeves,
who is currently research leader at the USDA-ARS J. Phil Campbell
Sr. Natural Resource Conservation Center in Watkinsville, Ga., was
research agronomist at the USDA-ARS National Soil Dynamics Lab in
Auburn until last year.
Entomology
and Plant Pathology (ENTPLP)
ENTPLP Student in the News
 |
Entomology
master's candidate Whitney Qualls recently was interviewed by Channel
3 News of Columbus, Ga., for a news special highlighting her research
involving a statewide survey of mosquito species inhabiting used
tire dumps.The survey, which includes all 67 counties in Alabama,
is only the second survey of its type in the nation. The survey
hopes to determine the range of mosquito vectors for such diseases
as West Nile Virus in tire dumps across Alabama. |
Whitney Qualls
|
Faculty and Students Receive Recognition
Several
ENTPLP faculty and graduate students are participating in the XII
International Congress of Entomology in Brisbane, Australia, in August.
Faculty who are participating are Henry Fadamiro, Kathy
Flanders,
Fudd Graham, Ping Hu, Bill
Moar, Gary Mullen and Michael Williams.
Graduate students who are attending include Vicky Bertagnolli, Elly
Maxwell, Joel Tindle and John Styrsky.
Partial support for travel to the congress will be provided by travel
grants from the Calvin and Helen Jones and F. S. and Margaret Arant
Endowments.
. ENTPLP
Professor Bill Moar served on the USDA-Cooperative
State Research, Extension and Education Service Competitive Programs
peer review panel for proposals in "Integrative Biology of Arthropods
and Nematodes."
 |
. Michael
Williams, ENTPLP chair, was selected for inclusion
in the Eighth edition of Who's Who Among American Teachers
2004 . This honor is especially prestigious because only
high school and college students who have been cited for excellence
in Who's Who Among American High School Students and
The National Dean's List are invited to nominate one
teacher from their entire academic experience.
Williams
presented an invited research paper entitled "Size variations
in the genus Llaveia Signoret |
Mike Williams
|
(Hemiptera : Margarodidae),
and its value as a taxonomic character" during the 10th International
Symposium on Scale Insect Studies held in Adana, Turkey, in April.
Williams has also been invited to present the opening paper for
the Symposium on Coccoidea : Taxonomy, Biology, and Management,
held during the Florida Entomological Society Annual Meeting in
July.
. Nathan
Burkett, an ENTPLP master's student, participated in
a two-week workshop on Medical-Veterinary Acarology at The Ohio
State University (OSU), Columbus, Ohio, in June and July. This
is an advanced workshop in the identification and biology of
mites affecting human and animal health being offered as part
. Kathy
Lawrence, assistant professor, and Sean Usery, graduate
research assistant, both of ENTPLP, will attend the Society of
Nematology meeting in August in Estes Park, Colo. They have submitted
four abstracts for oral and poster presentations.
. Gary
Mullen, ENTPLP professor and co-editor of Medical
and Veterinary Entomology, was selected for recognition
in the 2004 Faculty Author Reception jointly sponsored by the
. Wayne
Brewer, ENTPLP professor, was recognized by AU's Distance
Learning and Outreach Technology for his contributions to the
Independent Learning Program by developing and offering a Web-based
insects course, Entomology 2043/2044.
. Mary
Cupp, ENTPLP research professor, was recognized for
her participation in the Human Odyssey Program this past year.
. ENTPLP
Professor Robin Huettel served on a peer review panel to review
research project plans for USDA-Agricultural Research Service research
efforts in National Program 303, Plant Diseases.
. Ed
Sikora, ENTPLP professor, presented a paper, co-authored
with ENTPLP Professor John Murphy, entitled "Identifica-tion
and management of cucumber mosaic virus on tomato in Alabama" at
the International Tomato Disease Conference to be held in Orlando,
Fla., in June.
. ENTPLP
professors Kira Bowen, Austin Hagan and Jackie
Mullen are attending the Annual American Phytopathological
Society meetings to be held in Anaheim, Calif., in late July
and early August.
Animal
Sciences (AS)
Faculty, Staff, Students Garner
Accolades
. Werner
Bergen, AS professor of biochemistry and nutrition,
has been re-appointed to the editorial board of the Journal
of Nutrition , the preeminent nutrition journal. Bergen
also attended the Federation of Experimental Biology meetings
in Washington, D.C., in April, and represented the department
for the NCR 97 meeting. NCR 97 is the national project on fat
metabolism in farm animals.
. Bethany
Crean, a master's student of AS Professor Frank
Bartol, will present an invited paper at the 37th annual
SSR meetings in Vancouver, British Columbia, in August entitled
"Transient Estrogen Exposure from Birth Affects Adult Porcine Endometrial
Proteome at Day 12 of Pregnancy."
Bartol
recently gave an invited talk on "Animals and Society:
Ethical Perspectives on Animal Use in Research and Education" at
the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine Interdisciplinary
Environmental Toxicology Program.
. The
Alabama Pork Conference will be held at Auburn on Oct. 15.
Sessions at this year's conference will include demand enhancement,
marketing opportunities for Alabama pork producers and comprehensive
nutrient management planning. Details will be announced later
this summer. Contact AS Professor Frank Owsley at 334-844-1505
for details.
Fisheries
and Allied Aquacultures (FAA)
Bayne Named Water Conservationist
of the Year
. David
Bayne, FAA professor, was selected as the Water
Conservationist of the Year by the board of directors of the
Alabama Wildlife Federation (AWF). He was recognized
at the AWF's Governor's Conservation Achievement Awards Banquet
in July. For more than 30 years, the awards have been presented
to individuals and organizations that make great contributions
to the conservation of our wildlife and related natural resources.
FAA Scholarship Program Established
. A
grant has been given by the Alabama Power Foundation to establish
a scholarship for students to study aquatic resource management
in FAA. The $15,000 per year scholarship will cover all tuition,
books and should cover most living expenses. The scholarship
is available for undergraduate or masters students. Preferences
will be given to minority students. For more information visit www.ag.auburn.edu/fisheries/departmental_news/scholarship.tmpl.
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