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John Jensen, center, interim CoAg dean
and AAES director, and CoAg Associate Dean Bill Hardy, right,
stand with faculty members who earned top honors from the college
and the AAES for 2003. Shown are, from left, Roger Lien, Dean's
Award for Advising Excellence; |
| Joseph Giambrone,
Director's Senior Research Award; Jeff Sibley, Dean's Award
for Advising Excellence; Jensen; Norbert Wilson, Director's
Junior Research Award; Bill Moar, Dean's Award for Teaching
Excellence; and Hardy. |
Agricultural
Economics and Rural Sociology (AEC)
•Norbert Wilson, assistant professor
of AEC, received the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station Director’s
Junior Research Award for the work he has conducted in the area
of agricultural economics during his four years at Auburn. His work
has focused on the economic impacts of international trade, biotechnology’s
influence on markets and the economic and trade effects of invasive
species.
•Professor James Novak was a member
of the team receiving the Outstanding Public Issues Education Program
Award that is sponsored by the Farm Foundation and the National
Public Policy Education Committee. Title of the recognized program
was “2002 National Extension Farm Bill Train-the-Trainer Education
Program.”
•Diane Hite, who works in the natural
resources and environmental economics area, recently was promoted
to associate professor. Hite came to Auburn in fall of 2002 from
Mississippi State University. Her graduate degree is from the Ohio
State University’s agricultural economics department and her
undergraduate degree is from the Rhode Island School of Design.
•Four AEC professors retired at the end of 2003 and
all were recognized for their sustained meritorious service to Auburn
by receiving professor emeritus titles. The retirees include Jerry
Crews (with 27 years of service), John Dunkelberger
(43 years of service), Glenn Howze (18 years of
service) and Harry Strawn (34 years of service).
Biosystems
Engineering (BIO)
•John Fulton, who will be working in
the precision agriculture and machine systems areas, joined the Biosystems
Engineering (BIO) faculty in January 2004. Fulton received his Ph.D.
from the University of Kentucky and has extensive experience in engineering
for production agriculture. His position will have primary responsibilities
in education and research. Other searches are under way for three
new BIO faculty positions in the following areas: food and biological
process engineering, land and water resources engineering and forest
engineering.
•Congratulations to BIO Professor Larry Curtis
on his retirement in December from a distinguished career in extension
and research in water resources and irrigation. Curtis will continue
research in the department on a limited basis.
•New biomass energy research and outreach projects in
BIO have recently been funded by the Alabama Department of Economic
and Community Affairs. In one project, Oladiran Fasina,
assistant
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professor of BIO, is working with
David Bransby, professor of agronomy and soils,
to demonstrate the use of pelletized switchgrass and lespedeza
as a fuel source that can be burned in pellet furnaces to heat
greenhouses. In another project, Tim McDonald,
associate professor of BIO, is working with Vinyard Technologies,
of Hartford, Ala., to demonstrate the use of a low-cost diesel-powered
electrical generator set to provide supplemental electrical
power for poultry houses. In an innovative use of agricultural
products, the generator set will be operated on recycled vegetable
oil collected from restaurants, rather than diesel fuel.
•BIO alumni and friends gathered on |
A
BIO faculty member is working on using a low-cost diesel-powered
electrical generator set to provide supplemental electrical
power for poulty houses. |
Nov. 8, 2003, before the Ole Miss football game to renew old friendships.
Those in attendance included alumni from the first graduating class
of agricultural engineering in 1939, a 1943 graduate and other graduates
from each subsequent decade up through 2003. Alumni came from as
far away as Wisconsin. If you are an alumnus or friend of Biosystems
Engineering, begin making your plans to attend the gathering next
fall.
•BIO students received a major boost last fall with
a gift to increase the William R. and Irene Gill Endowed Scholarship
in Biosystems Engineering. This scholarship, which is available
to BIO students, was established by the Gill family and emphasizes
assistance for female students. William Gill’s
gift of more than $50,000 will result in a significant increase
in scholarship funds that can be awarded to BIO students.
•The Ginn College of Engineering will host its annual
E-Day recruiting event on Feb. 27, 2004, on the Auburn campus. Middle-
and high-school students are welcome to attend the event where different
displays will highlight activities and career opportunities in Biosystems
Engineering. For more information on Biosystems Engineering at Auburn,
go to www.eng.auburn. edu/bio.
Horticulture
(HF)
•Jeff Sibley, alumni associate professor
of HF, recently received a 2003 CoAg Dean’s Award for Advising
Excellence. Sibley is the official adviser for more than 50 students
and an unofficial source of guidance and encouragement for dozens
of other horticulture majors. He serves as adviser to the Ag Ambassadors
and other student groups and was named 2003 Camp War Eagle Faculty
Honoree.
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•The Department and its partners have launched
a quest for the Southern peony. The goal of the peony project
is to find peony species and cultivars that will tolerate the
heat and humidity of the South and to develop best management
practices for nurseries and landscapes. Bill and Faye
Ireland of Birmingham, Ala., provided a gift of $48,000
to the AU Foundation and designated the funds for use in the
peony project. The funds |
Horticulture
is looking for peonies that will tolerate heat and humidity. |
are targeted for the support of a two-year graduate student and the
purchase and distribution of a private peony collection by January
2004 to the Birmingham and Huntsville Botanical Gardens and to other
trial sites across the state. Helping HF with the project are the
Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station’s Brewton and Cullman
experiment fields, the Wuhan (China) Institute of Botanical Sciences,
the Birmingham and Huntsville Botanical Gardens. Others involved in
the project include nurseries and private individuals in Lawrenceville
and LaGrange, Ga., Birmingham and Auburn, Ala., and Charleston, S.C.
Follow the quest for the Southern peony on the web site www.ag.auburn.
edu/landscape.
•The Department’s annual Horticulture Welcome
Day was held last October at the Paterson Greenhouse Complex on
the Auburn campus. This event allows students and their parents
to interact with HF faculty, staff, alumni and administration. Some
200 people attended, including AU Board of Trustee Golda
McDaniel. This year HF alumni provided donations to cover
the cost of the entire event.
•The first annual Henry P. Orr Memorial Golf Classic
was held last November to benefit the Henry P. Orr Endowed Fund
for Horticultural Excellence and was a rousing success. The tournament
raised $16,000 and a silent auction held in conjunction with the
tournament raised another $3,800. The event, which drew some 62
golfers, was held at FarmLinks Golf Course on Pursell Farms in Fayetteville,
Ala. This year’s tournament is already scheduled for Oct.
22, 2004
Agronomy and
Soils (AY)
•Wilson Faircloth, an AY Ph.D. student,
won first place in the inaugural Cotton Weed Science Research Conference’s
graduate student paper contest with his presentation entitled “Weed
Population Dynamics Under Glyphosate-resistant Cotton Cropping Systems.”
This research was conducted at the Tennessee Valley Research and
Extension Center in Belle Mina and the E.V. Smith Research Center
in Shorter with significant funding provided by checkoff funds from
Alabama cotton growers and supported through Cotton Incorporated.
Faircloth, who was honored this spring as one of 10 distinguished
doctoral students for 2002-2003 by the AU Graduate School, also
recently authored Alabama Cooperative Extension System publication
ANR-1241, “Wanted Dead, Not Alive: Cogongrass,” which
is available through Extension Publications, Extension Annex, Auburn
University, AL 36849, or online at www.ag.auburn.edu/
ay/cogongrass.
•Professor David Weaver was selected
by the College to participate in the Experiment Station Committee
on Organization and Policy/Academic Committee on Organization and
Policy (ESCOP/ACOP) Leadership Development Program, along with 66
other participants from throughout the U.S. The program consists
of a week of intensive training related to the development of leadership
skills. As part of the program, participants return to their respective
institutions, select a mentor administrator and develop a relevant
project aimed at improving some aspect of the workings of the Experiment
Station or College. For his project, Weaver is assisting in the
development of a Strategic Plan for the Alabama Agricultural Experiment
Station.
During the past year, Weaver also was selected as CoAg’s
Outstanding Faculty Member by the AU Student Government Association.
This is an award presented annually by AU students to an Auburn
faculty member in each college or school who they feel has made
the most contributions to student development, both inside and outside
the classroom.
•AY Professor Jim Hairston and Program
Associate Eve Brantley received a $152,000 U.S.
Department of Agriculture water quality grant recently for a stream
restoration project. The grant is part of $12 million in grants
awarded to 22 institutions nationwide to conduct research, education
and extension programs aimed at improving the quality of the nation’s
water resources.
Entomology
and Plant Pathology (ENTPLP)
•ENTPLP Associate Professor Bill Moar
recently received the 2003 CoAg Dean’s Award for Teaching
Excellence. Moar, who has taught seven different entomology courses
since joining the AU faculty in 1990, was cited for his genuine
enthusiasm for his subject and his ability to get his students interested,
motivated and involved.
•A graduate-level course offered through ENTPLP is
giving tomorrow’s research scientists a definite edge in the
competition for extramural research funding. Research Proposal Writing
(PLPA 7820) takes students through the grant-writing process, with
each student selecting a research proposal topic shortly after the
semester begins and submitting a full grant proposal by the end
of the course. All grant proposals are then evaluated by a mock
National Research Initiative (NRI) competitive grants program review
panel comprised of students in the class.
“Often, the first challenge graduate students face
after receiving their Ph.D. is to write a grant proposal to get
their research funded, but most of the time, they haven’t
had any specific prior training in how to do that,” says Joe
Kloepper, the CoAg plant pathology professor who developed
the class. “This course prepares them to write proposals that
will be more competitive in attracting outside funding.” As
one who has served on NRI review panels and as a panel manager,
Kloepper also offers students valuable insight from inside the review
process.
Poultry Science (PH)
•Auburn is well represented in the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s Higher Education Challenge Grants program,
which funds new teaching methods/topics in agriculture. PH received
several grants from this program, illustrating that CoAg scientists
are on the cutting edge of agricultural higher education. The projects
funded for PH include one that focuses on materials for safer food,
led by Professor and Department Head Don Conner.
Another is entitled “The Virtual Chicken” and is headed
by PH Professor Patricia Curtis. The third is a
project to develop a Web-based poultry science course/curriculum
and is headed by Assistant Professor Shelly McKee.
•Associate Professor Roger Lein recently
received a 2003 CoAg Dean’s Award for Advising Excellence.
Lein, who serves as undergraduate program coordinator for PH, works
closely with poultry science students before, during and after their
time at Auburn. He directs advising, recruiting and curriculum development.
In addition, he assists with scholarship and internship programs,
advises the student Poultry Science Club and facilitates interaction
between prospective graduates and employers.
•The Poultry Science Department will be conducting
Poultry Career Development Events (PCDEs) as a means to meet high
school students interested in poultry science careers. The FFA Poultry
Career Devel-opment events are the department’s primary undergraduate
recruiting emphasis. Faculty members Roger Lien,
Joe Hess, John Blake and Bob
Voitle along with Research Assistant Frank Dillman
attend the district contests (South, Central and North Alabama)
with their “traveling road show.” Qualifying teams are
invited to the State PCDE. The high scoring team from the State
PCDE advances to the national competition in the fall of 2004. Agriscience
teachers interested in starting or contributing to their existing
poultry judging program are welcome to participate in the department’s
Poultry Inservice Shortcourse this summer. For more information
contact the Agriscience Education office at 334-844-5595. High school
students interested in obtaining a poultry science degree should
contact Lien, rlien@acesag.auburn.edu, for assistance with scholarship
eligibility and application process, AU enrollment and course selection.
•Assistant Professor Shelly McKee
served in 2003 on the National Research Initiative Competitive Grants
Program (NRICGP) panel to peer review food safety research proposals.
McKee and her fellow panelists waded through 111 proposals and she
was praised by the NRICGP coordinators for her valuable advice and
recommendations.
•Professor Joseph Giambrone was presented
the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station (AAES) Director’s
Senior Research Award in recognition of the significant contributions
he has made to the poultry industry in his 26 years as an AAES scientist.
His exceptional contributions to the commercial poultry industry
include developing numerous detection tests and vaccines for viral
diseases of poultry.
•The new poultry science building is expected to be
completed in late June or early July 2004.
•The PH Peaks of Excellence program was reviewed in
November 2003 and reviewers gave the AU Poultry Products Safety
and Quality Program high marks for its accomplishments to date.
A report from the outside reviewers has been forwarded to AU administration.
•The department participated in the International Poultry
Exhibition in Atlanta in January 2004.
Animal
Sciences (AS)
•Frank “Skip” Bartol,
an AS professor, recently was named congressional liaison for the
Society for the Study of Reproduction (SSR). He will be representing
the SSR to Congress on any matters dealing with reproduction and
reproductive health. Bartol also received a National Research Initiative
grant for $297,000 for the study of the interaction between various
endocrine disruptors and uterine estrogen receptors and their ultimate
effect on later reproduction.
•Becky Tarleton, a former AS graduate
student who is currently working in a post-doctoral position at
Yale, received an AU Graduate School’s Outstanding Student
Award for 2003. Tarleton’s research and dissertation were
directed by Bartol.
•Professors Buelon “Pete” Moss
and William “Bill” Jones, Associate
Professor Robert “Butch” Blaylock and
Agricultural Technician Clinton Dowdell all retired
from the department on Dec. 31, 2003. The retirees were honored
last year at a reception held at the Alabama Cattlemen’s Association
office in Montgomery. These individuals contributed more than 100
years of service to Auburn University.
•Bob Ebert, AS Extension specialist,
is making plans for the 2004 Alabama Junior Beef Expo that includes
a special Ultrasound Steer Show. The Ultrasound Steer Show began
in 2002 as a way to expose young people to the use of ultrasound
technology as a modern livestock selection method. Ultrasound is
commonly used in genetic evaluation of breeding animals for seedstock
producers and is often used in the selection of market cattle at
harvest time in many Midwestern feedlots. More and more 4-H members
are taking advantage of the ultrasound show and participation is
expected to increase in 2004.
•Construction plans for the Swine Research and Education
complex are in the final stages. The new complex will be constructed
at the site of the current swine facilities located on Shug Jordan
Parkway on the AU campus and will include modern production facilities
and a new research laboratory. These state-of-the-art facilities
will enhance the undergraduate instructional programs and support
biomedical research. The research laboratory provides Auburn University
the leadership in the development of extramural research projects
with other universities and research organization. Funds for the
project are provided through the Agricultural Bond issue.
•A memorial fund has been established in memory of
CoAg alumnus Bob Anderson, who was a member of the AU Meats Judging
Team in the 1970s. Anderson’s family established the fund
in his name to benefit the new Meats Laboratory. Contributions can
be made to the Bob Anderson Memorial Fund via Chris
Gary, Development Officer, Comer Hall, Auburn University,
AL 36849. For more information, contact Gary at 334-844-1136 or
garychr@auburn.edu.
Fisheries
and Allied Aquacultures (FAA)
•FAA Professor Claude Boyd recently
received the Annual Service Award from the Catfish Farmers of America
for his work in developing best management practices for aquaculture
to satisfy state and federal water quality standards. Boyd also organized
and led the second Butler/Cunningham Conference on Agriculture and
the Environment in November 2003.
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•FAA Associate Professor Rusty Wright
and other AU faculty members have been involved with the development
of a new biodegradable fishing worm that is now on the market.
FoodSource Lures, a Birm-ingham-based firm, teamed with Auburn
scientists to commercially produce and market an artificial
fishing lure made from food products. Because it is made of
ingredients that fish naturally feed on, the AU lure is more
enticing than plastic bait to lunkers awaiting to ambush a meal.
And, because the AU lure—unlike traditional |
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Anglers now can use the biodegradable
fishing worms.
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plastic bait—is biodegradable, it also may be more enticing
to environmentally conscious anglers. The product is being featured
through many print and broadcast outlets, including a Field &
Stream magazine article. Wright was helped by AU College of Human
Sciences faculty Jean Weese and Leonard Bell.
Excitement over the lures is running high among anglers and the industry,
which could be good news for Auburn. “We’re hoping this
will be our version of Gatorade,” notes Wright. More information
on the lures is available at www.fslures.com.
•An educational game that FAA Professor Bill
Deutsch developed through the Alabama Water Watch (AWW)
program will be commercially produced and sold throughout school
systems in the US. The card game that simulates a biological assessment
of a stream and a watershed evaluation in the classroom has been
used in AWW training workshops. The LaMotte Company (the company
that makes AWW’s test kit) and Deutsch have been modifying
the original game for the last several months, to make it simpler
and less expensive. The new game is called “Macro Mania.”
AU has recently completed a licensing agreement with LaMotte to
produce the game.
•AWW also received $550,000 from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture to do research, education and extension activities
regarding concentrations and loading rates of phosphorus and nitrogen
in the Tallapoosa River Basin. Deutsch is project director for a
team of scientists from AU, the University of Alabama, the Alabama
Department of Education, the Alabama Cooperative Extension System’s
Tallapoosa County coordinator and citizens of Lake Watch of Lake
Martin. Standard Methods chemical analyses will be conducted by
FAA Professor David Bayne’s laboratory. These
results will be compared with the simpler techniques of AWW that
will be used by the Lake Watch of Lake Martin citizen group. University
of Alabama geographer Luoheng Han will use remote
sensing and spectral analyses from satellite imagery. The team will
perform a cost-benefit analysis of the research methods, and combine
that with their methods of formal and informal education/extension
to produce a transferable model that they hope is appropriate for
other watersheds.
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