The following
are just a few examples of how CoAg researchers and others
working in the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station (AAES)
are conducting studies that get results for everyone, from
farmers to consumers. To learn more about the AAES or the
CoAg research initiative, visit the Web site at www.ag.auburn.edu/aaes
or contact Kira Bowen at 334-844-1953 or at bowenkl@auburn.edu.
CoAg Scientist
Develops Alternative to Methyl Bromide
An AAES/CoAg researcher has
developed a highly effective, environmentally friendly agricultural
pesticide that will give farmers a viable alternative to methyl
bromide, a widely used but soon-to-be-banned farm chemical.
Plant pathologist and AU Distinguished
University Professor Rodrigo Rodriguez-Kabana says the liquid
formulation of sodium azide he has developed significantly
outperforms ozone-depleting methyl bromide in controlling
weeds, diseases and harmful, root-eating nematodes. And as
an unexpected bonus, the liquid sodium azide, which is applied
to soil before planting through drip irrigation systems under
plastic tarps, actually enhances the environment.
“As sodium azide decomposes
in the soil, it breaks down into fertilizer and leaves the
soil healthier than it was before the sodium azide was applied,”
Rodriguez-Kabana says. Furthermore, he says, while methyl
bromide kills all nematodes and insects, “good ”
and “bad,” in the soil, sodium azide does not
harm beneficial nematodes and insects.
Methyl bromide, which is injected
as a gas into the soil before planting, is a broad-spectrum
soil fumigant that fruit and vegetable growers, ornamental
plant and tree nurseries, forest seedling nurseries and sod
producers worldwide have relied on exclusively for decades.
The chemical will be banned in the U.S. and other developed
countries effective Jan. 1, 2005, because it destroys the
earth’s protective ozone layer.
Before phase-out of methyl bromide
began in 1998, U.S. farmers were using an estimated 21,000
tons annually to fumigate soil before planting crops. Experts
have warned that unless cost-effective replacements for methyl
bromide are found, the ban will cost U.S. growers almost $500
million a year in lost production.
Rodriguez-Kabana, whom the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) formally recognized
in 1997 for his leadership in coordinating the global effort
to find methyl bromide replacements, said Auburn University
has applied for two patents on sodium azide: one for the new
liquid formulation of the chemical, which previously was marketed
only in granular form, and the other for the chemical’s
soil-enhancement properties. Approval of the patent applications
will ensure that AU will earn royalties on sales once sodium
azide is available commercially.
AmPac, the nation’s sole
manufacturer of sodium azide, is pursuing EPA registration
for the product. The methyl bromide replacement could be on
the market as early as the 2004 growing season for a limited
number of crops.
For more information on this,
contact Rodriguez-Kabana at 334-844-1976.
CoAg Catfish
Geneticist, Dean Pen Chapter for DNA Book
A CoAg fisheries professor internationally
recognized for his groundbreaking catfish genome research
has collaborated with the CoAg interim dean to author a chapter
in a new British publication, “Celebrating 50 Years
of DNA.”
The chapter by John Liu, AU
alumni professor in the Department of Fisheries and Allied
Aquacultures (FISH), and John Jensen, interim CoAg dean and
AAES director and former FISH head, focuses on the phenomenal
genetic advances that have occurred in aquaculture in the
past decade and outlines how the genome revolution is leading
scientists toward developing the “perfect catfish”
and other improved species of fish.
“Celebrating 50 Years
of DNA,” a slick 96-page softcover published by the
UK-based newspaper Business Weekly, chronicles the
1953 discovery of DNA’s structure and that discovery’s
impact on genetics, biology, immunology, medicine, criminology
and society as a whole. The publication features a foreword
by British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Liu and Jensen’s chapter
on the genome revolution in aquaculture is one of 14 chapters
contributed to the book by select world-leading scientists
from key international research centers and top universities.
Liu, head of AU’s Fish Molecular Genetics and Biotechnology
Laboratory, says Business Weekly sought Auburn’s participation
in the project because of AU fisheries’ reputation as
one of the world’s leading university fisheries program.
“Celebrating 50 Years
of DNA,” which is targeted toward the life sciences/biotechnology
community and senior business executives, is available in
paperback at www.amazon.co.uk.
Research Projects
Awarded AAES Foundation Grants
Twenty-two AU research projects
have been awarded a total of $803,232 in funding through a
new AAES competitive grants initiative. The projects approved
for funding were selected from among 78 research proposals
that AAES researchers in five AU colleges and schools submitted
to the AAES Foundation Grant Program, established this year
in an effort to help the AAES contend with the most serious
funding crisis it has faced in its 120-year history.
Kira Bowen,
CoAg research coordinator and professor of plant pathology,
says these are primarily seed grants that will allow researchers
to conduct pilot studies and generate preliminary data they
can use to seek additional funding from sources outside of
Auburn. The proposals funded showed the strongest potential
for leading to extramural funding from government agencies,
private companies, foundations or individuals, Bowen says.
The AAES’s financial problems
began in the mid-1980s, when federal support for agricultural
research programs began to decline even as the AAES faced
rising salaries and increasing operation and maintenance costs.
The AAES Foundation Grant Program is a move to begin rebuilding
the foundation, the funding base, of the Experiment Station
before the trend becomes irreversible, AU interim Provost
John Pritchett says.
Pritchett credited State Rep.
Richard Lindsey, D-Centre, for his legislative leadership
in securing continuing funds to make the program a permanent
part of AU’s annual appropriation.
The AAES Foundation Grant awards
are capped at $40,000 annually for projects involving more
than one researcher and $20,000 for single-investigator projects.
The grants are awarded for up to three years, but second-
and third-year funding will be contingent on productivity.
The funded projects involve AAES researchers in the colleges
of Agriculture, Science and Mathematics, Human Sciences and
Veterinary Medicine and the School of Forestry and Wildlife
Sciences.
For information on the 22 projects
awarded AAES Foundation Grants, go to http://www.ag.auburn.edu/exmurfund/aaes_fg_report.html.
Research Fueling
Horticulture, Turfgrass Industries
A four-year, $1.2 million federal
appropriation that has been funding horticultural and turfgrass
research in central and north-central Alabama since 2001 will
enhance the state’s landscape and boost its economy,
AAES researchers say.
“In the studies these
federal dollars are supporting, our researchers are working
to find new selections of trees, plants and sod that perform
well in the South, so that growers will have a wider range
of choices to offer their residential and commercial customers,”
says Dave Williams, CoAg horticulture professor. “Alabama’s
greenhouse, nursery and turf industries have experienced tremendous
growth in recent years. This type of research is crucial if
we are going to sustain and strengthen that growth.”
The Nursery, Greenhouse and
Turf Plant Evaluation Program — funding for which U.S.
Rep. Robert Aderholt of Alabama’s 4th Congressional
District played the key role in securing — includes
more than two dozen AAES research projects aimed at further
stimulating the fastest-growing segment of Alabama agriculture.
Crapemyrtles and maples, groundcovers and gardenias, hostas
and hydrangeas, and peonies, pansies and palms are among the
landscape and bedding plants researchers are targeting.
The nursery and greenhouse studies,
based at AAES’s North Alabama Horticulture Research
Center in Cullman, include one that is the world’s largest
sugar maple evaluation trial. Jeff Sibley, CoAg alumni professor
of horticulture, says the goal of that project is to identify
sugar maple cultivars that will grow well and produce dazzling
fall colors in Alabama’s climate.
The turfgrass studies funded
by the initiative are in full swing a couple of counties east
of Cullman, at the Sand Mountain Research and Extension Center
in Crossville. David Han, assistant professor of turfgrass
management, says research projects there are evaluating new
bermudagrass cultivars that could give high schools affordable
options for improving the turf on their sports fields and
identifying and refining management techniques that will increase
the resistance of bentgrass putting greens to disease, leading
to better playing surfaces on north Alabama golf courses.
Over the course of the four-year
Nursery, Greenhouse and Turf Plant Evaluation Program, about
$800,000 of the $1.2 million in federal funds will be invested
in the horticulture research at the Cullman facility with
the remaining $400,000 used to fund the turfgrass research
in Crossville.
For more information on these
projects, contact Sibley at 334-844-3132 or Williams at 334-844-3032.
New Pest Control
Approach Slashes Pesticide Use in Schools
A highly effective integrated
pest management (IPM) program that Auburn University entomologist
Fudd Graham introduced into the Auburn City School System
in 2000 has slashed the system’s use of pesticides by
90 percent from what it was three years ago, and that success
story is prompting school administrators around the state
to sit up and take notice.
Graham, an AAES researcher,
launched a pilot IPM program in three Auburn schools in May
2000. By December of that year, the administration had given
the go-ahead to implement IPM system-wide, to all nine schools.
“School IPM programs work,
plain and simple,” Graham says.
In a school IPM program, the traditional pest control strategy
of regularly scheduled pesticide spray applications is replaced
with commonsense prevention strategies that track down and
block pests’ entry routes into buildings and find and
eliminate pest-attracting conditions. Pesticides are used
only when baited traps in the school confirm a pest problem,
and even then, only minimal amounts of the least hazardous
products available are applied using precise, targeted treatments.
After inventories revealed problem
areas in Auburn schools, maintenance crews went to work installing
weather-stripping, placing screens over vents, sealing cracks
around pipes, repairing leaks, replacing rotted wood and trimming
shrubbery, while custodial workers cracked down on cleanliness
and sanitation and even began preaching pest-prevention strategies
to students and teachers.
This past spring, Graham helped
Mobile County’s public school system implement IPM in
three schools in Pritchard, but the 2003-04 school year will
see the program expanded into all 118 public schools in Mobile
County.
Any school administrators interested
in learning more about IPM are urged to contact either Graham,
at 334-844-2563, or Xing Ping Hu, a fellow CoAg entomologist
and AAES researcher, at 334-844-6392.
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