March 2007

Eating Better Than Organic

Check out this article in TIME magazine. It features Ted Blomgren a NY State grower and Cornell graduate.

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1595245,00.html

Update on Bee Colony Collapse Disorder

This NY Times article on Bees has many buzzing this additional article is from Dick Johnson in the Bee Corner (3-1-07) of the Windham Journal

There has been a sudden, significant loss of honeybees all across the nation that is likely to have an impact on the pollination of food crops, honey production, and the beekeeping industry alike. Originally called “Fall Dwindle Disease”? it actually occurs beyond the Fall, appears suddenly- not gradually, and may not really be a disease. A study group has been formed comprising the US Dept of Agriculture Honeybee Labs and several labs at state universities. Now calling this strange syndrome the Colony Collapse Disorder [CCD] they have surveyed beekeepers nationwide and have some preliminary though inconclusive results.

It seems that every “expert” has his own theory, yet none can show evidence for the sole cause. Here is what we do know about CCD so far. The symptoms of this syndrome are sudden disappearance of mature bees leaving the brood, young bees, queen and ample supplies of honey and pollen. Shortly afterwards the entire colony dies. There’s some evidence that the disorder is contagious and strangely that there’s no robbing out of the honey, no invasion of wax moths, and even the small hive beetle pest does not enter the “dead out” hives. The CCD has affected mostly the large, commercial, migratory beekeepers who travel from state to state pollinating all kinds of crops. Since this group of beekeepers do need to feed their colonies between crop pollination contracts, there are suspicions that the corn syrup [HFCS] may develop toxic substances if subject to overheating during storage or transportation. Some of the types of soy protein commonly used as pollen substitute may contain compounds unsuitable for honeybee feeding.

During the 1960’s a condition called parasitic mite syndrome [PMS] was blamed for many lost bee colonies and several bee viruses have been found to be vectored by the varroa mite pest. It has just been verified that viruses carried by the queen can be passed on to her eggs. Recently in both Spain and France a new variety of the the protozoen disease “nosema” has caused symptoms similar to CCD.

Since we have not really found the cause or causes of this destructive disorder ,nor the impact on the pollination of crops, it is suggested that anyone interested in these continuing studies should attend their local honeybee beekeepers club. The Catskill Mtn. Beekeepers Club meets monthly in Acra and the Columbia Co club meets monthly in Harlemville. For information call 518-734-4629.

Promoting Competition in Ag Research

The notion that competition produces better science is an underlying principle of the American research enterprise - with the possible exception, historically, of agriculture. Just 10 percent of the more than $2.6 billion that the federal government spends annually on agriculture research is awarded through peer review, with the rest flowing to scientists at the U.S. Agriculture Department or to researchers at land-grant colleges through formulas that have gone largely unchanged for decades.

As Congress engages in the every-half-decade ritual of reviewing and renewing federal agriculture programs, lawmakers and academic groups are once again pushing proposals that would significantly increase the proportion of federal agricultural research funds that are awarded competitively through peer review - not by cutting back on formula funds, but by sharply increasing spending over all, with a bias toward competitively awarded grants.

At a hearing Wednesday before the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, senators and research officials discussed a trio of proposals for revamping the Agriculture Department’s research programs and the way the department distributes its funds. Although opinions varied on exactly the right approach, there was widespread agreement that a greater proportion of the money should be awarded competitively.

“My view, and I believe the view of the vast majority of the scientific community, is that the core of scientific progress comes from competitive grants,” said Alan I. Leshner, chief executive officer of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. While formula funds have played an important role in building the agricultural research infrastructure, he said, “the core of research funding really should come from competitive, peer-reviewed grant programs.”

Added Sen. Tom Harkin, the Iowa Democrat who heads the Senate committee: “The intramural system and noncompetitive grants may have served our purpose for a time, but if we’re going to move ahead … the old system of formula grants just doesn’t move fast enough.”

The hearing, part of the Senate panel’s overall reauthorization of the so-called farm bill, was called to discuss possible changes to the Agriculture Department’s research programs. Three proposals were discussed: one from the Bush administration, one that emerged from an independent federal committee’s 2004 review, and a recent proposal from a coalition of university groups.

The Agriculture Department’s own farm bill proposal for research focuses fairly narrowly on the structure of the department’s programs. It would combine into one agency the Agricultural Research Service, the department’s main in-house research arm, with the Cooperative Research, Education and Extension Service, which oversees the department’s external programs with colleges and communities. It would authorize some additional funds for bioenergy and specialty crop research, but otherwise leave the flow of funds alone.

William H. Danforth, former chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis, presented a 2004 proposal (from an Agriculture Department panel created by the 2002 farm bill) to create a National Institute of Food and Agriculture within the Agriculture Department. This proposal, which was introduced in legislative form in the 109th Congress but did not advance, would largely leave the department’s research structure alone but create a new program of competitive, merit-based grants for basic agricultural research. The proposal would increase funds for competitive agricultural research by $1 billion over five years.

The last proposal, known as Create-21 (for Creating Research Extension and Teaching Excellence for the 21st Century), would build on both of the other two proposals. Like the administration’s proposal, it would revamp the Agriculture Department’s research programs (though it would go even further, by also wrapping into the single agency the Economic Research Service and Forest Service research and development) and nearly double the amount of research spending over all, with a sharp focus on competitive research.

Unlike some past calls to reshape the balance between formula-driven and competitive funds by shifting money from one to the other, though, the Create-21 proposal - which Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) is expected to introduce in legislative form soon, - calls for modest increases in formula funds from the 2007 levels, and much sharper increases in competitive funds. By providing 7 of every 10 new dollars provided for agriculture research going forward to competitive studies, the proposal would change the proportion of formula vs. competitive funds from the current 90/10 to about 58/42 within seven years.

Jeffrey Armstrong, dean of the agriculture college at Michigan State University and a leader of the Create-21 group (which is overseen by the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges), said some members of the group wanted to make all new funds competitive, and others argued for moving formula funds into competitive programs. But after much debate, the group overwhelmingly supported a proposal to try to lift all boats, he said. “We recommended [doing this by adding] new money so as not to compete with the ongoing [formula-driven] programs, which we respect,” Armstrong said. He noted that reducing formula-based funds, or even failing to increase them at least somewhat, would hurt historically black and other minority-serving institutions, which get a share of formula funds.

The other advantages of the Create-21 proposal over the others, Armstrong said, is that it would also add funds for education and for extension.

Harkin, the Senate committee’s chairman, said he would fight hard for more funds for agricultural research and other programs. But he expressed some philosophical qualms about the proposals to streamline the structure of the department’s research programs, which he said had been tried and rejected nearly three decades ago

Doug Lederman

The original story and user comments can be viewed online at http://insidehighered.com/news/2007/03/08/ag.

It’s always open season on alien invasive plants

Volunteers target unnatural green amid winter drab in never-ending battle to weed out species taking over the landscape.

Check out the good work of volunteers near Chesapeake Bay.

http://www.bayjournal.com/article.cfm?article=3001

Share with a comment what our NYS volunteers are doing.

Cornell Invasive Species posters

CALS communication office has two new invasive species posters.

Invasive poster 1

Invasive poster 2

The posters are about 6′ x 2.5′ tall but roll up like an upside down window shade and can be carried in their own special over the shoulder bag.

Contact Mary Alo (mka2@cornell.edu ) or Linda McCandless (llm3@cornell.edu) if you want to borrow them.

You might also be interested in Cricket-Lick-it lollypops with a cricket or larva inside.

http://www.teachersource.com/direct/42280

Cornell’s site assessment and landscape design resource

New web page on the Cornell’s Gardening resources web site. Includes a new pulication “Site Assesment for Gardeners” by Charlie Mazza in the Department of Horticulture.

http://www.gardening.cornell.edu/landscape/index.html

Soil Health Assessment Training Manual

Cornell’s Soil Health team has completed a final version (”1st edition”) of a comprehensive “Soil Health Assessment Training Manual”. At the following link, associated with the soil health website, you can view the table of contents and download the entire document or download specific chapters. Information for ordering hard copies is also provided.
http://soilhealth.cals.cornell.edu/Cornell%20Soil%20Health%20Manual.htm

Home and Garden Information Center

University of Maryland’s Home and Garden Information Center has a new search function and continues to keep an up to date timely tips page:

http://hgic.umd.edu/content/timelytips.cfm

Wildlife damage management (WDM)

Find answers and ask questions about WDM

There is a new kid on the block, eXtension, that, among other things, provides answers for folk that have questions about any aspect of wildlife damage management. You can access the FAQ section at http://faq.extension.org You have to register once, but there is a large and growing body of questions and answers on a wide range of topics.

This WDM initiative is a cooperative effort from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Cornell University, Clemson University, and Utah State University.


Robert H. Schmidt
Associate Professor
Environmental Studies Curriculum Advisor
Department of Environment and Society
Utah State University, Logan UT 84322-5215

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