Vision banner with U of A and Division of Agriculture logos

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture
Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences

A newsletter for faculty, staff and students

January-February 2006 • Vol. 32, No. 1

Table of Contents

WHO, WHAT,
WHEN, WHERE

Notables
Grants
Articles Published
New Projects
New Publications
Coming Events

HEADLINES

Dean reviews 2005 accomplishments
700-plus attend ‘Party of the Century’
Food Science Building expanded
Robert Bacon is CSES interim head
Robertson to coordinate Apparel Studies major
Food packaging, processing expert joins UA faculty
AGCS adds digital media specialist

Donors provide new scholarships and building funds
Legislature applauds UA fruit breeding program
Crop Biotechnology minor proposed
Bumpers welcomes transfer students
Magazine features U of A spinach breeding program
Congratulations to fall graduates
Poultry science students win national awards for research
CSES students win ASA poster contest

___________________________

Vision Archive Index

All About Advising
Monthly newsletter index

UA Agri LInks

Division of Agriculture
University of Arkansas
Dale Bumpers College of
xxxAgricultural, Food and
xxxLife Sciences
Arkansas Agricultural
xxxExperiment Station
Cooperative Extension
xxxService
Alumni and Development
Future Students
___________________________

Vision Credits
Vision is published six times a year by the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station in the U of A System's Division of Agriculture and by the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences. It is produced by the Communication Services unit of the Department of Agricultural and Extension Education, 110 Agriculture Building, U of A, Fayetteville, AR 72701. 479-575-5647.

• Editor: Howell Medders, (hmedders@uark.edu).
• Web manager: David Edmark (dedmark@uark.edu).
• Writers and photographers: Fred Miller and Karen Eskew
• Editorial Assistants: Cassandra Cox and Amalie Holland
• Broadcast e-mail support: Arkansas Alumni Association

E-mail items for publication in Vision to ahollan@uark.edu

 

Legislature applauds UA fruit breeding program

By Fred Miller

A House concurrent resolution from the Arkansas Legislature applauds the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture fruit breeding program for its impact on the state’s economy.

 
Dr. Milo Shult, University of Arkansas vice president for agriculture, second from left, presents framed copies of a joint house resolution from the Arkansas Legislature to, from left, Dr. John R. Clark, professor of horticulture; Dr. James N. Moore, retired distinguished professor of horticulture; and Dan Chapman, resident director of the U of A Division of Agriculture Fruit Substation at Clarksville. The resolution recognizes the contributions of the U of A fruit breeding program to the Arkansas economy.  

The resolution recognizes Dr. James N. Moore, distinguished professor emeritus of horticulture and founder of the fruit breeding program; his successor, Dr. John R. Clark, professor of horticulture and head of the fruit breeding program; and the faculty and staff of the Fruit Substation at Clarksville.

Dr. Milo Shult, U of A vice president for agriculture, said Arkansas fruit producers initiated the resolution. He presented framed copies of the resolution to Moore and Clark, and to Dan Chapman, resident director of the Fruit Substation, for display at the station.

“We felt like it was time they had some recognition for the impact they’ve had on the agricultural economy in the state,” said Jeremy Gillam, whose family operates Gillam Farms in White County. “And not just the state; U of A fruit varieties are known worldwide. You can’t go anywhere in the world where they haven’t heard the names of Arkansas blackberries.”

Gillam Farms is the largest commercial blackberry farm in Arkansas and one of the largest single-family operations in the country.

“The U of A’s production of quality plants, like the blackberries we grow, has revolutionized the industry and made a huge impact for our business,” Gillam said. “It’s been that way with everything they’ve done. They just have the Midas touch.”

Arkansas fruit crops contribute at least $9.8 million to the Arkansas economy, according to “Impact of the Agricultural Sector on The Arkansas Economy in 2001,” a U of A Division of Agriculture research publication.

“It’s hard to get a complete picture of the economic impact of fruit production in Arkansas because so much fruit is sold in roadside stands and similar fresh market outlets that are difficult to track,” Clark said.

The resolution also cites the release in 2004 of three new white flesh market peaches: White River, White Rock and White County, each named in recognition of a geographic place or feature of Arkansas. It notes that the release of these peaches represented the “remarkable accomplishment” of the testing and release of 40 fruit varieties in 40 years since Moore established the program.

Since 1964, Clark said, the U of A fruit breeding program has released three varieties of strawberries, 13 varieties of blackberries, seven varieties of grapes, three varieties of nectarines, one ornamental nectarine, three varieties of ornamental peaches,  two varieties of blueberries and five varieties of processing peaches, as well as the three varieties of market peaches.

The document concludes with congratulations to the breeding program and peach growers of Arkansas “for their diligence and professional contributions to the economic well being and quality of life for citizens of the State of Arkansas.”