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
.
November-December 2007 • Vol. 34, No. 6

Table of Contents

WHO, WHAT,
WHEN, WHERE

Notable
Grants
Articles Published
New Projects

HEADLINES

Arkansas food scientists in top 10 for 'scholarly productivity'

Energy savings guaranteed to pay for Tyson Building upgrade

Field day features research in organic fruit production

Teaching Academy honors Oliver, inducts Jack and Popp

Apparel studies students win design contest

'Razorback Roundup' sales total $46,722

Foundation gift designated for poultry science recruiting


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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.

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Field day features research in organic fruit production

Growing consumer demand for organic produce has opened opportunities for fruit producers to expand into a lucrative and earth-friendly market, said Horticulture Professor Curt Rom at the Division of Agriculture's first organic farming field day Nov. 9 at the Arkansas Agricultural Research and Extension Center.

"USDA certified organic produce sells for 30 to 50 percent more than other produce and consumption is increasing demand 10 to 15 percent per year," Rom said. "This is our opportunity."

The opportunity also presents a number of challenges to growers in Arkansas and surrounding states, Rom said, and that opens new avenues for division research and extension programs.

"A lot of growers are already using some organic methods, but they haven't put the system together that will allow them to obtain the price premium," Rom said.

In search of such a system, some 100 organic fruit growers and county extension agents from Arkansas, Oklahoma and Missouri attended the Organic Fruit Production Workshop and Field Day. Topics covered were government regulation, organic agricultural production systems, weed and insect management, nutrition and soil management, and economics. Participants toured an organic apple research orchard and test plots for high tunnel production of blackberries and raspberries.

The organic orchard research is a 10-year project to adapt organic production practices for southern states, Rom said. He and a multi-disciplined team of scientists are studying organic practices for managing weeds, insects, soil fertility and encouraging biodiversity. Following a three-year transition, the research plots will become a USDA certified organic orchard in 2008.

The high tunnel research uses fabric shelters to mediate extreme temperatures and protect blackberry and raspberry plants from frost. Rom said the tunnels allow producers to advance production to earlier in the year and extend it later. The research takes advantage of Arkansas primocane blackberry varieties, which produce a late crop of blackberries from first-season canes, to push harvest into late summer or fall.

"We think we can extend berry production from six weeks to five months," Rom said.

In an overview, George Kuepper, sustainable agriculture specialist for the Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture, said organic farming goes back to the early 20th century, when it was called humus farming. The term "organic" came into use during the 1940s.

During the 1960s and '70s, organic farming was "discovered" by the counterculture, Kuepper said.

"What they didn't realize," he said, "was that organic farming requires having a production system in place. There were some good organic farms, but many were in poor shape and grew low quality produce, so organic farming had a poor image for a while."

The Organic Production Act of 1990 began a series of draft legislations that resulted in the establishment of national standards for organic production by 2002, Kuepper said.

Today, organic production has moved out of the counterculture of the '60s into the commercial mainstream, Rom said. "Today's organic producers are capitalists with a conscience," he said. "They want to make a living while having a minimal impact on the environment."

Rom and entomologist Donn Johnson, funded by two USDA grants, surveyed organic producers, processors, marketers and researchers from seven southern states to determine needs and interest for a systematic approach to organic production research.

"We found a lot of need for research-based information," Rom said. "And at the University of Arkansas, there's strong interest in organic research and extension programs."

Division scientists in horticulture, entomology, agricultural economics and environmental sciences are employing a team approach to organic production research, Rom said. He plans to make results available as the research proceeds.

More information is available on the Web:

http://hort.uark.edu/research-programs/fruit-production-and-org-agri.html

A Division of Agriculture organic resource manual is available for download:

http://www.aragriculture.org/horticulture/Organic_Resource_Manual.pdf


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