Table of Contents

WHO, WHAT,
WHEN, WHERE

Notables

Grants

Articles published

New publications and projects

COLLEGE CENTENNIAL EVENTS

'Dogs with Dean' & Family Photo, Oct. 7

Centennial Symposium, Oct. 17

Bumpers to speak at Gala, Dec. 3

CSES celebrates Centennial, Oct. 6

Pryor to speak at Poultry Center Anniversary Event, Oct. 27

HEADLINES

Dean's Column

Record high College enrollment, 1,529

Ground broken for Felton Building at Mann Cotton Station

Donors support cattle feed research facility project

Steven Ricke named to Wray Chair for Food Safety

UA enrolls record number, 17,821

CAFLS Alumni Tailgate Party, Oct. 15

Division, ASU & Judd Hill collaborate

Students design learning environment 

Apples delivered to Katrina evacuees

Globe-trekking student

Carnall alumnae celebrate centennial

Students part of Carnall Inn atmosphere

Loewer new ASABE president

ASAE adds 'Biolgical' to name

LFBS Field Day

RREC Field Day

Pine Tree Station Field Day

NEREC Field Day

Poultry students, faculty win awards

Sensing technologies aid mapping

Keeping chicken fresh

New Rosen Center manager


ALL ABOUT ADVISING

Monthly newsletter index

Vision archive index


UA AGRI LINKS

Division of Agriculture

University of Arkansas

Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station

Cooperative Extension Service

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

 

 

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

September-October 2005 • Vol. 31, No. 5

Division, ASU and Judd Hill Foundation cooperate on research

The annual Judd Hill Cotton Technology Field Day Sept. 1 near Trumann in Poinsett County featured new research projects recently established in a cooperative agreement with the Division of Agriculture and Arkansas State University.

The research is an extension of projects conducted at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro and the Northeast Research and Extension Center at Keiser, NEREC director Dr. Fred Bourland said.

“This allows us to expand our research on soils that have very high yield potential for cotton,” Bourland said.

Ester Hill Chapin, who received the 4,000-acre Judd Hill Plantation as a wedding gift from her father, Judd Hill, created the foundation in 1985. When she died in 1991, Ester Chapin bequeathed the entire plantation to the foundation. The farm annually produces 3,800 acres of cotton to help fund a variety of philanthropic programs.

The new cooperative research projects managed by foreman Larry Fowler currently occupy 35 acres, with the option to expand to another 80 acres as needed.

Bourland, a cotton breeder and geneticist, made Judd Hill one of six locations for the Arkansas Cotton Variety Test. The test provides an objective, annual evaluation of commercial cotton hybrids in different environments. He also tests experimental strains of cotton from his breeding program.

Dr. Tina Teague, an entomologist based at ASU, has test plots at Judd Hill for research on irrigation termination and management of plant bugs in cotton.

Dr. Morteza Mozaffari, director of the Division of Agriculture’s Soil Testing Laboratory at Marianna, is mapping fields for variation in soil nutrients and other traits for future research on precision management practices.

Dr. Derrick Oosterhuis is testing plant growth regulators, and Dr. Craig Rothrock conducts research on seedling diseases of cotton.

Dr. Bill Robertson and Frank Groves are testing experimental transgenic cotton lines.

The foundation also cooperates with private companies for testing and demonstrating new technology.

Dr. Bill Baker at ASU is working with In-Time, a precision farming company based at Cleveland, Miss., to study the potential benefits of multispectral aerial imagery of plant biomass as a basis for variable rate application of agricultural chemicals within a field.