ARS News Service
Agricultural Research Service, USDA
Marcia Wood, (301) 504-1662,
MarciaWood@ars.usda.gov
February 10, 2005
Scientists with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) were honored Wednesday by
their agency for moving a variety of technologies from the
laboratory to the marketplace, farm fields, orchards and even
backyard gardens, including techniques for controlling fruit
flies and development of a new sandwich spread made from roasted
sunflower seeds. ARS is USDA's chief scientific research agency.
The awards were presented at ARS' annual national awards
ceremony at USDA headquarters here.
An award for "Outstanding Efforts in Technology Transfer" went
to Hawaii-based ARS scientists and their federal and state
colleagues for development and dissemination of science-based,
environmentally friendly technologies for controlling oriental
and Mediterranean fruit fly and other invasive species of
tropical fruit flies.
The ARS winners were entomologists Roger I. Vargas and Eric B.
Jang and plant pathologist Dennis Gonsalves at the agency's U.S.
Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center at Hilo, Hawaii, and
ARS collaborators Carroll O. Calkins, formerly at Wapato, Wash.,
and Robert M. Faust, formerly at Beltsville, Md. The other team
members were Ronald Mau of the University of Hawaii at Manoa;
Stuart H. Stein of USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service, and Lyle Wong of the Hawaii Department of Agriculture.
"Growers and hobbyist gardeners who are trying out these fruit
fly control tactics are harvesting unblemished guavas, loquats
and other top-quality produce for local and export markets,"
said ARS Administrator Edward B. Knipling.
Chemist Isabel M. Lima and food technologist Harmeet S. Guraya,
both at the ARS Southern Regional Research Center in New
Orleans, La., also won an "Outstanding Efforts in Technology
Transfer" award for developing a sunflower-seed spread that
offers a flavorful option for children and adults who are
allergic to peanuts.
"This sunflower-based product also makes a healthful and
delicious addition to yogurt, ice cream, health bars, filled
pretzels and other foods," said Knipling.
Lima and Guraya collaborated on development of the spread with
Red River Commodities, Inc., of Fargo, N.D., whose SunGold Foods
division now offers a line of sunflower-seed-based spreads.
ARS experts honored for "Superior Efforts in Technology
Transfer" were:
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Plant
pathologist Tim R. Gottwald, ARS U.S. Horticultural Research
Laboratory, Ft. Pierce, Fla., for leadership in developing
and applying new, cost-saving technologies to control the
spread of plant diseases such as citrus canker and plum pox.
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Nutritionists Rena L. Cutrufelli, Vincent P. de Jesus, David
B. Haytowitz, Linda E. Lemar and Robin G. Thomas, who worked
with HealtheTech, Inc., of Golden, Colo., to make USDA's
food composition database easy to download and search using
either a Personal Digital Assistant or personal computer.
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Entomologists Maria Guadalupe Rojas and Juan A.
Morales-Ramos, both at the Jamie Whitten Delta States
Research Center, Stoneville, Miss., for collaborations with
Ensystex, Inc., of Fayetteville, N.C., and Waterbury
Companies, Inc., of Waterbury, Conn., to formulate effective
new baits to kill insect pests including Formosan
subterranean termites, red imported fire ants and other
pests that can cause millions of dollars worth of damage
every year.
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Animal
physiologist Mohammad Koohmaraie and food technologists
Steven D. Shackelford and Tommy L. Wheeler at the U.S. Meat
Animal Research Center, Clay Center, Neb., for working with
what is now Tyson Foods, Inc., of Dakota Dunes, S.D., to
help meatpackers use the center's leading-edge system for
objectively analyzing beef carcass leanness.
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