With
revenues from U.S. organic food sales climbing by almost 20
percent each year, the demand for skilled workers in this
field is booming – and a new
University of Florida (UF) academic program will help
meet producers’ needs.
Fall
semester marks the official launch of a science-based
organic agriculture undergraduate degree program at UF,
making it one of the first three U.S. institutions to offer
this major. Colorado State University and Washington State
University debut similar programs this fall.
UF has
offered a minor in organic agriculture for the past year.
Both the major and minor programs are administered by the
horticultural sciences department, part of UF’s Institute of
Food and Agricultural Sciences.
Florida
has a growing organic food industry, but producers must look
beyond the state to find highly trained personnel to manage
their operations, said Dan Cantliffe, chairman of the
horticultural sciences department.
“This
(program) is something that’s been long overdue, especially
for UF and the United States,” Cantliffe said. “There’s a
big industry, a big demand and a lack of people who are
qualified to do the work employers need.”
Organic
agriculture is an approach to food production that involves
little or no synthetic chemical fertilizer and pesticide.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has established strict
guidelines for certifying organic farmers.
In 2005,
organic foods accounted for $13.8 billion in U.S. consumer
sales, about 2.5 percent of total U.S. food sales, according
to a manufacturers’ survey commissioned by the Organic Trade
Association, a leading industry organization. Since 1998,
revenues from U.S. consumer sales of organic foods have
risen by an average of more than 18 percent per year.
And it’s
not just consumers who are interested in organic food,
Cantliffe said. The UF major and minor programs were
developed partly in response to ongoing student demand.
“Another
big factor was that we have faculty and facilities that are
suitable for teaching this material,” he said. “As the
demand and the curriculum develop, we may expand the
program.”
Three
students have enrolled in the undergraduate degree program,
and many others have expressed interest, said Melissa Webb,
academic support services coordinator for the horticultural
sciences department.
“We think
a lot more (students) will come out of the woodwork,” Webb
said. “There’s no set cap on enrollment, so the more, the
merrier.”
About one
dozen students are enrolled in the minor program, she said.
The
undergraduate degree program will focus on training students
to manage an organic farming unit, said Mickie Swisher,
director of UF’s Center for Organic Agriculture.
“This
gives you the skills and technical knowledge where if you
needed to put 2,000 acres of organic crops into production,
you could do it,” said Swisher, a UF associate professor of
family, youth and community sciences.
The
program requires 120 credit hours, most of them in science
courses including chemistry, botany, genetics, entomology
and soil science, capped off by several
production-agriculture classes.
One
required class, Principles of Organic and Sustainable
Production, was devised specifically for the program;
another, Alternative Cropping Systems, was modified to put
greater emphasis on organic agriculture.
The minor
program requires the sustainable production and alternative
cropping classes, plus at least three credits of electives
on each of three subjects – crop production, pest management
and resource management.
Swisher
helped organize a committee that developed the minor program
over a six-month period in 2004. Launched in fall 2005, the
minor is considered interdisciplinary and is also
headquartered in the horticultural sciences department.
While the
minor program was being proposed, a committee in the
horticultural sciences department developed the proposal for
the organic agriculture major. Webb and Rebecca Darnell, a
professor of horticultural sciences and undergraduate
coordinator for the department, chaired the committee.
Darnell also helped secure approval from the College of
Agricultural and Life Sciences and the UF Curriculum
Committee for both the minor and major.
The new
undergraduate degree program will enhance the prestige of
both UF and the department, Darnell said.
“The
development of this program is addressing a critical need in
educating students in science-based information required for
successful organic production,” she said. “These students
would then be in an excellent position to aid in the success
of the organic industry in Florida and elsewhere.”