ARS News Service
Agricultural Research Service, USDA
Erin Peabody, (301) 504-1624,
ekpeabody@ars.usda.gov
Madison, Wisconsin
July 7, 2005
The U.S. Department of Agriculture
broke ground here today for a new laboratory where federal
researchers will work to improve barley and oats. The laboratory
will be operated by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS),
USDA's chief scientific research agency.
"This facility will provide much-needed work space for
Agricultural Research Service scientists who provide a critical
link between barley growers and breeders and the malting and
brewing industries," said ARS Administrator Edward B. Knipling,
who participated in today's ceremony. "The new lab will be
important because it is the country's only public research
facility that evaluates malting barley cultivars based on their
quality and usefulness."
Barley malt, which contains natural sugars, can be found in a
wide range of foods, including breakfast cereals, beverages and
bakery goods. It is the basic, fermentable ingredient in beer.
In 2004, ARS scientists at Madison assessed more than 5,000
different malting barley breeding lines, providing data that
will help breeders develop high-quality cultivars for U.S.
farmers. ARS research at Madison is also focused on finding new
ways to bolster crop plants against attack from persistent and
costly fungal diseases, like Fusarium head blight on barley and
blast on rice.
The ARS scientists are also studying the unique,
health-promoting compounds found in oats, which they hope to
someday enhance to make the hearty grain an even more
significant heart-healthy food.
ARS scientists in the Cereal Crops Research Unit share an
outdated 1948 laboratory. The new facility will have more than
twice the square footage of the current one, and will house
about 50 employees, including seven full-time research
scientists. Estimated to cost $11.3 million, the new building is
due to be finished in July 2006. |