Ponderings of a (Loveable?!) Curmudgeon
The School of Plant and Environmental Sciences held its annual Research Symposium and Blaser Lecture at The Inn at Virginia Tech and Skelton Conference Center.
Nearly four dozen graduate and undergraduate students presented their research to a panel of judges.
The keynote address was presented by Neal Eash, professor in Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science at the University of Tennessee.
In his address, Eash noted the changes Land Grant Universities are undergoing and the impact on stakeholders.
Eash pointed out that first generation college students, especially those trying to escape poverty, can face additional roadblocks as they navigate rules and deadlines.
In an effort to keep his students on track, in one-on-one sessions with the nearly 8,000 undergraduate students he has advised, he asked them, “Where do you want to be in five, 10, or 30 years?”
Eash also noted the changes in agricultural practices and approaches to sustainability due to erratic weather patterns.
Dr. Roy Blaser was a University Distinguished Professor at Virginia Tech, where he dedicated his career and much of his charitable giving to crop and soil sciences and graduate education.
Blaser established the Roy E. and E. Catherine Blaser fellowship for graduate education, including a distinguished lecture series that continues to advance his lifelong commitment to responsible soil management.
Graduate winners
First Place
Kelsey Reed
Cell-raiser: Regeneration
Second Place
Jordan Coscia
Floristics of Virginia Piedmont Grasslands
Third Place
Xiaoying Li
Screening Edamame Cultivars for Resistance to Damping-off Caused by Rhizoctonia solani and Southern Stem Blight Caused by Sclerotium rolfsii
Undergraduate winners
First Place
Kiara Randhawa
Mungbean [Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek] Potential as a Multi-Purpose Crop for Livestock Forage and Human Consumption
SECOND PLACE (tie)
Jonathan Ames
Identification and Validation of Quantitative Trait Loci for Methionine and Cysteine Concentrations in Soybeans
SECOND PLACE (tie)