Posts Tagged: Glenda Humiston
UC ANR to strengthen California agriculture through Mediterranean partnerships
In October, Vice President Glenda Humiston, Associate Vice President Brent Hales, and Research and Extension Center directors Ashraf El-kereamy and Atef Swelam attended three global food and agriculture events in Italy, met with key leaders of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (UN-FAO), and signed important research agreements in Jordan.
Growing partnerships in the region and exchanging knowledge and innovations can aid California producers in adapting to changes and volatility in the state's renowned Mediterranean climate. Because they must address many of the same challenges facing their counterparts in Europe and the Middle East, joint research and collaborating on solutions would benefit all.
In Rome, the UCANR leaders met UN-FAO Director General Qu Dongyu, Deputy Director-General Beth Bechdol and the directors of the technical departments in the UN-FAO headquarters. They discussed potential collaborations on enhancing the agrifood system, conserving natural resources, fostering food security and building the resilience of agriculture-based communities.
The delegation also met with Ellen Luger, the Minister Counselor of Agriculture, and Giulia Soffiantini, agricultural specialist, both for the US Mission to the UN Agencies, and discussed collaboration.
UC ANR leaders also met Executive Secretary Hildegard Lingnau of the Global Forum on Agricultural Research and Innovation (GFAiR) and discussed the co-creation, access, transformation and use of agri-food knowledge. Humiston and Lingnau signed a memorandum of understanding, or MOU, that will connect UC ANR with GFAiR's global network of research organizations to help bring to California new knowledge and technologies from different parts of the world. At the same time, other regions can benefit from UC ANR research and innovations.
In conjunction with the World Food Forum andGFAiR, the UCANR delegation held an interactive event to showcase UCANR's Cooperative Extension and Research and Extension Center models.Humiston presented UCANR's vision, mission and structure, explaining howUCCE scientists engage stakeholders, working hand-in-hand with them on research at the farm level and getting feedback to upgrade, update and adapt.
Swelam and El-kereamy also explained how RECs can be hubs for training on topics such as irrigation water management, soil health and salinity control, pest and disease management, orchard systems, conservation agriculture,postharvest practices and more.
ANR leadership and academics Khaled Bali and MohammadYaghmour then traveled to Amman, Jordan, where they met with University of Jordan President Nathir Obeidat, Dean of the Faculty of Agriculture Ayed Al-Abdallat and the Executive Secretary of the Association of Agricultural Research Institutions in the Near East and North Africa (AARINENA) RidaShibli.
Humiston and Hales signed agreements for scholar exchanges and opportunities to conduct joint research on a host of critical topics, such as optimizing agricultural practices in the water-scarce environments we have in common. In addition to meeting with Nabil Assaf, FAO representative in Jordan, and his assistant Wafaa Ramadena, UC ANR leadership met with the Ministry of Agriculture of Jordan to share insights on UC ANR's unique research-extension-education model.
The mission concluded with an irrigation water management for orchard systems workshop sponsored by the FAO office in Jordan and organized by Khaled Bali, UCCE irrigation water management specialist, and Mohammad Yaghmour, UCCE orchard systems advisor. The workshop was well-attended by 65 participants, including farmers, students, academics, research and extension staff, and representatives from funding agencies.
“Our mission really underscored for me the complex, interconnected nature of so many challenges related to agriculture and natural resources, as well as the need to seek out the latest research and best practices from across the globe,” Humiston said. “While UC ANR certainly has much to share about our innovations and Cooperative Extension model, we have just as much to learn from our international partners – which will ultimately benefit communities here at home.”
From left, Mohammad Yaghmour, Khaled Bali, Hales, JAFCO host, Humiston, JAFCO host, Swelam and El-kereamy took a tour of JAFCO (Jannat Adan Farms Company), located in the Jordan Valley, below sea level. They saw research plots of mango, dragonfruit and grapes.
Celebration Corner
Humiston wins CUCSA leadership award, reappointed to state ag board
Vice President Glenda Humiston was recently honored with the Outstanding Senior Leadership Award from CUCSA, the Council of UC Staff Assemblies. The award recognizes senior-level leaders in the system who are supportive and inclusive of UC staff and who encourage equity, diversity, inclusion and community.
Working with UC ANR Staff Assembly Council members, 2023-24 UC ANR CUCSA delegates Shirley Salado and Christine Davidson nominated Humiston for the award. They presented their nomination during the winter quarter CUCSA meeting at UC San Diego, Feb. 28-March 1.
After presentation of nominations by CUCSA delegates from across the UC system, the delegates voted on recipients for the Outstanding Senior Leadership Award, as well as the Kevin McCauley Outstanding Staff Award, Outstanding Board Member Award and Outstanding Alumni Award.
"Glenda authorized and initiated ANR's first Staff Assembly Council in 2015 and has been a tremendous supporter throughout its history," Salado said. "She has increased SAC's budget for a variety of programs that provide tremendous benefit to our staff, from the Wellness Reimbursement program to the Employee Experience and Engagement Challenge to the Educational Reimbursement Program."
Although he didn't win, UC ANR Staff Assembly Council Chair Scott Brayton was nominated for the Outstanding Board Member Award, in recognition of his tremendous record of service.
"Scott shows genuine care and appreciation for ANR Staff Assembly, as he is always thinking about its past and its future," Davidson said. "He is always finding opportunities to recognize past officers and volunteers, recruiting potential new members for the Council and making himself available to all Council members and staff."
In more good news, Governor Gavin Newsom has reappointed Humiston to the California State Board of Food and Agriculture, where she has served since 2022. Humiston has been UC vice president for agriculture and natural resources since 2015. She was California state director for rural development at the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 2009 to 2015.
ANR wins gold award for educational advertising
Strategic Communications won a gold award for ANR's “Improving Lives in California” social media campaign in the 39th Annual Educational Advertising Awards.
The “Improving Lives in California' campaign” is designed to showcase ANR research and those who deliver it by featuring compelling content and UC Cooperative Extension advisors and specialists. The campaign targets Californians interested in agriculture, pests, environment, wildfire, water, youth development and nutrition with paid campaigns and organic posts on Facebook, Instagram, X (formerly Twitter) and LinkedIn.
The campaign's strategic emphasis on showcasing employees within the narrative of research efforts enhances the UC ANR brand identity and positions the organization as a collaborative pioneer in innovation. This comprehensive approach leverages the power of social media to extend reach, foster engagement, and effectively serve our online community.
The EduAdAWARDS, dedicated to recognizing excellence in educational marketing and advertising, attracted entries from more than 1,000 colleges, universities and secondary schools nationwide, including UC Davis and UC San Diego, competing across 54 categories.
Crisosto wins journal award
Carlos Crisosto, UC Cooperative Extension specialist based in the UC Davis Department of Plant Sciences, won an “Editor's Choice” award for a paper about plums.
Crisosto's article describing how to measure firmness for optimum harvest, plus steps to ensure postharvest deliciousness and a proposed consumer quality index, was published in the journal Horticulturae. In February, the article won the journal's Editor's Choice award.
Read more about the article at https://www.plantsciences.ucdavis.edu/news/crisosto-plums.
Warner to present SFREC oak research at international symposium
Andrea Warner, staff research associate at the Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center, recently has been invited to present at the International Oak Symposium in October in Knoxville, Tennessee. Her abstract titled “Best Practices for Regeneration of California Blue Oaks (Quercus douglasii)” will highlight the findings from an oak regeneration project that started in 2019 at SFREC.
SFREC has dedicated 44 acres of previously cleared rangeland to researching best practices for blue oak regeneration, taking the effects of irrigation, weed mitigation strategies, various shelter types and seedling source into consideration with approximately 6,500 individual planting sites.
The International Oak Symposium provides a platform to exchange information and build collaborations around the best available science and technology on oak ecology and management for a global audience. The meeting will provide innovative and progressive formats to deliver and exchange information and foster collaborations between researchers and practitioners.
“We are excited to have Andrea present the work being done at SFREC on an international level to represent UCANR and connect with other researchers in the natural resources field from around the globe,” said Dustin Flavell, SFREC superintendent and interim director.
First 5 Imperial releases Farm Smart videos
Farm Smart hosted another successful Farm-to-Preschool Festival that brought over 1,000 participants, 35 community resource tables, and over 100 volunteers to Desert Research and Extension Center this past winter, said Jairo Diaz, DREC director.
“Thanks to our staff for supporting this large and complex event and maintaining the vegetable garden,” said Diaz.
First 5 Imperial, which funded the festival, produced two videos: Farm to Preschool Festival 2024 and UC-Farm Smart - Harvest Day 2024.
Celebration Corner
Editor's note: This new monthly feature provides an opportunity to recognize UC ANR colleagues and teams. Send your shout-outs to contentpipeline@ucanr.edu.
Long honored by Yolo County supervisors
Yolo County Supervisor Angel Barajas presented Rachael Long, emeritus UC Cooperative Extension farm advisor, with a resolution recognizing the valuable research she has contributed to Yolo County farmers over her 37-year UC ANR career. Supervisors Jim Provenza, Lucas Frerichs and Oscar Villegas joined Barajas in thanking Long for her service. Susan Ellsworth, UCCE Capitol Corridor director, and UCCE advisors Morgan Doran and Margaret Lloyd attended the ceremony on Sept. 26.
Read about Long's career at https://bit.ly/3rkowlR.
Humiston receives Excellence in Leadership Award
Vice President Glenda Humiston was honored with the 2023 Experiment Station Section Excellence in Leadership Award for the Western Region. The award is presented to leaders who personify the highest level of excellence by enhancing the cause and performance of the regional associations and ESS in achieving their missions and the Land-Grant ideal.
The award, which was announced in April, was presented to Humiston on Sept. 26 at the Ag Innovation Annual Conference in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
FIRA attracts more than 2,000 participants
UC ANR Chief Innovation Officer Gabe Youtsey and the team at The VINE did a phenomenal job partnering with Western Growers and Global Organization for Agricultural Robotics (GOFAR) to organize the second annual FIRA USA. More than 2,000 people attended the three-day event in Salinas.
ANR celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
Kudos to the Latinos and Friends Affinity Group for organizing three fantastic virtual events for Hispanic Heritage Month. Ricardo Vela, Miguel Sanchez, Arianna Nava, Doralicia Garay, Angela Johnson, Adela Contreras and Lisa Rawleigh put together these wonderful learning opportunities that are recorded and available at http://ucanr.edu/hhm2023.
Nobua-Behrmann to discuss shothole borers on KLCS
Bea Nobua-Behrmann, UC Cooperative Extension urban forestry and natural resources advisor for Los Angeles County, will be on an episode of Things Green with Nick Federoff. Nobua-Behrmann will talk about shothole borers and not moving firewood to prevent the spread of the pests. Her segment on the half-hour sustainable lifestyle show with a heavy emphasis on home, garden, ag, ranching and farming is scheduled to air on Oct. 21. You can watch it at 9 a.m. on Saturday on KLCS-TV 58 or see the simulcasts on Facebook and YouTube.
‘Open Conversation’ on June 20 offers chance to chat with UC ANR leaders
Many of our UC Agriculture and Natural Resources colleagues have already had the opportunity to chat – in an informal, online setting – with UC ANR leadership about a wide range of topics.
June 20 (1 to 2 p.m.) is your next chance to take part in the series, “Open Conversations with UC ANR Senior Leadership” (submit interest form to participate).
Within this small group format, you can voice your questions, comments, suggestions – or whatever is on your mind – with Vice President Glenda Humiston, Associate Vice President-Business Operations Tu Tran and interim Associate Vice President-Programs Deanne Meyer.
Past participants, such as Ricardo Vela, manager of News & Information Outreach in Spanish, recommend these sessions as a forum for candid, meaningful engagement with leadership.
“I encourage every UC ANR staff member to participate,” Vela said. “Open Conversations with UC ANR Leadership were precisely that – a very casual, open conversation about topics I was interested in. The meeting was not one-sided, and senior leadership showed genuine interest in what I had to say; in the end, participating made me feel that I mattered at UC ANR.”
Organizers seek to limit enrollment to 20 participants to allow for more in-depth dialogue, so submit your interest form early. Attendees are expected to have mic and camera on for the duration of the online session.
Contact the Program Support Unit at anrprogramsupport@ucanr.edu with any questions.
Names in the News
Violini joins Government and Community Relations
Sheron Violini joined UC ANR on April 6 as associate director of Government and Community Relations. Violini will help UC ANR members develop and nurture relationships with local government officials. She will also support programs to promote community awareness of UC ANR.
Violini has 28 years of leadership experience in the California State Legislature. During her tenure, she served as the deputy secretary of operations for the Senate Rules Committee. She founded the Senate Training office, which is responsible for mandatory training, as well as courses to help legislative staff develop soft skills.
Early in her career, Violini served as chief of staff for Orange County legislator Dick Ackerman. This role taught her how to forge relationships on both sides of the aisle and in both houses. She brings extensive knowledge of how Capitol and district offices operate as well as the legislative and budget process.
Violini earned an M.A. in cultural resources management from California State University, Sacramento and a B.A. in history from UC Davis. She is an International Coach Federation Professional Certified Coach, certified by Thrive Global and B.J. Fogg's Tiny Habits programs. She looks forward to using her motivational interviewing and appreciate inquiry skills to empower UC ANR staff as they connect with their local government officials and the public.
“I am so pleased to have Sheron join our team,” said Anne Megaro, government and community relations director. “Not only does she have fantastic expertise and knowledge in government relations, she is passionate about professional training and will be a great resource for UC ANR employees to build effective communication skills.”
Violini is a fourth-generation Californian, raised in Monterey County on a working cattle ranch. She was a member of the Buena Vista 4-H club where she completed both livestock and home economics projects. Violini is excited to give back to UC ANR and the programs that helped launch her career.
Violini is based at the UC ANR building in Davis in cubicle 160 and can be reached at (530) 341-4661 and sviolini@ucanr.edu.
Quinn-Davidson to lead UC ANR Fire Network
Lenya Quinn-Davidson has been named director of the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources' Fire Network, effective April 1. UC ANR's statewide Fire Network will build connections and capacity among UC ANR scientists, practitioners, land management and regulatory agencies, policymakers and communities to work toward fire resilience in California.
To meet the challenge of wildfire, UC ANR has hired several new UC Cooperative Extension fire advisors and staff to study issues related to wildfire and to assist Californians with their preparations. Quinn-Davidson and the Fire Network will provide critical coordination and connection across geographies and disciplines ranging from forestry to food safety to livestock to water.
Quinn-Davidson has served as a UC Cooperative Extension fire advisor for the North Coast since 2016. During her three-year term as the Fire Network director, she will continue her research program and continue to build capacity among landowners, tribes and other communities to use prescribed fire throughout the state. Quinn-Davidson also leads the international WTREX program, focused on empowering women and other underrepresented people who work in fire.
“I'm honored to take on this new role, and I can't wait to further grow, connect and support our fire efforts within UC ANR,” Quinn-Davidson said.
She is based in Eureka at the UCCE Humboldt County office and can be reached at (707) 445-7351 and lquinndavidson@ucanr.edu.
Read the full announcement at https://bit.ly/3KFTtXK.
Singh named UCCE tech and innovations advisor for small farms
Manpreet Singh began working on Feb. 15 as a UC Cooperative Extension technology and innovation advisor for small farms and serves Fresno, Kings, Tulare, Madera and Merced counties.
Singh is responsible for testing and evaluating new technologies that can resolve challenges that small farms experience. With a variety of technological advancements becoming available, Singh will help small farms determine the feasibility and economic impact of their options. His role will not only prioritize crop production efficiency, but postharvest and marketing of crops as well.
A few areas of concern that are top of mind for Singh are weed control and water efficiency. “Weed control is a major part of agricultural operations and a logistical nightmare,” he said. “Since I did a lot of research in irrigation, I also want to help small farms adapt to smart irrigation controllers.”
Singh earned a master's in horticulture, specializing in vegetable science, and a bachelor's in agriculture from Punjab Agricultural University in India. During his master's program, Singh focused his research on hybrid breeding of melons.
After completing his master's, he moved to the United States to join the Ph.D. program at Texas Tech University where he worked as a teaching assistant for Principles of Horticulture labs. His Ph.D. research focused on limited irrigation strategies for vegetable production in West Texas.
“In the past, I did some extension work, but I never had a chance to work directly with the farmers. I'm ready to do some applied research that involves the farmers. So, this job provides me a great opportunity to do those things,” said Singh.
Singh is based out of the Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center and can be reached at mansing@ucanr.edu.
Ott to advise growers in Tehama, Butte, Shasta and Glenn counties
Since the beginning of this year, Jaime Ott has been settling in at UC ANR as the new UC Cooperative Extension orchard systems advisor for Tehama, Butte, Shasta and Glenn counties.
“Officially I am covering walnut, prune, almond and olive in these counties,” Ott said. “But since there is only one other advisor in my office, Josh Davy, the joke is that he covers anything with feathers, fins and fur – and I cover anything with chlorophyll.”
Ott said she hopes to help California agriculture become more robust, profitable and sustainable – economically, socially and environmentally – far into the future.
“I want to help serve as a bridge, communicating the needs of the growers in my area to the researchers on UC campuses to make sure that we are doing the right research, research that will help to move our production systems forward,” she explained.
After growing up in El Dorado County, Ott earned her undergraduate degree in biological sciences from UC Davis. She received her M.S in marine science from the College of William & Mary, and then joined the Peace Corps, through which she worked with farmers in Zambia to raise tilapia.
Since returning from Africa in 2014, Ott has been working in the lab of Greg Browne at UC Davis and pursuing her Ph.D. in the Department of Plant Pathology. Her research has focused on which Phytophthora species are affecting almonds and walnuts in California and the ways the pathogen is introduced into orchards.
“My experience in Zambia really highlighted how powerful information can be, and I want to make sure that California growers have access to all of the practical information that UC and UC Cooperative Extension scientists are generating,” she said.
Ott, based at the UCCE office in Red Bluff, can be reached at njott@ucanr.edu and (530) 527-3101.
Justin Tanner joins UCCE as grape advisor
Justin Tanner joined UC ANR on Jan. 3 as a UC Cooperative Extension viticulture advisor for San Joaquin, Stanislaus and southern Sacramento counties.
Tanner is responsible for implementing an innovative extension education and applied research program to address high-priority production issues in wine and table grapes including pest, disease, and water management.
Specifically, he supports entry-level growers who are seeking basic viticulture and pest management practices, while providing experienced growers information on new technologies to remain competitive. All producers face mounting pressures from increased regulatory and environmental compliance requirements as well as cost-competitiveness in an increasingly global marketplace.
Tanner attended Colorado State University and earned a Ph.D. in horticulture, focusing on germplasm conservation of temperate fruit trees. He also attended Texas A&M University, where he earned a master's degree in horticulture for citrus virology, as well as a bachelor's degree in agriculture for environmental soil science.
As a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Viticulture and Enology at UC Davis, Tanner designed and implemented research projects at Oakville Station in Napa County. During his time there, he investigated various factors that affect wine grape production such as examining the effects of cluster thinning and irrigation practices on grapevine red blotch virus-positive vines to evaluate the efficacy of cultural management practices on mitigating virus impact on grape quality and yield. He also conducted trials to identify rootstock and scion combinations as well as trellis systems to optimize production under warming climate conditions.
To understand the needs and challenges of the growers he supports, Tanner is working closely with growers, industry leaders, the Lodi Winegrape Commission and pest control advisers in the region.
“I see the spread of grapevine leafroll-associated virus by the vine mealybug as a huge challenge for grape growers within San Joaquin and Stanislaus counties,” said Tanner. “As vine mealybug reproduces prolifically and spreads easily, controlling this invasive pest will require an integrated pest management approach with a concerted and sustained effort at the community level.”
Tanner is excited to contribute to the success of grape growers and the wine industry using a science-based approach. “The growers and pest control advisers I have already had the opportunity to meet with have been kind, intelligent and hardworking people who I enjoy working with,” he said.
Tanner is based at the UCCE San Joaquin County office in Stockton and can be reached at jdtanner@ucanr.edu.
Lazicki brings vegetable expertise to Yolo, Solano and Sacramento counties
Patricia Lazicki started on Feb. 1 as the vegetable crops advisor for University of California Cooperative Extension in the Capitol Corridor, comprising Yolo, Solano and Sacramento counties. She aims to develop an extension and applied research program that supports growers through industry, regulatory, and environmental changes, while increasing the profitability and resilience of the vegetable industry.
“I'm excited for the chance that this position gives to do holistic, applied, scientifically rigorous research that encompasses crop health, pest management, soil health, water dynamics and economic sustainability,” Lazicki said. “In particular, this region has long been a hub of California's processing tomato production and I'm excited for the opportunity to learn from and support local growers, pest control advisers and allied industry within this important crop.”
Lazicki said she's also looking forward to working with UCCE's team of vegetable crop advisors across California to develop integrated pest management approaches for emerging pests and pathogens.
After growing up in southern Chad and northern Cameroon, Lazicki has spent much of her adult life doing research in annual cropping systems in West and Central Africa and across the U.S.
She earned her bachelor's degree in international agricultural development with a minor in soil science from UC Davis, her master's in soil science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Ph.D. in soils and biogeochemistry from UC Davis.
“I know I'm biased, but I believe that in the long-term healthy soils underlie healthy crops, environments and communities,” Lazicki said. “I hope to work with growers in my counties to figure out ways to adapt soil health-promoting practices to local needs without sacrificing short-term economic sustainability.”
Based at Woodland, Lazicki can be reached at palazicki@ucanr.edu and (530) 219-5198.
Martinez Resendiz joins NPI as project policy analyst
Erica Martinez Resendiz joined the Nutrition Policy Institute on April 3 as a project policy analyst.
Martinez Resendiz, who began her work at NPI as a graduate student, received her master's and bachelor's degrees in public health with a concentration in public health nutrition from the UC Berkeley School of Public Health. She is passionate about working alongside individuals and communities, food security, health education and early childhood nutrition.
Her previous work experience includes helping individuals navigate basic needs community resources, breastfeeding promotion, and nutrition education for participants of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) Farmers Market Nutrition Program.
As a graduate student at NPI, she gained experience conducting telephone and in-person surveys, developing interviews and surveys, collecting plate waste data, administering 24-hour dietary recalls for children, and creating nutrition workshop materials. Martinez Resendiz brings these skills to continue collaborating on NPI projects evaluating the transition to freshly prepared school meals, school meals for all and farm to corrections programs.
Martinez Resendiz is based at UC Office of the President in Oakland and can be reached at emartinezresendiz@ucanr.edu.
Orta-Aleman joins NPI as project scientist
Dania Orta-Aleman joined the Nutrition Policy Institute on March 1 as a project scientist. She will be supporting NPI's collaborative School Meals for All evaluation project.
Orta-Aleman is a nutrition epidemiologist with a doctorate in human nutrition from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and a master of public health degree in epidemiology and biostatistics from UC Berkeley.
Orta-Aleman has over 10 years of experience working on public health nutrition and food insecurity research projects, domestically and internationally. Her past research focused on enhancing services for participants in the federal Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC), the affordability of high-protein foods, and the effect of federal food programs on meat and other high-protein foods purchasing.
Orta-Aleman is based at UC Office of the President in Oakland and can be reached at dorta@ucanr.edu.
Noble joins Contracts & Grants
Emilee Noble has joined Contracts & Grants as a research administrator 3. She will be assisting principal investigators and UCCE advisors with grant proposal preparation. She will provide resources and expertise to better understand contract and grant administration and successfully administer sponsored awards.
Prior to joining UC ANR, Noble worked at UC Davis in the Sponsored Programs Office.
The Woodland native enjoys drawing, reading, taking up the art of bonsai and physical activities from working out to riding dirt bikes.
Noble is located in cubical 234A in the ANR building in Davis and can be reached at eanoble@ucanr.edu and (530) 236-7364.
Humiston wins WAAESD leadership award
Vice President Glenda Humiston will be honored with the 2023 Experiment Station Section Excellence in Leadership Award for the Western Region. The award is presented to leaders who personify the highest level of excellence by enhancing the cause and performance of the regional associations and ESS in achieving their missions and the Land-Grant ideal.
“Glenda served as WAAESD chair during a time when the regional office was experiencing some internal issues. Glenda's leadership was essential to managing through those tough times,” said Bret Hess, executive director of the Western Association of Agricultural Experiment Station Directors.
“On the national level, Glenda served as the Chair of the Experiment Station Committee on Organization and Policy's (ESCOP) Budget and Legislative Committee (BLC),” he said.
As chair of this committee, Humiston served as the ESCOP representative to the Association of Public and Land Grant Universities Board on Agriculture Assembly's Budget and Advocacy Committee and Committee on Legislation and Policy.
“She also served on an ad hoc infrastructure committee that was formed by the APLU BAA to address the rapidly declining facilities operated by colleges of agriculture,” Hess said. “Glenda's leadership was instrumental in all of these committees. She is well-known for her no-nonsense approach, coupled with her vast experience in the political arena, she helped move the needle.
“For example, she helped the system develop a longer-term strategy for justifying annual federal appropriations requests in support of capacity research funds that are allocated to State Agricultural Experiment Stations. She also played a pivotal role in creating awareness among congressional leaders that the nation must address the infrastructure challenges colleges of agriculture are facing.”
Humiston will be presented the award at the Fall ESS Conference in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Sept. 24-27.
Becker named Society of Nematologists Fellow
J. Ole Becker, UC Riverside professor of Cooperative Extension and Agricultural Experiment Station, has been named a Society of Nematologists Fellow.
Nematodes are tiny, thread-like roundworms that feed on fungi, bacteria, other nematodes, and plants. While feeding, nematodes can induce plant deformation, which interfere with water and nutrient uptake, severely impacting plants' ability to grow. They also create wounds that can leave roots vulnerable to infection by other disease-causing organisms in the soil.
Most vegetable crops, as well as trees and vines, are susceptible to nematode infection. Becker, a 30-year member of UC Riverside's Department of Nematology, works on ways to stop the worms while having minimal impact on the surrounding environment.
“He has truly been at the forefront of developing innovative, integrated methods for treating these pests,” said Andreas Westphal, UCR professor of Cooperative Extension in nematology based at Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center, who works with Becker. “Some techniques he pioneered have changed entire industries.”
For example, Becker developed seed coatings that protect against nematodes, since plants are most susceptible to them right when they germinate. Seed treatments dramatically reduce the amount of chemicals required for crop protection and are safer for the individuals applying the chemicals.
Becker is also internationally recognized for developing innovative biological methods of nematode treatment, which involve the addition of organic materials to the soil that stimulate the worms' natural enemies, or changing the soil in other ways that suppress worm populations. Methods like these not only help control plant-parasitic nematodes, but also hugely reduce the environmental footprint of agriculture.
“He truly has set an example working with both chemical and biological means, which are equally important,” Westphal said. “Many scientists really focus, and only go one route. Becker exemplifies how to cover both to achieve maximum effectiveness.”
See full story by Jules Bernstein at https://insideucr.ucr.edu/awards/2023/04/14/ucr-professor-becomes-society-nematologists-fellow.