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USDA Research Agency Awards Scientists for
Technology Transfer By
Kathryn Barry Stelljes
February 8, 2000
BELTSVILLE, Md., Feb. 8--Two teams that developed tools
to improve farm animal health, including a vaccine for catfish and diagnostic
methods for three livestock diseases, will receive 1999's highest award for
technology transfer from the Agricultural
Research Service.
ARS, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency, will honor scientists who
developed these and other important technologies in a ceremony Feb. 9 at the
agency's Beltsville (Md.) Agricultural
Research Center. There, ARS Administrator Floyd P. Horn will present the
two top research teams with plaques and cash awards for outstanding technology
transfer efforts.
ARS microbiologist
Phillip H.
Klesiusand ARS molecular biologist Craig A. Shoemaker developed a vaccine
against the bacterial disease enteric septicemia of catfish (ESC). ARS
microbiologist Katherine I. ORourke and ARS veterinary medical officer
Donald P. Knowles created novel diagnostic tools for sheep scrapie, bovine
anaplasmosis and equine piroplasmosis.
The awards event, begun in 1986, "allows us to acknowledge
exceptional efforts in moving research from the laboratory to the users," said
Horn. |
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Read:
article on catfish vaccine in Agricultural Research |
Klesius and Shoemaker work at the ARS
Aquatic Animal Health
Research Laboratory in Auburn, Ala. Their vaccine--the first modified live
fish vaccine to be approved--reduced catfish mortality by 80 percent in tests
and should save farmers as much as $60 million a year in losses.
Intervet, Inc., Millsboro, Del.,
has licensed the vaccine, which is commercially available.
"This vaccine will reduce antibiotic use and provide a more
cost-effective way for the industry to raise healthy fish for consumers," Horn
said. |
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Read:
article on scrapie test in Agricultural Research. |
Knowles
and ORourke work
at ARS Animal Disease
Research Unit in Pullman, Wash. ORourke led the team that invented
the first non-invasive, preclinical diagnostic procedure for scrapie in live
animals, as well as sophisticated molecular tests to diagnose scrapie. Scrapie
is a fatal neurological disease in sheep and goats. Knowles developed the most
accurate tests available for anaplasmosis in cattle and piroplasmosis--also
known as equine babesiosis--in horses.
The methods are undergoing further scientific validation. ARS
has applied for patents on all the tests, and they are available for licensing.
"These tests give regulators and producers an accurate way to
diagnose these important diseases," said Horn. "In addition to paving the way
for treatment, these tests will bring science to bear on regulations that
govern the international movement of animals and animal products."
At the Feb. 9 ceremony, ARS will also present individual or team
awards for other significant contributions in technology transfer. The
recipients are:
- ARS zoologist H. Ray Gamble,
Parasite Biology and
Epidemiology Laboratory, Beltsville, Md. Gamble developed and implemented
pre- and post-harvest certification systems to verify the safety of pork
products for both domestic and export markets.
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Read: article on this
research. |
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Read: article on
NP-PET |
- NP-PET, a team of seven
scientists and numerous industrial and private partners led by ARS agricultural
engineer Terry A.
Howell, Water Management
Research Unit, Conservation and
Production Research Laboratory, Bushland, Texas. This Northern Plains
Potential Evapotranspiration Project promotes water conservation by providing
real-time, remote environmental data including information about water use from
six major irrigated crops grown in the region. The network was used by over 325
growers, consultants and others in 1998.
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Read: article on
Areawide IPM |
- The Areawide Integrated Pest
Management Project for Corn Rootworm, a team of 23 ARS and university
scientists working in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, South Dakota and Texas.
The team pioneered USDAs areawide IPM project against corn pests and
relies on an aromatic beetle lure and trap as well as other technology. Their
work could save farmers up to $1 billion during a year of heavy infestation.
Contact:Richard M. Parry, Jr., ARS
Office of Technology Transfer,
Washington, D.C. phone (202) 720-3973, fax (202) 720-7549,
rparry@ars.usda.gov. |
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