American Floral Endowment Update – Spring 2004
Monday, July 17th, 2006Spring 2004 Newsletter
To view full report click here.
Spring 2004 Newsletter
To view full report click here.
American Floral Endowment (AFE) and Floriculture Industry Research & Scholarship Trust (FIRST) have merged, creating a united organization that will become the floriculture industry’s comprehensive endowment for both research and scholarship grants. AFE will remain the name of the organization.
While the exploration has been in the works for nearly a year, both boards approved a [...]
Leaf Yellowing in Easter Lilies: Causes and Solutions
Verbena Cultivar Susceptibility to Powdery Mildew
M.L. Daughtrey, Senior Extension Associate, and M.K. Hausbeck, Professor and Extension Specialist
Report #100
Dr. Paul Fisher, University of New Hampshire, $20,000
Annual Progress Report
June 1, 2006
James E. Faust, Scott Whiteside, and Kay Cooksey
Clemson University
John M. Dole and Sylvia M. Blankenship
North Carolina State University
Industry Needs Addressed.
Current shipping procedures require that cuttings be harvested from the stock plants in Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Columbia, Kenya, Israel and China and delivered [...]
Dr. Margaret Skinner, University of Vermont, $15,000
2006 Annual Progress Report
Industry Needs Addressed.
Western flower thrips (WFT) are major pests of greenhouse ornamental crops. Substantial economic losses can result from foliar and flower feeding or virus vectoring, such as INSV and TSWV, from WFT. Few compounds are available for WFT management therefore increasing the need for the [...]
Dr. Colleen Warfield, North Carolina State University, $11,000
2006 Annual Progress Report
The goal of our project during the first year (Aug 2005-Aug 2006) was to develop an efficient, sensitive, and reliable diagnostic assay to detect foliar nematodes (Aphelenchoides spp.) in host plant tissues, and then in the following year (2006-2007) to utilize the assay as a [...]
Dr. Stephen Marek, Oklahoma State University, $18,000, 3 year project
2006 Annual Progress Report
Stephen Marek, Entomology and Plant Pathology
Todd Cavins and Sophia Kamenidou, Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Oklahoma State University
INDUSTRY NEEDS ADDRESSED
The floriculture industry loses billions of dollars to plant diseases annually. Producers need effective, economical disease management methods to reduce these losses. Nutritional supplementation with [...]
Dr. Mary Hausbeck, Michigan State University and Margery Daughtrey, Cornell University, $38,000, 3 year project
2005 Annual Progress Report
Dr. Mary Hausbeck, Department of Plant Pathology, Michigan State University
Margery Daughtrey, Horticulture Research Lab, Cornell University
INDUSTRY NEEDS ADDRESSED
Powdery Mildew can occur very quickly, with little warning, and can destroy floriculture crops. Growers need to know the environmental [...]
Dr. George Elliott, University of Connecticut, $24,000
2005 Annual Progress Report
INDUSTRY NEEDS ADDRESSED
Diseases caused by soilborne pathogens can be cause of substantial economic losses in Floriculture production. Growers generally use chemical pesticides to control diseases, but some growers are using microbial inoculants (MI) labeled as biological fungicides as an alternative. Growers using MI have reported reduced [...]