$15 Million Horticulture Research Program To Be Led By UC-Davis

The U.S. Agency for International Development has selected the University of California (UC), Davis to lead a new $15 million, five-year global Horticulture Collaborative Research Support Program.

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The new program will select and support U.S. and international partners as they undertake research, training, curriculum-development, and outreach activities in the neediest countries, most located in sub-Saharan Africa, southern Asia and Latin America.

The collaborative research effort will be responsible for developing and leading a broad range of activities that demonstrate how horticulture can help reduce hunger and malnutrition, and raise the incomes of the rural poor.

“This is not an easy task,” said Jim Hill, associate dean of International Programs in UC Davis’ College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. “In seizing this opportunity we are committing ourselves to making sure that the rural poor have access to appropriate technology, markets, resources, training, and supportive government policies.

The new program will be housed in the college’s Department of Plant Sciences under the leadership of Professor emeritus Ron Voss, a recognized vegetable and small-farm extension specialist.

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There are eight other existing USAID Collaborative Research Support Programs around the nation, including a global livestock program led by UC Davis. Like the older programs, the new horticulture program will provide funding to foster collaboration among U.S. land-grant colleges and universities and institutions in developing countries.

(Land-grant institutions, including the University of California, were designated in the mid-1800s by the federal government to focus on teaching agriculture, science and engineering.)

The newly created horticulture program will address priorities that were identified in the USAID-sponsored Global Horticulture Assessment, conducted and written in 2004-2005 by a team of international horticultural and development experts led by Patrick Brown, a UC Davis plant science professor.

Voss noted that in the developing world, women provide as much as 90% of the labor for production of horticultural crops, yet often have limited access to resources, receive lower wages and have less stable jobs than men. Gender equity will, therefore, be one of the overarching themes of the new horticulture program. Other areas of emphasis will be innovative technologies and information accessibility.

Research topics will include improving germplasm or plant genetic material; local plant varieties; and sustainable production methods in horticultural crops that will ensure success in the marketplace.

Because as much as 40% of the food grown in the target countries never reaches the table, there will be a special focus on reducing postharvest losses. Training aimed at decreasing the incidence of food-borne illnesses also will be provided.

Source: UC-Davis News Service

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Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

HUH? Obviously the Fed doesn’t know who the go to Universities are in the Horticulture industy. Oho State of course, NC State absoulutely but US-Davis what do they contribute to Horitculture? Sounds like another failed attempted bailout program from the Dems in Washington for their poor fellow elected Dems in California. By all means lets not award this to someone that might actually do something positive with the money-besides pay the Universities Light bills for a couple three months.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I am pleased to note that the well deserved UC-Davis is awarded the funding to help reduce hunger, malnutrition, etc. in the worst affected parts of the world. This is not an easy task to do. Several agriculture universities in the US, through their international programs, have been engaged in such work with the help of funding from various foundations and other sources. However, their efforts have not yet suceeded in solving these problems and they are all only on the increase. As an agriculture consultant for California farmers and also as a person working in developing countries, my opinion is that rather than telling people in developing countries to do certain things,get down to their level, hold their hands and show them how to improve crop yields per acre, which is miserably low in those countries. This involves transfer of modern crop production technologies along with assistance with what the plants need, since plants are the ones who prodence food.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

the university of california at davis is an outstanding horticultural institution and will do a superb job with the funding that is provided. as with most developing countries one of the main tasks is to prevent the government and politicians from absconding with the funds for teaching the farmers new technology. this can also apply to already developed countries like the good old united states of america.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

HUH? Obviously the Fed doesn’t know who the go to Universities are in the Horticulture industy. Oho State of course, NC State absoulutely but US-Davis what do they contribute to Horitculture? Sounds like another failed attempted bailout program from the Dems in Washington for their poor fellow elected Dems in California. By all means lets not award this to someone that might actually do something positive with the money-besides pay the Universities Light bills for a couple three months.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I am pleased to note that the well deserved UC-Davis is awarded the funding to help reduce hunger, malnutrition, etc. in the worst affected parts of the world. This is not an easy task to do. Several agriculture universities in the US, through their international programs, have been engaged in such work with the help of funding from various foundations and other sources. However, their efforts have not yet suceeded in solving these problems and they are all only on the increase. As an agriculture consultant for California farmers and also as a person working in developing countries, my opinion is that rather than telling people in developing countries to do certain things,get down to their level, hold their hands and show them how to improve crop yields per acre, which is miserably low in those countries. This involves transfer of modern crop production technologies along with assistance with what the plants need, since plants are the ones who prodence food.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

the university of california at davis is an outstanding horticultural institution and will do a superb job with the funding that is provided. as with most developing countries one of the main tasks is to prevent the government and politicians from absconding with the funds for teaching the farmers new technology. this can also apply to already developed countries like the good old united states of america.

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