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Tomato Growers Workshop in College Station

Texas A&M Horticultural Teaching, Research and Extension Center 3199 County Road 269, College Station, TX, United States

COLLEGE STATION — Tomato growers, whether at-home or commercial, are encouraged to attend a workshop on production improvement from 9 a.m.-noon July 28, according to Dr. Kevin Crosby, Texas A&M AgriLife Research horticulturist in College Station. Tomatoes in the grocery store. (Texas A&M AgriLife Communications photos by Kay Ledbetter) The free workshop will be at the Texas A&M Horticultural Teaching, Research and Extension Center, 3199 County Road 269, south of Farm-to-Market 60 and west of Farm-to–Market 50 near College Station. The Texas A&M University department of horticultural sciences…

Improving US melon crop focus of $4.4 million study at Texas A&M AgriLife Research

COLLEGE STATION -- More than $4.4 million is being funded to discover ways to improve the U.S. melon industry through a grant to scientists with Texas A&M AgriLife Research and in seven other states. Cantaloupe in a Texas A&M AgriLife Research study near Amarillo. The monies, provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Institute of Food and Agriculture, were part of $35 million given to 12 projects to find "science-based solutions and new technology for the specialty crop industry." The four-year project, "A Sustainable, Systems-based Approach for…

Improving U.S. melon crop focus of $4.4 million study

Kathleen Phillips, Texas A&M AgriLife Communications Updated 8:04 am, Wednesday, September 6, 2017 COLLEGE STATION — More than $4.4 million is being funded to discover ways to improve the U.S. melon industry through a grant to scientists with Texas A&M AgriLife Research and in seven other states. The monies, provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, were part of $35 million given to 12 projects to find “science-based solutions and new technology for the specialty crop industry.” The four-year project, “A Sustainable,…

AgriLife researchers receive $4.4 million USDA grant

TAMU research strives to improve food industry - @bowerman_rachel In the U.S. melons such as cantaloupe and honeydew have been associated with the outbreak of 36 foodborne diseases and pathogen related fruit recalls since 1990 according to Texas A&M horticulturalist Bhimu Patil. On Sept. 8, scientists with the A&M AgriLife Research department received a $4.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) to research and improve the U.S. melon industry. The department received $35 million have been awarded nationally by…