News from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at NC State University
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News from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at NC State University
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Bacteria in the guts of honeybees are highly resistant to the antibiotic tetracycline, probably as a result of decades of preventive antibiotic use in...
Yale University researchers find that routine oxytetracycline use to prevent foulbrood appears to have caused genetic adaptation in bacteria in the honeybee.
The resistant bacteria were not found in honey, however.
Check out our Apiculture site, also: http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/entomology/apiculture/
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Combining new tools, such as marker-assisted selection (MAS) with time-honored methods, Dr. Dilip Panthee carries on NCSU’s strong tradition in plant breeding, developing hardier, higher-yielding plants for NC's $30B/year tomato industry.
NCSU's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) has the nation’s largest university plant breeding program; and Pantheeproudly follows in the footsteps of Dr. Randy Gardner, a retired breeder credited with developing the cultivars used on some 60-75% of the vine-ripe tomatoes grown in the Eastern US.
Working at the Mt. Horticultural Crops Research & Extension Center in Mills River, Panthee focuses on developing tomato breeding lines and cultivars with three traits: disease resistance, fruit quality and stress tolerance. That’s because, in a survey he conducted, these three traits were the ones NC growers reported needing the most.
Read more about our tomato breeding program:
http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/agcomm/news-center/?p=21430
http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/fletcher/programs/tomato/
http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/achievement/tomato_breeding.htm
Some of our releases:
http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/fletcher/programs/tomato/publications.html