Monkey Business In China Pays Off In Apples GENEVA, N.Y., Phil Forsline and Herb Aldwinckle have won some hard-fought victories in their war against apple pests, but they met their match when confronted by rogue monkeys. The two were on a trip to China to collect wild apple germplasm when a band of primates attacked their party. “One of them ripped my wife’s poncho and grabbed her collect ing bag,” said Aldwinckle, a mild-mannered Brit who is the chairman of the U.S. Apple Germplasm Committee. “I yelled at him as loudly as I could. But when he stood up on his hind legs, screamed back at me with a blood-curdling screech and showed his fangs, we dropped our bags and got out of there as fast as we could walk.” The scientists ventured back about an hour later. They found their cloth bags ripped open and the small, bitter apples they had been collecting strewn about the forest floor. The party of four Americans and four Chinese was on a two week expedition to expand the apple collection at the USDA ARS Plant Genetic Resources Unit (PGRU) at Geneva that is used for breeding and species preservation. At the time of the attack, they were 11,000 feet high in the mountains of Sichuan in central China on the Tibetan plateau, one of the most botanically diverse regions of the world. Sichuan and neighboring provinces of china are consid ered the center of diversity for many wild -species of apples that are important for the PGRU col lection. The U.S. team, in coop eration with scientist form other countries, completed four expe- Let TT