Farming, Saturday, October 30, 1999 GENEVA, N.Y. Cornell University’s 7th Annual Process ing Sweet Com and Snap Bean Field Day was Aug. 17 here at the New York State Agricultural Ex periment Station’s Vegetable Re search Farm. Guests came Bom the Northeast and Canada, and as far as away as Alabama and Idaho. Twenty-nine USDA Protects 34 New Plant WASHINGTON, D.C. The USDA has issued certificates of protection to developers of 34 new varieties of seed-reproduced plants. They include alfalfa, bean, chickpea, corn, lettuce, pepper, annual ryegrass, red fescue, peren nial ryegrass, tall fescue, soybean, vinca, watermelon, and wheat The 34 certificates are being issued under the amended Plant Variety Protection Act. The amendments extend protection to FI hybrids and tuber-propagated varieties and require that all pro tected varieties be sold by variety name. The certificates require not only that the varieties be new, uni form, and stable, as in the original act, but also that they be distinct. The owners will have the exclusive right to reproduce, sell, import, and export their products in the United States for 20 years. The 34 certificates arc: • The DKI27 variety of alfalfa, developed by Dekalb Genetics Corporation, Dekalb, HI. • The Nugget variety of bean, developed by Harris Moran Seed Company, Modesto, Calif. • The Apache variety of bean, developed tty Idaho Seed Bean Company, Twin Falls, Idaho. • The Stan variety of chickpea, developed by Conagra Inc., Davis, Calif. •The PHWTI, PH63B, PH67A, PHBOB, PHFW4, and PH3BB varieties of com, deve loped by Pioneer Hi-Bred Interna tional, Inc., Johnston, lowa. • The Early Queen and Mid Queen varieties of lettuce, deve loped by Paragon Seed, Inc., Sali nas, Calif. • The Diamond variety of Let tuce, developed by Coastal Seed, Inc., Salinas, Calif. • The DMC 58-218 variety of pepper, developed by Del Monte Corporation, San Francisco, Calif. • The Taurus variety of pepper, developed by Novartis Seed, Inc., Boise, Idaho. • The Grazer variety of annual ryegrass, developed by United Come 6N you n\ove ovea/ NEED MORE ROOM? Read The Real Estate Ads In Lancaster Farming's Classified Section Attendance High At Cornell's Field Day guests representing the Ontario Growers Marketing Board came by motor coach from Ontario. TTiere were seven seed company representatives, five vegetable processing representatives, and one bean broker from Delaware. Also joining the field day were several local agri-business repre sentatives and a few New York State growers, including BUI Har- Varieties States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Tifton, Ga. • The SR 4300 variety of peren nial ryegrass, developed by Seed Research of Oregon, Inc., Corval lis, Ore. •The Wind Star variety of perennial ryegrass, developed by Pure-Seed Testing, Inc., Hubbard, Ore. • The Nobility variety of peren nial ryegrass, developed by Ampac Seed Co., Brownsville, Ore. • The 2CB and Shademaster II varieties of perennial ryegrass, developed by Pure-Seed Testing, Inc., Hubbard, Ore. •The Muscn variety of soy bean, developed by South Carolina Agriculture and Forestry Research System, Clemsoo, S.C. • The Hartz Variety H 6255 var iety of soybean, developed by Jacob Hartz Seeds Co., Inc., Stut tgart, Ariz. • The 9254,9611 and 9255 var ieties of soybean, developed by Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., Johnston, lowa. •The AG 1901, AG2IOI and A 4922 varieties of soybean, deve loped by Asgtow Seed Company, Kalamazoo, Mich. •The Lancer variety of tall fescue, developed by Picksccd West Inc., Tangent, Ore. • The Pacifica Red variety of vinca, developed by Waller Flowetseed Company, Guadalupe, Calif. • The W-9809 variety of water melon, developed tty Abbott & Cobb, Inc., Feastervilk, Pa. • The Solomon variety of wheat, developed fay HybriTech Seed International, a unit of Mon santo Co., Berthoud, Colo.; and the Nora variety of wheat, developed by Jose Buck S.A., Buenos Aires, Argentina. USDA’s Agricultural Market ing Service administers die olanf variety protection program, which provides marketing protection to developers of new and distinct seed-reproduced and tuber propagated plants ranging from farm crops to flowers. ris, an active member of the Pro cessing Sweet Com Research As sociation. Seven Cornell Cooperative Ex tension Agents attended from as far away as Wyoming County. Twenty Cornell faculty and staff from the Ithaca and Geneva cam puses attended to speak and sup port the field day activities, contri buting to the day’s success. Steve Reiners, associate profes sor of horticultural sciences, acted as emcee. He welcomed the more thn 100 people present and intro duced each speaker. Thomas Bjorkman, associate professor of horticultural sciences, Geneva, started the snap bean dis cussions with a presentation about solving the leftover phosphorous problem using ammonium and sodium bicarbonate release agents. Bjorkman and Reiners had acquired funding from the USDA for a two-year study. Their presentation was follow ed by Alan Taylor, professor of horticultural sciences, Geneva, who spoke on seed aging and the effect of cold storage, presenting emergence data on seed quality declination and yield declination. He addressed cold/stress tests and seed lab work on germination and the development of current eco nomic information for the grow ers. George Abawi, professor of plant pathology, Geneva, spoke on Being prepared... definitely! • Some “experts” are suggesting homeowners should prepare themselves for the loss of electric heat in their home •The STIHL 029 S is perfect for cutting firewood. • For those of you who want to be prepared, we’re offering the STIHL 029 S chainsaw, Get your firewood ready with the 029 s from #»Wf mm Now Just . » *l6" tm \ AbbQttgtQWn Hummels Wharf Peouea ShiDDen-«- ' MESSICK’S HUMMEL’S TEXACO DREXEL AUTO SUPPLY I RO #1 Box 255 A Rt. 11415 Tktwmi rmn n jji | 717-259-6617 570-743-7459 wSSISw | Carlisle I TRI-BORO I CONSTRUCTION SUPPUES ■ 1490 RITNER HWY. | 1-500-245-6590 I Dallastown I TRI-BORO | CONSTRUCTION I SUPPLIES : 435 Locum St. I 717-246-3095 j 1-800-632-9018 I East.Eart I GOODS LAWN & ■ GARDEN CENTER J Rout* 23 I 717-445-4490 I Elizabethtown i MESSICK’S I Rheeme ExH-Rl. 213 ■ 717-367-1319,717-653-6667 I Ephrata | WES STAUFFER ■ ENGINES & EQUIPMENT ! 23 Plaaaant Valley Rd. I 717-738-42150 ! Gap ' GAP ! POWER EQUIPMENT I Comer of Rt. 30 A Rt. 197 717-442-8970 the management of Bean Root Rot and described his fungicide seed treatment trials along with in formation about the impact of sub soiling, rotation, and composting with and without cover crops. Robin Bellinder, professor of fruit and vegetable sciences, Itha ca, spoke on regulatory informa tion for herbicides, including the EPA rejection of Reflex. “There will soon be a complete registra tion for snap beans,” she said. “It will help increase the number of tools in the toolbox for the grow ers. Finally, research support spe cialist Jim Ballerstein, Geneva, led a walking tour of the snap bean trials and described the sieve size, yield, and quality data fur each variety of snap beans. There woe some excellent conversations among Ballerstein and seed spe cialists as they went through each variety. Cans of processed snap beans woe displayed on a table near the field trial for a closer in spection of the finished product Margaret Smith, associate pro fessor of plant breeding, Ithaca, started off the sweet com trial por tion of the afternoon. Smith spe cializes in field com but has been able to transfer useful information to sweet com programs that deal specifically with pest problems and leaf blight. She spdke about the European Com Borer (ECB) resistance program at her field tri als in Aurora. N.Y. She also ex- Lltltz/Lebanon BOMBERGER’S LAWN & GARDEN Lltltz: 717-626-3301 Lebanon: 717-272-4155 6UTSHALLS INC. Loyavllla - PA - CarlMa 717-789-4343 717-249-2313 McAllstervllle HOOBER, INC. 717-463-2191 Oxford DEER CREEK EQUIPMENT, INC. 6400 LlmaMonaßd 610-932-6858 Palmyra HERR’S REPAIR SHOP RD2, Box USA 717-838-1549 Palmyra WEAVER’S LAWN & GARDEN 740 W. Main St. 717-838-5999 Peach Bottom A.K. SAW SHOP 214 Paach Bottom Road plained nitrogen stress tolerances and the genetic work to develop a better sweet com for the Finger Lakes Region. Mike Hoffman, associate pro fessor of entomology, Ithaca, spoke about Stewart’s Wilt and the use of parasitic wasps as a re lease inoculant for integrated pest management to control the com flea beetle. Fred Musser, graduate student in entomology, Geneva, continued on the subject of the ECB and the use of parasitic wasps as an IPM control on the egg masses of the com beetle. He also discussed use of Tracer and Success as insecti cides, their effects on milkweed, and, in turn, their effect on the Monarch butterfly. Bellinder returned to provide information about pesticides and specific information from the EPA concerning sweet com. She also talked about three new herbicides for sweet com that will be avail able within the following year. She notcd that Acton was good for Velvet Leaf and Aim may be used with 2-4-D for weed control. 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