Ornamental Plant Germplasm Center Has New Director, Curator COLUMBUS, Ohio The Ohio State University Orna mental Plant Germplasm Center has a new director and curator to head up its staff. David Tay, an internation ally recognized leader in germplasm management, has been hired as the permanent director of the facility, suc ceeding interim director Jim Corfield. Susan Stieve, a well-known breeder of African violets, has been appointed curator of the center. “David brings the right blend of academic training, hands-on-knowledge of germplasm conservation, people skills, business skills and international exposure to help our center move quickly to become a world center for plant research,” Corfield said. Tay will be responsible for creating strategies, goals and objectives that the center will then fulfill through its activi ties. Germplasm acquisition, characterization, conserva tion, management and distri bution are all central functions of the center. He has already devoted consid erable time to creating a plan outline that will address what the research and commercial customers might expect from the center and how it can be best organized to meet those needs. Tay brings more than 25 years of experience in germ plasm work including plant breeding, taxonomy, seed production and enterprise management. Most recently, he has served as director of the Australian Seed and Propagation Technology Centre at the University of Queensland since 1995. He has worked with World Bank, FAO, the International Potato Center in Peru and as Head / Genebank Manager for the Asian Vegetable Re search and Development Center in Taiwan. Tay received his master’s and doctorate degrees from the University of Birming ham in England and his un dergraduate degree from the University of Malaya. Susan Stieve, who has a solid background in breeding research that includes Afri can violets, has been ap pointed curator of the center. She leaves her work as a plant breeder for Green Circle Growers and trial manager for Express Seed Company in Oberlin, Ohio, to accept the position. “Susan knows ornamental plants as a breeder, a grower and as an innovator of new genetics. These are just the qualities we’re looking for at the center,” said Corfleld. In her breeding work, Stieve bred and selected 13 African violet cultivars that are in commercial production in North and South Ameri cas, Europe and Australia. Additional breeding re search was conducted on more than a dozen other genera. Stieve has a solid back- ■SOBER ■ LOCATIONS 800 732-0017 ground in trial design, man agement and evaluation and has provided technical crop production assistance to growers throughout the country. She has been re sponsible for all aspects of operating a complex green house and field operation that will serve her well in her capacity as curator. She will have day-to-day responsibil ity for maintaining germ plasm collections at the center in addition to being a vital part of the team that lo Cabbage Research Development Program Awards $35,400 For 2001 GENEVA, N.Y. Mi chael Riner, president of the New York State Cabbage Re search and Development Program’s advisory board, announced $35,400 in fund ing for eight cabbage research proposals during the New York State Vegetable Confer ence in Syracuse, in early February. “The proposed research projects were excellent,” he said. He announced that the R&D assessment would in crease to $3/acre in 2001. “The Empire State ranks first in total cabbage acreage in the U.S., which includes fresh market and kraut cab bage,” said Cornell Univer sity vegetable horticulturist Stephen Reiners, who works at the New York State Agri cultural Experiment Station in Geneva. 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Stieve earned her bache lor’s and master’s degrees in horticulture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and completed virtually all of her doctorate work there before moving into private industry in Ohio in 1994. The Ornamental Plant Germplasm Center is the first focused effort by the USDA’s National Plant Germplasm System to manage germ cabbage crop was worth more than $BO million. The Cabbage Research & Development Program Advi sory Board met Feb. 8 at the Experiment Station to con sider the cabbage research proposals they would fund with the money they raised under the $2.50/acre Re search & Development fund assessment in 2000. Last year was the first season the as sessment was in effect. Nine research proposals were received, requesting $60,000 in funds. Among them were proposals from Cornell University research ers Helene Dillard, Phil Grif fiths, Tony Shelton, Lisa Earle, John Roberts, Steve Reiners, A 1 Taylor, and others. Projects funded included research in weed manage- Nutra-Flo Pure-Grade Liquid Plant Food has the highMlt nutrient usability available. When applied in-furrow, 2 x 2, ralfar or in a transplant solution you have the ability to achieve greater fertilizer efficiency with lower rates equaling greater profits. 9-18-9 5-15-15 Low-Salt • Chloride-Free • Neutral pH • 100% Available Contact PARS, Inc. gmwmrn* Elizabethtown, PA 1800-929-2676 or 717-367-5272 www.PureGrade.com plasm of herbaceous orna mental plants. The germplasm, including seeds, bulbs, shoot tips and other living tissue, will be housed in facilities adjacent to the De partment of Horticulture and Crop Science on main campus. Ohio State Universi ty’s College of Food, Agricul tural, and Environmental Sciences finalized a coopera tive agreement with USDA in the summer of 1999 creating the center as a joint research venture. merit, controlling alternaria leaf spot, breeding improved varieties, controlling pests such as Diamondback moth and cabbage maggots, the ef fects of hot water treatments on cabbage seed quality, pro cessing, and storage. “Cabbage usually ranks near potatoes and onions in value among vegetables in New York,” said Reiners. “Since it is important to such a large segment of the indus try, cabbage researchers at Cornell need to keep the in dustry up to date on all as pects of production-pest management, culture, post harvest, etc. The industry usually wants to see research on topics that will benefit them in the short term-things like how they’ll control thrips or rot next year, or what they can use to control weeds.” 227