|

NEWS RELEASE
USDA Honors
Texas A&M's Pankiw with Research Award
Contact:
Scott Elliott, (202) 720-7185
WASHINGTON, Jan. 9, 2007 – USDA Under
Secretary for Research, Education and Economics Dr. Gale A.
Buchanan today presented the 2006 National Research Initiative (NRI)
Discovery Award to Dr. Tanya Pankiw of Texas A&M University for
her research in pheromone regulation of brood rearing in the
honey bee. Pankiw's work led to a patented procedure that
chemically manipulates a honey bee colony to significantly
increase pollination of crops and increase the colony growth
rate. The award includes a $10,000 supplement, and a one-year
extension of the project.
“Bees pollinate approximately 130
agricultural crops in the United States, including fruit, fiber,
nut and vegetable crops,” said Buchanan, who presented the award
at the Texas A&M campus at College Station. “Dr. Pankiw's work
clearly demonstrates the high-impact science supported by the
National Research Initiative, and the Discovery Award
illustrates the importance of that science on our nation's
agriculture.”
The U.S. honey bee industry provides
approximately $14.6 billion each year in added pollination
services to the agriculture industry. Pankiw's research
significantly increased the number of pollen and other foragers
in the honeybee colony, and increased colony growth rate. Dr.
Pankiw's research focuses on the effects of pheromones on honey
bee neurosensory physiology, endocrinology, behavior, ontogeny
and gene expression.
The NRI Discovery Award recognizes
outstanding researchers in agriculture who have supported the
Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service (CSREES)
mission and highlights the exceptional scientific and economic
impacts of NRI-funded projects. NRI, the largest peer reviewed
competitive grants program in CSREES, supports research,
extension and education grants that address key problems of
national, regional and multi-state importance in all components
of agriculture.
CSREES advances knowledge for
agriculture, the environment, human health and well-being, and
communities by supporting research, education, and extension
programs in the Land-Grant University System and other partner
organizations. For more information, visit
http://www.csrees.usda.gov.
# |