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Articles

NEW ULTRASONIC METHOD HAS PROMISE FOR MEATS INDUSTRY

COLLEGE STATION — The meat industry’s constant quest for tenderness could benefit with just a touch, says a Texas Agricultural Experiment Station scientist working with a promising automatic meat-grading technology. The “touch” is elastography, a new form of ultrasonic measurement developed for the medical field. It could also have important implications for beef, pork and… Read More →

March 29, 1994

Farm & Ranch

LONG-STEMMED BLUEBONNETS BECKON BUD VASES

EL PASO – Move over, yellow rose, the way to a Texas heart may soon be a bouquet of long-stemmed bluebonnets. These Texas-sized beauties, developed by researchers at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station in El Paso and Dallas, are expected to fill a void in the floral market. “In the cut-flower market, there’s a real… Read More →

March 14, 1994

Lawn & Garden

FASTER, MORE ACCURATE TESTS TRACK DOWN PATHOGENSGENETICALLY

Writer: Kathleen Davis Phillips, (979) 845-2872, ka-phillips@tamu.edu Contact: Dr. Suresh Pillai, (915) 859-9111 EL PASO — Disease-causing microbes lurking in water, soil and food now may be more easily found, says a scientist who developed new molecular detection methods. Dr. Suresh Pillai, an environmental microbiologist at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, devised methods to genetically… Read More →

February 21, 1994

Farm & Ranch

WINTER DRYNESS MAY DELAY AFRICANIZED HONEY BEE SWARMS

COLLEGE STATION — A lack of moisture so far in Texas this winter may have put a damper on Africanized honey bee activities despite overall mild winter temperatures. Inspectors with the Texas Apiary Inspection Service have been coming up dry in trap checks throughout the state all winter. And the state Honey Bee Identification Lab… Read More →

February 18, 1994

Environment

PIKE NAMED SOUTHWEST MAN OF THE YEAR IN AGRICULTURE

Dr. Leonard Pike, director of the Vegetable Improvement Center at Texas A&M University, has been named Man of the Year in Service to Southwest Agriculture by Progressive Farmer magazine. The honor, which appears in the February edition of the magazine, notes that Pike’s development of the famous, ultrasweet 1015 onion “will pale in comparison with… Read More →

February 1, 1994

Lawn & Garden

CARDS DEALS MEATS INDUSTRY A WINNING HAND

COLLEGE STATION — When they dealt out CARDS in 1991, a Texas A&M University System research and education team had no idea their action would create such big winners. CARDS, or Computer-Assisted Retail Decision Support, is software that is helping break a $4 billion logjam in the beef industry by encouraging retailers to buy more… Read More →

January 24, 1994

Farm & Ranch

CORPUS CHRISTI, TEXAS A&M GO FISHING FOR NEW DOCTORALPROGRAM

CORPUS CHRISTI — Robert Vega’s career as a marine biologist along the Gulf of Mexico has been coasting. With a family, a job and no access to advanced education in his field, Vega’s hopes for a doctoral degree were an ocean away. But a new agreement between the Corpus Christi and College Station campuses of… Read More →

December 10, 1993

Environment

COLOMBIAN CATTLE MAY BRING GENETIC BOOST TO TEXAS BEEF

COLLEGE STATION — On the plains, in the mountains and through the jungles of Colombia, Texas Agricultural Experiment Station researchers think they can find bovine genetic material that may help improve the Texas cattle industry. At the same time, they hope to help Colombia preserve some of its natural heritage and transfer valuable technology to… Read More →

December 10, 1993

Farm & Ranch

SURVEY SHOWS HOW CONSERVATION LOAN PROGRAM COULD GROW

COLLEGE STATION — A state loan program to help irrigators pay for equipment that conserves water could increase its number of loans with a few changes, a joint study between Texas A&M and Texas Tech universities concludes. The Texas Agricultural Water Conservation Loan Program provides low-interest loans to local conservation districts, which in turn provide… Read More →

December 1, 1993

Campus & Community

IN TEXAS, IT’S GENE-GLE BELLS FOR CLONED CHRISTMAS TREES

COLLEGE STATION — They look like perfectly formed factory Christmas trees stuck in dirt. But the only thing artificial about these living tannenbaums is the way life began — as clones rather than seedlings. The first of several hundred cloned Virginia pines growing in Texas soil are ready this year to deck the halls in… Read More →

November 22, 1993

Environment
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