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Science & Tech

DALLISGRASS POISONING AFFECTING SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS CATTLE

Dr. Larry Boleman, (979) 845-2051COLLEGE STATION — Changing cattle diets now will stop illness from a poisonous fungus currently affecting several South Central Texas pastures, officials with Texas A&M University said. Toxicology experts at the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory determined from grass samples — some of which had been ingested by animals that later…

July 28, 1995

Farm & RanchScience & Tech

FEDERAL, STATE AGENCIES TO REVIEW TEXAS WATER QUALITY PROJECTS

ABILENE–A progress report on state and federal projects designed to help farmers and ranchers safeguard the nation’s water quality will be presented here May 30-June 1 at the Kiva Inn. Representatives of 11 federal and state agencies will report and participants will get a close look at the Seymour Aquifer Hydrologic Unit Area Project in…

May 17, 1995

Science & Tech

RESEARCHERS MAKE PROGRESS TOWARD EDIBLE VACCINE

HOUSTON — Spoons could one day replace needles as a way to administer vaccines to protect children against diarrheal diseases that kill millions each year in developing nations, researchers say. Scientists at Texas A&M University’s Institute for Biosciences and Technology (IBT) in Houston and Tulane University in New Orleans say laboratory animals fed genetically engineered…

May 11, 1995

Science & Tech

May 1995 FEEDYARD DUST STUDY SHOWS EPA POLLUTION ESTIMATES TOO HIGH

COLLEGE STATION — Current U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates for feedyard dust are too high, and that could cost the Texas feedyard industry thousands of dollars in pollution fees that it doesn’t deserve, according to a preliminary study recently conducted at Texas A&M University. Annual dust emissions from feedyards studied by Texas A&M scientists accounted…

April 1, 1995

Science & Tech

TEXAS SPENDS BIG BUCKS TO STOP OAK WILT DISEASE

COLLEGE STATION — More than $6 million has been spent since 1988 battling deadly oak wilt disease in Texas, but foresters estimate that $60 million worth of trees have been saved. The Oak Wilt Suppression Project, handled by the Texas Forest Service, pits seven foresters full-time against googols of fungus spores that stick to the…

May 27, 1994

Science & Tech

ARTIFICIAL HUMIDITY MAY PROMOTE PEST DEATHS ON THE HIGH PLAINS

LUBBOCK — Aphids coming to feast on cotton plants on the High Plains this season may find the humidity in this normally dry climate truly unbearable. Scientists are hoping that a fine mist from a sprinkler system will help fend off damaging early season insects at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station at Halfway. If all…

April 12, 1994

Science & Tech

DUST-SUPPRESSION METHOD SHOULD REMAIN LEGAL, EXPERT SAYS

COLLEGE STATION — A controversial method for using water to help avoid grain elevator explosions should not be banned by the federal government, a Texas Agricultural Experiment Station researcher says. Dr. Calvin Parnell, an experiment station researcher and professor in the Texas A&M University agricultural engineering department, testified before Congress in October that using water…

November 1, 1993

Science & Tech

TEXAS A&M AGRICULTURAL COMMUNICATORS EARN TOP ENVIRONMENTAL AWARD FOR PUBLIC RELATIONS EFFORT

COLLEGE STATION — A collection of environmental news articles, videos, radio features and educational publications produced by the Texas A&M University department of agricultural communications has been selected as the Best Total Public Relations Program by Keep Texas Beautiful, Inc. The materials, produced June 1992-September 1993, were honored during the Environmental Expo, sponsored by Keep…

November 1, 1993

Science & Tech
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