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Posts Tagged: specialty crops

UC helps farmers identify profitable specialty crops

California small-scale farmers have an ally in their corner when it comes to specialty crop production - UC Cooperative Extension small farm advisors, noted a recent article in Capital Press.

In Fresno, UCCE small farm advisor Richard Molinar is working with Southeast Asian farmers on such crops as Chinese long beans, gailon, eggplant and jujubes, the story said.

He's also helping growers produce Uzbek-Russian melon, which is said to be more flavorful than cantaloupe or honeydew. And for the past seven years, he's been experimenting with miniature watermelons, another specialty crop well suited for small-scale production.

"We're taking a little twist off big watermelons," Molinar was quoted. "We're looking at varieties that growers can obtain and plant."

UC small farm advisor Mark Gaskell helps coastal farmers grow crops for niche markets.

"That's the kinds of things we do," Gaskell was quoted. "We get these things out in trials and get them in growers' hands."

The story said Gaskell, Molinar and other UC farm advisors are now working with Hidden Valley Salad Dressings to identify unusual vegetable varieties that will get elementary school students excited about eating right.

“We’re looking for vegetables that are not on everyone’s radar yet,” Gaskell said. “In some cases, a new crop is one that’s been grown by another culture for hundreds of years and is just ‘new’ to us.”

For more information the "Great Veggie Adventure," view the video below or see the UC news release.

View a 90 second video about the Small Farm Program
and the Great Veggie Adventure.
Posted on Tuesday, March 22, 2011 at 7:26 AM

Three ANR researchers receive NIFA grants

Three UC Davis researchers will receive grants from USDA's National Institute of Food and Agriculture for projects to benefit the California specialty-crop industry, according to a UC Davis news release issued yesterday.

The new grants are:

  • $2.6 million to study the use of sensors for precision canopy and water management of specialty crops. The lead researcher is professor of biological and agricultural engineering Shrini Upadhyaya, a precision farming expert.

  • $2.5 million to develop improved lettuce varieties. The research team, led by Richard Michelmore, director of the UC Davis Genome Center, will explore the genetic basis of horticulturally important traits in lettuce. 

  • $1.5 million to study the recurrent migration of Verticillium dahliae, a soilborne fungus that causes plant diseases. Researchers will investigate the relationship between international and interstate seed trade and spread of the fungus, as well as the risks of transmitting diseases and causing soil infestations by planting infected spinach and lettuce seed. The lead researcher is plant pathologist and Cooperative Extension specialist Krishna Subbarao. The Salinas Californian ran a story about the project last week.

 

Photo: Shrini Upadhyaya
Photo: Shrini Upadhyaya

In an example of Upadhyaya's precision agriculture work, a GPS-based auto-guidance system is being used to plant tomato seeds using a vacuum planter on the same beds in which tomatoes were transplanted previously.

Posted on Thursday, November 4, 2010 at 7:11 AM
Tags: grants (4), specialty crops (3)

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