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December 24, 2024

Finley: Behind the Research

Training graduate and undergraduate students how to safely operate equipment and tools in ABE’s shops and labs is a normal part of Tyler Finley’s job. But he recalls one unusual experience in which he shared the cab of a $600,000 tractor with a student who had never been behind the wheel of any vehicle. “I’ll remember that for a while,” he says. “They did great.”
December 2, 2024

Dasaro: Graduate Ag Research Spotlight

Every time I come into the lab, I know that I’m going to be learning something new, and every day is a step forward towards understanding these novel drug delivery systems.-Sophia Dasaro, PhD student, agricultural and biological engineering
November 21, 2024

Digital Ag: Purdue’s Institute for Digital and Advanced Agricultural Systems to cultivate innovation at upcoming panel and networking event

Purdue University’s Institute for Digital and Advanced Agricultural Systems (IDAAS) is at the forefront of integrating data-driven technologies into agriculture, serving as a platform for groundbreaking innovation. By connecting the brightest minds in academia and industry, IDAAS underscores Purdue’s commitment to shaping the future of agricultural systems.
October 25, 2024

Hinton: Cultivating the Future: One Year Later

Kayla Hinton has found a new “fit” with the Clorox Company as a supply chain leadership development program associate. She loved many things about her internship with Proctor and Gamble (P&G), and she was curious about other careers within the industry.
September 30, 2024

Hoagland: Purdue-led TOMI project receives $3.5M grant to turn a decade of data into new tools and strategies for tomato farmers

Hoagland said there are two kinds of tomato production in Indiana. Ketchup and canning companies like Red Gold form the industrial side, which relies on tomato crops grown in large fields. Fresh-market tomatoes, often grown on a small scale to sell unprocessed, may generate less revenue, but they are a fast-growing, popular option for both consumers and growers.
September 25, 2024

Wolf: One man’s watermelon waste is another man’s bioplastic treasure

AgroRenew is simultaneously investing in the education of current Purdue students as well. Amanda Wolf was originally inspired by her eighth grade science teacher to follow the potential of her strong problem-solving skills through agriculture. Now a junior majoring in biological engineering and minoring in biotechnology, Wolf put that passion and talent to use on the AgroRenew team this summer.
September 23, 2024

Engelberth: Ag Boilers Abroad: Microbial marvels in Germany

The Industrial Microbial Biotechnology study abroad program was created to offer students more insight into the many ways that microbes are used in industry. Germany is a choice location based on its history in food fermentation and expertise in anaerobic digestion of agricultural residues.
September 23, 2024

Porterfield: More than mushrooms—what do the mycologists at Purdue study?

From eating a poisonous fly agaric—the iconic red-with-white spots toadstool—as a child and getting his stomach pumped to later making clay versions of the same mushroom on a “Smurfs”-themed Mardi Gras float, Marshall Porterfield has gone from picking mushrooms off his pizza to growing them in the lab.
September 19, 2024

Grain entrapment is the leading cause of agricultural confined space-related injuries and fatalities; researchers emphasize safety

The purpose of the annual report is to maintain public focus on the issue of agricultural confined space injuries and fatalities, aid in the development of evidence-based training, and offer resources and direction to policymakers and engineering organizations in developing improved workplace regulations and design standards. New findings reported no fewer than 55 cases involving agricultural confined spaces, with 29 fatal and 26 nonfatal cases. This represents a 33.7% decrease over the 83 cases documented in 2022.
September 10, 2024

Porterfield: Purdue and NASA scientists plant the seeds for lunar agriculture

As a boy, Porterfield was influenced by viewing the Apollo rocket launches, an opportunity that came with being part of a military family stationed at a naval base nearby NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. Science fiction and television also sparked his fascination with space. The original Star Trek series hooked him as a young child, and later, during his undergraduate studies, an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation depicting hydroponics in space inspired Porterfield to his calling.
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