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In Touch with the Agronomy Department

Farewell letter from outgoing Agronomy Department Head

Dear Agronomy Friends,

Starting July 1st I will be taking a new position as Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Education, and Director of the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center in the College of Agriculture, Food, and Environmental Sciences at The Ohio State University.  As such, this is my farewell message to all of you.

Manhattan and K-State have been very good for us for 29 years and it was a difficult decision to leave, but one that offers many opportunities for both my wife and myself.  When I reflect back on my time in Kansas three things come to mind: 1) my family, as without their love and support I would not have been able to accomplish much, 2) the people, as I have always been amazed and impressed by what can be accomplished when you work with great people, and 3) my friends, all of you that have made working and living in Kansas so much more than just our accomplishments.

The Department has a very bright future.  The Agronomy Education Center project continues to progress (although not as quickly as I would like); our students are in demand; our research and extension programs continue to meet critical needs; and faculty, students, and alumni continue to be recognized for their outstanding efforts.  It has been a privilege and honor to serve as the department head.  Thank you to the alumni for their past and continued support.

 

Sincerely,

Gary Pierzynski
University Distinguished Professor and Head

Greetings from new Agronomy Interim Department Head

Dear Agronomy Friends,

On June 18, 1984, I started work for the Department of Agronomy. Exactly thirty-four years later, on June 18, 2018, I assumed new responsibilities as the Interim Head of the Department of Agronomy. First, I would like to thank Gary Pierzynski for his 29 years of service to K-State with most recent service as Head. I had the pleasure of serving on the Search Committee that recruited Gary to come to our department as an assistant professor of soil and environmental chemistry. I enjoyed working with Gary over the years and really appreciated his outstanding leadership as our Department Head. Gary and his wife, Joy, will be greatly missed.

I have gotten to know many of you over the years in my previous teaching and research appointment. I taught classes in soil genesis and classification, advanced soil genesis and classification, and soil mineralogy. Perhaps, the most rewarding aspect of my previous work was coaching the Soil Judging Team. It will probably take about one to two years to get a new permanent head. My plans are to retire once the permanent head is on the job.

Gary ended his farewell letter to the department by saying that the Department has a very bright future. I certainly agree. However, we have some challenges ahead due to the loss of faculty positions as a result of budget reductions at the university. We have lost two positions following retirement: Curtis Thompson’s weed science position in extension and Gary Cramer’s position as agronomist-in-charge at the South Central Experiment Field in Hutchinson. In addition, Ray Asebedo has left his faculty position in precision agriculture to work in private industry. Ray’s position was not lost, although we do not expect to be able to open a search for the position for a period of time.

I would also like to announce the appointments of Dallas Peterson as the new Extension State Leader for Agronomy and Anita Dille as the new Assistant Head for Teaching.

The department will be working on plans to meet the needs of our students, clientele, and citizens of Kansas despite the reductions in faculty positions. On a more positive note, faculty and students continue to receive many awards at the university and national level as illustrated in another section of this newsletter. Undergraduate and graduate enrollment is steady with a strong job market. The Agronomy Education Center will go out for bids soon with construction starting in early fall.

I look forward to the challenges of serving as Interim Head and to working with each of you in my new position. Please feel free to call, send an e-mail, message, or just drop by for visit.

Sincerely,

Michel D. “Mickey” Ransom, PhD
Interim Head and Professor
Department of Agronomy
Kansas State University
Manhattan, KS 66506-0110
785-532-6101 (office)
mdransom@ksu.edu

Agronomy judging teams have another successful year

Agronomy’s Crops, Weeds, and Soils Judging Teams have enjoyed many years of competitive successes. Since last summer, there have been another round of notable achievements by our students!

Weed Science Team Succeeds in 2017 Regional Contest

Kansas State University’s Weed Science teams had a successful showing against eight other universities at the regional North Central Weed Science Society Collegiate Weed Contest held on July 27, 2017.

A total of 80 undergraduate and graduate students competed in the competition hosted by Iowa State University at its Field Extension Education Laboratory near Ames, Iowa.

Two undergraduate teams and one graduate team represented K-State. One of the undergraduate teams took first place among all undergraduate teams. Members of that team (all from Kansas) included: Keren Duerksen, junior from Newton; Nicole Sudbeck, senior from Seneca; and Sarah Zerger, senior from Cheney.

Sudbeck took 1st Overall Undergraduate Score in the individual awards. Sudbeck was also the individual event winner for written calibration problems and Duerksen was the individual event winner for identification of herbicide symptomology. The team also placed 1st in the Undergraduate Team Sprayer Calibration Event.

Members of the second undergraduate team (all from Kansas) were Jace Bowen, junior from Topeka; Trent Frye, senior from Belleville; and Peter Bergkamp, sophomore from Cheney.

K-State also had the 3rd place Graduate Team among all graduate student teams, with the following members: Jeffrey Albers, Oakley; Garrison Gundy, Halstead; Larry Joe Rains, Harrisonville, Missouri; and Nathaniel Thompson, Manhattan. Albers won the Farmer Problem solving event. All were from Kansas except Rains.

Coaches were Anita Dille, Kevin Donnelly, and Dallas Peterson, professors of agronomy.

Crops Team wins 2017 National Championship

The Kansas State University Crops Team achieved the title of national champions by winning both the Kansas City American Royal Collegiate Crops Contest on Nov. 14 and the Chicago Collegiate Crops Contest on Nov. 18.  K-State teams have now won the collegiate crops contest championship in fifteen of the past nineteen years.  This was the ninth straight win for K-State in the Chicago contest, surpassing the previous record of eight set by the University of Minnesota from 1969-1976.

K-State 2017 Collegiate Crops Team (l to r): Dr. Kevin Donnelly (coach), Kaylin Fink, Tyler Marr, Keren Duerksen, Trent Frye, Nathan Ryan, Noah Winans, Rebecca Zach, Wes Jennings, Sarah Zerger (asst. coach)

Official members of the K-State team were Keren Duerksen, Newton, junior in agronomy, Kaylin Fink, Chapman, junior in agronomy, and Nathan Ryan, Louisburg, MO, sophomore in agronomy.  Alternate contestants were agronomy majors Rebecca Zach, Morrowville, sophomore, Westley Jennings, Salina, sophomore, Tyler Marr, Formosa, senior, Trent Frye, Belleville, senior, and Noah Winans, Tekonsha, MI, sophomore.

In both contests, the K-State team took first place in the plant and seed identification phase of the contest and placed second in seed analysis.  In grain grading, they were first at Chicago and second at Kansas City. At Chicago, Keren Duerksen was the first place individual overall. Kaylin Fink finished in third place overall, and Nathan Ryan was fifth overall. At Kansas City, Nathan Ryan was the top individual overall, where he won the grain grading component with a perfect score. Keren Duerksen was the second place individual overall, and Kaylin Fink placed fifth overall.

The team was coached by Kevin Donnelly, K-State professor of agronomy. Sarah Zerger, agronomy senior from Cheney, was the assistant coach.

In the contests, participants are required to identify 200 different plant or seed samples of crops and weeds; grade eight different samples of grain according to Federal Grain Inspection Service standards; and analyze ten seed samples to determine what contaminants they contain.

Continue reading “Agronomy judging teams have another successful year”

Agronomy Education Center is moving forward

In the last newsletter we reported that the Agronomy Education Center, to be built on the Agronomy Farm just north of the main K-State campus, was within reach.  Much has happened since then and we are excited to announce that the project is moving ahead.  We have an architect, the final design is set, drawings are complete and in review by the state, and we should be able to bid the project this summer.  Fund raising has been somewhat successful but we are still in need of some resources, as explained at the end of this article.

What will the Agronomy Education Center look like?

The Center will have two classrooms, a large exhibit hall, restrooms, and a foyer. The classrooms would be equipped with the latest audio/visual technology. An instructor would have access to as good, or better technology there as they do on campus.

Figure 1. Final floor plan of the Agronomy Education Center.

 

Figure 2. Elevation view of the Agronomy Education Center.

 

Why is the Agronomy Education Center needed?

The Agronomy Farm has always had an educational mission, but the farm lacks a dedicated facility for such activities.

Continue reading “Agronomy Education Center is moving forward”

Agronomy professor named University Distinguished Professor

Mary Beth Kirkham, professor of agronomy, has been named a 2018 university distinguished professor, a lifetime title that is the highest honor the university bestows on its faculty members.

The distinguished professors are appointed following a university-wide nomination and evaluation process conducted by the provost. “Our newest university distinguished professors are exceptional in their fields and have demonstrated the highest levels of scholarship,” said April Mason, university provost and senior vice president. “With such scholars leading the way, we continue toward our goal of becoming a Top 50 public research university by 2025.”

Kirkham is an international authority on the plant-water relations of winter wheat and the uptake of heavy metals by crops grown on polluted soil. She was the first researcher to document the effects of elevated levels of carbon dioxide on crops grown under semiarid conditions. She also conducts research on the effects of gravity on plants.

Kirkham came to Kansas State University in 1980. Her research has been supported by organizations such as the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Office Water Research and Technology.

She has contributed to more than 300 articles in scientific publications, has written three textbooks and has edited four books. She has served on the editorial board for 21 journals, including Soil Science and the Journal of Crop Improvement.

Kirkham is a fellow of the American Society of Agronomy, the Soil Science Society of America, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Crop Science Society of America, and the Royal Meteorological Society.

She was recognized with the Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s College of Agricultural and Life Sciences in 2017. She also has received the Carl Sprengel Agronomic Research Award from the American Society of Agronomy and the 2010 Crop Science Research Award. In 2013, she received the Irvin E. Youngberg Award in Applied Science, one of the Higuchi-University of Kansas Endowment Research Achievement Awards. At Kansas State University, she received the 2010 Dr. Ron and Rae Iman Outstanding Faculty Award for Research.

Before coming to Kansas State University, Kirkham held appointments at Oklahoma State University and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She earned a doctorate and a master’s degree in botany from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a bachelor’s degree in biological sciences from Wellesley College.

Agronomy Faculty Recognized for their Excellence

In the last year, Agronomy faculty members have accumulated numerous awards at all levels: college-wide, regionally, nationally, and internationally. A small selection of these outstanding accomplishments are outlined below:

J. Anita Dille, professor of weed science, was awarded the 2018 Outstanding Teacher Award from the Weed Science Society of America. To be eligible for this award, the nominee must be currently active in teaching weed science. Dille’s teaching responsibilities include three undergraduate courses as well as a graduate course in weed ecology. She also plays an active role in undergraduate advising and has advised 16 M.S. and 7 Ph.D. graduate students. Her research program focuses on the biology and ecology of key weed species and evaluating integrated and site-specific weed managements programs for Kansas cropping systems.

Kevin Donnelly, professor of agronomy, received the 2017 Murray Brown Leadership Award from the North American Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (NACTA). This award recognizes one member each year for a distinguished and sustained record of NACTA leadership. Donnelly has been the Central Regional director and president of NACTA, and is currently the NACTA historian. He was the NACTA Judging Conference liason for many years, and recently chaired the planning committee for the 2017 Judging Conference hosted by K-State.

Colby Moorberg, assistant professor of soil science, received the 2017 Outstanding Service Award from the Soil and Water Conservation Society. The Outstanding Service Award is given to society members in recognition of distinguished service in helping the society to develop and carry out its program over a long and sustained period of time. In honoring Moorberg with this award, the society stated that he has advanced soil and water conservation efforts through recruitment to and development of student chapters of the society, community outreach and educating the next generation of conservationists.

Clenton Owensby, professor of range management, received the 2018 Outstanding Undergraduate Teaching Award from the Society of Range Management. Owensby instructs both undergraduate and graduate students in courses dealing with range management.

Michel “Mickey” Ransom, professor of soil classification and interim department head, received a 2018 Educator Award (formerly Fellow) from the North American Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (NACTA). One of the central purposes of NACTA is to recognize those individuals whose efforts represent the very best in agricultural higher education.

Charles “Chuck” Rice, university distinguished professor, has been recognized for his lifelong commitment to international advancement in soil improvement and cultural exchanges. During the fall of 2017, he was awarded the International Agronomy Award from the American Society of Agronomy and the International Soil Science Award from the Soil Science Society of America. The International Agronomy Award recognizes outstanding contributions in research, teaching, extension, or administration made outside the U.S. by a current agronomist. The International Soil Science Award is bestowed on an individual for their outstanding contributions to soil science on the international scene.

Dr. Rice also received the 2017 Hugh Hammond Bennett Award from the Soil and Water Conservation Society. This is the highest honor that can be received by an individual from the Society. It recognizes national and international accomplishments in the conservation of soil, water, and related natural resources.

Happy trails – Agronomy retirements for 2017-2018

Since our last Agronomy alumni newsletter in July 2017, the department had bade farewell to three valuable members as they reached their retirements.

Curtis R. Thompson, Professor and Weed Science Specialist

Curtis Thompson, Professor and Agronomy Extension State Leader, will conclude his tenure in the Department of Agronomy on July 18, 2018. He has 25 years of professional service to Kansas State University, The College of Agriculture, and Kansas State Research and Extension, with 40 years total in the work force.

Curtis R. Thompson

Curtis grew up on a diversified farm in north central North Dakota. After earning a bachelor’s degree from North Dakota State University in 1978, he was employed as a research technician in weed science at NDSU while working on and attaining a master’s degree in 1983. He served as a research agronomist from 1982 to 1989 at the NDSU North Central Research and Extension Center in Minot, ND. Thompson moved on to graduate school in August 1989 and worked as a technician in weed science at the University of Idaho while working on and attaining a PhD in Plant Science in 1993.

Thompson began his tenure with K-State on July 18, 1993 at the Southwest Research Extension Center, Garden City as Assistant Professor and the Crops and Soils Extension Specialist responsible for Agronomic programing in Southwest Kansas. Curtis thoroughly enjoyed working directly with Ag Agents and Farmers conducting applied research and doing extension work. He moved through the ranks attaining Associate and Full Professor and served in this position for almost 15 years.

In 2008, Curtis moved to the Manhattan campus to assume the duties of Professor and Extension and Research Specialist in Weed Science in the Department of Agronomy. He focused on weed management in grain sorghum and corn as well as focusing on herbicide-resistant weed management, especially kochia and Palmer amaranth. Over the years, Thompson’s efforts have led to the registration of several herbicides in corn, sorghum, and sunflower. Thompson and colleagues developed strategies for controlling glyphosate resistant kochia in western Kansas. Thompson discovered the first HPPD-resistant Palmer amaranth in the U.S. and has worked with Dr. Mithila Jugulam, weed physiologist in Agronomy, to unravel the resistance mysteries.

Thompson has served as the State Extension Leader for Agronomy since July 2012.  Thompson has been recognized by his peers, receiving the Fellow award from the American Society of Agronomy and the North Central Weed Science Society.

During the early part of Thompson’s career, Curtis married his wife, Meri and they have three children: Keilah (spouse Anna), Krista (spouse Joshua), and Ryan (spouse Dawn) and nine grandchildren.

 

Gary L. Cramer, Agronomist-in-Charge, South Central Experiment Field

The Department of Agronomy and the College of Agriculture recognize Gary Cramer for 15 years of professional service to Kansas State University.

Cramer received his bachelor’s degree in agricultural ecology in 1973 from Northwestern State College, Alva, Oklahoma. In 1975, he received his master’s degree in agronomy from Oklahoma State University, Stillwater. He went on to complete a doctorate in weed science in 1980 from the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.

Continue reading “Happy trails – Agronomy retirements for 2017-2018”

Agronomy Personnel Changes

Dr. Anita Dille will serve as the Assistant Head for Teaching, effective on June 27, 2018. She will continue in her current position as professor of weed ecology but will assume the additional responsibilities of coordinating the teaching, undergraduate academic advising, and academic service activities for the department.

Dr. Anita Dille

Kathy Gehl rejoined the department in late summer 2017 as the new Extension eUpdate editor, replacing long-time editor Steve Watson upon his retirement. She also serves as the Extension Program Coordinator for the Great Plains Grazing project, a multi-university collaboration to adapt grazing strategies to changing conditions in the Southern Great Plains. Kathy received her M.S. in Agronomy at K-State in 2003 under the direction of University Distinguished Professor, Chuck Rice.

Faculty Departures

Dr. Doug Shoup, associate professor and the Southeast Area Crops and Soils Specialist, served his last day at K-State on June 29, 2018. Doug completed all three of his degrees in the Department of Agronomy at K-State and served in his position as the Southeast Area Crops and Soils Specialist for ten years. The department and K-State will greatly miss Dr. Shoup and wish him well as he continues to farm and consult in east central Kansas.

Dr. Antonio “Ray” Asebedo, assistant professor specializing in precision agriculture, resigned his faculty position effective July 1, 2018, to pursue other opportunities. The department thanks Dr. Asebedo for his service to the department and wishes him well in his future endeavors.

Dr. Anserd “A.J.” Foster, assistant professor and the Southwest Area Crops and Soils Specialist, resigned his position at the end of June 2018. He served in his role of area agronomist for three years. The department wishes A.J. and his family well as they relocate to Washington.

New option within Agronomy major

We are excited to announce a new option, Precision Agriculture, has been approved by Kansas State University to the Agronomy major.

Agronomy students who can analyze and interpret data points and digitized maps as part of precision ag systems are in high demand.

Students can now choose to enroll in the following options within Agronomy:

  • Business and Industry
  • Consulting and Production
  • Plant Science and Biotechnology
  • Precision Agriculture
  • Range Management
  • Soil and Environmental Science

This is the first new option added to the Agronomy curriculum in many years, and is in response to demand from employers and students, says Mickey Ransom, Agronomy Professor and Assistant Head for Teaching. Getting a new option added to a curriculum is a lengthy and detailed process within the university, but Ransom and Kim Kerschen, Agronomy Instructor and Academic Coordinator, felt strongly that the new option was needed.

“Industry came to us and said they were putting a lot of our recent graduates into precision agriculture work. They wanted to employ graduates who could take all the data being collected by new technology and make agronomic decisions based on that data,” Ransom says.

Until now, students in Agronomy could choose to take existing courses in precision agriculture, while selecting one of the other options within the Agronomy major. Students did not, however, have a way to promote themselves to prospective employers as having a focus and specialty in precision agriculture, Ransom explains.

Some of the courses at K-State and K-State Polytechnic directly related to the Precision Agriculture option within Agronomy include:

AGRON 202 Introduction to Precision Ag Software

AGRON 655 Site Specific Agriculture

ATM 450 Sensors and Controls for Agricultural and Biological Systems

ATM 550 Precision Agriculture Technologies

GEOG 508 Geographic Information Systems I

GEOG 605 Remote Sensing of the Environment

GEOG 608 Geographic Information Systems II

UAS 270 Introduction to Unmanned Aircraft Systems

UAS 373 Small Unmanned Aircraft Design and Construction for Non-Aviators

UAS 463 Introduction for Autopilots and Mission Planning for Non-Aviators

In Agronomy, AGRON 202 was offered for the first time in the Spring semester of 2017, taught by Ray Asebedo, Assistant Professor of Agronomy and Precision Agriculture Specialist. This course was developed to be an introduction to precision agriculture software for any undergraduate students interested in the subject. In its first year, 41 students were enrolled, which was the maximum capacity.

Students in the first AGRON 202 course, spring semester 2017. Lots of learning and lots of fun! Assistant Professor Ray Asebedo, who teaches the course, is in the center of the group on the front row, in a dark long-sleeved jacket.

In this course, students learned about mobile, cloud, and desktop GIS software. Emphasis was placed on the basics of data collection, processing, and analytics for the generation of recommendation maps and output files for rate controllers that account for site-specific variation. The goal of this course was to build students to a level of proficiency with GIS software early in their precision agriculture training that would be continually built upon as they go through the precision agriculture program.

Asebedo found the students in AGRON 202 to be thoughtful and creative. They seemed to enjoy the course.

“Learning software is often a struggle for students and can seem a rather daunting task. Often, software courses try to cover too much material and students get lost in the process. Majority of students thought the course was intensive but were pleased at the end of semester as they could build fields, import data such SSURGO, satellite imagery, and drone imagery, and process them to recommendation maps that are high quality on their own,” Asebedo says.

“Many students started doing extra work and building maps for their home farms, and even creating their own logos to mark their work. It was definitely a fun time with these students. We had many late-night ArcMap map making parties. Precision agriculture is an interdisciplinary field requiring students to understand software and hardware as well as the agronomic sciences. Interdisciplinary training is what we seek to provide for generating the next wave of precision agronomists,” Asebedo says.

Overall, the new Precision Agriculture option within the Agronomy major adds visibility and marketability to our undergraduate program, Ransom says. It also helps in recruiting new students. Precision agriculture technology has created fundamental changes within agriculture, and once again K-State and the Department of Agronomy are leaders in the field.

Student Competition Team Successes

Agronomy’s Crops Teams and Soil Judging Teams have enjoyed many years of competitive successes recently. Since October 2016, there have been another round of notable achievements by our students!

  1. Crops Team Shares 2016 National Championship Title
K-State 2016 Collegiate Crops Team (l to r): Dr. Kevin Donnelly (coach), Kaylin Fink, Hayden Guetterman, Sarah Zerger, Samantha L’Ecuyer (assistant coach), Jessi Bramhall, Nicole Sudbeck (assistant coach), Keren Duerksen.

The Kansas State University Crops Team completed the fall season by taking the top three individual placings to win the Chicago Collegiate Crops Contest by 104 points over Iowa State University. Earlier in the week, Iowa State edged the K-State team by six points in the Kansas City American Royal contest, resulting in a shared national championship for 2016.

This was the 8th straight win for K-State in the Chicago contest, matching the record set by the University of Minnesota from 1969-1976. K-State teams have now won or shared the collegiate crops contest championship in 20 of the past 23 years.

Official members of the K-State team were agronomy majors Jessi Bramhall, Seneca, senior; Sarah Zerger, Cheney, junior; and Hayden Guetterman, Bucyrus, senior. Alternate contestants were sophomores Keren Dureksen, Newton, and Kaylin Fink, Chapman.

In both contests, the K-State team took first place in both the grain grading and the plant and seed identification phases of the contest, and placed second in seed analysis. At Chicago, each team member won one component, and a 1-2-3 finish in grain grading sealed the win for K-State.

Jessi Bramhall was the high individual overall and the high individual in seed analysis. Sarah Zerger took second overall and was the high individual in plant and seed identification with a perfect score, the first in since 1994 in the Chicago contest. Hayden Guetterman was third high individual, and won the grain grading section. Bramhall was second in identification and third in grain grading. Zerger placed second in grain grading while Guetterman placed fourth in seed analysis and fifth in identification.

At Kansas City, Jessi Bramhall was second overall, second in identification, third in seed analysis and fifth in grain grading. Sarah Zerger placed fourth overall, second in grain grading and fifth in seed analysis and identification. Hayden Guetterman was eighth overall and fourth in identification.

The team was coached by Kevin Donnelly, professor of agronomy. Assistant coaches were Nicole Sudbeck, agronomy junior from Seneca, and Samantha L’Ecuyer, agronomy senior from Morrowville.

 

  1. Crops Team Wins Australian Universities Crops Competition
K-State Collegiate Crops Team at the Australian Universities Crops Competition (l to r): Dr. Kevin Donnelly (coach), Jessi Bramhall, Sarah Zerger, Samantha L’Ecuyer, Nicole Sudbeck, Michaela Simmelink, and Kim Kerschen (assistant coach).

Five members of the Kansas State University Crops Team took first place in the Australian Universities Crops Competition. The event was hosted by the Australian Grain Growers organization and was held in Temora, New South Wales.

K-State Crops Team members making the trip included Samantha L’Ecuyer, Morrowville; Nicole Sudbeck, Seneca; Michaela Simmelink, Downs; Jessi Bramhall, Seneca; and Sarah Zerger, Cheney. The team was accompanied to Australia by coach Kevin Donnelly, professor of agronomy, and Kim Kerschen, academic coordinator in agronomy.

L’Ecuyer took second place overall individual in the contest. Bramhall was 6th and Sudbeck placed 10th overall individual.

The competition was held over two days at the Temora Agricultural Innovation Centre, managed by FarmLink. The contest included a seed identification section, three exams over production of selected Australian crops, commercial grading of wheat samples, a business management problem, field yield estimates and management recommendations, and a live crop, weed and disease evaluation component.

Before and after the competition, contestants also toured various research projects being conducted on site and at farms in the local area. Learning about canola and Australian white wheat production, ryegrass herbicide resistance problems, and the use of pulse crops such as lupins and fieldpeas in crop rotations were highlights for the U.S. teams.

The students also took the opportunity to learn more about Australia. The trip began with visits to popular sites in Sydney, followed by a trip to the Great Barrier Reef at Cairns. There they also visited the Atherton Tablelands region in Queensland to observe tropical agriculture including sugar cane production and a coffee plantation. On the trip to Temora, the group visited the Blue Mountains west of Sydney.

After the competition, they toured Charles Sturt University and the Rhizolysimeter Center at Wagga Wagga, New South Wales. The trip concluded with two farm visits in the Junee area featuring mixed cropping systems integrating wheat, canola and pulse crops with pasture crops supporting sheep production.

In addition to the grant funds from the American Society of Agronomy, the trip was sponsored by the K-State Department of Agronomy. The College of Agriculture also provided international travel scholarships to the Kansas State students.

 

  1. Soil Judging Team Takes 2nd in National Competition
Members of the 2017 K-State Soils Judging Team. From left to right: Back row — Mickey Ransom, Tessa Zee, Peter Bergkamp, Lucas Scott, Jacob Reinecker, Chris Weber. Front row — Megan Owens, Tara Wilson, Logan Evers, Keren Duerksen, Erin Bush, Kim Kerschen.

K-State’s Soil Judging Team won 2nd place in the “Overall Team” and 2nd place in the “Group Judging” categories at the 2017 National Collegiate Soils Contest hosted by Northern Illinois University on April 23-28 in DeKalb, Ill.

Erin Bush, graduate student from Franklin, Ind., was 2nd high individual. Chris Weber, junior from Hoxie, was 7th high individual.

Other team members include Keren Duerksen, sophomore, Newton; Jacob Reinecker, junior, Caldwell, Idaho; Logan Evers, junior, Great Bend; Tessa Zee, junior, Erie, Colo.; Tara Wilson, sophomore, Highland, Mich.; Peter Bergkamp, freshman, Garden Plain; Megan Owens, freshman, Harlan, Iowa; and Lucas Scott, freshman, Olathe.

Coach for the team is Mickey Ransom, professor of agronomy. The assistant coach is Kim Kerschen, agronomy instructor and academic coordinator.

The contest is an activity of the American Society of Agronomy and the Soil Science Society of America. Twenty-four teams from all over the U.S. participated.

 

  1. Soil Judging Team Takes Top Regional Honors
Members of the 2016 K-State Soils Judging Team. Back row (l to r): Mickey Ransom (coach), Benjamin Hamill, Jaret Kluender, Chris Weber, Peter Bergkamp, Jacob Reinecker, Kim Kerschen (assistant coach). Front row (l to r): Logan Evers, Keren Duerksen, Erin Bush, Lucas Scott, Tara Wilson, Tessa Zee.

K-State’s Soil Judging Team won 1st place in the “Overall Team” and 2nd place in the “Group Judging” categories at the 2016 Region 5 Soil Judging Contest.

Erin Bush, senior from Franklin, Ind., was 2nd high individual, Jacob Reinecker, junior from, Caldwell, Ida., tied for 6th, and Logan Evers, junior from Great Bend, tied for 10th.

Other team members include: Jaret Kluender, senior, Perryville, Mo.; Benjamin Hamill, senior, Newton; Chris Weber, junior, Hoxie; Tessa Zee, junior, Erie, Colo.; Keren Duerksen, sophomore, Newton; Tara Wilson, sophomore, Highland, Mich.; Peter Bergkamp, freshman, Garden Plain; and Lucas Scott, freshman, Olathe.

The Soil Judging Team was coached by Mickey Ransom, professor of agronomy, and assistant coach, Kim Kerschen, instructor and academic coordinator in agronomy.

The contest is an activity of the American Society of Agronomy and the Soil Science Society of America.