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ARS Scientists Honored for Technology Transfer
Efforts

ARS researchers have invented a bioreactor that
removes nitrates from swine effluent, allowing the livestock wastewater to be
recycled for irrigation. Click the image for more information about
it.

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By Ann Perry
June 8, 2010 The Agricultural Research Service (ARS) will
recognize some of its most innovative scientists and research partners at the
agencys Technology Transfer Awards Program here today. These awards
recognize individuals or groups who have done outstanding work in transferring
technology to users outside ARS, the principal intramural scientific research
agency of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
ARS places great importance on making sure that our findings
dont just languish in the laboratory, but are translated into useful
products that benefit consumers, said Edward B. Knipling, ARS
administrator. The winners of this years technology transfer awards
represent outstanding examples of that commitment in the areas of animal
health, natural resources management, food product development, and food
safety.
Top honors for outstanding technology transfer will be presented to two ARS
research teams:
- Five ARS scientists are being recognized for their development of an
energy-efficient, environmentally friendly, and profitable livestock manure
treatment system. This team includes
Matias
B. Vanotti,
Ariel
A. Szogi, and
Patrick
G. Hunt, who work at the ARS
Coastal
Plains Soil, Water, and Plant Research Center in Florence, S.C.;
Patricia
D. Millner, who works at the ARS
Environmental
Microbial and Food Safety Laboratory in Beltsville, Md., and
John
H. Loughrin, who works at the ARS
Animal
Waste Management Research Unit in Bowling Green, Ky.
- Two ARS scientists and their research partner are being recognized for
technology transfer to countless laboratories worldwide that use the
QuEChERSQuick, Easy, Cheap, Effective, Rugged and Safeapproach to
monitor pesticides and other residues in foods. This team includes
Steven
Lehotay and Katerina Mastovska, ARS
Eastern
Regional Research Center, Wyndmoor, Pa.; and Michelangelo Anastassiades,
Stuttgart, Germany.
Awards honoring superior efforts in technology transfer will be presented
to:
- George E.
Inglett, ARS
Functional
Foods Research Unit, Peoria, Ill., for outstanding accomplishments
in the invention and technology transfer of the multi-functional food
ingredient Z-Trim, which contributes to healthier foods for people around the
world.
- The Industrial Microwave System Technology Team, a partnership between
ARS, North Carolina State University, and Industrial Microwave Systems, which
developed and transferred a novel continuous flow microwave heating process for
producing large containers of aseptic, shelf-stable vegetable and fruit purees.
The team includes
Van
Den Truong, ARS
Food
Science Research Unit, Raleigh, N.C.; Josip Simunovic, Ken Swartzel, K. P.
Sandeep, Pablo Coronel, Gary Cartwright, Prabhat Kumar, and Laurie Steed, North
Carolina State University, Raleigh; and David Parrott, Industrial Microwave
Systems, Morrisville, N.C.
- The Rift Valley Fever Outbreak Early-Warning Team, for outstanding effort
and creativity in the development and transfer of a Rift Valley fever outbreak
early-warning system to protect global agriculture and public health. The team
includes
Kenneth
J. Linthicum and
Seth
C. Britch, ARS
Center
for Medical, Agricultural and Veterinary Entomology, Gainesville., Fla.;
Asaph Anyamba, Jennifer Small, Edwin Pak, and Compton J. Tucker,
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, Greenbelt, Md.; Jean-Paul Chretien,
Department of Defense, Silver Spring,
Md.; Ralph L. Erickson, Department of Defense, Washington, D.C.; David C.
Schnabel and Jason H. Richardson, Department of Defense, Nairobi, Kenya; Allan
Hightower and Robert Breiman, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention , Nairobi, Kenya; Stephane De La Rocque,
Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome,
Italy; and Pierre B. Formenty, World Health
Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
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