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81. NEMO: Nonpoint Education For Municipal National Network - Previous Workshops
April 2001, georgia, University of georgia GA Dept 2001, South Carolina, NOAA CoastalService Center, Meeting. Erosion Control Assoc, UMN coop ext, Training session.
http://nemo.uconn.edu/national/workshops_1.htm
National Network Member Resources Workshops > Workshop History
Workshop History - Program History: 1996 - 2001 Workshop Date State Lead Agency Workshop Type 2001 Workshops January 2002 NEMO University II
January 28 - 30 National NEMO Network NEMO User Conference December 2001 Washington, D.C. Interagency Workgroup Meeting Briefing November 2001 Rhode Island Phase II Conference Presentation November 2001 Vermont VT Assoc. of Conservation Districts Presentation October 2001 Louisiana Gulf of Mexico Sea Grant Extension Regional Meeting Presentation, Workshop September 2001 Pennsylvania Great Lakes Sea Grant Consortium Presentation August 2001 Georgia Southeast Watershed Forum Workshop August 2001 Tennessee Tennessee Valley Authority Scoping July 2001 Massachusetts River Network Presentation May 2001 Washington DC NOAA Meeting May 2001 Delaware DE Sea Grant Program Scoping April 2001 Massachusetts American Landscape Arch.

82. NCSU Crop Science Department, Alan York
NC coop. ext. Four former students are now extension specialists in georgia, Mississippi,and North Carolina, one is in academia in Uruguay, one is the IR4
http://www.cropsci.ncsu.edu/personnel/York_Alan/
PLEASE NOTE: This site uses javascript to detect screen width and control font size. COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND LIFE SCIENCES Alan York CROP SCIENCE
PERSONNEL
Williams Hall 4401D
PO Box 7620
Raleigh, NC 27695-7620 Phone: (919) 515-5643
FAX: (919) 515-5315

alan_york@ncsu.edu
William Neal Reynolds Professor of Crop Science and Extension Specialist Commodity Areas Disciplines Appointments
  • Corn Cotton Soybeans Wheat and Small Grains Weed Science Extension Faculty Research
William Neal Reynolds Professor of Agriculture . His current responsibilities include weed management research and extension in corn, cotton, small grains, and soybeans. He advises graduate students and previously taught the weed management course in the Agricultural Institute for 14 years.

83. Publications
1977. ARest and Phosfon, cause stem weakness in 'georgia' Easter lilies. Ohio Florists'Assn. Bul. Greenhouse Prod. 8(8)3-8, Univ. Missouri, coop. ext. Serv.
http://ohld.ag.utk.edu/ohld/htm/albrpubs.htm
Publications
JOURNAL PUBLICATIONS
Albrecht, M.L., M.E. Watson, and H.K. Tayama. 1982. Chemical characteristics of composted hardwood bark as they relate to plant nutrition. J. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 107(6):1081-1084.
Albrecht, M.L. and D.L. Ladd. 1984. Comparison of five poinsettia cultivars grown under different temperature regimes. HortScience 19(3):438-439.
Ladd, D.L., M.L. Albrecht, and C.D. Clayberg. 1984. Genetics of flower color in spider flower. J. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 109(6):759-761.
Agnew, N.H., M.L. Albrecht, and R.K. Kimmins. 1985. Reducing corolla abscission of Streptocarpus X hybridus under simulated shipping conditions with silver thiosulfate. HortScience 20(1):118-119.
Albrecht, M.L. 1987. Growth retardant use with potted ranunculus and anemone. J. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 112(2):277-281.
Zajicek, J.M., M.L. Albrecht, and B.A.D. Hetrick. 1987. Growth of three native prairie perennials as influenced by phosphorus fertilization, potting media, and mycorrhizae. J. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 112(2):277-281.
Zajicek, J.M., B.A.D. Hetrick, and M.L. Albrecht. 1987. Influence of drought stress and mycorrhizae on growth of two native forbs. J. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 112(3):454-459.

84. Membership List
Yaowen Huang, huang@arches.uga.edu, University of georgia 207a Food Science Bldg.Athens, GA 30602-7610. Mark Shirley, mshirley@agctr.lsu.edu, Louisiana coop. ext.
http://wfscnet.tamu.edu/faculty/gatlin/project_membership_list.htm
Name E-mail Address Mailing Address Jimmy Avery javery@drec.msstate.edu National Warmwater Aquaculture Center
P.O. Box 197
Stoneville, MS 38776 Brian Bosworth bgboswor@ag.gov CGRU/USDA-ARS
P.O. Box 38
Stoneville, MS 38776 Marty Brunson martyb@ext.msstate.edu Mississippi State University
Box 9690
Mississippi State, MS 39762 Gary Burtle fish@tifton.cpes.peachnet.edu A.S.C.P. Experiment Station
P. O. Box 748
Tifton, GA 31793-0748 David Cline dcline@acesag.auburn.edu Extension Aquaculturist
USDA/SCS Office
917 Snow Street Oxford, AL 36203 David Teichert-Coddington dcodding@acesag.auburn.edu 203 Swingle Hall Dept. of Fisheries Auburn University, AL 36844 Charles "Bo" Collins snarc-gen@futura.net Fish Farming Experimental Lab. P. O. Box 860 Stuttgart, AR 72160 Jerry R. Crews jcrews@acesag.auburn.edu 100 Comer Hall Auburn University, AL 36849 Allen Davis ddavis@acesag.auburn.edu 203 Swingle Hall Department of Fisheries Auburn University, AL 36849 Ken Davis kdavis@memphis.edu Dept. of Biology University of Memphis Memphis, TN 38152 Bob Durborow bdurborow@gwmail.kysu.edu Kentucky State University Cooperative Extension Service Frankfort, KY 40601

85. Georgia Cooperative Extension Service
The Henry County Cooperative Extension service site features useful information forgardeners, farmers and 4H'ers as 2001 The University of georgia College of Category Reference Education
http://www.ces.uga.edu/

CONNECTOR

WHAT'S NEW

PERSONNEL DIRECTORY

PUBLICATIONS
...
Habersham County
The Habersham County Extension Service seeks to provide all residents of Habersham County with research-based educational programs in agriculture and natural resources, family and consumer sciences, and 4-H and youth development. For more information, visit its Web site: www.habces.org
Fresh veggies
A little information about this and a little about that.
Food science career
He couldn't avoid love of food science
Young entrepreneurs
New Jones, Jasper business owners too young to drive
Easier access
Worldwide problem sparks Fulbright scholar.
Gardens and golf grow
Business is blooming in the green industry Plant duplications Double genes in a little weed provide key genetic information. More News Search the UGA phonebook for employees or students. Name: Go to the CAES Master Calendar Annual and Perennials Plant Identification Enter criteria for searching the CAES publications Search the CAES Personnel Directory First Name: Last Name: Commercial Vegetables - Select one - Tomatoes Onions Peppers Cole Crops Beans Okra Sweet Corn Melons Eggplant Peas Carrots Squash Sweet Potatoes Pumpkins General Environment - Select one - Weather Air Soil Water Agencies Home Horticulture - Select one - Fruit Nuts Turf Vegetables Ornamentals Rowcrops

86. CSREES - Diversity And Pluralism - Institutional Diversity Contacts
and Env. Sciences caesdean@arches.uga.edu. Ivery Clifton University of Georgiaiclifton@agecon.uga.edu. Louisiana, Ann Berry Louisiana coop. ext.
http://www.reeusda.gov/diversity/contacts.htm

Funding Opportunities
State Partners Program Information Legislation/Budget ... Related Links
Diversity and Pluralism
Institutional Diversity Contacts Alabama
Philip W. Brown
Auburn University
Alabama Coop. Extension System
pwbrown@acesag.auburn.edu
Athal Pierce
Tuskegee University
No e-mail address available Alaska Peter Stortz
Palmer Research Center
University of Alaska No e-mail address available American Samoa Mrs. Jack Uhrle American Samoa Community College Extension Program No e-mail address available Arizona Francis Becenti Acting President Dine College fbecenti@crystal.ncc.cc.nm.us James A. Christenson, Director University of Arizona Cooperative Extension jimc@ag.arizona.edu

87. Página Do Clube Da Floresta
of Montana Daniel B. Warnell School of Forest Resources, University of GeorgiaWVU College of Agriculture and Forestry. Voltar ao TOPO. coop. ext.
http://www.eb23-pontinha.rcts.pt/floresta.html
CLUBE da FLORESTA
Canis lupus História do Clube Trabalhos de Professores Trabalhos de Alunos Trabalhos de Professores e Alunos
LOCAIS DE INTERESSE PARA O ESTUDO DA FLORESTA
1 - EM INGLÊS
Yahoo's Science: Agriculture: Forestry Page Other Forestry Links Indexes Forestry Schools ... Conservation Links
Links to other Forestry Sites
Agroforestry News Group
Kentucky Forest Policy

Kentucky Wood Products Competitiveness Corporation

Archives of Appalachia, logging and lumbering
...
FORS Home Page
- Forest Resources Systems Institute
Ben Meadows Company
- Seller of Forestry equipment
Association of Consulting Foresters

VanNatta
- Forestry, logging, computer, links in Oregon
Foresters, Inc.
- Blacksburg, VA Zimmerman's Forest - Forestry in the Upper Cumberland of Tennessee State of the World's Forests 1997_FAO [.pdf, 200p.] Forestry Research Bibliographies at the University of Minnesota Forestry Gopher § Ecosystem Management Bibliography § College of Natural Resources Gopher ... Voltar ao TOPO
Indexes to Forestry and Biology Web Sites
WWW Virtual Library: Forestry Directorio de recursos relacionados con las plantas - English and Spanish Link List Steve Shook's Directory of Forest Products, Wood Science, and Marketing

88. .gs Domain Registration -.gs Domain Name South Georgia And The South Sandwich Is
The .gs domain name stands for the South georgia and the South Free service for yourNew Web Site
http://101domainname.biz/gs.htm
.CH Domain Registration we offer .gs domain registration with our International Domain Name Registration include Domain Name Forwarding - Domain Name Cloaking - Domain DNS Service - Domain Name Hosting. Free Domain Names available for generic domains included hosting . Domain Registration Domain Name Home Domain Name Search Domain Name Wizard ... Domain Shopping Cart E-Mail Service Branded E-Mail Service Catch all Mail Service Additional Services Domain Name FAQ Domain Term of Use About - Contact Us 03/01/03 02:04 PM Update powered by http://101domainname.biz Top Ranking Search Engine Registration Web Hosting ... Shopping Carts .GS Domain Registration - .gs domain
.gs - .GS - .gs domain - .gs domain name
GS domain registration, South Georgia .GS Domain South Georgia Facts: Country Code: .GS Application Fee: included $50 Maintenance Fee: variable Domains per Applicant unlimited Sub Domains: .GS Local Presence: none Requirements: none Multiple Domains: allowed Registration Contract: 2 years Registration Fee: .gs 2 letter country-code domains have become increasingly popular due to short supply of .com domain names.
The .gs domain name stands for the South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands.

89. STATE MASTER GARDENER COORDINATORS
4917745 E-mail dwhiting@coop.ext.colostate.edu. Bob Westerfield extension HorticultureGeorgia Experiment Station Cowart 8742 E-mail sskelly@ext.msstate.edu.
http://www.themastergardenershow.com/State_coordinator/
STATE MASTER GARDENER COORDINATORS Compiled by The Master Gardener Show
List Revised 12/16/02
The Master Gardener Show web site strives to present accurate and timely information as general assistance for the farmers, consumers, agriculturists, homeowners, master gardeners and other constituents of the world. If Your Master Gardener Coordinator has changed, we would like to know about it so we can update this list. Please Contact Us. ALABAMA Mary Beth Musgrove
25 Extension Hall
Auburn University
Auburn, AL 36849-5630
phone: (205) 221-3392
E-mail: mmusgrov@acesag.auburn.edu MISSOURI Mary Koening
Plant Sciences Extension Associate
I-87 Agriculture Building
University of Missouri
Columbia, MO 65211 phone: (573) 882-9633 fax: (573) 882-1469 E-mail: Kroeningm@missouri.edu ALASKA Alaska Cooperative Extension University of Alaska Fairbanks 122 1st Avenue Fairbanks, AK 99701

90. Apiculture - Summary Of Losses From Insect Damage And Costs Of Control In Georgi
The Entomology and Forest Resources Digital Information Work Group College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences/Warnell School of Forest Resources The University of georgia Tifton, GA USA The University of georgia - Tifton, GA USA. The Bugwood Network. Library georgia CAPS AFAE Eastern Arc TPMN SFIWC georgia Ent Soc Wolf Creek
http://www.bugwood.caes.uga.edu/sl96/apiculture.html
Subcommittee Reports I. Apiculture Keith S. Delaplane The number of managed bee hives in Georgia increased from 70,000 in 1995 to 75,000 in 1996 . This welcome upswing follows a general increase in honey prices due to decreasing world honey stocks. Overall honey production in Georgia, including the 1996 crop year, has stayed uniform over ten years . Thus, production efficiency is good. Parasitic tracheal mites and Varroa mites continue to kill colonies and cost beekeepers large sums for control. There remains only one registered miticide for varroa mite control, Apistan TM . There is concern for chemical resistance in mites but so far there are no data from North America to suggest this is a problem. Conditions were good for honey production in 1996. Beekeepers with five or more hives harvested 5,100,000 pounds of honey, up from 4,340,000 in 1995. Production per hive (68 pounds) was up slightly from 1995 (62 pounds). Value of the 1996 crop was $4,539,000 compared to $3,081,000 in 1995. In 1996, average price per pound rose to $0.89, up from $0.71 in 1995 Extension programs reached 1,876 people in educational efforts aimed at honey bee parasite biology and control, optimum bee management, and public awareness of the value of bee pollinators. The fifth annual Young Harris College/University of Georgia Beekeeping Institute drew 99 participants. Research focused on identifying economic treatment thresholds for Varroa mites and the pollinators and their flower-visiting behavior in rabbiteye blueberry.

91. TURFGRASS WEED MANAGEMENT - THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA
Turfgrass Weed Management 1999 Tim R. Murphy UNIVERSITY OF georgia Lambert B. McCarty A weed can simply be defined as any plant growing out of place or growing where it is not wanted.
http://www.griffin.peachnet.edu/cssci/TURF/ASAWEED.htm
Turfgrass Weed Management - 1999 Tim R. Murphy UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Lambert B. McCarty CLEMSON UNIVERSITY INTRODUCTION A weed can simply be defined as any plant growing out of place or growing where it is not wanted. For example, tall fescue may be considered a weed when grown in a stand of bermudagrass or Kentucky bluegrass, but it is desirable when grown as a monoculture. Reasons for classifying a plant as a weed are numerous. In addition to being unsightly, weeds compete with turfgrasses for sunlight, soil nutrients, soil moisture, and growing space. Weeds also act as hosts for pests such as plant pathogens, nematodes and insects. Certain weeds cause allergic reactions in humans due to their pollen or their volatile chemicals. Probably the most undesirable characteristic of weeds in turf is the disruption of the uniformity of a turf. Different leaf width and/or shape, different growth habit, and/or different color contribute to unsightliness. For example, many broadleaf weeds such as dandelion, plantains, and pennywort have leaf widths different from turf. Goosegrass, smutgrass, and dallisgrass tend to form clumps or patches which disrupt turf uniformity. In addition, large clumps are difficult to mow effectively which increases maintenance problems. Turf uniformity also is disrupted by the presence of weed seedheads. Annual bluegrass, for example, is largely unnoticed in cool-season turfgrasses until numerous seedheads appear in late winter and spring. Plant color is a another factor in determining the potential of a weed problem in turf. The lighter green color typically associated with annual sedge often distracts from the playing surface. Bahiagrass often has different color when grown in combination with other turf species.

92. Herbarium, Department Of Botany, NC State University
1954. Fabaceae Isotype United States, georgia Telfair County 3 miles northwestof Lumber City on US 23. Sandy ridge sloping off into moist dense thicket.
http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/botany/ncsc/typelabels.htm

About NCSC

Services

Use policies

Specimen loans
...
NC Agric. Res. Service
The NCSC Type Collection Type specimens deposited at NCSC are listed alphabetically below. For links to images of each specimen, simply click on the highlighted text.
NCSC Types
Aesculus sylvatica Bartram, Travels Through North and South Carolina 476. 1791. [Hippocastanaceae]
Neotype
United States, South Carolina
South Carolina: Union Co; Bluffs of Broad River just south of Neal Shoals. Understory shrub in a mixed hardwood stand. Shrub 10 ft. tall; fls. greenish yellow.
James W. Hardin, No. 113 22 April, 1953 Amorpha georgiana Wilbur, Rhodora 56: 261-265. Fabaceae]
Isotype

United States, Georgia Telfair County: 3 miles northwest of Lumber City on U.S. 23. Sandy ridge sloping off into moist dense thicket. Dry savannah and river bank. Common shrub c. 3 dm. Tall in sandy savannah. Forming clumps.

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