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Ļć½¶Ö±²„students and faculty honored at Beltwide Cotton Conference

Ļć½¶Ö±²„students and faculty honored at Beltwide Cotton Conference

Contact: Vanessa Beeson

Ļć½¶Ö±²„students (l-r) Savana Davis, Michael Plumblee, Chase Samples and Lucas X. Franca recently were honored at the 2016 Beltwide Cotton Conference in Louisiana. (Photo submitted)

STARKVILLE, Mississippiā€”Four Mississippi State students and a faculty member are recent award winners at the 2016 Beltwide Cotton Conference.

All are affiliated with the agronomy program of the universityā€™s plant and soil sciences department.

Regarded to be among the best of its kind in the world and held in New Orleans, Louisiana, the competition was part of a major event coordinated by the National Cotton Council that involved 11 concurrent technical conferences.

In the visual display category, Ļć½¶Ö±²„student winners included:

ā€”Senior Savana S. Davis of Pungoteague, Virginia, first in the undergraduate division;

ā€”Doctoral candidate Chase A. Samples of Starkville, first in the agronomy and physiology section of the graduate division; and

ā€”Doctoral candidate Michael T. Plumblee, second in the agronomy and physiology section of the graduate division.

In the graduate-level oral presentation competition, doctoral student Lucas X. Franca of Starkville placed third.

Darrin Dodds, adviser for all four, received the conferenceā€™s Dr. J. Tom Cothren Outstanding Young Physiologist Award. Indiana-based Dow AgroSciences sponsors the Cothern Award as a memorial to a well-known Texas A&M professor and physiologist.

Dodds, an Ļć½¶Ö±²„doctoral graduate who now is an associate extension and research professor, said each member of his student team ā€œis exemplary and has what it takes to succeed.ā€

Samples is the only one among the four with an earlier agronomy degree completed at the university. With a masterā€™s awarded in 2014, his doctoral research involves the study of herbicide-drift control aids in cotton and soybeans that is sponsored by the Soybean Promotion Board and Cotton Inc.

ā€œThis is Chaseā€™s second year placing in this competition, and is only one of several awards he has won in recent years,ā€ Dodds noted.

He also praised Davis who, he said, ā€œtook her project and made it her own.ā€ Davis currently is considering pursuit of a graduate degree in the department under a dual enrollment program.

Davis and Plumblee both are conducting irrigation-related research. While Davis is studying furrow irrigation options on silt loam soil on a producerā€™s cotton acreage in the Delta, Plumblee is evaluating furrow irrigation as it relates to cotton-growth stages at the R.R. Foil Plant Science Research Center at the Starkville campus.

Franca, who is evaluating the performance of harvest-aid programs in different cotton cultivars, currently holds the College of Agriculture and Life Sciencesā€™ Will D. Carpenter Distinguished Field Scientist Graduate Assistantship.

Mike Phillips, plant and soil sciences department head, said the conference awards illustrate how Ļć½¶Ö±²„and its agricultural research units continue to be national leaders in cotton research.

Phillips also said Doddsā€™ expertise has become widely acknowledged throughout higher education and the cotton industry.

ā€œDr. Dodds knows the physiology of cotton inside and out; he is an innovator and a collaborator that is respected throughout the Mid-South,ā€ Phillips said, observing that the 2016 Cothren Award ā€œpays tribute to his talent as both an educator and researcher.ā€

Plant and soil sciences is a comprehensive, multidisciplinary department with graduate programs in agronomy, horticulture and weed science. For more information, visit .

Ļć½¶Ö±²„is Mississippiā€™s leading university, available online at .