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(left to right) Megan Dewdney, Francis Trail
and Maryann Borsick Herman
Credit: J. Ogrodnick – NYSAES, Cornell
University
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 11, 2007
Contact: Linda McCandless, llm3@cornell.edu
Cornell graduate students, Maryann
Borsick Herman and Megan Dewdney receive Robert M. Gilmer Award
by Joe Ogrodnick
Geneva. NY: Maryann Borsick Herman and Megan Dewdney, both Cornell
graduate students in the Department of Plant Pathology at Cornell's
New York State Agricultural Experiment Station (NYSAES) in Geneva,
NY, were recently named co-recipients of the Robert M. Gilmer award
for 2007. The Gilmer Award is presented annually in recognition
of excellence in research, teaching, and service to the department.
Gilmer, who endowed the award through his estate, was a faculty
member in Plant Pathology from 1950 to 1975 and chaired the department
from 1967 to 1972. He is fondly remembered for his intelligence
and great breadth of knowledge of plant diseases, and for being
a free thinker who challenged conventional views. Gilmer was known
internationally for his research on virus diseases of deciduous
tree fruits and grapes.
"I could not be more pleased with the progress that
Maryann has made during the time she has been in my program," said
Chris Smart, assistant professor of plant pathology, in her introductory
remarks. "She has done an excellent job of gaining insight
into how plant activators work." (Plant activators, explained
Smart, are compounds that induce a plant's own resistance against
pests; while several of these products are commercially available,
they are not widely used by growers in New York.)
"Maryann is utilizing molecular tools to understand when
plant defenses are turned on in tomatoes in the field, and the
results will enable us to understand when it might be appropriate
to utilize these plant activators. This project nicely bridges
the gap between basic and applied science," said Smart.
"She is well deserving of the Gilmer Award," Smart went
on to say. "I am truly fortunate to have her as a graduate
student in my program, and am confident that she will make outstanding
contributions to the field for years to come."
"Megan has a very strong academic and research record
at Cornell," said Herb Aldwinckle, Dewdney's major professor. "Her
research for the Ph.D. is being done in two phases, in statistical
and then biological studies related to the epidemiology of fire
blight, a bacterial disease of apple trees." Aldwinckle pointed
out that Dewdney already has a Phytopathology paper in press on
her statistical comparison of the accuracy of two systems for forecasting
fire blight, MARYBLYT and Cougarblight.
"Her biological work is directed toward improved understanding
of temperature, flower age and varietal effects on the growth of
Erwinia amylovora bacterial cells on the stigmas of apple blossoms,
and she is also looking at how well MARYBLYT really predicts the
growth of E. amylovora on the stigmas," Aldwinckle went on
to say. "Her results are already providing new insight into
these phenomena, which have been assumed but not studied experimentally,
despite the long history of fire blight research. Her work is likely
to cause significant changes in the tools we use to manage fire
blight. She is indeed a very worthy recipient of the Robert Gilmer
Award."
The two students have received a number of grants and other awards
from both Cornell and the American Phytopathological Society.
As part of the day's events, a seminar was presented by Dr. Francis
Trail, a former Geneva Plant Pathology graduate student who is
currently at Michigan State University.
Both Dewdney and Borsick Herman were presented with framed certificates
commemorating the event, and their names were inscribed on a plaque
on permanent display in the Plant Pathology seminar room.
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