Beratan Lends Her Sustainablity Science Expertise to Fort Bragg Community

From BRAC-RTF Website – August 28, 2009

Dr. Kathi Beratan, research assistant professor in the N.C. State University Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, has joined the BRAC RTF as a Policy Advisor and External Partnership Liaison.

Dr. Beratan will advise BRAC RTF staff in their regional planning and workforce development programs and provide specific guidance to BRAC partners, local governments, and non-profit organizations as they tailor strategies to implement recommendations from the Comprehensive Regional Growth Plan and develop programs for adopting sustainable business practices.

Read the complete BRAC-RTF Press Release

NSF Grant Funds NC State "Plant Switchboard" Research

NC State News Release – September 3, 2009

Media Contacts:
Dr. Vincent Chiang, 919/513-0098 or vincent_chiang@ncsu.edu
Caroline M. Barnhill, News Services, 919/515-6251 or caroline_barnhill@ncsu.edu

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

A new four-year, $3.72 million grant to North Carolina State University will allow researchers to shed light on an important mystery – how genes impact the type and amount of glue, known as lignin, produced in trees. Understanding the role of lignin, which binds fibers together to form wood, has significant implications in the production of paper products, biofuels and construction materials.

The National Science Foundation Plant Genome Research grant will spur the most comprehensive analysis of lignin regulation ever undertaken. By triggering genetic on/off switches in more than 10,000 trees, researchers will determine how each of the 33 lignin-producing genes impact the type and amount of lignin in wood of the model tree species, black cottonwood.

Additional lignin creates an even stronger wood, so having lots of lignin can be advantageous in developing construction materials or wood-burning energy. To create products like paper or to produce bioethanol, however, lignin needs to be removed from wood, says Dr. Vincent Chiang, Jordan Family Distinguished Professor for Natural Resource Innovation, co-director of NC State's Forest Biotechnology Group and the studys principal investigator. Removing lignin to make paper products is the basis of a $300 billion global industry, and the efficient conversion of plant biomass to ethanol is largely determined by the lignin.

To produce bioethanol from wood, lignin needs to be broken down by expensive chemical pretreatment, Chiang continues. When we reduce the lignin by modifying the genes, we can eliminate chemical pretreatment, which is typically 35 percent of the cost of producing ethanol from any lignin containing plant biomass.

To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the lignin biosynthesis pathway, researchers will eliminate each pathway gene, one at a time. Then the team will determine the role each gene plays in producing a specific type and amount of lignin. Finally, the information will be turned into a mathematical model to create equations that determine how to create specific types and levels of lignin suited for any particular end use. 

Were starting with lignin biosynthesis, but this systems approach could really be used for any biological process in any plant, Chiang says. It could guide strategies for improved plant productivity for materials, energy and food.

Working with Chiang is a group of 37 researchers, including co-principal investigators Dr. Ronald Sederoff, Distinguished University Professor and co-director of the Forest Biotechnology Group at NC State, Dr. Joel Ducoste, associate professor of civil, construction and environmental engineering at NC State, Dr. Fikret Isik, research associate professor of forestry and environmental resources at NC State, and Dr. John Ralph, professor of biochemistry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Graduate and postdoctoral education and training in systems biology is a major emphasis. Six graduate students will conduct part of the proposed research for their dissertations. In addition, outreach and education efforts will focus on under-represented groups at the university and high school levels. The Kenan Fellows Program for Curriculum and Leadership Development will develop curricular materials to bring cutting-edge plant genomics and systems biology to high school classrooms.

This project represents the efforts of a group of people getting together and trying to develop systems biology by integrating individual work that has been carried out over a lifetime, Sederoff says. We are using systems approaches that are typical of engineering, but that bring together biology from the perspective of developing predictive models. The integration of genomic and proteomic science to molecular biology to biochemistry to chemistry to statistics to wood products to predictive modeling makes this research really unique. This switchboard approach will establish a new strategy for many future studies of biological processes in plants.

-barnhill-

Behavioral Ecology of Mammals Symposium Honors Dr. Roger A. Powell

The W.M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology at North Carolina State University will honor Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences and Zoology professor Dr. Roger A. Powell with the "Behavioral Ecology of Mammals" symposium, on Friday, September 4, 2009 from 1-5 P.M. in the Stanley G. Stephens Room, 3503 South Gardner Hall.  Students, faculty, alumni and friends of the program are encouraged to attend.  Gardner Hall is located at 100 Derieux Place on North Campus
Download the Symposium Agenda 

Dr. Roger A. Powell, NC State Fisheries & Wildlife Sciences

 Dr. Powell's research for the past 30 years has emphasized how limiting resources affects animals and has examined how animals space themselves on a landscape due to the home ranges of other individuals and on the distributions of pertinent resources. His black bear field research results and his research approach have been widely applied and generalized to other forest animals and have led to diverse applications through state wildlife agencies, the USDA Forest Service, the US Fish & Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service   In addition, Dr. Powell teaches Wildlife Management, Community Ecology and Advanced Topics in the Study of Mammals.

Related Links
Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Program at North Carolina State University
More information about Dr. Roger A. Powell

College of Natural Resources Partners with U.S. Forest Service to Host 2nd International Conference on Forest and Water in a Changing Environment

When: September 14-16, 2009
Where: Raleigh, North Carolina, US

Global climate change has resulted in a series of chain reactions in the watershed ecohydrological processes. Growing concerns over watershed degradation, water scarcity, and ecosystem sustainability due to climate change require new approaches to managing forest water resources. Unfortunately, little science-based guidance is available for forest managers and policy makers adapting to climate change.

At this 2nd conference we will continue to discuss forest-water relations and changing environmental conditions. The goal of this symposium is to provide a forum for experts from around the world on eco-hydrology, restoration ecology, forest ecology, watershed management and global change sciences to share knowledge and research experiences, and develop long-term international collaborations on watershed research.

Learn more and register at the Conference Website

 

 

 

What a Deal! NC State Ranks As Higher Ed Best Value

From the NC State Bulletin – August 2009

The bustling Brickyard at NC State UniversityBy Dave Pond

Families still struggling through the economic recession received some good news this month.

Both the Princeton Review and U.S. News & World Report ranked NC State as one of the best values in higher education. 

Each year, Princeton Review staffers spend countless hours poring over survey results from students and faculty at more than 2,500 North American colleges and universities. They found that NC State offers its students the sixth-best value of any public university located in the United States or Canada. U.S. News ranked NC State as the third-best value of any public university in the country.
 
NC State offers students one of the best values in higher education, according to the Princeton Review and U.S. News. 

“I think students recognize that NC State offers the kind of hands-on learning opportunities and relevant experience that will enable them to be valuable contributors to society upon their graduation,” NC State chancellor James Woodward said. “In a time of economic uncertainty and technological evolution, NC State remains uniquely positioned to produce future leaders with the knowledge and the skills to help solve the world's problems. “It's not surprising students would seek out the opportunities available to them at NC State in hopes of reaching their personal, educational and career goals.”

In its profile on NC State, the Review praises the university not only for the academic quality of its student applicants, but their extracurricular activities and altruistic endeavors as well.

No other North Carolina-based institution – public or private – made the Review’s “Top 10” list, featured in the 2010 edition of the Review’s popular guidebook, The Best 371 Colleges.

In addition to being one of the nation’s best values, NC State also received high scores based on admissions selectivity as well as the university’s “green rating,” a measure of the university’s commitment to environmentally related policies, practices and education.

“It's always nice for NC State to earn this kind of recognition,” Woodward said. “The true measure of a university is its people, and I truly believe that our faculty, students, staff and alumni are among the nation's best.”

The Princeton Review is a New York City-based education services company known for its annual rankings based on surveys conducted of higher education institutions and of students attending the schools, in addition to its test-prep courses, college and graduate school admission services, books, and education programs. U.S. News, a news magzine published in Washington, D.C., has released its annual rankings of colleges and universities since 1985.