Partnership endeavor includes Texas
A&M, Sam Houston State University
MURFREESBORO — A
$714,000 U.S. Department of Agriculture grant to MTSU for collaborative
research with two Texas universities will support a partnership to discover
novel ways of land management and solve important ecological problems in
changing climates and agricultural management.
The three-year joint venture between MTSU, Texas A&M and
Sam Houston State University is the largest USDA grant the MTSU School of
Agribusiness and Agriscience has ever received and largest of 12 national
competitive awards totaling $4 million granted by the USDA in February.
The award is for precision agriculture, agroecological
education and research.
MTSU will oversee the overall research and educational
components of the project and coordinate with the other partner institutions,
said Song Cui (pronounced CHOY), assistant professor in the School of
Agribusiness and Agriscience and project leader.
“We will be setting up a very strong agroecological research
site here in Middle Tennessee,” he added. “Texas A&M will provide strong
research and contribution on the ecological modeling component of the project.
Sam Houston will focus on agroecological education and leadership building for agricultural
students.”
Calling it a milestone for the School of Agribusiness and
Agriscience, interim director Jessica Gentry Carter said the $714,023 award
"provides a great opportunity for us to build on this partnership and
improve research opportunities for our students."
Including 100 MTSU students, about 260 altogether from the
three universities will be involved. Twenty will be in research-based summer
internships; the other 240 will enroll in and complete agriculture courses that
have been revamped because of this project.
Twelve courses will be modified at MTSU, Texas A&M and
Sam Houston. Four are graduate courses, two at MTSU that will be taught by
mathematical sciences’ associate professor Qiang Wu and one at each of the
other schools. Nine undergraduate courses — three taught by Cui at MTSU and
four at Sam Houston and one at Texas A&M — await students.
The award was made a reality because of MTSU’s Non-Land
Grant College of Agriculture designation and “the combined strength in
agriculture, aerospace, math and our strong partners,” Cui said. He added that
the grant competition will strengthen agricultural research and education
programs.
Precision agriculture is the science of using computer
information systems, sensors, geographic information system (GIS) and global
position system (GPS) technologies “to enable producers to apply the right
inputs at the right location at the right time and in the right quantity and
right matter,” Cui said.
Jackie Eller, interim vice provost for research and dean of
the College of Graduate Studies, said MTSU now has received more than $1
million from the USDA and “this success is a result of MTSU’s collaborative
spirit and its strength in agriculture, aerospace and mathematics.”
Cui and MTSU earned a $300,000 USDA grant in 2015 to support
precision agriculture research and education in partnership with the University
of Tennessee-Martin.
Professor Warren Gill, the former director of the school,
credits Cui in leading the proposal team.
“This successful effort is a compliment to the growing
reputation MTSU has as institution where scientific innovation is nurtured and
rewarded,” Gill said. “MTSU is beginning to attract scientists of Song Cui’s caliber
and continue to enhance the educational experience of MTSU students,
particularly those ‘best and brightest’ who become interested and involved in
the cutting-edge work this grant award supports.”
Advances in unmanned aircraft systems vehicles, commonly
called drones, machine learning and modeling in computer science will be
incorporated into students’ undergraduate and graduate courses.
MTSU has been working to secure a certificate of
authorization from the Federal Aviation Administration to operate unmanned
aircraft at the MTSU Experimental Learning and Research Center (the MTSU farm
and dairy) in Lascassas, Tennessee, about 6 miles from the university.
This is the first comprehensive research project that has
been conducted combining these techniques on a regional scale, said Todd Gary,
special assistant to the MTSU vice provost for research.
In addition to Cui, Gary and mathematical sciences’ Wu, the
research team includes aerospace’s Doug Campbell, Nithya Rajan of Texas A&M
and Shyam Nair of Sam Houston State University.
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