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X-WR-CALNAME:Office of Research
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://cahnrs.wsu.edu/research
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Office of Research
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DTSTART:20230312T100000
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DTSTART:20231105T090000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231012
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231013
DTSTAMP:20260407T153044
CREATED:20230329T164349Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230517T163333Z
UID:1221-1697068800-1697155199@cahnrs.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:AFRI - FAS Engineering for Precision Crop and Water Management (A1551)
DESCRIPTION:Program Area Priority: This program area priority focuses on engineered devices\, technologies\, sensors\, and tools to provide precision crop and orchard management\, technologies for targeted application of crop protection materials\, and improve efficiency of irrigation and nutrient use in agricultural systems. Applications must have a significant engineering component. Engineering is defined as the application of scientific and mathematical principles to practical ends such as the design\, manufacture\, and operation of efficient and sustainable structures\, technologies\, sensors\, machines\, processes\, and systems. \na. Develop and test the implementation of tools and precision technologies for monitoring\, measurement\, and detection in agricultural systems that may incorporate both drone and unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) technologies. \nb. Explore the use or development of advanced computational or engineering methods and technologies for navigation\, mining\, management\, visualization\, understanding\, and communication of agricultural systems data pertaining to precision water and crop management. \nc. Develop and improve precision engineering technologies that prevent disease spread/pathogens and invasive weeds in agricultural systems. \nd. Develop systems or technology for sensing\, automation and mechanization of laborintensive tasks in precision crop and water management. \ne. Within potential topics presented herein\, methods of breaking down technological barriers to adoption in integrated projects are welcomed. \nf. For integrated projects that provide engineering solutions for conservation of energy and water resources in irrigation\, emphasis areas (that can be combined) include\, but are 74 not limited to: \n\nPackaged irrigation management solutions using smart sensing and model-based decision support systems that can be readily adopted by farmers on both small and large scales;\nVariable-rate and deficit irrigation management solutions that provide adaptive prescriptions and consider limitations of the water delivery system;\nInnovative sensing and control schemes for furrow irrigation;\nCombined water and nutrient management systems;\nMicro-irrigation designs and management practices that can be appropriately scaled to site-specific characteristics and end-user capabilities; and/or\nDecision support tools into easy-to-use irrigation mobile apps that integrate sitespecific weather\, sensor\, soil\, and/or model-based data for decision-making.\n\n 
URL:https://cahnrs.wsu.edu/research/proposal_deadlines/afri-fas-engineering-for-precision-crop-and-water-management-a1551/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231012
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231013
DTSTAMP:20260407T153044
CREATED:20230517T161944Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230517T161944Z
UID:1183-1697068800-1697155199@cahnrs.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:AFRI - FAS Conventional Plant Breeding for Cultivar Development (A1143)
DESCRIPTION:Program Area Priority: The Conventional Plant Breeding for Cultivar Development program will support public breeding efforts that provide farmers with greater access to locally and regionally adapted cultivars and address the public breeding priorities in the USDA plant breeding roadmap (https://www.usda.gov/topics/plants). \nApplications for research must address later stages of cultivar development focused on datadriven evaluation of developed materials in established regional trials or cooperative networks with the primary goal of producing distinct\, uniform\, finished cultivars or heterogeneousvarieties for public release with benefits to either producers or consumers. Research proposals must include (1) how the cultivar will be released and marketed\, (2) who owns the intellectual property\, (3) letters of support from stakeholders\, (4) how the research fits within the overall existing breeding program\, and (5) how this support for later stages of cultivar development will enhance and increase the availability of cultivars in the market place within the duration of the award. In addition to the research\, proposals may include requests for modern plant breeding equipment (e.g.\, ranging from field to seed or processing to laboratory) to support plant breeding program infrastructure. Stand-alone equipment proposals are not acceptable. Relevance and need to enhance cultivar development must be clearly justified\, demonstrable\, and specific. Research that incorporates education of field-based plant breeders is strongly recommended. Breeding for tribal food systems using indigenous traditional ecological knowledge is appropriate for this program area priority. Research that results in new cultivars addressing sustainability or climate resiliency goals are also appropriate for this priority.
URL:https://cahnrs.wsu.edu/research/proposal_deadlines/afri-fas-conventional-plant-breeding-for-cultivar-development-a1143/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231013
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231014
DTSTAMP:20260407T153044
CREATED:20230517T162214Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230517T162214Z
UID:1179-1697155200-1697241599@cahnrs.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:AFRI - FAS Plant Breeding for Agricultural Production (A1141)
DESCRIPTION:Program Area Priority: The Plant Breeding for Agricultural Production program will support public breeding efforts to improve crop productivity\, efficiency\, quality\, and performance. Research is welcome to genetically dissect and then introduce desirable traits that may include\, but are not limited to: increased nutrient use efficiency; increased photosynthetic efficiency; tolerance to drought\, flood and temperature extremes associated with climate change; resistance to pests and diseases; improved taste\, aroma\, or nutrition; and removal of undesirable traits through the use of both traditional genetic approaches and targeted gene editing.
URL:https://cahnrs.wsu.edu/research/proposal_deadlines/afri-fas-plant-breeding-for-agricultural-production-a1141/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231102
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231103
DTSTAMP:20260407T153044
CREATED:20230329T163447Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230517T163212Z
UID:1227-1698883200-1698969599@cahnrs.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:AFRI - FAS Social Implications of Food and Agricultural Technologies (A1642)
DESCRIPTION:Program Area Priority: Examining the social implications of technology is a form of technology assessment that anticipates the unforeseen and unintended consequences of technological innovation\, including cultural\, health\, welfare\, equity\, ethical\, and environmental impacts. A critical lesson learned from past experiences with the application of scientific discoveries and technological innovations to agricultural production is that public trust in science begins with and requires ongoing transparency and open deliberation. Technologies such as gene drives and genome editing\, big data\, nanotechnology\, autonomous technologies and novel foods have tremendous capability in shaping the future of agriculture\, requiring the scientific community to develop effective means of communicating and engaging with the public. The National Academies of Sciences\, Engineering\, and Medicine recommended that for these innovations to become applicable to agriculture\, there should be a dialogue between scientists\, legal scholars\, bioethicists\, social scientists\, the public\, and other stakeholders to assess the merits and risks of new technologies and scientific discoveries\, and pursue open and participatory approaches to meaningfully engage with potentially impacted communities about these issues.
URL:https://cahnrs.wsu.edu/research/proposal_deadlines/afri-fas-social-implications-of-food-and-agricultural-technologies-a1642/
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