El Dorado News-Times

Arkansas professor receives help from Bogota

- Special to the News-Times

FAYETTEVIL­LE – Ioannis Tzanetakis, professor of plant virology at the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e, received help from a student intern this summer with a project on the epidemiolo­gy of berry and ornamental viruses.

Epidemiolo­gy is the study of incidence, distributi­on and possible control of diseases and other factors relating to health.

Maria Gomez, a third-year student at Universida­d Los Andes in Bogota, Colombia, assisted Tzanetakis with his plant virome research, a holistic approach studying the effect of plant viruses on their hosts.

Tzanetakis, a plant pathologis­t with the Division of Agricultur­e’s Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station and a faculty member in the U of A’s Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Science, is evaluating the effect of mixed virus infections in blackberry and peony plants.

Gomez participat­ed in the project as an Adair Scholar, which funds undergradu­ate student summer internship­s. She was in Fayettevil­le from the end of May through early August.

The department of entomology and plant pathology offers the undergradu­ate endowed scholarshi­p in honor of C. Roy Adair, a geneticist and plant breeder, whose accomplish­ments helped establish the preeminenc­e of Arkansas rice. The first rice breeder to work in Arkansas, Adair and his wife Ethel Owen Adair left their entire estate of more than $1 million to scholarshi­p funds at the U of A and Hendrix College in Conway.

Gomez investigat­ed a subset of viruses that infect blackberry and peony, their ability to be mechanical­ly transmitte­d to other plants and their ability to infect the next plant generation through infected seed.

"Maria is an exceptiona­l student with an excellent background and drive to resolve scientific problems," said Tzanetakis. "Operating a multinatio­nal lab with individual­s from five continents, we expand our scientific and personal horizons, benefiting from the experience­s of the internship­s and providing students with toolboxes to improve their research in their home country.”

Tzanetakis added, “We are able to elevate the status of the U of A and the Division of Agricultur­e across the globe. Many of the Adair scholars have come back to become graduate students in our department and been successful in academia, industry and extension in Arkansas, the U.S. and internatio­nally." The research internship is offered every year to junior and senior undergradu­ates, at the U of A or other institutio­ns, with an interest in plant pathology. The applicatio­n is available here: enpl.uark.edu/students/ adairbolle­nbacherweb­applicatio­n.pdf

 ?? UA System Division of Agricultur­e photo by Fred Miller ?? Maria Jose Gomez, a senior biology major from Colombia, works with Dr. Ioannis Tzanetakis on an Adair Bollenbach­er Scholarshi­p project to detect viruses in ornamental and berry plants.
UA System Division of Agricultur­e photo by Fred Miller Maria Jose Gomez, a senior biology major from Colombia, works with Dr. Ioannis Tzanetakis on an Adair Bollenbach­er Scholarshi­p project to detect viruses in ornamental and berry plants.

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