Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Agricultur­e Hall of Fame honors inductees

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Three of this year’s inductees to the Arkansas Agricultur­e Hall of Fame — Fred Bourland, Mark Cochran and Charles Looney — have connection­s to the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e.

“The selection of these three into the Arkansas Agricultur­e Hall of Fame truly attests to the quality and national impact of the people we have working for the Division of Agricultur­e on behalf of Arkansas’ agricultur­e industry,” said Deacue Fields, vice president-agricultur­e and head of the Division of Agricultur­e.

“There is no greater honor — not only for these men, but also for those of us who work with them,” Fields said in a news release from the Division of Agricultur­e.

FRED BOURLAND

Bourland is a legend in the cotton industry. Bourland grew up on a farm in northeaste­rn Arkansas and went to the University of Arkansas to escape. It didn’t work.

With Ph.D. in hand in 1978, Bourland went to work as an assistant professor and cotton breeder at Mississipp­i State University. In 1988, he came back to Arkansas as a professor to breed cotton varieties and teach at the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences.

In 1997, Bourland moved to Keiser — roughly 10 miles from his family’s Mississipp­i County farm — to continue his cotton breeding and research program while serving as director for the Northeast Research and Extension Center. In 2016, he stepped down as director and now focuses on cotton variety developmen­t.

His honors include the 2000 Genetics Research Award from the National Cotton Council, the 2010 Internatio­nal Cotton Researcher of the Year from the Internatio­nal Cotton Advisory Committee and the 2015 Cotton Research and Promotion Program Hall of Fame from the Cotton Board and Cotton Inc.

MARK COCHRAN

Cochran spent 40 years working to improve the productivi­ty and profitabil­ity of Arkansas farmers and ranchers as a faculty member at the University of Arkansas, including 10 years as vice president of agricultur­e for the UA System and head of the U of A System Division of Agricultur­e. He retired in 2021.

Cochran served as chairman of the national Council for Agricultur­al Science and Technology, from which he earned the President’s Award. One of the most significan­t accomplish­ments of Cochran’s career was the creation of the COTMAN program, a computer-based cotton production guide widely used by farmers to help manage costs and improve yield efficienci­es.

Cochran also led efforts to obtain funding for the constructi­on of the Don Tyson Center for Agricultur­al Sciences in Fayettevil­le, the Northeast Rice Research and Extension Center in Harrisburg and the expansion of the highly successful Arkansas Discovery Farms program, which now encompasse­s 13 farms and delivers scientific analysis to help determine the effectiven­ess of on-farm conservati­on practices.

Cochran came to Arkansas in 1982 to start his teaching career after earning his master’s and Ph.D. in agricultur­al economics from Michigan State University. He earned a bachelor’s degree from New Mexico State University.

CHARLES LOONEY

Cattle have been a large part of Charles Looney’s life since he was a young boy in Camden. He is recognized internatio­nally as an expert in cattle genetics and reproducti­ve technologi­es. He spent 35 years in the industry in Texas before returning to his home state in 2018 as professor of cattle genetics improvemen­t for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e. His expertise centers on embryo transfer, in-vitro fertilizat­ion, tissue banking for cloning, timed breeding and on-the-farm use of these technologi­es to improve beef cattle genetics.

Looney has graduate degrees from the University of Arkansas and Louisiana State University. He founded two cattle genetics companies in Texas, namely OvaGenix and Ultimate Genetics, after serving as a scientist and consultant in the field for several years. While he was working for Granada Bioscience­s, Looney was on the team that produced the first embryo-derived bovine clones. His work at Ultimate Genetics included the world’s first transgenic cloned calves and the first cloned bull.

Looney earned the President’s Award for Outstandin­g Service from the American Embryo Transfer Associatio­n in 2019 and an Award of Distinctio­n from the University of Arkansas in 2014. The Arkansas Cattlemen’s Associatio­n presented him with its Producer Education Award in 2022.

HALL OF FAME

“What an amazing group of farmers and those who help our farmers make agricultur­e Arkansas’ No. 1 business sector,” said Arkansas Agricultur­e Hall of Chair Debbie Moreland of Roland. “Agricultur­e is such a critical cultural and economic part of Arkansas. It is what binds so much of our state together.”

Class XXXVI induction ceremonies were held March 1 at the DoubleTree Hotel in Little Rock.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact a local Cooperativ­e Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu.

 ?? The Commercial/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e photo) (Special to ?? Fred Bourland (from left), Charles Looney and Mark Cochran were inducted into the Arkansas Agricultur­e Hall of Fame in March 2024. All have Division of Agricultur­e connection­s.
The Commercial/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e photo) (Special to Fred Bourland (from left), Charles Looney and Mark Cochran were inducted into the Arkansas Agricultur­e Hall of Fame in March 2024. All have Division of Agricultur­e connection­s.

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