CaesNews

Where Science Meets Society

CaesNews

Where Science Meets Society

News and Notes – December 2020

December 16, 2020

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CAES to Host Alumni and Donor Appreciation Event Dec. 17

Join us for an evening of Aggie Pride! You are cordially invited to a virtual holiday celebration with the College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences at 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 17.

Please register in advance for this Zoom meeting

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about attending the meeting. For more information, contact Justin Lewter, director of development, at 336-285-3055 or jmlewter1@ncat.edu.

Jefferson-Moore, Bell Interviewed by ABC News

Kenrett Jefferson-More, Ph.D.

Kenrett Jefferson-Moore, chairperson of the Department of Agribusiness, Applied Economics and Agriscience Education and alumnus Kamal Bell, CEO of Sankofa Farms, were interviewed by ABC News for a story about the Justice for Black Farmers Act, a bill that would allow Black farmers to acquire acreage through a USDA system of land grants.

“African American farmers have had to fight for so much over the years — information, rights, land access, capital access and so on,” Jefferson-Moore said. “… It brings tears to my eyes to think of how this would change opportunities for African American farmers.”

Sang Awarded Grant to Study Oats’ Effects on Inflammatory Diseases

Shengmin Sang, Ph.D.

Shengmin Sang, Ph.D., a professor of functional foods and human health in N.C. A&T’s Center for Post-Harvest Technologies, has been awarded a three-year grant totaling nearly $500,000 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture’s Agriculture and Food Research Initiative.

The grant will be used to develop germinated and false-germinated oats as “functional” foods that not only taste good but also benefit human health, potentially offering important, new dietary options for preventing and treating disease.

“Increasing evidence shows that many chronic diseases are preventable, and diet plays a very important role in disease prevention and treatment,” Sang said. “The general public prefers dietary regimens, instead of drugs, for preventing or treating chronic diseases.”

The $499,000 grant will support research on the use of germination and false-germination to optimize the bioactive compounds in oats. Studies have shown that oat products can help prevent and combat chronic inflammatory diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease and its associated colorectal cancer, Sang said. Preliminary data from Sang’s lab found that germinated and false-germinated oats have significantly more of the phytochemicals – plant-based chemicals that protect cells – that can boost oats’ anti-inflammatory properties.

“Oat phytochemicals show significant promise in helping reduce inflammation,” Sang said. “Our goal is to help people with chronic inflammatory conditions improve their outcomes by eating oats, instead of taking more medicine.”

Read more CAES News

Innovative Practices Lead to Small Farmer of the Year Award

Innovative Practices Lead to Small Farmer of the Year Award

At the age of 40, Mike Jones finally had enough resources to buy land in Franklin County and pursue his dream of owning his own farm. He came from a farming background, but the family lost its farm in the 1950s and since then, family members had worked as sharecroppers and tenant farmers. Fifteen years ago, he bought a 73-acre abandoned tobacco farm and turned it into a successful agricultural operation called MAE Farm. Today, he is the 2021 N.C. Small Farmer of the Year, a recognition awarded annually by Cooperative Extension at North Carolina A&T State University as part of Small Farms Week.
New report shows strong market for ag science majors

New report shows strong market for ag science majors

A strong job market awaits new college graduates with degrees in the agricultural sciences, according to a new report released in December by USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the Purdue University College of Agriculture.
From Chemical Explosions to Hurricanes: Troxler Seminar Series Returns

From Chemical Explosions to Hurricanes: Troxler Seminar Series Returns

North Carolina’s Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler launched his fourth annual CAES seminar series this month with a presentation by the department’s Emergency Programs Division Director Kelly Nilsson, who told a group of students and faculty about ways the division readies the agricultural and general community to face natural and unnatural disasters.
CAES students earn top university scholarships

CAES students earn top university scholarships

Six members of the class of 2026 with majors in the College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences have earned two of N.C. A&T’s top scholarships, the Lewis and Elizabeth Dowdy Scholarship and the Cheatham-White Scholarship.
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