More than 130 faculty, academics, staff, grad students and others attended the first School of Integrative Plant Science (SIPS) Retreat in Kennedy Hall Tuesday.
That morning, after a welcome from SIPS director Alan Collmer, speakers from each section gave short presentations on their work:
- Michael Scanlon (Plant Biology), Ontogeny of the grass ligule: how to draw a line on a leaf. (View video.)
- Courtney Weber (Horticulture), The art and science of berry breeding. (View video.)
- Michael Gore (Plant Breeding & Genetics), Progress towards building a genetic foundation for biofortification of maize.
- Harold van Es (Crop and Soil Science), Adapt-N: cloud computing technology to achieve agronomic and environmental objectives. (View video.)
- Fabio Rinaldi (Plant Pathology & Plant-Microbe Biology), Hitting the Sweet Spot: TAL effectors as tools for targeted gene activation in plants.
![Speakers Scanlon, Weber, Gore, van Es and Rinaldi. Speakers Scanlon, Weber, Gore, van Es and Rinaldi.](https://blogs.cornell.edu/hort/files/2014/10/sips-retreat-speakers-2jw7p5v.jpg)
![Following lunch, a poster session fueled discussion and sharing.](https://blogs.cornell.edu/hort/files/2014/10/poster-session1246x640-1o3vw6u.jpg)
![Speaker Weber brought raspberries from his variety trials for sampling at lunch.](https://blogs.cornell.edu/hort/files/2014/10/berries1234x640-1glrjbf.jpg)