Julieta Sherk Wins Fulbright Award

For NC State University’s Julieta Trevino Sherk, a recent visit to the North Carolina Academy of Physician Assistants Veteran Memorial Garden in Durham was a chance to both look back and think ahead.

While there on a rainy February morning, Sherk recalled practicing with a local landscape architecture firm to develop the gardens and grounds in 2005. Then, last spring, as an associate professor of horticultural science, she and her undergraduate landscape construction studio students worked to incorporate a remembrance wall and patio to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the physician assistant profession, which originated in North Carolina in 1967 when three former Navy hospital corpsmen completed studies at Duke University. Continue reading

Wehner Honored with Career Award

Dr. Todd C. WehnerDr. Todd Wehner was presented with the career award at the international meeting of EUCARPIA VI, the European plant breeding organization, in Warsaw, Poland.

Dr. Todd C. Wehner is leader of the cucumber and watermelon breeding project at North Carolina State University-Raleigh. He also does research on melon and Asian gourds. His research has emphasized improved selection methods; recurrent selection for fruit yield, earliness and quality; resistance to chilling, nematodes, anthracnose, belly rot, gummy stem blight, powdery mildew, downy mildew and potyviruses; and germplasm evaluation. His objectives are to provide industry with new traits for the development of improved cultivars, research information, and graduate students who can run field plant breeding programs. Continue reading

Sweet Potato Sequencing Effort Aims to Improve Food Security

Dr. Bode Olukolu

Craig Yencho and Bode Olukolu Win 2017 Agricultural Greater Good Initiative Grant

Since 2011, the Agricultural Greater Good Initiative has awarded grants of Illumina products to researchers using Illumina technology to tackle diverse genomics-oriented projects aimed at alleviating global hunger, malnutrition, and poverty in the developing world. Supported research projects have spanned the globe and the spectrum of scientific discovery improving studies of agriculturally important plants and animals that are commonly consumed by food insecure populations. Continue reading

Whipker Wins National Alex Laurie Award

Dr. Brian WhipkerNC State University’s Dr. Brian E. Whipker, an internationally acclaimed expert in the fields of plant growth regulators and plant nutrition, is the 2016 recipient of the Society of American Florists’ Alex Laurie Award. The honor was presented September 24, 2016 at the society’s annual convention in Hawaii.  Continue reading

Lupin Blooms!

Visitors watch, Lupin, the corpse flower (Amorphophallus titanum)

The stinky flower bloomed and it only took 13 years!  Brandon Huber, a horticultural science master’s student, was thrilled to see and smell his Amorphophallus titanum bloom recently. Known commonly as a corpse flower, the bloom created quite a stink. Many spectators came for the smell alone, but the titum arum is also known for its beauty and rarity. Only 200 or so titum arum blooms have occurred in cultivation in the past 127 years. Huber called his plant a flagship plant and said it is the world’s largest flowering plant. Once it blooms, the flower lasts only a few days.

Huber acquired his corpse flower nine years ago when he was visiting the Huntington Botanical Gardens in California. It was a dormant four-year old corm which is an underground stem and was the size of a softball. Huber brought the corpse flower with him to NC State in 2014. To honor the plant’s connection to NC State, Huber named it Lupin, after Remus Lupin, a werewolf from the Harry Potter series whose name comes from the Latin word meaning wolf.

Understanding the unique event that was about to occur, Diane Mays, the conservatory curator, arranged to have a live feed set up on the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences website (cals.ncsu.edu/corpse-flower-at-nc-state). The flower opened fully on September 23 and became an overnight sensation. Standing 6 ½ feet tall, the beautiful flower attracted a steady crowd of visitors through its blooming cycle which lasted through Sunday September 25. Huber was a natural teacher and interview subject, and his and Mays’ enthusiasm never wavered.     

Who is Brandon Huber?

Brandon Huber standing with Lupin, the corpse flower.
Brandon Huber is a horticultural science master’s student working with Dr. Todd Wehner in plant breeding. He’s been growing plants since early childhood and won several prizes as a teen. When the plant showed signs of blooming, Huber’s family traveled from Pennsylvania to be with him during the event.

While the plant was in bloom, Huber pollinated his plant using pollen from a titan arum that bloomed at the University of Wisconsin a few weeks ago. If that pollination is successful, he could have blooming offspring in about a decade. Huber will also use Lupin for hormone studies.

The Conservatory and its Curator

diane-mays-conservatoryThe conservatory does not usually accept personal plants, but when Huber contacted conservatory curator, Diane Mays, and told her what he had, she made an exception. The conservatory is located in the Marye Anne Fox Teaching Laboratory. Diane Mays has been its curator for 17 years. Mays is extremely talented and knowledgeable about plant care and plant propagation. The conservatory collection is diverse and includes cacti, succulents, tropical foliage plants, ferns, orchids, and carnivorous plants. Mays manages all to a high standard. She also loves working with her undergraduate student interns and teaching them plant care and greenhouse management.

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Venus Flytrap at NC State Conservatory
Whether through hands-on instruction in our greenhouses, field labs or community gardens, our work ensures the economic and environmental sustainability for horticulture across the state, the nation, and the world. Help support our work by designating a gift for the conservatory.

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