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Contact:
Dr. Fred Gould,
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Dave Caldwell,
CALS Communication Services, 919/513-3127
Sept.
24, 2004
NC
State Entomologist Wins Prestigious Humboldt Award
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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Dr.
Fred Gould
College of Agriculture & Life Sciences File
Photo |
A
North Carolina State University entomologist will
receive the prestigious Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
Award during a ceremony Monday (Sept. 27) at the university.
Dr. Fred Gould, whose work has played a pivotal role
in determining how best to use emerging, transgenic
pest management technology, is the 2004 recipient of
the Humboldt Award, which is presented annually to
the person judged to have made the most significant
contribution to American agriculture during the previous
five years. With the award comes a $15,000 cash prize,
which Gould will donate to the NCSU
Libraries and the
Department
of Entomology.
In addition, a student at the recipient’s institution
is chosen to receive a $5,000 Alfred Toepfer scholarship
to be used to study agriculture in Germany. Melanie
Bateman, a doctoral student from Weaverville, N.C.,
studying entomology-behavioral biology, will receive
this scholarship. She plans to use it to study plant
defense chemicals at the Max Plank Institute for
Chemical Ecology. Gould, William Neal Reynolds Professor of Entomology,
was recognized for groundbreaking work on the development
by insects of resistance to so-called Bt crops. He
and colleagues also developed strategies to help ensure
that insects do not develop resistance.
Bt crops are among the most successful of transgenic,
or genetically altered, crops. Such crops contain genes
from Bacillus thuringiensis, a bacterium. The genes
produce a toxin that kills caterpillars that feed on
crops such as corn and cotton.
Gould was among the first to show that insects could
develop resistance to transgenic crops; he and colleagues
then developed strategies to prevent insects from developing
resistance.
Gould also helped inform national policy toward
biotechnology by serving on several committees
of the National
Academy of Sciences’ National Research Council
that dealt with biotechnology issues. He also served
on an Environmental Protection Agency Science Advisory
Subcommittee on Resistance Management and briefed
the U.S. State Department’s Undersecretary
for Global Affairs on the risks associated with genetically
engineered crops. Gould joined
the College of
Agriculture and Life Sciences faculty
at NC State in 1978 as a research associate.
He was named a William Neal Reynolds Professor in 1993.
He holds a bachelor’s degree in biology from
the City University of New York and a Ph.D. in ecology
and evolutionary biology from the State University
of New York at Stony Brook.
The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation was established
in 1959 by Dr. Alfred Toepfer, a German grain merchant
and philanthropist. The foundation and the award are
named for a 19th century geographer and natural scientist.
NOTE
TO EDITORS: The award ceremony will be held at 10 a.m.
Monday, Sept. 27, in the Talley Student Center
Ballroom on the NC State campus. The program includes
a seminar by Gould titled “Resistance Management
for Transgenic Insecticidal Crops.” The program
will also include remarks by NC State Interim Chancellor
Robert Barnhardt, Provost James Oblinger and Interim
Dean Johnny Wynne of the College of Agriculture and
Life Sciences.
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