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Chico State
Hometown: South Ripley, New York
Major: Interdisciplinary Master’s
Year in School: Graduate student
Expected Graduation: Spring 2021
Mentor: Elizabeth Boyd, Professor, Center for Water and the Environment
How did you become interested in this field of study?
After completing my undergraduate degree in agriculture
science from Chico State, I chose to continue in agriculture
and focus my master’s program in Integrated Pest
Management and Agroecology. I chose this because of my
interest in entomology, data science and whole-systems
approaches to pest management.
What is the title of the ARI project and what faculty are you
working with?
“Expanded Analysis of a Novel Trapping Method for Walnut
Husk Fly in California Walnut Orchards” with Dr. Elizabeth
“Betsy” Boyd, professor in the College of Agriculture, Chico
State University.
Briefly describe your project and why it is important to
California agriculture or natural resources.
California produces all the nation’s walnuts, and its annual
value to growers fluctuates between $0.9 billion to $1.6 billion.
Larvae of walnut husk flies infest black walnuts and damage
the nut. While the pest has been in California for 100 years,
we are lacking basic information regarding its distribution, no
new methods for managing the pest have been developed,
and economic thresholds need to be established. In this
project, we implemented and evaluated intensive monitoring
of walnut husk fly in walnut orchards for the purpose of
improving management techniques of this pest, using novel
trap designs and placements in orchards.
Why are you interested in this project?
I enjoy working in the field and having the opportunity to
approach a long-standing issue in agriculture with new
technology and ideas. I like the complexity of the data and
the ability to try something new in the way we manage a
common pest.
Describe your role in this ARI project.
My role has been to provide support to the PI in all stages
of the project, including writing the grant, setting up the
experiment in the field, collecting the data and entering and
analyzing it. This was a multiple-year study, and we were
able to make year-to-year comparisons on population size
and densities of the walnut husk flies and evaluate trap
density and new trap designs. I have assisted in presenting
preliminary findings and will be a primary author in
forthcoming publications.
What do you hope to learn, or have you learned, through
your involvement?
I have learned about the role of grants in research, the
importance of experimental design, the ins and outs of
collecting “good” data, how to manage data and version
control, time management, proper scientific writing
methodologies and how to research appropriate analysis
techniques. I have always liked chemistry, biology and solving
problems. I have also enjoyed realizing how much cuttingedge
technologies are being used in agriculture, especially
geospatial analyses as a management tool.
What do you want to do after graduation, and how will
working on this ARI project help you to achieve that goal?
I plan to pursue a Ph.D. and work toward establishing a
research career. I was able to help write several grant
applications and progress reports, so I feel I have gotten
a good idea of the demands of research. Working on this
ARI project provided an opportunity to collect data worthy
of publication and allowed me to see how to develop and
implement an applied research project with real-world
applications. All this has provided me with the confidence to
apply to a doctoral program and the credentials to qualify
for one.
Is there anything else you would like to share with us
regarding your background and interests?
I am a single mother of three daughters.