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APSnet
Education Center | Feature: Sequencing
the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.

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Joseph Esnard
Department of Crop and
Soil Sciences
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850
http://www.css.cornell.edu/staff/Esnard.html
Joseph
Esnard holds a B.Sc. (Hons.) degree (double majors in Biology and
Mathematics) from the University of the West Indies, an M.S. in Crop
Protection (major: Plant Pathology) from the University of Puerto
Rico, and a Ph.D. with distinctions in Plant Pathology (nematology/bacteriology)
from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (1995, under Prof.
Emeritus B.M. Zuckerman). He joined Cornell’s Plant Pathology
faculty August 1997 as a Senior Research Associate with an
independent Nematology research program and responsibilities for
teaching graduate nematology (PL PA 706 Phytonematology).
His research program is
exciting and presently focuses on biological control (specifically,
the interactions of nematodes, microbes and abiotic factors in the
soil environment) and nematodes as bioindicators of soil health.
He was a Caribbean Basin
Initiative Research Fellow at the USDA Tropical Agriculture Research
Station in Puerto Rico. From 1995 to 1997, he worked in the Plant
Physiology program at North Carolina State University on two
projects: mechanism of aluminum toxicity in soybean and turfgrass
roots and, on free living nematodes as bioindicators of soil health
in turfgrass systems.
Joseph has served two terms
on the Board of Directors of the Caribbean Society for
Biotechnology. His is currently chair of the multi-state regional
Nematology research project NE-171 (10 State agencies
participating); a member of the Biological Control Committee of the
Society of Nematologists, the International Society for Molecular
Plant-Microbe Interactions, Sigma Xi, Gamma Sigma Delta, the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, and APS. He has
published in scholarly journals in Europe, America, Japan. |
©
Copyright 2001 by The American Phytopathological Society.
This article was first published June 1, 1999. It was reviewed, revised,
and published as a feature article for The Plant Health Instructor
March 29, 2001.
American
Phytopathological Society
3340 Pilot Knob Road
St. Paul, MN 55121-2097
e-mail: aps@scisoc.org |