Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station
Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station   SANDPOINT R&E CENTER--1912
1904 N. Boyer Ave., 83864 • 263-2323 • 78 acres • lab greenhouse • 1 faculty, 3 staff • http://www.ag.uidaho.edu/sandpoint/

Today Emphasis is on commercial specialty crops and sustainable production practices. Model production systems are created for billberries and other berries. Premier in the world for taming huckleberries: commercial use expected within five years.
Contact Dan Barney, superintendent, dbarney@uidaho.edu  

UI RESEARCH PARK, POST FALLS--1997
721 Lochsa, 83854
• 777-4700 • 100 acres • labs • 2 faculty, 14 staff • http://www.uirp.com

Today Jacklin Science and Technology Building houses eight companies, three university and two federal programs. UI CALS researchers in molecular biology and food sciences collaborate with electrical engineers in the Center for Micro-electronic and Bimolecular Research to develop biosensors for use in agricultural, food, and health industries.
Contacts A. Larry Branen, Assoc. V.P. for North Idaho, info@uirp.com

IDAHO AG EXPERIMENT STATION, MOSCOW--1892
In addition to main campus buildings, four R&E facilities are flagship filed research stations whose findings have contributed significantly to sustainability of northern Idaho's dryland crops and livestock research. They include:

PARKER FARM, MOSCOW--1956
1025 Plant Science Road (2 miles east of Moscow on State 8), 885-3777 • 157 acres • 10 greenhouses • 3 staff

Today Foundation seed for 8 crops; research includes plant breeding, crop variety trials for wheat, barley, canola, mustard, rapeseed, pea, and lentils; also weed, disease, and insect control and biology studies, crop rotation, conservation tillage, organic farming.
Contact Roy Patten, supervisor, royp@uidaho.edu

KAMBITSCH FARM, GENESEE--1993
2897 Highway 95 South • 232 acres • same staff as Parker Farm

Today The Kambitsch family donated part of this land. Infrastructure planned as funds permit. Of equal importance to Parker Farm; similar research.

NORTH FARM, UI CAMPUS--1940s
Behind Palouse Shopping Mall • 553 acres • greenhouse • lab dairy and sheep barns • 4 faculty, 5 staff serve 200 students each semester • http://www.avs.uidaho.edu/

Today The UI Sheep and Dairy Research and Teaching Centers serve UI and Washing State University animal and veterinary science students.
Sheep Center Includes 120 breeding ewes and 6 rams-purebred Suffolk and Cheviots. Flock is enrolled in the Scrapie certification program. All breeding animals are genotyped. Research benefits some 2,500 Idaho and Washington sheep growers. Idaho flocks tend to graze public lands; Washington's are more farm grown. Research serves both audiences in sustainable practices.
Dairy 110 milking cows (200 cows total) for studies of fiber digestion, fat metabolism, and reproduction efficiency.
Contacts Dave Casebolt (sheep), 885-3516, casebolt@uidaho.edu; Ed Wagner (dairy), 885-3526, ewagner@uidaho.edu; Carl Hunt (AVS, dept. head), 885-6345, chunt@uidaho.edu

SOUTHWEST IDAHO R&E CENTER, CALDWELL--1906
16852 S. Tenth Ave. (4 miles south of I-84) 83607-8249 459-6365 • 280 acres • lab • staff of 9 • http://www.ag.uidaho.edu/caldwell 

Today Includes UI Extension District II director and staff. Dairy program emphasizes reproductive efficiency, milk quality, and risk management on Idaho dairy farms. Range economics programs offer expertise in livestock production, economics, and public land policy. Computer specialists support all off-campus R&E offices. $-H associate leads after-school programs, visual arts curricula development, and partners to reach under-served at-risk youth.
Contact
Mike Thornton, superintendent, 722-6701, miket@uidaho.edu

TWIN FALLS R&E CENTER--1915
315 Falls Ave. Evergreen Bldg., 83301-1827 • 736-3600 20 leased acres • 4 labs • 12 faculty, 9 staff http://www.ag.uidaho.edu/twinfalls/

Today Research has helped southern and eastern Idaho become some of the most affluent and successful agricultural areas in the West. Located at College of Southern Idaho (CSI), this is also UI Extension District III headquarters. Most scientists here conduct their research at Kimberly. Premiere efforts to solve airy odor problems are ongoing. Research also focuses on improving other dairy, beef, and range practices.
Contact
Don Morishita, 736-3616 or 423-6616, don@uidaho.edu

KIMBERLY R&E CENTER--1950
3793 North 3600 East, 83341 • 423-4691 • 180 acres • 3 labs, 3 greenhouses (new 2,400 sq. ft) • 3 Kimberly, 6 Twin Falls faculty, 9 USDA scientists • 11 staff, 6 to 10 seasonal employees http://www.kimberly.uidaho.edu/

Today Research includes Forage evaluated for yield, quality and environmental impact; Potato Storage to control disease, evaluate products; Soil Fertility documents best management practices, organic and inorganic soil amendments; Water research seeks to improve surface and groundwater quality, irrigation scheduling, while improving crop yield; also supports groups managing the Snake River and its aquifer.
Foundation seed & bean breeding
One of five U.S. public bean breeding programs since 1966 has developed varieties to help Idaho´s dry bean industry thrive. The Foundation Seed Program--responsible for transfer of crop varieties from breeding programs to producers--collaborates with Aberdeen, Caldwell, Kimberly, Moscow, and Tetonia to renew at premium health about 120 varieties of wheat, barley, oats, beans, potatoes, peas, chickpeas, lentils, rapeseed, grasses, forbs, and forage legumes.
Disease, Insects, Weeds Diagnoses and manages insects and disease impacting cereal grains, beans, and other row crops, and makes sure proper pesticides are registered for Idaho.
Contact Don Morishita, superintendent, 736-3616 or 423-6616, don@uidaho.edu

  WEST FARM, UI CAMPUS--1920
West of Perimeter Road • 307 acres • beef center, meats lab, equine center, farm operations center, meat processing lab, livestock pavilion, Holm Research Center

Today Animal and veterinary science and medicine staff research ways to improve beef and dairy cattle, horse, and sheep production.
Beef Center Herd includes steers for digestion trials on processing of low-quality forages and feed intake efficiency studies. Other cattle are used in production management classes and as animal models for purebred shows, sales.
Equines Most famous of recent UI research is the world's first successful cloning of an equine, resulting in the 2003 birth of 3 identical mule brothers at the Northwest Equine Reproduction Lab. Research also investigates hormonal status of mares.
Contacts Denny Falk (beef center), 885-6585, dfalk@uidaho.edu; Dirk Vanderwall (mule clones), 885-7414, dirkv@uidaho.edu; Ron Richard (meats lab), 885-6727, rrichard@uidaho.edu; Carl Hunt (AVS dept. head), 885-6345, chunt@uidaho.edu

FOOD TECHNOLOGY CENTER, CALDWELL--2004

Caldwell Business Incubator, 1904 E. Chicago St., 83605 • 455-9650 • 7,000 sq. ft. food processing center • R&D lab • 2 staff • http://www.ag.uidaho.edu/ftc/

Today Operates a commercial kitchen and food processing pilot plant; works on applied food research and development projects for individual growers, trade associations, commodity commissions, and private companies.
Contacts Drew Dalgetty, food processing supervisor, dalgetty@uidaho.edu; Jim Toomey, director, jtoomey@uidaho.edu

CAINE VET. TEACHING CENTER, CALDWELL--1977
1020 E. Homedale Rd., 83607 • 454-8657 • 40 acres • 6 labs • large animal clinics • 5 scientists • 20 staff (some part time)

Today Provides Washington-Oregon-Idaho (WOI) vet students opportunities for hands-on experience in food animal production medicine. Up to 65 students spend 2-4 week rotations working with livestock producers and veterinarians on food animals. focus is on production and population medicine (crowd dynamics with infection, nutritional diseases).
Major research (1) Study of Johne's, a chronic incurable disease of ruminants that causes diarrhea and wasting an increasing problem for big dairies; (2) Pasteurellaceae, bacteria associated with respiratory and reproductive diseases in wild and domestic animals; (3) Scrapie and other prion diseases (bovine spongiform encephalopathy, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, chronic wasting disease) research is part of a huge national cutting edge effort; (4) Diagnostic services and field investigations for food animal diseases.
Contacts Marie Bulgin, WOI coordinator, mbulgin@uidaho.edu; Linda DuBose, tours, ldubose@uidaho.edu

SOUTHWEST IDAHO R&E CENTER, PARMA--1925
29603 U of I Lane, one mile north of Parma, 83660 • 722-6701 • 200 acres • labs • 3 greenhouses • 8 faculty, 15 staff, 1 USDA scientist • http://www.ag.uidaho.edu/parma/

Today Research to improve Treasure Valley crops. Focus is on production, storage, and related problems of vegetables, forages, cereals, hops, mint, apples and other tree fruits, grapes, and seed crops: 90 acres for row crops; 25 acres for tree fruit and small fruit research. Other programs:
Plant Science emphasizes strategies to improve crop yields and quality, evaluates new niche fruits, promotes efficient water use, reduces post-harvest disorders, finds best practices for wine and table grapes. Entomology develops integrated pest management practices for hops, researches insect vectored viruses of small grains and potatoes, studies pollination systems for alfalfa and other crops. Soil Science identifies yield-limiting nutrients, evaluates green manure crops, and improves fertilizer use efficiency. Plant Pathology focuses on disease diagnosis and treatment, integrated management programs for nematodes in many crops.
Contact Mike Thornton, superintendent, miket@uidaho.edu

ABERDEEN R&E Center--1911
1693 S. 2700 W., PO Box 870, 83210-0870 • 397-4181 464 acres • 13 labs • 10 greenhouses • 8 faculty, 32 staff, 13 USDA scientists, 27 USDA staff • http://www.uidaho.edu/aberdeen/

Today Known internationally, this center-in the heart of the U.S.´s major potato-producing region-serves both irrigated and dryland agriculture; improves cultural practices for all major area crops. Teams evaluate crop rotation effects on pest management, production. Potato Breeding Part of the USDA´s Tri-State Potato Breeding Program-along with Oregon and Washington State Universities-initiates 140,000 seedlings each year. Aim is to develop high-quality, disease-resistant varieties for fresh market and processing. From 1953 to 2004, 26 new potato varieties were released from here. Small Grains Breeding In 1988 all USDAs National Small Grains Collection of Germsplasm-dating to about 1897-moved here, a national treasure utilized worldwide for genetic research, breeding, and crop improvement. Wheat Quality Lab supports the wheat industry by completing a myriad of quality tests-including baking breads and cookies-that ensure grain sold from Idaho is the best. Testing provides critical support for variety development, new product development, and wheat export.
Contact Steve Love, superintendent, slove@uidaho.edu

IDAHO FALLS R&E CENTER--1917
1776 Science Center Dr., 83402 • 529-8376 • 4 acres (varies with grants) • 1 lab • 1 greenhouse • 5 scientists • 12 staff http://extension.ag.uidaho.edu/district4/

Today Scientists share space with UI Extension District IV staff. Focus is better management of small grains and potatoes. Research involves fertility and irrigation for potatoes, and best management practices to increase profitability. Scientists study ways to reduce risk of PVY potato virus.
Contacts Jeff Stark, division chair, horticultural sciences, jstark@uidaho.edu

TETONIA R&E CENTER, NEWDALE--1917
8888 W. Highway 33, U of I, 83426 • 456-2879 • 585 acres • 3 greenhouses • 6 staff

Today At 6,200 feet elevation, UI's high-altitude research site-because of its short growing season and relative isolation-is ideal fro producing seed crops protected from insects and disease that plague other areas. Priority is growing foundation seed grain and seed potatoes for sale to certified seed growers. Some 3,000 to 7,000 new lines of potatoes are tested each year. Seeds grown here: wheat (5 to 8 varieties), potatoes (10 to 15 varieties).
Contact Jim Whitmore, superintendent, whitmore@uidaho.edu

NANCY M. CUMMINGS RESEARCH, EXTENSION & EDUCATION CENTER, SALMON--2001
16 Hot Springs Road, Carmen, 83462 (just north of Salmon on U.S. 93) • 756-2749 • staff of 3 • 925 acres http://www.ag.uidaho.edu/nancycummings/

Today Acquired through a special lease/gift from the Auen Foundation of Palm Desert, CA., this scenic working ranch focuses on programs in cow-calf research, forage productions, and pasture grazing management systems. A herd of 400 Angus-Herefords aids research to help cattle producers. Studies involve increasing pregnancy rates to 70 percent from artificial insemination.
Contacts John Hall, superintendent, jbhall@uidaho.edu; Carl Hunt, chunt@uidaho.edu

Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station
 
U.S. SHEEP EXPERIMENT
STATION, DUBOIS--1916

6 miles north of Dubois on I-15, 83423 • 374-5364 • 3 UI staff, 6 USDA scientists • 71,000 acres of federal land

Today The UI maintains a sheep herd for study by USDA scientists, to improve efficiency of lamb meat and wool production. Scientists have contributed significantly to knowledge of sheep reproductive physiology.

Contact Greg Lewis, USDA,
glewis@pw.ars.usda.gov;
Quinn Jacobson, herd manager,
qjake@uidaho.edu

 
HAGERMAN FISH CULTURE EXPERIMENT STATION--1996
3059 F. National Fish Hatchery Rd., 83332 • 837-9096 • 4 acres • labs • hatcheries • 6 UI, 4 USDA scientists • 
<<Aquaculture Web site>>

Today In the heart of Idaho's aquaculture industy alonge the Snake River, UI scientists from various disciplines conduct research for sustainable aqualculture for both commerical and conservation sciences and technologies. A commercial-scale trout fram opened in 2001, and a new 13,600 sq. ft. admin/laboratory will open in 2005. Much complex rainbow trout research is underway.

Contact Ron Hardy, director, rhardy@uidaho.edu

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station