News and Events


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He ʻAʻaliʻi Kū Makani: Resilience Through Innovation

He ʻAʻaliʻi Kū Makani: Resilience Through Innovation 30 April 2025

He ʻAʻaliʻi Kū Makani: Resilience Through Innovation

The 2025 CTAHR Conference, “He ʻAʻaliʻi Kū Makani: Resilience Through Innovation,” succeeded far beyond our expectations, thanks to the support of our CTAHR community. 

Planting Seeds of Hope (and Sales)

Planting Seeds of Hope (and Sales) 30 April 2025

Planting Seeds of Hope (and Sales)

More than 1,300 people and 25 exhibitors participated in community gathering at the Komohana Research and Extension Center in Hilo that combined ʻŌhiʻa Love Fest 2025 and the East Hawaiʻi Master Gardeners plant sale.

Find It Faster on the Updated CTAHR Extension Website

Find It Faster on the Updated CTAHR Extension Website 27 January 2025

Find It Faster on the Updated CTAHR Extension Website

Want to learn more about CTAHR Cooperative Extension programs, research, and resources? Whether you’re working in agriculture, environmental conservation, or community development, our newly updated website can help.

CTAHR Dean Shares Personal Story, Vision for College on SOW Podcast

CTAHR Dean Shares Personal Story, Vision for College on SOW Podcast 16 December 2024

CTAHR Dean Shares Personal Story, Vision for College on SOW Podcast

In the most recent episode of the Seeds of Wellbeing (SOW) Podcast, producer Jim Crum interviews CTAHR Dean Parwinder Grewal

UGC Plants Brighten Reception for Outgoing UH President

UGC Plants Brighten Reception for Outgoing UH President 16 December 2024

UGC Plants Brighten Reception for Outgoing UH President

Mahalo to Oʻahu County Administrator Jari Sugano and the fabulous folks at the Urban Garden Center (UGC) in Pearl City for helping CTAHR and the UH community thank UH System President David Lassner.

Hawaiʻi 4-H Plaque Dedication to Recognize Early Members

Hawaiʻi 4-H Plaque Dedication to Recognize Early Members 16 December 2024

Hawaiʻi 4-H Plaque Dedication to Recognize Early Members

All are welcome on January 25, when a plaque commemorating 106 years of the 4-H youth development program in Hawaiʻi will be dedicated on Maui near the site of the state’s first 4-H club.

In Waimānalo, Bare Hands and Full Hearts Replant Kalo Collection

In Waimānalo, Bare Hands and Full Hearts Replant Kalo Collection 16 December 2024

In Waimānalo, Bare Hands and Full Hearts Replant Kalo Collection

Over 60 volunteers from CTAHR and the local community came together on December 10 to plant kupuna kalo back into the ‘āina at the Waimānalo Research Station.

College Assists Oʻahu Ag’s Next Generation at FFA Competition

College Assists Oʻahu Ag’s Next Generation at FFA Competition 16 December 2024

College Assists Oʻahu Ag’s Next Generation at FFA Competition

By Jeremy Elliott-Engel, PhD, Associate Dean for Cooperative Extension

CTAHR was well represented at the Oʻahu District FFA Career Development Event (CDE) Competition held December 14 at Kāhala Elementary School.

The Science Zone

The Science Zone 23 August 2024

The Science Zone

“In Your Head with Professor Ted” airs this Friday (and next)

Since 2019, Ted Radovich has been conducting science interviews as part of the “Science Zone” segment on his radio show, “In Your Head with Professor Ted,” which airs this Friday 9-12 on KTUH. Ted’s show, which is supported by producer Mikey Kantar (both of the Dept. of Tropical Plant and Soil Sciences), has interviewed more than 50 scientists on different projects related to Hawaiʻi and the world. 

Camp Kau Kau

Camp Kau Kau 8 August 2024

Camp Kau Kau

Extension engages 4-H kids across the islands in local cooking

This summer, youths across the state learned and cooked their way through “4-H Camp Kau Kau,” a new week-long summer culinary camp from CTAHR’s 4-H Youth Development Program. Recipes and lessons focused on the context and diversity of local food in Hawai‘i, with hands-on cooking experiences and educational activities about Hawai‘i’s food and agricultural history.

Summer Workdays = Summer Fun

Summer Workdays = Summer Fun 8 August 2024

Summer Workdays = Summer Fun

UGC welcomes the communityʻs help to expand food production

When CTAHR serves the community, and the community helps the College, everybody wins. The Mānana ahupuaʻa is home to several new food-growing systems after Oʻahu County Extension wrapped up its third annual summer workday series at the Urban Garden Center. 

UGC on TV

UGC on TV 8 August 2024

UGC on TV

Hawaiʻi News Now taps Extension for C&C’s Healthy Yard Care

The Urban Garden Center is more than a green oasis that calls to commuters as they drive through Pearl City. It’s a living classroom where community growers and gardeners can learn how to keep plants — and the environment — healthy and beautiful. 

Garlic Gone Local

Garlic Gone Local 8 August 2024

Garlic Gone Local

Extension explores potential for production in the islands

Garlic is one of the most widely used spices for cooking across many different ethnic groups, yet it is one of Hawaiʻi’s most rarely produced spices. One of the challenges, explains Jensen Uyeda of the Dept. of Tropical Plant and Soil Sciences, is that garlic requires a cold winter to overcome dormancy.

Red Hot Chili Peppers

Red Hot Chili Peppers 8 August 2024

Red Hot Chili Peppers

Extension hosts field day at Waimānalo

What’s the appetite for hot peppers among local growers in the community? On one hand, Hawaiian chili types are well known and one of the more widely produced peppers in the state. And of course, chili peppers are commonly used, both fresh and dried, in many different culinary dishes. 

End of Summer Picnic

End of Summer Picnic 8 August 2024

End of Summer Picnic

UGC thanks faculty, staff, volunteers for student stewardship

Mahalo to the Oʻahu County ʻOhana for your ongoing support of our various CTAHR programs in the county, especially our student summer program. Whether it’s picking plumeria, teaching students how to transplant seedlings, approving their supply purchases, packing vegetables for donations, editing their paperwork, prepping their workspace, or attending their various presentations, the time and kindness you’ve extended to these students will pay off greatly in the future.

Preserving Palapalai

Preserving Palapalai 20 June 2024

Preserving Palapalai

Extension and UGC host expert on native ferns

Palapalai is an indigenous Hawaiian fern – one of the most important plants in hula – and Oʻahu Extension was proud to host a recent talk with Hawaiian fern specialist Kay Lynch. The UH Horticulture graduate (ʻ98), Master Gardener, and founder of Lāʻau Hawaiʻi, a Hawaiian fern propagation research nursery, spoke at CTAHR’s Urban Garden Center

Seeds of Wellbeing

Seeds of Wellbeing 20 June 2024

Seeds of Wellbeing

FCS mental health for Hawaiʻi farmers project wins award

Nearly half of Hawaiʻi farmers under age 46 report depression – which reflects the high-stress environment they must contend with on a daily and seasonal basis, complete with risks and uncertainties, volatile markets, fluctuating weather, invasive species, and the list goes on.

Inaugural Address

Inaugural Address 29 April 2024

Inaugural Address

Dean Grewal charts a path forward for the college

CTAHR’s mission is to secure the future of Hawaiʻi by building local self-sufficiency in food and agricultural products, noted Dean Parwinder Grewal at the first CTAHR Conference April 11. “CTAHR’s inclusive vision is to secure the future of Hawaiʻi through collaborative innovation and merging the Western, Asian, Hispanic, and Native Hawaiian knowledge systems,” he said.

Excellence in Extension

Excellence in Extension 20 March 2024

Excellence in Extension

Nancy Ooki of FCS is CTAHR’s 2023 recipient

The 2023 Dean’s Award for Excellence in Extension goes to Nancy Ooki of the Dept. of Family and Consumer Sciences.

Since 2018, Nancy’s “My PI Hawai‘i” has trained Maui youths in fire safety and suppression, search-and-rescue, C.P.R., disaster psychology, and other topics in FEMA’s Teen Community Emergency Response Team. By the final disaster simulation, youths can demonstrate knowledge and skills in first aid, triage, communications, and damage assessment. 

The Manini Farm

The Manini Farm 28 February 2024

The Manini Farm

UGC workforce development project takes root

With one student holding a wireless microphone and another a portable amplifier, the tour of The Manini Farm Project on the grounds of the Urban Garden Center had begun. As students took turns at the mic, presenting their projects and roles and walking participants through the rows of plants, it was apparent that these young adults felt an awful lot of pride in their participation.

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3 November 2022

Growing Jack

HNFAS partners with Hawai‘i Sea Grant, HPU to improve local aquaculture

Growing Jack

The longfin yellowtails, or Almaco Jack, and locally known as kampachi, are among the most valuable finfish groups for offshore aquaculture development. Yet, they are notoriously difficult to rear and harvest on a large commercial scale.

At the same time, despite the shrimp industry’s massive volume – and the U.S. being a leader in shrimp genetics research – programs on genetic improvement have given little attention to shrimp egg and larvae production.

But with nearly $1.25 in new funding from NOAA Sea Grant, these staple food sources of many Pacific Basin nations may become easier to grow in the aquaculture setting.

The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoaʻs College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources and the University of Hawai‘i Sea Grant College Program (Hawaiʻi Sea Grant) have partnered with the Oceanic Institute of Hawaiʻi Pacific University on two NOAA Sea Grant-funded projects that aim to improve the reproduction of kampachi and Pacific white shrimp in the state.

One project will address the key barriers of kampachi production by focusing on improving egg quality, fecundity, and juvenile development. The other will use a genomic approach to improve the reproduction performance of shrimp, including laboratory experiments to assess and improve their genetic traits. 

“Through an integrated collaboration among university research, Extension, and industry partners, the results obtained through this proposed work will result in the facilitation and expansion of commercial development of these and related species,” says PI Andre P. Seale, PhD, of CTAHR’s Dept. of Human Nutrition, Food and Animal Sciences. “By addressing production constraints, this combined HPU and UH effort will contribute to increasing commercial production in Hawaiʻi.”

“This is a critical time for aquaculture, food security, and our ability to feed humans sustainability around the world,” adds Bradley (Kai) Fox, PhD, of Hawai‘i Sea Grant. “We are very fortunate to be able to collaborate with researchers at OI to push cutting-edge technologies with global relevance forward, while at the same time recognizing, appreciating, and learning from our host culture here in Hawaiʻi, where aquaculture has been practiced and refined for a thousand years.”

The funding is part of a nearly $14 million federal funding investment by NOAA Sea Grant to select Sea Grant programs around the country, including Hawai‘i Sea Grant, to strengthen U.S. aquaculture.

Read more of Andre’s project, “Resolving Impediments to Captive Longevity and Fecundity in Seriolids, America's Most Successful Offshore Marine Fish Species.”

Image of kamachi by Andre Seale.