Alumni News

Banana Bunchy Top

Extension’s virtual workshop is Sept. 1

Banana Bunchy Top

Cooperative Extension is proud to present a virtual workshop on the benefits or using integrated pest management (IPM) to help diagnose, prevent, and control banana bunchy top virus in Hawaiʻi. Registration is free, and “Benefits of IPM Practices & Sustainable Strategies for BBTV Control-Prevent” will be held Sept. 1 at 6:00 p.m.

Registration is Open

Alumni & Friends golf tourney set for Oct. 21

Registration is Open

Dust off the putter and squeeze into those plaid pants, because the CTAHR Alumni & Friends Golf Tournament is just two months away! The inaugural fundraiser will be held Friday, October 21, at Pearl Country Club, Oʻahu. CTAHR Alumni & Friends have come together to coordinate this friendly tournament to raise funds to help support student engagement, including upkeep and renovations to the CTAHR Student Lounge.

Farm Finances

Extension hosts 2-part workshop Aug. 22 and 29

Farm Finances

Farmers who can leverage all the latest financial tools, are already taking advantage of every federal and state incentive available, and aren’t a bit worried about their bottom line bottoming out need not apply.

Demon Max

Drones deliver targeted attacks on coconut rhinoceros beetle

Demon Max

The coconut rhinoceros beetle is a major invasive pest that’s hungry for not just coconut palms. The large beetle with its telltale horn also feeds on betelnut, Pandanus palms, banana, pineapple, and sugarcane. On Pacific islands with no natural enemies of this beetle, the damage can be significant. Enter Dan Jenkins of the Dept. of Molecular Biosciences and BioEngineering and his PhD student Mohsen Paryavi. Armed with a drone that looks like something borrowed from a Transformers movie set,

Two Species Are Really One

PEPS study finds DNA barcoding cannot accurately ID fruit flies

Two Species Are Really One

When two fruit flies look very different, it’s logical to conclude they’re from two different species, correct? Au contraire, monsieur. A new study by the Dept. of Plant and Environmental Protection Sciences, using genomic sequence data, shows that what was previously thought to be two different pest fruit fly species in the mango fruit fly complex – are actually one.

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