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Appendix C
Speaker Biographies
Dr. Charles J. Arntzen, Florence Ely Nelson Presidential Endowed Chair, Arizona State
University (see Appendix B)
Mr. Ben Barstow, Past-President, Washington Association of Wheat Growers
After receiving a B.S. from the University of Idaho and an M.S. from Purdue University, Mr.
Barstow spent four years working in cooperative extension and weed science research in
Arizona. He was a newly tenured Assistant Extension Professor at the University of Idaho
20 years ago when he "retired" to take the reins of his wife's family's farm in Palouse,
Washington. Together with his wife, Janet, Mr. Barstow grows dryland winter wheat,
barley, and dry green peas on about 1,000 acres of Palouse silt loam soil in Eastern
Washington. Mr. Barstow has served as the Chairman of the Washington Dry Pea and Lentil
Commission and is the immediate Past-President of the Washington Association of Wheat
Growers. He currently serves as the Research Committee Chairman for the National
Association of Wheat Growers. Having worked in sweet corn, soybeans, alfalfa, cotton, and
canola, with both insects and weeds, Mr. Barstow has had many opportunities to witness
pesticide-resistance disasters. Over the last 20 years as a farmer, he personally
understands the economic hurdles farmers face in avoiding those disasters.
Dr. Harold D. Coble, Agronomist, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural
Research Service (see Appendix B)
Mr. Chuck Farr, Crop Consultant, Mid-South Ag Consultants, Inc.
Mr. Farr has been named Consultant of the Year by the National Alliance of Independent
Crop Consultants. He has been named Consultant of the Year by Cotton Farming Magazine,
an award that is voted on by peers in his field. He specializes in corn, cotton, wheat,
soybeans, rice, and milo. Mr. Farr holds a B.S. in Agronomy from the University of Arkansas
and an M.S. in Plant Science from Arkansas State University. He has been consulting for 24
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years in Northeast Arkansas. He has a wonderful wife Tami and three wonderful boys--
Taylor (17), Charlie (12), and Kevin Landry (5).
Dr. George Frisvold, Professor, University of Arizona
Dr. Frisvold is Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of
Arizona. He received his B.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of California, Berkeley.
His research interests include domestic and international environmental policy, as well as
the causes and consequences of technological change in agriculture. He has been a visiting
scholar at India's National Institute of Rural Development, a lecturer at the Johns Hopkins
University, and Chief of the Resource and Environmental Policy Branch of USDA's Economic
Research Service. In 1995-1996, Dr. Frisvold served as a senior economist for the
President's Council of Economic Advisers with responsibility for agricultural, natural
resource, and international trade issues.
Dr. Thomas Green, President, IPM Institute of North America
Dr. Green is President and Co-founder of the IPM Institute of North America, a nonprofit
organization whose mission is to leverage marketplace power to improve health,
environment, and economics in agriculture and communities. The Institute created IPM
STAR certification for schools, now impacting more than 2 million children and adopted by
the U.S. Army, and offers Green Shield Certification to structural pest management
professionals. The Institute is a partner with Sysco on its Sustainable Agriculture/IPM
initiative and, with American Farmland Trust in the BMP CHALLENGE project, guarantees
farmers income when they adopt conservation practices. Dr. Green and the Institute earned
recognitions from the International Integrated Pest Management (IPM) Symposium in
2009 and 2012, and the Institute was recognized as a national award winner in 2004, 2005,
2008, 2009, and 2012 by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Pesticide
Environmental Stewardship Program Champion. Dr. Green is a Certified Crop Advisor, a
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service-certified Technical Service Provider, and a
member of the U.S. EPA Pesticide Policy Dialogue Committee and serves as Vice President
of the Entomological Foundation. He holds a Ph.D. in Entomology from the University of
Massachusetts.
Dr. John E. Hamer, Venture Partner, Burrill & Company
Dr. Hamer's career spans more than three decades of research, senior management, and
investment experience in the life sciences. Most recently he spent six years with Burrill &
Company, a leading life sciences merchant bank with activities in venture capital, merchant
banking, and media. Dr. Hamer was Managing Director and General Partner in several
Burrill funds and helped to raise and invest more than $500 million across three funds,
including funds based in Latin America and Asia. Prior to joining Burrill & Company, Dr.
Hamer was the CSO and later CEO of Paradigm Genetics Inc., a leading genomics and ag-
biotechnology company that completed its IPO on NASDAQ in 2000 and was later acquired
by Monsanto. Dr. Hamer received his Ph. D. in Microbiology from the University of
California at Davis and was a visiting scientist in DuPont's Central Research & Development
Group. He later joined Purdue University, where he rose to the rank of full Professor, and
was the recipient of several national awards including the David and Lucile Packard Award
and the National Science Foundation Presidential Faculty Fellowship. At Purdue, Dr.
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APPENDIX C 49
Hamer's research focused on crop diseases, where his lab pioneered molecular approaches
to disease management and control and worked with numerous international agencies in
China, The Philippines, and South America. Dr. Hamer is a passionate believer in the
opportunity that is emerging in the agricultural value chain in food, health, energy,
materials, and chemicals.
Dr. Jodie Holt, Professor of Plant Physiology, University of California, Riverside
(see Appendix B)
Dr. Steven Leath, President, Iowa State University
Dr. Leath became the fifteenth President of Iowa State University (ISU) in January 2012.
Trained as a plant scientist, Dr. Leath served at three universities in teaching, research, and
economic development posts en route to the ISU presidency. From 2007 until his
appointment at ISU, he served as Vice President of Research and Sponsored Programs for
the University of North Carolina system. In the last year, he also served as Interim Vice
President for Academic Planning for the 16-campus system. He began his career in 1985 at
North Carolina State University's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, where he
progressed through the plant pathology faculty ranks conducting research on disease
resistance in grains, primarily wheat and oats, in the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Agricultural Research Service. He was named Research Leader to the unit in 1998, shortly
before beginning a stint as the USDA-Agricultural Research Service's acting National
Program Leader for grain crops. He returned to NC State in 2001 as Professor and Assistant
Director of the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service. He rose to be Director and
Associate Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences in 2005. He was also the
Interim Assistant Vice Chancellor for Research prior to his appointment at the University of
North Carolina. Dr. Leath holds a bachelor's degree in Plant Science from Pennsylvania
State University, a master's degree in the field from the University of Delaware, and a
doctorate in Plant Pathology from the University of Illinois.
Mr. David Miller, Director of Research and Commodity Services, Iowa Farm Bureau
Federation
Mr. Miller is Director of Research and Commodity Services for the Iowa Farm Bureau
Federation (IFBF). In this position, he coordinates the research programs of the Iowa Farm
Bureau and the various commodity services offered by the Federation. He provides
economic analysis of agricultural issues and is a primary liaison for the Federation with
state and national commodity organizations. Mr. Miller has served on several state,
regional, and national boards or committees including the National Institute of Animal
Agriculture, the Extension Section of the American Agricultural Economics Association, the
U.S. Meat Export Federation, the Offset Committee of the Chicago Climate Exchange, the
Midwest Governor's Association Greenhouse Gas Accord committee, and the Iowa Climate
Change Advisory Council. He joined IFBF in April 1998 as Director of Commodity Services.
Prior to IFBF, Mr. Miller served as a commodity policy specialist for the American Farm
Bureau, where he worked on agricultural policy issues for dairy, livestock, and the grain
industry. He is also active in production agriculture. In 2003, he began active ownership
and operation of a 630-acre grain farm in southern Iowa. Primary crops on the farm are
corn and soybeans. Mr. Miller grew up on a dairy and grain farm in Indiana with 1,000
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acres of crops and 150 dairy cows, which he ran in partnership with his father from 1971
to1984.
Dr. Micheal Owen, Professor of Agronomy, Iowa State University (see Appendix B)
Mr. Steve Reeves, Vice President, Bank of Fayette County
Mr. Reeves was raised and still lives on a multi-generation cattle farm in Fayette County,
Tennessee. After receiving a B.S. in Agriculture from the University of Tennessee, he spent
four years managing a local COOP. In 1990, he started to work as an agricultural lender for
a local community bank. After completing a Masters in Banking from Louisiana State
University, he was recruited by another local community bank, Bank of Fayette County, to
start an agriculture program. He is a certified F.S.A. lender and works with farmers on a
daily basis. He also serves as a Fayette County Commissioner and sits on several agriculture
committees. He is active in church work, serving as a Sunday School teacher and Deacon.
He and his wife Jeana of 26 years have two children, Shelby and Grace.
Mr. Ken Root, President, Root Communications
Mr. Root is one of America's most recognized farm news broadcasters. He has a 35-year
history of covering agribusiness news across the United States and around the world. He
travelled with U.S. Secretaries of Agriculture to Asia, South America, Europe, and the
Middle East. He also accompanied Iowa Secretary of Agriculture, Bill Northey, to China in
2008. Mr. Root has a broad understanding of agricultural markets and has reported
extensively on crops and livestock as well as rural economic development programs in
Iowa. He was a finalist in the New York Film Festival for a documentary on Russian
agriculture and has won two Oscars in Agriculture for producing the outstanding stories of
the year in 1983 and 2008. He received the industry's highest honor by being named Farm
Broadcaster of the Year in 2009 by the National Association of Farm Broadcasting.
Dr. Dale Shaner, Plant Physiologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural
Research Service
Dr. Shaner was reared on a farm in west central Illinois. He received a B.S. in Botany from
DePauw University in 1970, an M.S. in Plant Ecology from the University of Colorado,
Boulder, in 1972, and a Ph.D. in Plant Physiology from the University of Illinois, Urbana, in
1976. Dr. Shaner began his weed science research when he was an assistant professor of
Weed Science at the University of California, Riverside, from 1976 to 1979. After leaving
Riverside, he managed research in herbicides and agricultural biotechnology at the
Agricultural Research Center in Princeton, N.J., for American Cyanamid and then for BASF
from 1979 to 2001. He was instrumental in discovering the mechanism of action of the
imidazolinones and in developing imidazolinone-resistant crops. In 2001, Dr. Shaner joined
the Water Management Unit of USDA-Agricultural Research Service in Fort Collins,
Colorado, where he conducts research on weed management under deficit irrigation. He
helped establish the intercompany Herbicide Resistance Action Committee (HRAC) and
was the chairman of HRAC from 1998 to 2001. Dr. Shaner has been active in herbicide-
resistance management for ALS inhibitors (imidazolinones, sulfonylureas, etc.) and
glyphosate. He developed a leaf disc assay for early detection of glyphosate resistance and
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APPENDIX C 51
has written several reviews on the impact of glyphosate-resistant crops on selecting
resistant weeds and on the mechanisms of resistance to glyphosate.
Dr. David Shaw, Vice President for Research and Economic Development, Mississippi
State University (see Appendix B)
Dr. Katherine "Kitty" Smith, Vice President, American Farmland Trust
Dr. Smith is Vice President of Programs & Chief Economist for American Farmland Trust, a
nonprofit organization dedicated to saving farmland for a productive future. Prior to
joining American Farmland Trust, Smith served as Administrator of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Economic Research Service (ERS), which provides high-quality, objective,
peer-reviewed research. Dr. Smith has served on several United Nations Expert Panels and
chaired the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's Joint Working
Party on Agriculture and Environment. Her work has been published in books and
scholarly journals throughout her career. She is a fellow of the Agricultural and Applied
Economics Association and a recipient of that association's Quality in Communications
Award. While working at ERS, she was also awarded the Presidential Rank Award for
Meritorious Executives in 2001. Dr. Smith earned a B.S. with an emphasis in the Biological
Sciences and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Agricultural and Resource Economics from the
University of Maryland.
Dr. John Soteres, Chair, Herbicide Resistance Action Committee
Dr. Soteres is the Scientific Affairs Global Weed Resistance Management Lead at Monsanto
Company, St. Louis, Missouri, and current Chairman of the Global Herbicide Resistance
Action Committee. Within Monsanto, his responsibilities include the development and
implementation of strategies and stewardship programs for managing herbicide resistance
globally. He is also responsible for external collaborations with key academics to further
the science relative to the causes of resistance and elucidation of best practices to manage
resistance. Dr. Soteres received his B.S. in Biology from the University of Alabama in 1975,
an M.S. in Agronomy (Soil Microbiology/Weed Science) from Auburn University in 1978,
and a Ph.D. in Agronomy (Weed Science) from Oklahoma State University in 1981. He
joined Monsanto in 1981, starting his career as a field Product Development
Representative and progressing through a variety of technical management roles during
his 30+ year career in the agchemical/agbiotech industry.
Dr. Paul Thompson, W. K. Kellogg Chair in Agricultural, Food and Community Ethics,
Michigan State University
Dr. Thompson holds the W. K. Kellogg Chair in Agricultural, Food and Community Ethics at
Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan. He formerly held positions in
philosophy at Texas A&M University and Purdue University. His research has centered on
ethical and philosophical questions associated with agriculture and food, especially
concerning the guidance and development of agricultural technoscience. This research
focus has led him to undertake a series of projects on the application of recombinant DNA
techniques to agricultural crops and food animals. Dr. Thompson published the first book-
length philosophical treatment of agricultural biotechnology in 1997 and has traveled the
world speaking on the subject, delivering invited addresses in Egypt, Thailand, Taiwan,
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Mexico, Israel, and Jamaica as well as a number of European countries. In addition to
philosophical outlets, his work on biotechnology has appeared in technical journals
including Plant Physiology, The Journal of Animal Science, Bioscience, and Cahiers
d'Economie et Sociologie Rurales. He serves on the United States National Research
Council's Agricultural Biotechnology Advisory Council and on the Science and Industry
Advisory Committee for Genome Canada. Dr. Thompson's new work focuses on
nanotechnology in the agri-food system. In addition to his biotechnology research, Dr.
Thompson has published extensively on the environmental and social significance of
agriculture. His 1992 book (with four coauthors) on U.S. agricultural policy, Sacred Cows
and Hot Potatoes, was used as a textbook for U.S. Congressional agriculture staff and won
the American Agricultural Economics Association Award for Excellence in Communication.
He also has published a number of volumes and papers on the philosophical and cultural
significance of farming, notably The Spirit of the Soil: Agriculture and Environmental Ethics
(1995) and The Agrarian Roots of Pragmatism (2000). Dr. Thompson completed his Ph.D.
studies on the Philosophy of Technology at the State University of New York at Stony Brook
under the guidance of Don Ihde. He is married, has two grown children, and enjoys nature
walks as well as playing the guitar.
Dr. Michael Walsh, Research Associate Professor, University of Western Australia
Dr. Walsh is a senior member of the Australian Herbicide Resistance Initiative, where his
research role is focused on the development and evaluation of alternate weed control
techniques. He has a B.Sc. from the University of Western Australia, an M.Sc. from LaTrobe
University in Melbourne, and a Ph.D. from the University of Wyoming. Dr. Walsh has two
decades of experience in the management of herbicide-resistant weed populations. Over
this period, Dr. Walsh has driven the research and development of harvest weed-seed
control systems. Currently he is leading the research on the development of the Harrington
Seed Destructor. Dr. Walsh grew up on a dryland cropping farm, and his early experience as
a research agronomist with the Victorian state department of agriculture has developed in
him a strong focus on applied research aimed at overcoming production constraints.