 August 7, 2015 Subscribe to our weekly Idaho email newsletter at CapitalPress.com/newsletters Capital Press LEWISTON, Idaho — Ida- ho’s wine industry and a coali- tion of economic development groups, cities and counties are gearing up to promote the pending Lewis-Clark Valley American Viticultural Area. An AVA is a specific wine grape growing region that is federally designated because it has certain growing condi- tions, boundaries and history. It’s anticipated the pro- posed AVA will be approved early next year. It’s critically important that the AVA be promoted and marketed heavily and correct- ly from the get-go, said Idaho Wine Commission Executive Director Moya Shatz-Dolsby. The IWC is using part of an $88,000 specialty crop grant it obtained from the Idaho State Department of Agriculture to organize a media tour of the AVA once it’s approved. “You need to make sure you do it right because as soon as that AVA goes live, you’re going to get a huge splash in the media,” Shatz-Dolsby said. “You want to make sure it’s ex- ecuted well because you have one chance to look good.” IWC will coordinate its efforts with Clearwater Eco- nomic Development Associa- tion, which received a $67,000 specialty crop grant from the ISDA to promote and market the AVA. CEDA will use the funds to implement a marketing launch to introduce the AVA’s grape growers and vintners to con- sumers, tourism operators and potential markets. The funding will help en- sure the AVA “gets a bang-up launch,” said CEDA Econom- ic Development Specialist Deb Smith. “You really do only have one chance to do it right,” she said. “You can’t launch year after year. You have to do it right the first time.” CEDA will also create a five-year marketing plan for the AVA. “You can’t just market it for year one and then stop,” Smith said. “We’re trying to approach this much like a business.” The proposed 306,658- acre Lewis-Clark Valley AVA includes parts of five counties in Idaho and Washington and is centered around a 40-mile long strip of canyons sur- rounding the cities of Lewiston and Clarkston. The area was a premier wine grape growing region in the early 20th Century but that disappeared after Prohibition. Evidence of the region’s former winemaking history, including hundreds of acres of abandoned vineyards, are all around the region, said Melissa Sanborn, owner and winemaker for Colters Creek Winery, which is included in the AVA. In the early 2000s, wine grapes started to make a come- back in the region and the pro- posed AVA now includes four wineries and 12 grape growers. “It’s definitely coming back and it’s coming back strong,” Sanborn said. “We’re looking forward to promoting the heck out of the AVA once it’s final- ized.” Public learns about ag research at Twilight Tour By JOHN O’CONNELL Brian Schneider, a USDA agricultural research technician involved in the Aberdeen, Idaho, potato breeding program, takes the test to guess the potato variety during the July 29 Twilight Tour in Aberdeen. The tour is intended to share the facility’s research with the public. Capital Press ABERDEEN, Idaho — USDA researcher Michael Gines is working to discover the mechanism plants use to produce a heart-healthy fiber found in barley and oats, called beta glucan. Gines, science technician in the oat laboratory at USDA’s Agricultural Research Service in Aberdeen, was among sever- al scientists to display details of their research during the July 29 Twilight Tour. University of Idaho hosts the tour and rotates it annually between its Aberdeen Research & Extension center and its re- search facility in Kimberly. USDA, which partners with UI on several research projects, is also invited to participate. Gines explained high lev- els of beta glucan are ideal for nutrition in oats and barley varieties bred for human con- sumption, but low levels are preferable in malt barley. “There are reasons to have high levels, but there are also reasons to have low levels within the plant, and we don’t know how it’s made yet,” Gines said. “We need to de- termine what makes more and what makes less.” His lab has confirmed a specific gene found in oats and barley is associated with beta John O’Connell/Capital Press glucan expression by introduc- ing it into an Arabidopsis plant. The resulting cross produced beta glucan, which normally isn’t found in Arabidopsis. “We know this gene has a large responsibility in the pro- duction of beta glucan, but we still don’t know how the syn- thesis works,” Gines said. To solve the puzzle, Gines is seeking to identify proteins that may play a role in beta glucan production. He’s also studying other genes that may also be expressed simultaneously with beta glucan production. Gines said his study is one of many being conducted around the country targeting beta glucan levels in cereals. Jeff Stark, superintendent at UI’s Aberdeen facility, estimates 200 people attended the Twi- light Tour to learn about such research efforts, and to enjoy a free barbecue and games for children. While other field days at the facility are geared toward crop advisors and producers, Stark said the Twilight Tour fos- ters “social interaction with peo- ple in the community so they’re more familiar with us.” The event included tours of research programs, such as North America’s largest potato breed- ing program, involving both UI and USDA, and native plant research. UI weed scientist Pam Hutchinson gave samples of a potato salad she made with an edible common weed, purslane. USDA aquaculture researchers served smoked rainbow trout. Aberdeen potato farmer C.J. Harris, who brought his Boy Scout troop to the Twi- light Tour, visits the facility frequently to inquire about dis- eases and other crop issues. Idaho farm personal income drops 18 percent in first quarter According to an IDL news release, several sectors of the economy showed gains BOISE — A sharp drop in in personal income of more Idaho farm income was a ma- than 2 percent during the first jor reason the state’s personal quarter “but it was not enough income total dropped slightly to offset a seasonal decline in during the first three months farm earning of 18 percent, of 2015. followed by significant de- Total personal income in clines in durable goods at 10 the state’s farming sector was percent and mining at nearly $2.8 billion on a seasonally 3.8 percent.” adjusted basis during the first Farm personal income in quarter of 2015, an 18 percent Idaho grew from $2.37 bil- decrease from the $3.4 bil- lion in 2012 to $2.77 billion lion total recorded during the in 2013 and $3.32 billion in fourth quarter of 2014. 2014. Personal income is an indi- The drop in farm income vidual’s total didn’t sur- earnings and prise Univer- ‘We’re looking at includes wag- sity of Idaho es, investment soft prices for every agricultural earnings and economists. crop in the state government After four transfer pay- straight years basically, except ments such of record cash as unemploy- receipts, Ida- for beef.’ ment benefits. ho agriculture — Garth Taylor Those to- is slowing Agricultural economist, tals, which somewhat, University of Idaho were reported said UI econ- by the Idaho omist Garth Department Taylor. of Labor, are based on U.S. “We’re looking at soft pric- Bureau of Economic Analysis es for every crop in the state data. basically, except for beef,” he Idaho farm profits — the said. “Cash receipts will be proprietor’s profit — totaled way, way down this year.” $2 billion during the first UI economist Ben Eborn quarter, a 23 percent decrease said Idaho cash receipts could from $2.6 billion during the be down significantly from fourth quarter of 2014. last year’s record $9.7 billion Statewide, total personal total. income dropped by a tenth of “I’m estimating that for all a percentage point to $62.76 of Idaho agriculture, cash re- billion during the first quarter. ceipts this year will be down Large gains in farm income about 20 percent,” he said. have helped drive the state’s Dairy accounts for a large personal income growth the share of the state’s farm re- past several years. For ex- ceipts, he said, and milk pric- ample, total Idaho personal es are 28 percent below last income increased 5.3 percent year’s record level. in 2014, in large part because Based on the average Ida- of a 19.7 percent increase in ho milk price of $16.50 so farm income. far in 2015, Eborn said Idaho But that role was reversed dairy receipts could be down during the first three months $800 million to $1 billion this of 2015. year compared with 2014. By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press Committee reviews PCN program By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press IDAHO FALLS, Idaho — Members of an Idaho State Department of Agriculture ad- visory committee are mulling eight alternatives to the state’s current pale cyst nematode eradication program. Options considered during a July 24 meeting ranged from completely deregulating potato cyst nematodes, including PCN and golden nematode, to es- tablishing a “generally infested area” surrounding known infest- ed fields, with special restric- tions on crops and equipment leaving its boundaries. Idaho has the only known PCN infestation in the U.S. It was first detected in 2006 and is confined to 10,316 total reg- ulated acres, including 2,897 infested acres. The 26 infested fields are confined to a 7.5-mile radius of Bonneville and Bing- ham counties. Associated fields can be re- leased from the program follow- ing two negative surveys after host-crop production. Infested fields require a series of tests and three host-crop plantings without PCN detection to be de- regulated. This season, the pro- gram had its first infested field returned to commercial produc- tion for evaluation. Half of the infested fields have undetect- able PCN levels, seven infested fields have undergone at least one treatment and six infested fields await their first treatment. Regulated growers have complained the current program — which imposes special sani- tary restrictions on equipment and crops from regulated fields and restricts potato production in infested fields — is overly re- strictive. Some regulated grow- ers have filed a lawsuit alleging PCN treatments with methyl bromide have compromised the quality of their alfalfa, contrary to USDA assurances. “I can’t do anything with my soil because of that methyl bro- mide,” regulated grower Bryan Searle told program officials at the meeting. “You’ve lost our trust.” Jonathan Jones, national pol- icy manager with USDA’s Ani- mal and Plant Health Inspection Service, emphasized APHIS isn’t proposing the options, which have been offered solely for discussion purposes. “We’re very comfortable with how the program is pro- gressing,” Jones said. Strategies suggested by an APHIS technical working group of experts included: •Offering a single APHIS-funded field treatment and requiring growers to wait 30 years for viable cysts to die before planting spuds in infest- ed fields. •Implementing a four-year rotation with a resistant Euro- pean variety or a resistant Rus- set yet to be bred, also includ- ing a “trap crop” to stimulate cysts to hatch in the absence of a viable host. •Utilizing a six-year rotation with a resistant variety, a suscep- tible variety and a trap crop. •Establishing a “generally infested area” encompass- ing infested fields in which free movement of equipment would be allowed without san- itation and testing, but equip- ment and crops leaving the area would be treated as com- 9 Idaho Wine industry gears up for launch of pending AVA By SEAN ELLIS CapitalPress.com ing from an infested field. Strategies suggested by a group of regulated growers in- cluded: •Having APHIS regulate all of Idaho as infested but allow- ing the unregulated movement of commodities within the state. •Allowing growers to plant susceptible crops in infested fields but to suppress PCN pop- ulations with chemical applica- tions and trap crops. •Deregulating PCN, includ- ing all of the Idaho acres and nearly 313,000 acres infested by golden nematode in New York. •Having the government purchase infested fields and re- strict potato production. Jones explained many of the options, such as regulating the entire state or deregulating PCN, would likely lead to lost relationships with trade partners. Establishing one or more “gen- erally infested areas” would rope in many growers who ar- en’t currently regulated without suppressing the PCN popula- tion, he said. Jones said it could take sev- eral years to develop a resistant Russet, and the resistant Europe- an variety already approved for planting in North America, In- novator, is susceptible to bacte- rial ring rot and has yellow flesh, which is less popular among U.S. consumers. He said buying fields would likely require an act of Congress. Jared Wattenbarger, who heads the group of affected growers, believes compen- sating growers and “locking down those fields” is the best option. 32-2/#6