
U.S.-Mexico
Meeting To Forge Cooperation on Future ResearchBy Lupe Chavez November 6, 2001The most pressing issue facing
farmers on both sides of the Rio Grande River, the dividing line between Texas
and Mexico, involves water. In south Texas, two reservoirs that provide water
for crops are facing the worst shortage ever for this time of year. Drought in
the region has persisted for eight years. In northern Texas, farmers are
pumping water from aquifers deeper and deeper in the ground, which increases
energy costs. Mexico faces many of the same challenges of managing crops with
limited water and poor soil conditions. As a step toward solving these problems, the
Agricultural Research Service and
Mexicos National Institute of Forestry, Agriculture and Livestock
Research (INIFAP) will co-host a
two-day summit Nov. 6 in Weslaco, Texas, and Nov. 7 in Rio Bravo, Tamaulipas,
Mexico, to discuss joint projects and plan future research. ARS Administrator
Floyd P. Horn and INIFAP Director Jesus Moncada are expected to attend. Topics of discussion at the meeting will include soil and water management,
plant health, livestock diseases and remote sensing techniques. Scientists will
trade information and suggest ways to improve collaboration on future research.
This will be the first time the two agencies have met to plan border
agricultural research. Scientists from both agencies will lead panel sessions
on regional problems in the U.S. and Mexico. Discussions on techniques for protecting plant health could aid the
importation of exotic fruits. Mangos, for example, must now be heat-treated to
kill Mexican fruit fly larvae. ARS scientists hope to work in Mexico on ways to
control the spread of native fruit fly populations from Mexico into Texas'
fruit industry. Mexican and American scientists have been collaborating for more than 80
years. ARS goals include carrying out more research in Mexican laboratories
while inviting more INIFAP scientists to America. Past U.S.-Mexican scientific
collaborations have resulted in many successes, and the Nov. 6-7 meeting could
lay the groundwork for additional breakthroughs. ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agricultures chief scientific research agency. U.S. Department of Agriculture |