Nursery Research and Service Center
The TTU Nursery Research and Service
Center serves the horticulture industry of Tennessee. The nursery
industry in Tennessee includes about 2,000 plant dealers, which
employ more than 10,000 full-and part-time employees. Clientele
also includes the professional associations for nursery producers
and retailers. These include the Tennessee Nursery and Landscape
Association, Inc., Middle Tennessee Nurserymen’s Association,
East Tennessee Nurserymen’s Association, Southern Nurserymen’s
Association, and the Horticultural Therapy Association. The
Nursery Research and Service Center also cooperates with other
state and federal organizations such as the Tennessee Department
of Transportation, the USDA, SCS, and the National Arboretum.
The personnel at the Center are available to area garden clubs
and home owners for consultation.
The Center is available to provide
educational and instructional services for the horticultural
industry. Diagnosis of pest problems and their management is
a service provided by the Center. Research is developed and
centered around problems that the industry is experiencing in
production or management. Topics include disease, insect and
weed control, fertility, propagation or production management,
and sustainable agriculture. The Center also cooperates with
suppliers in testing of chemicals, fertilizers, new cultivars
and other products used in the industry. The facilities are
well equipped for conducting general plant disease diagnostics
and predominantly applied research, whether in the field, the
greenhouse or in container production systems.
The research facility includes three
acres of field plot space, all under drip irrigation. The greenhouse
facilities include one 3,000 ft. polyhouse, 2,000 ft. under
glass, 2,000 ft. under shade, and 450 ft. in cold frames. Work
areas include two headhouses and one equipment barn. Equipment
includes a 100 ft2 walk-in cooler, media mixer, sprayers, an
18 hp tractor, a 30 hp tractor, a front-end loader, rototillers,
cultivators, fertilizer injectors, a tree setter, a tracking
wagon, and a Lindig cart.
Laboratory facilities include a plant
pathology lab equipped for diagnosis and culture of plant pathogens,
and a general lab used for weed science and plant physiology
studies. A transfer hood, fume hood, various microscopes, leaf
area meters, conductivity meters, an autoclave, a growth chamber,
incubators, freezers, a spectrophotometer, microtomes, and a
convection oven are on site for plant science studies.
The newest addition to the Nursery
Research and Service Center is the establishment of an American
chestnut orchard, part of a cooperative research program to
sustain and re-establish this species nearly eliminated by the
chestnut blight
(see
http://www.tntech.edu/publicaffairs/rel/chestnut.html).