Here is more info on the upcoming Millets Webinar on finger millet
(Thursday, May 15, at 11 am EDT/8 am PDT), including presenter bios and
Zoom details.

Juan Di Salvo and Srikanth Panthulugiri, doctoral students in plant
breeding, will discuss their research and findings on finger millet at Iowa
State University, where they work in Prof. Asheesh Singh's lab.

Finger millet, or "ragi" (Eleusine coracana), is not widely known or
researched in the US or its neighbors, nor is it grown in this part of the
world at any scale. It originated in East Africa, and is a staple in parts
of Africa and Asia. Globally, India is the largest producer (and exporter)
of this grain.

What could be the future of finger millet in North America?

What does research in Iowa tell us?

Presenter bios:

* Juan Di Salvo is a PhD Student in Plant Breeding under Dr. Asheesh Singh
at Iowa State University. He holds a B.S. in Agronomy from Universidad
Nacional de Rosario and a MSc. in Integrated Crop and Soil Sciences from
University of Kentucky and MSc in Plant Breeding at Iowa State University.
During his Master's Juan worked in the description and identification of
current finger millet accessions in the USDA germplasm collection for
cultivation in the Midwest U.S. region and selection of parental candidates
to develop new finger millet varieties. He also used the standardized BBCH
chart as the baseline, to describe eight main stages of development and
provided a simplified and user-friendly phenological growth staging scale
for finger millet.

* Srikanth Panthulugiri is a Ph.D. student in plant breeding at Iowa State
University working in Dr. Asheesh Singh’s lab. Srikanth’s research focuses
on mutation breeding in finger and proso millets to generate genetic
variation and select superior mutants suited for Iowa and the Midwest. He
is also exploring various emasculation techniques to make crosses in Finger
millet. Prior to his Ph.D., he worked as a Research Fellow in the finger
millet breeding program at the International Crops Research Institute for
the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) from 2021 to 2022, where he contributed to
the development of breeding and mutant populations.


Topic: NAMA Monthly Webinar Session

Time: Thursday, April 17, 2025, at 11 am EDT/8 am PDT

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/86716347793?pwd=Fbp5YT9KNYKcum7obg94cExifEXrDE.1

Meeting ID: 867 1634 7793

Passcode: 340314

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--


Don Osborn, PhD
(East Lansing, MI, US)
North American Millets Alliance

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