MEPS Molecular and Environmental Plant Sciences

 

Faculty in Horticultural Sciences

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Major Information
Current Research
Marla L. Binzel

 

Marla L. Binzel
Associate Professor
m-binzel@tamu.edu

 

Molecular biology and plant physiology; salt stress and ion transport; plant transformation and regeneration.

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B. Gregory Cobb
Associate Professor
gregcobb@tamu.edu

 

Physiological genetics; tissue culture and seed biology.

 

Fred T. Davies
Professor
f-davies@tamu.edu

Ornamental crop physiology, mycorrhizal enhancement of plant abiotic stress resistance, low-pressure controlled production environments for NASA, integrated pest management (IPM), tissue culture acclimatization, plant propagation systems.

Kendal Hirschi

 

Kendal Hirschi
Associate Professor
kendalh@bcm.tmc.edu

 

Molecular genetic analyses of plant ion transport.

 

Stephen King
Associate Professor
srking@tamu.edu

 

Plant breeding, genetics and biotechnology

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Patrica Klein
Associate Professor
pklein@tamu.edu
BioEnergy Alliance

 

Biochemistry and biophysics

 

Hisashi Koiwa
Assistant Professor
koiwa@neo.tamu.edu

 

Abiotic stress; Molecular genetics of osmotic stress response; Arabidopsis thaliana.

Leonardo Lombardinia

 

Leonardo Lombardinia
Assistant Professor

l-lombardini@tamu.edu

 

Physiology of pecan

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Edward McWilliams
Professor
Phone: 979.845.3614
e-mcwilliams@tamu.edu

 

Disease resistance, rooting control, cold hardiness, and postharvest changes of rose and other ornamental plant production in east Texas.

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J. Creighton Miller
Professor
Phone: 979.845.3828
jcmillerjr@tamu.edu

 

Disease resistance, rooting control, cold hardiness, and postharvest changes of rose and other ornamental plant production in east Texas.

H. Brent Pemberton

 

H. Brent Pemberton
Associate Professor
b-pemberton@tamu.edu

 

Disease resistance, rooting control, cold hardiness, and postharvest changes of rose and other ornamental plant production in east Texas.

 

Astrid Volder
Assistant Professor
a-volder@tamu.edu

 

Landscape ecology and climate change. Effects of changes in rainfall pattern and climate warming on the growth, physiology and interactions of plants.

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