PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Danforth Plant Science Center President & CEO announces leadership transition plan

2024-07-01
(Press-News.org) ST. LOUIS, MO., July 1, 2024 – Today, Donald Danforth Plant Science Center President and CEO Jim Carrington, PhD, announced he will step down on July 1, 2025. 

“I’ve been so fortunate to have had this opportunity over the past 13 years,” said Dr. Carrington. “We’ve been able to do so much because of our exceptional people, our partners and our supporters. But it’s time to plan for a transition, and I know the Center will benefit greatly from the renewal of perspective, ideas and talents that come with a new leader.”

Penny Pennington, managing partner, Edward Jones and chair, Danforth Center Board of Directors, will lead the search for a new President. The search process will be inclusive, actively engaging the Danforth Center community - as well as stakeholders in the St. Louis region and beyond.

“Jim followed tremendous leaders at the Center, and he has taken this remarkable institution to new heights of mission impact helping us gain renown in the field and forge new partnerships that extend worldwide,” said Pennington. “We will benefit from his leadership over the next year and celebrate his impact as he approaches his retirement milestone.”  

Carrington has led the Danforth Center in delivering on its mission since 2011. Under his leadership, the Danforth Center has grown significantly through doubling its staff, expanding the scope of scientific research, and developing new facilities like the William H. Danforth building on the main campus and the 140-acre Field Research Site in  St. Charles County. Dr. Carrington set priorities for new plant science research initiatives, and for moving the products of research into the marketplace through spin-out company formation and development of the 39North innovation district.  

“Though a transition date is set, I’m not yet done,” Dr. Carrington said. “I’ll be working to ensure that opportunities for the next President, and for members of the Danforth Center community, are as abundant as they were for me when I started.” 

About The Donald Danforth Plant Science Center
Founded in 1998, the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center is a not-for-profit research institute with a mission to improve the human condition through plant science. Research, education, and outreach aim to have an impact at the nexus of food security and the environment and position the St. Louis region as a world center for plant science. The Center’s work is funded through competitive grants from many sources, including the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Agency for International Development, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and through the generosity of individual, corporate, and foundation donors. Follow us on Twitter at @DanforthCenter. 

Media contact: Karla Roeber, VP Public and Government Affairs, kroeber@danforthcenter.org

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NIH-sponsored trial of nasal COVID-19 vaccine opens

NIH-sponsored trial of nasal COVID-19 vaccine opens
2024-07-01
A Phase 1 trial testing the safety of an experimental nasal vaccine that may provide enhanced breadth of protection against emerging variants of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is now enrolling healthy adults at three sites in the United States. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is sponsoring the first-in-human trial of the investigational vaccine, which was designed and tested in pre-clinical studies by scientists from NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Laboratory of Infectious Diseases.  “The rapid development ...

Commercial stock photos of farmworkers found lacking

Commercial stock photos of farmworkers found lacking
2024-07-01
A new North Carolina State University study examining the availability and content of commercial stock farmworker photos – images often used in health- and safety-education materials for farmworkers – shows a dearth of useful depictions of the people who work on farms and the tasks they perform. The study’s recommendations could lead to more relevant education materials that gain more attention and engagement from farmworkers “I was really interested in how farmworkers were represented in stock-photo libraries,” said Catherine LePrevost, agromedicine extension specialist and associate extension professor in NC State’s Department ...

Genetic patterns of world’s farmed, domesticated foxes revealed via historical deep-dive

Genetic patterns of world’s farmed, domesticated foxes revealed via historical deep-dive
2024-07-01
URBANA, Ill. — Domesticated animals play a prominent role in our society, with two-thirds of American families enjoying the companionship of pets and many others relying on animal products for their nutritional needs. But the process of domestication remains a bit of a mystery. Convincing wild animals they are safe enough to coexist and mate in enclosures and in close proximity to humans and other animals is no small feat. What does it take behaviorally and genetically for that to happen?  For the most part, the animals we’ve domesticated have been docile for so long that ...

Flatiron Institute launches initiative for computational catalysis

Flatiron Institute launches initiative for computational catalysis
2024-07-01
The Simons Foundation’s Flatiron Institute has launched a new initiative focused on advancing the science of catalysis. The Initiative for Computational Catalysis (ICC), which began operations on July 1, will harness computational techniques to study and design substances called catalysts that speed up chemical reactions. Such substances promise to be instrumental in clean energy generation and in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from industrial processes. “These are big questions that are hard to address from the very first step of the ...

NRL intern discovers a new pulsar buried in a mountain of data

NRL intern discovers a new pulsar buried in a mountain of data
2024-07-01
WASHINGTON  –  U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) Remote Sensing Division intern, Amaris McCarver, along with a team of astronomers, discovered the first millisecond pulsar in the stellar cluster Glimpse-CO1 and recently published findings in the Astrophysical Journal.   Pulsars are natural laboratories for studying the behavior of matter under extreme gravitational and magnetic fields - conditions difficult or impossible to replicate on Earth. They also function as natural timekeepers. Precise timing of the observed pulses from an array of pulsars offers a means to ...

Farm-to-table study reveals why whole grains are healthiest

Farm-to-table study reveals why whole grains are healthiest
2024-07-01
Chicago (July 1, 2024) — What does whole wheat have that refined flour lacks? A new study reveals key differences in nutrient content along with exactly where nutrients are lost — and sometimes gained — along the journey from farm to table.    While previous studies have assessed the nutrients contained in various crops or in food products, the new study is among the first to bridge the two by tracing how processing and baking influence nutrient composition at each step. Researchers report that levels of major minerals were cut by nearly three-quarters ...

Revolutionary technology promises to reduce the time to pregnancy in assisted reproduction

Revolutionary technology promises to reduce the time to pregnancy in assisted reproduction
2024-07-01
A new technology developed by the "Bioengineering in Reproductive Health" team at the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) is able to visualise the metabolism of embryos obtained through in vitro fertilisation in order to decide which are most likely to implant correctly in the uterus and reaching full-term. It is a more accurate and reliable technique than traditional methods. The revolutionary method, called METAPHOR", generates 3D images that reveal the colours present in the embryo in a completely non-invasive way. Certain naturally fluorescent compounds in the embryo's metabolism are also key to processes such as cellular respiration ...

Shrinking glaciers: Microscopic fungi enhance soil carbon storage in new landscapes created by shrinking Arctic glaciers

Shrinking glaciers: Microscopic fungi enhance soil carbon storage in new landscapes created by shrinking Arctic glaciers
2024-07-01
Melting Arctic glaciers are in rapid recession, and microscopic organisms colonise the newly exposed landscapes. Dr. James Bradley, Honorary Reader in Arctic Biogeochemistry in the School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences at Queen Mary University of London, and his team, have revealed that yeasts play an important role in soil formation in the Arctic after glaciers have melted away.  Roughly 10% of Earth’s land surface is covered by glacial ice. However, glaciers are retreating ever further and ever faster because of global warming. As they do, ...

UMD-led study finds one-third of Indonesia’s deforested land left idle

2024-07-01
EMBARGOED UNTIL JULY 1, 2024 AT 3:00 PM U.S. EASTERN TIME According to a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, extensive land areas have been left sitting idle after tropical forests were cleared in Indonesia, a country renowned for its biodiverse rainforests and carbon-rich peatlands. Since 1990, the country has lost 25% of its old-growth forest, and while over one-quarter (7.8 million hectares) of Indonesia’s deforested lands have been converted to palm oil plantations since ...

University of Cincinnati study: Overlooked brain organ plays key role in promoting brain repair after stroke

University of Cincinnati study: Overlooked brain organ plays key role in promoting brain repair after stroke
2024-07-01
University of Cincinnati researchers have pioneered an animal model that sheds light on the role an understudied organ in the brain has in repairing damage caused by stroke. The research, published July 5 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, sought to learn more about how the adult brain generates new neurons to repair damaged tissue. The research team focused on the choroid plexus, a small organ within brain ventricles that produces the brain’s cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). CSF circulates throughout the brain, carrying signaling molecules and other factors thought to be important for maintaining brain function. However, prior to this study, little ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UNSW Sydney's Dr Vaishnavi Ananthanarayanan receives RMS Award for Life Sciences

Researchers unveils a critical role of the lateral septum in drug addiction

Efficient hydrogenolysis of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural over Ni-C3N4 catalysts

Hitachi’s holography electron microscope attains unprecedented resolution

An innovative test to diagnose chagas disease in newborns

Compact cities have lower carbon emissions, but poorer air quality, less green space and higher mortality rates

Cuts to processed meat intake bring a range of health benefits

Pioneering Code of Practice released for use of stem cell-based embryo models in research

First study to measure toxic metals in tampons shows arsenic and lead, among other contaminants

Rice researchers uncover key mechanisms in chromosome structure development

Rice research aims to reprogram the genetic code

Home test reveals the risk of heart attack in five minutes

New tuberculosis vaccine results presented at FAPESP Week China

Wastewater is a viable medium for growing lettuce in hydroponic systems, study shows

Researchers capture never-before-seen view of gene transcription

Do genes-in-pieces code for proteins that fold in pieces?

Can inflammation in early adulthood affect memory, thinking in middle age?

Poor health, stress in 20s takes toll in 40s with lower cognition

Scientists may have found how to diagnose elusive neuro disorder

Cracking the code for cerebellar movement disorders

Stability indicating RP-HPLC method for the estimation of impurities in esomeprazole gastro-resistant tablets by AQbD approach

Clinical implications and procedural complications in patients with patent foramen ovale concomitant with atrial septal aneurysm

Cryptocurrency investors are more likely to self-report “Dark Tetrad” personality traits alongside other characteristics

Smoking behavior is linked to personality traits

Minority status, social origin, gender, and weight can all count against a German kid’s grades

Dengue linked to heightened short- and long-term risk of depression in Taiwan

Fighting COVID-19 with a cancer drug

From ‘hit to vial’: Discovery and optimization of a promising vaccine adjuvant

Why do you keep your house so cold? Science says: Ask your parents

Texas A&M center receives $7.6 million grant to promote research in environmental health

[Press-News.org] Danforth Plant Science Center President & CEO announces leadership transition plan