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SUDAN HARVEST FOR LIVESTOCK FEED

Here a New Holland Bale Wagon, H9880 stacks bales automatically

The custom harvester, is Rick Dinsmore, Yuma, AZ

“Potential for Ethanol Looks Good if Things Play Out Right”

 

The potential future growth of the corn-starch ethanol industry is at least 45-percent from current production levels. That’s according to Energy Economist Robert Wisner. But can the industry snap back from the wave of idled plants, losses and bankruptcies? He says three questions raise doubts - and the answers could determine the future for today’s corn-based ethanol plants and tomorrow’s cellulosic ethanol. Those questions are: will the EPA raise the maximum blend rate to E-15; will Underwriters Laboratory approve the use of retail pumps with a 15-percent blend; and will California and EPA re-think their indirect land use calculations?

 

Wisner notes the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act mandates the blend of 15-billion gallons of ethanol with gas in 2015. That goes even higher to 35-billion gallons by 2022. But he says ethanol demand is limited by the E-10 limit for most cars and the small number of flex-fuel vehicles that use blends up to E-85. Wisner believes there may not be demand for more than the 10.36-billion gallons of fuel ethanol being produced this year if these limits stay in place. This could cause the hard times for the ethanol industry to continue.

 

 

“Secretary Vilsack Announces Disaster Funding 

for Rural Development Programs”

 

Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack announced Thursday that USDA is accepting applications for funds to help rural communities affected by natural disasters. USDA Rural Development plans to distribute 150-million dollars to communities declared disaster areas in 2008 - and 38-million for housing assistance in areas affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Vilsack says this assistance will help individuals, businesses and communities in areas that were declared a major disaster in 2008. He says USDA will work to ensure these funds help rural citizens rebuild their communities and their lives from the devastating effects of natural disasters.

 

An Editorial from the American Farm Bureau Federation

 The Garden of Invention is a new biography of one of the true heroes of American agriculture who should not be forgotten. American Farm Bureau's Stewart Truelsen reports...

 

Right Click to Download MP3 File

 

 

 

“Rural Tour Heads to New Hampshire”

 

Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack will hold a rural community forum in Concord, New Hampshire as part of the Rural Tour today (Monday July 6th). Vilsack will talk with local residents about USDA’s work to revitalize and rebuild rural America - and also ask them how USDA can help in supporting other programs to help the community participate successfully in the 21st century economy.

 

Other Rural Tour events are scheduled in Alaska, Louisiana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin. USDA encourages everyone to follow the Tour’s progress on www dot ruraltour dot gov (www.RuralTour.gov) or at www dot twitter dot com slash ruraltour (www.twitter.com/RuralTour).

 

World Champion Bullfighter 

Pleads Guilty To Cattle Theft

.


After an eight-month investigation, a cattle theft case in Pittsburg County, Okla., is finally closed after a rodeo bullfighter pled guilty to felony embezzlement of cattle.

On June 16, Michael Eugene Matt, 36, of Blanco, Texas, was sentenced to a five-year deferred sentence, including supervised probation and was ordered to pay nearly $15,000 in restitution after assisting in the theft of 300 head of cattle worth approximately $244,000 from a California couple who owned a ranch in Oklahoma. 
More... ?  

Beeftalk: What Is The Real Value In A Beef Herd?

.


Usually, when businesses buy and sell inventory, one of three things happens. Under option one, the item sells for more than it was purchased for and one has the opportunity to make money. The second is the break-even option. This is when an item sells for the same as the purchase price. The last option is selling an item for less than the purchase price, which some refer to as depreciation. Option two and three are both losers because there is no opportunity to make money.   More... ?

Jolley: Tyson vs. Schumacher 

(And The Chilling Effect)

.

Does Tyson want to seize Herman Schumacher's home? Not really, kinda' sorta' according to a letter Archie Schaffer, Executive Vice President-Corporate Affairs, Tyson Foods, Inc., sent to Schumacher More... ?

 

 

“ASA Has Concerns About Bioenergy Program”

 

The American Soybean Association has submitted comments to the House Ag Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk Management regarding farm bill implementation - voicing concerns about the Bioenergy Program for Advanced Biofuels. According to ASA President Johnny Dodson - that program affects the viability of soybean farmers and the biodiesel industry. Plans to implement the program for Fiscal Year 2009 have been published. ASA is pleased USDA has moved forward - and is pleased with the overall nature of the program. There are concerns - however - with provisions of the Notice of Contract Proposal - including the manner in which USDA would determine Base Production of new biorefineries for 2009 and the differential payments for base and incremental production in future years.

 

Dodson says ASA supports making equal payments on actual production - but says the criteria should apply to actual production of new and old plants alike. He says differentiating between older and newer plants could undercut the competitiveness of older facilities. Another concern is a misstatement that Congress appropriated mandatory funding to the tune of 30-million dollars for FY ’09. ASA says the farm bill provides mandatory funding of 55-million.

 

ASA is asking the Committee to conduct active oversight of the Bioenergy Program for Advanced Biofuels to ensure it’s administered in a manner that’s equitable for all producers and is consistent with the intent of Congress. They say that includes using the full mandatory funding amounts provided in the 2008 Farm Bill.

 

 

 

“New Enforcement Approach 

for Immigration Focuses on Employers”

 

The Obama administration is going to crackdown on companies employing illegal immigrants. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has started an audit of over 650 companies to verify if employees were eligible to work. It’s not clear how severe penalties might be if an employer is discovered to have hired illegal workers - but violations could lead to fines - as well as civil and criminal charges. The announcement comes as President Obama attempts to gain support for a new policy that put millions of illegal immigrants on the path to become U.S. citizens.

 

Enforcement activity during the Bush administration was known by high-profile raids where hundreds of illegal immigrants were rounded up. A series of raids at JBS Swift and Company meatpacking plants in December 2006 resulted in 12-hundred workers being detained. The policy led to large numbers of deportations. This new enforcement approach isn’t set up to bring immediate deportations.

 

 

“Sorghum Checkoff a Year Old”

 

July 1st marked one year since the United Sorghum Checkoff Program started collections. The idea was to help producers improve their bottom lines by delivering cutting edge research, meaningful promotion and targeted information to the nation’s sorghum producers. The USCP has already funded three rounds of research projects that range from basic production handbooks to next-generation genomics. It has also hosted multiple buyers’ missions that have forged working relationships between sorghum handlers and international buyers.

       

  Revus logo

 

“Slight Drop in Retail Food Prices for Final Quarter of ‘08”

It’s now been three consecutive quarters that retail food prices have dropped slightly at the grocery store. That’s a ccording to the American Farm Bureau Federation's latest Marketbasket Survey - which shows a two-percent - or $1.12 - decline in prices from the first quarter of 2009. The informal survey shows a total cost of $46.29 for 16 basic grocery items that can be used to prepare a meal. Over a year’s time - the average price for the marketbasket of foods has declined by about six-percent.

Ten of the items decreased in price - five increased and a 20-ounce loaf of bread remained the same compared to the first quarter. Consumers saw the biggest price declines in Russet potatoes - down 29-cents for a five-pound bag; boneless chicken breasts - down 28-cents per pound; and eggs - 16-cents less for a dozen. Prices for both sliced deli ham and whole milk are down 14-cents. Compared to a year ago - egg prices are down 26-percent - milk decreased 22-percent and the decline for chicken is 19-percent. Ground chuck, sirloin tip roast, flour, bacon and toasted oat cereal round out the items that decreased in price.

As for those products increasing in price - bagged salad will cost 13-cents more for a one-pound bag; shredded cheese is up seven-cents for one pound; apples will cost six-cents extra per pound; a 32-ounce of vegetable oil is six-cents more; and a half-gallon of orange juice will require a couple more pennies.


Eighty-two volunteer shoppers in 33 states took part in AFBF's Marketbasket survey for the second quarter of 2009. The survey was conducted in May.

 

 

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Brigade® WSB insecticide 

 

 

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“Consumers and Cattle Producers Suffering”

 

Consumers are paying near record beef prices and cattle ranchers are receiving below cost-of-production prices for their cattle - a loss of nearly 300-dollars per head in 22 of the last 23 months. That’s according to R-CALF USA. The group says USDA data show ranchers received the smallest share of the consumer’s beef dollar in seven years during the first quarter of 2009. Ranchers received just more than a thousand dollars for raising a Choice beef steer from birth to about 18-months of age - while consumers who purchased the Choice beef paid a little over two-thousand dollars for the meat.

 

R-CALF USA CEO Bill Bullard says the middlemen have captured unjust profits away from the rancher and exploited the consumer - with the producer receiving only 43-percent of the consumer’s beef dollar. He says consumers wouldn’t pay long-term record beef prices while cattle producers suffer long-term in a competitive marketplace - but since this is happening - it shows that U.S. producers and consumers have lost their competitive marketplace. R-CALF is calling on USDA and the Department of Justice to protect U.S. farmers and ranchers from the anticompetitive practices disrupting the competitive market.

 

 

 

 

 

DTN HEADLINE NEWS

Ask the Taxman by Andy Biebl

Aphid Prospects for 2009

Midsummer Weather Outlook - 4

Animal ID Meetings Lose Steam

Newsom on the Market

Midsummer Weather Outlook - 3

View From the Cab

USDA Hikes Corn and Soy Acres

Midsummer Weather Outlook - 2

 

 

FRIDAY, JULY 6, 2009

Most movie buffs know the first film with a partial soundtrack was “The Jazz Singer,” with superstar Al Jolson. But not too many can name the first movie with a full-length soundtrack, which opened on this date in New York in 1928. It was “Lights of New York,” about the murder of a crime boss, a film which has faded into obscurity. After “The Jazz Singer” stunned the country, movie studios scrambled to change over from silent films to what were then called the “talkies.” it was a technical revolution that completely changed the making and viewing of movies. In 1928, Americans went to the movies an average of about twice a week.  Now, we each take in about five films a year in a theater.

www.census.gov

 

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An exemplary Line 1 Hereford bull.

Researchers Help Cattle Breeders Optimize Profit and

 Desired Beef Traits

Tender steaks start with cattle breeders who carefully document numerous characteristics of their animals. They use this information to breed those animals with the “best” combination of desired traits. 

However, “best” has been a subjective and inconsistent measure, according to Agricultural Research Service geneticist Michael MacNeil. That slowed producers’ ability to breed improved animals. Now, thanks to ARS research, breeders may refine their decision-making by focusing on profitability.

MacNeil works at ARS’ Fort Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory in Miles City, Mont. ARS is the chief scientific agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

To assess their animals, breeders keep track of growth traits, such as weights at birth, weaning, and yearling ages and at maturity. They also measure carcass traits such as marbling and fat content that are indicators of value to consumers. In addition, they record traits like the age when a female reaches puberty, and her pregnancy rate.

Breed associations take the information, combine it with each animal's genetic tree and run it through a computer program to develop an expected progeny difference, or EPD. That lets breeders compare individual animals for individual traits. They would know, for example, that cow A was more likely to produce offspring with the desired marbling than cow B.

But the process is not complete. Producers were left with the difficult task of combining the EPDs in an efficient manner. So MacNeil is improving the performance testing process by using the EPDs to predict genetic potential for profit. With his system, breeders will be able to know how to trade off changes in fat thickness and marbling, for example, most profitably.

Breeders would also be able to rank animals more effectively. If there were 100 bulls for sale, breeders could rank them numerically to find the best bull for their purposes.

The complicated calculations are not yet available in a simple computer program for individuals to use. Producers will most likely get the information through Cooperative Extension Service specialists or breed associations as the lab passes on the technology.

This research is reported in the December issue of Agricultural Research magazine. Click here to read about it online.

Scientific contact: Michael D. MacNeil, ARS Fort Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory, Miles City, Mont., phone (406) 232-8213, fax (406) 232-8209, mike@larrl.ars.usda.gov.

 

Photo: Fire ant.
Fire ants have been found to be the most ecologically dominant species in their environment, according to a new ARS study. Photo courtesy of Pest and Diseases Image Library, Bugwood.org.

Fire Ant Out Competes Other Species—

Even in its Native Habitat

Even in its native Argentina, the fire ant wins in head-to-head competition with other ant species more than three-quarters of the time, according to Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists.

ARS scientists at the South American Biological Control Laboratory (SABCL) in Hurlingham, Argentina, have been studying how different ant species fare against the fire ant as part of an effort to learn more about the behavior of this pest—an invasive species in its non-native United States.

Fire ants often attack in swarms--not only causing painful stings to humans, but can even kill small animals. Little has been known, however, about the fire ant's competitive nature or how it interacts with other ants.

SABCL biologist Luis Calcaterra, working closely with lab director Juan Briano, has been studying interactions between the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta, and other aboveground foraging ants in two habitats in northeastern Argentina—using a combination of pitfall traps and baits to study day-to-day activity in ant communities.

The pitfall trap is a 50 milliliter plastic tube buried in the ground and half-filled with soapy water. The bait is one gram of canned tuna placed on a plastic card measuring five centimeters in diameter. The trap and bait gave the scientists a way to determine ant populations at the sites, and showed the dominance of each species.

Some 28 ant species coexisted with S. invicta in an open area of forest growing along a watercourse, whereas only 10 species coexisted with S. invicta in the dry forest grassland. The researchers found that the fire ants had the highest numbers in the open forest area along the watercourse.

Prior to these studies, it was thought that the fire ant—now established throughout the Americas—was not dominant in its native land. But the studies showed that the fire ants were the most ecologically dominant, winning 78 percent of the interactions with other ants, mostly against its most frequent competitor, the South American big-headed ant, Pheidole obscurithorax, an ant of northern Argentina and Paraguay also introduced in the United States. And in battles with the invasive Argentine ant, Linepithema humile, the fire ants were even more dominant, winning out 80 percent of the time.

This study was published in Oecologia, a journal that deals with plant and animal ecology.

ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Photo: Varroa mite on a honey bee. Link to photo information
ARS scientists have developed a new bait that may help control varroa mites, the top pest of honey bees. Click the image for more information about it.

New Bait 

Lures Varroa Mite to its Doom

Varroa mites could literally be walking into a trap—thanks to a new attractant developed by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in Gainesville, Fla.

The 1/16-inch long parasite, Varroa destructor, is a top pest of honey bees nationwide, hindering the beneficial insects' ability to pollinate almonds, blueberries, apples, zucchini and many other flowering crops.

At the ARS Chemistry Research Unit in Gainesville, research leader Peter Teal and colleagues are testing a bait-and-kill approach using sticky boards and natural chemical attractants called semiochemicals.

In nature, Varroa mites rely on these semiochemicals to locate—and then feed on—the bloodlike hemolymph of both adult honey bees and their brood. Severe infestations can decimate an affected hive within several months—and rob the beekeeper of profits from honey or pollinating services. But in this case, the mites encounter a more heady bouquet of honey bee odors that lure the parasites away from their intended hosts and onto the sticky boards, where they starve.

In preliminary tests, 35 to 50 percent of mites dropped off the bees when exposed to the attractants. Free-roving mites found the semiochemicals even more attractive, according to Teal.

Moreover, the extra dose of semiochemicals wafting through hives didn't appear to significantly interfere with the honey bees' normal behavior or activity, added Teal who, along with postdoctoral associate Adrian Duehl and University of Florida collaborator Mark Carroll, reported the results this past January at the 2009 North American Beekeeping Conference in Reno, Nev.

The team hopes ARS' patenting of the Varroa mite attractants will encourage an industrial partner to develop the technology further.

ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Photo: Cattle on the range. Link to photo information
It may not always pay for ranchers to use herbicides to kill exotic invasive weeds on the range, according to a new study. Click the image for more information about it.

Spraying Herbicide on Invasive Weeds 

Doesn't Always Pay, Study Shows

It may not always pay for ranchers to use herbicides to kill exotic invasive weeds such as leafy spurge, according to a 16-year study by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and colleagues.

Rangeland ecologist Matt Rinella at the ARS Fort Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory in Miles City, MT, and colleagues conducted the study. Data they collected 16 years after a one-time aerial spraying of herbicide showed that the invasive leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula L) may have ultimately increased due to spraying. Conversely, several desirable native forbs were still suffering the effects of spraying 16 years after spraying.

Although the herbicide would have dissipated within a few years, it seemed to cause a long-term plant community shift.

Any increase in grass production from the herbicide spraying only lasted a year or two.

The study was done on the N-Bar Ranch in Montana. Each plot was either grazed and sprayed, grazed but not sprayed, not grazed but sprayed or not grazed or sprayed. Cattle grazing helped maintain native plant numbers when herbicide was used.

Cattle grazing can help native forbs thrive because cattle prefer grasses over forbs, and cattle trample soil, loosening soil for seeds that the animals inadvertently plant when seeds are caught in their hooves or fur. That said, when herbicide wasn't used, most native forbs did as well with or without cattle grazing.

Herbicide caused the native plants Missouri goldenrod and yarrow to become rarer over the 16-year study period. Barring herbicides, these two species proved capable of co-existing indefinitely with the exotics.

Four native perennials became rarer in sprayed plots, but only when grazing was excluded: velvety goldenrod, white prairie aster, vetch, and prairie sagewort. Herbicide spraying caused no long-term harm to four other native perennials. Rockjasmine and other plants belonging to the Androsace spp. group were not affected by the herbicide even initially.

The study suggests that applying herbicides over large areas of land containing herbicide-sensitive native plants is sometimes ill-advised.

The research was published in the journal Ecological Applications.

ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency in the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

 

Photo: Cow sick with fescue toxicosis. Link to photo information
New research is shedding light on how endophytic fungus-infected fescue causes fescue toxicosis--a disease that affects grazing animals and costs the U.S. cattle industry an estimated $600 million annually. Click the image for more information about it.

Connecting the Dots

 for Alkaloids, Toxicosis Symptoms

New research from Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists and their university colleagues is shedding light on the relationship between chemical compounds and fescue toxicosis—a disease that affects grazing animals and costs the U.S. cattle industry an estimated $600 million annually.

Fescue toxicosis is a major problem for producers whose herds graze on tall fescue. A major forage grass in many states, tall fescue can cause toxicosis in cattle and other ruminants if it's infected with endophytic fungus. The disease causes lameness and reduced production efficiency, and can even be fatal if infected animals are subjected to stressful situations, such as extreme heat or long-distance transport.

Scientists believe many symptoms of toxicosis are caused by chemical compounds known as ergot alkaloids, but much is still unknown about how they cause clinical signs to develop. Led by ARS animal scientist James Klotz, scientists at the ARS Forage Animal Production Research Unit in Lexington, Ky., and the University of Kentucky are investigating the physiological responses of ruminants to tall fescue alkaloids.

One sign of toxicosis is a narrowing of blood vessels. Using a model that predicts changes in blood flow in the limbs of cattle, Klotz and his colleagues examined the influence of specific alkaloids—both individually and in combination.

Of the three alkaloids tested, ergovaline was the most effective at making the veins contract. The others, N-acetylloline and lysergic acid, had little effect on vein contraction. The results also showed that combining two alkaloids did not increase the toxicity of either—at least in terms of vein contraction.

Further research is underway to determine how these alkaloids influence other tissues, organs and physiological systems. In one study, the scientists showed that ergovaline, but not lysergic acid, can bioaccumulate in vitro, suggesting that ergovaline may be more likely to induce toxicosis.

Research like this is essential for understanding exactly how endophyte-infected tall fescue influences grazing animals. Eventually, this information could help scientists determine which compounds are most toxic and how to protect cattle from them.

These studies were published in the Journal of Animal Science.

ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency for the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Photo: Roller compacted concrete stepped spillway.
ARS hydraulic engineers are helping the Natural Resources Conservation Service rehabilitate aging small dams across the country by increasing their utility and safety with roller compacted concrete stepped spillways. Photo courtesy of NRCS.

New Designs for Making Old Dams Safer

A group of Agricultural Research Service (ARS) hydraulic engineers are helping to rehabilitate aging small dams across the country.

Efforts are underway to upgrade existing auxiliary spillways or build new spillways for these dams, especially in Oklahoma. These upgraded or new spillways meet current dam safety standards and will increase the useful lives of the dams.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has helped build more than 11,000 earthen dams over the years as part of its Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Operations Program. These dams serve many purposes, but the primary purpose is flood control. Since the program began in 1944, ARS Hydraulic Engineering Research Unit (HERU) engineers in Stillwater, Okla., have partnered with NRCS in the development of design standards for the dams.

When ARS hydraulic engineer Sherry L. Hunt and her colleagues were asked recently by NRCS to help evaluate and design retrofitted Roller Compacted Concrete (RCC) stepped spillways for dams in Georgia and North Dakota, they found the same technology also can help increase flow capacity on many of these dams across the country. So they developed generalized criteria for designs that could be used anywhere in the country.

Compacting concrete with a roller is a fast way to make a tough surface.

With the many changes that have occurred over the years—including deterioration, changes in upstream and downstream land use and population, and changes in dam safety laws—the research by the HERU engineers with this technology is once again helping NRCS, which has the lead for design and construction of these earthen dams.

The ARS engineers conduct model studies both indoors at small scales and also outdoors at large scales. This summer Hunt will begin using a large-scale flume outdoors that is the actual size of the RCC spillways being designed for these dams. ARS engineers will use the data from the water flow on their experimental spillways to develop design and construction guidelines.

ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency in USDA.

Photo: Scientist inspects a petri dish. Link to photo information
An assay created by Agricultural Research Service chemist Charles C. Lee and colleagues provides a faster, less expensive way to discover genes that make an enzyme that can help ferment cellulose into biofuel. Click the image for more information about it.

New Test Corners Elusive Biofuels Enzyme

In a wood near you, powerful microbes quicken the decay of fallen tree branches. These adroit decomposers perform that essential role by producing specialized enzymes. In the United States and abroad, biofuels researchers prize these enzymes because they may speed and simplify the process of making bioethanol, and coproducts, from the cellulose in the cell walls of energy crops such as switchgrass.

One of the most sought-after of those specialty enzymes may now be easier for today's researchers to find. That's thanks to an assay created by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) chemist Charles C. Lee and colleagues at the agency's Western Regional Research Center in Albany, Calif.

High-speed and high-tech, but surprisingly affordable, the sophisticated assay equips scientists with a faster, less expensive way to discover genes that enable microbes to make an enzyme known as an alpha-glucuronidase. In nature, this enzyme cleaves glucuronic acid from hemicellulose and, in so doing, helps disassemble plant cell walls. Hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin are bound in a tight, complicated matrix that impedes other enzymes' ready access to the cellulosic sugars that are ideal for fermenting into bioethanol.

Right now, there are very few genes in the publicly available GenBank database that code for alpha-glucuronidases. The new assay, however, may change that by making it possible for scientists to quickly screen the genes in masses of anonymous microbes taken from the forest floor, compost heaps, or other outdoor places where decomposers live and work.

In brief, the test involves moving the DNA from the outdoor microbes into laboratory bacteria that, in petri dishes, will form telltale dark spots if they have alpha-glucuronidase genes and enzymes actively working inside. Scientists can then isolate and copy the genes from those bacteria, and perhaps re-tool the genes to make them even stronger and faster-acting, for tomorrow's biorefineries.

Lee developed the assay with Albany colleague Kurt Wagschal, patterning it upon an assay Wagschal built earlier for finding another in-demand biofuels enzyme. Lee also worked with Dominic W.S. Wong, George Robertson, William Orts, and Rena Kibblewhite. All are with the Bioproduct Chemistry and Engineering Research Unit at Albany.

ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.