Farms.com Home   News

New Crop and Soil Chair Brings Years of Experience and First-Hand Familiarity to Role

By Scott Weybright

Lynne Carpenter-Boggs grew up on a small farm, but it was when she and her family moved off the farm that she began to appreciate the importance agriculture has on the economy, the environment, and culture.

“My family was part of the farm crisis in the ‘80s,” said Carpenter-Boggs, a Washington State University professor. “I put together after that just how important agriculture is in so many aspects of life.”

The native of eastern Oregon and southern Idaho has taken that experience, and years working at WSU, into a new role as chair of the Department of Crop and Soil Sciences.

“Lynne is a renowned researcher and teacher,” said Wendy Powers, Cashup Davis Family Endowed dean of WSU’s College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resources. “She will be a fantastic leader for this vital department. And I know that Rich Koenig, who has been a tremendous leader for the department for many years, will provide excellent guidance as she transitions into this position.”

Carpenter-Boggs is the first woman to lead the Crop and Soil Sciences department, joining a list of first-female leaders in the college. Lindsey du Toit recently became the first woman to chair the Department of Plant Pathology. Colleagues Laura Lavine, chair of the Department of Entomology, and Jill McCluskey, director of the School of Economic Sciences, are also the first women to lead their respective units.

Carpenter-Boggs’ main priority is to help rebuild the feeling of teamwork in the department after years of external turmoil, including the 2023 demolition of their primary location on the Pullman campus, 60-year-old Johnson Hall.

“I’ve been in this department for a really long time,” said Carpenter-Boggs, who earned a doctorate from WSU in 1997. “It’s always had a big family feeling. But between the Covid pandemic and losing our building, it’s been hard to keep. I look forward to finding ways to re-familiarize ourselves with each other again and help our new faculty get to know the more senior scientists.”

Carpenter-Boggs’ research focus is on soil science, primarily studying more natural systems of agriculture like organic farming. Her interest in soil science began in college while taking classes on agriculture.

“I didn’t know there was a thing called soil science, I didn’t know there was a thing called graduate school,” said the first-generation college student who eventually earned a master’s degree and PhD in soil science. “Soil is the basic cog in Earth functioning. It filters water, air, and nutrients through the whole Earth system. The deeper you get in studying the soil, the more amazing it gets.”

Source : wsu.edu

Trending Video

Seeing the Whole Season: How Continuous Crop Modeling Is Changing Breeding

Video: Seeing the Whole Season: How Continuous Crop Modeling Is Changing Breeding

Plant breeding has long been shaped by snapshots. A walk through a plot. A single set of notes. A yield check at the end of the season. But crops do not grow in moments. They change every day.

In this conversation, Gary Nijak of AerialPLOT explains how continuous crop modeling is changing the way breeders see, measure, and select plants by capturing growth, stress, and recovery across the entire season, not just at isolated points in time.

Nijak breaks down why point-in-time observations can miss critical performance signals, how repeated, season-long data collection removes the human bottleneck in breeding, and what becomes possible when every plot is treated as a living data set. He also explores how continuous modeling allows breeding programs to move beyond vague descriptors and toward measurable, repeatable insights that connect directly to on-farm outcomes.

This conversation explores:

• What continuous crop modeling is and how it works

• Why traditional field observations fall short over a full growing season

• How scale and repeated measurement change breeding decisions

• What “digital twins” of plots mean for selection and performance

• Why data, not hardware, is driving the next shift in breeding innovation As data-driven breeding moves from research into real-world programs, this discussion offers a clear look at how seeing the whole season is reshaping value for breeders, seed companies, and farmers, and why this may be only the beginning.