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PEN_120722

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Penn Manor DECEMBER 7, 2022

SERVING THE LOCAL COMMUNITIES SINCE 1954

VOL LVIX • NO 32

Penn Manor FFA Wins National Awards

Researching Around The Globe BY ADRIAN ESCHENWALD

nce summer break returns each year, most people embark on beach trips or other vacation getaways. Anika Hurst, a student at Eastern Mennonite University (EMU) and a Conestoga native, had other plans in mind this past June. Hurst spent most of her summer conducting research in Australia with a group of six other studentstwo other students from EMU, three from Bridgewater College and one from James Madison University. This was the first excusion in a series of research trips funded by a three-year, $300,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. The research initiative, Tephritid Fruit Fly Multidisciplinary Australian Research Collaboration for Biosecurity, or T-MARC-BIO for short, was created with the goal of discovering ways to monitor and control the invasive species and reduce the negative effects of pesticide use globally. Tephritid fruit flies are a dangerous horticultural pest in many countries, and affect trade barriers between nations. The group first landed in Sydney, where it spent a few weeks becoming oriented for its research a couple hours outside the city. Hurst and two other students then traveled to Queensland to work with the Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, while the rest of the research group remained in Sydney to conduct lab work. Hurst and her group were focused on ecological field work and learning more about the behaviors of the Tephritid fruit fly. “Our goal was to look at the fruit fly and determine its flight patterns,” said Hurst. “It’s always been difficult to track them. We wanted to see if there was a bias in (the fly’s) patterns.” Hurst and her group used harmonic radar tags to keep track of the insects. After marking the flies with the small tags, the students released them into papaya fields. The harmonic tags emit

BY ADRIAN ESCHENWALD

Two teams of Penn Manor agricultural education students received high honors at the end of October at the National FFA Convention in Indianapolis. Each team completed different exercises and competed against teams of students from across the country. At the state competition in June, each team took first place and multiple individual team members placed in the top three. The FFA floriculture team at Penn Manor, comprising students Vita Failla, Leah Hess, Jeanette Kneisley and Carly Railing, earned a gold ranking and placed fifth out of 45 teams. Members of the floriculture team were tasked with identifying 50 flower specimens and types of equipment, completing a general knowledge test, arranging and pricing floral arrangements and corsages and develop advertising

The research team was made up of seven students, (from left) Jacqueline Kossey, Anika Hurst, Laura Craft, Nicole Miller, Emily Schloss, Allison O’Brien and Maryruth Shifflett.

a frequency that researchers can use to find their location by using what is called a RECCO unit. RECCO units are primarily used in search-and-rescue efforts to locate survivors in catastrophes such as avalanches by receiving the frequency emitted from the harmonic tags. Hurst’s group also conducted trials to determine if specific chemical compounds were more attractive to the flies, in an effort to assist with the management of the pest. “I absolutely loved it. It was such a beautiful trip and the work was fun,” Hurst said. “The community and people I worked with were wonderful.” Hurst grew up in Conestoga, where she attended Conestoga Elementary School, and she graduated from Lancaster Mennonite High School in 2020. She is now majoring in environmental studies at EMU and minoring in Spanish and biology, and will return from her semester abroad in Peru in mid-December. For more information on the T-MARC-BIO research project, visit https://tinyurl.com/tmarcbio.

See FFA Awards pg 3

INSIDE THIS ISSUE House Of Worship . . . . . . .4 Woman’s Club Plans Cookie, Fudge Sale . . . . .5 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Concert To Feature Franck’s Works . . . . . . . . .8 Business Directory . . . . . .8

Allison O’Brien (left), Nicole Miller (center) and Anika Hurst conducted research and tracked the Tephritid fruit fly.

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