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Featured researches published by Aaron Shew.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Economic and Environmental Impact of Rice Blast Pathogen ( Magnaporthe oryzae ) Alleviation in the United States

Lawton Lanier Nalley; Francis Tsiboe; Alvaro Durand-Morat; Aaron Shew; Greg Thoma

Rice blast (Magnaporthe oryzae) is a key concern in combating global food insecurity given the disease is responsible for approximately 30% of rice production losses globally—the equivalent of feeding 60 million people. These losses increase the global rice price and reduce consumer welfare and food security. Rice is the staple crop for more than half the world’s population so any reduction in rice blast would have substantial beneficial effects on consumer livelihoods. In 2012, researchers in the US began analyzing the feasibility of creating blast-resistant rice through cisgenic breeding. Correspondingly, our study evaluates the changes in producer, consumer, and environmental welfare, if all the rice produced in the Mid-South of the US were blast resistant through a process like cisgenics, using both international trade and environmental assessment modeling. Our results show that US rice producers would gain 69.34 million dollars annually and increase the rice supply to feed an additional one million consumers globally by eliminating blast from production in the Mid-South. These results suggest that blast alleviation could be even more significant in increasing global food security given that the US is a small rice producer by global standards and likely experiences lower losses from blast than other rice-producing countries because of its ongoing investment in production technology and management. Furthermore, results from our detailed life cycle assessment (LCA) show that producing blast-resistant rice has lower environmental (fossil fuel depletion, ecotoxicity, carcinogenics, eutrophication, acidification, global warming potential, and ozone depletion) impacts per unit of rice than non-blast resistant rice production. Our findings suggest that any reduction in blast via breeding will have significantly positive impacts on reducing global food insecurity through increased supply, as well as decreased price and environmental impacts in production.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2016

Are all GMOs the same? Consumer acceptance of cisgenic rice in India.

Aaron Shew; Lawton Lanier Nalley; Diana M. Danforth; Bruce L. Dixon; Rodolfo M. Nayga; Anne Cécile Delwaide; Barbara Valent

India has more than 215 million food-insecure people, many of whom are farmers. Genetically modified (GM) crops have the potential to alleviate this problem by increasing food supplies and strengthening farmer livelihoods. For this to occur, two factors are critical: (i) a change in the regulatory status of GM crops, and (ii) consumer acceptance of GM foods. There are generally two classifications of GM crops based on how they are bred: cisgenically bred, containing only DNA sequences from sexually compatible organisms; and transgenically bred, including DNA sequences from sexually incompatible organisms. Consumers may view cisgenic foods as more natural than those produced via transgenesis, thus influencing consumer acceptance. This premise was the catalyst for our study--would Indian consumers accept cisgenically bred rice and if so, how would they value cisgenics compared to conventionally bred rice, GM-labelled rice and no fungicide rice? In this willingness-to-pay study, respondents did not view cisgenic and GM rice differently. However, participants were willing-to-pay a premium for any aforementioned rice with a no fungicide attribute, which cisgenics and GM could provide. Although not significantly different (P = 0.16), 76% and 73% of respondents stated a willingness-to-consume GM and cisgenic foods, respectively.


Agronomy Journal | 2017

The Production, Consumption, and Environmental Impacts of Rice Hybridization in the United States

Lawton Lanier Nalley; Alvaro Durand; Greg Thoma; Francis Tsiboe; Aaron Shew; Andrew P. Barkley


Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics | 2017

The Economic and Environmental Benefits of Sheath Blight Resistance in Rice

Francis Tsiboe; Lawton Lanier Nalley; Alvaro Durand; Greg Thoma; Aaron Shew


Archive | 2018

The Benefits of Public Rice Breeding

Aaron Shew; Lawton Lanier Nalley; Alvaro Durand; Karen A. K. Moldenhauer


Archive | 2018

Potential Economic and Food Security Impacts of Sustainable Intensification of Polder Agriculture in Coastal Bangladesh

Aaron Shew; Manoranjan Mondal; Sudhir Yadav; S.V. Krishna Jagadish; Humnath Bhandari; Lawton Lanier Nalley


Agronomy Journal | 2018

Estimating Spatial Differences in Methane Emissions to Identify Sustainable Rice Sources

Francis Tsiboe; Lanier Nalley; Kristofor R. Brye; Bruce L. Dixon; Aaron Shew; Andrew P. Barkley


Agricultural Economics | 2018

Estimating the benefits of public plant breeding: beyond profits

Aaron Shew; Alvaro Durand-Morat; Lawton Lanier Nalley; Karen A. K. Moldenhauer


Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics | 2017

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL'S DRY BEANS BREEDING PROGRAM

Thula Dlamini; Lanier Nalley; Francis Tsiboe; Andrew P. Barkley; Aaron Shew


Food Control | 2017

New innovations in agricultural biotech: Consumer acceptance of topical RNAi in rice production

Aaron Shew; Diana M. Danforth; Lawton Lanier Nalley; Rodolfo M. Nayga; Francis Tsiboe; Bruce L. Dixon

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Greg Thoma

University of Arkansas

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