Prep students making mark in science internships

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By Dan Rahn

University of Georgia

It’s hard to imagine two less likely partners toiling in a
steamy, south Georgia tobacco field than Summer Wright and Shane
Connell. The high school students’ studies, though, could catch
scientists’ eyes worldwide.

“This research has been done before, but not in this detail in
tobacco,” said Stephen Mullis, coordinator of the University of
Georgia’s plant pathology virology lab in Tifton, Ga.

Side-by-side with Georgia’s best

Mullis and UGA plant pathology researcher Alex Csinos are
mentoring Connell and Wright in the Young Scholars Program of the
UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.

The annual program pairs students with CAES scientists in
six-week summer internships on the UGA Athens, Griffin and Tifton
campuses.

“We wanted these two students to do something productive,” Mullis
said of the research project he and Csinos have guided. “I’ve
been extraordinarily impressed with their work. We may be looking
at getting their names on a refereed journal article.”

Connell, a country boy, and Wright, a city girl, are studying
tomato spotted wilt virus. Specifically, they’re trying to find
exactly how this devastating virus moves through tobacco plants.

The scientists set up the experiment by screening 90 tobacco
plants for the virus. From those, they singled out 10 infected
and 10 noninfected plants.

Twice a week since early June, Connell and Wright have been out
in the tobacco field, observing symptoms and carefully sampling
plant tissues throughout those plants to be analyzed in the lab.

“I like this, but I don’t like the field work much,” said Wright,
whose normal summer habitat is air-conditioned. “It’s a lot
harder than I thought it would be.”

But the work they’re doing may be groundbreaking. “They’ve run
roughly 2,000 samples off those 20 plants so far,” Mullins said.
“We’ve got a lot of good, hard data to analyze.”

More than 60 interns statewide

The Young Scholars Program has 14 students enrolled on the Tifton
campus this summer, said Susan Reinhardt, YSP director in Tifton.
Another 26 students are interning in Griffin, and 25 are in
Athens.

The interns are paid for up to 40 hours per week while working
side-by-side with UGA scientists. “The whole purpose is to get
students involved in the science behind agriculture,” Reinhardt
said.

It’s working.

“It’s different from what I expected,” said Wright, a junior this
fall at Tift County High. “I never thought of agriculture and
science together. I thought of agriculture as growing things and
science as high-tech work. But the two really go together
hand-in-hand.”

Wright was surprised at the work load in a science laboratory,
too. “I pictured them sitting around a lot, but they don’t,” she
said. “They really work.”

Connell, a senior this fall at Berrien County High, feels right
at home in agriculture. “I’ve had a lot of ag classes,” he said.
“And I live in south Georgia. Everything around me is
agriculture. I’m naturally interested in it.”

While Wright chose plant pathology because she knew the least
about it, Connell was well acquainted with it, partly through his
Future Farmers of America work. “I’ve been working on a
three-year study on tomato spotted wilt virus,” he said.

His experience hasn’t completely surprised him. “This is what I
expected, for the most part,” he said. “But I’ve had a much
broader look at how research is actually done, as opposed to the
kind of science we do in the high school lab.”

Like Wright, Connell is impressed by the volume of work in a
university lab. “The most surprising thing,” he said, “has been
how many samples run through this lab in a week. These guys
really have a lot to do.”

Connell plans to attend Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College for
core classes and then UGA or the Medical College of Georgia.

“I’d like to get into clinical pathology — people pathology,” he
said. “But some of the basic principles of what we’re doing here
will apply in that field, too.”