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FOOD SAFETY ONLINE MEDIA KIT
UC Cooperative Extension food safety experts

= Bilingual, Spanish and English
(For assistance in contacting sources on deadline, call Jeannette Warnert at (559) 240-9850.)


 

Alex A. Ardans
Director, California Animal Health & Food Safety Laboratory System
(530) 752-8709
aaardans@ucdavis.edu

Immunology, infectious disease (bovine, equine, ruminant, swine), clinical veterinary immunology and virology, infectious diseases of large animals

 

Rob Atwill
Cooperative Extension specialist
Veterinary Medicine Extension – UC Davis
(530) 754-2154
ratwill@vmtrc.ucdavis.edu

Water transport of pathogens, research underway to determine whether there is a hydrological or other link between livestock production and E. coli contamination of vegetables in Salinas Valley fields.
 

Richard Bostock
Professor of Plant Pathology
Director of the National Plant Diagnostic Network Western Region
Department of Plant Pathology
UC Davis
(530) 752-0308
rmbostock@ucdavis.edu

Biochemistry and molecular biology of plant-microbe interaction; diseases of orchard crops.

 

Christine Bruhn
Cooperative Extension food marketing specialist
UC Davis
(530) 752-2774, cell (530) 219-2888
cmbruhn@ucdavis.edu

Consumer attitudes toward food safety, quality, and wholesomeness, food labels, and new production and processing technologies, public reaction to food-borne illness outbreaks and how consumers can best guard against food-borne illnesses.
 

Michael Cahn
Cooperative Extension farm advisor
Monterey County
(831) 759-7350
mdcahn@ucdavis.edu

Water quality and irrigation in the Salinas Valley.
Bilingual

Marita Cantwell
CE Vegetable Specialist
UC Davis
(530) 752-7305, lab (530) 754-6124
micantwell@ucdavis.edu

Postharvest quality, physiology and handling (harvest, preparation, storage, transportation) of vegetables; quality and storage of fresh-cut
products.
 

Dean Cliver
UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine
(530) 754-9120
docliver@ucdavis.edu

Transmission of infectious agents via food and water, mad cow disease/BSE, Cryptosporidium, Giardia, E. coli O157:H7, Salmonella, Listeria, Campylobacter, Yersinia, hepatitis A and norovirus, and other food-borne and water-borne causes of disease.

Bilingual

Roberta Cook
Extension Marketing Economist
Agricultural and Resource Economics
UC Davis
(530) 752-1531
cook@primal.ucdavis.edu
http://cook.ucdavis.edu

Impact of food safety concerns on the fresh produce industry and on the marketing of fresh produce.

  Karen Jetter, Ph.D.
Assistant Research Economist
Agricultural & Resource Economics
UC Davis
(530) 754-8756
jetter@primal.ucdavis.edu

Nutrition economist
 

Patricia Conrad
Professor of Parasitology
UC Davis
School of Veterinary Medicine
(530) 752-7210
paconrad@ucdavis.edu

Disease-causing microbes -- including Toxoplasma gondii, Cryptosporidium and Giardia -- that are transmitted between animals and humans.
 

James Cullor
Professor and director
UC Davis Veterinary Medical Teaching and Research Center, Tulare, Calif.
(559) 688-1731 (extension 202)
cell (559) 936-0510
jscullor@ucdavis.edu

Biology of mad cow disease/BSE, how it spreads and is controlled, the adequacy of U.S. surveillance programs and the prevention of BSE in large dairy herds.
 

Gail Feenstra
Food systems analyst
UC Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program
UC Davis
(530) 752-8408
gwfeenstra@ucdavis.edu

Food safety related to local food systems, i.e., how communities can "shorten the supply lines" between farm and table using produce from local farmers, how local food sources reduce the need to rely on transportation, and how local, seasonal food systems contribute to food security.

 

Ian Gardner
Veterinary epidemiologist
UC Davis
(530) 752-6992
iagardner@ucdavis.edu

Disease-causing microbes including E. coli, salmonella and campylobacter, where they occur in the environment, how they are sustained and how they infect livestock herds.
 

Jerry Gillespie
Director and veterinary pathologist
Western Institute for Food Safety and Security, UC Davis
(530) 757-5757
cell (530) 867-4394
jrgillespie@wifss.ucdavis.edu

Food safety and biosecurity of livestock and poultry, and safety of all foods in the food continuum.
 

Ian Gardner
School of Veterinary Medicine
(530) 752-6992
iagardner@ucdavis.edu

Where disease-causing microbes, including E. coli and salmonella, occur in the environment, how they are sustained and how they infect livestock herds.
 

Linda Harris
Cooperative Extension food microbiologist
UC Davis
Associate Director for Research at the Western Institute for Food Safety and Security
(530) 754-9485
ljharris@ucdavis.edu

Food-safety issues relating to the fruit, vegetable and nut industries, best ways to clean fruits and vegetables.
 

Sharon Hietala
Professor
California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System
(Headquartered at UC Davis)
(530) 752-4739
skhietala@ucdavis.edu

Clinical immunology and diagnostic techniques for infectious diseases in animals, strains of influenza, influenza surveillance, detection and diagnostic programs for animals in California.

 

Don Klingborg
Associate Dean
Veterinary medicine extension
(530) 752-1524
djklingborg@ucdavis.edu

Agroterrorism, food safety, food animal residue avoidance, dairy production, infectious diseases, zoonoses.

 

Karen Klonsky
Cooperative Extension specialist
Agricultural & Resource Economics
(530) 752-3563
klonsky@primal.ucdavis.edu

Information that permits the estimating the financial loss to growers when a major a food safety outbreak occurs (number of acres in production, typical farming practices, costs of production and expected income.)

 

Bob Krieger
Extension Toxicologist
Personal Chemical Exposure Program
Department of Entomology Environmental Toxicology Graduate Program
(951) 827-3724
bob.krieger@ucr.edu

Biomonitoring human chemical exposures, pesticides and other chemical technologies, worker health and safety, risk characterization, mitigation, and public communication.  Chemical risk perception.
 

Peggy Lemaux
Cooperative Extension Specialist    
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology          
UC Berkeley
(510) 642-1589
lemauxpg@nature.berkeley.edu

Techniques used in producing foods through biotechnology as well as the safety of eating these foods, and the regulatory structures governing them.
 

John Maas
Cooperative Extension veterinarian
UC Davis
(530) 752-3990
jmaas@ucdavis.edu

Foot-and-mouth disease and mad cow disease/BSE diagnosis, testing and control systems, U.S. cattle-tracking methods and disease-surveillance programs. (He also has been an active cattle rancher for 35 years.)

 

Dan Sumner
Director
Agricultural Issues Center
UC Davis
(530) 752-1668
dasumner@ucdavis.edu

Economics of food safety issues including
traceability.

 

Trevor Suslow
Cooperative Extension specialist
UC Davis
(530) 754-8313
tvsuslow@ucdavis.edu

Possible sources of e. coli contamination in fruits and vegetables, how the bacterial diseases might be transmitted to consumers and what industry is doing to prevent microbial contamination of crops.

 

Ken Tate
Cooperative Extension rangeland watershed specialist
(530) 754-8988
kwtate@ucdavis.edu

Waterborne transport and fate of microbial pollutants in natural and agricultural landscapes, identification of
management risk factors associated with increased microbial pollution of
waterbodies, and identification of management practices to reduce risk
of microbial pollution of waterbodies.

 

Carl Winter
Toxicologist
Director UC FoodSafe
UC Davis
(530) 752-5448
ckwinter@ucdavis.edu  

Pesticide residues in foods, including analysis, risk assessment, regulation, public policy, development of bioanalytical methods using mass spectrometry to measure xenobiotic metabolites from biological fluids; development of biomarkers for in vivo peroxidation; toxicology of naturally-occurring metabolites.