KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- At the opening ceremony for the new program known as SABRE, Space Agricultural Biotechnology Research and Education, four of the speakers gather around the SABRE poster. From left are University of Florida Vice President for Agriculture and Natural Resources Mike Martin, Representative Dave Weldon, Center Director Roy D. Bridges Jr., and Florida Representative Bob Allen. Involving UF and NASA, SABRE will focus on the discovery, development and application of the biological aspects of advanced life support strategies. The program will include faculty from UF's


KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- At the opening ceremony for the new program known as SABRE, Space Agricultural Biotechnology Research and Education, four of the speakers gather around the SABRE poster. From left are University of Florida Vice President for Agriculture and Natural Resources Mike Martin, Representative Dave Weldon, Center Director Roy D. Bridges Jr., and Florida Representative Bob Allen. Involving UF and NASA, SABRE will focus on the discovery, development and application of the biological aspects of advanced life support strategies. The program will include faculty from UF's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, who will be located at both KSC - in the state-owned Space Experiment Research and Processing Laboratory (SERPL) being built there - and UF in Gainesville. Robert Ferl, professor in the horticultural sciences department and assistant director of the University of Florida Biotechnology Program, will direct and be responsible for coordinating the research and education efforts of UF and NASA.


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