Irish teens took the top prize for experiments with common soil bacteria
Nov 18, 2014 | |
Healy-Thow, Judge and Hickey () took home $50,000 worth of scholarships.
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A chance observation about warts on a pea plant led a group of teenagers on a three-year mission to using agricultural science. Their perseverance paid off when they won the Grand Prize at the annual in Palo Alto, Calif., in September. ( co-sponsors the awards.)
The mission started after Émer Hickey, a now 17-year-old from Kinsale, Ireland, and her mother first embarked on gardening a few years ago. They pulled up a pea plant and saw that the roots were covered in nodules. Thinking the bumps might be a sign of poor health, Emer brought the plant to her science teacher. He explained that , a beneficial bacterium that converts nitrogen in the atmosphere into ammonia and other compounds that help plants grow.
At the time, Hickey's geography class was studying the , which inspired her and two friends, Ciara Judge and Sophie Healy-Thow, to try and apply rhizobia to barley and oats to see if the microbes might boost their yields. “We became really interested in what this bacterium can do,” Healy-Thow says.
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