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Janell Stevens Johnk Student Travel Award
Colleagues and friends have established this award in honor and memory
of Dr. Janell Marie (Stevens) Johnk for the contributions that she has
made to the science of plant pathology through her research, teaching,
and service.
Janell Stevens Johnk
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Janell Marie Stevens Johnk was born October 30, 1962 at Montevideo, MN,
the daughter of Ronald and Joyce (Bosch) Stevens. She graduated from
Montevideo Senior High school in 1981, and earned a B.A. in Biology and
Chemistry, with honors, from Hamline University in St. Paul in 1985. Her
rural upbringing on a farm and her love of agriculture inspired her to
pursue further education in plant pathology at the University of
Minnesota. She received her M.S. degree from that institution in 1991 and
her Ph.D. in 1993. Dr. Johnk assumed the title rank of Extension Plant
Pathologist and Assistant Professor for Texas A&M University at the
TAMU Research and Extension Center in Dallas, TX. She died in an
automobile accident on the way to a wheat field day in Prosper, TX on the
6th of May, 1998.
In her position in Dallas, Dr. Johnk applied her limitless energy and
enthusiasm to establish statewide responsibilities and regional leadership
for extension programs on diseases of turfgrass, shade trees and retail
and landscape ornamentals. She also developed regional programs on
diseases of cotton, sorghum, peanuts, and small grains during the short
time she was at TAMU. As the first urban plant pathologist in the state,
Dr. Johnk forged a variety of cooperative relationships with golf course
superintendents, municipal foresters, garden clubs, arborists, and
influential clientele in the Dallas area. In a very short time Dr. Johnk
became widely known as a leader and original thinker. She and her
colleagues in Dallas developed an IPM demonstration garden and a kiosk
containing a computer that provides answers to questions concerning garden
problems. This kiosk has subsequently been dedicated to her memory. Her
impact on clientele and colleagues went far beyond what is normal for such
a young scientist. She was asked to be a speaker at the Plenary Session of
the 1994 APS annual meeting in Albuquerque and she was an APS
representative to the Council of Agricultural Science and Technology
(CAST). She was selected by CAST to participate in the W.K. Kellogg
Foundation funded "Conversation on Change," a program to explore
change in agriculture-related professional societies.
As a legacy in plant pathology, Dr. Johnk has left a brief, but
substantive record of her research and experiences on the behavior of
plant diseases. For her thesis and dissertation research, she studied the
use of fatty acid analysis for differentiating populations of Rhizoctonia
solani. The results of this work are published in Phytopathology. Her
responsibilities in the highly urbanized Dallas region led her to publish
on nematode problems of turfgrassess (Journal of Applied Nemotology) and
the testing of fungicides for control of black spot in rose (Fungicide and
Nematicide Reports). She was very active on a team of scientists at the
Dallas center working on Integrated Pest Management on urban plant
problems and subsequently wrote numerous book chapters and extension
publications on that topic. Additional extension publications included
fact sheets and bulletins on oak wilt, brown patch, take-all patch,
Entomosporium leaf spot, and a variety of publications on plant disease
development and control.
Dr. Johnk was extremely active in the affairs of APS as a member of a
variety of ad hoc and standing committees. She serves as an outstanding
role model for those young women who choose to follow a career path as
well as become a parent by excelling in both roles. Her selfless drive to
help people solve problems, her intense commitment to our discipline, her
wonderful sense of humor, and her dedication to her family will forever
inspire all who had the good fortune to have worked with her. Her husband
Michael and daughter Kayla live in Murphy, Texas.
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