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Stuart D. Lyda Student Travel Award
Colleagues and friends have established this award in honor of Dr.
Stuart D. Lyda for the contributions that he has made to the science of
plant pathology through his research, teaching, and service.
 Stuart
D. Lyda
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Stuart D. Lyda, professor of plant pathology at Texas A&M
University, was born in Bridger, MT, on June 6, 1930. Upon graduation from
high school, he enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps and served for four
years, including 17 months in Korea during wartime. He received his B.S.
degree in agricultural education and M.S. degree in botany in 1956 and
1958, respectively, from Montana State University, Bozeman, and his Ph.D.
degree in 1962 from the University of California, Davis. His dissertation,
titled "The Physiology Effect of Sodium Pentachlorophenate on
Sclerotinia fructicola (Wint.) Rehm," was under the guidance of Dr.
Joe M. Ogawa.
In 1962 Dr. Lyda began his career at the University of Nevada, Reno, as an
assistant professor in the Department of Plant, Soil and Water Sciences.
His research focused on the soilborne organism Phymatotrichum omnivorum
and its relationship to alfalfa. He remained in Reno for five years, where
he was promoted to associate professor. In 1967 Dr. Lyda left Reno and
took an associate professor appointment with Texas A&M University and
the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station. He accepted the challenge to
conduct research on Phymatotrichum root rot of cotton, a devastating
soilborne fungal disease found across the blackland cotton growing regions
of Texas, the southwestern United States, and northern regions of Mexico.
Dr. Lyda headed up the Phymatotrichum root research effort for the next 27
years. In this era he led investigations into cultural and chemicals means
of control of P. omnivorum and conducted extensive research on the
epidemiology and ecology of P. omnivorum. In 1978 Dr. Lyda authored a
chapter titled "Ecology of Phymatotrichum omnivorum" for the
Annual Review of Phytopathology. Dr. Lyda edited numerous papers for
Phytopathology and Plant Disease. He also served on the APS Nomenclature
Committee and the Soil Microbiology Committee, which he chaired. He was a
member of the Soil Fungus Conference Steering Committee and secretary and
head of the National Cotton Disease Council. He is a member of APS,
Mycological Society of America, Alpha Zeta, Gamma Sigma Delta, Phi Kappa
Phi, Who's Who in the South and Southwest, and the American Institute of
Chemists.
Dr. Lyda's research interests were extensive and, because of his immense
scientific curiosity, he never turned down a difficult project or left a
question unanswered. As a mentor Dr. Lyda's photographic memory was a
hurdle every one of his students had to overcome and of which all were
envious. Dr. Lyda's teaching responsibilities encompassed three courses in
addition to graduate student counseling. He taught the undergraduate plant
pathology class, a course on action of pesticides and a graduate course on
physiology of fungi. His tests and the problems on those tests in
physiology of fungi will be long remembered by each of his students—"you
cannot make an 'A' without being able to do the problems" was his
motto.
During Dr. Lyda's research and teaching career, he guided over 40 students
in master or doctorate programs, contributing to 37 publications and
numerous technical bulletins. His ability to motivate and challenge
students to reach beyond the classroom and laboratory and to explore life
to its fullest encouraged students to always reach for new frontiers. Dr.
Lyda was a teacher in every sense of the word. He constantly pushed each
individual to go beyond the norm. He challenged students to learn
something new every day and to think of all the consequences and
opportunities of their endeavors. Dr. Lyda allowed students to ask
questions and to learn on their own, but they all knew he was in the
background if they needed him. He won a teaching award from the students
of the Plant Science Department in the 1980s. Dr. Lyda took time from his
personal life to serve as chaperone for numerous field trips for plant
pathology graduate students and he drove the student van to several APS
meetings so that students could afford to attend the meetings. His former
students best remember Dr. Lyda for his strong convictions and his ability
to get each of them to think and to form their own opinions. The
establishment of this student travel award in his name seems fitting to
this outstanding teacher, mentor and plant pathologist. The tradition of
learning and shaping plant pathologists for the future may be carried on
in his name for generations to come.
Dr. Lyda is retired and lives with his wife JoAnne in Bryan, TX. He has
been married since 1952 and has five children and 13 grandchildren. Since
retiring he enjoys traveling in his motor home and has been on several
trips in the United States and abroad.
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