A woman in front of a rice field, next to a table, speaking
Whitney Brim-DeForest received a Graduate Student Research award while at UC Davis, and now she is the UC Cooperative Extension director in Sutter and Yuba counties, and the CE rice and wild rice advisor. In her role, she shares the latest research during rice field days – here, at the Rice Experiment Station in Biggs, Calif., in 2022. (Trina Kleist/UC Davis)

Whitney Brim-DeForest – UCCE director in Sutter & Yuba counties

Whitney Brim-DeForest is the UC Cooperative Extension director in Sutter and Yuba counties, and the CE rice and wild rice advisor. Her focus is weed management in rice. California is the nation’s top rice producer, with the 2022 crop valued at nearly $8.8 billion, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Q: How did the GSR award help you? While I was a doctoral student, the GSR award funded my position, so I was able to conduct research full-time during my studies. 

A man and a woman standing in front of a table, with rice plants in pots in the foreground.
Whitney Brim-DeForest, right, and colleague Troy Clark, both with UC Cooperative Extension, during the Rice Field Day in Biggs, Calif., in 2022. (Trina Kleist/UC Davis)

Q: How did this research training prepare you for your current role? While a graduate student, I was already engaging with growers and PCAs, plus working with key stakeholders in the rice industry. I was also working with the other rice researchers at UC, some who are now my colleagues, so I had well-established connections when I started at UC ANR. 

Importantly, I learned how to effectively run a research program, conducting field-level research and greenhouse studies. I even gained some background in agricultural economics from my MS studies.

Q: What was your research during your graduate studies at UC Davis? My Ph.D. was in weed science, as a member of the horticulture and agronomy graduate group. I studied the ecology of weed species in California rice, in relation to irrigation management and herbicide resistance, with a focus on yield impacts and interactions between weed species and rice.

I started at UC Davis as a master's degree student in international agricultural development, where I conducted a study on rice weed management in Senegal, West Africa.

Q: What outreach and extension research did you undertake as part of your studies?

I was heavily involved with research at the Rice Experiment Station in Biggs, Calif., where my principal investigator, Albert Fischer, ran the Rice Weed Science program. I took part in the California Rice Field Day every year, setting up our demonstration plots and running the weed science portion of the tour.

I also helped with the herbicide resistance testing program for growers and PCAs, where they could submit their seed samples to be tested. As a part of that program, I met with growers and PCAs individually to discuss management options. I also participated in UC Davis Weed Day as a speaker, and was asked to speak at some rice industry meetings during my last couple of years as a Ph.D. student. I also wrote extension articles with my PI, as well as with some of the current UC Rice members. 

Related links

Apply for a GSR award.

The James Monroe McDonald Endowment, administered by UC ANR, funds our GSR awards.

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