Mark Burow, Ph.D.
Email: md.burow@ttu.edu
Phone: (806) 834-5717
Address:
Department of Plant and Soil Science
Texas Tech University
Food Technology, Room 204
Mail Stop 2122
Lubbock, TX 79409-2122
Background
Dr. Burow received his Ph.D from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1990 in the areas of Plant Breeding/Plant Genetics, Biochemistry. He received his B.A. from St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN in 1981 in Chemistry, Development in Latin America.
Curriculum vitaeResearch Interests
Peanuts are an important crop on the Southern High Plains of Texas. Dr. Mark Burow's research focus is the improvement of seed quality of peanuts grown in West Texas, reduction of production costs due to water usage and disease, and development and use of molecular tools to assist in peanut improvement. Advances in molecular genetics are proving useful for medicine, criminology, and plant breeding. Molecular markers are being used for breeding new peanut varieties. Unlike genetically-modified organisms (GMO's), in which foreign genes are transferred through test-tube manipulation, molecular markers do not modify a plant genetically. Instead, they are a diagnostic tool, a type of gene fingerprint. For peanut breeding, markers are used to identify individuals possessing or lacking specific genes for useful traits, for example, nematode resistance. Markers can allow selection of resistant plants even when disease pressure is absent.
Dr Mark Burow believes that most of his future research will be in collaborative projects, including working on development of disease-resistant and abiotic stress-tolerant germplasm to reduce the costs of production to growers. In addition, he hopes that discovery and deployment of molecular markers will improve the efficiency of plant breeding.
Graduate students represent the future for the science of plant genetics, whether as future scientists or agricultural practitioners. "Being able to work with good graduate students, helping them develop their critical thinking skills, bringing more minds to address an issue or question, helps get more accomplished," Burow says.
Teaching
- PSS 3421 Fundamental Principles Genetics
- PSS 6424 Structural Genomics and Animals

Department of Plant and Soil Science
-
Address
Texas Tech University, Department of Plant and Soil Science, Box 42122, Lubbock, TX 79409 -
Phone
806.742.2838 -
Email
psstechsupport@ttu.edu