Dr Jenna Ross has received an OBE in the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee Honours.

The Nuffield Farming scholar, Oxford Farming Conference director, Lantra Scotland industry champion, STEM ambassador and award-winning scientist, received the award for her contribution to agriculture and science.

Growing up in Tarland, Aberdeenshire, on her family farm, Jenna has dedicated her career to finding innovative solutions in agriculture. With a PhD in Environmental Science, focused on developing biological control agents for slugs and snails, she is now a world-renowned malacologist and nematologist and hugely active both in the farming and scientific community.

In 2017, Jenna was awarded a Nuffield Farming Scholarship and spent 26 weeks travelling the world gathering data about slugs, and studying their economic risk, exploring monitoring systems, and investigating existing and future control options. The findings of her study, sponsored by AHDB Cereals and Oilseeds and RHASS, were published in her report 'Riding the Slime Wave: Gathering Global Data on Slug Control'.

Since finishing her studies, Jenna remains active in the Trust, serving as past Secretary for Nuffield Scotland and is now the current Chair of the Scotland Regional group, where she works to recruit new Scholars and promote Nuffield within the industry.

Commenting on the accolade, Jenna said: “I am hugely shocked and massively honoured to receive an OBE. Through my own career I have been fortunate enough to experience so many wonderful opportunities within agriculture and science, helping broaden my knowledge and network. I am very much looking forward to using my OBE to help positively champion our amazing industry and all it has to offer now, and in the future.”

Aside from her current outreach activities within agriculture, Jenna is also highly proactive in her role on leading international development for UK agri-tech innovation centre, Crop Health and Protection, where her work includes overseeing innovation projects such as SlugBot – an autonomous slug monitoring and bio-molluscicide treatment system. Other highlights include driving two projects to improve agronomy and crop production in India and managing a UK-Kenya collaboration to help growers overcome potato cyst nematode.

She added: “It’s a privilege to get up every morning and do something that I truly love. Coming from generations of farmers on both sides of my family means that agriculture well and truly flows through my blood. It’s an honour to work with so many amazing organisations in the sector, and of course, as a scientist, to develop game changing innovative and sustainable solutions for agriculture that deliver economic, environmental and societal impact”.