Thank you, John, and welcome to everyone on the call today. Jumping into the results, our second quarter revenues were $230 million, essentially flat compared to the same quarter a year ago. Core revenue, which excludes the impact of foreign currency, acquisitions, and discontinued product lines, declined just under 1% for the quarter. Acquisitions and discontinued product lines added a net 20 basis points, while foreign currency contributed 50 basis points compared to the prior year. Notably, we passed the one-year anniversary of the 3M Food Safety transaction on the first day of our second quarter, and accordingly, those revenues are now included in our core growth. Moving to the segment level, revenues in our Food Safety segment were $164 million in the quarter, an increase of 2% compared to the prior year, including core growth of 1%. The core growth was led by the bacterial and general sanitation product category, which benefited from the pathogen business wins John mentioned, as well as increased distributor orders in Latin America. Within the Indicator Testing, Culture Media, and Other category, solid growth in Petrifilm and food quality and nutritional analysis sales was offset by declining in Culture Media due mainly to a large one-time order in the prior year. Natural toxins and allergens had a mid-single digit core decline, with growth in allergen test kits offset by decline in natural toxin test kits, due primarily to shipment delays. Quarterly revenues in the Animal Safety segment were $65 million, which includes a core revenue decline of 5% compared to the prior year quarter. The destocking trend abated somewhat, with non-genomic sales that go primarily through distribution, down less than 3%, which was a notable improvement from the first quarter. Core growth in this segment was led by life sciences, a result of increased demand for substrates used by manufacturers of diagnostics tests and vet instruments and disposables, with higher sales of detectable needles and syringes. Growth in these product categories was offset by continued lower sales of certain animal supplements and wound care products in the animal care and other category due mainly to ongoing supply constraints. Our biosecurity products experienced a slight core revenue decline, with higher volumes and rodent control products offset by decline in insect control products, largely the result of the phasing of certain distributor booking programs. Worldwide genomics revenue was down mid-single digits on a core basis, which marked a deceleration from the first quarter. We continued to see a decline related to small production animals, reflecting our strategic shift away from these offerings. The effects of this strategic shift in focus offset growth in international beef markets. From a geographical perspective, core revenue growth was mixed. Growth was led by Latin America, which grew low double digits from strong Petrifilm, pathogen, and hygiene monitoring sales. Asia Pacific grew modestly, with solid growth in genomics in Australia and China mostly offset by a slight decline in Food Safety sales. We saw a trajectory of recovery in Japan, while China, although a very small part of our total business, showed significant improvement from the first quarter. In the US and Canada, core revenue declined in the mid-single digit range. Food Safety sales were mostly flat, with solid growth in Petrifilm and pathogens offset by the compare-driven decline in Culture Media, while Animal Safety sales, which include genomics, were down mid-single digits. The US and Canada is the region most impacted by the build and backlog that we saw during the quarter. Finally, sales in our EMEA region also declined in the mid-single digit range, as strong growth in pathogens was primarily offset by the aforementioned shipment delays in certain other Food Safety product categories. Gross margin in the second quarter was 50.9%, representing an increase of 200 basis points from 48.9% in the same quarter a year ago, with the margin expansion driven primarily by benefits from favorable product mix. Adjusted EBITDA was $55 million in the second quarter, with an adjusted EBITDA margin of 24%, representing a sequential improvement of 110 basis points from the first quarter. On a year-over-year basis, last year's second quarter followed the closing of the 3M Food Safety transaction, and adjusted EBITDA at that point did not include a full reflection of necessary expenses, which were only beginning to ramp up at that time to accommodate the increased size of the company and enable the exit of various transition arrangements. Adjusted net income was $25 million for the quarter, with adjusted earnings per share of $0.11, compared to $31 million and $0.15, respectively in the prior year period. The decline in adjusted net income was driven by lower adjusted EBITDA, which more than offset the reduced interest expense. We ended the quarter with gross debt of $900 million, 67% of which remains at a fixed rate, and a total cash position of $230 million. Relative to the first quarter, cash was impacted by an increase in working capital, primarily reflecting the purchase of finished goods inventory from 3M as we move the acquired products into our own distribution network as part of our transition agreement exit activities. As John mentioned earlier, with the first half now behind us, we are in a better position to update our view of the fiscal year. While we believe things are beginning to stabilize in our end markets, we do not believe they're improving as steadily as contemplated in the original guidance we provided in July. We are updating our guidance to reflect the slower pace of recovery, as well as incremental headwinds in our genomics business, and now expect full year revenues to be between $935 million and $955 million. Taking into account the impact of the lower expected revenue, we now expect adjusted EBITDA will be in the range of $230 million to $240 million. We continue to expect capital expenditures to be approximately $130 million, including integration-related capital expenditures of approximately $100 million, the majority of which we do not expect to repeat next fiscal year. With respect to the third quarter, we expect a modest increase in revenue from the second quarter, despite it historically being seasonally lower, and some impact from our ongoing work with transition agreement exits and the elevated backlog. We expect our adjusted EBITDA margin in the second half of the year to be higher than the first half. This would reflect sequential improvement in the third quarter and more substantially in the seasonally higher fourth quarter, driven by increased volumes and the exit of transition agreements. I'll now hand the call back to John for some closing thoughts.