ARS geneticist William Anderson measures the height of napiergrass.
Link to photo information ARS geneticist William Anderson thinks
napiergrass (Pennisetum purpureum) has great potential as a biofuel crop
for the southeastern United States
A grass fed to cattle throughout much of the tropics may become a
biofuel crop that helps the nation meet its future energy needs,
according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientist.
Napiergrass (Pennisetum purpureum) is fairly
drought-tolerant, grows well on marginal lands, and filters nutrients
out of runoff in riparian areas, according to William Anderson, a
geneticist in the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Crop Genetics and
Breeding Research Unit in Tifton, Ga. ARS is USDA's principal intramural
scientific research agency, and this research supports the USDA
priority of developing new sources of bioenergy.
Government mandates call for production of up to 36 billion gallons
of biofuel by 2022. While much of that will come from grain ethanol, 21
billion gallons is expected to be derived from other crop-based
feedstocks.
As part of a nationwide search for alternatives, Anderson and his
colleagues compared napiergrass with several other candidate feedstocks
in a study to see how they would fare in head-to-head competition. The
researchers grew energy cane, napiergrass, switchgrass and giant reed
for four years and compared biomass yields and soil nutrient
requirements.
Joseph Knoll, a post-doctoral researcher in Anderson's laboratory,
led the research effort. The team included Timothy Strickland and Robert
Hubbard, ARS scientists with the agency's Southeast Regional Watershed
Research Unit in Tifton, and Ravindra Malik of Albany State University
in Albany, Ga.
With sunny skies and long growing seasons, farms and forests in the
Southeastern United States are expected to play a major role in
providing biofuel crops. The researchers' findings, along with others,
show that napiergrass could be a viable biofuel crop in the Southeast's
southern tier. It is not as cold-tolerant as switchgrass, but does offer
advantages, such as continuing to produce biomass until the first
frost. The research results have been published in BioEnergy Research.
The researchers are continuing to study napiergrass with an eye
toward improving yields, usable fiber content, and disease resistance.
They are also evaluating production systems that use chicken litter,
synthetic fertilizer, and winter cover crops, as well as different
irrigation levels, harvest times and planting dates. Preliminary
findings in those studies show yields are sufficient without irrigation,
and that there is little difference in yield when poultry litter is
used instead of synthetic fertilizers
1 comment:
future fuel crop
Post a Comment