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Kentucky:
UK Researcher on Ground Floor of Biofuels Study
AgFax.Com
- Your Online Ag News Source
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By Katie Pratt
University of Kentucky College
of Agriculture
LEXINGTON, Kentucky (Feb 4,
2010) - A turfgrass scientist
in the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture is part of a regional
team of university researchers studying the feasibility of growing
miscanthus for biomass and biofuels.
Miscanthus x giganteus is a warm-season hybrid grass
native to China that can produce large yields. Unlike Miscanthus sinensis
that is found in landscapes and is invasive, Miscanthus x giganteus does not
spread by seed so it is not invasive.
David
Williams, associate professor in the UK
Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, is one of the researchers
studying the effects of nitrogen to miscanthus yields and quality.
University of Illinois researchers are leading the project that is a part of
the U.S. departments of energy and transportation's
Sun Grant Initiative, which is
administered by South Dakota State University. In addition to Kentucky and
Illinois, researchers from Rutgers University, Virginia Tech and the
University of Nebraska are also participating in the five-year study. In
2009, they completed the project's second year.
Researchers apply three nitrogen treatments to their
research plots. Each month, they measure plant height, stems per plant and
leaves per stem as well as collect yield data at harvest. Then, they send
plant samples and all data to South Dakota State University researchers for
analyzing.
So far, a common finding is nitrogen fertilizer has no
effect on miscanthus yields and quality.
"This finding has lead to several questions for
researchers including: ‘are we applying at the most opportune time or using
the right amounts,'" Williams said.
This
miscanthus study is only the beginning and is laying the groundwork for
further research. Researchers are in the process of working through some
obstacles with the plant that they need to find solutions to before it can
become an economically viable crop for farmers. A major concern is planting.
Since the plant is sterile, it does not produce seeds. Additional plants are
only produced by vegetative propagation. With no equipment currently
available to handle the planting of this plant material, growers must plant
it by hand.
Although UK plots had virtually no winter kill, plots at
other universities did. UK's trial was unique in that it contracted a fungus
that caused leaf damage. Little is known at this point about that fungus or
any additional fungal or insect problems.
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