Rockville, Maryland
July 10, 2007At the
annual meeting of the American
Society of Plant Biologists in Chicago (July 7-11, 2007),
scientists will present findings on how to economically and
efficiently produce plant crops suitable for sustainable
bioenergy. Improving the production of such biomass is important
because it should significantly ease and eventually replace
dependence on petroleum-based fuels. Biomass is plant material,
vegetation or agricultural waste used as fuel.
Converting biomass into biofuels can be costly and slow. Two
crops, both classified as C4 perennial grasses, have been
studied extensively to determine how best to improve costs and
production rates. Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) has been
trialed across the United States. Miscanthus (Miscanthus x
giganteus) has been studied throughout the European Union. Both
show great promise, but until now, nobody has been sure which
crop is more efficacious. The study completed by Frank Dohleman
of the Plant Biology Department at
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and his
colleagues, is the first to compare the productivity of the two
grasses in side-by-side field trials. Results from trials
throughout Illinois show that Miscanthus is more than twice as
productive as switchgrass.
Dohleman’s team, which included Dafu Wang, Andrew D.B. Leakey &
Stephen P. Long also of University of Illinois, along with Emily
A. Heaton of Ceres Inc., theorized that Miscanthus produces more
usable biomass than switchgrass because of these three key
attributes:
1. Miscanthus can gain
greater amounts of photosynthetic carbon per unit of leaf
area
2. Miscanthus has a greater leaf area
3. Miscanthus has a longer growing season.
The research team measured the
amount of gas exchanged on the upper canopy of Miscanthus leaves
from pre-dawn to post-dusk on 20 dates in the 2005 and 2006
growing seasons. The averages from two years’ data showed that
Miscanthus gained 33% more carbon than switchgrass. Integrated
measurements also showed that the Miscanthus leaf area was 45%
greater than switchgrass and that Miscanthus plants grew an
average of eleven days longer than switchgrass. This extended
growing season and accompanying lower temperatures proved to
further boost the photosynthetic activity of Miscanthus.
Specifically, pyruvate Pi dikinase was found to be expressed at
higher rates when ambient temperatures are lower. This enzyme
supports C4 photosynthesis in Miscanthus.
Unraveling the mystery of why Miscanthus is the more productive
crop will enable researchers to engineer this and other
potential bioenergy crops. These developments will increase
production options as well as support efforts within biofuel
research and industry to work with non-food based biomass
resources.
The ASPB is please to support the scientists who conducted this
study as they contribute to the plant research community’s
cutting-edge progress in conservation and resources management.
Founded in 1924, ASPB (formerly known as the American Society
of Plant Physiologists), is headquartered in Rockville,
Maryland. This professional society has a membership of
approximately 5,000 plant scientists from the United States and
more than 50 other nations. ASPB publishes two of the most
widely cited plant science journals in the world, Plant Cell and
Plant Physiology. Further information concerning ASPB can be
found on its website, www.aspb.org.
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