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Miscanthus, usually used as an ornamental grass in Georgia, is at the center of new biofuel research.
MISSION Miscanthus, usually used as an ornamental grass in Georgia, is at the center of new biofuel research.
 
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Miscanthus: Better Southeast biofuel crop

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Complete story
University of Georgia Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Franklin College of Arts and Sciences

When it comes to growing crops to make into biofuels, the talk usually centers on corn or switchgrass. But in the Southeast, the ornamental grass Miscanthus may outgrow them both.

In published research comparing it to switchgrass, Miscanthus produces two times as much tonnage as switchgrass, said Andrew Paterson, director of the University of Georgia Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory, a facility jointly housed by the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

West of the Mississippi River, he said, where rain is less plentiful, switchgrass is more competitive.

Miscanthus is commonly planted at the end of driveways in Georgia and grows more than 12 feet tall with wispy white flowers that clump together to look like large feathers.

“As an agricultural crop, it’s carbon neutral,” Paterson said, meaning that the plant absorbs as much carbon dioxide as it releases when converted to fuel.

It is a perennial that only needs to be planted once every decade by farmers. Already used as a biofuel crop in Europe, it can also be combined with wood to burn to produce electricity.

Using a $1.2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Department of Energy, Paterson will study the plant’s genes. It is closely related to sugarcane and sorghum, two plants he has extensively researched.

Paterson first will figure out how the 19 chromosomes that make up Miscanthus relate to the 10 found in sorghum. Then, he hopes “to translate what we know about sorghum to accelerate Miscanthus improvement,” he said.

For instance, he knows that six genes in sorghum influence flowering. He wants to find a matching set in Miscanthus and use the genes to slow down flowering in the plant. Less time spent making flowers means more time producing biomass, the stuff used to make biofuels.

“We already know where the target genes are in sorghum,” he said. “If they are in the corresponding regions in Miscanthus, we can greatly accelerate the development of diagnostic tools for breeding Miscanthus.”

He’s also looking for DNA markers that indicate stalk size and bud production. And he plans to explore the plant’s flooding tolerance based on comparative data from rice.

Paterson is working with the private company Mendel Biotechnology, which has a leading Miscanthus breeding program. Its scientists are using their locations in Germany, China and Alabama to characterize and evaluate varieties of Miscanthus.

So far, they’ve discovered four species of Miscanthus that can either be biofuel producers or gene contributors. One is completely sterile. “It tries to flower but it won’t produce any seed,” Paterson said.

That’s good news when it comes time for farmers to harvest the crop. But because that variety of Miscanthus doesn’t produce any seed, plant breeders would have to sell the plant as rhizomes. And farmers would have to pay more to grow that type of Miscanthus. Seeds would be less expensive.

“With each new plant we look at, we find something surprising,” he said. “I’m looking forward to seeing what those surprises are for Miscanthus.”


Maximizing Research Opportunities

Critical to the success of the research program at UGA is the construction of badly needed facilities in this area of institutional strength. The $40 million Paul D. Coverdell Center for Biomedical Health Sciences, which was completed in 2005, includes two floors of biomedical research laboratories, a state-of-the-art bioimaging research center, a 20,000-square-foot rodent-barrier facility and program offices for BHSI and the College of Public Health. Also, the College of Veterinary Medicine opened the Animal Health Research Center in 2006. AHRC houses scientists who study infectious diseases and toxicity problems that affect human and animal populations. Additionally, the College of Pharmacy’s capital campaign has raised $7 million of the $10 million it committed to build new facilities that will “bridge UGA and Medical College of Georgia,” while the state has promised to fund $36.5 million of the project. The new 140,000-square-foot Complex Carbohydrate Research Center was dedicated in February 2004, and its 900 MHz NMR spectrometer became operational in January 2005.


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This page was last updated on Thursday, September 3, 2009 04:32 PM EDT

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