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[ Indiana ] A tree that can reach 90 feet in six years and be grown as a row crop on fallow farmland could represent a major replacement for fossil fuels. Purdue University researchers are using genetic tools in an effort to design trees that readily and inexpensively can yield the substances needed to produce alternative transportation fuel. Chapple and Meilan want to genetically modify the hybrid poplar so that lignin will not impede the release of cellulose for degradation into fermentable sugars, which then can be converted to ethanol. Researchers believe that using the hybrid poplar in its present form could produce about 70 gallons of fuel per ton of wood.
News notes are courtesy of Southern Forests Network News Notes
www.southernsustainableforests.org
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