ELSEWHERE IN AG UTILIZATION
BY DAN LEMKE
CARTOON © UNCLE HYGGLY / POUNCE.COM
Editor’s note: As a service to our readers, we provide news
from around the globe on new uses for agricultural products.
Please note that ARS is the research arm of the USDA.
Spinning straw
to liquid gold
The world’s first commercial plant to convert straw to
ethanol is under construction in Spain and set to open the
fall of 2006. While most U.S. ethanol plants are fueled by
corn and most in Europe use cereal grains, this will be the
first to produce ethanol from cellulose. From: Soyatech.com,
August 8, 2005
Rooting out
cancer
Soft, downy fibers make cotton balls attractive, but
cancer researchers are interested in the hairy roots. The
compound gossypol, extracted from cotton roots, leaves,
seeds and stems, may guard against certain types of cancer
as well as snuff out costly farm pests. USDA ARS researchers
have been able
to grow root clumps in a laboratory, making it easy to
extract and test the gossypol. The compound has shown
impressive antifungal, antibacterial and anticancer effects.
From: USDA-ARS, July 14, 2005
A
poop magnet
USDA ARS chemists have turned chicken manure into a
prized filtering product used to clean up polluted water. By
charring the waste in an oxygen-free environment, scientists
can produce a sponge-like material ideal for mopping up
pollutants. The charred poultry litter is especially adept
at grabbing heavy metals from wastewater, including copper,
cadmium and zinc. Scientists have made charred waste
pellets, granules and powders to accommodate a variety of
filtering structures, from water tanks to columns. From:
USDA-ARS, July 7, 2005
Good and moldy
You can’t fight fire with fire, but you can fight mold
with mold, researchers are discovering. Aflatoxin, a natural
carcinogenic produced by certain molds found in grains, is
prevalent in hot, arid regions. The toxin is believed to be
responsible for Africa’s high liver cancer rates, and it
killed hundreds of thousands of turkeys in Brazil during the
1960s. From the toxic mold, University of Arizona
researchers
have been able to propagate mold strains that produce no
toxins on grains or corn. The nontoxic strain spread on
cotton fields was able to almost entirely supplant the toxic
molds. From: Soyatech.com, August 8, 2005
Better
eat your broccoli
Broccoli compounds that have been shown to halt the
growth of breast, prostate, colon and stomach cancer cells
now appear to slow the growth of bladder cancer. Ohio State
University researchers report that compounds called
isothiocyanates hindered the growth of bladder-cancer cells,
with the most profound effect on the most aggressive cancers
they studied. Ohio State and Harvard studies found men who
ate two or more half-cup servings of broccoli per week had a
44 percent lower incidence of bladder cancer than men who
ate less than one serving per week. From: Foodnavigator.com,
July 29, 2005
Fueling up at
the local cafe
High fuel prices have prompted an underground movement
in Australia to cook-up backyard biodiesel. Motorists are
collecting used vegetable cooking oil from fish and chip
shops, converting it to biodiesel
and putting it in their vehicles without engine
modifications. Using store-bought chemicals, these
clandestine refineries are skirting Australian law, which
requires fuel makers to test biodiesel to make sure it meets
government standards. Plus, the motorists are avoiding
paying fuel excise tax. Most say the emissions from their
diesel vehicles now smell like restaurants. The
backyard-fuel chemicals are
toxic, but proponents say making biodiesel is as easy as
baking a cake. From: Sydney Morning Herald, August 7, 2005 |