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Tiny Super-Plant Can Clean Up Hog Farms and Be Used For Ethanol Production
April 08, 2009
Researchers at North Carolina State University have found that a tiny aquatic plant can be used to clean up animal waste at industrial hog farms and potentially be part of the answer for the global energy crisis. Their research shows that growing duckweed on hog wastewater can produce five to six times more starch per acre than corn, according to researcher Dr. Jay Cheng. This means that ethanol production using duckweed could be "faster and cheaper than from corn," says fellow researcher Dr. Anne-Marie Stomp. "We can kill two birds - biofuel production and wastewater treatment - with one stone - duckweed," Cheng says. Starch from duckweed can be readily converted into ethanol using the same facilities currently used for corn, Cheng adds.
Corn is currently the primary crop used for ethanol production in the United States. However, its use has come under fire in recent years because of concerns about the amount of energy used to grow corn and commodity price disruptions resulting from competition for corn between ethanol manufacturers and the food and feed industries. Duckweed presents an attractive, non-food alternative that has the potential to produce significantly more ethanol feedstock per acre than corn; exploit existing corn-based ethanol production processes for faster scale-up; and turn pollutants into a fuel production system. The duckweed system consists of shallow ponds that can be built on land unsuitable for conventional crops, and is so efficient it generates water clean enough for re-use. The technology can utilize any nutrient-rich wastewater, from livestock production to municipal wastewater.
Large-scale hog farms manage their animal waste by storing it in large "lagoons" for biological treatment. Duckweed utilizes the nutrients in the wastewater for growth, thus capturing these nutrients and preventing their release into the environment. In other words, Cheng says, "Duckweed could be an environmentally friendly, economically viable feedstock for ethanol."
"There's a bias in agriculture that all the crops that could be discovered have been discovered," Stomp says, "but duckweed could be the first of the new, 21st century crops. In the spirit of George Washington Carver, who turned peanuts into a major crop, Jay and I are on a mission to turn duckweed into a new industrial crop, providing an innovative approach to alternative fuel production."
Cheng, a professor of biological and agricultural engineering, co-authored the research with Stomp, associate professor of forestry, and post-doctoral research associate, Mike Yablonski. The research, which is funded by the North Carolina Biofuels Center, was presented March 21 at the annual conference of the Institute of Biological Engineering in Santa Carla, Calif.
Cheng and Stomp are currently establishing a pilot-scale project to further investigate the best way to establish a large-scale system for growing duckweed on animal wastewater, and then harvesting and drying the duckweed.
North Carolina State University
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Exo-Terra Duck Weed Floating Water Plants Color:Green
by Exo-Terra
4.5" length water plant prevents drowning of insects and reptiles. Provides resting places in the aquatic part of your terrarium. Natural look adds beauty to your terrarium. Easy to clean. These unique life-like plants are an excellent addition to a water dish, or to the aquatic part of a natural terrarium. The floating Water Plants give certain aquatic species (such as frogs, salamanders and turtles) the necessary hiding places or resting areas they require. Another benefit of adding plants is that they help prevent smaller animals and feeding insects from drowning. reptile terrarium décor plants float
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The Duckweed Way: Haiku of Issa
by Lucien and Takashi Ikemoto (trans.) Stryk (Author)
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The Duckweed Way: Haiku of Issa
by Lucien and Takashi Ikemoto Stryk (Author)
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We're Layabouts EP
Moonbabies (Performer)
5 Tracks. 1.We're Layabouts 2.Cherry Blossoms 3.Blue 4.Olympian Heights 5.Happy When Smile
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Sowerby Plants C1902 Rootless Duckweed Lemna Arrhiza
by old-print
A Colour Plate From English Botany Or Coloured Figures Of British Plants By J. Sowerby And Others Edited By John Boswell.Dates C1902 Size Of Each Plate Is Approx 10 X 6.5 Inches (260X160) All Are Genuine Antiques And Not Modern Copies.
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![Nutrient recovery from domestic wastewater using a UASB-duckweed ponds system [An article from: Bioresource Technology]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512SA5QAAFL._SL160_.jpg)
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Nutrient recovery from domestic wastewater using a UASB-duckweed ponds system [An article from: Bioresource Technology]
by S.A. El-Shafai (Author), F.A. El-Gohary (Author), F.A. Nasr (Author), Peter v (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Bioresource Technology, published by Elsevier in 2007. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: The pilot-scale wastewater treatment system used in this study comprised a 40-l UASB reactor (6-h HRT) followed by three duckweed ponds in series (total HRT 15days). During the warm season, the treatment system achieved removal values of 93%, 96% and 91% for COD, BOD and TSS, respectively. Residual values of ammonia, TKN and total phosphorus were 0.41mg N/l, 4.4mg N/l and 1.11mg P/l, with removal efficiencies of 98%, 85% and 78%, respectively. The system achieved 99.998% faecal coliform removal during the warm...
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Effect of Operational Variables on Nitrogen Transformations in Duckweed Stabilization Ponds
by Julia Rosa Caicedo Bejarano (Author)
There is an urgent need to develop and improve low cost technologies for wastewater treatment. Simultaneously treating wastewater and producing duckweed in a pond system is, therefore, an attractive solution contributing to both environmental protection and food production. Duckweed has excellent qualities: a high protein content, a high growth rate and is an easy crop to handle. The small plant turns nitrogen from wastewater into a food source. This thesis reports on the effect of different operational variables, like anaerobic pre-treatment, the combination of algae and duckweed ponds and pond depth. Improved nitrogen removal was obtained through the combination of duckweed ponds with algae ponds. Duckweed pond systems could be designed with shallow depth without affecting nitrogen...
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Sowerby Plants C1902 Ivy Leaved Duckweed Lemna Trisulca
by old-print
A Colour Plate From English Botany Or Coloured Figures Of British Plants By J. Sowerby And Others Edited By John Boswell.Dates C1902 Size Of Each Plate Is Approx 10 X 6.5 Inches (260X160) All Are Genuine Antiques And Not Modern Copies.
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Duckweed: cleaning water at the grassroots.: An article from: World Watch
by Ann E. Platt (Author)
This digital document is an article from World Watch, published by Worldwatch Institute on November 1, 1993. The length of the article is 1694 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
From the supplier: Duckweed is a natural alternative to conventional treatment systems for managing increasing waste streams from human communities and industries. Duckweed is known in Thailand as khai-nam or 'poor man's food,' and this tiny floating water weed provides an abundant supply of protein and nutrition to Thai families for generations. Duckweed breaks down and converts certain types of waste to...
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Sowerby Plants C1902 Lesser Duckweed Lemna Minor Colour
by old-print
A Colour Plate From English Botany Or Coloured Figures Of British Plants By J. Sowerby And Others Edited By John Boswell.Dates C1902 Size Of Each Plate Is Approx 10 X 6.5 Inches (260X160) All Are Genuine Antiques And Not Modern Copies.
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