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Panicum virgatum

Panicum virgatum, commonly known as switchgrass, is a perennial warm season bunchgrass native to North America, where it occurs naturally from 55°N latitude in Canada southwards into the United States and Mexico. Switchgrass is one of the dominant species of the central North American tallgrass prairie and can be found in remnant prairies, in native grass pastures, and naturalized along roadsides. It is used primarily for soil conservation, forage production, game cover, as an ornamental grass, in phytoremediation projects, fiber, electricity, heat production, for biosequestration of atmospheric carbon dioxide, and more recently as a biomass crop for ethanol and butanol.

Switchgrass

Secure  (NatureServe)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Poaceae
Subfamily: Panicoideae
Genus: Panicum
Species:
P. virgatum
Binomial name
Panicum virgatum

Other common names for switchgrass include tall panic grass, Wobsqua grass, blackbent, tall prairiegrass, wild redtop, thatchgrass, and Virginia switchgrass.

Description edit

Switchgrass is a hardy, deep-rooted, perennial rhizomatous grass that begins growth in late spring. It can grow up to 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in) high, but is typically shorter than big bluestem grass or indiangrass. The leaves are 30–90 cm (12–35 in) long, with a prominent midrib. Switchgrass uses C4 carbon fixation, giving it an advantage in conditions of drought and high temperature.[2] Its flowers have a well-developed panicle, often up to 60 cm (24 in) long, and it bears a good crop of seeds. The seeds are 3–6 mm (1814 in) long and up to 1.5 mm (116 in) wide, and are developed from a single-flowered spikelet. Both glumes are present and well developed. When ripe, the seeds sometimes take on a pink or dull-purple tinge, and turn golden brown with the foliage of the plant in the fall. Switchgrass is both a perennial and self-seeding crop, which means farmers do not have to plant and reseed after annual harvesting. Once established, a switchgrass stand can survive for ten years or longer.[3] Unlike corn, switchgrass can grow on marginal lands and requires relatively modest levels of chemical fertilizers.[3] Overall, it is considered a resource-efficient, low-input crop for producing bioenergy from farmland.

Habitat edit

Much of North America, especially the prairies of the Midwestern United States, was once prime habitat to vast swaths of native grasses, including switchgrass, indiangrass (Sorghastrum nutans), eastern gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides), big bluestem (Andropogon gerardi), little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)[4] and others. As European settlers began spreading west across the continent, the native grasses were plowed under and the land converted to crops such as corn, wheat, and oats. Introduced grasses such as fescue, bluegrass, and orchardgrass[5] also replaced the native grasses for use as hay and pasture for cattle.[4]

Distribution edit

 
Panicum virgatum ecotypes and their distribution in the United States of America[6]

Switchgrass is a versatile and adaptable plant. It can grow and even thrive in many weather conditions, lengths of growing seasons, soil types, and land conditions. Its distribution spans south of latitude 55°N from Saskatchewan to Nova Scotia, south over most of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains, and further south into Mexico.[7] As a warm-season perennial grass, most of its growth occurs from late spring through early fall; it becomes dormant and unproductive during colder months. Thus, the productive season in its northern habitat can be as short as three months, but in the southern reaches of its habitat the growing season may be as long as eight months, around the Gulf Coast area.[8]

Switchgrass is a diverse species, with striking differences between plants. This diversity, which presumably reflects evolution and adaptation to new environments as the species spread across the continent, provides a range of valuable traits for breeding programs. Switchgrass has two distinct forms, or "cytotypes": the lowland cultivars, which tend to produce more biomass, and the upland cultivars, which are generally of more northern origin, more cold-tolerant, and therefore usually preferred in northern areas. Upland switchgrass types are generally shorter, at ≤ 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) tall, and less coarse than lowland types. Lowland cultivars may grow to ≥ 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in) in favorable environments. Both upland and lowland cultivars are deeply rooted, > 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in) in favorable soils, and have short rhizomes. The upland types tend to have more vigorous rhizomes, so the lowland cultivars may appear to have a bunchgrass habit, while the upland types tend to be more sod-forming. Lowland cultivars appear more plastic in their morphology, produce larger plants if stands become thin or when planted in wide rows, and they seem to be more sensitive to moisture stress than upland cultivars.[9]

In native prairies, switchgrass is historically found in association with several other important native tallgrass prairie plants, such as big bluestem, indiangrass, little bluestem, sideoats grama, eastern gamagrass, and various forbs (sunflowers, gayfeather, prairie clover, and prairie coneflower). These widely adapted tallgrass species once occupied millions of hectares.[10]

Switchgrass’ suitability for cultivation in the Gran Chaco is being studied by Argentina's Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA).[11]

Establishment and management edit

Switchgrass can be grown on land considered unsuitable for row crop production, including land that is too erodible for corn production, as well as sandy and gravelly soils in humid regions that typically produce low yields of other farm crops. No single method of establishing switchgrass can be suggested for all situations. The crop can be established both by no-till and conventional tillage. When seeded as part of a diverse mixture, planting guidelines for warm-season grass mixtures for conservation plantings should be followed. Regional guidelines for growing and managing switchgrass for bioenergy or conservation plantings are available. Several key factors can increase the likelihood of success for establishing switchgrass. These include:[12]

  • Planting switchgrass after the soil is well warmed during the spring.
  • Using seeds that are highly germinable and planting 0.6 - 1.2 cm deep, or up to 2 cm deep in sandy soils.
  • Packing or firming the soil both before and after seeding.
  • Providing no fertilization at planting to minimize competition.
  • Controlling weeds with chemical and/or cultural control methods.

Mowing and properly labeled herbicides are recommended for weed control. Chemical weed control can be used in the fall prior to establishment, or before or after planting. Weeds should be mowed just above the height of the growing switchgrass. Hormone herbicides, such as 2,4-D, should be avoided as they are known to reduce development of switchgrass when applied early in the establishing year.[13] Plantings that appear to have failed due to weed infestations are often wrongly assessed, as the failure is often more apparent than real. Switchgrass stands that are initially weedy commonly become well established with appropriate management in subsequent years.[12] Once established, switchgrass can take up to three years to reach its full production potential.[14] Depending on the region, it can typically produce 1/4 to 1/3 of its yield potential in its first year and 2/3 of its potential in the year after seeding.[15]

After establishment, switchgrass management will depend on the goal of the seeding. Historically, most switchgrass seedings have been managed for the Conservation Reserve Program in the US. Disturbance such as periodic mowing, burning, or disking is required to optimize the stand's utility for encouraging biodiversity. Increased attention is being placed on switchgrass management as an energy crop. Generally, the crop requires modest application of nitrogen fertilizer, as it is not a heavy feeder. Typical nitrogen (N) content of senescent material in the fall is 0.5% N. Fertilizer nitrogen applications of about 5 kg N/hectare (ha) applied for each tonne of biomass removed is a general guideline. More specific recommendations for fertilization are available regionally in North America. Herbicides are not often used on switchgrass after the seeding year, as the crop is generally quite competitive with weeds. Most bioenergy conversion processes for switchgrass, including those for cellulosic ethanol and pellet fuel production, can generally accept some alternative species in the harvested biomass. Stands of switchgrass should be harvested no more than twice per year, and one cutting often provides as much biomass as two. Switchgrass can be harvested with the same field equipment used for hay production, and it is well-suited to baling or bulk field harvesting. If its biology is properly taken into consideration, switchgrass can offer great potential as an energy crop.[12][16]

Uses edit

Switchgrass can be used as a feedstock for biomass energy production, as ground cover for soil conservation, and to control erosion, for forages and grazing, as game cover, and as feedstock for biodegradable plastics. It can be used by cattle farmers for hay and pasture and as a substitute for wheat straw in many applications, including livestock bedding, straw bale housing, and as a substrate for growing mushrooms.

 
Panicum virgatum 'Heavy Metal', an ornamental switchgrass, in early summer

Additionally, switchgrass is grown as a drought-resistant ornamental grass in average to wet soils and in full sun to part shade.

Moth host plant edit

It is the preferred larval host plant of Dargida rubripennis.[17] It is also a larval host for the Delaware skipper and the Hobomok skipper.[18]

Bioenergy edit

Switchgrass has been researched as a renewable bioenergy crop since the mid-1980s, because it is a native perennial warm season grass with the ability to produce moderate to high yields on marginal farmlands. It is now being considered for use in several bioenergy conversion processes, including cellulosic ethanol production, biogas, and direct combustion for thermal energy applications. The main agronomic advantages of switchgrass as a bioenergy crop are its stand longevity, drought and flooding tolerance, relatively low herbicide and fertilizer input requirements, ease of management, hardiness in poor soil and climate conditions, and widespread adaptability in temperate climates. In some warm humid southern zones, such as Alabama, it has the ability to produce up to 25 oven-dry tonnes per hectare (ODT/ha). A summary of switchgrass yields across 13 research trial sites in the United States found the top two cultivars in each trial to yield 9.4 to 22.9 t/ha, with an average yield of 14.6 ODT/ha.[19] However, these yields were recorded on small plot trials, and commercial field sites could be expected to be at least 20% lower than these results. In the United States, switchgrass yields appear to be highest in warm humid regions with long growing seasons such as the US Southeast and lowest in the dry short season areas of the Northern Great Plains.[19] The energy inputs required to grow switchgrass are favorable when compared with annual seed bearing crops such as corn, soybean, or canola, which can require relatively high energy inputs for field operations, crop drying, and fertilization. Whole plant herbaceous perennial C4 grass feedstocks are desirable biomass energy feedstocks, as they require fewer fossil energy inputs to grow and effectively capture solar energy because of their C4 photosynthetic system and perennial nature. One study cites it takes from 0.97 to 1.34 GJ to produce 1 tonne of switchgrass, compared with 1.99 to 2.66 GJ to produce 1 tonne of corn.[20] Another study found that switchgrass uses 0.8 GJ/ODT of fossil energy compared to grain corn's 2.9 GJ/ODT.[21] Given that switchgrass contains approximately 18.8 GJ/ODT of biomass, the energy output-to-input ratio for the crop can be up to 20:1.[22] This highly favorable ratio is attributable to its relatively high energy output per hectare and low energy inputs for production.

Considerable effort is being expended in developing switchgrass as a cellulosic ethanol crop in the USA. In George W. Bush's 2006 State of the Union Address, he proposed using switchgrass for ethanol;[23][24][25] since then, over US$100 million has been invested into researching switchgrass as a potential biofuel source.[26] Switchgrass has the potential to produce up to 380 liters of ethanol per tonne harvested.[27] However, current technology for herbaceous biomass conversion to ethanol is about 340 liters per tonne.[28] In contrast, corn ethanol yields about 400 liters per tonne.[29]

The main advantage of using switchgrass over corn as an ethanol feedstock is its cost of production is generally about 1/2 that of grain corn, and more biomass energy per hectare can be captured in the field.[22] Thus, switchgrass cellulosic ethanol should give a higher yield of ethanol per hectare at lower cost. However, this will depend on whether the cost of constructing and operating cellulosic ethanol plants can be reduced considerably. The switchgrass ethanol industry energy balance is also considered to be substantially better than that of corn ethanol. During the bioconversion process, the lignin fraction of switchgrass can be burned to provide sufficient steam and electricity to operate the biorefinery. Studies have found that for every unit of energy input needed to create a biofuel from switchgrass, four units of energy are yielded.[30] In contrast, corn ethanol yields about 1.28 units of energy per unit of energy input.[31] A recent study from the Great Plains [32] indicated that for ethanol production from switchgrass, this figure is 6.4, or alternatively, that 540% more energy was contained in the ethanol produced than was used in growing the switchgrass and converting it to liquid fuel. However, there remain commercialization barriers to the development of cellulosic ethanol technology. Projections in the early 1990s for commercialization of cellulosic ethanol by the year 2000[33] have not been met. The commercialization of cellulosic ethanol is thus proving to be a significant challenge, despite noteworthy research efforts.

 

Thermal energy applications for switchgrass appear to be closer to near-term scale-up than cellulosic ethanol for industrial or small-scale applications. For example, switchgrass can be pressed into fuel pellets that are subsequently burned in pellet stoves used to heat homes (which typically burn corn or wood pellets).[14] Switchgrass has been widely tested as a substitute for coal in power generation. The most widely studied project to date has been the Chariton Valley Project in Iowa.[34] The Show-Me-Energy Cooperative (SMEC) in Missouri[35] is using switchgrass and other warm-season grasses, along with wood residues, as feedstocks for pellets used for the firing of a coal-fired power plant. In Eastern Canada, switchgrass is being used on a pilot scale as a feedstock for commercial heating applications. Combustion studies have been undertaken and it appears to be well-suited as a commercial boiler fuel. Research is also being undertaken to develop switchgrass as a pellet fuel because of lack of surplus wood residues in eastern Canada,[36] as a slowdown in the forest products industry in 2009 is now resulting in wood pellet shortages throughout Eastern North America. Generally speaking, the direct firing of switchgrass for thermal applications can provide the highest net energy gain and energy output-to-input ratio of all switchgrass bioconversion processes.[37] Research has found switchgrass, when pelletized and used as a solid biofuel, is a good candidate for displacing fossil fuels. Switchgrass pellets were identified to have a 14.6:1 energy output-to-input ratio, which is substantially better than that for liquid biofuel options from farmland.[21] As a greenhouse gas mitigation strategy, switchgrass pellets were found to be an effective means to use farmland to mitigate greenhouse gases on the order of 7.6-13 tonnes of CO2 per hectare. In contrast, switchgrass cellulosic ethanol and corn ethanol were found to mitigate 5.2 and 1.5 tonnes of CO2 per hectare, respectively.[16]

Historically, the major constraint to the development of grasses for thermal energy applications has been the difficulty associated with burning grasses in conventional boilers, as biomass quality problems can be of particular concern in combustion applications. These technical problems now appear to have been largely resolved through crop management practices such as fall mowing and spring harvesting that allow for leaching to occur, which leads to fewer aerosol-forming compounds (such as K and Cl) and N in the grass. This reduces clinker formation and corrosion, and enables switchgrass to be a clean combustion fuel source for use in smaller combustion appliances. Fall harvested grasses likely have more application for larger commercial and industrial boilers.[38][39][40] Switchgrass is also being used to heat small industrial and farm buildings in Germany and China through a process used to make a low quality natural gas substitute.[41]

Bai et al. (2010) conducted a study to analyze the environmental sustainability of using switchgrass plant material as a feedstock for ethanol production.[42] Life cycle analysis was used to make this assessment. They compared efficiency of E10, E85, and ethanol with gasoline. They took into account air and water emissions associated with growing, managing, processing and storing the switchgrass crop. They also factored in the transportation of the stored switchgrass to the ethanol plant where they assumed the distance was 20 km. The reductions in global warming potential by using E10 and E85 were 5 and 65%, respectively. Their models also suggested that the “human toxicity potential” and “eco-toxicity potential” were substantially greater for the high ethanol fuels (i.e., E85 and ethanol) than for gasoline and E10.

In 2014, a genetically altered form of the bacterium Caldicellulosiruptor bescii was created which can cheaply and efficiently turn switchgrass into ethanol.[43][44]

Biodegradable plastics production edit

In a novel application, US scientists have genetically modified switchgrass to enable it to produce polyhydroxybutyrate, which accumulates in beadlike granules within the plant's cells.[45] In preliminary tests, the dry weight of a plants leaves were shown to comprise up to 3.7% of the polymer.[46] Such low accumulation rates do not, as of 2009, allow for commercial use of switchgrass as a biosource.

Soil conservation edit

Switchgrass is useful for soil conservation and amendment, particularly in the United States and Canada, where switchgrass is endemic. Switchgrass has a deep fibrous root system – nearly as deep as the plant is tall. Since it, along with other native grasses and forbs, once covered the plains of the United States that are now the Corn Belt, the effects of the past switchgrass habitat have been beneficial, lending to the fertile farmland that exists today. The deep fibrous root systems of switchgrass left a deep rich layer of organic matter in the soils of the Midwest, making those mollisol soils some of the most productive in the world. By returning switchgrass and other perennial prairie grasses as an agricultural crop, many marginal soils may benefit from increased levels of organic material, permeability, and fertility, due to the grass's deep root system.

Soil erosion, both from wind and water, is of great concern in regions where switchgrass grows. Due to its height, switchgrass can form an effective wind erosion barrier.[47] Its root system, also, is excellent for holding soil in place, which helps prevent erosion from flooding and runoff. Some highway departments (for example, KDOT) have used switchgrass in their seed mixes when re-establishing growth along roadways.[48] It can also be used on strip mine sites, dikes,[47] and pond dams. Conservation districts in many parts of the United States use it to control erosion in grass waterways because of its ability to anchor soils while providing habitat for wildlife.

Forages and grazing edit

Switchgrass is an excellent forage for cattle; however, it has shown toxicity in horses, sheep, and goats[49][50][51] through chemical compounds known as saponins, which cause photosensitivity and liver damage in these animals. Researchers are continuing to learn more about the specific conditions under which switchgrass causes harm to these species, but until more is discovered, it is recommended switchgrass not be fed to them. For cattle, however, it can be fed as hay, or grazed.

Grazing switchgrass calls for watchful management practices to ensure survival of the stand. It is recommended that grazing begin when the plants are about 50 cm tall, and that grazing be discontinued when the plants have been eaten down to about 25 cm, and to rest the pasture 30 – 45 days between grazing periods.[52] Switchgrass becomes stemmy and unpalatable as it matures, but during the target grazing period, it is a favorable forage with a relative feed value (RFV) of 90-104.[53] The grass's upright growth pattern places its growing point off the soil surface onto its stem, so leaving 25 cm of stubble is important for regrowth. When harvesting switchgrass for hay, the first cutting occurs at the late boot stage – around mid-June. This should allow for a second cutting in mid-August, leaving enough regrowth to survive the winter.[54]

Game cover edit

Switchgrass is well known among wildlife conservationists as good forage and habitat for upland game bird species, such as pheasant, quail, grouse, and wild turkey, and song birds, with its plentiful small seeds and tall cover. A study published in 2015 has shown that switchgrass, when grown in a traditional monoculture, has an adverse impact on some wildlife.[55] Depending on how thickly switchgrass is planted, and what it is partnered with, it also offers excellent forage and cover for other wildlife across the country. For those producers who have switchgrass stands on their farm, it is considered an environmental and aesthetic benefit due to the abundance of wildlife attracted by the switchgrass stands. Some members of Prairie Lands Bio-Products, Inc. in Iowa have even turned this benefit into a profitable business by leasing their switchgrass land for hunting during the proper seasons.[56] The benefits to wildlife can be extended even in large-scale agriculture through the process of strip harvesting, as recommended by The Wildlife Society, which suggests that rather than harvesting an entire field at once, strip harvesting could be practiced so that the entire habitat is not removed, thereby protecting the wildlife inhabiting the switchgrass.[57]

Ornamental cultivars edit

Panicum virgatum cultivars are used as ornamental plants in gardens and landscaping. The following have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:-

See also edit

References edit

  • Référence :
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  3. ^ a b Secter, Bob. "Plentiful switch grass emerges as breakthrough biofuel". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved 2008-05-24.
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  39. ^ "Samson et al., 2008": In regions where the potassium and chlorine contents of switchgrass cannot be successfully leached out for thermal applications, it may be that biogas applications for switchgrass will prove more promising. Switchgrass has demonstrated some promise in biogas research as an alternative feedstock to whole plant corn silage for biogas digesters.
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  48. ^ "KDOT Bid Tabs". Kansas Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
  49. ^ Lee, S.T.; Stegelmeier, B.L.; Gardner, D.R.; Vogel, K.P. (2001). "The isolation and identification of steroidal sapogenins in switchgrass". J Nat Toxins. 10 (4): 273–81. PMID 11695816.
  50. ^ Johnson, A.L.; Divers, T.J.; Freckleton, M.L.; McKenzie, H.C.; Mitchell, E.; Cullen, J.M.; McDonough, S.P. (2006). "Fall Panicum (Panicum dichotomiflorum) Hepatotoxicosis in Horses and Sheep". Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine. 20 (6): 1414–1421. doi:10.1892/0891-6640(2006)20[1414:FPPDHI]2.0.CO;2. PMID 17186859.
  51. ^ Stegelmeier, B.L.; Elmore, S.A.; Lee, S.T.; James, L.F.; Gardner, D.R.; Panter, K.E.; Ralphs, M.H.; Pfister, J.A. (2007). Switchgrass (panicum Virgatum) Toxicity In Rodents, Sheep, Goats And Horses. Vol. 19. pp. 113–117. doi:10.1079/9781845932732.0113. ISBN 9781845932732. Retrieved 2008-05-24. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  52. ^ Ball, D.M.; Hoveland, C.S.; Lacefield, G.D. (2006). "Table 28. Guidelines for rotational stocking of selected forage crops". Forage Crop Pocket Guide. International Plant Nutrition Institute.
  53. ^ Ball, D.M.; Hoveland, C.S.; Lacefield, G.D. (2006). "Table 33b. Total Digestible Nutrients (TDN) and Relative Feed Value (RFV) Ranges for Various Forage Crops". Forage Crop Pocket Guide. International Plant Nutrition Institute.
  54. ^ Wolf, D.D.; Fiske, D.A. (1995). (PDF). Virginia Cooperative Extension Publication: 418–013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-17. Retrieved 2008-05-24.
  55. ^ Leimbach, D.D.; Marcello, G.J. (2015). "Observed effects of warm season perennial grass agriculture on resident mammal species" (PDF). Sustainable Agriculture Research. 4 (2): 70–77. doi:10.5539/sar.v4n2p70.
  56. ^ Hipple, Patricia C.; Duffy, Michael D. (2002). "Farmers' Motivations for Adoption of Switchgrass" (PDF). In Jules Janick, Anna Whipkey (ed.). Trends in New Crops and New Uses. Fifth National Symposium, New Crops and New Uses, Strength in Diversity. Alexandria, Virginia: American Society for Horticultural Science. pp. 252–266. ISBN 978-0-09-707565-5. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  57. ^ Bies, Laura (2006-11-01). "The Biofuels Explosion: Is Green Energy Good for Wildlife?". Wildlife Society Bulletin. 34 (4): 1203–1205. doi:10.2193/0091-7648(2006)34[1203:TBEIGE]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 85776458.
  58. ^ "Panicum virgatum 'Dallas Blues'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  59. ^ "Panicum virgatum 'Heavy Metal'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  60. ^ "Panicum virgatum 'Hänse Harms'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  61. ^ "Panicum virgatum 'Northwind'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  62. ^ "Panicum virgatum 'Shenandoah'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.

External links edit

  • : (fr)
  • (fr)
  • (fr)
  • Switchgrass for Bioheat in Canada (agriwebinar presentation)
  • Establishing and Managing Switchgrass as an Energy Crop
  • Optimization of Switchgrass Management for Commercial Fuel Pellet Production
  • Management Guide for the Production of Switchgrass for Biomass Fuel in Southern Iowa
  • Switchgrass Fuel Yields Bountiful Energy
  • "Switchgrass: A Living Solar Battery." Roger Samson (Online reprint)
  • USDA Studies Switchgrass for Ethanol and Energy Production
  • Switchgrass as an Alternative Energy crop - European Union study on Switchgrass feasibility.
  • Keshwani, D. R.; Cheng, J. J. (2009). "Switchgrass for Bioethanol and Other Value-Added Applications: A Review". Bioresource Technology. 100 (4): 1515–1523. doi:10.1016/j.biortech.2008.09.035. PMID 18976902. S2CID 10337157.
  • - Archive of Central Texas Plants
  • Switchgrass images - Has closeup photos of spikelets
  • "Grass Makes Better Ethanol than Corn Does" - Scientific American article on the potential use of switchgrass for biofuels
  • Taxonomic description in GrassBase: Panicum virgatum
  • (fr)

panicum, virgatum, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, april, 2021, commonly, known, switchgrass, perennial, warm, season, bunchgrass. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article April 2021 Panicum virgatum commonly known as switchgrass is a perennial warm season bunchgrass native to North America where it occurs naturally from 55 N latitude in Canada southwards into the United States and Mexico Switchgrass is one of the dominant species of the central North American tallgrass prairie and can be found in remnant prairies in native grass pastures and naturalized along roadsides It is used primarily for soil conservation forage production game cover as an ornamental grass in phytoremediation projects fiber electricity heat production for biosequestration of atmospheric carbon dioxide and more recently as a biomass crop for ethanol and butanol Switchgrass Conservation status Secure NatureServe 1 Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Monocots Clade Commelinids Order Poales Family Poaceae Subfamily Panicoideae Genus Panicum Species P virgatum Binomial name Panicum virgatumL Other common names for switchgrass include tall panic grass Wobsqua grass blackbent tall prairiegrass wild redtop thatchgrass and Virginia switchgrass Contents 1 Description 2 Habitat 3 Distribution 4 Establishment and management 5 Uses 5 1 Moth host plant 5 2 Bioenergy 5 3 Biodegradable plastics production 5 4 Soil conservation 5 5 Forages and grazing 5 6 Game cover 5 7 Ornamental cultivars 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDescription editSwitchgrass is a hardy deep rooted perennial rhizomatous grass that begins growth in late spring It can grow up to 2 7 m 8 ft 10 in high but is typically shorter than big bluestem grass or indiangrass The leaves are 30 90 cm 12 35 in long with a prominent midrib Switchgrass uses C4 carbon fixation giving it an advantage in conditions of drought and high temperature 2 Its flowers have a well developed panicle often up to 60 cm 24 in long and it bears a good crop of seeds The seeds are 3 6 mm 1 8 1 4 in long and up to 1 5 mm 1 16 in wide and are developed from a single flowered spikelet Both glumes are present and well developed When ripe the seeds sometimes take on a pink or dull purple tinge and turn golden brown with the foliage of the plant in the fall Switchgrass is both a perennial and self seeding crop which means farmers do not have to plant and reseed after annual harvesting Once established a switchgrass stand can survive for ten years or longer 3 Unlike corn switchgrass can grow on marginal lands and requires relatively modest levels of chemical fertilizers 3 Overall it is considered a resource efficient low input crop for producing bioenergy from farmland nbsp Root system of switchgrass grown at the Land Institute nbsp Seeds Kirt PrairieHabitat editMuch of North America especially the prairies of the Midwestern United States was once prime habitat to vast swaths of native grasses including switchgrass indiangrass Sorghastrum nutans eastern gamagrass Tripsacum dactyloides big bluestem Andropogon gerardi little bluestem Schizachyrium scoparium 4 and others As European settlers began spreading west across the continent the native grasses were plowed under and the land converted to crops such as corn wheat and oats Introduced grasses such as fescue bluegrass and orchardgrass 5 also replaced the native grasses for use as hay and pasture for cattle 4 Distribution edit nbsp Panicum virgatum ecotypes and their distribution in the United States of America 6 Switchgrass is a versatile and adaptable plant It can grow and even thrive in many weather conditions lengths of growing seasons soil types and land conditions Its distribution spans south of latitude 55 N from Saskatchewan to Nova Scotia south over most of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains and further south into Mexico 7 As a warm season perennial grass most of its growth occurs from late spring through early fall it becomes dormant and unproductive during colder months Thus the productive season in its northern habitat can be as short as three months but in the southern reaches of its habitat the growing season may be as long as eight months around the Gulf Coast area 8 Switchgrass is a diverse species with striking differences between plants This diversity which presumably reflects evolution and adaptation to new environments as the species spread across the continent provides a range of valuable traits for breeding programs Switchgrass has two distinct forms or cytotypes the lowland cultivars which tend to produce more biomass and the upland cultivars which are generally of more northern origin more cold tolerant and therefore usually preferred in northern areas Upland switchgrass types are generally shorter at 2 4 m 7 ft 10 in tall and less coarse than lowland types Lowland cultivars may grow to 2 7 m 8 ft 10 in in favorable environments Both upland and lowland cultivars are deeply rooted gt 1 8 m 5 ft 11 in in favorable soils and have short rhizomes The upland types tend to have more vigorous rhizomes so the lowland cultivars may appear to have a bunchgrass habit while the upland types tend to be more sod forming Lowland cultivars appear more plastic in their morphology produce larger plants if stands become thin or when planted in wide rows and they seem to be more sensitive to moisture stress than upland cultivars 9 In native prairies switchgrass is historically found in association with several other important native tallgrass prairie plants such as big bluestem indiangrass little bluestem sideoats grama eastern gamagrass and various forbs sunflowers gayfeather prairie clover and prairie coneflower These widely adapted tallgrass species once occupied millions of hectares 10 Switchgrass suitability for cultivation in the Gran Chaco is being studied by Argentina s Instituto Nacional de Tecnologia Agropecuaria INTA 11 Establishment and management editSwitchgrass can be grown on land considered unsuitable for row crop production including land that is too erodible for corn production as well as sandy and gravelly soils in humid regions that typically produce low yields of other farm crops No single method of establishing switchgrass can be suggested for all situations The crop can be established both by no till and conventional tillage When seeded as part of a diverse mixture planting guidelines for warm season grass mixtures for conservation plantings should be followed Regional guidelines for growing and managing switchgrass for bioenergy or conservation plantings are available Several key factors can increase the likelihood of success for establishing switchgrass These include 12 Planting switchgrass after the soil is well warmed during the spring Using seeds that are highly germinable and planting 0 6 1 2 cm deep or up to 2 cm deep in sandy soils Packing or firming the soil both before and after seeding Providing no fertilization at planting to minimize competition Controlling weeds with chemical and or cultural control methods Mowing and properly labeled herbicides are recommended for weed control Chemical weed control can be used in the fall prior to establishment or before or after planting Weeds should be mowed just above the height of the growing switchgrass Hormone herbicides such as 2 4 D should be avoided as they are known to reduce development of switchgrass when applied early in the establishing year 13 Plantings that appear to have failed due to weed infestations are often wrongly assessed as the failure is often more apparent than real Switchgrass stands that are initially weedy commonly become well established with appropriate management in subsequent years 12 Once established switchgrass can take up to three years to reach its full production potential 14 Depending on the region it can typically produce 1 4 to 1 3 of its yield potential in its first year and 2 3 of its potential in the year after seeding 15 After establishment switchgrass management will depend on the goal of the seeding Historically most switchgrass seedings have been managed for the Conservation Reserve Program in the US Disturbance such as periodic mowing burning or disking is required to optimize the stand s utility for encouraging biodiversity Increased attention is being placed on switchgrass management as an energy crop Generally the crop requires modest application of nitrogen fertilizer as it is not a heavy feeder Typical nitrogen N content of senescent material in the fall is 0 5 N Fertilizer nitrogen applications of about 5 kg N hectare ha applied for each tonne of biomass removed is a general guideline More specific recommendations for fertilization are available regionally in North America Herbicides are not often used on switchgrass after the seeding year as the crop is generally quite competitive with weeds Most bioenergy conversion processes for switchgrass including those for cellulosic ethanol and pellet fuel production can generally accept some alternative species in the harvested biomass Stands of switchgrass should be harvested no more than twice per year and one cutting often provides as much biomass as two Switchgrass can be harvested with the same field equipment used for hay production and it is well suited to baling or bulk field harvesting If its biology is properly taken into consideration switchgrass can offer great potential as an energy crop 12 16 Uses editSwitchgrass can be used as a feedstock for biomass energy production as ground cover for soil conservation and to control erosion for forages and grazing as game cover and as feedstock for biodegradable plastics It can be used by cattle farmers for hay and pasture and as a substitute for wheat straw in many applications including livestock bedding straw bale housing and as a substrate for growing mushrooms nbsp Panicum virgatum Heavy Metal an ornamental switchgrass in early summerAdditionally switchgrass is grown as a drought resistant ornamental grass in average to wet soils and in full sun to part shade Moth host plant edit It is the preferred larval host plant of Dargida rubripennis 17 It is also a larval host for the Delaware skipper and the Hobomok skipper 18 Bioenergy edit Switchgrass has been researched as a renewable bioenergy crop since the mid 1980s because it is a native perennial warm season grass with the ability to produce moderate to high yields on marginal farmlands It is now being considered for use in several bioenergy conversion processes including cellulosic ethanol production biogas and direct combustion for thermal energy applications The main agronomic advantages of switchgrass as a bioenergy crop are its stand longevity drought and flooding tolerance relatively low herbicide and fertilizer input requirements ease of management hardiness in poor soil and climate conditions and widespread adaptability in temperate climates In some warm humid southern zones such as Alabama it has the ability to produce up to 25 oven dry tonnes per hectare ODT ha A summary of switchgrass yields across 13 research trial sites in the United States found the top two cultivars in each trial to yield 9 4 to 22 9 t ha with an average yield of 14 6 ODT ha 19 However these yields were recorded on small plot trials and commercial field sites could be expected to be at least 20 lower than these results In the United States switchgrass yields appear to be highest in warm humid regions with long growing seasons such as the US Southeast and lowest in the dry short season areas of the Northern Great Plains 19 The energy inputs required to grow switchgrass are favorable when compared with annual seed bearing crops such as corn soybean or canola which can require relatively high energy inputs for field operations crop drying and fertilization Whole plant herbaceous perennial C4 grass feedstocks are desirable biomass energy feedstocks as they require fewer fossil energy inputs to grow and effectively capture solar energy because of their C4 photosynthetic system and perennial nature One study cites it takes from 0 97 to 1 34 GJ to produce 1 tonne of switchgrass compared with 1 99 to 2 66 GJ to produce 1 tonne of corn 20 Another study found that switchgrass uses 0 8 GJ ODT of fossil energy compared to grain corn s 2 9 GJ ODT 21 Given that switchgrass contains approximately 18 8 GJ ODT of biomass the energy output to input ratio for the crop can be up to 20 1 22 This highly favorable ratio is attributable to its relatively high energy output per hectare and low energy inputs for production Considerable effort is being expended in developing switchgrass as a cellulosic ethanol crop in the USA In George W Bush s 2006 State of the Union Address he proposed using switchgrass for ethanol 23 24 25 since then over US 100 million has been invested into researching switchgrass as a potential biofuel source 26 Switchgrass has the potential to produce up to 380 liters of ethanol per tonne harvested 27 However current technology for herbaceous biomass conversion to ethanol is about 340 liters per tonne 28 In contrast corn ethanol yields about 400 liters per tonne 29 The main advantage of using switchgrass over corn as an ethanol feedstock is its cost of production is generally about 1 2 that of grain corn and more biomass energy per hectare can be captured in the field 22 Thus switchgrass cellulosic ethanol should give a higher yield of ethanol per hectare at lower cost However this will depend on whether the cost of constructing and operating cellulosic ethanol plants can be reduced considerably The switchgrass ethanol industry energy balance is also considered to be substantially better than that of corn ethanol During the bioconversion process the lignin fraction of switchgrass can be burned to provide sufficient steam and electricity to operate the biorefinery Studies have found that for every unit of energy input needed to create a biofuel from switchgrass four units of energy are yielded 30 In contrast corn ethanol yields about 1 28 units of energy per unit of energy input 31 A recent study from the Great Plains 32 indicated that for ethanol production from switchgrass this figure is 6 4 or alternatively that 540 more energy was contained in the ethanol produced than was used in growing the switchgrass and converting it to liquid fuel However there remain commercialization barriers to the development of cellulosic ethanol technology Projections in the early 1990s for commercialization of cellulosic ethanol by the year 2000 33 have not been met The commercialization of cellulosic ethanol is thus proving to be a significant challenge despite noteworthy research efforts nbsp Thermal energy applications for switchgrass appear to be closer to near term scale up than cellulosic ethanol for industrial or small scale applications For example switchgrass can be pressed into fuel pellets that are subsequently burned in pellet stoves used to heat homes which typically burn corn or wood pellets 14 Switchgrass has been widely tested as a substitute for coal in power generation The most widely studied project to date has been the Chariton Valley Project in Iowa 34 The Show Me Energy Cooperative SMEC in Missouri 35 is using switchgrass and other warm season grasses along with wood residues as feedstocks for pellets used for the firing of a coal fired power plant In Eastern Canada switchgrass is being used on a pilot scale as a feedstock for commercial heating applications Combustion studies have been undertaken and it appears to be well suited as a commercial boiler fuel Research is also being undertaken to develop switchgrass as a pellet fuel because of lack of surplus wood residues in eastern Canada 36 as a slowdown in the forest products industry in 2009 is now resulting in wood pellet shortages throughout Eastern North America Generally speaking the direct firing of switchgrass for thermal applications can provide the highest net energy gain and energy output to input ratio of all switchgrass bioconversion processes 37 Research has found switchgrass when pelletized and used as a solid biofuel is a good candidate for displacing fossil fuels Switchgrass pellets were identified to have a 14 6 1 energy output to input ratio which is substantially better than that for liquid biofuel options from farmland 21 As a greenhouse gas mitigation strategy switchgrass pellets were found to be an effective means to use farmland to mitigate greenhouse gases on the order of 7 6 13 tonnes of CO2 per hectare In contrast switchgrass cellulosic ethanol and corn ethanol were found to mitigate 5 2 and 1 5 tonnes of CO2 per hectare respectively 16 Historically the major constraint to the development of grasses for thermal energy applications has been the difficulty associated with burning grasses in conventional boilers as biomass quality problems can be of particular concern in combustion applications These technical problems now appear to have been largely resolved through crop management practices such as fall mowing and spring harvesting that allow for leaching to occur which leads to fewer aerosol forming compounds such as K and Cl and N in the grass This reduces clinker formation and corrosion and enables switchgrass to be a clean combustion fuel source for use in smaller combustion appliances Fall harvested grasses likely have more application for larger commercial and industrial boilers 38 39 40 Switchgrass is also being used to heat small industrial and farm buildings in Germany and China through a process used to make a low quality natural gas substitute 41 Bai et al 2010 conducted a study to analyze the environmental sustainability of using switchgrass plant material as a feedstock for ethanol production 42 Life cycle analysis was used to make this assessment They compared efficiency of E10 E85 and ethanol with gasoline They took into account air and water emissions associated with growing managing processing and storing the switchgrass crop They also factored in the transportation of the stored switchgrass to the ethanol plant where they assumed the distance was 20 km The reductions in global warming potential by using E10 and E85 were 5 and 65 respectively Their models also suggested that the human toxicity potential and eco toxicity potential were substantially greater for the high ethanol fuels i e E85 and ethanol than for gasoline and E10 In 2014 a genetically altered form of the bacterium Caldicellulosiruptor bescii was created which can cheaply and efficiently turn switchgrass into ethanol 43 44 Biodegradable plastics production edit In a novel application US scientists have genetically modified switchgrass to enable it to produce polyhydroxybutyrate which accumulates in beadlike granules within the plant s cells 45 In preliminary tests the dry weight of a plants leaves were shown to comprise up to 3 7 of the polymer 46 Such low accumulation rates do not as of 2009 allow for commercial use of switchgrass as a biosource Soil conservation edit Further information Mine reclamation Restoration ecology and Revegetation Switchgrass is useful for soil conservation and amendment particularly in the United States and Canada where switchgrass is endemic Switchgrass has a deep fibrous root system nearly as deep as the plant is tall Since it along with other native grasses and forbs once covered the plains of the United States that are now the Corn Belt the effects of the past switchgrass habitat have been beneficial lending to the fertile farmland that exists today The deep fibrous root systems of switchgrass left a deep rich layer of organic matter in the soils of the Midwest making those mollisol soils some of the most productive in the world By returning switchgrass and other perennial prairie grasses as an agricultural crop many marginal soils may benefit from increased levels of organic material permeability and fertility due to the grass s deep root system Soil erosion both from wind and water is of great concern in regions where switchgrass grows Due to its height switchgrass can form an effective wind erosion barrier 47 Its root system also is excellent for holding soil in place which helps prevent erosion from flooding and runoff Some highway departments for example KDOT have used switchgrass in their seed mixes when re establishing growth along roadways 48 It can also be used on strip mine sites dikes 47 and pond dams Conservation districts in many parts of the United States use it to control erosion in grass waterways because of its ability to anchor soils while providing habitat for wildlife Forages and grazing edit Switchgrass is an excellent forage for cattle however it has shown toxicity in horses sheep and goats 49 50 51 through chemical compounds known as saponins which cause photosensitivity and liver damage in these animals Researchers are continuing to learn more about the specific conditions under which switchgrass causes harm to these species but until more is discovered it is recommended switchgrass not be fed to them For cattle however it can be fed as hay or grazed Grazing switchgrass calls for watchful management practices to ensure survival of the stand It is recommended that grazing begin when the plants are about 50 cm tall and that grazing be discontinued when the plants have been eaten down to about 25 cm and to rest the pasture 30 45 days between grazing periods 52 Switchgrass becomes stemmy and unpalatable as it matures but during the target grazing period it is a favorable forage with a relative feed value RFV of 90 104 53 The grass s upright growth pattern places its growing point off the soil surface onto its stem so leaving 25 cm of stubble is important for regrowth When harvesting switchgrass for hay the first cutting occurs at the late boot stage around mid June This should allow for a second cutting in mid August leaving enough regrowth to survive the winter 54 Game cover edit Switchgrass is well known among wildlife conservationists as good forage and habitat for upland game bird species such as pheasant quail grouse and wild turkey and song birds with its plentiful small seeds and tall cover A study published in 2015 has shown that switchgrass when grown in a traditional monoculture has an adverse impact on some wildlife 55 Depending on how thickly switchgrass is planted and what it is partnered with it also offers excellent forage and cover for other wildlife across the country For those producers who have switchgrass stands on their farm it is considered an environmental and aesthetic benefit due to the abundance of wildlife attracted by the switchgrass stands Some members of Prairie Lands Bio Products Inc in Iowa have even turned this benefit into a profitable business by leasing their switchgrass land for hunting during the proper seasons 56 The benefits to wildlife can be extended even in large scale agriculture through the process of strip harvesting as recommended by The Wildlife Society which suggests that rather than harvesting an entire field at once strip harvesting could be practiced so that the entire habitat is not removed thereby protecting the wildlife inhabiting the switchgrass 57 Ornamental cultivars edit Panicum virgatum cultivars are used as ornamental plants in gardens and landscaping The following have gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit Dallas Blues 58 Heavy Metal 59 Hanse Harms 60 Northwind 61 Shenandoah 62 See also editAlgae fuel Backyard Wildlife Habitat Big Bluestem Brachypodium distachyon Butanol fuel Cellulosic ethanol Energy crop Energy efficient landscaping Natural landscaping Phytoremediation Wildlife gardenReferences editReference Seedenergies Technic Panicum virgatum switchgrass Crops Photos NatureServe Explorer Retrieved 2021 02 26 Silzer Tanya January 2000 Panicum virgatum L Switchgrass prairie switchgrass tall panic grass Rangeland Ecosystems amp Plants Fact Sheets University of Saskatchewan Department of Plant Sciences Retrieved 2007 12 08 a b Secter Bob Plentiful switch grass emerges as breakthrough biofuel The San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved 2008 05 24 a b Uchytil Ronald J 1993 Panicum virgatum Fire Effects Information System FEIS US Department of Agriculture USDA Forest Service USFS Rocky Mountain Research Station Fire Sciences Laboratory Retrieved 2018 07 13 Ernst Seed Catalog Web Page 2007 Switchgrass and Warm Season Grass Planting Guide Ernst Conservation Seeds Archived from the original on 2007 08 03 Retrieved 2007 12 08 T Lovell John 2021 02 01 Genomic mechanisms of climate adaptation in polyploid bioenergy switchgrass Nature 590 7846 eScholarship University of California 438 444 Bibcode 2021Natur 590 438L doi 10 1038 s41586 020 03127 1 OCLC 1245255103 PMC 7886653 PMID 33505029 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link USDA NRCS n d Panicum virgatum The PLANTS Database plants usda gov Greensboro North Carolina National Plant Data Team Retrieved 2008 05 21 Ball D M Hoveland C S Lacefield G D 2002 Southern Forages 3rd ed International Plant Nutrition Institute p 26 ISBN 978 0 9629598 3 7 Establishing and Managing Switchgrass as an Energy Crop Forage and Grazinglands 2008 Switchgrass as a Bioenergy Crop ATTRA National Sustainable Agricultural Information Service 2006 Aprovechamiento de recursos vegetales y animales para la produccion de biocombustibles PDF in Spanish INTA 26 June 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 26 September 2010 a b c http reap canada com online library feedstock biomass 5 Establishing 20and 20Managing 20Switchgrass 20as 20an 20Energy 20Crop 20 Parrish 20et 20al 202008 pdf David J Parrish John H Fike David I Bransby Roger Samson Establishing and Managing Switchgrass as an Energy Crop Forage and Grazinglands 2008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 01 22 Retrieved 2009 03 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Samson R 2007 Switchgrass Production in Ontario A Management Guide PDF Resource Efficient Agricultural Production REAP Canada Retrieved 2008 05 24 Bransby David 2005 Switchgrass Profile Bioenergy Feedstock Information Network BFIN Oak Ridge National Laboratory Archived from the original on 2008 05 11 Retrieved 2008 05 24 a b http www reap canada com online library feedstock biomass Optimization 20of 20switchgrass 20management 20for 20commercial 20fuel 20pellet 20production 20 Samson 20et 20al 202007 pdf Samson R Bailey Stamler S amp Ho Lem C Optimization of Switchgrass Management for Commercial Fuel Pellet Production Final report prepared by REAP Canada for the Ontario Ministry of Food Agriculture and Rural Affairs OMAFRA under the Alternative Renewable Fuels Fund 2008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 06 08 Retrieved 2018 01 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The Xerces Society 2016 Gardening for Butterflies How You Can Attract and Protect Beautiful Beneficial Insects Timber Press a b McLaughlin S B Kzos L A 2005 Development of switchgrass Panicum virgatum as a bioenergy feedstock in the United States Biomass and Bioenergy 28 6 515 535 doi 10 1016 j biombioe 2004 05 006 Dale B Kim S 2004 Cumulative Energy and Global Warming Impact from the Production of Biomass for Biobased Products PDF Journal of Industrial Ecology 7 3 4 147 162 doi 10 1162 108819803323059442 a b Samson R et al 2005 The Potential of C4 Perennial Grasses for Developing a Global BIOHEAT Industry PDF Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences 25 5 6 461 495 doi 10 1080 07352680500316508 S2CID 85407638 a b Samson R et al Developing Energy Crops for Thermal Applications Optimizing Fuel Quality Energy Security and GHG Mitigation In Biofuels Solar and Wind as Renewable Energy Systems Benefits and Risks D Pimental Ed Springer Science Berlin Germany 2008 395 423 Adrienne Mand Lewin 2006 02 01 Switchgrass The Super Plant Savior ABC News Switch Grass Alternative Energy Source NPR org National Public Radio 2006 02 01 Dana Bash Suzanne Malveaux et al 2006 02 01 Bush has plan to end oil addiction CNN Since that mention in the 2006 investment in switch grass has exploded thanks in large part experts say to the President s speech Venture capitalists have poured over 100 million into private companies that are exploring the technology necessary to convert switchgrass into fuel and large publicly owned companies are also directing their research dollars into biofuels Jessica Yellin Katie Hinman Nitya Venkataraman 2007 01 23 What Happened to Bush Call for Switchgrass ABC News Switchgrass Native American Powerhouse Renewable Energy Resources Retrieved 2007 01 05 Iogen Corporation Iogen Corporation 2009 Farrell A E Ethanol Can Contribute to Energy and Environmental Goals Science Volume 311 2006 506 508 Switch Grass Alternative Energy Source NPR org NPR Retrieved 2007 01 05 Wang M Wu M amp Huo H Life cycle energy and greenhouse gas emission impacts of different corn ethanol plant types Environmental Research Letters Volume 2 2007 1 13 M R Schmer K P Vogel R B Mitchell R K Perrin 2008 Net energy of cellulosic ethanol from switchgrass PNAS 105 2 464 469 Bibcode 2008PNAS 105 464S doi 10 1073 pnas 0704767105 PMC 2206559 PMID 18180449 Lynd L R Cushman J H Nichols R J Wyman C E 1991 Fuel Ethanol from Cellulosic Biomass Science 251 4999 1318 1323 Bibcode 1991Sci 251 1318L doi 10 1126 science 251 4999 1318 PMID 17816186 S2CID 11209055 Home iowaswitchgrass com Show Me Energy Cooperative Bailey Stamler S R Samson and C Ho Lem Biomass resources options Creating a BIOHEAT supply for the Canadian greenhouse industry Final report to Natural Resources Canada Ottawa 2006 38 pages Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 05 08 Retrieved 2009 03 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Samson R and S Bailey Stamler Going Green for Less Cost Effective Alternative Energy Sources C D Howe Institute Commentary 282 Economic Growth and Innovation 2009 25 pages Samson et al 2007 http www reap canada com online library feedstock biomass The 20Emerging 20Agro Pellet 20Industry 20in 20Canada 20 Samson 20et 20al 202007 pdf R Samson S Bailey and C Ho Lem The Emerging Agro Pellet Industry in Canada 2007 Samson et al 2008 In regions where the potassium and chlorine contents of switchgrass cannot be successfully leached out for thermal applications it may be that biogas applications for switchgrass will prove more promising Switchgrass has demonstrated some promise in biogas research as an alternative feedstock to whole plant corn silage for biogas digesters Frigon et al 2008 http www gtmconference ca site downloads 2008presentations 5B3 20 Frigon pdf Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine J C Frigon P Mehta S R Guiot The bioenergy potential from the anaerobic digestion of switchgrass and other energy crops National Research Council Canada Growing the Margins Conference Energy Bioproducts and Byproducts from farms and food sectors April 2 5 2008 London Ontario plentiful switchgrass Bai Y Luo L amp van der Voe E 2010 Life cycle assessment of switchgrass derived ethanol as transport fuel Int J Life Cycle Assess 15 15 468 477 This can be found on line at https doi org 10 1007 2Fs11367 010 0177 2 dead link Bacteria take plants to biofuel in one step Science News 3 June 2014 Retrieved 2014 06 04 Chung D Cha M Guss A M Westpheling J 2014 Direct conversion of plant biomass to ethanol by engineered Caldicellulosiruptor bescii Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 24 8931 8936 Bibcode 2014PNAS 111 8931C doi 10 1073 pnas 1402210111 PMC 4066518 PMID 24889625 Biomass Combo Chemical amp Engineering News 86 33 18 Aug 2008 p 13 Plant Biotechnology Journal 2008 6 663 a b Plant Fact Sheet Panicum virgatum switchgrass PDF United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service Plant Materials Program 2006 05 06 Retrieved 2008 05 21 KDOT Bid Tabs Kansas Department of Transportation Retrieved 2008 05 20 Lee S T Stegelmeier B L Gardner D R Vogel K P 2001 The isolation and identification of steroidal sapogenins in switchgrass J Nat Toxins 10 4 273 81 PMID 11695816 Johnson A L Divers T J Freckleton M L McKenzie H C Mitchell E Cullen J M McDonough S P 2006 Fall Panicum Panicum dichotomiflorum Hepatotoxicosis in Horses and Sheep Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine 20 6 1414 1421 doi 10 1892 0891 6640 2006 20 1414 FPPDHI 2 0 CO 2 PMID 17186859 Stegelmeier B L Elmore S A Lee S T James L F Gardner D R Panter K E Ralphs M H Pfister J A 2007 Switchgrass panicum Virgatum Toxicity In Rodents Sheep Goats And Horses Vol 19 pp 113 117 doi 10 1079 9781845932732 0113 ISBN 9781845932732 Retrieved 2008 05 24 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Ball D M Hoveland C S Lacefield G D 2006 Table 28 Guidelines for rotational stocking of selected forage crops Forage Crop Pocket Guide International Plant Nutrition Institute Ball D M Hoveland C S Lacefield G D 2006 Table 33b Total Digestible Nutrients TDN and Relative Feed Value RFV Ranges for Various Forage Crops Forage Crop Pocket Guide International Plant Nutrition Institute Wolf D D Fiske D A 1995 Planting and managing switchgrass for forage wildlife and conservation PDF Virginia Cooperative Extension Publication 418 013 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 05 17 Retrieved 2008 05 24 Leimbach D D Marcello G J 2015 Observed effects of warm season perennial grass agriculture on resident mammal species PDF Sustainable Agriculture Research 4 2 70 77 doi 10 5539 sar v4n2p70 Hipple Patricia C Duffy Michael D 2002 Farmers Motivations for Adoption of Switchgrass PDF In Jules Janick Anna Whipkey ed Trends in New Crops and New Uses Fifth National Symposium New Crops and New Uses Strength in Diversity Alexandria Virginia American Society for Horticultural Science pp 252 266 ISBN 978 0 09 707565 5 Retrieved 2008 05 23 Bies Laura 2006 11 01 The Biofuels Explosion Is Green Energy Good for Wildlife Wildlife Society Bulletin 34 4 1203 1205 doi 10 2193 0091 7648 2006 34 1203 TBEIGE 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 85776458 Panicum virgatum Dallas Blues RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Panicum virgatum Heavy Metal RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Panicum virgatum Hanse Harms RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Panicum virgatum Northwind RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Panicum virgatum Shenandoah RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Panicum virgatum Seedenergies Technic Panicum virgatum switchgrass Parcelles en France Technique fr Switchgrass Production in Ontario A Management Guide Switchgrass Variety Choice in France fr Vermont Grass Energy Symposium Technic Panicum virgatum switchgrass fr Switchgrass for Bioheat in Canada agriwebinar presentation Establishing and Managing Switchgrass as an Energy Crop Optimization of Switchgrass Management for Commercial Fuel Pellet Production Management Guide for the Production of Switchgrass for Biomass Fuel in Southern Iowa Switchgrass as a Bioenergy Crop Switchgrass Fuel Yields Bountiful Energy Switchgrass A Living Solar Battery Roger Samson Online reprint USDA Studies Switchgrass for Ethanol and Energy Production Switchgrass as an Alternative Energy crop European Union study on Switchgrass feasibility Keshwani D R Cheng J J 2009 Switchgrass for Bioethanol and Other Value Added Applications A Review Bioresource Technology 100 4 1515 1523 doi 10 1016 j biortech 2008 09 035 PMID 18976902 S2CID 10337157 Switchgrass images Archive of Central Texas Plants Switchgrass images Has closeup photos of spikelets Grass Makes Better Ethanol than Corn Does Scientific American article on the potential use of switchgrass for biofuels Taxonomic description in GrassBase Panicum virgatum Crops Photos Switchgrass fr Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panicum virgatum amp oldid 1195608014, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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