Title: Growing Grass for Energy
1Growing Grass for Energy
- Vance N. Owens
- South Dakota State University
2What is Lignocellulosic Biomass?
- Biomass is all plant and plant-derived materials
including animal manure. - Lignocellulosic biomass is the nonstarch, fibrous
part of plant materials, woody, and generally
inedible portions of plant matter.
3Potential Biomass Resources
- Crop residues (e.g., corn stover, wheat straw)
- Grain (e.g., corn, canola)
- Woody crops (e.g., hybrid poplar)
- Forest resources
- Other agricultural waste(e.g., manure)
- Perennial grasses (switchgrass, big bluestem,
prairie cordgrass, etc.)
4Why Perennial Grass for Biomass?
- Advantages
- Reduced fuel, pesticides, and fertilizer
- Grown on land not suitable for annual crops
- Soil and water conservation/quality
- Carbon sequestration/reduce global warming
- Wildlife habitat
- Issues
- Harvest, storage, and transportation
- Processing
- Pretreatment
5Key Attributes of Promising Perennial Energy Crops
- Native or noninvasive
- High biomass yield potential
- Established with seed or relatively inexpensive
vegetative propagules - High nutrient and water use efficiency
- Broad genetic variability
- Persistent
- Harvestable with standard agricultural equipment
- Environmental benefits
6Switchgrass
- Native, warm-season, perennial
- Eastern 2/3 of North America
- Tall grass prairie from Canada to Central America
- Extensive genetic variation related to latitude
- Relatively easy to establish good seed producer
- Long-lived sod-former
- Resistant to lodging
- Wildlife habitat
7Switchgrass biomass left standing over winter
traps snow and provides cover for wildlife
December 1, 2005 Brookings, SD
8Switchgrass Biomass After Snow Melt March 30, 2006
9Switchgrass managed for biomass production
provides habitat for white-tailed deer,
pheasants, and other wildlife
October 2004 Dakota Lakes Research Farm Near
Pierre, SD
10Native grass monocultures and mixtures
- Monoculture stands of switchgrass, big bluestem,
and indiangrass versus two- and three-way
mixtures of these species
Switchgrass
Big bluestem
Indiangrass
11Big bluestem
- Greens up later than switchgrass
- Dominant species of tallgrass prairie
- Excellent quality and highly palatable
- Leaf growth/soil cover
12Indiangrass
- Prominent species in tallgrass prairie
- Excellent quality if grazed/hayed before heading
- Good wildlife habitat
- Persistence may be an issue in northern Great
Plains
13Switchgrass/big bluestem mix
14Prairie cordgrass
- Tall growing
- Native C4 grass
- Low, wet areas
- High yield potential
- Forage
- Biomass energy
- Season-long growth
- Widely distributed
15Why prairie cordgrass?
Season-long growth
Widely adapted
Source U.S. Department of Energy Genome Programs
(http//genomics.energy.gov.)
16Prairie cordgrass adaptation to marginal land
17Prairie cordgrass on the landscape
18Prairie cordgrass growth habit (Fall 2008)
19Prairie cordgrass management and production
- Seeding and establishment
- Seeding rate
- Equipment
- Seed treatment
- Seeding time
- Management
- Fertilizer
- Chemicals
- Harvest time
- Persistence
20Prairie cordgrass yield potential
Source Arvid Boe
21Prairie cordgrass response to N (Locken Farms, 29
Oct. 2008)
NS
NS
22Prairie cordgrass harvest (Locken Farms, 29 Oct.
2008)
North Unit
South Unit
23Biomass Work in South Dakota
- Harvest management of long-established
switchgrass and mixed stands enrolled in or
managed similarly to CRP
24Effect of harvest timing (anthesis and killing
frost) and harvest frequency (every year and
alternate years) on total and switchgrass biomass
production in Gregory Co., SD for 2001-2002 and
2003-2004 growth cycles.
25Harvest Timing Effect on Switchgrass
Persistence(Moody County, South Dakota)
Harvested in August 2001-2004
26Harvest Timing Effect on Switchgrass
Persistence(Near Pierre, South Dakota)
Dakota Lakes, Aug. 6, 2006
Harvested in March or April 2001-2005
Harvested in July 2000-2005
27Other On-going Biomass Work at SDSU
- Species comparisons (switchgrass, big bluestem,
and intermediate wheatgrass) - Harvest management (forage, biomass-fall, and
biomass-spring) - Landscape position (backslope and footslope)
- Manure application
- Seed production
28Summary
- Conversion
- Financial support from US DOE should help
companies demonstrate commercial potential of
biomass to biofuel - The Biorefinery Concept integrates biomass
conversion processes - Production
- Mixtures of perennial grasses may provide
environmental benefits but switchgrass helped
maintain yields - Native grasses such as switchgrass and prairie
cordgrass utilize N efficiently - Proper harvest timing is critical for sustainable
production of switchgrass - Certain species may allow for winter carryover
better than others - All biomass is local
29Questions