By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Researchers at Mississippi State University are
collecting samples of cottonwood trees in the Southeast to
preserve the genetic diversity of this species. Eastern
cottonwood is an important contributor to forestry in the
United States and other countries, with attributes that make
it potentially even more important in the future. Timber
industries have traditionally been attracted to it because
it is fast-growing and can be grown from
cuttings. Recently,
Eastern cottonwood has been identified as the most promising
tree species in the eastern United States for biofuels
production. Sam
Land, forest geneticist in MSU's Forest and Wildlife
Research Center, has teamed up with the U.S. Department of
Energy, U.S. Forest Service, and the pulp and paper
industries to study these trees. The work was prompted by
the DOE's Biofuels Feedstock Development Program. "We're
trying to study and preserve the natural genetic diversity
of native trees and develop genetically improved trees,"
Land said. "This is a classic tree improvement
program." Cottonwoods
are a hardwood, but softer than most. They are also very
fast-growing, reaching 8 to 9 inches in diameter and 40 to
50 feet tall in five years. They are uniform trees and can
make a profitable farm crop. In the
1970s, the U.S. Forest Service at Stoneville began
researching cottonwood genetics and released some new
varieties. They closed this project in 1981, and Land
salvaged what he could of their material and began
collecting his own samples. "My
objective was to get a collection of Eastern cottonwoods
from throughout their natural range in the southeastern
United States. This includes North Carolina and Florida to
central Texas and up to southern Missouri and Kentucky,"
Land said. "This
collection will preserve samples of genes in the native
population from being lost to urban sprawl or bottomland
flooding by dams and reservoirs," he said. "The collection
also will provide the plant material needed for studies of
the basic biology of this species and for tree improvement
breeding." Land
divided the Southeast into six smaller subregions, with
three east and two west of the Mississippi River and one in
the Lower Mississippi River Valley. Samples already had been
collected from the two sites west of the river, and from the
river valley. Land's group located 72 natural stands in the
three other subregions, with 24 stands identified from each
subregion. Seeds
were collected and cuttings made from individual trees in
each subregion. Orchards and nurseries were established in
Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida to house samples of each
of these trees. Cuttings provide clones of the trees from
which they are taken, while breeding generates seeds that
grow new trees not identical to either parent. "Orchards
and nurseries are central repositories of natural
diversity," Land said. Four
field trials are being conducted to determine the fastest
growing and most disease-resistant cottonwood varieties.
These sites are located in south-central Florida, southeast
Missouri, west-central Alabama and northeastern North
Carolina. "We're
trying to find the best families and make crosses of these
trees to improve them genetically," Land said. "With
cottonwood's ability to propagate by cuttings, you can find
the best individuals and multiply them many
times." By
collecting and breeding trees, researchers are trying to
preserve the genetic diversity that exists and find the best
cottonwoods for a variety of uses. A primary goal is to
develop a fast-growing source of cellulose that can be
converted to fuels. "We want
to find rapidly grown trees to produce wood that can provide
wood alcohol, or ethanol, for fuels," Land said. "Ethanol is
an alternative, renewable source for fuels." Land
said there is a growing demand for ethanol, especially in
light of the recent surge in crude oil prices reminiscent of
the oil crisis of the 1970s. "The
primary argument is to get away from dependence on foreign
oil," Land said. "It may cost 10 to 20 cents more at the gas
pump to use ethanol, but the process for producing it is
clean for the atmosphere and is not affected by
international politics." The
traditional fuels of oil and coal are non-renewable. As they
burn, they release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Trees
are renewable and although they release carbon dioxide when
burned, they use more of this gas from the atmosphere as
they grow. Land said this process reduces the carbon dioxide
responsible for global warning. "Timber
companies also are interested in developing fast- growing
cottonwoods for pulp and paper," Land said. "Both the timber
and energy production companies are interested in the
improvement of similar traits such as disease resistance and
rapid growth." The
economic impact of developing genetically-improved trees
will depend on how widely the improved material is used. As
the market for these wood crops increases, the economic
impact will also increase. Land
said cottonwood is expected to become more important to
agriculture in the coming decades since growing these trees
in an intensive five-year rotation can provide fiber, store
energy "on the stump" and improve the
environment. Released:
Nov. 27, 2000
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
Study Saves And
Uses Trees' Natural Variation
Contact: Dr. Sam Land, (662) 325-2786
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:26
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw00/001127sl.htm
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