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HomeMy WebLinkAboutAgrilife Showcases Efforts e sh owcases AgilLif efforts 1-7 I. -*lira } ,,4 S'~ to I t r~ . t Ilk h sys d d ? r y Al s ¢ a,( - w'"~ kv} /.~aa...Y.''ir '•f4~~_a.t _ _ ra.. si+~.`:. S~~ _ .."Aurx _ _ Cutting-edge sorghum techniques on display for tour ou p By VIMAL PATEL I- oinaal.patel@theeaglexom Bill Rooney, a plant scientist and Texas A&M associate professor, gripped two types f sorghum as he explained how cutting dge breeding of the two led to the creation" 1 of the towering 12-foot-tall sorghum behind ~ ecies serves as feedstock *r ~V f~ ~:biT grass sppeer gy production. i he explanation came in a field next to , 60 outside College Station as Texas ;riLife researchers showed off the ency's ground-level bioenergy research to o -roup of reporters Thursday. The tour s caked through the nearby Texas A&M ` ` esearch Farm and included a demonstra ti on of a cotton module builder that lifted a fi ve-ton stack of chopped sorghum. The I¢ Thine showed how large amounts of the ristock could be stored and hauled. We need to have a diverse energy pro- 1n in our count ry,,> said Robert Avant Jr., rector of the AgriLife Research bioenergy Eagle photos by Stuart Villanueva Tram. "Bioenergy is just one of the tools Top: Alex Klattenhoff harvests stalks of energy sorghum to be analyzed at the Texas A&M AgriLife Research bioenergy program Thursday. Above: Robert Avant Jr., director of the bloener- BIOFUEL, Page A7 ;y program, leads a tour through a sorghum field. s N fH r+ g O A g A W a ° -3~:S~ ~(D R eo O 11 ID cn o 'Y m K CD > m~ D :J ~l 'q 0 ID 0 n• rL SD (D cG'o (K-D R3 p' ~ (D 'ID L ID MCD C' (D n CO <D I:D X CD +vA~ cn O.~ ~3' CD (n Al rt (n CD (D O to* CD n -e > W CD -9 VC (n (n A A' (D (D c~-r A C, A CD 0 (n cn "A -.0 En CD CD (D 0 g:L zCD 0 ~ p,~~Cn0m~ pA~ (D A ' r A ~ (D 'fir n (AD. P w frrt^ In 0 (D m• OZ ~A (D H A'~ .O.'• O C:l r.• S3. CTS AAA Sy O O (D (On - O 5s O r O m O cmn (1Q ° 'LS A CT' (D 0 0 1"~