White Rot Fungus Boosts Ethanol Production From Corn Stalks, Cobs and Leaves

ACS

Scientists are reporting new evidence that a white rot fungus shows promise in the search for a way to use waste corn stalks, cobs and leaves – rather than corn itself – to produce ethanol to extend supplies of gasoline. Their study on using the fungus to break down the tough cellulose and related material in this so-called “corn stover” to free up sugars for ethanol fermentation appears in the ACS’ journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research.

white rot fungus Yebo Li and colleagues explain that corn ethanol supplies are facing a crunch because corn is critical for animal feed and food. They note that the need for new sources of ethanol has shifted attention to using stover, which is the most abundant agricultural residue in the U.S., estimated at 170-256 million tons per year. The challenge is to find a way to break down tough cellulose material in cobs, stalks and leaves – so that sugars inside can be fermented to ethanol. Previous studies indicated that the microbe Ceriporiopsis subvermispora, known as a white rot fungus, showed promise for breaking down the tough plant material prior to treatment with enzymes to release the sugars. To advance that knowledge, they evaluated how well the fungus broke down the different parts of corn stover and improved the sugar yield.

Treating stover with the white rot fungus for one month enabled them to extract up to 30 percent more sugar from the leaves and 50 percent more from the stalks and cobs. Because corn leaves are useful for controlling soil erosion when left in the field, harvesting only the cobs and stalks for ethanol production may make the most sense in terms of sustainable agriculture, the report suggests.

Add a comment
  • to get your picture next to your comment (not a member yet?).
  • Posted on July 21, 2012. Listed in:

    Pledge to do these related actions

    Food for Change: eat only plant-based foods for one whole DAY, 187°

    Simply experience what it's like. Make sure to consume lots of vegetables and fruit, not ...

    Commit to not eating any fish on the WWF's red list, 183°

    Seafood is healthy, and one of humanity's great sources of protein. If we are to ...

    Veggie Garden, 312°

    Cleared a large swathe of overgrown mess at the end of the garden and put ...

    Follow these related projects

    One Million Gardens

    All Over the Place, United States

    Featured Companies & Orgs