2 resultados para wood transport
em Digital Commons - Michigan Tech
Resumo:
Auxin is a key regulator in plant growth and development. This dissertation examines the role of auxin and polar auxin transport in woody growth and development. Strategies of promoter reporter system, microarray expression analysis, transgenic modification, physiological assays, anatomical analysis, and histochemical/biochemical assays were employed to improve our understanding of auxin study in Populus. The results demonstrate various aspects of auxin regulation on shoot growth, root development, wood formation, and gravitropism in woody tissues. We describe the behavior of the DR5 reporter system for measuring auxin concentrations and response in stably transformed Populus trees. Our study shows that DR5 reporter system can be efficiently used in Populus to study auxin biology at a cellular resolution. We investigated the global gene expression in responding to auxin in Populus root. The results revealed groups of IBA up- and down- regulated genes involved in various biological processes including cell wall modification, root growth and lateral root formation, transporter activity and hormone crosstalk. We also verify two of the identified genes' function by transgenic modification in Populus, which encode auxin efflux carrier PtPIN9 and transcription factor PtERF72. We investigated the role of PtPIN9 in woody growth and development, especially in wood formation and gravitropic response in woody stem. We found that overexpressing PtPIN9 enhanced several growth parameters while suppression of PtPIN9 has inhibited tension wood formation. Our results show that PIN9 and other members from PIN family could be possible useful tools for increasing biomass productivity, wood quality, or in modifying plant form.
Resumo:
Renewable hydrocarbon biofuels are being investigated as possible alternatives to conventional liquid transportation fossil fuels like gasoline, kerosene (aviation fuel), and diesel. A diverse range of biomass feedstocks such as corn stover, sugarcane bagasse, switchgrass, waste wood, and algae, are being evaluated as candidates for pyrolysis and catalytic upgrading to produce drop-in hydrocarbon fuels. This research has developed preliminary life cycle assessments (LCA) for each feedstock-specific pathway and compared the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of the hydrocarbon biofuels to current fossil fuels. As a comprehensive study, this analysis attempts to account for all of the GHG emissions associated with each feedstock pathway through the entire life cycle. Emissions from all stages including feedstock production, land use change, pyrolysis, stabilizing the pyrolysis oil for transport and storage, and upgrading the stabilized pyrolysis oil to a hydrocarbon fuel are included. In addition to GHG emissions, the energy requirements and water use have been evaluated over the entire life cycle. The goal of this research is to help understand the relative advantages and disadvantages of the feedstocks and the resultant hydrocarbon biofuels based on three environmental indicators; GHG emissions, energy demand, and water utilization. Results indicate that liquid hydrocarbon biofuels produced through this pyrolysis-based pathway can achieve greenhouse gas emission savings of greater than 50% compared to petroleum fuels, thus potentially qualifying these biofuels under the US EPA RFS2 program. GHG emissions from biofuels ranged from 10.7-74.3 g/MJ from biofuels derived from sugarcane bagasse and wild algae at the extremes of this range, respectively. The cumulative energy demand (CED) shows that energy in every biofuel process is primarily from renewable biomass and the remaining energy demand is mostly from fossil fuels. The CED for biofuel range from 1.25-3.25 MJ/MJ from biofuels derived from sugarcane bagasse to wild algae respectively, while the other feedstock-derived biofuels are around 2 MJ/MJ. Water utilization is primarily from cooling water use during the pyrolysis stage if irrigation is not used during the feedstock production stage. Water use ranges from 1.7 - 17.2 gallons of water per kg of biofuel from sugarcane bagasse to open pond algae, respectively.