A2B—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, July 16,1983 Bleach ‘digests’ PEORIA, 111. Peroxide, a common bleach, predigests weeds and stems of crop plants in laboratory studies here and frees the components for possible use as feed and chemical raw materials, says a U.S. Department of Agriculture biochemist. Michael Gould says plant stems, stalks, straws, husks, hulls, cobs and wood contain more energy than seeds, but are little used for feed and chemical products because they are hard to digest. To free components that contain energy-yielding sugars, be treats plant parts 12 hours at room temperature with a solution of hydrogen peroxide that is about as alkaline as strong soap (pH 11.5). This peroxide is a common an tiseptic as well as a bleach. The treatment is like a ten derizing process. It frees com ponents in the plant parts for digestion by animals and microorganisms and for chemical reactions. “Changes in com position are accompanied by dramatic changes in physical properties,” Gould says. '‘During the wheat straw treatment, for instance, chopped straw disin tegrated into highly absorbent fibers with a pulp-like con sistency.” He also treated com stalks, husks and cobs, steins of soybeans and foxtail, a weed grass, kenaf stalks and oak wood shavings in the Agricultural Research Service studies. “Chemical energy from the peroxide makes the reaction go at room temperature,” Gould says. It saves the cost of fuel for heating. The treatment uses 1 part of hydrogen peroxide for about 4 parts of straw, a proportion that might be too costly in an industrial scale process, depending upon the value of the feed and industrial raw materials produced. “Fur thermore,” Gould says, “con tinuing studies may lead to ways to lower the peroxide requirement significantly.” This first study at the Northern Regional Research Center was designed not to develop an in dustrial process but to learn more about the plant components, cellulose, lignin and henucellulose, and how to get them out of the plant materials. Gould says a process “may be years in the future and with many variations from the present treatment, depending upon what we learn in further research. Right now, for example, we are studying how the LONG’S CORRUGIASS BINS FOR HIGH MOISTUr GRAIN STORAGE Long incorporates the strength of corrugated steel with the protec tive coating of glass to produce the most affordable, glass-lined, oxy gen limiting storage system for high moisture grain that you can buy. This feed system allows live stock growers to carry more ani mals on the same number of acres. OXYGEN LIMITING SYSTEM PROTECTS FBD AND CONTROLS THE FERMENTATION PROCESS Breather baj suspended in' roof of the bin provide an oxygen limitin; environment for the feed. This oxygen limiting feature controls the amount of fermentation that takes place within the bin. Feed stays fresh longer, feed losses are cut—both quality and quantity, and the need for dry ing equipment and heater fuel is eliminated. i Now Available From: "{ UN6S weeds & stems into feed peroxide changes the plant materials. We think it may react primarily with lignin to yield oxygen and oxidized lignin fragments. These new products may have potential as chemical raw materials.” Feeding trials of treated crop residues have started in cooperation with George C. Fahey, Jr., animal scientist at the University of Illinois. In the first studies, cattle appear to digest almost all of a treated straw product, primarily cellulose, in 24 hours, ITiey digest less than half of untreated straw even in 72 hours. “Complete use of the cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin from agricultural residues to produce cattle feed, simple sugars, alcohol and feedstock chemicals,” Gould says, “would be a positive factor in the overall economics of a com mercial peroxide process.” A commercial process could aid soil conservation, he says. It could furnish a market for grass or other soil-protecting crops planted in stead of row crops or cultivated crops on hillsides and strip-mined land. Cellulose is a fibrous substance Now available to farmers in this area.. Watsontown, PA 17777 PH: 717-538-2591 Ask About Our Financing Program making up mosi ot plant cell walls and plant products such as paper, cotton and linen. Gould says it is a source of the same glucose sugar obtained now from corn starch for making ethyl alcohol. If cellulose in crop residues can be made more digestible, it might be fed to cattle for producing meat and milk for people. Hemicellulose is another petrochemicals, Gould says, component of plant cell walls. It is ' Lignin gives strength to plant the source of another sugar, steins and protects the cellulose xylose, which can be converted to (Tlirn tn Pa> . *3l. alcohol by the yeast, Pachysolen, (Turn t 0 PageA3 ' Milton Hershey School Farms 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. July 19 HIGH MOISTURE GRAIN IS MORE MGESTIBUL MORE MUHBILMDMORE NUTRITIOUS The controlled fermentation pro- 1 cess helps livestock to utilize more of the nutrients available in the feed. 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