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Contents
Science Update
$3 Million Boost Against Wheat Scab
ARS has distributed the first of the
new $3 million annual funding increases for research to combat wheat scab. The
new funds build on $500,000 that ARS has allocated annually since 1997. Caused
by Fusarium fungi, wheat scab shrivels kernels of wheat and other
cereals. It also produces toxins that can ruin the crop's value for food or
feed products. From 1991 to 1997, U.S. farmers lost 470 million bushels of
wheat to scab.
ARS distributed the new funds to university and ARS researchers who are part
of the U.S. Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative. It is a consortium of about two
dozen universities supported by 40 wheat- and barley-related organizations and
many individuals. This year, about half of the $3 million increase went to ARS
and university labs in Minnesota and the Dakotas, the hardest hit states.
Researchers will address issues in food and feed safety, biological control,
pesticide use, and crop breeding. This past spring, for the upper Midwest, ARS
and the University of Minnesota released McVey, a new, high-yielding spring
wheat with improved scab resistance. Farmers may plant the new variety as early
as next year.
Robert H. Busch,
USDA-ARS Plant Science
Research Unit, St. Paul, Minnesota; phone (612) 625-1975.
The Big Book of Plant Names
A new book on nearly 10,000 economically important plants greatly expands on
a long-popularand out-of-printreference. The new, 784-page volume
is World Economic Plants: A Standard Reference. It stems from USDA's
Agricultural Handbook No. 505 that was first published in 1977. World
Economic Plants provides information needed by scientists and others who
study, identify, or classify crops, weeds, poisonous plants, and plants with
medical and industrial potential. The book supplies accepted scientific names,
important synonyms, common names, economic uses, and geographical distribution.
It was published under a cooperative research and development agreement between
ARS and CRC Press of Boca Raton, Florida. Details on purchasing the book,
priced at $125, can be found online at
http://www.crcpress.com/catalog/2119.htm.
John W. Wiersema,
USDA-ARS Systematic Botany and Mycology
Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland; phone (301) 504-9181.
Turning Old Tires Into New Products
By adapting some cotton ginning technology, ARS scientists created a new way
to recycle more of the 265 million tires discarded in this country each year.
Recycled rubber can be used to make new tires, along with truck bed liners,
running tracks, shoes, carpet backing, brake pads and shoes, asphalt, water
hoses, floor mats, and other goods.
Currently, companies typically cut tires into small pieces. Then they
pulverize the rubber and polyester/nylon fiber componentseither by
grinding or by using a freezing treatment and a hammer mill. This recovers over
half the rubber, but the rest goes to landfills. Recovered rubber, or
"crumb," is worth about $500 per ton. The scientists' two
patent-pending methods would allow the companies to recoveras separate
materialsthe fiber, or "fluff," as well as the rubber crumb.
Fluff is valued at about $475 a ton. Several companies are considering
licensing the technology.
W. Stanley Anthony,
USDA-ARS Cotton Ginning
Research Unit, Stoneville, Mississippi; phone (601) 686-3094.
Dual-Purpose Durum
Bread loaves with a slightly nutty taste and a cream-colored interior could
soon be baked largely from durum wheat flour. Durum is typically used in making
pasta. But durum suited for breads would give growers a new market. ARS
researchers are developing durum breeding lines for both kinds of products.
Meanwhile, they devised a baking procedure to yield pan bread made mostly from
durum.
Until now, bread flour of more than 25 percent durum did not produce light,
airy loaves. But 1-pound loaves of 60 percent durum flour, baked with a
modified version of the industry's sponge-dough method, had about the same
volume as loaves of 100 percent hard red spring wheat flour. The gluten content
of wheat flour is key to good loaf volume and to dough flexibility and
strength. During the first, or sponge, stage, commercial bakers mix 70 percent
of the flour with water and yeast and let the mixture ferment. For the dough
stage, the sponge is further mixed with water, sugar, nonfat dry milk,
shortening, salt, and the remaining flour. The scientists used 60 percent durum
flour and 10 percent spring wheat flour for the sponge stage. The remaining 30
percentfor the dough stagewas spring wheat flour.
Gary A. Hareland,
USDA-ARS Hard Red Spring and Durum
Wheat Quality Laboratory, Fargo, North Dakota; phone (701) 231-7728.
"Science Update" was published in the
August 1999 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
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