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Contents
Science Update
All Pollens Are Not Created Equal
Honey bees, like people, need variety in their diet. Sunflower pollen alone,
for example, won't supply bees with enough protein,
Agricultural Research Service scientists
discovered. While flower nectar supplies the insects with sugars, pollen
supplies protein as well as vitamins, minerals, and fats. But in a test, bees
lived 48 to 65 percent longer with a canola-pollen diet than with a sesame or
sunflower pollen diet.
High sunflower yield calls for healthy, effective pollinators, and bees love
sunflower pollen. But working in--and dining on pollen from--only the sunflower
field will probably weaken the bees as a result of undernourishment. Sunflower
growers can help the bees--and themselves. They can plant small areas of other
crops such as canola near sunflower fields. They can also leave some weeds and
wildflowers along field edges, beside ditches, or among rock outcroppings. Bees
that work indoors--in greenhouses--run a similar risk of nutrient deficiency.
To help, beekeepers can place protein supplements or high-protein pollen
patties in the hive. Justin O.
Schmidt, USDA-ARS Carl Hayden Bee
Research Center, Tucson, Arizona; phone (520) 670-6481, ext. 109.
Colon Cells for Cancer Screening
Physicians could have a new, reliable early warning system for colorectal
cancer within about 5 years. That new system would owe its origin to an ARS
scientist's technique for isolating live colon cells from stool samples. Colon
cancer accounts for some 14 percent of U.S. cancer deaths. It begins as
abnormal growths, or polyps, 3 to 5 years before a malignancy appears. With a
noninvasive screening technique, doctors could detect and remove polyps before
they turn cancerous--and patients could correct any contributing dietary
habits. The current noninvasive screening method checks for blood in fecal
smears. But it's plagued with false positives and negatives. Plus, a
"true" positive indicates an advanced tumor.
A different approach with potential is based on subtle changes in genes and
surface proteins of colon cells. A few years ago, an ARS scientist developed
the first method for isolating live, intact colon cells from the stool. Then,
he and a scientist at Sinai Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, found that CD44--a
telltale marker on other types of cancer cells--also appears on isolated colon
cells. Early this year, British researchers reported a strong correlation
between the amount of DNA in these cells and the presence of tumors. More
recently, Japanese researchers reported finding--on colon cells--variants of
CD44 that may be sensitive indicators of precancerous conditions.
Padmanabhan P. Nair, USDA-ARS
Beltsville Human Nutrition Research
Center, Beltsville, Maryland; phone (301) 504-8145.
Potato Vine Silage Good for Cattle
Harvesting potato vines for silage to feed cattle can benefit the cattle,
potato growers, and environment, says agricultural engineer Richard E. Muck at
the U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center in Madison, Wisconsin. Potato vines are
normally killed with herbicides about 2 weeks before potatoes are harvested.
This practice prevents the leftover vines from providing a home to insects and
plant diseases that could damage the next year's crop. Another benefit of vine
harvest to growers is that potato skins "set" faster. The skin of the
potato tuber is easily scuffed, peeled, or scraped unless it has time to
thicken and harden after harvesting. This process actually accelerates if the
vines are removed all at once, according to a plant pathologist at the
University of Wisconsin.
Muck, who is with ARS, says, "Potato vines can be turned into silage in
combination with other crops to produce a high-protein, low-fiber cattle feed.
The savings for U.S. potato growers could be as much as $42 million
annually." At least 80 percent of the 1.3 million U.S. potato acreage
receives a single vine-killing herbicide application at a cost of $35 an acre.
The other 20 percent may receive a double dose costing $50 an acre. Feeding the
vines to animals will mean less herbicides in the environment and less
out-of-pocket expenditure. Vines contain 85 to 90 percent water. So Muck says
the best method for making silage from the watery vines is to mix them with
drier crops such as chopped alfalfa hay, barley, and chopped whole-plant corn.
Richard E. Muck, USDA-ARS
U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center,
Madison, Wisconsin; phone (608) 264-5245.
"Science Update" was published in the October 1998 issue of
Agricultural Research magazine. Click here to see this
issue's table of contents.
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