A bioenergy field trial in Wisconsin is evaluating
how switchgrass, Miscanthus, corn stover, poplar trees, and native prairie grasses stack up against each other.
Not exact matches
Bartley is among a number of researchers investigating
how research on plants can be applied to grasses like sorghum and
switchgrass.
A recent study from the Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center and published in Environmental Research Letters looks at
how efficiently «second generation» biofuel crops — perennial, non-food crops such as
switchgrass or native grasses — use rainwater and
how these crops affect overall water balance.
I asked the teacher of the
switchgrass students
how she knew if her students were learning any chemistry.