Colby and McCarter Honored with Employee Awards of Excellence

NEWS RELEASE – April 22, 2009

Two CNR staff members are the winners of 2009 College of Natural Resources Awards of Excellence.  The Awards of Excellence recognize the accomplishments and achievements of permanent NC State employees who do not hold faculty rank.

 Ms. Susan Colby (SPA Award) is the Program Assistant for the Professional Golf Management Program, the creator and advisor for the PGM student ambassador group, and serves as print and web communications co-ordinator for the Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism Management.

Ms. Kelley McCarter (EPA Award) is the Program Coordinator for the Forestry and Environmental Outreach Program where she coordinates the logistics of FEOP's many credit and non-credit courses, workshops, conferences and seminars for forestry and natural resources professionals; educational opportunitites for the general public, landowners, and professionals; and public forums for the exchange of information and ideas on natural resources management.

Both Colby and McCarter were recognized for their hardwork, dedication, and innovation far above the expectations for their respective positions. 

 "Susan and Kelley demonstrate the kind of outstanding professionalism that makes the College of Natural Resources a great place to work and learn," says CNR Dean Robert Brown. "The staff in our college are vital to our success in every arena – teaching, research and extension.  We are pleased to have this opportunity to recognize the impressive accomplishments of these two members of our outstanding staff."

Colby and McCarter will be among forty-eight college/unit Awards for Excellence winners who will be honored at a social at the Talley Student Center Ballroom on June 9 at 3:00 p.m.   The reception is open to the public.  Both recipients receive $250 and eight hours of paid leave and are eligible to receive an additional award if chosen as one of the five distinguished employees to receive the University Awards for Excellence.

 For more information on the Awards of Excellence programs visit:   http://www7.acs.ncsu.edu/hr/benefits/easummary.asp

Dr. Leung named President-elect of Sigma Iota Rho – Eta Chapter

NEWS RELEASE – April 22, 2009

The NC State College of Natural Resources is proud to announce that Dr. Yu-Fai Leung has been named president-elect of the Eta Chapter of Sigma Iota Rho, the NC State Chapter of the National Honor Society for International Studies.

Dr Leung is an associate professor in the NC State Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism Management who works primarily in the areas of recreation ecology and impact assessment and in park planning and management.   

For more information about Dr Leung visit http://cnr.ncsu.edu/prtm/faculty/Leung.html 

For more information on the Eta Chapter of Sigma Iota Rho visit http://mis.chass.ncsu.edu/sigmaiotarho.htm

Tiny Super-Plant Can Clean Up Hog Farms and Be Used For Ethanol Production

NEWS RELEASE:

Media Contact(s)

Dr. Jay J. Cheng, (919) 515-6733

Dr. Anne Stomp, (919) 444-3559

Matt Shipman, News Services, (919) 515-6386

April 7, 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 Researchers at North Carolina State University have found that a tiny aquatic plant can be used to clean up animal waste at industrial hog farms and potentially be part of the answer for the global energy crisis. Their research shows that growing duckweed on hog wastewater can produce five to six times more starch per acre than corn, according to researcher Dr. Jay Cheng. This means that ethanol production using duckweed could be "faster and cheaper than from corn," says fellow researcher Dr. Anne-Marie Stomp.

"We can kill two birds – biofuel production and wastewater treatment – with one stone – duckweed," Cheng says. Starch from duckweed can be readily converted into ethanol using the same facilities currently used for corn, Cheng adds.

Corn is currently the primary crop used for ethanol production in the United States.  However, its use has come under fire in recent years because of concerns about the amount of energy used to grow corn and commodity price disruptions resulting from competition for corn between ethanol manufacturers and the food and feed industries. Duckweed presents an attractive, non-food alternative that has the potential to produce significantly more ethanol feedstock per acre than corn; exploit existing corn-based ethanol production processes for faster scale-up; and turn pollutants into a fuel production system. The duckweed system consists of shallow ponds that can be built on land unsuitable for conventional crops, and is so efficient it generates water clean enough for re-use. The technology can utilize any nutrient-rich wastewater, from livestock production to municipal wastewater.

Large-scale hog farms manage their animal waste by storing it in large "lagoons" for biological treatment. Duckweed utilizes the nutrients in the wastewater for growth, thus capturing these nutrients and preventing their release into the environment. In other words, Cheng says, "Duckweed could be an environmentally friendly, economically viable feedstock for ethanol."

"There's a bias in agriculture that all the crops that could be discovered have been discovered," Stomp says, "but duckweed could be the first of the new, 21st century crops. In the spirit of George Washington Carver, who turned peanuts into a major crop, Jay and I are on a mission to turn duckweed into a new industrial crop, providing an innovative approach to alternative fuel production."

Cheng, a professor of biological and agricultural engineering, co-authored the research with Stomp, associate professor of forestry, and post-doctoral research associate, Mike Yablonski. The research, which is funded by the North Carolina Biofuels Center, was presented March 21 at the annual conference of the Institute of Biological Engineering in Santa Carla, Calif.

Cheng and Stomp are currently establishing a pilot-scale project to further investigate the best way to establish a large-scale system for growing duckweed on animal wastewater, and then harvesting and drying the duckweed.

-shipman-

Note to editors: The presentation abstract follows.

"Growing High-Starch Duckweed on Wastewater for Ethanol Production"

Authors: Jay J. Cheng, Anne-M. Stomp and Mike Yablonski, North Carolina State University

Presented: March 21, 2009, at the 14th Annual Institute of Biological Engineering Conference in Santa Carla, Calif.

Abstract: Recently there has been a great drive to significantly expand fuel ethanol production in the United States to reduce our dependency on foreign oil. Currently corn is a primary crop for fuel ethanol production in the US. However, it is clear that tremendously increasing ethanol production from corn would not be practical because the ethanol industry would then compete for limited resource of corn against the food and feed industries. Thus, additional sources of fermentable carbohydrates are needed to meet the expanding fuel ethanol demand. Our research focuses on exploring a new feedstock for ethanol production – duckweed. Duckweed or Lemnaceae is an aquatic plant that has a great potential for fuel ethanol production. Duckweed proliferates through clonal, vegetative budding of new fronds and accumulates biomass faster than field crops, almost 28 times faster than corn. Duckweed can be grown on wastewaters for nutrient management and biomass production. Our current research focuses on development of a system to use animal wastewater to produce high-starch duckweed that is then converted to ethanol using existing starch-based conversion technologies. Duckweed starch content is highly variable, ranging from 3-75% of dry weight depending on species and individual stains. A number of parameters including nutrient profiles and concentration play a major role in starch accumulation.  In our laboratory study, a North Carolina strain of duckweed, Spirodela polyrrhiza, could be grown on anaerobically treated swine wastewater with a starch content of 45.8% (dry weight). Enzymatic hydrolysis of the high-starch duckweed biomass with amylases yielded a hydrolysate with a reducing sugar content corresponding to 50.9% of the original dry duckweed biomass. Fermentation of this solution using yeast gave an ethanol yield of 25.8% of the dry duckweed biomass. These results indicate that duckweed biomass can produce appreciable quantity of starch that can be readily fermented into ethanol. Duckweed has a great potential for the development of an environmentally friendly, economically viable ethanol production technology. A pilot-scale duckweed system with approximately 600m2 water surface is being established on a commercial farm to investigate the scale-up factors on growing duckweed on animal wastewater, duckweed harvesting and drying, and economic analysis. Progress of the pilot system will be presented at the meeting.

Dr. Orlando Rojas Named 2009 Finland Distinguished Professor

NEWS RELEASE

Media Contact:  Tilla Fearn, NC State College of Natural Resources, (919) 513-4644

March 20, 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Dr. Orlando Rojas in Wood & Paper Science has been named a Finland Distinguished Professor by the Finland Distinguished Professor Program (FiDiPro). FiDiPro enables distinguished researchers, both foreign and expatriates, to work and team up with the "best of the best" in Finnish academic research. The goal of the FiDiPro is to raise the level of scientific knowledge in Finland by supporting research institutes and creating international cooperation. Dr Rojas' Finnish host will be Helsinki University of Technology, Department of Forest Products Technology, Professor Janne Laine.

Dr. Rojas specializes in the study of lignocellulosic materials.

FiDiPro project: Value-added materials and functional structures from lignocellulosics
The general goal of this project is to use abundant renewable forest resources and by-products (cellulose and lignin) as precursors for the production of high performance materials and structures (and their functionalized versions) and also as substrates for a biologically inspired synthesis of catalysts for clean energy. The future economic viability of the forest cluster companies could be greatly enhanced by extending plant-based materials for new, high-value, high-volume products that can be effectively recycled.

New Tourism Extension Website Brings Resources to Local Communities

NEWS RELEASE

March 27, 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tourism Extension at NC State University is proud to announce the launch of their new website!  The Tourism Extension website is designed to benefit NC Cooperative Extension Agents and other professionals working throughout North Carolina.  The overall purpose of the website is to provide useful information on a variety of tourism-related topics, to identify additional resources, and to provide a forum to share current news and information related to tourism and extension within North Carolina and beyond. 

Be sure to save this site in your favorites and visit often as new information and resources will be added on a regular basis. Visit the new Tourism Extension website at www.ncsu.edu/tourismextension/.

For more information contact:
Stacy Tomas or Samatha Rozier at tourismextension@ncsu.edu