Abstract

In commercially grown Miscanthus × giganteus, despite imposing a yield penalty, postwinter harvests improve quality criteria for thermal conversion and crop sustainability through remobilization of nutrients to the underground rhizome. We examined 16 Miscanthus genotypes with different flowering and senescence times for variation in N, P, K, moisture, ash, Cl and Si contents, hypothesizing that early flowering and senescence could result in improved biomass quality and/or enable an earlier harvest of biomass (in autumn at peak yield). Ideal crop characteristics at harvest are low N and P to reduce future fertilizer inputs, low K and Cl to reduce corrosion in boilers, low moisture to reduce spoilage and transportation costs, and low Si and ash to reduce slagging and consequent operational downtime. Stems and leaves were harvested during summer, autumn and then the following spring after overwinter ripening. In spring, stem contents of N were 30–60 mg kg−1, P were 203–1132 mg kg−1, K were 290–4098 mg kg−1, Cl were 10–23 mg kg−1 and moisture were 12–38%. Notably, late senescence resulted in increased N, P, K, Cl, moisture and ash contents, and should therefore be avoided for thermochemical conversion. Flowering and senescence led to overall improved combustion quality, where flowered genotypes tended towards lower P, K, Cl and moisture contents; marginally less, or similar, N, Si and ash contents; and a similar higher heating value, compared to those that had not flowered. Such genotypes could potentially be harvested in the autumn. However, one genotype that did not flower in our trial exhibited sufficiently low N and K content in autumn to meet the EN plus wood pellet standards for those traits, and some of the lowest P, moisture and ash contents in our trial, and is thus a target for future research and breeding.

Highlights

  • Miscanthus is a perennial energy crop with C4 metabolism

  • We examined 16 Miscanthus genotypes with different flowering and senescence times for variation in N, P, K, moisture, ash, Cl, and Si contents, hypothesising that early flowering and senescence could result in improved biomass quality and/or enable an earlier harvest of biomass, i.e. in autumn at peak yield

  • Flowering and senescence led to overall improved combustion quality, where flowered genotypes tended towards lower P, K, Cl, and moisture contents; marginally less, or similar, N, Si and ash contents; and a similar higher heating value (HHV), compared to those that had not flowered

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Summary

Introduction

Miscanthus is a perennial energy crop with C4 metabolism It can produce high yields from low inputs across multiple environments in temperate regions as well as in the tropics (McCalmont et al, 2015). The most cultivated Miscanthus species for biomass production in Europe and North America is M. x giganteus, which exhibits rapid growth, low mineral content, and high yield (Lewandowski & Kicherer, 1997, Linde-Laursen, 1993). M. x giganteus resulted from a cross in the wild between diploid M. sinensis (2n = 2x= 38) and tetraploid M. sacchariflorus (2n = 4x = 76) Greef and Deuter (1993), (Linde-Laursen, 1993, Rayburn et al, 2009) and is sterile, prohibiting improvement through breeding. The Miscanthus genus comprises 13 or so species (Greef & Deuter, 1993, Hodkinson et al, 1997) of high diversity, providing considerable genetic and phenotypic resources to improve Miscanthus both in terms of quality and quantity of harvested biomass. The crop is grown for heat and power, in the wider bioeconomy there is interest in its use for green chemistry (Parveen et al, 2011), biomaterials (Uihlein et al, 2008) and transport fuels (Brosse et al, 2012)

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