Fast-growing willow shrub named 'Millbrook'
Abstract
A distinct female cultivar of Salix purpurea.times.Salix miyabeana named 'Millbrook', characterized by rapid stem growth producing 9% more woody biomass than one of its parents (`SX64`) and 2% more biomass than a current production cultivar ('SV1'). 'Millbrook' produced greater than 2-fold more stem biomass than two other current production cultivars, 'SX67' and 'SX61'. 'Millbrook' can be planted from dormant stem cuttings, produces multiple stems after coppice, and the stem biomass can be harvested when the plant is dormant. In the spring following harvest, the plant will re-sprout very vigorously, producing new stems that can be harvested after two to four years of growth. This harvest cycle can be repeated several times. The stem biomass can be chipped and burned as a source of renewable energy, generating heat and/or electricity. 'Millbrook' displays a low incidence of rust disease.
- Inventors:
- Issue Date:
- Research Org.:
- Oak Ridge National Lab. (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States); State Univ. of New York (SUNY), Albany, NY (United States)
- Sponsoring Org.:
- USDOE
- OSTI Identifier:
- 1176676
- Patent Number(s):
- PP17646
- Application Number:
- 11/244,636
- Assignee:
- The Research Foundation of State University of New York (Albany, NY)
- DOE Contract Number:
- AC05-00OR22725
- Resource Type:
- Patent
- Resource Relation:
- Patent File Date: 2005 Oct 06
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
- Subject:
- 09 BIOMASS FUELS; 59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Citation Formats
Abrahamson, Lawrence P., Kopp, Richard F., Smart, Lawrence B., and Volk, Timothy A. Fast-growing willow shrub named 'Millbrook'. United States: N. p., 2007.
Web.
Abrahamson, Lawrence P., Kopp, Richard F., Smart, Lawrence B., & Volk, Timothy A. Fast-growing willow shrub named 'Millbrook'. United States.
Abrahamson, Lawrence P., Kopp, Richard F., Smart, Lawrence B., and Volk, Timothy A. Tue .
"Fast-growing willow shrub named 'Millbrook'". United States. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1176676.
@article{osti_1176676,
title = {Fast-growing willow shrub named 'Millbrook'},
author = {Abrahamson, Lawrence P. and Kopp, Richard F. and Smart, Lawrence B. and Volk, Timothy A.},
abstractNote = {A distinct female cultivar of Salix purpurea.times.Salix miyabeana named 'Millbrook', characterized by rapid stem growth producing 9% more woody biomass than one of its parents (`SX64`) and 2% more biomass than a current production cultivar ('SV1'). 'Millbrook' produced greater than 2-fold more stem biomass than two other current production cultivars, 'SX67' and 'SX61'. 'Millbrook' can be planted from dormant stem cuttings, produces multiple stems after coppice, and the stem biomass can be harvested when the plant is dormant. In the spring following harvest, the plant will re-sprout very vigorously, producing new stems that can be harvested after two to four years of growth. This harvest cycle can be repeated several times. The stem biomass can be chipped and burned as a source of renewable energy, generating heat and/or electricity. 'Millbrook' displays a low incidence of rust disease.},
doi = {},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {2007},
month = {4}
}