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ARS Home » Midwest Area » Madison, Wisconsin » U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center » Cell Wall Biology and Utilization Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #282931

Title: The ruminant animal as a natural biomass-conversion platform and a source of bioconversion agents

Author
item Weimer, Paul

Submitted to: Book Chapter
Publication Type: Book / Chapter
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/13/2013
Publication Date: 1/9/2014
Citation: Weimer, P.J. 2014. The ruminant animal as a natural biomass-conversion platform and a source of bioconversion agents. In: Sun, J., Ding, S.-Y., Peterson, J.D., editors. Biological Conversion of Biomass for Fuels and Chemicals: Explorations from Natural Utilization Systems. London: Royal Society of Chemistry. p. 248-281.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: In terms of a number of operational metrics, the ruminant animal -- particularly the grazing cow -- represents the pinnacle of a cellulosic biomass processing system. The active conversion of cellulosic biomass is assisted by an effective physical pretreatment of the biomass by the cow. This pretreated biomass is fermented by a complex anaerobic microbial community, primarily in a specialized digestive organ, the rumen. Fermentation of the non-lignin components of the feed (carbohydrates, protein, nucleic acids, and some lipids) yields methane, carbon dioxide, and a mixture of volatile fatty acids ([VFA], C2-C6 monocarboxylic acids), the latter of which retain about two-thirds of the energy of the feed and are used by the host for energy and biosynthetic reactions. The rumen itself displays many of the properties of a bioreactor in a cellulose biorefinery, including high solids loading, temperature and pH control, adequate mixing, biphasic continuous flow, and absorptive removal of energetic products. Because the ruminal fermentation can be readily conducted in bioreactors under non-aseptic conditions, it may represent a practical route to fuels production if the energy-rich VFA products can be chemically converted to more practical liquid or gaseous fuels. Several useful co-products of these fermentations have also been identified.