Abstract:
For Nova Scotia, the adoption of green fuels represents an opportunity to transition away
from its high emission, coal-based energy system. Namely, a NS bioindustry could be
facilitated by its agricultural expertise and abundant marginal land. The objective of this
research was to determine whether bioenergy crops could be established on Nova Scotian
marginal land. Two sites were created in East Gore, Hants County and Skye Glen, Inverness
County. At these sites, four biomass crops (Miscanthus, switchgrass, poplar, willow) were
planted and treated with one of three soil amendments (Ascophyllum nodosum seaweed
extract, paper mill sludge, anaerobic digestate) or a no-additives control. Growth
parameters were measured in the following fall/spring. After analyzing these data through
ANOVA, it was found that poplar and Miscanthus treated with paper mill sludge possessed
higher growth parameters (relative to other tested crops) consistently across sites.
Conversely, switchgrass generally had lower yields in comparison.
Description:
1 online resource (vii, 407, 6 unnumbered pages) : colour illustrations, charts (chiefly colour), graphs
Includes abstract and appendix.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 174-205).