Multitasking canola: A California miracle crop?

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TRACIE CONE | 12/ 3/08 05:15 AM | AP

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In this June 6, 2006 file photo, seed pods of a winter canola plant are silhouetted against the setting sun in Bob Schrock's field near Kiowa, Kan. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

FIVE POINTS, Calif. — A hardy but pedestrian plant is doing triple duty in California's agricultural heartland.

Farmers, water managers and agriculture researchers are closely watching an experiment using canola plants to absorb the salt from soil and water. The seeds are then crushed to extract oil for blending into environmentally friendly biodiesel.

If that were the end of the story, it would be just another case of farmers turning food into fuel. Yet at John Diener's Red Rock Ranch in this town 60 miles southwest of Fresno, the selenium-rich canola byproduct has an even higher calling: cattle feed naturally infused with an essential micro-nutrient.

"It's all part of what we have to try to do here to turn a profit," said Diener, who also grows almonds, tomatoes, grapes and corn on 5,000 acres.

In a trial, Diener's canola meal _ grown on once-fallow land _ was fed to dairy cows on the east side of the San Joaquin Valley, where selenium does not occur naturally and has to be added to food rations.

If the USDA's experiment is successful, officials say they will try to persuade other farmers in the region to start planting canola and other selenium-tolerant plants.

"These challenges force farmers to become smarter, and that's where science comes in," said Gary Banuelos of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's research station in Parlier, who manages test plots at Diener's ranch.

There is urgency to the effort because the ongoing drought and court-ordered water rationing to protect threatened fish species means farmers who have relied for decades on state and federal water deliveries via canals are being forced to turn to groundwater pumping.

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Irrigation water that passes through the soils picks up toxins as it percolates. And what to do with that drainage has vexed farmers, water managers and attorneys since the Bureau of Reclamation's drainage ponds at the Kesterson Reservoir closed in the 1980s after selenium caused often-fatal birth defects in millions of waterfowl.

Whether canola can cure the valley's groundwater and soil problems and become a viable crop is the challenge facing the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Diener installed drainage pipes under some of his fields to funnel the percolating water to the once-fallow areas where it irrigates canola and other salt-resistant plants such as prickly pear cactus and poplar trees.

If Diener, 57, can find a crop that can grow profitably using marginal soils and groundwater, he can increase his farm's productivity, help solve the drainage issue and perhaps make farming economically attractive to his adult children. The canola crop even yielded the oil that Diener blended with regular diesel to power his tractors.

For eight weeks this summer, Banuelos fed six pounds of the leftover canola meal each day to 36 Jersey and Holstein dairy cows at California State University at Fresno as part of their 100-pound rations, eliminating the need for adding the critical dietary salt.

The cows did well, Banuelos said, and produced a milk with trace amounts of selenium, a potential cancer-fighter that humans need in small amounts for good health.

Diener is readying his fields for his second crop of canola, with yields of $300 an acre that pale next to the $6,000 an acre he can earn growing almonds on his prime land. But the potential to sell it as a dietary supplement for some of the San Joaquin Valley's 2.5 million dairy cows holds promise.

"It's potentially the most valuable part of the process," Diener said. "In the end, we're capitalists."

___

On the Net:

U.S. Canola Association: http://www.uscanola.com

FIVE POINTS, Calif. — A hardy but pedestrian plant is doing triple duty in California's agricultural heartland. Farmers, water managers and agriculture researchers are closely watching an exper...
FIVE POINTS, Calif. — A hardy but pedestrian plant is doing triple duty in California's agricultural heartland. Farmers, water managers and agriculture researchers are closely watching an exper...
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The article “Multitasking Canola: A California Miracle Crop,” published December 3rd, makes a common, but unfortunate, connection between what the author correctly describes as “clean burning biodiesel” and the food we eat.

Readers are left with the mistaken impression that a fuel that is better for the environment and lessens our reliance on foreign oil is being produced at the expense of food meant for the family dining table. In fact, besides the promise of canola, biodiesel can be produced from inedible crops, even used restaurant grease. And soy, the most common feedstock used in biodiesel today, the extraction of the oil to be used in production yields protein rich soy meal for livestock and people. Further, biodiesel produced from America’s soybean farmers used less than 12 percent of the nation’s soybean harvest in 2007, and the 81 percent of each soybean that still went into protein markets had a positive impact on the net food supply.

Biodiesel is a truly sustainable fuel made right here at home. And while we appreciate the attention biodiesel receives for its environmental benefit; let’s make sure readers also know it doesn’t take food off the dinner table to reduce harmful emissions – just a little American ingenuity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 12/11/2008

Codex Crash Course
Codex Alimentarius was founded in 1962 by the UN to establish international free trade foods. It is jointly administered by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) through annual and regional meetings.

Codex sets advisory standards and guidelines which nations may adopt or modify. If they modify them without special protections, nations may be found guilty of setting up trade barriers by the World Trade Organization (WTO), and be assessed crippling financial penalties. If, on the other hand, countries deviate from Codex texts by creating a scientifically strong alternative guideline or standard, and pass enabling legislation (a process we refer to as "The Codex Two Step") they are free to deviate from Codex without being found guilty of creating barriers to trade. WTO has repeatedly refused to grant Codex a unique position as THE international food code, saying it is one of several such standards.


Codex' decisions are heavily influenced by the desires of multinational special interest groups who send representatives to sit on national committees and as NGO delegates. Because Codex is so heavily influenced by corporate interests, its decisions are, in our opinion, often helpful to corporate well-being but strikingly detrimental to human and einviromental health.

Codex pertains to every bite - and kind of - food traded internationally and allows high doses of pesticides, veterinary drugs, synthetic hormones, contaminants, artificial sweeteners, and other dangerous compounds and processes (like mandated irradiation of food) while it forbids health claims for food.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 PM on 12/08/2008

excellent, Diener

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 AM on 12/05/2008
- IDIOTA I'm a Fan of IDIOTA 61 fans permalink

I am impressed with these facts. I had known some, but I thought that no one outside of my world cared about this. Are you guys my neighbors?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:59 PM on 12/04/2008

CANOLAFORNIA! They have to grow Canola ARNHOLE vetoed the hemp bill.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 12/04/2008

just legalize industrial hemp already

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 12/03/2008

Hear! Hear!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 12/03/2008

We need to legalize Hemp production and leave behind the production of animal products. Until we do these two things we are just spinning our wheels on environmental protection.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 12/03/2008

CANOLA OIL IS A POISON! SPRAY IT ON INSECTS THEY DIE!
Dont try to sell what we already have like its new.....
LEGALIZE HEMP we havent tried that yet.
Strongest root structure known.
8 times more bio-diesel than CANOLA.
6 times more fiber than cotton.
Hemp seeds contains complete protein.
Hemps seeds contain GLA (prevents depression and A.D.D.
(Gamma Lineolic Acid)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 12/03/2008

YES!
Why can't we get over our ridiculous notion that Hemp is Marijuana, and therefore, we can not or should not use it. It has a variety of uses, a variety of benefits (including easy to grow without the use of pesticides). WHY NOT HEMP?????

We need to get a BIG campaign out there and educate people on this issue.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 PM on 12/03/2008
- Dystopic I'm a Fan of Dystopic 20 fans permalink
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OK, you can spray any type of oil and soap on most soft bodied insects and kill them. They die because they are suffocated, not because there is a poison in there.

Canola oil is not poison. Bull$hit uneducated rhetoric is.

I totally agree with your points on Hemp. But you can kill those same insects with the oil produced from the seeds.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 12/03/2008

The marijuana connection to hemp was a canard fashioned by the cotton industry to drive out an otherwise superior competitor. Hemp was a major crop in Colonial America that even George Washington and Thomas Jefferson produced at Mount Vernon and Montecello.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 12/03/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 287 fans permalink

Very good!

Erucic acid

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canola

"The word "canola" was derived from "Canadian oil, low acid" in 1978.[1][2] The oil is also known as "LEAR" oil (for Low Erucic Acid Rapeseed).[3]"

Heat lesions.

Use Olive Oil instead.

And of course legalize pot/hemp

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 PM on 12/03/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 287 fans permalink

"Heart Lesion"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 PM on 12/03/2008
- musselmanm I'm a Fan of musselmanm 21 fans permalink
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This is being proposed as a supliment to the diet of COWS!
it replaces salt which is now added to their diet plus gives them a boost of fiber and other nutrients. Is adding salt to our food good for us?
Come on get over the fear of science to bring prosperity.
We are not talking flouride on our water here!
by the way, 421!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 AM on 12/04/2008

There is no such thing as a canola plant. The commerical name CanOla is a contraction of Canadian Oil which is made from rapeseeds from rape plants.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 12/03/2008

True, but would you by "Rape Oil" ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 12/03/2008

Sorry for the duplicate. I meant to mention the mis-spelled "buy" and thought it had been deleted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 12/03/2008

True, but who would buy Ra.pee Oil" ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 12/03/2008
- MGhamma I'm a Fan of MGhamma 15 fans permalink

Cool.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 12/03/2008

This is good news, too bad these projects take so long because they have to test so many variables and it takes forever for stuff to grow

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 12/03/2008
- Dystopic I'm a Fan of Dystopic 20 fans permalink
photo

rape seed goes from germination to harvest in like 5 months. Far from forever

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 PM on 12/03/2008
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