Could lab-grown plant tissue ease the environmental toll of

Could lab-grown plant tissue ease the environmental toll of logging and agriculture?


Credits:
Image courtesy of the researchers
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The technology, as demonstrated in this chart, is still in early development but could one day reduce the heavy environmental footprint of agriculture and forestry.
Credits:
Image courtesy of the researchers
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It takes a lot to make a wooden table. Grow a tree, cut it down, transport it, mill it … you get the point. It’s a decades-long process. Luis Fernando Velásquez-García suggests a simpler solution: “If you want a table, then you should just grow a table.”
Researchers in Velásquez-García’s group have proposed a way to grow certain plant tissues, such as wood and fiber, in a lab. Still in its early stages, the idea is akin in some ways to cultured meat — an opportunity to streamline the production of biomaterials. The team demonstrated the concept by growing structures made of wood-like cells from an initial sample of cells extracted from zinnia leaves.

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Ashley Beckwith , David Stern , Jeffrey Borenstein , Charles Stark Draper Laboratory , Stern , Draper Fellow Program , Cornell University , Fernando Vel , Charles Stark Draper , Draper Fellow , Biomaterials , Bioprinting , Additive Manufacturing , Velasquez García , Lab Grown Wood , ஆஷ்லே பெக்கவித , டேவிட் கடுமையான , சார்லஸ் அப்பட்டமான டிராப்பர் ஆய்வகம் , கடுமையான , டிராப்பர் சக ப்ரோக்ர்யாம் , கார்னெல் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , பெர்னாண்டோ அல்லது , சார்லஸ் அப்பட்டமான டிராப்பர் , டிராப்பர் சக , உயிர் பொருட்கள் , வெலாஸ்கெஸ் கர்க்íஅ , ஆய்வகம் வளர்ந்த மரம் ,

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