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Oilseed study has researchers evaluating modern uses in Ohio
By DOUG GRAVES
Ohio Correspondent

WOOSTER, Ohio — More than 200 years ago oilseed crops such as flax and camelina grew on the farm of Benedict Mellinger in Wayne County. Five generations of Mellingers have farmed the site since that time, always keeping fiber crops in the rich soil.

Today, Ohio State University researchers are evaluating the many uses of flax and camelina, which may include animal feed and biofuel, and their potential to help diversify Ohio farms and boost their sustainability. The Mellingers’ 300-acre farm is not too far from OSU’s Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC). It was donated to OARDC in 2002 by the Mellinger estate.

“Oilseed crops could offer many benefits to diversified farms,” said Hannah Whitehead, the research assistant coordinating the project. “They have the potential to add complexity to crop rotations, provide valuable ecosystem services and deliver additional value chains in the form of on-farm biodiesel, cooking oil and highly nutritious feed for animals.”

Flax was one of the staple crops grown by the first Mellinger and his family, who arrived in Wayne County in 1816 and cleared one of the first farms in the area. The Mellingers were weavers, so they used the land to keep sheep and grow flax, whose fibers can be spun into linen. Elaborate linen tablecloths and woolen coverlets made by the Mellingers are still highly sought after by collectors.

Also including canola and sunflower, this project represents the first research plots established on the working farm since it was donated, said Casey Hoy, Kellogg Endowed Chair in Agricultural Ecosystems Management, director of OARDC’s Agroecosystems Management Program and principal investigator in this project, which was funded by an OARDC SEEDS grant.

The crops will be evaluated in terms of their growth characteristics, yield, oil content and animal feed quality. They will also be studied for their benefits to ecosystems, including floral resources for pollinators, biocontrol for pests and soil conditioning.

In addition to its fibers, flax is valuable for seeds, which have high oil content, can be consumed by people and livestock and can be pressed to produce linseed oil, which is used in a variety of products, including wood finishes, paints and linoleum. It is also consumed as a nutritional supplement because of its high level of omega 3 fatty acids.

A less common crop, camelina has only recently received research interest as it is being rediscovered for its nutritional value and potential as a biofuel. A cool-weather crop long cultivated in Eastern Europe, camelina was maligned elsewhere in Europe and in the United States as a weed that grew voluntarily in flax fields.
“European farmers probably brought camelina to the New World accidentally, mixed in with their flax seed,” Whitehead said. “It is likely that Benedict Mellinger complained about the ‘false flax’ on his farm.”

The oilseed demonstration and evaluation project is being conducted in collaboration with Organic Valley/CROPP Cooperative, which is collecting complementary data in plots on its research farm in La Farge, Wis. The co-op is especially interested in longer rotations with more diverse crops in them for its member farms, as well as the additional on-farm value oilseed crops could offer.
In September, Organic Valley will bring its mobile oil press to the Mellinger Farm to press the harvested seeds and offer a workshop for its Ohio members and other interested farmers. The oil, pressed meal and fiber will then be analyzed by OARDC researchers to evaluate their potential for fuel, cooking and animal feed.
“We’re hoping to get a picture of the economic and ecological benefits that these crops could provide to an integrated farming system, including and beyond seed oil,” Whitehead said.
8/16/2013