Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania.
Department of Food Science, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania.
Curr Protoc. 2024 Jun;4(6):e1090. doi: 10.1002/cpz1.1090.
In the event of a sunlight-blocking, temperature-lowering global catastrophe, such as a global nuclear war, super-volcano eruption or large asteroid strike, normal agricultural practices would be severely disrupted with a devastating impact on the global food supply. Despite the improbability of such an occurrence, it is prudent to consider how to sustain the surviving population following a global catastrophe until normal weather and climate patterns resume. Additionally, the ongoing challenges posed by climate change, droughts, flooding, soil salinization, and famine highlight the importance of developing food systems with resilient inputs such as lignocellulosic biomass. With its high proportion of cellulose, the abundant lignocellulosic biomass found across the Earth's land surfaces could be a source of energy and nutrition, but it would first need to be converted into foods. To understand the potential of lignocellulosic biomass to provide energy and nutrition to humans in post-catastrophic and other food crisis scenarios, compositional analyses should be completed to gauge the amount of energy (soluble sugars) and other macronutrients (protein and lipids) that might be available and the level of difficulty in extracting them. Suitable preparation of the lignocellulosic biomass is critical to achieve consistent and comparable results from these analyses. Here we describe a compilation of protocols to prepare lignocellulosic biomass and analyze its composition to understand its potential as a precursor to produce post-catastrophic foods which are those that could be foraged, grown, or produced under the new climate conditions to supplement reduced availability of traditional foods. These foods have sometimes been referred to in the literature as emergency, alternate, or resilient foods. © 2024 The Authors. Current Protocols published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Convection oven drying (1 to 2 days) Alternate Protocol 1: Air-drying (2 to 3 days) Alternate Protocol 2: Lyophilization (1 to 4 days) Support Protocol 1: Milling plant biomass Support Protocol 2: Measuring moisture content Basic Protocol 2: Cellulose determination Basic Protocol 3: Lignin determination Basic Protocol 4: Crude protein content by total nitrogen Basic Protocol 5: Crude fat determination via soxtec extraction system Basic Protocol 6: Sugars by HPLC Basic Protocol 7: Ash content.
在发生全球灾难,如全球核战争、超级火山爆发或大型小行星撞击等导致阳光被遮挡、温度降低的情况下,正常的农业实践将受到严重干扰,对全球粮食供应造成毁灭性影响。尽管这种情况发生的可能性不大,但谨慎考虑如何在全球灾难后维持幸存人口,直到天气和气候模式恢复正常是很有必要的。此外,气候变化、干旱、洪水、土壤盐渍化和饥荒等持续挑战凸显了开发具有弹性投入的粮食系统的重要性,如木质纤维素生物质。地球上陆地表面丰富的木质纤维素生物质含有高比例的纤维素,它可能是能源和营养物质的来源,但首先需要将其转化为食物。为了了解木质纤维素生物质在灾难后和其他粮食危机情况下为人类提供能源和营养的潜力,应该完成成分分析,以评估可能获得的能量(可溶性糖)和其他宏量营养素(蛋白质和脂质)的数量,以及提取它们的难度。木质纤维素生物质的适当预处理对于从这些分析中获得一致和可比的结果至关重要。在这里,我们描述了一组用于准备木质纤维素生物质并分析其成分的方案,以了解其作为生产灾难后食物的前体的潜力,这些食物是在新的气候条件下可以觅食、种植或生产的食物,以补充传统食物供应的减少。这些食物在文献中有时被称为紧急、替代或弹性食物。© 2024 作者。Wiley Periodicals LLC 出版的现行协议。基本方案 1:对流烘箱干燥(1 至 2 天)替代方案 1:风干(2 至 3 天)替代方案 2:冻干(1 至 4 天)支持方案 1:植物生物质粉碎支持方案 2:测量水分含量基本方案 2:纤维素测定基本方案 3:木质素测定基本方案 4:总氮法测定粗蛋白含量基本方案 5:索氏提取系统测定粗脂肪基本方案 6:HPLC 法测定糖基本方案 7:灰分含量。