Minnesota
University of Minnesota trademarks fast-growing poplar tree
DULUTH — It’s been said that the true meaning of life is planting a tree “under whose shade you do not expect to sit,” a hint, of course, that you’ll likely be dead before the tree gets that tall.
But researchers at the University of Minnesota now say you don’t have to wait that long after all.
The university has trademarked a new, rapid-growth tree that not only will shade your lawn and put up a natural fence between you and your neighbor faster than ever before, but a tree that could be a key to cleaning up polluted hot spots, reducing climate change and developing plastics and biofuels from crops other than corn and soybeans.
It’s called InnovaTree and it was unveiled Friday at Hauser’s Superior View Farm just outside Bayfield, the first place the tree is available for the public to buy.
University officials are hoping InnovaTree will become the Honeycrisp of shade trees. Much as university horticulture experts have developed some of the nation’s most successful apple varieties over the last century, researchers at the Natural Resources Research Institute arm of the University of Minnesota Duluth has spent nearly 30 years perfecting the fastest-growing, most disease-resistant poplar in the world.
How fast? Up to 8 feet in a single Northland growing season, some 64% faster than other hybrid poplars and four times faster than many common landscaping trees. That’s taller than a two-story house in just a few years. It will grow to more than 70 feet tall as a mature tree that can live for an estimated 75 years or more.
“The oldest InnovaTrees now are just 14 years. But its mother is a Minnesota native cottonwood, and those can easily grow for more than 100 years, so we’re expecting a really long-lived tree,” said Jeff Jackson, University of Minnesota Extension outreach educator.
Need some quick shade to cool down an urban hot spot amid record-setting heat waves? Rapid-relief erosion control for farm shelter-belts and along streams? Check and check. InnovaTree also is being tested by U.S Forest Service and NRRI scientists for its ability to soak up toxins from polluted hot spots, called phytoremediation, including its ability to absorb sulfate, a byproduct of some mining operations.
Because InnovaTree grows so fast, research shows it can pull toxins out of the ground at a rapid rate. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, volatile organic compounds and even PCBs and heavy metals can be absorbed and either stored or broken down by the tree’s photosynthesis. And because it absorbs so much water as it grows, InnovaTree is being touted for urban rain gardens where it could slow runoff and help reduce flooding caused by increasing rainstorms.
InnovaTree could even be refined into bioethanol and bio-plastics to replace carbon-spewing fossil fuels. And it could be planted on marginal farmland across the globe to help ease global climate change, absorbing carbon four times faster than a red pine and earning carbon credits for the landowners.
“There’s really nothing else like it anywhere else. Of all the trees they (NRRI staff) worked on over nearly 30 years, this one came out on top,” Jackson said.
InnovaTree is sterile, like a mule, and its seed won’t sprout, so Hauser’s nursery received 25 10-inch cuttings of InnovaTree in 2021 and planted them, with more cuttings from those first trees planted in 2022. This April, Dane Hauser, the fifth-generation owner of the nursery, planted dozens of four-inch InnovaTree cuttings into pots and grew them in a greenhouse. Those cuttings are already 3-5 feet tall and ready for sale.
“For over 20 years, our NRRI team used natural selection and breeding to develop hundreds of poplar varieties in extensively replicated Minnesota and regional field trials,” said Bernard McMahon, NRRI’s now-retired hybrid poplar program tree breeder.
McMahon and other researchers and University officials were expected to gather at Hauser’s on Friday to celebrate the results of their efforts. For each InnovaTree sold, the University of Minnesota will get a royalty, with the money planted back into research.
Jackson was called-in to help market the tree that after its originally intended use cooled.
Pushed by calculations in the 1990s that Minnesota’s natural forests might run short of wood if demand from board plants and paper mills continued to expand, NRRI scientists went to work on hybrid poplars that could be grown on marginal farmland and replace fiber from forests.
But as the number of mills in Minnesota shrunk due to global competition, the demand on the state’s forests diminished, too. Attention then turned to growing hybrid poplars for biomass fuel to replace coal and natural gas. But that market, at least in the U.S., also cooled as coal prices plummeted and debate raged over whether burning biomass was truly carbon-neutral or not.
While the focus has shifted to the consumer market for InnovaTree, there are still potentially large-scale applications for carbon capture and fiber, Jackson noted. InnovaTree is being tested in Europe as feedstock for plants that produce oriented strand board, called OSB, because native forest trees in Europe are in high demand, short supply and very expensive. And foresters in eastern Europe are eyeing InnovaTree to help reforest war-torn Ukraine where countless urban and rural trees have been obliterated by bombs and shells.
Until then, though, it will be consumer purchases for landscaping trees that U of M officials hope will make InnovaTree famous.
“There are currently millions of hybrid poplars being sold in the U.S. for landscaping every year, and there’s no reason this tree can’t capture a big part of that market considering how much better it is,” Jackson noted. “This is not a tree that’s intended for natural forests. … But for landscaping and for phytoremediation and fiber, planted in cities and on marginal lands, we think it can have a really big impact.”
- A cross between native eastern cottonwood and European black poplar, naturally cross-bred over 25 years until the star of the family emerged.
- Resulted from NRRI research, starting in 1996, on 1,672 hybrid poplar varieties from 115 families in 27 field tests at nine sites in Minnesota and sites in several other states.
- Is not a genetically modified organism but grows from the same, traditional horticulture practices used for apple and other fruit trees. The NRRI established over 45 field sites throughout the Midwest and Northeastern U.S. and has never had an escaped seedling survive outside the planting area.
- Doesn’t sucker and its seeds are infertile, so it won’t become an invasive species problem by spreading into native forests. It’s cottonless, so no fluffy stuff in the springtime.
- Hardiness across zones 3-6 — everywhere from North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin south to Missouri, Kentucky and Kansas.
- Grows best in full sun in well-drained loam, sandy loam, clay loam and light clay soils with annual rainfall above 20 inches.
- Captures an impressive 6.8-8.5 metric tons of carbon dioxide per acre per year.
A 3-foot potted InnovaTree is $20.
Visit Hauser’s Superior View Farm, 86565 County Highway J, Bayfield; call 715-779-5404; or visit
superiorviewfarm.com
. Shipping is available. It’s expected to be available at several other nurseries in the Midwest next spring.
Minnesota
Wife of murdered Minnesota pastor hired 3 men to kill husband after affair: police
The investigation into the violent death of a Minnesota pastor in Angola has taken another shocking twist, with police now saying that the pastor’s wife was having an affair with the couple’s security guard, and she then offered the guard and two others $50,000 to slay her spouse.
Beau Shroyer, 44, a former pastor of Lakes Area Vineyard Church, was found stabbed to death in the African country on Oct. 25. Days later it was revealed that his wife Jackie had been arrested in connection with his death, although the exact circumstances of the nature of his death were scant.
Now police in Angola say they have arrested two of the alleged hitmen, while a third is on the run, according to the Angola Press Agency, a public news agency in Angola. The couple and their five children moved to Angola in 2021 to become missionaries.
WIFE OF PASTOR KILLED ON AFRICAN MISSION ARRESTED IN CONNECTION WITH DEATH: ‘GIANT SHOCK’
According to the report, the Angolan Criminal Investigation Service says that Jackie was having an affair with Bernadino Elias, 24, who worked at the family’s home as a security guard, and she was upset that the family’s mission was ending and didn’t want to leave.
In a sinister plot, she paid the trio, all of whom had prior criminal records, $50,000 to slay her husband, according to the report.
The diabolical scheme involved the three men hiring a car and pretending the vehicle was having trouble in a remote area in the town of Thienjo, Palanca.
They called Beau, who arrived in his jeep, and the three suspects then stabbed him to death, per the report.
Police released an image of Elias with his alleged accomplice, Isalino Kayoo, 23, outside a police station.
They were pictured standing in front of the blue rental car and Beau’s white SUV. A picture from inside Beau’s white SUV shows a bloodstained front seat and binoculars.
Police say they recovered an American-made knife that had been gifted to Elias at the scene. The knife was displayed on a table along with cash and a cell phone.
Manuel Halaiwa, the CIS Superintendent of Criminal Investigation, says that the motives for the crime were “strong suspicions of a romantic relationship between the person who ordered the crime and her accomplice, the guard and the couple’s residence,” per The Angola Press Agency.
MINNESOTA MISSIONARY, A FATHER OF 5, KILLED IN ‘ACT OF VIOLENCE’ IN ANGOLA
The State Department confirmed Beau’s death to Fox News Digital but was unable to provide further details due to privacy considerations.
“We extend our deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of the deceased,” a State Department spokesperson said.
Beau previously described the area that the family moved to as a “remote bush village” with no electricity, sewer or water systems. In a Facebook post on the day before his death, Shroyer wrote that the Nyneka people they were serving “are among the most marginalized people groups in Angola,” after he came across a young person called “Mauricio” who was walking to school nearly two hours before class started.
Shroyer worked for the Detroit Lakes Police Department in 2013 before becoming a real estate agent in the area.
In a previous press release, Lakes Area Vineyard Church Lead Pastor Troy Easton said that the religious community was in shock to hear about Beau’s death and Jackie’s subsequent arrest,
He said that the missionaries there — SIM USA and SIM Angola — were caring for the couple’s five children. It is unclear if the children are still in Africa.
David Dorman, who worked with Beau Shroyer in real estate for years before Shroyer decided to leave for Africa, tells Fox News Digital that Beau was “a wonderful person.
“Not sure I’ve ever met a more selfless human,” Dorman told Fox News Digital. “The courage it took to take this leap to begin with was something I’ve admired for years. He loved people and genuinely cared about those less privileged. It’s been a giant shock to the core to see this unfold this way.”
Dorman said Beau’s passion to help those less well-off was prevalent even in the real estate industry, where the pair worked on several complex and difficult transactions together.
“Beau was special. Beau went the extra mile for clients… He was a true partner and loved what he did. His attitude was infectious and I genuinely loved working with him,” said Dorman, who added he would often drive for three hours to meet Beau for closings and have a meal together afterward.
“He was one of the true ‘good guys’ in real estate. This is far less common than you might think. I’ve been doing this for 13 years and he stood out for all the right reasons. A true servant in a sea of snakes. 100% a client advocate. The lengths I watched him go to for his clients was something of legend. No one went the extra mile more than him.”
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Beau would give regular email updates about their mission, highlighting the ups and downs, some of which Dorman shared with Fox News Digital.
“We are currently living in a house in the missionary complex in Lubango. It’s a big change from living in the middle of the neighborhood Senhora Do Monte,” an email update from April reads. He said the family at the time was “settled in and loving it,” and also mentioned they were returning to Detroit Lakes last summer.
A video online shows the couple speaking of their mission at one of those gatherings. They then returned to Angola before the Oct. 25 incident unfolded.
Minnesota
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Minnesota
Minnesota (MSHSL) high school football 2024 state tournament brackets, matchups, game times
The 2024 Minnesota high school football state championship semifinal begin this week, and High School on SI has brackets for 9-player to Class 6A.
The semifinal games will be played at U.S. Bank Stadium on November 14 through November 16. The 2024 MSHSL Prep Bowl will be at U.S. Bank Stadium on Friday, November 22 and Saturday, November 23.
>>Minnesota high school football state championship brackets
High School on SI will have scores, schedules and coverage throughout the 2024 MSHSL football playoffs.
Click on the classification to view the bracket.
No. 2 Anoka vs. No. 1 Minnetonka — Nov. 14 at 7 p.m.
No. 1 Maple Grove vs. No. 2 Shakopee — Nov. 15 at 7:30 p.m.
No. 1 Elk River vs. No. 2 Chanhassen — Nov. 15 at 2 p.m.
No. 3 Alexandria vs. No. 1 Owatonna — Nov. 16 at 7 p.m.
No. 1 Becker vs. No. 3 Marshall — Nov. 14 at 10:30 a.m.
No. 1 Totino-Grace vs. No. 3 Orono — Nov. 14 at 11:30 a.m.
No. 2 Dassel-Cokato vs. No. 2 Pequot Lakes — Nov. 16 at 1 p.m.
No. 1 Stewartville vs No. 4 Albany — Nov. 16 at 3:30 p.m.
No. 1 Kimball vs. No. 2 Jackson County Central — Nov. 15 at 8 a.m.
No. 1 Chatfield vs. No. 3 Staples-Motley — Nov. 15 at 3:30 p.m.
No. 3 Springfield vs. No. 2 Mahnomen/Waubun — Nov. 16 at 9 a.m.
No. 4 Parkers Prairie vs. No. 1 Minneota — Nov. 16 at 11:30 a.m.
No. 1 Mountain Iron-Buhl vs. No. 2 Hills-Beaver Creek — Nov. 14 at 1 p.m.
No. 2 Fertile-Beltrami vs. No. 1 LeRoy-Ostrander — Nov. 14 at 4 p.m.
To get live updates on your phone – as well as follow your favorite teams and top games – you can download the SBLive Sports app: Download iPhone App | Download Android App
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