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July 6, 2009

JGI/UW-M leaf cutter ant project on Discovery News

The genomes of 17 different ants, fungi and bacteria that eat through hundreds of pounds of leaf matter a year could ultimately lead to new techniques for making biofuels.

Scientists from the University of Wisconsin, the Joint Genome Institute and Emory University are sequencing the first-ever community genome, searching for clues to how what’s essentially a 50 million-year-old bioreactor operates.

“These leaf cutter ants, fungi and bacteria can plow through over (880 lbs.) of dry leaves each year,” said Garret Suen, a scientist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison working on the project.

“We believe that the whole community effort helps achieve this,” Suen told Discovery News.

The rest of the story can be found here.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: bacteria, biofuel, fungi, University of Wisconsin-Madison

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