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Kenaf Plant By Danielle King. Origin Species – Hibiscus cannabinus, L. Family – Malvaceae Origin – Western Sudan (Africa) Related to cotton and okra.

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Presentation on theme: "Kenaf Plant By Danielle King. Origin Species – Hibiscus cannabinus, L. Family – Malvaceae Origin – Western Sudan (Africa) Related to cotton and okra."— Presentation transcript:

1 Kenaf Plant By Danielle King

2 Origin Species – Hibiscus cannabinus, L. Family – Malvaceae Origin – Western Sudan (Africa) Related to cotton and okra

3 History Africans used this plant thousands of years ago (around 4,000BC) for cordage and fuel Introduced into southern Asia around 1900 China, India, Tashkent – main users 1940 – US research begins in Alabama and Florida Areas of suitable growing conditions

4 What does it look like? Leaves StalkFlower

5 Plant PartsPlant Parts Flower - The flowering can last 3-4 weeks, but the flower only blooms for one day The outer fiber – This outer fiber is called “bast,” and is about 2.6mm thick. This is about 40% of the stalk’s dry weight. Inner fiber – This is a light, spongy fiber, similar to balsa wood called “core.” Each fiber is about.6mm thickness, and it is about 60% of the stalk’s dry weight.

6 Basic Facts  It offers an alternative to cutting down trees for paper  In 4-5 months, Kenaf can grow to about 12-14 feet tall  Kenaf can produce 6-10 tons of dry fiber per year  Flower blooms at the end of growing season, and falls off leaving a seed pod  Seeds cannot germinate because they need 60-90 days of frost-free weather  Therefore, Kenaf cannot run wild like a weed

7 Harvesting Anywhere where soil is above 65°F and weather is warm In Northern Hemisphere, soil should be cultivated from between March to May Kenaf seeds planted around May with grain drills 5 weeks – plant is about 4-5 feet tall 6 months – forage harvester chops the stalk into short lengths

8 Harvesting cont’d Cane harvester Stalks cut at 12 feet and layed in windrows Stalks sit to dry for 10n days Chopped into 1 foot long sticks Brought to fiber yard for storage before separation

9 Seperation Bast and core fibers are separated Process is cost efficient and provides a surplus supply Separation creates paper pulp Bark before pulpingKenaf Core

10 Bast and Core

11 Products As a result of separation, Kenaf can make:  Paper  Cardboard  Hardboard panels  Roof Lining  Fiber mattress  Doors/furniture  String/rope  Cat litter  Potting material  Cellulose for chemical uses

12 Companies Vision Paper- “the clearcut alternative” Kenaf International – “The center for new crops and plant products” Ankal, Inc – “Home of the comercially viable Kenaf Industry”

13 Work Cited http://www.greenenaturalfibers.com/products.asp www.kenaf.com/ history.html http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/CropFactShe ets/kenaf.html#Scientific%20Names http://www.visionpaper.com/kenaf2.html www.apparelsearch.com www.gifu-u.ac.jp www.fiberfutures.org


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