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The Rural Voice, 2000-04, Page 12Kiri" GREY BRUCE FORESTRY SERVICE MANAGED FOREST TAX INCENTIVE PROGRAM Deadline for 2001 plans is July 31, 2000 Let us help you apply for the Managed Forest Tax Incentive Program (MFTIP) We offer three options: 1. A complete, bound plan that includes your objectives, a resource inventory, required maps, a 5 -year schedule of management activities and the approval process. 2. The inventory and mapping necessary to supplement a plan prepared by the landowner. 3. Approval process only, by our accredited MFTIP approvers. Call now for more information! A Co-operative Program Between: GREY SAUBLE CONSERVATION AUTHORITY R.R. #4, Owen Sound N4K 5N6 (519) 376-3076 gsca@bmts.com SAUGEEN VALLEY CONSERVATION AUTHORITY R.R. #1, Hanover N4N 3B8 (519) 364-1255 svca(a bmts.com 8 THE RURAL VOICE Scrap Book Carbon in soil helps crops, environment Farmers kill two birds with one stone when they keep carbon in their soil, says the director of Agriculture Canada's research centre in Swift Current, Saskatchewan. Speaking at the recent FarmTech 2000 conference in Red Deer, Alberta, Wayne Lindwall said farmers are not only increasing their field's productivity when they keep carbon in the soil, but they're doing their part to help the environment. "If your soil goes up in carbon it is generally more productive." he said. "It is still the number one indicator of soil productivity." Lindwall said farmers can keep carbon in their soil by planting forages in rotations, improving pasture management and reducing tillage. The reverse is also true. he said, estimating that 25-30 per cent of soil carbon has been lost due to cultivation. "It is estimated we have lost about a million tonnes of carbon since the land was broken in Canada," Lindwall said. Besides restoring soil productivity, scientists argue that good farming practices also play an important role in reducing carbon emissions. Canada was one of the countries in Kyoto, Japan, which agreed to reduce levels of greenhouse gases like methane, nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide to 1990 levels. To do this, Canada must remove 200 million tonnes of emissions. Lindwall said keeping carbon in the soil can help Canada reach that goal. He said discussions surrounding carbon sinks are probably at the same place as conservation tillage theories were 30 years ago. A sink is any activity or process that removes a greenhouse gas from the atmosphere. For example. trees remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as part of the photosynthesis process. Green plants take carbon dioxide from the air, and when they die, microbes break down the plants and the carbon becomes part of the soil but it can be returned to the air if the soil is disturbed by tillage. Grassland soil contains more carbon per unit than most other ecosystems worldwide.° —Source: Western Producer First pigs for transplants unveiled The promise of pigs genetically engineered to provide organs for transplanting to hutnans came a step closer to reality March 5 when PPL Therapeutics of Edinburgh, Scotland delivered the first offspring of a genetically -altered sow in a Caesarean section at Virginia -Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine. "The birth of these pigs is a very significant accomplishment," said Dave Ayares, PPL's vice-president of research. "It has the potential to essentially revolutionize the transplantation field." The company, which was the first to clone an adult mammal four years ago with Dolly the sheep, cloned the five little pigs from an adult sow named Destiny using a slightly different technique than the one that produced Dolly. The company said that independent DNA tests proved the piglets were clones of the sow. PPL says the clones are a major step toward creating genetically altered pigs whose organs and cells could be successfully transplanted in humans since pigs are physiologically one of the closest animals to humans. Pig organs may be tested in humans in as little as four years, PPL officials said. Analysts believe the market could be worth $6 billion (U.S.) Dr. Fritz Bach of Harvard Medical School, who studies genetic and immunological aspects of people and • was not involved in the cloning, applauded the announcement. "I think this is a big step forward they've made," Bach said. "We hope in the very near-term to overcome the shortage of human organs," said PPL's Ayares. Already other cloning pregnancies are ongoing at the company's Blacksburg, Virginia farm. Other uses for the pigs could be cellular therapies such as transplantable cells that produce insulin for treatment of diabetes.0 — Source: Associated Press