Peer M. Schenk, Ph.D.

Professor Peer Schenk works to address food and energy security concerns facing today’s world using science and technology. Through his former role at The University of Queensland, Australia, Peer developed new technology in Algae Biotechnology and Plant-Microbe Interactions. He has recently accepted a new role as Director of the Sustainable Solutions Hub.

Peer is internationally recognised for his expertise in plant biotechnology, including the development of new disease resistant plants and his extensive knowledge of algae cultivation and harvesting. Peer and his team developed a large-scale Algae Farm at Pinjarra Hills, a prototype demonstration farm that deployed new cost-saving technologies to produce food, feed, nutraceuticals or biodiesel from microalgae. The farm also functioned as a zero-input “power plant” with full resource recycling capability to produce fuel (biogas and biodiesel).

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2008 Plants can use protein as a nitrogen source without assistance from other organisms

Nitrogen is quantitatively the most important nutrient that plants acquire from the soil. It is well established that plant roots take up nitrogen compounds of low molecular mass, including ammonium, nitrate, and amino acids. However, in the soil of natural ecosystems, nitrogen occurs predominantly as proteins. This complex organic...

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