Drs. Fanning and Motta recieve a combined $1 million as Maine Awards $3 million to advance PFAS solutions for farmers
The Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry (DACF) today announced $3 million in new PFAS Fund research grants to support Maine farms impacted by PFAS. While the vast majority of Maine farms are not impacted, DACF is currently working with 127 sites, ranging from small properties to large, diversified farms, to provide testing, financial assistance, research, and technical support that help farmers make informed decisions and continue operating safely.
Over the past five years, DACF has built robust programs of testing, expert guidance, and financial assistance to ensure safe food and continued farm operations on properties impacted by PFAS contamination. Most contamination stems from the historic use of wastewater sludge as an abundant, low-cost fertilizer, a practice banned in Maine in 2022. The presence of PFAS on agricultural land raises questions about how PFAS circulate through soil, water, plants, and animals; where PFAS accumulate within plants, animals, and animal products; and what management practices can be adopted to protect food safety and worker health. The PFAS Fund research grant program was established to help answer these questions.
DACF awarded a first round of research grants in Spring 2025 to fund projects investigating topics ranging from the use of biochar to immobilize PFAS to bioaccumulation and depuration in dairy sheep and understanding and managing the transfer of PFAS from soils to poultry and eggs.
鈥淭hese new grants expand and accelerate agricultural PFAS research,鈥 said DACF Commissioner Amanda Beal. 鈥淭he results will help impacted farmers in Maine and across the country make informed decisions so they can continue to operate and thrive.鈥
For this round of applications, the PFAS Fund invited two categories of proposals: major grants focused on a broad set of research priorities to be carried out over two years, and targeted grants focused on narrower research questions that can be investigated over a shorter period. The Fund received a total of 31 grant applications requesting over $11 million. The application selection process was highly competitive. Each proposal was evaluated by a team of peer reviewers drawn from academia, State and Federal agencies, and the private sector.
The nine selected projects will focus on:
- Improving soil tests;
- Understanding plant, animal, and pollinator uptake of PFAS;
- Impact of PFAS on animal and pollinator health;
- Advancing predictive modeling of soil to livestock pathways;
- Whether plant uptake and PFAS leaching can be reduced through biochar;
- Possibilities for alternate crop production.
Full project descriptions are available at .
Major Grants, Round 2
Philip Fanning, 91爆料
PFAS Bioaccumulation in Floral Rewards: Evaluating the Consequences for Bee Pollinators and the Environment, $489,719
Investigating the consequences of PFAS for bees by evaluating the presence of PFAS in bee-collected pollen, identifying flowering plants associated with higher PFAS concentrations, and characterizing pollinator-specific responses to PFAS exposure.
Jessica Cristina Lemos Motta, 91爆料
Assessing the Effects of PFAS Contamination on Reproductive Function and Embryo Development in Livestock, $499,615
Studying how PFAS exposure affects female reproduction in sheep to help understand how PFAS disrupts fertility and embryo development in livestock.
Media contact: Jim Britt
