Michaelangelica
11-09-2009, 08:42 PM
Rascal to Remedy: Fungus on the
Farm
http://www.acresusa.com/toolbox/reprint ... Remedy.pdf (http://www.acresusa.com/toolbox/reprints/Sept09_RascalToRemedy.pdf)
A well written introduction to the role of fungus in the garden/farm soil etc
eg
CARBON SINK
Perhaps the most significant part of this plant fungal interaction is the pro-
tective, carbon-rich sheath that forms around the hyphae of arbuscular mycorrhizae.
The sheath is made of glomalin, a substance only recently identified (in 1996). Glomalin is 30-40 percent carbon,
which researchers think may account for much of the carbon stored in fertile soils. . . .
A greenhouse trial by Mycorrhizal Applications Inc. in Oregon found that mycorrhizal inoculation of tall fescue nearly doubled a soil’s rate of carbon increase in a year and that glomalin correlated significantly with the increase.
Furthermore, glomalin resists breakdown for seven to 42 years, making it a long-term carbon store.
Mike Amaranthus, Ph.D., is president of
Mycorrhizal Applications Inc., phone 541-476-
3985, info@mycorrhizae.com, website www.
mycorrhiza.com.
Anyone know where you can buy the mycorrhizal fungi?
(or is buying it/them a waste of time and money)
Anyone seen glomalin growing in their soil?
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/graphics/photos/jul08/d1139-1i.jpg
http://www.marine.uq.edu.au/lab_lovelock/img/projectsconn2.jpg
Farm
http://www.acresusa.com/toolbox/reprint ... Remedy.pdf (http://www.acresusa.com/toolbox/reprints/Sept09_RascalToRemedy.pdf)
A well written introduction to the role of fungus in the garden/farm soil etc
eg
CARBON SINK
Perhaps the most significant part of this plant fungal interaction is the pro-
tective, carbon-rich sheath that forms around the hyphae of arbuscular mycorrhizae.
The sheath is made of glomalin, a substance only recently identified (in 1996). Glomalin is 30-40 percent carbon,
which researchers think may account for much of the carbon stored in fertile soils. . . .
A greenhouse trial by Mycorrhizal Applications Inc. in Oregon found that mycorrhizal inoculation of tall fescue nearly doubled a soil’s rate of carbon increase in a year and that glomalin correlated significantly with the increase.
Furthermore, glomalin resists breakdown for seven to 42 years, making it a long-term carbon store.
Mike Amaranthus, Ph.D., is president of
Mycorrhizal Applications Inc., phone 541-476-
3985, info@mycorrhizae.com, website www.
mycorrhiza.com.
Anyone know where you can buy the mycorrhizal fungi?
(or is buying it/them a waste of time and money)
Anyone seen glomalin growing in their soil?
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/graphics/photos/jul08/d1139-1i.jpg
http://www.marine.uq.edu.au/lab_lovelock/img/projectsconn2.jpg