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Re: When good buds go bad     

Group: alt.drugs.pot.cultivation · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in alt.drugs.pot.cultivation
Author: Frank
Date: Mar 13, 2008 23:44

...> Any thoughts on heating the soil by placing the planter over a box containing a 15 w bulb wired to a dimmer? I figure 78-82 F should be conducive to growth of mycorrhizae and other friendly bugs. Perhaps, (seems a little on the warm side for root zone) still the most important thing is that they need to dry out some to stimulate root dev. ...
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Re: When good buds go bad     

Group: alt.drugs.pot.cultivation · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in alt.drugs.pot.cultivation
Author: Mycoloteur
Date: Mar 11, 2008 12:28

... Any thoughts on heating the soil by placing the planter over a box containing a 15 w bulb wired to a dimmer? I figure 78-82 F should be conducive to growth of mycorrhizae and other friendly bugs. Perhaps, (seems a little on the warm side for root zone) still the most important thing is that they need to dry out some to stimulate root dev. Yup. ...
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Re: When good buds go bad     

Group: alt.drugs.pot.cultivation · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in alt.drugs.pot.cultivation
Author: Frank
Date: Mar 11, 2008 11:28

...> Any thoughts on heating the soil by placing the planter over a box containing a 15 w bulb wired to a dimmer? I figure 78-82 F should be conducive to growth of mycorrhizae and other friendly bugs. Perhaps, (seems a little on the warm side for root zone) still the most important thing is that they need to dry out some to stimulate root dev. Yup. Hard to get ...
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Re: When good buds go bad     

Group: alt.drugs.pot.cultivation · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in alt.drugs.pot.cultivation
Author: Mycoloteur
Date: Mar 10, 2008 22:01

... almost wilt". Any thoughts on heating the soil by placing the planter over a box containing a 15 w bulb wired to a dimmer? I figure 78-82 F should be conducive to growth of mycorrhizae and other friendly bugs. Perhaps, (seems a little on the warm side for root zone) still the most important thing is that they need to dry out some to stimulate root dev. Love and Light
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Re: When good buds go bad     

Group: alt.drugs.pot.cultivation · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in alt.drugs.pot.cultivation
Author: Frank
Date: Feb 1, 2008 18:38

... make it available immediately. Any thoughts on heating the soil by placing the planter over a box containing a 15 w bulb wired to a dimmer? I figure 78-82 F should be conducive to growth of mycorrhizae and other friendly bugs. I only wait about 2 weeks after they root to start flowering though because I have a small enclosure and I like the plants to stay short. I am using 6" ...
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Re: Vegetarians Are More Intelligent, study saith     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in alt.philosophy
Author: pearl
Date: Dec 20, 2006 09:03

... inhibits absorption of some minerals, which are likely to be at lower levels to begin with in soils that have been abused. This may be caused in part by the lack of beneficial mycorrhizae fungi on the roots since high levels of fertilizer tend to kill them. Standard diets tend to be low in various minerals, resulting in a variety of problems including osteoporosis. ..' ...
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Re: Vegetarians Are More Intelligent, study saith     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in alt.philosophy
Author: pearl
Date: Dec 20, 2006 05:02

... inhibits absorption of some minerals, which are likely to be at lower levels to begin with in soils that have been abused. This may be caused in part by the lack of beneficial mycorrhizae fungi on the roots since high levels of fertilizer tend to kill them. Standard diets tend to be low in various minerals, resulting in a variety of problems including osteoporosis. ..' http://math.ucsd....
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Co-Evolution     

Group: sci.bio.evolution · Group Profile · Search for Mycorrhizae in sci.bio.evolution
Author: William Morse
Date: Oct 31, 2006 21:50

... that ignores the biological reality that individual organisms are unviable without their symbionts. I have seen a figure of 95%% of plant families being mycorrhizal. Yes they can survive without the mycorrhizae, but they don't prosper. That's a better one. I didn't know it was that high a figure. Corals are a dominant influence in shallow tropical seas, and ...
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