Excellent presentation🐸thank you I was wondering why I saw such great results at my farm soil by spraying the probiotic lab (lactobacillus) mixed with prebiotic sourdough bread starter🐸
What you saw, was the result of providing the Microbial Life, that makes up the Rhizosphere, with a source of carbohydrates. Which it then used to provide nutrients to the plants above it. Your delusions about the use of probiotics and prebiotics are meaningless. You fed carbs to microbes that excrete perfect nutrients at the exact perfect rate for optimal plant health. Fungus and Bacteria along with all the uncountable trillions of microbial creatures in living soil don't need your delusions to do what billions of years of evolution have already programmed them for. Unless you kill the Rhizosphere because you delusionally believe that the Rhizosphere is plants.
@ZennExile This is the angriest and pettiest comment I've ever seen on a relatively small niche video for improving gardening/farming. - "Cool! saw xyz results after experimenting with abc :) " - "you dillusional idiot!!" Point to the place on your Rhizosohere where they hurt you... lol
Ecosystems are not plant-based. They are Rhizosphere based. The plant life means very little to the overall carbon cycle until there's a Rhizosphere connecting them together and supplying them with nutrients. The focus on plant life in this discussion is very similar to the focus on "cute" animals in conservation media. A very large part of what caused the climate crisis was due to a lack of understanding what the Rhizosphere does and how important a complete carbon cycle is.
@@floridanaturalfarming3367 did you +1 yourself for posting an easily googled factual error? If you're having trouble with the vocabulary, what you posted is very wrong.
@@ZennExile @ZennExile yes. As a retired plant researcher the rhizosphere indeed does mean 'in the root zone'. I would also agree with you that very little is understood regarding the molecular signalling that takes place in the rhizosphere between plants, fungi and bacteria. In addition, the carbon capture attributed to plants/trees generally doesn't include the soil biodiversity they support. I wasn't following the thread of your argument completely...but I think I get your drift.
Excellent presentation🐸thank you
I was wondering why I saw such great results at my farm soil by spraying the probiotic lab (lactobacillus) mixed with prebiotic sourdough bread starter🐸
What you saw, was the result of providing the Microbial Life, that makes up the Rhizosphere, with a source of carbohydrates. Which it then used to provide nutrients to the plants above it.
Your delusions about the use of probiotics and prebiotics are meaningless. You fed carbs to microbes that excrete perfect nutrients at the exact perfect rate for optimal plant health.
Fungus and Bacteria along with all the uncountable trillions of microbial creatures in living soil don't need your delusions to do what billions of years of evolution have already programmed them for.
Unless you kill the Rhizosphere because you delusionally believe that the Rhizosphere is plants.
@ZennExile This is the angriest and pettiest comment I've ever seen on a relatively small niche video for improving gardening/farming.
- "Cool! saw xyz results after experimenting with abc :) "
- "you dillusional idiot!!"
Point to the place on your Rhizosohere where they hurt you... lol
Ecosystems are not plant-based. They are Rhizosphere based. The plant life means very little to the overall carbon cycle until there's a Rhizosphere connecting them together and supplying them with nutrients. The focus on plant life in this discussion is very similar to the focus on "cute" animals in conservation media. A very large part of what caused the climate crisis was due to a lack of understanding what the Rhizosphere does and how important a complete carbon cycle is.
Plants=rhizosphere🐸
@@floridanaturalfarming3367 did you +1 yourself for posting an easily googled factual error? If you're having trouble with the vocabulary, what you posted is very wrong.
@@ZennExilecan't have one without the other but literally 'rhizo' means roots.
@@jamesgibson3582 root zone. As in the zone where roots grow. That's the sphere part. GG No Rematch.
@@ZennExile @ZennExile yes. As a retired plant researcher the rhizosphere indeed does mean 'in the root zone'. I would also agree with you that very little is understood regarding the molecular signalling that takes place in the rhizosphere between plants, fungi and bacteria. In addition, the carbon capture attributed to plants/trees generally doesn't include the soil biodiversity they support. I wasn't following the thread of your argument completely...but I think I get your drift.