h a l f b a k e r yYeah, I wish it made more sense too.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
How would this work? I can see the symbiosis of a fungus and a plant, but two crops? Are you thinking of a cross of corn and soy or of planting them next to each other with their roots intertangled? Might be kind of hard to harvest? |
|
|
Somebody countered the notion that C4 plants are more efficient in Vernon's "More plants with the C4 cycle" (do you guys know each other?). |
|
|
Yes they would have to be planted in parallel rows. It probably would take testing to determine the best distance, However fungi can create some amazingly large individuals. The fairy rings of mushrooms generally come from an individual, growing until it runs out of food and then putting its stored mass into spore bodies. I assume one individual fungi can form root symbiosis with multiple high order plants. They just have to be in the growing area. Dont know the other guy, worked in agricultural research for six or seven years before moving into transportation research. Moved on from that. |
|
|
I accidentally grew a bunch of squashcumbers once. They were hideous, but useful for scaring burglars. |
|
|
You could just use the current method, and plow the beans under after harvesting. Alternate crops, and that guy bob finally marries your spinster aunt. |
|
|
Would the proximity of two diiferent crops cause a problem when harvest time comes? Extra sorting and that sort of thing. |
|
|
Corn doesn't mean the same thing in all parts of the world, but you clearly mean maize. |
|
|
Sounds feasible, as mycorrhizas are not extremely species specific. |
|
|
The other sociological problem, of course, is the degree of acceptance of genetic manipulation. |
|
|
There probably would be problems if harvested mechanically. The equipment existing wouldnt be optimized for the new planting scheme. And yes I mean Zia mays (maize). Forgot about the old world idea of corn. Guess I demonstrated a bit of locality there. Glycine max for soybeans. |
|
|
I would prefer a breeding program instead of genetic manipulation. It worked for thousands of years. There are some subspecies of Zia mays that are wild in Florida, USA. Most likely some have root symbiosis already. It wouldnt surprise me if there arent escaped varieties of soy beans with root symbiosis as well. Just need to find a match. |
|
| |