Sentimental Over Ornamentals?
Most of the scientific research and widespread publicity
about using mycorrhizal fungi to grow plants has been focused
on food-type plants, but these beneficial
organisms can be put to work equally well on ornamental plants.
Just like food plants, many ornamentals have evolved a dependence on mycorrhizae
and have largely lost the ability to efficiently uptake nutrients without
the fungi on their roots. Without mycorrhizal fungi, we humans must take
on the
job of providing all the nourishment to fungi-less plants - usually by continuously
applying “plant foods” that mostly wash right through the root
zone into underground water supplies.
Keeping a mycorrhizal-dependent plant nourished when it lacks its fungi partnership
is difficult and expensive. In effect, the soil must be kept artificially
overloaded with nutrients (typically incomplete NPK fertilizers) to the point
where even
an inefficient root system can suck in enough food to survive. Besides being
environmentally harmful, this abnormal loading-up of NPK is harmful and disruptive
to soil biology. If there were any beneficial organisms
present
(and many urban/disturbed soils are lacking in them to begin with), repeated
doses of “plant food” can prevent them from multiplying into
large populations.
Ornamental plants
that would normally use mycorrhizal fungi and
nitrogen-producing bacteria to thrive are made dependent on artificial
chemical feedings.
This almost makes me want to write one of those angry letters to a newspaper
that always ends with, “Wake up, America!” but I’m not quite
that old and cranky yet.
Turf grass is by far the most egregious example of creating a high-profit
industry by making simple-to-grow plants dependent on direct feeding. Grass
is ridiculously
simple to grow if there are good populations of soil microbes present,
and ridiculously difficult/expensive to keep alive and healthy without
such organisms.
A biologically-active lawn where mulched clippings are returned to the
soil instead of being removed needs virtually no additional input, does
not build
up thatch, suffers few disease problems, and provides its own soil aeration.
You would think that the chemical fertilizer companies, with all their
good knowledge about plant physiology, would realize that they are disrupting
the biological processes that would allow plants to grow with very little
input.
(Pause for thought)
About the only negative I can think of for using a biology-based approach
to turf grass is that golf courses do not like the idea of having little
mounds
of earthworm castings appear on their fairways and greens, but most grass
growers should be happy to see such evidence of healthy soil.
I might mention that many golf courses, including some listed in the top
10 nationally, are now using our inoculants. Golf courses are increasingly
under
fire because of nutrient runoffs and are also faced with the need to fight
turf diseases with relatively non-toxic methods for the safety of the golfers.
(Ironically, golf courses would probably not dare to use some products
that are routinely applied to our food crops, but that’s another story.)
Decorative trees, shrubs, flower beds - all can be very successfully grown
without pouring on the great amounts of synthetic fertilizers that we have
been instructed to apply. But as I watch the artful TV commercials showing
smiling happy people lovingly caressing the fantastic-miracle-lush grass
or flowers that Brand X has given them, I can understand why the cash registers
at garden centers go ding-ding-ding-ding with “lawn food” sales.
And, as you might imagine, I do a little tooth-grinding when I see homeowners
buying soil fungicides that will harm their plant-protective mycorrhizae.
To me, this is like fogging your yard or orchard with a general pesticide
that
kills all insects...including those that would have happily eaten the harmful
bugs at no cost.
I’m also reminded of a lady who asked what she could do about honeybees
that were “invading” the flowering shrub next to her front door.
She was spraying them with an aerosol pesticide, but more kept coming! Can
you imagine how she would have panicked if she learned there was fungus on
her plant roots?
To learn more on this topic, look at all the mycorrhiza studies that have
been done on food plants and remember that the same symbiotic logic applies
to ornamentals...and
wake up, America!
Cheers, my friends.
Don Chapman
President, BioOrganics, Inc.
www.bio-organics.com
April. 2003
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