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| #Post#: 592-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Sustainable Food Production | |
| By: AGelbert Date: December 21, 2013, 5:14 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| For those who may be a bit depressed about our Homo Hubris | |
| Civilization trajectory because it looks more like Home Erectus | |
| morphed into Homo Defectus. ;D | |
| Perhaps this fellow, who lives in much less beneficent | |
| surroundings than you, sees a great deal of filth, decay and | |
| Homo defectus trashing of the biosphere in the modern inner city | |
| cluster**** day in and day out YET, is making "lemonade" out of | |
| "toxic lemons", will cheer you up. | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=440] | |
| http://media.treehugger.com/assets/images/2011/10/Will-Allen-Photo.jpg[/img] | |
| Urban Aquaponics pioneer grows mercury free Tilapia and Lake | |
| Perch to sell to restaurants nearby. ALL the feces from the fish | |
| is used with the water to fertilize food plants grown year | |
| around. He even grows edible flowers (Nasturtiums) he sells to | |
| restaurants. He continually reuses the SAME water and has ZERO | |
| effluent from his urban farming and aquaponics system | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-211213180651.png[/img… | |
| /> | |
| Everything is organic with zero chemical fertilizers. He has, | |
| because of his success in sustainable urban farming in an inner | |
| city high crime area, become famous and travelled the world | |
| giving lectures and training on his sustainable business model. | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=580] | |
| http://www.marquette.edu/universityhonors/images/allen.jpg[/img] | |
| Will Allen receiving Honorary Degree awarded by Marquette | |
| University. | |
| Will Allen is evidence to me that no matter how bad things are, | |
| we must always try to make a go of it, not as some quixotic, | |
| mindless gesture of futility, but as a function of our | |
| existence. We are here for a lot of reasons; one very important | |
| one is to make sure others of our species can be here too. Don't | |
| give up on [i] Homo "defectus"[/I]. It ain't over yet. | |
| Will Allen is now also teaching organic methods to leach city | |
| soil of heavy metals and other toxins and recreate the organic | |
| soil that was there before the city was. People like him give me | |
| hope. I hope his efforts lighten your mood too. | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/8.gif | |
| Here's a cool video about Will Allen and Urban Farming. After | |
| the video, I post a jpg as food for thought for you. [img | |
| width=40 | |
| height=40] | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-051113192052.png[/img… | |
| /> | |
| http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5zP4WPgcqY&feature=player_embedded<br | |
| /> | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://public.wsu.edu/~mreed/380American%20Consumption_files/image002.jpg[/img]… | |
| /> | |
| #Post#: 672-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Marvelous Azolla has been with us since the Cretacious Period (D | |
| inosaurs!) | |
| By: AGelbert Date: January 6, 2014, 10:05 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Azolla: Another floating, fast growing wonder plant like | |
| duckweed with great promise in a variety of applications that | |
| will aid us in establishing a sustainable civilization. | |
| Azolla BioSystems Ltd | |
| Azolla BioSystems uses a natural biological process to reduce | |
| the threat of man-made climate change by converting the | |
| greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) directly into a unique | |
| free-floating plant called Azolla. | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=640] | |
| http://azollabiosystems.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/azolla-flow-chart-NEW.… | |
| Azolla Biosystems is currently developing opportunities and | |
| commodities in eight sectors: | |
| Design including architectural development of Azolla Hubs | |
| Sequestration including the development of new Azolla strains | |
| Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) including Azolla�s conversion | |
| into bioplastics and biopolymers | |
| Biofuels produced from Azolla, and its integration with the | |
| production of algoil (algal-oil) and other | |
| renewable biofuels | |
| Biofertilizers including its use in rice production and other | |
| crops | |
| Livestock Feed including the production of long shelf-life | |
| Azolla pellets | |
| Food including hydroponics, and aquaponics | |
| Research & Development including high-value pharmaceuticals, | |
| nutraceuticals, bioplastics and biopolymers. | |
| These form the basis of the Azolla BioSystem that we have | |
| developed � a flexible, modular biological system that can be | |
| adapted to local needs anywhere in the world. | |
| We welcome your input and interest in joining us on our exciting | |
| journey. | |
| About Azolla | |
| Azolla is a unique freshwater fern that is one of the fastest | |
| growing plants on the planet due to its symbiotic relationship | |
| with a cyanobacterium (�blue-green alga�) called Anabaena. | |
| Anabaena draws down the atmospheric nitrogen that fertilizes | |
| Azolla, and Azolla provides a nitrogen-filled home for Anabaena | |
| within its leaf cavities. This enables the plant to double its | |
| biomass in as little as two days free floating on water as | |
| shallow as one inch (2.4 cm). | |
| Azolla�s rapid growth makes it a potentially important sequester | |
| of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide which is converted directly | |
| into Azolla�s biomass. This provides local livestock feed, | |
| biofertilizer and biofuel wherever Azolla is grown, so that this | |
| remarkable plant has the potential to help us weather the | |
| Perfect Storm � the related threats of man-made climate change | |
| and shortages of food and land as our population passes seven | |
| billion. | |
| Why is Azolla Unique? | |
| Azolla is unique because it is one of the fastest growing plants | |
| on the planet � yet it does not need any soil to grow. Unlike | |
| almost all other plants, Azolla is able to get its nitrogen | |
| fertilizer directly from the atmosphere. That means that it is | |
| able to produce biofertilizer, livestock feed, food and biofuel | |
| exactly where they are needed and, at the same time, draw down | |
| large amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere, thus helping to reduce | |
| the threat of climate change. | |
| How is it able to do this? | |
| Azolla and Anabaena � the Perfect Marriage | |
| Azolla is able to do this because it has a unique mutually | |
| beneficial �symbiotic relationship� with a cyanobacterium | |
| (blue-green alga) called Anabaena. | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://theazollafoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Azolla-Anabaena-symbi… | |
| The symbiotic relationship between Anabaena on the left and | |
| Azolla on the right. | |
| Each partner gives something to the other in this Perfect | |
| Marriage. Because oxygen is poisonous to cyanobacteria, Azolla | |
| provides an oxygen-free environment for Anabaena within its | |
| leaves. In return, Anabaena sequesters nitrogen directly from | |
| the atmosphere which then becomes available for Azolla�s growth, | |
| freeing it from the soil that is needed by most other land | |
| plants for their nitrogen fertilization. | |
| The oldest Azolla fossils are more than 70 million years old, | |
| representing the remains of plants that lived during the Late | |
| Cretaceous Period when dinosaurs roamed the earth. They occur in | |
| sediments that were deposited in quiescent freshwater bodies, | |
| such as lakes, ponds and sluggish rivers, identical to those | |
| inhabited by modern Azolla. | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=380] | |
| http://theazollafoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/modern-and-fossil-Azo… | |
| Fossil Azolla (left) has leaves (circled above in red) and | |
| tendrils (circled in blue) that are identical to those of modern | |
| Azolla (right). The fossil is from the Green River Formation of | |
| Colorado, dated between 50.5 and 55.5 million years. The | |
| photograph was kindly provided by Dr Ian Miller of the Denver | |
| Museum of Nature and Science. | |
| Several other symbioses are known between plants and | |
| cyanobacteria � for example in legumes � but the Azolla-Anabaena | |
| relationship is the only known symbiosis in which a | |
| cyanobacterium passes directly to subsequent generations via the | |
| plant�s reproductive sporangia and spores. | |
| So Azolla and Anabaena have never been apart for 70 million | |
| years. During that Immense period of time, the two partners have | |
| co-evolved numerous complementary ways that make them | |
| increasingly efficient. | |
| Agelbert NOTE: IF the above symbiosis has been continuous for 70 | |
| million years, I question the "co-evolve" assumption. The | |
| evidence points to the same relationship without changes. I | |
| don't see evidence of co-evolution, or evolution, for that | |
| matter, in this marvelous symbiosis of genetically disparate and | |
| unrelated life forms. It looks more like they started out the | |
| way. | |
| The Azolla Superorganism: A unique biological system | |
| In 2010, our Associate Francisco Carrapi�o proposed that | |
| Azolla-Anabaena should be designated as a superorganism �because | |
| of its unique symbiosis in which the two partners have | |
| successful co-evolved into a system that makes important | |
| contributions to ecology, biofertilization and biotechnology� | |
| (Carrapi�o, 2010). | |
| The Challenge | |
| The challenge, then, is to work with Azolla and use its | |
| remarkable properties to help us weather the Perfect Storm that | |
| now threatens us and the other species with whom we share our | |
| planet. | |
| You can find more details about Azolla, its history, and its | |
| multiple uses on our information website The Azolla Foundation. | |
| http://azollabiosystems.co.uk/ | |
| Agelbert NOTE: Azolla can be feed to chickens, cows and other | |
| livestock. Ducks love Azolla as much as they love duckwweed! | |
| http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-9qgznNeA4M&feature=player_embedded<br | |
| /> | |
| Baby ducks eating Azolla | |
| #Post#: 1073-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Almost 60,000 US Farms Have On-Site Renewable Energy | |
| By: AGelbert Date: May 6, 2014, 3:24 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Almost 60,000 US Farms Have On-Site Renewable Energy ;D | |
| SustainableBusiness.com News | |
| As of 2012, 57,299 of our nation's farms produce on-site | |
| renewable energy, according to the USDA Census, more than double | |
| the 23,451 in 2007. | |
| Solar is the most popular resource, used by 36,000 farms, | |
| followed by geo-exchange systems and wind turbines, each used on | |
| about 9,000 farms. About 1300 farms use small hydro and 537 have | |
| biogas systems. | |
| That's pretty impressive even if it still makes up a small | |
| percentage of US farms. USDA's 2012 census, released last week, | |
| shows there are 2.1 million farms taking up 914.5 million acres. | |
| USDA's Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) funds up to 25% | |
| of a renewable energy system (solar, wind, biogas) or energy | |
| efficiency upgrades and provides additional support through loan | |
| guarantees. 8,250 projects have been installed under the Obama | |
| administration, with more to come because it made it into this | |
| year's Farm Bill. | |
| Compare the number of farms with renewable energy to all the | |
| organic farms in the country. Even thought it's booming, with | |
| $31.5 billion in sales (up from $1.7 billion in 2007), organic | |
| acreage is tiny with 17,600 organic farms spread over 4.6 | |
| million acres - 0.8% of the total value of US food production. | |
| Amazing how long it takes to make a dent in conventional | |
| farming. :( | |
| Lots of conventional farms have moved to conservation tillage | |
| or no-till practices, however - 474,028 farms covering 173.1 | |
| million acres. [img width=40 | |
| height=40] | |
| http://www.clker.com/cliparts/c/8/f/8/11949865511933397169thumbs_up_nathan_eady… | |
| /> | |
| And 144,530 farmers sell direct to consumers with sales over | |
| $1.3 billion (up 8.1%). [img width=40 | |
| height=40] | |
| http://www.clker.com/cliparts/c/8/f/8/11949865511933397169thumbs_up_nathan_eady… | |
| /> | |
| "Once every five years, farmers, ranchers and growers have the | |
| unique opportunity to let the world know how U.S. agriculture is | |
| changing, what is staying the same, what's working and what we | |
| can do differently," says Dr. Cynthia Clark, head of USDA's | |
| National Agricultural Statistics Service. | |
| Some interesting statistics: | |
| �Both sales ($394.6 billion) and production expenses ($328.9 | |
| billion) reached record highs in 2012; | |
| �75% of farms are small, producing 3% of products with sales | |
| under $50,000. 4% of all farms produce 66% of products with | |
| sales over $1 million; | |
| �Corn and soybean acres topped 50% of all acres harvested for | |
| the first time; | |
| �Cows raised for beef are the biggest food category, accounting | |
| for 29% of farms and ranches (619,172); | |
| �Not surprisingly, farming is concentrated geographically. | |
| California has 9 of 10 top counties for sales, led by Fresno | |
| with $5 billion; | |
| �Top 5 states: California ($42.6 billion); Iowa ($30.8 billion); | |
| Texas ($25.4 billion); Nebraska ($23.1 billion); and Minnesota | |
| ($21.3 billion); | |
| �87% of US farms are operated by families or individuals, on | |
| average 58.3 years old and predominantly male; | |
| �Young farmers increased 11.3%, however, to 40,499 people, and | |
| minority-operated farms are increasing, especially Hispanics at | |
| 21%. | |
| One of the newer risks on farms is aquaculture, particularly for | |
| their negative impacts on wild salmon. Last year, the USDA | |
| opened the door to expand British Columbia's open net-cage | |
| industry, accepting 13 applications for the Pacific Northwest. | |
| Monterey Bay Aquarium's Seafood Watch and Canada's SeaChoice | |
| program both rated that industry with a "avoid buying" | |
| designation. There are many problems: what they feed farmed | |
| salmon, disease transmission between farmed and wild salmon, and | |
| concentrations of many farms in small areas. Over 90% of wild | |
| salmon die before they return to freshwater to spawn - most of | |
| them in the first months after they enter the ocean, according | |
| to the David Suzuki Foundation. | |
| "Aquaculture must stop using the ocean as a free waste-treatment | |
| system," says Dr. Suzuki. "Closed-containment - in the ocean or | |
| on land - is better at controlling water and removing feces and | |
| chemicals like antibiotics and pesticides used for sea lice. One | |
| British Columbia open net-cage company lost more than $200 | |
| million in one year because of disease, enough to build 10 | |
| closed-containment farms. Yet the industry claims closed | |
| alternatives cost too much." | |
| http://www.sustainablebusiness.com/index.cfm/go/news.display/id/25690 | |
| #Post#: 1101-------------------------------------------------- | |
| LEDs Can Triple the Efficiency of Greenhouse Lighting | |
| By: AGelbert Date: May 12, 2014, 12:25 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| LEDs Can Triple the Efficiency of Greenhouse Lighting ;D | |
| [move] [font=courier]Solid-state lighting could improve the | |
| world food supply.[/font] | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/47b20s0.gif[/move] | |
| Doug Widney | |
| February 21, 2014 | |
| LED greenhouse lighting is poised on the hockey stick of the | |
| adoption curve, saving electricity while potentially improving | |
| the world food supply. | |
| The past year has seen production-scale deployment emerge out of | |
| years of trial grower installations, at users such as Rainbow | |
| Greenhouses in British Columbia, Clean Fresh Food in Wisconsin, | |
| Butter Valley Harvest in Pennsylvania, and many others. | |
| The scale of modern greenhouse operations is visible in places | |
| such as Almeria, Spain, where greenhouses are actually changing | |
| the regional climate. In attempting to reproduce the energy flux | |
| of the sun over many acres, inefficient legacy lighting ends up | |
| drawing a staggering amount of electricity -- well into the | |
| megawatt range. There are growers that have to notify the local | |
| power company of their operating schedule. Lumigrow has a | |
| Canadian customer which operates its lights sixteen hours a day, | |
| seven months a year, and has a winter electricity bill that is | |
| ten times higher than it is in summer. | |
| Growers also encounter local power caps. A commercial greenhouse | |
| complex in Indiana lost an entire summer�s worth of plants when | |
| its electricity was curtailed during a heat wave. :( To this | |
| should be added the approximately 1.3 quads (quadrillion BTUs) | |
| of energy spent hauling food, an amount nearly equal to the | |
| energy in the food itself :o ???. Roses and salad delicacies | |
| are hauled many thousands of miles to northern Europe, Canada, | |
| and Alaska, with the roses often transported by air. >:( | |
| LEDs have a unique efficacy advantage in horticulture. Plants | |
| appear green because they absorb red and blue, the bandgap | |
| energy of the two primary photosynthetic reactions. With LED | |
| lighting, the color of the light can be tuned to �horticultural | |
| red� (660 nanometers) -- deeper than the standard traffic light | |
| or brake | |
| light. | |
| http://www.freesmileys.org/emoticons/emoticon-object-060.gif | |
| So why on earth has everyone been feeding plants orange high | |
| pressure sodium (HPS) light, the dominant horticultural lighting | |
| technology? The answer is that from a total output, lifespan | |
| and cost point of view, HPS used to be just the best of a bad | |
| lot. | |
| Spherical emitters such as HPS lose up to 40 percent of their | |
| photons getting the light stream turned around in a downlight | |
| application. As with street lighting, LEDs have the advantage of | |
| being a natural downlight emitter. | |
| PAR is for plants, lumens are for humans | |
| An LED luminaire, for example, could put out red and blue | |
| photosynthetically available radiation (PAR) slightly greater | |
| than a standard 1,000-watt HPS luminaire, while consuming only | |
| 325 watts. The PAR unit of measurement is standard in | |
| horticultural lighting, since it is weighted for plant | |
| photosyntethic response. The lumen unit is useless in this | |
| context, as it is based solely on human visual response. | |
| Obvious greenhouse lighting candidates are facilities located in | |
| cloudy northern areas with long winter nights. But any locale | |
| can employ year-round supplementation for especially | |
| light-hungry crops such as corn and tomato. There are a | |
| surprising number of tropical uses, including stretching the | |
| never-long tropical summer daylight, and the raising of crops | |
| that are intolerant of humid heat. All lettuce consumed in the | |
| tropics must either be grown in greenhouses or shipped in from a | |
| higher latitude. | |
| LED horticultural lighting may yield one of the more financially | |
| viable greentech investment niches. Sector sales are growing | |
| rapidly, with market saturation still only in low-single-digit | |
| percents. While the total available market is respectable at | |
| $4.8 billion for North America, the far larger streetlight and | |
| residential lighting markets have distracted the attention of | |
| worldwide lighting majors and Asian exporters (with one or two | |
| significant exceptions). | |
| Challenges include the technology's higher initial cost and the | |
| tendency of farmers to deliberate carefully before gambling an | |
| entire crop cycle on something new. Economics at present are | |
| channeling LED applications towards boutique areas such as | |
| flowers, seed stock growing, and salad herbs and delicacies. | |
| However, costs are falling. Payoff time is now often less than | |
| three years, and the latitude line for the viability of | |
| greenhouse lighting has dropped from Indiana southwards to Santa | |
| Barbara. | |
| Beyond the energy savings, LED greenhouse lighting offers hope | |
| for continued technical progress in world food production. | |
| Observers such as Lester Brown and the Worldwatch Institute have | |
| noted that the years after the new millennium saw a reversal of | |
| some of the progress of the 1990s in eliminating world hunger. | |
| Drought in California is currently driving up food prices | |
| regionally; reportedly, the state government is considering | |
| diverting research funds to investigate greenhouse growing for | |
| saving water. The potential of LED lighting in the greenhouse is | |
| a bright spot for a hungry world. | |
| http://www.freesmileys.org/emoticons/emoticon-object-041.gif | |
| *** | |
| Doug Widney is Manager of Engineering for LumiGrow, based in | |
| Novato, Calif. He has previously been a consultant in solar, | |
| batteries, and LEDs. LumiGrow, which recently achieved | |
| profitability, is funded by Clean Pacific Ventures. Reach him at | |
| [email protected]. | |
| http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/leds-can-triple-the-efficiency-of-g… | |
| #Post#: 1122-------------------------------------------------- | |
| 11 Edible Flowers to Grow in Your Garden | |
| By: AGelbert Date: May 13, 2014, 10:47 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 11 Edible Flowers to Grow in Your Garden | |
| http://www.freesmileys.org/emoticons/emoticon-object-103.gif | |
| Anna Brones, Care2 | May 12, 2014 1:57 pm | |
| It�s not just fancy chefs that can use flowers to add a little | |
| color to a meal; you too can grow your own edible flowers at | |
| home. In fact, while you may find edible flowers on sale at a | |
| farmers market every now and then, there�s nothing like walking | |
| into your garden and picking them fresh. | |
| Nasturtiums | |
| Calendula | |
| Chive blossoms | |
| Borage | |
| Lilacs | |
| http://www.coh2.org/images/Smileys/huhsign.gif | |
| Violets | |
| Roses | |
| http://www.freesmileys.org/emoticons/emoticon-object-045.gif | |
| Squash blossoms | |
| Basil blossoms | |
| Fennel blossoms | |
| Lavender | |
| [i]SLIDESHOW and HOW TO PREPARE AND EAT THEM at link: ;D | |
| http://www.freesmileys.org/emoticons/emoticon-object-060.gif | |
| [/i] | |
| http://ecowatch.com/2014/05/12/11-edible-flowers-garden/ | |
| #Post#: 1277-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Can you find the Mistaken Assumptions in this PRO-GMO scientific | |
| video? | |
| By: AGelbert Date: June 4, 2014, 3:16 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Rusty Waves of Grain | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://ewcablog.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/stemrust_inset.jpg[/img] | |
| http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeuP5IYP5HA&feature=player_embedded<br | |
| /> | |
| One more reason why MONOCULTURE predatory capitalist profit | |
| worshipping agriculture at the expense of the biosphere is | |
| STUPID. >:( | |
| This video illustrates PERFECTLY (without wanting to do so!) the | |
| stupid, reductionist, profit mentality of "modern" (as in | |
| mono-culture idiocy) agriculture. You will note that the Melinda | |
| Gates Foundation (GMO champion for corporate profits disguised | |
| as "helping feed and protect humanity" ;)) is funding this | |
| latest GMO target ( wheat fungus). | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://292fc373eb1b8428f75b-7f75e5eb51943043279413a54aaa858a.r38.cf3.rackcdn.co… | |
| Why is this exactly the wrong approach? First of all, because, | |
| rather than question monoculture practice as the MAIN CAUSE of | |
| an opportunistic fungus going hog wild when a large, | |
| concentrated food source is available (something nature normally | |
| avoids in its vast plant diversity for that VERY REASON - | |
| preventing organism population unbalances in the biosphere), the | |
| scientists merely state that the fungus reproduces rapidly when | |
| "the conditions are suitable". | |
| Well, no kidding! These worthies have a tremendous capacity for | |
| the obvious! Unfortunately, their blind spot in elementary logic | |
| is just as big! And that is, If you have a huge concentrated | |
| food supply, you just left the proven method that nature uses to | |
| keep balance in the biosphere behind! You profit loving fools | |
| are asking for a fungal, bacterial and or insect "plague" to | |
| UNDO THE UNBALANCE IN THE BIOSPHERE. | |
| http://www.coh2.org/images/Smileys/huhsign.gif | |
| Oh, but it is | |
| corporate capitalist heresy to question monoculture | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/237.gif | |
| so the "suitable | |
| conditions" for the fungus to feast on the wheat are not | |
| considered "the problem" | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/gen152.gif | |
| The "problem" is now the fungus! [img width=80 | |
| height=60] | |
| http://fc06.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2009/347/2/6/WTF_Smiley_face_by_IveWasHere.jp… | |
| />"It's a new strain! It EVOLVED! iT'S DANGEROUS!" | |
| http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys/smiley-scared002.gif<br | |
| /> | |
| http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys/smiley-scared005.gifhttp://www.pic4ever.com/… | |
| />width=40 | |
| height=40] | |
| http://www.imgion.com/images/01/Angry-animated-smiley.jpg[/img]<br | |
| />[img width=40 | |
| height=40] | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-051113192052.png[/img… | |
| />width=80 | |
| height=60] | |
| http://www.whydidyouwearthat.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/tumblr_l7j9nik8Wf1q… | |
| Never mind that LOTS of opportunistic life forms in nature | |
| ALWAYS go after a concentrated food source, there's money to be | |
| made by GMOing the wheat to resist the fungus or GMOing the | |
| fungus so it won't eat the wheat! | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-311013201314.pnghttp:… | |
| /> | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/acigar.gif | |
| So, these bought and paid for "luminaries" set out do us all a | |
| big "favor" [img width=60 | |
| height=40] | |
| http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_9HT4xZyDmh4/TOHhxzA0wLI/AAAAAAAAEUk/oeHDS2cfxWQ/s200/… | |
| />by "saving the wheat from the fungus". | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/ugly004.gif | |
| As you will see in the video, that pesky ;D fungus has quite a | |
| few tricks up its "sleeve", so to speak. It even lives on | |
| surrounding vegetation for a while before pouncing on the wheat. | |
| Of course, if they manage to slow the fungus down, there will be | |
| a thousand other species of life forms out there lining up to | |
| repair the UNBALANCE IN THE BIOSPHERE known as a concentrated | |
| monoculture food supply. | |
| Scientists, because they are so abysmally ignorant (while | |
| egotistically and pridefully claiming they have nature mostly | |
| figured out - NOT!) of the incredible complexity of the | |
| biochemical processes in the biosphere, MUST work WITH the | |
| biosphere's laws, not against them. Of course the Profit over | |
| Planet IntelliMORONS don't want to hear that... | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/290.gif | |
| ;) | |
| Monoculture needs to be eliminated. Various crops must grow | |
| mixed. Soil must not be plowed, perennial grains, not annuals | |
| must be grown. Then there will never be a concentrated food | |
| supply for any single organism and they, predators and prey, | |
| will balance out and NO GMO will be necessary. The HEALTH of | |
| humanity, as well as the biosphere, will then be SUSTAINABLE. | |
| http://dl6.glitter-graphics.net/pub/2752/2752256x4e962185l.gif<br | |
| /> | |
| http://dl6.glitter-graphics.net/pub/57/57396kkkx0l656b.gif | |
| What WON'T be sustainable, is corporate GMO monoculture profit | |
| over planet. [img width=070 | |
| height=060] | |
| http://carrieamedford.com/wp-content/uploads/money-emoticon.gif.jpg[/img]<br | |
| />[img width=180 | |
| height=80] | |
| http://www.desismileys.com/smileys/desismileys_6869.gif[/img] | |
| [move]Pass it on. The planet you save may be your own. | |
| http://dl3.glitter-graphics.net/pub/723/723623pjc70713cu.gif[/move] | |
| #Post#: 1318-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Are Weeds the Future of Food? | |
| By: AGelbert Date: June 7, 2014, 5:31 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Are Weeds the Future of Food? | |
| Lisa Palmer, Yale Environment 360 | June 7, 2014 | |
| Weeds that resemble knee-high grass grow in planter pots in a | |
| small room at a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) lab just | |
| outside Washington, D.C. Light, heat and carbon dioxide reach | |
| the plants at steady levels. For more than a month, the weeds | |
| have sustained the same conditions expected to be Earth�s norm | |
| 35 years from now�carbon dioxide levels equivalent to an urban | |
| traffic jam, and temperatures tipping into the dangerous zone | |
| for the planet�s health. | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://files.cdn.ecowatch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/IMG_1880_1881_800.jpg[… | |
| On the left is bushy red rice, technically a weed, under | |
| standard growing conditions at a USDA lab near Washington, DC. | |
| On the right, red rice at the USDA lab grows taller and thicker | |
| after being exposed to elevated levels of CO2 and higher | |
| temperatures, mimicking conditions plants will face this century | |
| as the world warms. Photo credit: Lisa Palmer | |
| But rather than choking from such treatment, the weeds�a wild | |
| plant called red rice�are thriving. The test lab mimics | |
| conditions expected around the world by 2050, when an additional | |
| 2.6 billion people will be wondering what�s for dinner. | |
| Lewis Ziska, a plant physiologist with the USDA�s Agricultural | |
| Research Service, studies, among other things, weeds in food | |
| production and human health. Weeds beguile Ziska. Weeds may be | |
| the largest single limitation to global crop yield. But they | |
| also have traits that are useful to plant growth. Red rice, for | |
| instance, can adapt to more carbon dioxide and heat by producing | |
| more stems and grain�red rice has 80 to 90 percent more seed | |
| than cultivated rice. :o | |
| Now, plant breeders and plant physiologists are capitalizing on | |
| those traits and counting on all possible sources of genetic | |
| variation, including weedy lines of rice, to improve | |
| productivity in cultivated crop varieties. Such cross-breeding | |
| could play an important role in helping the world�s staple food | |
| crops better adapt to a warming climate. | |
| Plant physiologists such as Ziska usually put weeds in two | |
| categories: �an unwanted or undesired plant species� and �early | |
| vegetation following soil disturbance.� Ziska thinks a third | |
| definition could be more suitable: the unloved flower. �A weed | |
| is a plant whose [color=green]virtues have yet to be | |
| discovered,� he says, paraphrasing Emerson.[/color] | |
| http://www.desismileys.com/smileys/desismileys_0293.gif | |
| Ziska is not the only one with this perspective. Many scientists | |
| now believe that weeds may be part of the solution to boosting | |
| harvests in a warming world. Wild lines of wheat, oats and | |
| rice�which are, in fact, weeds�have genetic characteristics that | |
| may be useful to adapt their domesticated cousins to an | |
| uncertain future. | |
| Why weeds? | |
| http://www.desismileys.com/smileys/desismileys_1730.gif | |
| When | |
| other plants are wilting at extremes of temperature and | |
| rainfall, weeds thrive. [img width=30 | |
| height=40] | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-141113185047.png[/img… | |
| /> Ziska studies weeds for their redemptive qualities. His | |
| research in this area was bolstered on a sweltering day in an | |
| abandoned industrial lot in Baltimore, 25 miles from his USDA | |
| research center, where he observed weeds that were two to four | |
| times bigger than weeds growing on his rural test plot. The | |
| urban weeds prompted further research on weeds that could be | |
| valuable to raising crops in high-carbon, high-heat scenarios. | |
| Ziska tries not to call red rice a weed. Sometimes he calls it | |
| skanky rice, but mostly he refers to it as wild or feral rice. | |
| All crop plants were wild at some point. They became | |
| domesticated in the same way cows and pigs became domesticated | |
| on farms: through breeding and selection. Wild and feral crop | |
| relatives are the original source of raw genetic material from | |
| which all modern crop varieties were first developed, but these | |
| reservoirs of natural variation have not been well studied. | |
| Breeding from wild, ancestral plant populations may hold the key | |
| to creating crops of the future. Wheat breeding has already made | |
| significant progress in producing weedy lines, which have led to | |
| the cultivation of edible wheat. Because it has a large genome, | |
| wheat can incorporate traits that better withstand heat and | |
| drought. Matthew Reynolds, head of the wheat physiology program | |
| at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in | |
| Mexico City, says that wheat producers are fortunate because | |
| they are slightly ahead of the curve in developing heat- and | |
| drought-resistant varieties. | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://files.cdn.ecowatch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Rice-comparison-702.jp… | |
| The value of using wild relatives of crops as sources of | |
| environmental resilience and resistance to pests and diseases | |
| led to an estimated $115 billion in annual benefits to the world | |
| economy by 1997, primarily through increased production, | |
| according to research at Cornell University. | |
| Although seeds are readily accessible in 1,700 gene banks | |
| throughout the world, �they are not used to their full potential | |
| in plant breeding,� said Susan McCouch, a plant geneticist at | |
| Cornell. �There are still vast reserves of valuable genes and | |
| traits hidden in low-performing wild ancestors and long | |
| forgotten early farmer varieties that can be coaxed out of these | |
| ancient plants by crossing them with higher-yielding modern | |
| relatives. These crosses give rise to families of offspring that | |
| carry a myriad of new possibilities for the future.� | |
| McCouch says the plant breeder�s job is to utilize a combination | |
| of insight, field experience, technology and innovative breeding | |
| strategies to select the most promising offspring and prepare | |
| them for release as new varieties. The breeding system allows | |
| ancient traits and genes to be constantly recycled and | |
| recombined, giving rise to an infinite range of new | |
| possibilities with every generation. | |
| �The same process happens in nature,� McCouch said, �but the | |
| plant breeder can bring together parents from diverse sources | |
| that would never have found each other in the wild.� | |
| http://files.cdn.ecowatch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Gealypic5-800.jpg | |
| [img width=640 | |
| height=480] | |
| http://files.cdn.ecowatch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Gealypic5-800.jpg[/img] | |
| Wild red rice, technically a weed. The plant is hardy and | |
| aggressive. Scientists are working to breed these hardier traits | |
| of red rice into rice grown as crops, improving productivity and | |
| yields. Photo credit: USDA | |
| Improved rice breeding has a long way to go. It takes about 10 | |
| years for a crop to go from breeding to production, and another | |
| five years to bring it to distribution to farmers. That�s | |
| because it is a painstakingly slow process to select populations | |
| of offspring that contain combinations of traits and genes that | |
| have never been utilized in agriculture before, then test their | |
| resiliency to environmental stresses. | |
| But through such work weeds may become the unlikely hero of food | |
| production. Take red rice. As the name implies, weedy red rice | |
| looks like cultivated rice�the staple food for more than 3 | |
| billion people in the world�but it is an Asian wild grass. If it | |
| gets into a field of cultivated rice, it�s a fierce competitor. | |
| Because it looks so similar to rice, it develops incognito. It | |
| grows vigorously. It propagates quickly. As it matures, it grows | |
| taller than other rice plants. | |
| Then the wind blows its seeds all over a field and the crop | |
| plants itself. Red rice can�t be controlled by herbicides | |
| because it is so closely related to most cultivated rice. Once | |
| it�s established in a field, it is so aggressive that it will | |
| cut a field�s rice yield by 80 percent. Within five years it can | |
| become the dominant species in a field. Technically, red rice is | |
| edible but almost impossible to harvest because once it develops | |
| a seed, the seed falls to the ground and shatters. | |
| The goal, says Ziska, is to transfer the traits that make red | |
| rice so hardy into the more commonly cultivated rice crops. | |
| With a growing global population projected to reach 9.6 billion | |
| by mid-century, the demand for rice and other cereals is | |
| expected to rise by 14 percent per decade. But climate change is | |
| expected to cut into some of those crop yields. Today�s high | |
| temperatures stress the rice plants, limit growth and shorten | |
| growing seasons. Increasing carbon dioxide causes weeds to | |
| outpace crop growth. Coastal deltas are major rice-growing areas | |
| worldwide, and repeated coastal flooding is worsening with | |
| rising sea levels and intensifying storms; Vietnam, one of the | |
| top exporters of rice globally, already is losing land in the | |
| Mekong Delta. | |
| To surmount these many challenges, new tools and technologies | |
| are being developed that allow plant breeders to utilize | |
| ever-more distantly related wild and exotic relatives and to | |
| liberate the potential that remains locked up in these | |
| reservoirs of natural variation. | |
| However, crop resilience does not come in the form of a silver | |
| bullet. �It will not be one new trait, one super crop variety or | |
| one new management system that allows us to meet the world�s | |
| demand for food,� McCouch says. �It takes time, effort and | |
| training to make significant genetic progress when utilizing | |
| these ancient sources of variation.� | |
| But Donald Boesch, president of the University of Maryland�s | |
| Center for Environmental Science said agricultural science must | |
| move quickly to keep pace with climate change. �This adaptation | |
| needs to be fast,� said Boesch. �It is not something we can | |
| gradually work on. We need to have our science to support | |
| adaptation done at the same time as the rapid change that is | |
| occurring. And that poses tremendous risks for food security.� | |
| Ziska believes weeds will likely be a key part of the solution. | |
| �The feral cousins of today�s crops may allow us to adapt to | |
| meet food security needs,� he says. �This paradox of weeds I | |
| find fascinating. Let�s turn lemons into lemonade.� | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/47b20s0.gif<br | |
| /> | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/128fs318181.gifhttp://www.desismileys.com/smiley… | |
| http://ecowatch.com/2014/06/07/weeds-the-future-of-food/ | |
| Agelbert Comment: | |
| Great Article! I just want to add the tiniest flowering plant | |
| known to science ([I]Lemna minor[/I] - Duckweed), also has great | |
| promise as a source of nutrition [I] and [/I] bioremediation of | |
| the environment at the same time. | |
| This wonder plant grows almost [I]everywhere on earth[/I], can | |
| be fertilized with pig feces, thereby avoiding chemical | |
| fertilizers and nitrogen waste farm runoff, grows in shallow | |
| ponds with no need of continual water resupply once the initial | |
| pond is set up, does not replace crop land because ponds can be | |
| placed over non arable land all over the world to help sequester | |
| carbon, can be used as feed for animal and nutrient supplements | |
| for humans to prevent malnutrition, have even been used as | |
| environmental markers to detect heavy metal pollutants in water | |
| and, last but not least, are a known natural water purifier | |
| (lowers the fecal coliform count to acceptable levels). | |
| The Chinese have actually proposed Duckweed refineries because, | |
| as long as crude oil costs more that $80 a barrel, biofuel | |
| hydrocarbons form the Duckweed carbohydrates are profitable. | |
| Duckweed, unlike many cellulose biofuel plant sources is | |
| extremely low in lignin . This makes the extraction process far | |
| simpler, cheaper and more environmentally friendly that making | |
| biofuel out corn (a horrible choice only a fossil fuel lover | |
| could like) or even sugar can, which is eight times more | |
| efficient as a biofuel source than corn. Even switchgrass | |
| varieties have more lignin than Duckweed. | |
| I am firmly convinced this humble plant is part of a human | |
| future in a viable biosphere. [/I] | |
| [b]Duckweed, [i]The Little Green Plant that Could.[/b] | |
| http://renewablerevolution.createaforum.com/renewables/plant-based-products-for… | |
| #Post#: 1669-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Sustainable Food Production | |
| By: AGelbert Date: August 6, 2014, 8:08 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7ffAzRGqnw&feature=player_embedded | |
| [b]What if we CHANGE? [/b] | |
| #Post#: 2029-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Sustainable Food Production | |
| By: AGelbert Date: October 13, 2014, 1:19 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [font=times new roman]Growing Gourmet Mushrooms From Coffee | |
| Grounds[/font] | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/reading.gif | |
| Stefanie Spear | October 13, 2014 8:14 am | |
| Here�s a company with a very noble goal: keep coffee grounds out | |
| of landfills and use them to grow gourmet mushrooms. GroCycle, | |
| the UK�s first urban mushroom farm, is a social enterprise | |
| focused on social and environmental good, rather than profit. | |
| Started more than two years ago, GroCycle collects used coffee | |
| grounds from local UK coffee houses and takes them back to an | |
| old abandoned building to grow oyster mushrooms. | |
| In the UK, people drink 18 million cups of coffee every day, but | |
| only 1 percent of the coffee biomass ends up in their cups, | |
| leaving plenty of nutrient-rich grounds to grow a business. | |
| Meet Adam and Eric, and see how the GroCycle process works. | |
| Video at link: | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-200714194256.bmp<br | |
| /> | |
| http://ecowatch.com/2014/10/13/gourmet-mushrooms-coffee-grounds/ | |
| #Post#: 2033-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Sustainable Food Production | |
| By: AGelbert Date: October 13, 2014, 9:01 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| LEARN about the "Food Disparagement LAW". LEARN the ORWELLIAN | |
| way this LAW is used to HIDE the Big Ag Corporate TRUTH from | |
| being told to the American Public! :o Say what? ??? If you | |
| tell the TRUTH, you are SUED for telling an "untruth" ;D. | |
| And you are ALSO guilty | |
| http://www.desismileys.com/smileys/desismileys_6869.gif | |
| under | |
| the "Patriot" Act if you do that because FOOD is a "National | |
| Resource". | |
| http://www.smiley-lol.com/smiley/exagerent/police/enprison.gif<br | |
| />HELLO FASCISM! ;D Ka Ching for the LAWYERS! Are they fighting | |
| to overturn this TRAVESTY of LAW? NOPE! They ARE, however, | |
| making TONS of money suing anyone that DARES to tell the TRUTH | |
| about Big AG in the USA. | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-200714191329.bmp | |
| Big Ag is a greater contributor to global warming than the | |
| direct burning of Fossil Fuels. Is that a reason for the fossil | |
| fuelers to cheer? | |
| http://www.desismileys.com/smileys/desismileys_2932.gif | |
| Why? | |
| ??? | |
| The CAUSE of the ocean dead zones is Chemical FERTILIZERS | |
| manufactured by the PETROLEUM INDUSTRY. So it is ALL of a piece. | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-200714183337.bmp | |
| <br | |
| />And the LAW and the LAWYERS are not doing JACK **** to stop | |
| them. On the contrary, the most high powered (CIVIL) Law | |
| Firms | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/www_MyEmoticons_com__burp.gif<br | |
| />are the HANDMAIDENS of these planet polluting, ethics challeng | |
| ed | |
| villains. | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/acigar.gif<br | |
| /> | |
| http://www.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-200714183337.bmp | |
| http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nV04zyfLyN4&feature=player_embedded<br | |
| /> | |
| Before anybody tries to BLOW OFF what is said in this video as a | |
| "conspiracy theory", try to remember that it is a TRAILER of a | |
| documentary of 90 minutes duration. Don't make rash statements. | |
| These people HAVE done their homework. Please do YOURS. 8) | |
| Cowspiracy Exposes the Truth About Animal Agriculture | |
| Ward Pallotta | October 10, 2014 8:57 am | |
| A recent documentary, Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret, | |
| asks why most leading environmental organizations are ignoring a | |
| leading cause of environmental damage. | |
| In 90 minutes, co-producers Kip Andersen and Keegan Kuhn argue | |
| that our institutional and individual attention to selected | |
| environmental issues will not make a collective difference | |
| unless we also confront the realities of animal agriculture. | |
| Animal agriculture�s environmental effects are so pervasive that | |
| apparent progress elsewhere cannot counter its destructive and | |
| growing impact. | |
| The film suggests why protection for expanded areas of the ocean | |
| will not protect oceans or ocean animals. Growing food | |
| organically, even on a commercial scale, will not protect the | |
| land. Keeping lumber operations out of the Amazon will not save | |
| the rainforest. | |
| Making homes more water efficient and taking short showers will | |
| not make more water available. Driving electric cars will not | |
| solve the carbon emissions problem. Installing LED lights and | |
| converting to renewable energy will not stop global warming. | |
| Here is some of the data gathered by the producers and woven | |
| into this powerful film. | |
| Animal agriculture uses 55 percent of the water in the U.S. | |
| American homes use five percent. | |
| http://www.pic4ever.com/images/301.gif | |
| One thousand gallons of | |
| water are needed to produce 1 gallon of milk. Two thousand five | |
| hundred gallons of water are needed to make one pound of beef. | |
| Growing water shortages make animal agriculture unsustainable. | |
| Livestock uses 30 percent of the Earth�s total land mass, | |
| including nearly 50 percent of the U.S. mainland. The growing | |
| demand for animal farmland is responsible for 80 percent of | |
| Amazon rainforest destruction. (Palm oil production is second). | |
| With 160-million acres cleared or degraded annually for the | |
| animal industry, 40 percent of the rainforest will be destroyed | |
| in 20 years, affecting species survival and carbon | |
| sequestration. | |
| Animal agriculture is responsible for 18 percent of greenhouse | |
| gas emissions. All forms of land, air and ocean transportation | |
| total 13 percent. Transportation industry air pollution is | |
| overshadowed by animal agriculture air pollution. | |
| Seventy billion animals are raised annually worldwide. Everyday | |
| 144 million animals are killed for food. U.S. farm animals | |
| produce 7 million pounds of excrement every minute. Our lakes, | |
| oceans and psyches cannot sustain animal agriculture. | |
| Too many environmental groups are dodging this issue, but the | |
| cattle industry is steaming. One cattle association blogger | |
| reminds its members that it also takes a lot of water to make a | |
| T-shirt or produce a car. | |
| Seventy-five percent of Americans consider themselves | |
| environmentalists. Only 5 percent of Americans are vegetarian or | |
| vegan, however their percentage has quintupled in five years. | |
| The average American consumes 209 pounds of meat each year. | |
| Everyday, a person that eats a plant-based diet saves 1,100 | |
| gallons of water, 45 pounds of grain, 30 sq. ft. of forested | |
| land, the equivalent of 20 lbs. of CO2 and one animal�s life. | |
| This issue is an environmental advocate�s dream come true. It | |
| requires no political action money, no corporate boardroom | |
| decisions, no re-negotiated food policy, no tax incentives. When | |
| we eat meat, dairy and eggs, we feed this growing catastrophe. | |
| Change will happen as quickly as we convince each other to | |
| change what we eat. While producing his film, Kip Andersen | |
| became a vegan. | |
| Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret was self-funded by the | |
| producers and crowdfunded via Indiegogo. The marketing efforts | |
| for the film depends on community organizations to sponsor the | |
| film, promote ticket sales through their networks and fill a | |
| local theater. They bear no cost, only effort, and it is | |
| working. Cowspiracy showings are accelerating all over the | |
| country�during the last two weeks in October, the film will be | |
| seen in 35 locations. | |
| Click here for a list of upcoming events or to host a screening. | |
| Ward Pallotta is retired from social justice, nonprofit | |
| fundraising in Cleveland, Ohio. He and his life partner, Ann | |
| Urick, are members of VegSarasota and Transition Sarasota in | |
| Sarasota, Florida, and are advocates for safe and healthy food. | |
| Nine years ago they realized they were eating dangerously and | |
| switched to a plant-based diet. | |
| http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqZTaaGSKg0&feature=player_embedded<br | |
| /> | |
| http://ecowatch.com/2014/10/10/cowspiracy-exposes-animal-agriculture/ | |
| ***************************************************** | |
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