jaydub13
Well-Known Member
So I have been reading up some on mycorrhizae to try and find out what types of sugars are used the most efficiently.
I started out on this sugar kick after I had thought about using fruit sugars to feed the biomass in my medium. I had remembered that Dave used his old pears and mashed them up to feed his soil at the Garden of Weeden, and then I had this epiphany:
I am juicing everyday, and I figure that there has to be some residual sugars left in the pulp. So if I were to take the pulp from fruit like green apples, kiwi, pears, etc.... suspend it in water, and store it in the refrigerator for a day or so to leach out the sugars and micronutrients... it might make for a good source of food for the biomass in a given medium.
So after digging around to figure out what types of sugar are the best food, i found this chart in a book titled Mycorrhizal Symbiosis.
Within the same book I read that glucose uptake was inhibited if fructose was also present. Seeing how glucose has the quickest rate of uptake, it only seemed logical to seek out sources of sugar with high glucose content that could be used to feed the biomass. Glucose is also the sugar that plants produce during photosynthesis, so my reasoning is that it would fit right in as a nutrient additive.
So in a sense I am done looking at fruit, as it is primarily made up of fructose.
I looked over Sucanat, organic maple syrup, agave nectar, honey, molasses, and various fruits that were categorized high sugar content. Some we all know work as a microbe/fungi food source, but I'm not looking for something that just "works". You get the best by using the best.
This led me to Brown rice syrup. Brown rice syrup is a pretty common item, available at most health food stores. The sugars within it are almost all glucose or in the glucose family of sugars. It mostly contains maltose, which is basically a glucose derivative... kind of like a caramelized form of glucose.
In 100g of Brown Rice Syrup you will find the following values:
I started out on this sugar kick after I had thought about using fruit sugars to feed the biomass in my medium. I had remembered that Dave used his old pears and mashed them up to feed his soil at the Garden of Weeden, and then I had this epiphany:
I am juicing everyday, and I figure that there has to be some residual sugars left in the pulp. So if I were to take the pulp from fruit like green apples, kiwi, pears, etc.... suspend it in water, and store it in the refrigerator for a day or so to leach out the sugars and micronutrients... it might make for a good source of food for the biomass in a given medium.
So after digging around to figure out what types of sugar are the best food, i found this chart in a book titled Mycorrhizal Symbiosis.
Within the same book I read that glucose uptake was inhibited if fructose was also present. Seeing how glucose has the quickest rate of uptake, it only seemed logical to seek out sources of sugar with high glucose content that could be used to feed the biomass. Glucose is also the sugar that plants produce during photosynthesis, so my reasoning is that it would fit right in as a nutrient additive.
So in a sense I am done looking at fruit, as it is primarily made up of fructose.
I looked over Sucanat, organic maple syrup, agave nectar, honey, molasses, and various fruits that were categorized high sugar content. Some we all know work as a microbe/fungi food source, but I'm not looking for something that just "works". You get the best by using the best.
This led me to Brown rice syrup. Brown rice syrup is a pretty common item, available at most health food stores. The sugars within it are almost all glucose or in the glucose family of sugars. It mostly contains maltose, which is basically a glucose derivative... kind of like a caramelized form of glucose.
In 100g of Brown Rice Syrup you will find the following values:
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