Substrate Growing Articles & Analysis
7 articles found
At Fa. Bisschops we grow Dahlia bulbs, among other things. And we have been doing so with great care and attention for ...
Within this context, high-power impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS) – a technological advancement to drastically enhance the flux of ionised target species involved in conventional DC magnetron sputtering (DCMS) – is rendered particularly attractive for introducing novel means of influencing working gas- and metal-ions incident on substrate and ...
Soil is no longer a problem thanks to the existence of optimal substrates for growing blueberries. Of all the berries, blueberries require the most consideration for greenhouse cultivation. We are going to see some of them, as well as an optimal hydroponic growing system for blueberries. A good selection of variety (Bluetta, Duke, Earliblue, ...
The present research study assesses the use of substrates with different compositions for the growth of six aromatic plant species – Lavandula dentata, Pelargonium odoratissimum, Helichrysum italicum, Satureja montana, Thymus caespititius and T. pseudolanuginosus, during a 2-year period, and the monitoring of water runoff quality. Growing ...
Theo: There are only a handful growers that still grow in soil, but nowadays it is grown in substrate. Cocofiber, rockwool, peat moss, perlite or mixtures of different media. The choice of substrate growing media is dependent on the grower’s preference, crop type, water quality, size of irrigation system, and price. ...
These compounds can be produced during anaerobic fermentation by the bacterium Clostridium acetobutylicum and a variety of related organisms growing on substrates such as potatoes, corn, rye, millet, cheese whey, apple pomace, algal biomass, (Woods, Trends in Biotechnology 13: 259-264, 1995) and soybean oil that can be used to enhance reductive dechlorination in ...
This free input of barley mash becomes perfect substrate on which to grow mushrooms. This provides a local food source and more practical skills for the students. The substrate, mixed with rice straw or sawdust, is inoculated with fungus spores. As the mushrooms grow, they produce an enzyme that unlocks the protein in the grain, ...