This mycorrhiza includes a fungus of the genus Amanita (Photo source Wikipedia)
It's the right time to imagine that the  Philippine denuded mountains will be covered again with forever green grass and  trees.
"It's a silent miracle worker and, best of all,  it's organic,"
It may hurt the chemical fertilizers business  but it would benefit the Mother Nature and the earth as it helps the farmers to  have abundant harvest.
"mycorrhiza" is not expensive compared to  chemical fertilizer and maybe soon accessible by the farmers to replace the commonly used chemical fertilizer.
Mycorrhiza  in the Know
According to Wikipedia, a mycorrhiza (Gk.  μυκός, mykós, "fungus" and ριζα, riza, "roots",pl.  mycorrhizae or mycorrhizas) is a symbiotic (generally mutualistic, but  occasionally weakly pathogenic) association between a fungus and the roots of a  vascular plant.
In a mycorrhizal association, the fungus  colonizes the host plant's roots, either intracellularly as in arbuscular  mycorrhizal fungi (AMF or AM), or extracellularly as in ectomycorrhizal fungi.  They are an important component of soil life and soil chemistry.
Philippines  banks on fungus to plant 1.5 billion trees
Fungus converts previously useless earth around  it into healthy soil
To help it achieve the goal of planting 1.5  billion trees by 2016, the government is counting an unlikely ally — a rare  fungus that converts previously useless earth around it into healthy soil.
According to Department of Environment and  Natural Resources (DENR) Secretary Ramon Paje, the government has found a  partner in "mycorrhiza" a fungus which the official said would not just help  the country plant more trees, but will also wean away Filipino farmers from  dependence on non-organic fertilizers.
Mycorrhiza, being a fungus, is inexpensive and  can be grown anywhere, he said. It is also safe in comparison to chemical fertilizers  that can harm the environment and humans.
"It's a silent miracle worker and, best of all,  it's organic," Paje said, adding that the Philippine government had adopted a  policy on the wide use of mycorrhiza in agricultural and forestry applications.
"This policy on the use of mycorrhiza has in  effect boosted government efforts to encourage the use of organic fertilizers  to wean away farmers from chemical fertilizers in order to improve the health  of soil throughout the country," he said.
The depletion of the country's forest cover had  been largely blamed for calamities such as flash floods that occur in the  Philippines with increasing regularity.
According to experts, the country has lost as  much as 80 per cent of its natural forest cover.
Based on the 2001-2003 satellite imagery, the  Philippines' remaining forest cover is estimated at 7.168 million hectares, or  24.27 per cent of the total land area. The remaining eight million hectares are  unproductive, open, denuded or degraded.
In a bid to rehabilitate and restore the  country's forest cover, the government of President Benigno Aquino launched the  National Greening Program (NGP). Part of this scheme is promoting a new  approach to reforestation where the mycorrhiza plays a big role.
Paje explains that other than serving as a fertilizer  for trees, mycorrhiza can be used on other crops.
"Aside from trees, mycorrhiza can even be  applied on a variety of crops, including sugarcane, onions, garlic and  vegetables. It's cost-effective. The cost of adding mycorrhiza is lower than  the savings from reduction in chemical fertilizer use. The yield gains add to  the profits,'' he said,
Mycorrhiza promotes plan growth by enhancing a  plant's uptake of water even in arid or acidic soils. At the same time, it also  releases powerful enzymes into the soil that dissolve hard-to-capture nutrients  such as organic nitrogen, phosphorus, iron and other "tightly bound" soil  nutrients.
According to experts, mycorrhizal fungus  possesses "symbiotic ties with plants".
"It attaches itself either on or inside the  plant roots to tap into the sugars and carbohydrates present in the leaves for  its sustenance. In turn, the fungal hyphae (filaments) grow out from the roots  and bring water and soil nutrients back into the plant host," the DENR said.
The Philippines' studies on the workings of  this wonder fungus were the result of the efforts of Dr Evangeline T. Castillo  of the Ecosystems and  Research Development Bureau (ERDB).
"Through her work, ERDB has produced pure  inoculants of endomycorrhiza which now have two approved patents from the  Bureau of Patents of the Intellectual Property Office-Philippines," said the  DENR.
With  report from the Gulf  News




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