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Mycorrhizal Applications
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<blockquote data-quote="ClinchValley86" data-source="post: 1586961" data-attributes="member: 38595"><p>Quoted from google. "You can use a trap culture method to multiply commercial inoculant (skip forward), or to make your own local AM fungi from a soil sample. The easiest way to make mycorrhizal inoculant is to get it from a nearby plant. Simply take an infected plant's root area and place it close another plant's roots to inoculate."</p><p></p><p>Its just like growing any other fungus. A little can and will grow a lot. Just a matter of applying it to to scale that we would need.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ClinchValley86, post: 1586961, member: 38595"] Quoted from google. "You can use a trap culture method to multiply commercial inoculant (skip forward), or to make your own local AM fungi from a soil sample. The easiest way to make mycorrhizal inoculant is to get it from a nearby plant. Simply take an infected plant's root area and place it close another plant's roots to inoculate." Its just like growing any other fungus. A little can and will grow a lot. Just a matter of applying it to to scale that we would need. [/QUOTE]
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