Eco-Farm: An Acres U.S.A. Primer — Lesson 2: The Forgiveness of Nature, Part 3
This is an excerpt from Charles Walters’ Eco-Farm — An Acres U.S.A. Primer, available from the Acres U.S.A. bookstore at bookstore.acresusa.com. Read more excerpts from this book using the category “Eco-Farm” (https://members.acresusa.com/magazine-features/eco-farm/).
9. Plants capture solar energy
All energy comes from the sun. Tiny spines called trichomes probably focus the sun’s energy onto the surface of the leaf. The curved trichomes on small veins of wild grape leaves, for instance, are hollow. They are also coated with wax exactly as are the sensilla spines on insect antennae—a happenstance we will discuss in the lesson on insects. Likely, the leaf trichomes should be credited with the efficiency mentioned earlier, that of plants needing only one part in 2,000 of the sun’s energy for efficient growth.
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