Green algae stimulate the growth of soil microorganisms
In Hickory, North Carolina, Russell Hedricks harvested 460 bushels of corn last year, an American dryland record. Among other practices, one of his inputs was a live green algae biostimulant. Based on soil analysis using Haney and PLFA tests, he applied 310 pounds of organic nitrogen to a field that had been farmed with regenerative practices for five years, and he applied a live Chlorella vulgaris formulation three times during the season. He estimated that the biostimulant boosted yield by 17 bushels per acre.
In a review of biostimulants in the March 2024 issue of this magazine, Patrick Freeze described four classes of biostimulants: humic and fulvic acids, seaweed extracts, microbial inoculants (rhizobacteria or mycorrhizal fungi) and protein hydrolysates that contain growth-signaling molecules called phytohormones. These four categories have variable actions with some overlap, but Dr. Freeze reported that no single class provides all of the possible benefits.
What about live green algae, though? They were the original biostimulants and can provide the full range of biostimulant benefits:
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