mindstalk: (riboku)
Artificial synthesis, saying they can make acetate from electricity at 18x the efficiency of plants, then grow plants with the acetate.

https://news.ucr.edu/articles/2022/06/23/artificial-photosynthesis-can-produce-food-without-sunshine
mindstalk: (riboku)
Quickbeam talking about rowan trees:

"Yet there are no trees of all that race, the people of the Rose, that are so beautiful to me"

Me: "Wait, are rowans Rosaceae?" Yes, yes they are.
mindstalk: (Earth)
Growth continues, and I've discovered microclimates. I'd put some bunches by the window for sun, and others a food inward for lack of room. Given that the heavily cut inward bunch has almost caught up to the lightly cut window bunch, I'm thinking that being close to a 13 C window at night was the dominant (and negative) growth effect. Currently all are inward, with the formerly window ones on the inside of the formation, to see if they even out.

It is mysterious why some individual plants spurt forth vigorously and others, in the same bunch, just wilt.

Roots are also growing, the glasses are getting crowded. I wonder if I should trim them, or if that would traumatize them.

This definitely seems a way to at least double the amount of scallion you get for your money. Webpages said you could get 3 or 4 growths before they give up.

I changed their water today, in case mineral depletion is an issue.
mindstalk: (riboku)
Sunday I dared a grocery run and came back with 5 bunch of scallions in my haul. I cut up 3 to freeze, leaving some green above the roots, then put all five in glasses of water. I think they''ve grown an inch or so since. The cut bunches are pretty obvious: I had cut them cleanly with scissors, but now there's new growth coming from inside the stalks, like a pipe within a pipe. The other two bunches are less clear, no sleeve action like that, but some stalks are longer than others despite my cutting for fresh scallion use. It's possible I missed some though.

CO2 and H20 have obvious sources, but where are the minerals for new growth coming from? I assume mostly cannibalizing the roots, but Los Angeles water is pretty 'hard'. Hmm, there's an idea for a science experiment, compare growth in tap vs. distilled water...
mindstalk: (riboku)
Currently reading The Secret Life of Trees by Colin Tudge, not to be confused with the more recent The Hidden Life of Trees by a German forester.

What is a tree? The obvious popular, and functional, definition is a tall plant on a stick, outgrowing competition in a race for sunlight. The least interesting definition requires the stick to be made of wood[1], rather than herbal stems kept up by water pressure; I'll call that "woody tree". A more evolutionary definition of "trees proper" invokes secondary growth, and specifically the cambium, a sheath of cells around the trunk that generate wood on the inside and bark on the outside (xylem and phloem), contributing to growth outward as well as upward.

The tree lifestyle is one of the targets of convergent evolution, hit by Lepidodendron, tree ferns, some Carboniferous horsetails, various monocots.

The tree proper encompasses conifers (and their gymnosperm relatives, cycads and ginkgo) and most flowering (angiosperm) trees, which suggests their common ancestor was a tree, and also that the first flowering plant was a tree, despite the vast mass of angiosperms that have since shed all wood and tree-ness.

Flowering plants can be divided into primitive dicots, true dicots (eudicots), and monocots. The big distinction is that monocot leaves grow from the base, rather than the tip or edge; grasses are monocots, and having their growth region below the ground means they can survive grazing, which is part of why they've become so successful in the last 40 million years. There are five groups of monocot 'trees', none of which have the cambium of trees proper, so the first monocot must have been herby, with subsequent re-inventions of the tree lifestyle. Some of those have a form of secondary growth but not the cambium. Monocot trees include Joshua trees and palms.

[1] Lignified cellulose. Cellulose is floppy, having lots of lignin molecules in it makes for a rigid matrix that can stand up on its own.

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