Soil Bacteria as effective as anti depressants - researchers find

 Mycobacterium vaccae is a bacterium that is common in soil ecosystems. This bacteria has been shown to be effective at elevating serotonin production in clinical trials. This, in effect acts as many prescription anti-depressants, which is exactly what researchers are discovering at universities world wide!!

below is a link to an article discussing some of the other benefits of introducing some of the soil microbiota into your life!!!

https://qz.com/993258/dirt-has-a-microbiome-and-it-may-double-as-an-antidepressant/

Tips for healthy soils:

Available webinar classes on this topic


01 : Be careful of the compounds placed in your soil. learn what to use and what not to.

02 : Learn to compost!!

03 : Cover crop basics in your own backyard.

04 : Keep those root systems in-tact!!!! Killing off weeds without chemicals or labor-intensive pulling, digging, or the like….

Introducing silvopasture and silvoculture: what is it and what are the benefits?

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Both silvopasture and silvoculture have one primary component, incorporating trees and forest products into a food production system. Silvopasture, is of course grazing livestock in amongst trees, either by planting into an existing pasture, or by introducing livestock into a managed forest ecosystem. Silvoculture typically refers to the production of produce in a forested ecosystem. Both of course have similar benefits, namely the ecosystem services of water conservation, temperature regulation and improved nutrient cycling.

Other primary benefits are the added economic gains of having a short term economic strategy of either annual crops, or livestock coupled with the longer term return of nuts, fruits, or lumber.

These systems can be terribly simple, composed of two species or as wildly complex as having 4 or 5 species of grazers and dozens of species of trees. Either method has specific goals in mind by the producer.

Overall these systems have continued to demonstrate improvements to the land, the carbon sequestrative ability per acre, and long term economic stability.

According to researchers at the Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research,

The primary role of grazing animals in grassland biodiversity management is maintenance and enhancement of sward structural heterogeneity, and thus botanical and faunal diversity, by selective defoliation due to dietary choices, treading, nutrient cycling and propagule dispersal.

Grazing and pasture management for biodiversity benefit Andrew J. ROOK*, Jeremy R.B. TALLOWIN Soils, Environmental and Ecological Science Department, Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, North Wyke, Okehampton, Devon EX20 2SB, UK (Received 19 August 2002; accepted 25 February 2003)