Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

US: Mycorrhizal Applications introduces MycoApply Injector Endo Organic

Adding to its popular Injector series of mycorrhizal inoculant products, Mycorrhizal Applications has launched MycoApply Injector Endo Organic for Spring 2020.


MycoApply® Injector Endo Organic

Grants Pass, OR: Building on the success of the MycoApply Injector Endo product, launched on June 1, 2019, Mycorrhizal industry leader Mycorrhizal Applications has once again responded to customer demand by rolling out MycoApply Injector Endo Organic. This new addition to the MycoApply product line maintains the same high propagule concentration, carrier solubility, and diverse application options as MycoApply Injector Endo, but also offers the benefits of OMRI Listing for organic production. Designed for ease and efficiency of application, MycoApply Injector Endo Organic is formulated for application via horticulture injection and dosing equipment, and features a very broad label, making this new product ideal for growers with diverse operations.

Mycorrhizal Applications designed the Injector line of mycorrhizal inoculant products in order to allow medium- to large-scale growing operations to incorporate mycorrhizae into their growing protocols efficiently and effectively, avoiding any additional labor-intensive steps in their production protocols. The high solubility of the humic carrier and the high concentration of active ingredients allow these products to be seamlessly added to a production protocol by adding the inoculant directly into the injector stock tank and then applying the active ingredients to the crop via boom spray, sprinkler, drip irrigation, hand spray, hydroseed/hydromulch, in-furrow, or any method that effectively drenches the crop plant’s root zone to get the propagules into direct contact with the growing roots.

MycoApply Injector Endo Organic is launching in Spring 2020, and features four species of endomycorrhizae: Glomus intraradices, G. mosseae, G. etunicatum, and G. aggregatum. These soil organisms benefit about 85% of plant species, and are included at a very high concentration of 17,600 propagules per gram (7,983,219 propagules per pound). This new addition to the MycoApply lineup is a concentrated suspendable powder formulation on an OMRI Listed soluble humic carrier, sold in 100-gram bags with a 20-gram scoop included. MycoApply Injector Endo Organic is designed to be applied at a rate of 20 grams per 1 gallon of water in the injector’s stock tank, and diluted at a rate of 1:100 gallons of drench via injection/dosing equipment. This means that each 100-gram bag of MycoApply Injector Endo Organic can treat 500 gallons of application solution.

Endomycorrhizae are biological, symbiotic soil fungi, which colonize plants’ root systems and act as a living extension of the roots, drastically increasing the absorptive surface area and improving the plant’s nutrient and water efficiency. Data shows that mycorrhizae provide a range of direct and indirect benefits to host plants through this symbiosis, and ultimately increase plants’ overall vitality, stress resilience, drought resistance, and transplant success. They can also reduce necessary investments in other important production inputs such as fertilizer and irrigation.

More information about the MycoApply Injector Endo Organic and its benefits: https://mycorrhizae.com/mycoapply-injector-endo-organic/ 

For more information:
Mycorrhizal Applications
PO Box 1029
Grants Pass, OR 97528
Toll Free: 866-476-7800
Phone: 541-476-3985
Fax: 541-476-1581
[email protected]
mycorrhizae.com

 

Publication date: