What's new
  • Happy Birthday ICMag! Been 20 years since Gypsy Nirvana created the forum! We are celebrating with a 4/20 Giveaway and by launching a new Patreon tier called "420club". You can read more here.
  • Important notice: ICMag's T.O.U. has been updated. Please review it here. For your convenience, it is also available in the main forum menu, under 'Quick Links"!

Another reason to use crab meal?

Albertine

Member
Just found this article. Perhaps using crab meal containing chitin stimulates the immune system against fungal attacks also?






Science News



Share Blog Cite


Print Email Bookmark


Smart Fungus Disarms Plant, Animal and Human Immunity

ScienceDaily (Aug. 20, 2010) — Fungal and bacterial pathogens are quite capable of infecting plants, animals and humans despite their immune systems. Fungi penetrate leafs, stalks and roots, or skin, intestines and lungs, to infect their hosts. Researchers from Wageningen UR (University & Research centre) discovered, together with Japanese colleagues, how this is possible. They found that the fungus secretes a protein that makes stray building blocks of the fungal cell wall invisible for the immune system of the plant, such that infection remains unnoticed.
See Also:
Health & Medicine

Plants & Animals

Reference


They report their findings in the Aug. 20 issue of the journal Science.
Fungi prepare their attack, for instance on a tomato plant, rather well. Take for example the fungus Cladosporium fulvum that causes leaf mould on tomato plants. Once the fungus starts to infect, the tomato plant would recognize the fungus based on the presence of chitin fragments that are derived from the fungal cell wall. Chitin does not naturally occur in plants, but chitin fragments can always be found near fungi, just like cat hairs betray a cat's presence. The tomato immune system recognizes the chitin fragments as "non-self and unwanted" and alarms the immune system to combat the infection. So far so good.
However, Cladosporium fulvum as well as nearly all other fungi carry a secret weapon. A team of researchers under the supervision of plant pathologist Bart Thomma discovered that the fungus secretes the protein Ecp6 during host attack. Ecp6 is the code name for 'extracellular protein 6'. Ecp6 finds the chitin fragments that surround the fungus and binds them. This binding makes the chitin fragments invisible for the tomato plant, like a stealth-jet is invisible for radar, such that the immune system is not alarmed. As a result the plant gets diseased. Animal and human fungal pathogens also produce the protein, and are likely to disarm the immune system of their hosts in a similar way.
From experiments that the researchers performed to investigate the role of Ecp6, it appears that a fungus that does not produce Ecp6 is much less aggressive and less capable of causing disease in tomato plants.
Since not only Cladosporium but nearly all fungi, including pathogens of humans and animals, have Ecp6, the binding of chitin fragments appears a general strategy of fungi to evade the immune system of their hosts.
This knowledge may enable scientists to design novel methods to combat fungal diseases in agriculture (leaf mould, root and stalk rot, smut, wilt disease, apple scab, rust, tree cancer) and in health care (dandruff, athlete's foot, candida-infections, aspergillosis, etc.).
 

supermanlives

Active member
Veteran
the chi product i have seen was for foliar. i wonder if adding shells to the mix works too? i add shrimp and lobster shells to my mix
 

guest2012y

Living with the soil
Veteran
Crab meal is also a slow release N source...ideal for recycled mixes if you can keep track of the variables on re-amending. But hey,loving the chitin....have noticed a big decrease in fungus gnats since I've started amending with it. Shrimp shell has chitin...I'd assume lobsters do????
 

Clackamas Coot

Active member
Veteran
Besides the 'chitin' component of using crab/shrimp meal is the calcium component.

Calcium is important in maintaining a soil's pH as it relates to the CeC in a soil's structure. See also 'Base Saturation' for further details.

HTH

CC
 
one year my mothers had ROOT KNOT NEMETODES i did my research and i found out crab meal mixed with NEEM CAKE controled my bugs the crab meal i got was a commercial product i could only get it in 50 lb bags! the crab meal had all sorts of shell fish in it also it had some urea mixed in there this product saved my grow season when the product would get old in the dirt the nematodes would come back and them bitches were killers!!!!!
 

Clackamas Coot

Active member
Veteran
For 'da kind' neem and karanja meals as well as ORGANIC neem seed oil as well as ORGANIC karanja seed meal - not only organic but fair trade as well, etc. look to NeemResource.com and consder their #3 Sample Package - well worth sourcing, IMHO.

I've been adding both their organic neem seed meal as well as their karanja meal as a soil amendment as well as using these agents to make nutrient teas with both kelp and liquid silica as a regular application, i.e. every 10 days or so.

CC
 
Last edited:
Top