Kathleen Pryer

Kathleen Pryer

Jun 26, 2014

Group 6 Copy 348
2
Please wait...

About This Project

Azolla is a symbiotic superorganism that captures all the nitrogen fertilizer it needs to grow from the air around it. Asia’s farmers have long known this, growing Azolla together with rice to provide a natural fertilizer to bolster rice productivity.

Genome sequencing of Azolla is a big step toward potentially helping crops to use less synthetic nitrogen that would benefit farmers' bottom lines, the environment, and the prices we pay for food.
Blast off!

Browse Other Projects on Experiment

Related Projects

Tiny worlds in desert moss: Microbes and microfauna in biological soil crusts

Desert mosses live closely with lichens and other microorganisms, together performing vital ecosystem services...

Blazing new trails to protect our forests: birds as bioindicators of trail impacts

Millions of people use recreational trails each year. With participation in hiking projected to increase...

Uncovering fungal biodiversity from contaminated brownfield and superfund sites in Southern California

Fungal biodiversity in Southern California remains poorly documented, particularly in contaminated soils...

Backer Badge Funded

A biology project funded by 123 people