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The Utah State University with funding from NASA, have been developing new crops for space exploration.

The wheat varieties developed, USU-Apogee and USU-Perigee, are over 50% shorter than normal varieties and are specifically developed to grown with 24 hour sunlight, no soil and with limited space as you would find in a space station or a base on Mars.

Not only they trive in these conditions, they also present a faster lifecycle, with the seeds heads emerging just 23 days after germination.

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Forwarded from 🌊【 -ˏˋ 𝔊𝔞𝔯𝔦𝔤a𝔫𝔡𝔲 ˎˊ- 】🌊🌃
❄️WELCOME TO MY DEMONS, YOU'RE MY SPECIAL GUEST. ❄️

🇪🇸ESP🇻🇪

chicos!!

hare unos request para aquellas personas que desean un dibujo completamente gratis.

las reglas sin muy simples, solo debes:

💖 escribirme en privado.

💖compartir esta publicación en grupos de más de 15 personas

💖los demás pasos los explicaré sin prisa una vez me escribas en privado,

🌺aqui me despido, hasta luego UwU 🌺

Privado: @Garigandu

🇬🇧ENG🇺🇸

🖤⭐️Welcome to my demons, you're my special guest⭐️🖤

Boys!!

I will make some requests for those people who want a completely free drawing.


the rules without very simple, you just:

❄️have to write to me in private.

❄️Share this post in groups of more than 15 people

❄️the other steps I will explain without hurry once you write to me in private, here I say goodbye.

🌺 see you later UwU🌺

Private: @Garigandu
By using radioactive trace elements, the researchers were able to show that nutrients were being passed by the fungi between different species of trees over a large area. The trees that were not so good in the winter, like aspens, were being given food manufactured by the conifers, which do much better in winter, and vice versa. So the fungus is actually helping to distribute food amongst forest trees so that they all benefit at the right time.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2016/02/160221-plant-science-botany-evolution-mabey-ngbooktalk/