jumpincactus
Supporter
Premium Member
- Posts
- 11,605
- Reactions
- 35,935
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2011
- Points
- 438
Yes temperature has a lot to do with preserving the viability of the spores. Which is a huge part of the problem. One is, rarely does the product contain what it is claimed to contain, (see oregon state report earlier in thread) secondly the product if it indeed contains the spores are killed off due to improper handling and shipping like you pointed out with the UPS trucks. Then there is the problem of the industry not having a clue of what specific spores will colonize your plants rhizosphere. It is a friggn crap shoot because not even the heavy hitters in plant science fully understand what drives mychos to colonize which specific plant types.Are some of these spores temp sensitive? The inside of a UPS truck can reach 140*+ in the summer, and well below zero in the winter.