STOP Spraying Pesticides! One Copper Coil Makes Plants “Invisible” To Bugs
Every gardener fears bugs — and the chemicals used to stop them. But what if insects aren’t primarily finding plants by smell or sight, but by signals released when a plant is under stress?
In this video, we explore research showing that stressed plants exhibit measurable changes in temperature, water flow, and metabolism — changes that modern agriculture already detects using thermal and infrared imaging, often before visible damage appears. These stress signals are known to influence pest pressure and plant vulnerability.
We examine the work of USDA entomologist Philip Callahan, who proposed that insect antennae may function as highly sensitive biological sensors, and revisit early electroculture experiments by Georges Lakhovsky, who documented changes in plant vitality using open copper loops nearly a century ago. We also look at the well-documented galvanic reaction between copper, moisture, and soil that deters pests like slugs, and discuss why repeated pesticide use can stress plants and increase long-term susceptibility to infestation.
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