W John Martin MD, PhD.
Institute of Progressive Medicine
South Pasadena CA 91030
Running Title: KELEA Restoring of Nature’s Allostasis
Author Mailing Address: 1634 Spruce Street, South Pasadena CA 91030
E-Mail:
wjohnmartin@ccid.org
Phone: 01-626-616-2868
Author ORCID Number: 0000-0002-9947-4374
Conflicts of Interests: None
Word Count w/o References, Acknowledgement, Key Words: 3,213
Key Words: Nature’s allostasis, KELEA, fertilizers, pesticides, water
pollution, tipping points, ecosystems, organic farming, electroculture,
Kiko pellets, enerceuticals
Abbreviations: ACE – Alternative Cellular Energy, KELEA – Kinetic
Energy Limiting Electrostatic Attraction, KARNA -KELEA Assisted
Restoration of Nature’s Allostasis,
Abstract
Synthetic chemicals are widely used in agriculture mainly as
fertilizers and pesticides. These chemicals were initially considered
highly beneficial for crops and relatively harmless to humans and the
environment. Experience, however, has shown that many have time-limited
effectiveness, yet cause persisting biological disruptions. They are
also an added cost amounting to approximately $130 billion annually.
Nature has a limited capacity to adapt to changed conditions, including
the cultivation of large monocultures and the presence of unnatural
chemicals. These adaptations are referred to as Nature’s allostasis. In
addition to requiring time, allostasis depends on there being sufficient
life force energy. KELEA is an acronym for Kinetic Energy Limiting
Electrostatic Attraction. It functions as a major life force energy,
which can be conveyed in KELEA activated water. Various means are
available to increase the KELEA level of groundwater and in turn that of
growing crops. A low-cost approach to KELEA activation of water is
provided by using pellets of volcanic rock materials that have been
pulverized and heated before pelleting. Relatively few commercially
available pellets, marketed as Kiko Technology, greatly increase the
production of rice. Further, when used in conjunction with biochar, the
pellets markedly reduce the levels of pollution in water, some of which
would normally flow into land used for agriculture. The effects are
attributed to KELEA Assisted Restoration of Nature’s Allostasis (KARNA).
Without apparent adverse effects, increasing the KELEA levels in the
water and soils can provide a low-cost alternative to the use of
fertilizers and pesticides in agriculture.
Introduction
Food is essential for the survival of life. Yet, it is wrongly assumed
that calories derived from food metabolism are the sole source of the
energy expended in daily human activities. This and other reasoning
support the existence of the alternative cellular energy (ACE) pathway
[1-2]. Further research led to the proposal that the ACE pathway is
supported by a fundamental force designated as KELEA, an acronym for
Kinetic Energy Limiting Electrostatic Attraction [1,3].
Agricultural research is primarily focused on ways of increasing crop
yields, including minimizing losses due to competing weeds, insects,
rodents, and infectious pathogens. This research has led to the
continuing development of synthetic chemicals. Some of these chemicals
are directly used to enhance the growth of plants, while others provide
a competitive advantage for the plants over other forms of life. The
former chemicals are called fertilizers, and the latter are pesticides.
The major fertilizers provide various combinations of nitrogen (N),
phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) and are referred to as NPK.
Worldwide Use of Synthetic Fertilizers and Pesticides
One premise for the annual world’s usage of almost 200 million tons (4)
of NPK fertilizers is that the yearly harvesting of crops creates a net
loss of these minerals from the soil. If this were correct, one would
seemingly need to replenish the additional minerals and other components
incorporated into crops. Support for the continuing use of NPK
fertilizers is also based on the dramatic fall in productivity in
circumstances in which they are not available. This observation could,
however, be explained if the external administration of the fertilizer
markedly suppressed the intrinsic production of organic forms of these
minerals by beneficial soil microbes. Coupled with these considerations
is evidence of progressive environmental damage caused by the toxicity
of excess fertilizers entering the world’s waterways [5]. It can
also have deleterious effects on the functioning of other life forms in
the soil that could otherwise contribute to the quality and vitality of
plant life.
Nitrogen-containing compounds are extensively used in munitions. The
ending of World War II hostilities would have led to excess
manufacturing capacity of organic nitrogen compounds if the producers
did not promote the use of fertilizers. Without giving time for the
soils to adapt, it was relatively easy to show that nitrogen compounds
could increase the productivity of monocultures of crops with relatively
high nitrogen content. Once the practice of using NPK fertilizers was
established, it allowed for a steady increase in pricing and presumably
profitability. The current approximate local cost of NPK fertilizers is
$350 per ton with export prices nearing $1,000 per ton (6). Even at
the lower level, the annual cost of 200 tons of NPK fertilizers amounts
to $70 billion.
Pesticides comprise another major grouping of agrochemicals that are
being increasingly utilized in industrial agriculture. Indeed, the
World’s annual financial outlay on pesticides is around $60 billion
(7). The term pests include weeds, insects, rodents, and infectious
pathogens. One approach has been to genetically modify the crops such
that they can tolerate exposure to pesticides that are lethal to the
competing weeds and other forms of life. This implies, however, that the
pesticide will likely be present in consumable crops. Through natural
selection, weed and other life form variants will arise, which have lost
their susceptibility to the applied pesticide. This then entails
additional research and development of newer pesticides, which require
additional genetic modification of the crops and risks of toxic exposure
to those handling and consuming the crops [8-9].
Genetic engineering can also be used to render crops resistant to
certain pathogens. If not, then both the crops and pathogens are being
exposed to chemicals, which typically have only a marginal degree of
greater selectivity for the killing of the pathogens. Not only can the
crops be partially damaged by the pesticides, but so too can those who
consume the contaminated crops. As with the exposure of other competing
life forms, pathogens can become resistant to each successive type of
pesticide used.
The combined annual costs of both fertilizers and pesticides are $130
billion. Yet, with a more insightful view of Nature’s allostasis and how
it can be easily assisted, neither type of agrochemical product may be
necessary. Before addressing this topic, it is worthwhile to consider
other efforts to reduce the use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides
in agriculture. These are mainly occurring in smaller operations,
primarily considered as horticulture.
Efforts to Avoid the Use of Synthetic Fertilizers and Pesticides in
Farming
Organic farming allows for the use of compounds that occur naturally at
other locations but are locally deficient. Prominent examples of added
components include sea salts, humic and fulvic acids, zeolites, trace
minerals, biochar, and animal manure. Microbes can be harvested from
highly performing soils and greatly amplified by fermentation before
being transferred to the organic farm locations. Complex mixtures of
natural products are commonly used in place of synthetic pesticides to
suppress the growth of microbial pathogens or to repel insects, rodents,
or other crop-damaging animals. Various supply companies specialize in
the marketing of products to organic farmers along with educational
programs purporting the products’ advantages over the uses of synthetic
fertilizers and pesticides. Approximately 1% of US farmlands and 1.6 %
of worldwide farmlands are in organic production (10)
Regenerative farming is even less prevalent. It tries to further
minimize the need for external inputs by rotating or simultaneously
cultivating mutually supportive crops that are of nutritional benefit to
one another. There is also the reciprocal culturing of the desired crops
with the planting of ground-cover plants that sustain and even enrich
the growth-supporting and water-retaining qualities of the soil.
Similarly, tilling of the soil is discouraged so that its
water-containing properties are better preserved. More importantly,
tilling can be disruptive to the balanced growth of beneficial life
forms, including bacteria, fungi, and earthworms. Animal grazing and
composting are also encouraged. The primary goal of regenerative farming
is to establish a sustainable, diverse, and productive ecosystem that is
less dependent than regular organic farming upon seasonal weather
changes.
Biodynamic farming further emphasizes the self-contained interactions
between plants, soil, farm animals, and the climate. There are added
spiritual and respectful components to these complex biological
interactions. Biodynamic farming also involves the use of various
homeopathic formulations and the inclusion of animal-derived flesh and
bone materials in composting. Each farm is considered different such
that a better understanding of its unique characteristics can lead to
more effective management.
Electroculture and Magnetoculture Technologies
Another approach to reducing the need for synthetic fertilizers and
pesticides is by replicating certain historical farming practices that
involve the use of devices that presumptively respond to electrical
and/or magnetic impulses (11). Although yet to be introduced into
industrial agriculture, small gardeners commonly report better growth of
plants using various antennas. Typically used are i) vertical antennas
that extend from within the soil to above the ground, and ii)
north-south aligned within-the-ground antennas. The above-the-ground
antennas are often coiled with some controversy as to the best direction
of the coiling in the northern and southern hemispheres. The
within-the-ground antennas are often magnetized in the direction of the
earth’s major magnetic field. Beneficial effects on the growth of plants
have also been observed using precisely angled pyramids, and both full
and partially opened circles of single or multiply wrapped wires.
Large-scale studies on these devices have generally provided
inconclusive results. As discussed later, this uncertainty will likely
change in future studies in which correlations will be sought between
efficacy and to capacity to activate groundwater.
KELEA Activated Water
Some farmers prize their locations as being naturally endowed with such
excellent water and/or soils as not to require any synthetic or organic
additives. Conversely, polluted water and soils can have deleterious
effects on the growth and vitality of plants. Examples of beneficial
locations are sites in which the land and water are rich in volcanic
deposits. Such deposits are generally considered excellent sources of
beneficial minerals. As next discussed in this article, a more likely,
although still hypothetical, explanation exists for why certain sources
of water have superior soil penetrating and plant growth-supporting
activities.
Electrical charges are viewed as attracting a fundamental force that is
required to prevent the fusion and annihilation of electrostatically
attracted opposing electrical charges. As noted above it is termed KELEA
as an acronym for Kinetic Energy Limiting Electrostatic Attraction
(1-3). KELEA is perceived as a radiating repulsive force that can also
slightly limit the strength of distant electrostatic attractions. In
polar fluids such as water, it can, therefore, lead to a slight
loosening of the intermolecular hydrogen bonding between the water
molecules (3). It is further proposed that KELEA is utilized as a
life-force energy, which is distinct from the conventional view that all
biological energy arises from sunlight via photosynthesis or from the
catabolism of food.
Certain dipolar compounds, probably with flexibility in the separation
of their electrical charged regions, can attract and then transfer added
KELEA into water [12]. The compounds, referred to as enerceuticals,
can be soluble or insoluble and can either be placed into the water or
positioned near the water. Examples include certain herbal products
(tinctures), crystals, various mineral oxides, perovskite chemicals,
such as barium titanate, and unevenly mixed alloys. Pulverized volcanic
rock materials that are heated to their partial melting temperatures
(850o – 1,200o Celsius for 15-25
hours) followed by slow cooling and pelleting comprise another form of
KELEA activating insoluble material [13]. One such pelleted product
is marketed as Kiko Technology. Water placed in the vicinity of devices
with fluctuating electrical charges can also become KELEA activated
[14-15]. If sufficiently activated, the loosened water molecules can
function as a continuing source of KELEA for nearby water such that the
water activation process can spread both horizontally and vertically.
Closed containers of KELEA activated water and other fluids can
similarly initiate the activation of much larger volumes of water. As
noted above, life forms can directly benefit from KELEA radiating from
activated water.
Nature’s Allostasis
Life has been maintained on Earth for several billion years and is
adaptable to changed conditions. The capacity to maintain life functions
under changed conditions is referred to as Nature’s allostasis. This
contrasts with homeostasis, which implies a single optimal mode of
operation. While successful adaptation to changed conditions can require
time and energy, the outcome is likely far preferable than trying to
chemically intervene within the complex workings of Nature. Thus, it
cannot be assumed that chemical interventions will not have major
deleterious consequences. In any event, their effects can be short-lived
because of Nature’s adaptive responses. This argument applies to the use
of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. Indeed, over time the
accumulated toxicity of agrochemicals has pushed Nature beyond its
energy-dependent allostatic capacity to restore aspects of normal
functioning. Their use should be rapidly withdrawn in favor of efforts
to support Nature’s allostasis. Such efforts are proving successful as
reported in the following recent studies.
Enhanced Rice Production Using Kiko Pellets
In a recently reported study conducted in Vietnam, a comparison was made
between rice growing in fields pretreated with thirty (30) Kiko pellets
per hectare and rice growing in control fields. The benefits of the Kiko
pretreatment included more effective weed and rodent control, more
efficient germination, deeper roots, greener color, and more abundant
tillers, panicles, and rice grains. These benefits resulted in a
remarkable 29% increase in total harvested rice and nearly 40%
increase in the amount of milled rice [16]. Such differences have
not been reported in efficacy assessments of any chemical fertilizers or
pesticides. Moreover, the benefits are expected to extend into future
years with the continuing transfer of KELEA into the groundwater and
beneficial soil microbes.
Reinvigorating Polluted Water Ecosystems
A few Kiko pellets mixed with small amounts of biochar were immersed in
a channel of water contaminated with toxic blue-green algae
(cyanobacteria). The channel connected the water from the Spirit Lake in
Iowa to one of its many tidal basins, referred to as sloughs. Over the
next several days, the amount of algae contamination was significantly
reduced at and beyond the treated area. A person revisited the site six
weeks later. To his astonishment, a beaver had constructed a dam at the
site of treatment. Before this, the person had not seen beaver activity
in the region for several decades. There were also indications of other,
rarely recently seen wildlife, including muskrats, and bullfrogs
[17]. Additional areas of the lake were treated with similar
transformations. Moreover, the return of aquatic, land, and flying
wildlife has continued to progress beyond six months [18]. Adding to
the apparent stepwise restoration of Spirit Lake is the die-off of zebra
mussels, an invasive species [19]. Unlike the usual washed-on-shore
shells, those that are now appearing in markedly increased numbers are
partially disintegrated. Several other sites of heavily polluted
waterways in the US have also been restored to where they now support
far more wildlife. These sites include water that is directly being used
in agriculture.
Increased Resistance to Infectious Diseases, Insects, and Rodents
The ACE pathway was originally characterized in humans as a
non-immunological defense mechanism against stealth adapted viruses
[1,20]. These viruses evade recognition by the cellular immune
system. Additional clinical data support the role of the ACE pathway in
the defense against human infections with conventional viruses,
bacteria, and fungi. Plants growing on land treated with Kiko pellets
also show heightened resistance to infections. Specific examples include
infection of rice with rice tungro bacilliform
virus (RTBV ) and infection of sugarcane with Downy mildew
(Peronosclerospora sacchari ) [21]. Pink rot disease in Palm
trees caused by Nalanthamala vermoeseni fungus also
responded to treatment with activated water that was developed using a
tincture of a species of yucca plants. This treatment gave an initial
boost to the number of aerobic bacteria. These bacteria continued to
proliferate as they overcame the fungal organisms. Their numbers then
returned to levels found in normal Palm trees.
Reduced insects and rodent infestations are also commonly reported
changes in crops exposed to what can be considered as KELEA activated
water. Indeed, it was once stated that rows of plants sprayed with humic
acid were distinguishable at a distance from non-sprayed plants by the
absence of clouds of hovering insects. Similarly, supportive
observations have been made in Kiko pellets treated sugarcane fields in
referring to the markedly reduced capture of rodents and the absence of
rat bites on the sugarcane.
Working Hypothesis
As mentioned above, Nature’s allostasis refers to Nature’s ability to
adjust to changing conditions to restore optimal performance. It can
choose different ways of doing so depending upon the components and
processes that are available. In a time and energy-dependent manner, it
can work toward replacing those components and processes that are
lacking and/or working around or removing those components and processes
that are impairing normal function. Beneficial bacteria are considered
as the primary elements in an ecosystem, possibly regulated to some
extent by bacteriophages. For various theoretical reasons and supported
by some data, beneficial bacteria seemingly have a survival advantage
over their pathogenic counterpart when exposed to KELEA activated water.
The reemerging beneficial bacteria can then create conditions for the
next line of beneficial life forms to enter and thrive within the
improving ecosystem. These beneficial life forms can in turn
progressively allow for added diversity. As the needs arise, certain
life forms may temporally dominate to remove any harmful excesses. Man’s
efforts to chemically intervene within complex ecosystems can be
disruptive of Nature’s ability to retain its optimal functioning.
Moreover, if the interventions are too extreme, Nature may not have
sufficient available energy to fully repair the disruptions. This
concept is depicted in Figure 1.
Providing a malfunctioning ecosystem with additional KELEA is a
relatively easy process that does not require an understanding of the
complexity of the ecosystems. The benefits may take time for the various
levels of adjustments to occur. It is also wise to minimize further
disruptions, especially with the continuing use of toxic chemicals.
The transition from chemically intervening within natural processes to
KARNA (KELEA Assisted Restoration of Nature’s Allostatsis) has many
additional potential applications [22]. It can begin immediately by
improving the quality of the world’s waterways. Large industrial
farmlands should also be treated with anticipated improvements in
subsequent crop yields. A centralized reporting system would help to
document progress and optimize protocols. Refinements can also be made
in methods for the delivery of KELEA for agricultural and other
applications.
Conclusion
Industrial agriculture has become dependent upon the continuing use of
synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. Yet, the proposed agricultural
benefits of these expensive and potentially toxic chemicals can be
equally if not better achieved by utilizing a life force energy referred
to as KELEA. This is an acronym for Kinetic Energy Limiting
Electrostatic Attraction. The growing of crops comprises a complex
ecosystem. Water with increased levels of KELEA can significantly
enhance the quality and quantity of crops. It can do so by restoring the
capacity of a disrupted agricultural ecosystem to undergo stepwise
adjustments to maximize its intended functional activity. These stepwise
adjustments are described as Nature’s allostasis. Nature’s allostasis
requires energy, which if not sufficiently available, can prevent the
restoration of agricultural land to allow for the optimal growth of the
cultivated crops. The disrupted ecosystem is then said to have gone back
from beyond its tipping point. Numerous means are available to increase
the levels of KELEA in water for agricultural use. None has been as
extensively field-tested or as inexpensively manufactured as Kiko
pellets. Small, closed containers of previously activated water also
hold promise for widespread use as do adaptations of electroculture and
magnetoculture technologies. Examples are cited of the beneficial use of
Kiko pellets in the cultivation of rice and the return of wildlife to
regions of previously contaminated water.
Acknowledgment. Mr. James Osugi Chairman of Kiko Technology Limited,
registered in Hong Kong SAR, provided data on the manufacturing and uses
of Kiko pellets. Mr. Steve Gruhn assisted with studies documenting
improvements in the water and wildlife in treated regions of Spirit
Lake, Iowa. Research on KELEA and the ACE Pathway is supported by MI
Hope Inc., a non-profit public charity. One of the missions of MI Hope
Inc. is to help in the compiling and reporting of data relating to
clinical, agricultural, and industrial applications of KELEA.
Information on KELEA is available in the cited references.
References
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pp 321.
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10.2254/au.170869819.90148640/v1
Legend to Figure 1. An illustration of the limited extent to which
Nature by itself can respond to changed environmental conditions using
energy-dependent allosteric adaptations. Additional sources of energy
are required to bring a discorded, energy-insufficient, environment back
past the tipping points ( ) into the zone of self-correcting allostasis.
KELEA can potentially provide this energy, especially through its
water-activating actions. Only minimal amounts of KELEA, as indicated by
the arrows, may be required to initiate the self-healing process. Copied
from reference (17).