Ensynox as a Logical Solution

Ensynox as a Logical Solution


How do Earthworms Fight for the Globe?

Climate change, global warming is a disease, but it is better when we mention as a by-product of our Modern World.


We cannot change a lot of things anymore, but we cannot ignore situations, issues either. We cannot reduce drastically the greenhouse gases emissions but we have another way of avoiding the catastrophe and maintaining a livable life on the Earth.


Earthworms’ role is a little bit similar than the 
wolves did for Yellowstone National Park. Those wolves have made changes in a small environment and have had a consequential impact on a larger environment and have restored nature through chain reactions. Enzymes also fulfills a small, but very important part in Nature and the ecosystem: decreasing and eliminating toxins, bad bacterias that are killing living organisms.
In Nature, things are in a cycle and the events affect each other.


It is not a surprise, the most influential species (defined as the species that has most changed life on Earth) is the earthworm. Not just because Charles Darwin said, who studied them for 39 years. It is fact.


There are regulatory processes in a smaller ecosystem that, if not working well, will upset the balance and change will take place in a smaller, after that larger ecosystem and then in the earth’s ecosystem and atmosphere.


Such is the increase in carbon dioxide emissions, which causes the atmosphere in the earth to warm up.
There are several reasons for this, the most important reason being the unfavorable processes in the oceans.
These unfavorable changes affect the processes taking place on the ground, the temperature and the level of the oceans rise, which is not only uncomfortable but also endangers the existence of humanity on earth.


This is a chain process and the dominoes started falling.


The whale, once it feeds at depth by healthy food that supports the healthy digestive system, migrates to the surface, releasing fecal plumes at the surface and providing nutrients for the algae to grow and a means for them to travel down (through vertical mixing) to where the krill will feed on them. All the fish does the same.
Just as the whale’s engineered trophic cascade combats climate change by increasing the ocean’s carbon sink (through more phytoplankton), the wolf combats climate change by increasing terrestrial carbon sink (through more trees and vegetation). There are a lot of problems in nature in a smaller environment that affect the operation of larger systems and eventually may lead to the extinction of species. But when we repair the wrong part of the cycle, where toxins or bad bacterias generates the problem, then everything comes back into the right direction.


We are not saying, earthworm and its enzyme is the key solution for global warming. But we cannot find better, much more logical answer that is safe for the environment. Earthworm enzyme is an ecosystem engineer and we just manage small-medium-large scale works, cleaning, detoxifying the environment, creating healthy conditions and Nature and its residents can function better. When things are functioning better and better, then the ecosystem also functioning well and the dominoes begin to stand-up.

Phytoplankton are responsible for most of the transfer of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to the ocean. Carbon dioxide is consumed during photosynthesis, and the carbon is incorporated in the phytoplankton, just as carbon is stored in the wood and leaves of a tree. Most of the carbon is returned to near-surface waters when phytoplankton are eaten or decompose, but some falls into the ocean depths. (Illustration adapted from A New Wave of Ocean Science,U.S. JGOFS.)

Worldwide, this “biological carbon pump” transfers about 10 gigatonnes of carbon from the atmosphere to the deep ocean each year. Even small changes in the growth of phytoplankton may affect atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, which would feed back to global surface temperatures.

  • Earthworms have a key role in creating and maintaining a healthy ecosystem.

    But people need to understand, there are no supersolutions that are able to solve the problem from one month to another. Global warming is a slow killer, slowly make life inevitable on earth, taking the necessary conditions for life away. But we can stop this process and we can turn the trigger in the right direction. When we are moving in the right direction, we do not have to be impatient, time is working for us and life on earth will be assured for future generations.

    The recipe is simple: we need to create the basis, indicate good proceedings and Nature will do its job in slow motion because the processes are interacting with each other and it needs time to get the effects.

  • We do this with the earthworm enzyme, with Ensynox.

    We create the basis, decontaminate, detoxicate the medium, ocean, soil, and make it healthy creating a good base for the development and healthy conditions of life.


    As suggested by Sir Isaac Newton in 1687, that nature is a probabilistic mechanical system, “a clockwork universe.” It is not exactly like “Butterfly-effect” when a butterfly can flutter its wings over a flower in China and cause a hurricane in the Caribbean. But events generate effects in small circles and small circles are affecting big circles.

  • The oceans are a key part of the natural carbon cycle.

    Carbon dioxide is circulated between the land, seas, and atmosphere. About one-third of the CO2 released into the air by humans each year is soaked up by the oceans. This helps slow the rate of global warming but increases ocean acidity, posing a potentially disastrous threat to marine ecosystems. It means when the ocean will be able to soak more and more CO2, then it becomes more acidic that is a favorable environment for bacterias that are killing coral reef and the normal marine life. It is a catch-22. The ocean and marine waters cannot maintain a healthy medium for themselves (especially in coastal waters) without help.



The world’s oceans are a major sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). The biological carbon pump plays a vital role in the net transfer of CO2 from the atmosphere to the oceans and then to the sediments, subsequently maintaining atmospheric CO2 at significantly lower levels
then would be the case if it did not exist.

This NASA-video explains the important role of phytoplankton that provides 50% of the oxygen in the atmosphere. Those green oxygen machines soak 30% of the carbon dioxide from the atmosphere into the ocean and transform them into oxygen.

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