Not at all likely. The outer glass is in compression when the bottom is deflecting - and adding virtually no strength or stiffness to the hull. Until you have added so much that it approaches a stand-alone fiberglass hull, it's not going to contribute any serious stiffness. The easiest way to make half-ribs in a stripper is to get some cedar or balsa and make some decent-sized half-round pieces that span most of the bottom and taper out at both ends near the turn of the bilge. Spread them out every 18"-24". Assuming that the inside glass is in decent shape and you aren't going to remove and replace it, sand it a bit in those areas to get it clean and ready to glue to. Use epoxy resin and glue the ribs to the floor. You can stick a weight on them to bend them into the bottom's curved shape while the resin hardens if needed. Let the epoxy set up. After it's hardened, you want to cover each rib with a couple strips of fiberglass cloth, cut to overlap onto the bottom about 1"-1.5" on either side of the rib. Let that harden. If desired, you can feather out the edges of the fiberglass strips with a sander and/or apply filler coats of resin to match whatever texture you have on the rest of the inner glasswork. A protective coat or three of a good UV filtered marine varnish will protect the epoxy from ultra-violet damage.
When positioning your ribs, don't put any in places where your knees might go if you decide to paddle from a kneeling position, as that would be pretty uncomfortable. You're probably talking about ribs that would be 1" wide or so, and maybe 3/4" tall. Hobby shops sell pre-shaped balsa stock that is made to use as a leading edge on a model airplane wings and nicely curved in cross-section. Cut it to length, taper the ends and it's probably the fastest way possible to get a nice half-rib core.
The glass does the vast majority of the work on these things and the core acts more as a spacer than a structural element. Here's one that Norm and I did many years ago with half-ribs. I tried plastic tubing as the rib cores, as somebody had mentioned that it worked well and we knew that the inside of this boat would be painted, rather than clear-finished. It worked, but I had some trouble keeping the tubing straight. Sawn, shaped and glued-in wooden cores would have been neater.