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Synthetic Fertilizers or Natural Organic Fertilizers? heartspring.net | Organic Kitchen - Buy Organic Kitchen Products, Organic Kitchen on herbspro.com | Arizona Organic produce | Organic Food Arizona personalpowertraining.net |
Organic fertilizers are naturally-occurring fertilizers (e.g. peat moss or green manure), or naturally occurring mineral deposits (e.g. saltpeter). Naturally occurring organic fertilizers include manure, slurry, worm castings, peat, seaweed, and guano. Sewage sludge use in organic agricultural operations in the U.S. has been extremely limited and rare due to USDA prohibition of the practice (due to toxic metal accumulation, among other factors)[1][2][3]. Processed organic fertilizers include compost, bloodmeal, bone meal and seaweed extracts. Other examples are natural enzyme digested proteins, fish meal, and feather meal. Decomposing crop residue from prior years is another source of fertility.
[edit] Discussion of the term 'organic'There can be confusion as to the definition of the word 'organic' as applied to agricultural systems and fertilizer. The problem is related to the colloquial (e.g. organic agriculture, organic food) versus technical (organic chemistry) usage of the term. [edit] Natural sourcingAnimal-sourced Urea and Urea-Formaldehyde (from urine), are suitable for application organic agriculture, while pure synthetic forms are not deemed, however, pure (synthetically-produced) urea is not[4][5]. The common thread that can be seen through these examples is that organic agriculture attempts to define itself through minimal processing (e.g. via chemical energy such as petroleum—see Haber process), as well as being naturally-occurring or via natural biological processes such as composting. Cover crops are also grown to enrich soil as a green manure through nitrogen fixation from the atmosphere[6]; as well as phosphorus (through nutrient mobilization)[7] content of soils. Powdered limestone, mined rock phosphate and Chilean saltpeter, are inorganic chemicals in the technical (organic chemistry) sense of the word, but are considered suitable for organic agriculture[8][9][10].. [edit] AdvantagesAlthough the density of nutrients in organic material is comparatively modest, they have many advantages. The majority of nitrogen supplying organic fertilizers contain insoluble nitrogen and act as a slow-release fertilizer. By their nature, organic fertilizers increase physical and biological nutrient storage mechanisms in soils, mitigating risks of over-fertilization. Organic fertilizer nutrient content, solubility, and nutrient release rates are typically much lower than mineral (inorganic) fertilizers[11][12] A University of North Carolina study found that potential mineralizable nitrogen (PMN) in the soil was 182–285% higher in organic mulched systems, than in the synthetics control.[13] They re-emphasize the role of humus and other organic components of soil,[14] which are believed to play several important roles:
Organic fertilizers also have the advantage of avoiding certain problems associated with the regular heavy use of artificial fertilizers:
According to the PPI institute website, it is widely thought[by whom?] that organic fertilizer is better than inorganic fertilizer.[17] However, balanced responsible use either/or can be just as good for the soil[citation needed]. [edit] DisadvantagesOrganic fertilizers have the following disadvantages:
[edit] Conventional farming applicationIn non-organic farming a compromise between the use of artificial and organic fertilizers is common[citation needed], often using inorganic fertilizers supplemented with the application of organics that are readily available such as the return of crop residues or the application of manure. [edit] See also
[edit] References
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