Difference between farm yard manure and compost?
Answers
Answered by
25
Solution:
Farm yard manure is generally the animal feces produced by the farm animals.
These are used as manure for the cultivation of the crops.
These are even used with the bits of leaves, husk and many more.
Compost is prepared in the pits where animal wastes and other organic wastes are mixed moistened together.
Answered by
0
Answer:
- Farmyard manure is a degraded mixture of cow excrement, dung, urine, litter, and plants such as roughage and fodder that have been left behind.
- Compost manure is made from waste from farms and cities, such as vegetable and animal waste.
Explanation:
Farmyard manure
- It has a nitrogen content of 0.5 percent, a phosphorus pentoxide content of 0.2 percent, and a potassium monoxide content of 0.5 percent.
- It's a decomposing mixture of cow excrement, urine, litter, and organic debris that hasn't decomposed yet (roughage or fodder).
Compost manure
- It has a nitrogen content of 1.4 percent, a phosphorus pentoxide content of 1.0 percent, and a potassium monoxide content of 1.4 percent.
- It's made from agricultural and city waste, including vegetable and animal waste, feces, and sewage waste.
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