Biology, asked by MrM00N, 1 month ago

Urine is helpful to plants​

Answers

Answered by riya107066
4

Answer:

Yes

Explanation:

Urine can be used as a fertiliser without fear it will fuel the spread of antibiotic resistance, researchers have revealed – although they urge caution against using fresh bodily waste to water crops. Urine is rich in nitrogen and phosphorus and has been used for generations to help plants grow.

Hope it will help you:)

#riya ❤

Answered by ItsTrendyBlush
2

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It is totally possible to use human urine as a fertilizer instead of industrial fertilizer.

Research group has also used urine to cultivate cucumbers, cabbage and tomatoes. Recycling urine as fertilizer could not only make agriculture and wastewater treatment more sustainable in industrialized countries, the researchers say, but also bolster food production and improve sanitation in developing countries.

Urine is chock full of nitrogen, potassium and phosphorus, which are the nutrients plants need to thrive—and the main ingredients in common mineral fertilizers. There is, of course, a steady supply of this man-made plant food: an adult on a typical Western diet urinates about 500 liters a year, enough to fill three standard bathtubs.

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