Russian scientists obtained fertilizers from poultry and livestock waste

Scientists from the Ural Federal University has developed a highly efficient method for obtaining fertilizers from poultry and livestock waste, reported the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation.
The technical expert of the project, Konstantin Lukyashin, said that, according to the technology, biological waste is first decontaminated, and then an organo-mineral complex fertilizer is obtained.
Ural Federal University scientists continue to conduct large-scale research on this type of fertilizer. Comparative tests carried out on seedlings of amaranth and oats showed good results.

Enjoyed this story?
Every Monday, our subscribers get their hands on a digest of the most trending agriculture news. You can join them too!
In focus
Stock quotes
Most read
Events
Live
Johan Fredin
August 22, 2024, 07:57 pm
Europe is falling behind in this field. The concerns 30 years ago was reasonable. Now not so much. We need crops that can survive in a more extreme future climate. Handle droughts and hot weather better. Crops that are less tasty to pests like hogs and deere.
Gene-edited crops set for groundbreaking European trials
About
Sections
Support
16+
More to read
Advertising that helps us do quality reporting
Discussion0 comments