Which is Better for Your Landscape
Chemical Fertilizer or Organic Fertilizer
?
To compost or not to compost? That is the question.
Home growers are recognizing the need for supplying the nutrients in a timely fashion
in order to promote vigorous plant growth in landscapes and gardens. Application of nutrients may be done using
either inorganic fertilizer type or organic fertilizer type.
Many people argue that chemical
fertilizers do more harm than good. This is why most have turned to organic fertilizers for their plants’ main
nutrient-base as opposed to chemical fertilizers.
However, a common misconception in using organic fertilizer types is that
they are safer for plants. Inappropriate or improper application of any fertilizer can be harmful to plants.
Organic fertilizer types, if not properly applied, may contribute to ground water pollution, cause nutrient
deficiency and toxicity, or induce salt burn.
Chemical fertilizers are “processed” fertilizers. Chemical fertilizers can provide a correct supply of nutrients to
plants with a preapproved mix of Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium, something an organic fertilizer cannot always
do. Organic fertilizers naturally contain a large percentage of one of these three major nutrients and have low
content levels of the other two.
But because chemical fertilizers are highly processed, their strongly acidic substances contribute to the alkaline
content in soil. Alkalinity reduces the presence of soil nutrients which are essential for the plants’ growth and
overall health. Organic fertilizers, on the other hand, contain less chemical substances. Thus, organic fertilizers
are less likely to add to the acidic level of soil. Less acid means more nutrients.
Agricultural studies show time and time again that the key to a healthy garden is soil teeming with microscopic
life. The acids in chemical fertilizers can kill these essential micro-beings. In contrast, organic fertilizers
support them. There are no substances present in an organic fertilizer that can adversely affect or hinder
microscopic life. Thus organic fertilizers prove not only beneficial to plants but to the microorganisms found in
soil as well.
Some people argue that chemical fertilizer is still the way to go. Nutrient retention in soil are known to be the
primary function of microorganisms but with the concentrated nutrients of chemical fertilizers, the need for
microorganisms in gardens is not that pressing. This is only partially true.
Nutrients found in chemical fertilizers tend to evaporate or leach beyond the root system of plants and into ground
water. This tendency of chemical fertilizers is not only harmful to humans (chemical fertilizers are the known
culprits in contamination of drinking water), but wasteful as well. Plants only require so many nutrients during
their growth cycle. Any excess is wasted or stored in the soil organisms’ food banks to be later tapped into by
plants when food is scarce. Now since organic fertilizers promote microscopic life, they in effect provide plants
with a steady, albeit slow, supply of nutrients.
The merits of organic fertilizers do not end there. Most people agree that organic fertilizers are a cheaper
alternative to the industry processed chemical fertilizers. True that commercially packaged organic fertilizers
cost more per pound of nutrients compared to chemical fertilizers. But traditional backyard organic fertilizers
like manure and compost are absolutely free.
So to compost or not to compost? It’s not even the question to ask.
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