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Project Report On Manures and Chemical Fertilizers

This document provides information on manures and chemical fertilizers. It discusses the qualities of good fertilizers, including being readily available to plants, soluble in water, and containing nothing harmful. It describes different types of manures and their advantages in enriching soils with nutrients and organic matter. Chemical fertilizers are discussed, including nitrogenous, phosphatic, potassic, and complex fertilizers. Biofertilizers are also mentioned as renewable sources of nitrogen that can supplement chemical fertilizers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
360 views5 pages

Project Report On Manures and Chemical Fertilizers

This document provides information on manures and chemical fertilizers. It discusses the qualities of good fertilizers, including being readily available to plants, soluble in water, and containing nothing harmful. It describes different types of manures and their advantages in enriching soils with nutrients and organic matter. Chemical fertilizers are discussed, including nitrogenous, phosphatic, potassic, and complex fertilizers. Biofertilizers are also mentioned as renewable sources of nitrogen that can supplement chemical fertilizers.

Uploaded by

Avishek
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Project Report on Manures and Chemical

Fertilizers
This project report have full information about Project Report on Manures, Project
Report on Fertilizers, Project Report Chemical Fertilizers, Quality of Good Fertilizers,
natural fertilizers, Advantages Disadvantages of Manures, Types of Nutrient,
Artificial Fertilizers, Differences between Manure and Fertilizers.

Project Report on Manures and Chemical fertilizers


Manures
The deficiency of plant nutrients and organic matter in the soil is made up by adding
manures and fertilizers to the soil of crop-fields. Both manures and fertilizers are
major sources of nutrients of plants, so they are used in crop production.
Besides water CO2 and sunlight plants required no. of elements for their growth.
These elements are known as nutrient. Plants get their elements from the salt of these
elements present in the soil. But after repeated cultivation of plants soil become poor
in these elements. The substance added to the soil to make up the deficiency of the
essential elements these by increasing the fertility of soil are called fertilizers.
Qualities of Good Fertilizers
1. The elements present in good fertilizers must be easily available to plants.
2. Good fertilizers must be sufficiently soluble in water.
3. Good fertilizers should contain nothing injurious to plants.
Theory of Chemical Fertilizers
The majority of the chemical fertilizer whether simple or mixed are in organic
compounds, the generally contain cation likes Ca 2+, K+, NH4+ etc. and are soluble in
water. Therefore, these can be identified from their aqueous solution by the regular
systematic scheme used for qualitative mixture analysis.
Analysis of Chemical Fertilizers
All the plants need nutrients for their growth but each plant may not require the same
kinds, to meet the requirement of particular crop we first need to analyse the soil and
then select the fertilizer. This proper selection of fertilizer is possible if we know the
cation and anion present in a particular fertilizer.
The analysis means identification of acid and basic radicals present in fertilizers.
In general, a chemical fertilizer may contain :
Anions : Cl–, NO3–, SO42–, PO43– etc.
Cations : Ca2+, K+, NH4+ etc.
Manures or natural fertilizers
Manures are natural fertilizers. They are bulky sources of organic matter which
supply nutrients in small quantities but organic matter in large quantities. Manures
include farmyard manure (FYM), compost, green manures, vermicompost, etc.
Advantages of Manures :
Manures affect the soil in following three ways :
(i) The manures enrich the soil with nutrients. They replenish the general
deficiency of nutrients in the soil. Since manures contain nutrients in small
quantities, they are needed to be applied in large quantities.
(ii) The manures add organic matter (called humus) to the soil which restores the
soil texture for better retention of water and for aeration of soil. For example,
organic matter present in the manures increases the water holding capacity in
sandy soils and drainage in clayey soil.
(iii) The organic matter of manures provide food for the soil organisms
(decomposers such as bacteria, fungi, etc.) which help in making nutrients
available to plants.
Thus, organic matter help to improve the physical properties of soil, reduce soil
erosion, increase the moisture holding capacity of soil and above all these
advantages, they are low cost nutrient carriers.
Disadvantages of Manures :
Manures are bulky with low nutrient content. The nutrients of manures are released
slowly, not keeping pace with the high and rapid demand of nutrients by improved
high-yielding hybrid varieties of crops. Being bulky and voluminous, they are
inconvenient to handle, store and transport. Moreover, a manure is not nutrient
specific and hence it is not much useful when a particular nutrient is required in the
soil for a particular crop.
Types of Nutrient
1. Farmyard Manure (FYM) :
FYM is the decomposed mixture of cattle excreta (dung) and urine along with litter
(i.e., bedding material used in night under cattles) and left over organic matter such as
roughage or fodder. These waste materials are collected daily from the cattle shed and
stored in a pit for decomposition by the microbes (bacteria, fungi, etc.). FYM contains
nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. Thus, a well decomposed farmyard manure
contains about 0.5 percent nitrogen (N), 0.2 percent phosphorus pentaoxide (P2O5)
and 0.5 percent potassium monoxide (K2O).
2.Compost :
Compost is prepared from farm and town refuge such as vegetable and animal
refuse (e.g., excreta of domestic animals such as cattle, goat, sheep, horse, donkey,
camel, dogs, cats, etc.), faecal matter of human beings, sewage waste (Box 7-2),
weeds, crop stubble, straw, rice, hulls, forest litter, etc. Composting is a biological
process in which both aerobic (organisms requiring the presence of oxygen for the
respiration) and anaerobic (organisms, in which respiration takes place in the absence
of oxygen) microorganisms decompose the organic matter. It takes about 3 to 6
months for decomposition of organic refuse. The nutrient contents of farm compost
and town compost are not the same. For example, farm compost generally contains
about 0.5 percent nitrogen (N), 0.15 percent phosphorus pentaoxide (P 2O5) and 0.5
percent potassium monoxide (K2O), whereas compost prepared from town refuse
(garbage and night soil) contains about 1.4 percent nitrogen (N), 1.0 percent
phosphorus pentaoxide (P2O5) and 1.4 percent potassium monoxide (K2O).
Method of Preparing Compost :
For the preparation of compost, a trench of suitable size 4 to 5 m. long, 1.5 to 1.8 m.
broad and 1.0 to 1.8 m. deep in dug. A layer of well-mixed refuse of about 30 cm.
thickness is spread in the trench. This layer is well moistened by slurry (water paste)
of cattle dung and water or earch and water. A second layer of mixed refuse is spread
in trench till the heap rises to a height of 45 to 60 cm. above ground level. The top of
this heap is then covered with a thin layer of mois earth. After three months, the
partially decomposed biomass is taken out of the trench and collected in conical heap.
This heap is moistened if necessary and covered with earth. After another one or two
months, the compost is ready for use in the field.
3. Green Manuring :
The practice of green manuring includes growing, turning or ploughing and mixing of
green crops with soil to improve physical structure and soil fertility. Green manures
may include both leguminous and non-leguminous plants, e.g., Sannhemp (Crotalaria
juncea), Egyption clover (‘Berseem’, Trifolium alexandrium), Sesbania or ‘Dhaincha’
(Sesbania aculeata) and cluster bean or ‘Guar’ (Cyamopsis tetragonoloba). These
plants are used by Indian farmers to add nitrogen and organic matter to the soil for the
improvement of crop yield.
The green manure crops are grown in the field for about 6 to 8 weeks and turned into
field in the tender stage, i.e., at flowering stage. These crops remain buried for about
one to two months. During this period, plants should be completely decomposed
before sowing of next crop. Generally the crops which require high nutrient input, are
raised in the green manured field. Such crops are rice, maize, sugarcane, cotton,
wheat, etc.
Artificial Fertilizers or Chemical Fertilizers :
Fertilizers are the sources of plant nutrients, manufactured commercially from
chemicals. They contain much higher amount of nutrients in comparison to the
manures and are, therefore, used in very small quantities. These fertilizers may supply
one or more nutrients. Chemically they may be inorganic compounds (e.g.,
ammonium sulphate) or organic compounds (e.g. urea). On the basis of the
availability of nutrients from them, fertilizers are divided into following four groups :
1. Nitrogenous Fertilizers :
These fertilizers supply the macronutrient nitrogen. Examples of nitrogenous
fertilizers are the following :
(i) Urea, CO (NH2)2 ;
(ii) Ammonium Sulphate, (NH4)2 SO4 ;
(iii) Calcium ammonium nitrate ;
(iv) Sodium nitrate, Na NO3 ;
(v) Ammonium Nitrate, NH4NO3 ;
2. Phosphatic Fertilizers :
They are the source of the macronutrient phosphorus. Examples of phosphatic
fertilizers are the following :
(i) Single Superphosphate ;
(ii) Triple Superphosphate ;
(iii) Dicalcium phosphate.
3. Potassic Fertilizers :
These fertilizers supply the potassium which is one of the essential macronutrient to
the plants. Examples of potassic fertilizers are the following :
(i) Muriate of potash or potassium chloride, KCl ;
(ii) Potassium Sulphate, K2SO4 ;
(iii) Potassium nitrate, KNO3 ;
4. Complex Fertilizers :
When a fertilizer contains at least two or more nutrients (N, P 2O5 and K2O), it is called
Complex Fertilizers. Examples of complex fertilizers are the following :
(i) Nitrophosphate ;
(ii) Ammonium phosphate ;
(iii) Urea ammonium phosphate.
Modern agriculture depends greatly on the chemical fertilizers. Indeed high doses of
these chemicals greatly increase crop yield but then chemicals get washed off through
irrigation, rainfalt as drainage and reach rivers, lakes, streams and pollute them (by
causing toxicity, algal bloom and eutrophication) disturbing the ecosystem. The water
of these water bodies become unfit for human consumption and even kills the aquatic
animals such as fishes. So chemical fertilizers must be used carefully and judiciously.
5. Biofertilizers :
A Biofertilizers is Organisms which enrich the soil with nutrients are called
biofertilizers. Biofertilizers are used for the specific crop plants such as pulses,
legumes, oil seeds and rice. Biofertilizers are renewable and non-pollutant sources
of plant nutrients such as nitrogen. They are not alternatives to chemical fertilizers
but can play a supplementary role is supplying nitrogen to specific crops under
specific soil conditions. Nitrogen fixing micro-organisms i.e., non-symbiotic and
symboitic cyanobacteria and phosphate-solubilising micro-organism, are the main
type of biofertilizers that are being used in India. Recently, two biofertilizers, namely
Rhizobium cultures and blue green algae (such as Anabaena and Nostoc) have gained
popularity amongst farmers cultivating pulses, legumes, oil seeds and wet-land rice.
6. Mycorrhiza :
Mycorrihiza is a symboitic (mutualistic) association of certain fungi with roots of
higher plants. Mycorrhiza increases water and nutrient uptake by plants and increase
growth, vigour and yield of the plants.
Differences between Manure and Fertilizers :
Manure Fertilizers
1. A manure is a natural substance. It is 1. A fertilizer is a human made substance. It is
obtained by decomposition of animal wastes an inorganic salt or an organic compound.
such as dung (gobar) of cattle and buffaloes 2. Fertilizers are very rich in plant nutrients
and plant residues. such as nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium.
2. A manure contains small amounts of 3. A fertilizer does not add any humus to the
essential plant nutrients such as nitrogen, soil.
phosphorus and potassium. 4. Being soluble in water, a fertilizer is readily
3. A manure adds a great amount of organic absorbed by the crop plants.
matter in the form of humus in the soil. 5. A fertilizer is nutrient specific. It can
4. Nutrients present in the manure are provide specifically nitrogen, phosphorus and
absorbed slowly by the crop plants since potassium to the soil according to the need.
manure is not soluble in water. Nutrients exist 6. A fertilizer is compact and concentrated so
locked inside the organic compounds of it is easy to store, transport and apply to the
humus. crop.
5. A manure is not nutrient specific and it 7. A fertilizer is costly and is prepared in
tends to remove the general deficiency of the factories.
soil.
6. A manure is voluminous and bulky so it is
inconvenient to store, transport, handle and
apply to the crop.
7. A manure is cheap and is prepared in rural
homes or fields.
 
 

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