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rabbit manure; how good is it
Kevin Eanes wrote: Archimedes, I got this from the internet. Fertilizer (NPK) values for rabbit manu Nitrogen 2.4% Phosphorus 1.4% Potassium 0.6-0.8% Rabbit manure is an excellent plant fertilizer due to its composition and concentration of NPK. It produces fast and abundant plant growth. Rabbit manure should be composted for about three weeks, which lessens the chance of harmful pathogens and breaks down the manure, which makes it more useable to the plant and reduces the smell. Fresh rabbit manure is high in acid content from the urine and should not be used. However, when the manure has been aged and air-dried, rabbit manure will not "burn" the plants when applied directly to the plants. Best Regards, -Kevin Yes, thanks Kevin, Charles in a different post with a reference showed a 2.4% nitrogen for rabbits which is one of the highest concentrations of nitrogen. And considering how prolific breeding that rabbits have. I believe if memory serves me that a female rabbit in one year time can result in the birth of a total offspring of over 50 rabbits just in one year. Where some of the females in the litter are giving birth also within that one year period. So, one female rabbit can give rise to over 50 other rabbits within one year. Kevin, the real question I am searching for is abstruse and abstract and profound. It is not about the best fertilizer for a farmer or other such practical things. What I really want to know is why the animal body is constructed in the way it is such that when nitrogen passes through the animal body that it is a fertilizer for plants. What does the animal body do to nitrogen that plants find it impossible or extremely difficult to also do to nitrogen. That is the question I really want to know the answer. For throughout the entire existence of the plant kingdom on Earth, has required the simultaneous existence of the animal kingdom. And I believe it all comes down to some key elements such as nitrogen. That the plant kingdom cannot exist without the animal kingdom because plants cannot transform and move the nitrogen that animals can do. So, Kevin, what happens to nitrogen when it goes through a rabbit body for which that same nitrogen when it goes through a plant body such as a grass is unable to transform or change? Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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