A popular topic among the agriculture specialists and home gardeners these days is the furor on organic fertilizer vs. chemical fertilizer. Now each fertilizer certainly has its pros and their cons, but before we delve in deeper into that, let us first make a few definitions.
What is organic fertilizer?
Organic fertilizers are substances containing nutrients derived from the remains or by-product of an organism. Examples of organic fertilizers are cottonseed meal, blood meal, fish emulsion, and manure and sewage sludge.
Organic fertilizers are naturally rich in nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, the three major nutrients needed in plant growth. Organic fertilizers depend on microorganisms found in soil to break them down and release the nutrients.
What is chemical fertilizer?
Chemical fertilizers are synthetically produced plant nutrients from inorganic materials. Because they are artificially made, many chemical fertilizers contain acids that can be harmful to the soil's population of microorganisms. In this aspect, chemical fertilizers have the potential to stunt plant growth.
Chemical fertilizer vs. organic fertilizer
Fertilizers are created to target soil nutrient deficiency, which is a prevalent problem among home garden owners. One distinct advantage chemical fertilizers have over organic fertilizers is the fact that they contain all three of the major nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium). Organic fertilizers can only either have high content levels of one of these three or have all three nutrients in low levels.
For its part, organic fertilizers are a much cheaper and cost-effective alternative to chemical fertilizers. Any home gardener can create his own brand of organic fertilizer by composting or mixing cow, sheep, or poultry manure with other organic matters. Chemical fertilizers on the other hand will have to be bought from a gardening store or horticulturists.
A noted aspect of organic fertilizer is its slow-release capability. This slow release of nutrients in organic fertilizers can be both beneficial and potentially harmful to plants. Slow release of nutrients means that there is less risk of over-fertilization. However, this could also mean that if the need for immediate supply of nutrients arises, organic fertilizers would not be able to provide the needed supply. In contrast, chemical fertilizers can prove plants with an immediate supply of nutrients when the situation calls for it.
Several chemical fertilizers have high acid content. Acids in chemical fertilizers, like sulfuric acid and hydrochloric acid, lead to high soil acidity which would in turn result in the destruction of nitrogen-fixing bacteria, the microorganism that plays a key role in supplying a growing plant's nitrogen needs.
Plants certainly do not recognize the difference between organic fertilizers and chemical fertilizers. Their tiny root hairs will absorb those microscopic nutrients, regardless of where they come from or how they were manufactured. But even so, with today's growing environmental concerns, some people debate over the wisdom of using chemical fertilizers as a nutrient source.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A
- Grass Clippings For Lawn Care
- Great Lawn Care - Truly Worth These Small Steps
- How to Determine if you Need a Lawn Care Professional
- Lawn Care Tips and Advice for Vancouver
- Lawn Care Advice - Easy Steps To Lawn Care Success
- Natural Lawn Care - Get Your Lawn Off Drugs
- Best Tips for Green Lawn Care
- Lawn Care Tips That Will Save You Money




Plant Pots and Pans
By: Edward Smith | 02/01/2010Whilst plant pots are generally used to cultivate and display plants both indoors and out, smaller versions are also useful for sowing and raising young seedlings.
Discover The Top 10 Tips For Keeping Pests And diseases Away From Your Organic vegetable Plants
By: Daniel Materson | 02/01/2010In this easy-to-read article you will quickly discover the top ten suggestions to protect all your organic Vegetable plants all year round. Prevention is the best path to this and you may find many ways Of doing this.
Cactus Plants are excellent at hoarding water and using very little of it
By: Paul Ingersole | 02/01/2010Cactus plants are fun to observe and study, as well. Having your own plant is a good way to do this. They are plants that have completely adapted to the harsh desert life.
When people think of cactus plants they don't think beautiful flowers
By: Paul Ingersole | 02/01/2010If you want to grow a cactus in your yard or in your home, you may want to consider getting a cactus that will bring forth their own cactus flowers. Some cactus plants do not come to flower and some do. If you are interested in having a plant which flowers you will want to do some research.
Proper Cactus care takes some learning
By: Paul Ingersole | 02/01/2010Once you find the plants you want, you will need to understand how to transplant it. If you want to grow them indoors, you may not need to transplant them. Most places sell you a plant that is in a pot and you can just keep it as is.
An Artificial cactus can look great in any house
By: Paul Ingersole | 02/01/2010The first thing to do if you want to buy an artificial cactus is to look and see what is out there. You can look online or find them in catalogs. There are plenty of resources. There are several different kinds of cactus plants too which vary in size.
About Indoor Gardening
By: Luann Hays | 02/01/2010Believe it or not, keeping the green of Spring in you life year round, is easier than you think. While it is great fun to get outside when the weather breaks, and start planting that landscaping project, many people keep the outdoor freshness in their life, all year long, by...
Biodynamic Farming for Planting and Growing Vegetables
By: Sutiyo Na | 02/01/2010Earthworms or night crawlers are best used as fertilizers for vegetables, whether in small or large areas. Such organisms are best suited for a type of composting called vermicomposting. The composting type is a process wherein worms are fed to excrete a form of soil that is very rich in necessary and productive nutrients essential to growth of vegetable crops...
Problems of Old-Style Conferences
By: Bill Weaver | 28/08/2006 | MotivationalWhen was the last time you heard anyone come up with a radically new and unconventional idea in an old-style conference or committee meeting? I can't remember one. Conferences are supposed to stimulate thought, but, as we all know, they usually stifle it.
5 Bowling Tips for Beginners
By: Bill Weaver | 28/08/2006 | Sports & FitnessWhen a person is a beginner at bowling, there are a number of details at which he should work and of which he should think, if he wishes to bowl correctly and to improve quickly. I have listed below a number of these details and, if strict attention is paid to them, the average beginner may cut his "apprenticeship" to a fraction of the time ordinarily spent in learning the game.
How to Clean Gas and Electric Stoves
By: Bill Weaver | 27/08/2006 | Home & FamilyRoutine cleaning of your stove is not only a safe thing to do, but it will make your food taste better and save energy!
Small Ideas Make a Difference
By: Bill Weaver | 27/08/2006 | MotivationalIdeas change the world! No matter how big or small they may be, you can benefit from them. As you will find out, even the smallest of ideas have led to major discoveries!
How to Choose the Fit of Your Bowling Ball, Shoes and Bag
By: Bill Weaver | 27/08/2006 | Sports & FitnessThe first thing I do when a bowler approaches me for advice is to examine the ball he is using-to determine if it is properly fitted to his hand. Proper fit is most important, for a badly fitted ball handicaps any bowler.
Fun for Your Kids In Your Own Backyard
By: Bill Weaver | 06/08/2006 | Art & EntertainmentJust outside our back door is a vacation spot that our youngsters claim is tops for sheer fun. It is our own backyard recreation center that we created to solve the problem of idle vacation hours for our active sons and their friends.
How Ideas Make a Difference
By: Bill Weaver | 06/08/2006 | MotivationalYou know the difference an idea makes. You may not realize it, but if you look about you where you work, in a large office, on an assembly line, in the government, on a salesman's beat, in a small store, in a laboratory, in the shipping room or the executive suite, you will see the difference an idea makes.
12 Tips on Bowling Etiquette
By: Bill Weaver | 05/08/2006 | Sports & FitnessEvery sport has its rules of etiquette. In golf, for example, one does not talk or move while a player is shooting. In basketball, the crowd is silent when a free throw is made. Even in such a rugged sport as boxing, a man who has scored a knockdown retires to the farthest neutral corner to allow his opponent a chance to get up after a count. So it is in bowling.