Posted by admin | Posted in Peru | Posted on 15-06-2009
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You may find this hard to believe, but gardening, but has an image of being environmentally friendly, so good, may actually harm the environment! Why? Because a large amount of carbon dioxide can be released through tilling the soil. This contributes to global warming. When cultured and compacting the soil, destroys good fungi. Fertilizers like nitrogen and manure often leave the land and pollute the water you drink.
Warming global
Did you know that the largest contributor to carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is the soil of the earth? Delivers up to 10 times more than human activity produces. This comes from the cochineal insects, microbes, fungi and earthworms to breathe, digest food and then die. Although previous plants have been able to absorb dioxide carbon caused by small-scale tillage, this is no longer the case.
The increase in average global temperature has been produced by the soil carbon dioxide emitted when cultivated. The good news is that, fortunately, this cloud has a silver lining, however, due to tillage can be minimized by mulching or sheet composting.
Good Fungi
In the uncultivated soil, it develops a beneficial fungus called vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae, or VAM for short. VAM actually constitutes a symbiotic relationship with plants. The increase in root hair strands and therefore provide nutrients to plants, in turn, raise awareness of zinc, copper, potassium and phosphorus. Plants provide carbohydrates for the fungi in return. You can have a garden without tilling the soil at all, but by the mulch heavily until the soil is soft and tasty.
Excess nitrogen
Many gardeners waste nitrogen and fertilizer while farmers do otherwise. Farmers only need a quarter to a third of nitrogen to mix with an inch of compost, horse or cow manure. Kate Burroughs of Sebastopol, California, uses the same rule for home-lettuce and sweet corn. When it comes to broccoli and pear trees, farmers only have to use a small amount. Also it is true that gardeners apply larger amounts of compost and manure to do most of the farmers. Obviously, losing not only fertilizer but also are, without doubt, throw money down the drain ..
The best gardening advice I can offer in these circumstances is to approach all things with a sense of moderation. Too much of something can be as damaging as too little.
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