Human urine can help grow bumper tomato crops
September 14th, 2009 - 12:21 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Sep 14 (IANS) Human urine can help grow bumper tomato crops that can be eaten safely, says a new study.
Surendra Pradhan, an environmental biology researcher at the University of Kuopio, Finland, and colleagues gave potted tomato plants one of three treatments: mineral fertilizer, urine and wood ash, or urine only.
Yields for plants fertilized with urine, rich in nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, quadrupled and matched those of mineral-fertilized plants. The urine-fertilized tomatoes also contained more protein and were safe for human consumption.
“This is a very simple technology. Urine can be collected in a urine-diverting toilet or it can be collected in a separate jerry can [from] an ordinary, pre-existing toilet,” said Pradhan.
“If wood ash is available, this can be use as a supplement of phosphorus, potassium and other nutrients,” Pradhan added.
He says that the method is a free alternative to expensive mineral fertilizer, which is not easily available in remote or hilly areas.
A pilot programme based on the research will be launched in Nepal in November, says Pradhan, who is of Nepalese origin.
But Håkan Jönsson, eco-agriculture and sanitation system technology expert at the Stockholm Environment Institute in Sweden says, “the amount [of urine] that can be collected from a person or a family is fairly small”.
“[The technique] is of great value to a subsistence farmer but does not suffice for even a medium-scale cash-crop farm,” said Jönsson.
He adds that to fertilize larger areas, many urine-diverting toilets would have to be linked up to a good transportation system.
Their research was published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
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Tags: cash crop, crop farm, environmental biology, hilly areas, human consumption, human urine, journal of agricultural and food chemistry, kuopio finland, medium scale, mineral fertilizer, potted tomato plants, sanitation system, simple technology, stockholm environment institute, subsistence farmer, surendra, technology expert, tomato crops, university of kuopio, wood ash