Chemical fertilizer is any inorganic materials that is inserted into the soil for the growth and cultivation of plants. Examples are ammonia, ammonium sulphate, potash, urea, sodium nitrate, ammonium nitrate. The main role plays by the substance called nitrogen which are used in all these chemical fertilizers that helps to acidify the soil, very useful for the growth and stability of plants.
I hope that will enough to clarify your point.
chemical
Examples of chemical fertilizers include ammonium nitrate, urea, and superphosphate. These fertilizers are synthetically produced and typically provide essential nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium to plants for their growth and development.
That the product is used on the particular plant that it's intended for and that the product is applied completely in accordance with the product's instructions are the precautions concerning chemical fertilizers.
fertilizers
Nitrogen :)
Chemical fertilizers can pollute the water supply. Their use helps to produce more crops but their quantities have to be carefully controlled.
Yes. Nitrogen is used for making many types of amide/amine-based chemical fertilizers. It is the main constituent of fertilizers like Urea & Di-Amino-Phosphate.
Although organic fertilizers are costlier than chemical fertilizers, the growth of the plants with organic fertilizers is more harmonious.
They breathe in the chemical water to get oxygen.
Fertilizers contain high concentrations of nitrogen, a limiting nutrient for algae.
Yes, chemical fertilizers stimulate plant growth. Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are the main components of artificial, chemical, inorganic, synthetic fertilizers. They're the nutrients that encourage both proper growth of plant body parts and overall growth of the plant in question.
It is only a legend; natural fertilizers are not complete fertilizers (they doesn't contain phosphorous, potassium, calcium, microelements), the quantities are not sufficient and they are also a great source of pollution.