Chicken manure is loaded with nitrogen. Best used for the vegetation stage of growth. Chicken manure is very strong and will burn your plants roots. It is best to compost it before you fertilize your plants with it.
Carbon and nitrogen, among other macro and micro minerals.
Cattle manure is basically made up of digested grass and grain. Cow dung is high in organic materials and rich in nutrients. It contains about 3% Nitrogen, 2% phosphorous and 1% potassium (3-2-1 NPK).
Waste that is expelled from the body of a chicken. It's also called poop, feces, etc.
It is a chemical change because it can not be converted back to the original substance. Once dung starts decaying it can not reverse the process.
The composition of cow dung can be rather complex due to the four chambers food must pass through before being expelled as waste. However, most dung will include dead cells, undigested food, microorganisms, digestive system secretions, and water.
Not in its fresh state, unless the context is "When he picked up the chicken, it soiled his clothing." Chicken manure is typically quite corrosive and needs to be composted for it to become soil. Otherwise, it can actually "burn" plants which come into contact with it.
Cow dung is comprised of organic matter including fibrous material that passed through the cow's digestive system, among other liquid digesta that has been left after the fermentation, absorption and filtration, then acidified, then absorbed again. Exact chemical composition is of mostly carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, etc. with salts, cells sloughed off as the digesta went through the digestive tract, some urea, mucus, as well as cellulose, lignin and hemicellulose.
Chicken droppings are richer than cow dung because a chicken's droppings contains both highly concentrated urea and fecal matter. Birds don't urinate like mammals do, and the urea that is collected by their single kidney is expelled in a highly concentrated form as droppings.
Dry cow dung is mainly comprised of organic matter including fibrous material that passed through the cow's digestive system, and dead and live microflora. Exact chemical composition is of mostly carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, etc. with salts, cells sloughed off as the digesta went through the digestive tract, microflora that came up from the rumen, and cellulose, lignin, fibre and hemicellulose. Originally dung was quite moist, but as time goes on the water from the feces evaporated, drying up the patty, leaving it with primarily organic matter similar to the partly decomposed plant matter that is left after each growth cycle.
by adding chicken dung,pigs "popo" or any biodegradable waste!
I like ham a lot, and do u like chicken? I do.
I am no expert at all, but it seems to me that the much more useful and urgent question has to do with the chemical properties of animal dung. If animal dung has any unique mechanical properties, it will come as a shock and a revelation to many.