Organic food is better because non-organic food is sprayed with chemicals to help foodstuffs stay in season even though synthetic sprays are hazardous for people.
Chemical fertilizers lack trace elements.
No.
No, organic manure is not expensive if cultivators have their own resources to draw upon. The term organic manure references the use of the waste products of backyard and farm animals as non-chemical, non-genetically-modified, non-synthetic fertilizer. Store-bought organic manure may be a bit more expensive than commercial fertilizers even though the price can come down with periodic coupons and sales at organic farming and gardening centers.
Cow manure is better fertilizer, even though it has a lower phosphate value than swine manure.
Manure is better than fertilizers because of fallowing points: 1. It is cheaper than Fertilizers. 2. It is easily available by the wastes of animals. 3. It does not pollute earth.
Organic food is better than non-organic because it contains more nutrients.
Most manures are good fertilizers, and improve plant growth.
sometimes. if you are alergic to eggs like me, it's better to eat organic eggs than regular eggs. organic food tastes sweeter than non organic food as it has more water and natural sugars in it.
Whatever Organic is better than normal because organic food are free of chemicals and pesicides.
Manure IS a fertilizer ! I think you may mean to say artificial fertilizer - which has energy costs as well as requiring the use of resources such as petroleum.
The better type of pesticide is organic because it is natural and generally will harm plants less than chemical pesticides.
Organic fertilisers - those that originate from the processing of organic or vegetative materials. Examples are bone meal, humus, blood meal, urea (although urea is part processed). organic fertilisers are normally much more diluted than chemical fertilisers and take a longer time to affect the growth of the plant, they are however longer acting and normally add to/ improve the structure of the soil. Chemical fertilisers - these are compounds that are manufactured from chemicals or chemical byproducts (eg. through the gas and petroleum industry). They are concentrated, fast acting and come in a wide variety of formulations. They can however damage crops if they are incorrectly applied, leach easily from the soil (contributing to the pollution of ground water) and they (normally) have no long residual action in the soil. Examples of these are: NPK formulations, ammonia nitrate, ammonia suphate etc.