Bat manure is called "Guano" and it is used for fertilizer.
chicken poo is great fertilizer!
out of a bat lol
Fertilizer provides essential nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium that plants need for growth and development. These nutrients help support processes such as photosynthesis, root development, and flower/fruit production. Fertilizer can also help improve soil fertility and structure, leading to healthier plants.
No. .
No. Seeds from trees make trees, cow's poo just adds extra fertilizer.
Manure is composed of animal waste such as feces and urine, along with bedding materials like straw or sawdust. It also contains microbes that help decompose organic matter, releasing nutrients that can benefit plants when used as fertilizer.
In the power plants of ballistic missile submarines.
No. It is the name for bat poo.
manuever is animals poo which is used for garden as food for the plants that people grow and it helps plants grow better.
Answer 1: Bat "poo" is called "bat guano."And it's, among other things, an excellent fertilizer. Cave bat guano, for example, is used to grow peppercorns, from which the black pepper in the pepper shakers on tables in restaurants is made.There have long been claims that bat guano was once used in mascara, but such claims remain unproven.Some tribal cultures have long used it in ceremonies, though... to cast out demons, mostly.And bat guano helps make things blow-up: Up 'til World War I, bat guano from the famous Mammoth Caves, in Kentucky, was used to make saltpetre, which is one of the key ingredients in black gun powder. A derivative of that was used by NASA during both the Mercury and Gemini space programs to deploy antenna into space.Finally (at least for me, 'cause I can't think of anything else), bat guano is an important source of food for beetles and certain other insects on the floors of the caves beneath where the bats hang upside down and sleep during daylight hours.
poo
because worms R used to grind down compost in the soil, and their poo is the fertilizer. after they eat the compost, i mean.