One of the solutions to non-biodegradable wastes can be recycling. Another solution is to embrace the use of biodegradable products as an alternative.
Yes.
its plastic
No, paper will biodegrade (it is an organic material).
Humans produce nonbiodegradable substances because of our advanced technology and industrial processes that involve creating synthetic materials like plastics, which are not easily broken down by natural processes. Other organisms do not produce as many nonbiodegradable substances because they rely on organic materials for their survival and reproduction.
- some wastes are recycled - some are taken to landfills - others are thrown on the ground or in waters
Nonbiodegradable waste is basically "trash that doesn't decompose naturally". Meaning that bacteria will not break it down and turn it into topsoil. Thinks like banana peels will decompose very quickly, thus they are biodegradable. But plastics, foams, and metals will not decompose, thus they are nonbiodegradable.
biodegradable nonbiodegradable are produce in the market
urea and other harmfull subtance
No. Cow dung is organic material which definitely makes it biodegradable.
Nonhazardous wastes are municipal and household wastes, street sweepings, constructions and demolition wastes etc. Some of these materials form the recyclable components of municipal solid wastes. They include plastic, paper, metal, glass etc.
Cleans out your intestines, decomposes some wastes, and helps get nutrients out of the wastes.
A chemical element is homogeneous, also many solutions, etc.; examples of heterogeneous materials: soils, foods, rocks, wastes, etc.