دانشمندان فنلاندی دریافته اند که ادرار انسان موجب
بارور تر شدن گیاه گوجه فرنگی می شود در حالی که طعم و کیفیت آن با گوجه فرنگی های
معمولی تفاوتی ندارد و در برخی ویژگی ها بهتر هم هست! . بوته های گوجه فرنگی آبیاری
شده با ادرار و مخلوط خاکستر چوب، حدود 4 برابر بیشتر از بوته های گوجه فرنگی معمولی
بار داده است. نکته جالب تر این است که بوته های گوجه فرنگی آبیاری شده با ادرار
انسان، بتا کاروتن_ پیش ساز ویتامین آ_ و
مهمتر از آن، میزان پروتئین بیشتری از گوجه های معمولی داشته اند!
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ادرار انسان سرشار از مواد نیتروژندار، پتاسیم
و فسفر است که همه این موارد برای رشد گیاهان ضروری اند. علاوه بر آن ، ادرار
انسان استریل و عاری از هر گونه میکروب است و به نظر می رسد به این ترتیب ، نسبت
به کودهای حیوانی که این مواد مغذی در آن ها یا نیست یا بسیار کمتر است و دارای
آلودگی میکروبی هم هستند ، مزایای بیشتری دارد.
استفاده از ادرار برای آّبیاری گیاهان ، در
دوران باستان معمول بوده ولی امروزه به دلیل استفاده از کودهای شیمیایی و روش های
آّبیاری دیگر کم کم به بوته فراموشی سپرده شده است. با توجه به نتایج پژوهش های
بالا که در فنلاند انجام شده، آبیاری گیاهان با ادارار انسان می تواند روشی
جایگزین به ویژه در مناطقی که در معرض کم آبی هستند باشد.
Apparently, human urine works remarkably well as a fertilizer for
tomatoes, according to a new study out of Finland.
Plants fertilized with a mixture of stored human urine and wood ash
produced 4.2 times more fruit than plants without the pee, the study found. The
urine-fertilized tomatoes had more beta-carotene than unfertilized ones, and
much more protein than traditionally fertilized plants.
And the tomatoes were just as good as those grown with traditional
fertilizer, according to a panel of 20 brave tasters.
Healthy human urine is rich in nutrients like nitrogen, potassium and
phosphate, all key ingredients for healthy plants. As long as the pee doesn't
contain any fecal matter, it's usually free of any microorganisms.
Surendra K. Pradhan, K. Holopainen and Helvi Heinonen-Tanski of the
University of Kuopio in Finland collected human urine during the winter of 2007-2008
from several eco-toilets in private homes. The urine was stored for about six
months at 45 degrees F and tested for microbes and bacteria. The team mixed it
with wood ash collected from a household furnace, and found the mixture was
just as good as -- or better than -- conventional chemical fertilizer.
In taste tests, the urine-fertilized tomatoes tasted different from
those fertilized with urine and ash, but tasters didn't have a preference --
"all tomato samples were evaluated as being equally good by the
tasters," the study says. The results are reported in the latest Journal
of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
The same team had previously tested human pee as a fertilizer for
cucumber and cabbage, and a South African team reported last year that urine
had successfully fertilized maize. The Finnish team said they tried tomatoes
because they're grown all over the world and are a staple ingredient in many
recipes.
The use of urine to fertilize crops has been practiced since ancient
times, but is relatively rare today, thanks to the ick factor and the
prevalence of chemical and mineral fertilizers. But as farmers and home growers
seek organic ways to grow food, urine could be a solution.
The study "may contribute to the development of positive attitudes
about the use of urine and ash as fertilizer as a way to both increase crop
yield and reduce water pollution," the authors wrote.
It may not be necessary
to go all NASA with our pee and start drinking it. But if we can safely and
efficiently grow food with it, why not