So, in an effort to make Biology come alive for my students I am trying to select interesting articles. Last week I used an article about the Christmas Island crabs. It was a great article that the students really enjoyed, but it brought a great deal of awkwardness too. One student asked me, "Teacher, are these the same crabs that you get down there?" And of course, I laughed. I quickly tried to resurrect my defunct teacher persona, "While that is very amusing, no, these are not the same." And I moved quickly forward. The article did not end there, no, it went on to describe how the island is made entirely of bird droppings and inhabited by boobies (look it up.). Anyway, since I am a glutton for punishment and I really value the engagement of my students, I am including another article to grab their attention on a really boring topic (the nitrogen cycle). I'll update you with results on Friday...
"Flush-Free Fertilizer
Most urine ends up in the toilet, as it should. But the garden may be another appropriate place to send human pee, according to scientists in Finland. The yellow liquid appears to help cabbages grow. Researchers from the University of Kuopio grew cabbages under three conditions. For the first group of plants, they added conventional fertilizer to the soil. They treated a second group of cabbages with human urine that had been stored for 6 months. They let the third group grow without any soil treatments.
In Finland, researcher Surendra Pradhan shows off large cabbages that were grown in soil fertilized by human urine.Results showed that the urine-treated cabbages grew to be bigger than the other groups. Those plants also carried fewer germs. So, how does a pee-grown cabbage taste? Just fine, the researchers say. They made sauerkraut from cabbages grown in all three conditions. A panel of tasters noticed differences in flavors among the groups, but they liked all three equally. Nutrients in a person's urine depend on what she or he has eaten. Analyses of urine used in the new experiments, however, show it contained amounts of nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium that were similar to concentrations of those nutrients found in commercial fertilizer. According to the team's calculations, urine collected from one person throughout a year could fertilize a 90-square meter (970-square foot) plot of soil. More than 160 cabbages could grow in that space. Compared to a plot treated with conventional fertilizer, a pee-treated plot could grow 64 kilograms (140 pounds) more cabbage, the researchers say. Compared to an untreated plot, the urine-treated plot could yield 256 kg (564 pounds) more cabbage. Earlier this year, the same team reported that cucumbers also grow better with human urine than with conventional fertilizer. The power of human pee to grow crops is only just being realized. Next time you flush, imagine the possibilities!—Emily Sohn "
http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20071010/Note3.asp
Sunday, July 20, 2008
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1 comment:
seriously i haven't seen you in FOREVER!!!
So much has changed i see. where are you teaching? did you ever finish seminary, where the heck did you go for like the last 2 years? blah blah blah
all those other questions that go along
I'm glad you've joined the blogging word.
Let's chat or get lunch.
Andrew
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