I know it will burn a plant up and kill it. There will be an educated person that will answer the question better for you.
2006-10-05 03:58:36
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answer #1
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answered by Ha Ha Charade You Are................... 4
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You may often read that too much fertilizer will burn plants. In practice that is hard to do. One time I was spreading lawn fertilizer from a bucket. I dropped the bucket and fertilizer spilled out on one spot. I picked up as much as I could get out of the grass with my fingers. There was still a lot left. Later the grass on that spot turned brown and looked dead. After a while it turned green again and the grass on that one spot got very tall. Next time I mowed the lawn, I cut it down to the same height as the rest of the grass and after that you couldn't see any difference. Lawn fertilizer, by the way, is high only in nitrogen. This stuff was something like 26 - 3 - 3. The 26 is the percentage of nitrogen, which makes leaves grow. Grass is a type of leaves.
2006-10-05 04:14:45
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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There are 2 important sorts of fertilizers (better in case you opt for to get tremendous complicated) organic and organic and non-organic and organic (man made)... genuinely the guy made fertilizer is a soluble salt... too a lot of it might want to kill it... better concentrations keep roots from soaking up any water and genuinely furnish you with tip burn it truly is what you'll see once you've over fertilized... organic and organic fertilizers... which contain compost, composted cow manure or computer virus compost... gained't burn your roots... you could in spite of the indisputable fact that burn them in case you position clean manure on them it really is only too warm (it truly is from microbacteria breaking down the clean poo) and would reason some harm... only undergo in recommendations a lot less=further and extra=lack of life...
2016-11-26 03:57:24
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answer #3
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answered by gyllenband 3
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The obvious is it may 'burn' the plant, however in the real world and a well draining soils the extra fertilizers end up in our rivers and are causing the huge death zones in the gulf of Mexico, and this is mostly due to lawn care (a license to kill) not farming.
2006-10-05 04:06:19
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answer #4
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answered by Kelly L 5
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It will burn the roots and plant up . Well more or less it will make the plant grow so fast that it will burn itself out . That is what will kill the plant .It is like if a person that eats tomuch will grow fat and and that in returns shortens there life span. they burn there heart out .
2006-10-05 04:00:17
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answer #5
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answered by Heath M 1
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eutrophication to the environment.
I know it will burn a plant up and kill it. There will be an educated person that will answer the question better for you.
2006-10-06 01:23:55
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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well the fertilizers like all minerals mix into things with less of it in them ( imigration ) there is a reaction
so if ther is no work for it in europe it will move to america or africa where there is less of it !
also it will leack stuff if it lives in a mineral poor naiborhood and become a gangster !
2006-10-05 04:16:13
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm not sure but i think it burns the root.
2006-10-05 04:34:07
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answer #8
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answered by DERECK H 1
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two good answers !
2006-10-05 04:06:13
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answer #9
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answered by K9 4
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