New use for human hair
Agricultural crop production relies on composted waste materials and byproducts, such as animal manure, municipal solid waste composts, and sewage sludge, as a necessary nutrient source. Studies have shown that human hair, a readily available waste generated from barbershops and hair salons, combined with additional compost, is an additional nutrient source for crops. Although human hair has become commercially available to crop producers in the past couple years, it has not been proven to be an exclusive source of nutrients in greenhouse container production. Vlatcho D. Zheljazkov, Juan L. Silva, Mandar Patel, Jelena Stojanovic, Youkai. Lu, Taejo Kim, and Thomas Horgan of Mississippi State University recently published a research study in HortTechnology designed to determine whether commercially available noncomposted hair waste cubes would support plant growth in horticulture crops as a sole source of nutrients.
The study compared the productivity of four crops: lettuce, wormwood, yellow poppy, and feverfew, grown in commercial growth medium using untreated control, noncomposted hair cubes at differing weights, a controlled-release fertilizer and a water-soluble fertilizer. Results showed that, with the addition of hair waste cubes, yields increased relative to the untreated control but were lower than yields in the inorganic treatments, suggesting that hair waste should not be used as a single source for fast-growing plants such as lettuce.
Zheljazkov suggests that, "once the degradation and mineralization of hair waste starts, it can provide sufficient nutrients to container-grown plants and ensure similar yields to those obtained with the commonly used fertilizers in horticulture. However, it takes time for the hair to start degrading and releasing nutrients, as is reflected in lower yields in the hair treatments relative to the inorganic fertilizers for lettuce and wormwood."
Because of possible health concerns, further research is necessary to determine whether human hair waste is a viable option as fertilizer for edible crops.
Source: American Society for Horticultural Science
Related
- Hair today, gone tomorrow: Tracking hair loss and growthMon, 3 Nov 2008, 9:08:35 EST
- Study examines normal hair loss in men without evidence of baldnessMon, 16 Jun 2008, 16:56:37 EDT
- No longer a gray area: Our hair bleaches itself as we grow olderMon, 23 Feb 2009, 13:21:39 EST
- Study compares safety and effectiveness of laser therapies for hair removalTue, 21 Oct 2008, 7:58:01 EDT
- Important new hair-loss gene discoveredSun, 12 Oct 2008, 13:28:29 EDT
Other sources
- Human Hair Combined With Compost Is Good Fertilizer For Plantsfrom Science DailyWed, 31 Dec 2008, 2:29:26 EST
- New Use For Human Hair - Growing Plantsfrom Scientific BloggingMon, 29 Dec 2008, 17:28:09 EST
- Human hair works as nutrient, study findsfrom UPIMon, 29 Dec 2008, 16:56:21 EST
- New use for human hairfrom PhysorgMon, 29 Dec 2008, 10:56:34 EST
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