0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Gut & Microbiome Remediation Sign in to save

Recycling fertilizers from human excreta exhibit high nitrogen fertilizer value and result in low uptake of pharmaceutical compounds

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) 2023 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Franziska Häfner, Oscar Rodrigo Monzón Díaz, Sarah Tietjen, Corinna Schröder, Ariane Krause

Summary

Researchers found that nitrified urine fertilizers derived from human excreta produced marketable white cabbage yields comparable to commercial organic fertilizer across three soil types, and that pharmaceutical uptake by plants from fecal compost was low, supporting human excreta recycling as a viable circular economy approach.

Body Systems

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2022.1038175/full Recycling nutrients is essential for closing nutrient loops within a circular economy. Using locally available resources such as human excreta to produce bio-based recycling fertilizers can substitute mineral fertilizers and thereby promote environmentally friendly food production. To better understand the fertilizer potential and nitrogen value of human excreta, three novel and safe recycling products were evaluated in a field experiment. Two nitrified urine fertilizers (NUFs) and one fecal compost were applied alone or in combination, and compared against the commercial organic fertilizer vinasse. In addition, the uptake of pharmaceuticals was assessed for treatments with compost application. White cabbage (Brassica oleracea var. capitata f. alba) was cultivated in plots in three different soil types (sand, loam or silt) treated with the fertilizers according to plant needs and mineral soil nitrogen content. The two NUFs resulted in marketable yields similar to those of vinasse in all soil types. Combining fecal compost with a NUF led to increased marketable yield compared to compost alone. The highest yield was recorded from the sandy soil, where vinasse and NUF treatments led to comparable yields, as expected in organic productions systems (up to 72 t ha−1). The cabbage yield and total aboveground fresh biomass followed the following trend in all soils: NUFs ∼ vinasse ≥ compost + NUF ≥ compost. Nitrogen uptake in the cabbage heads and total biomass was significantly higher in sand (69.5–144 kg ha−1) than loam (71.4–95.8 kg ha−1). All compost treatments alleviated the effect of soil type and resulted in comparable nitrogen uptake and yield in all soil types. Plant uptake of pharmaceuticals (Carbamazepin) was higher in sand than in loam, and concentration in the edible part was lower than in the outer leaves. In conclusion, NUF alone appears to be a promising successful fertilizer substitute in horticultural food production. The combined application of NUF and compost led to slightly lower crop yields, but may increase soil carbon content in the long term, promoting climate-friendly food production.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Recycling fertilizers from human excreta exhibit high nitrogen fertilizer value and result in low uptake of pharmaceutical compounds

Researchers evaluated novel fertilizers made from human urine and fecal compost in a field experiment growing white cabbage across three soil types. They found that nitrified urine fertilizers produced crop yields comparable to commercial organic fertilizers, while pharmaceutical uptake by the plants remained very low. The study suggests that recycling nutrients from human excreta offers a viable and safe approach to sustainable food production within a circular economy.

Article Tier 2

Recycled Nitrogen for Regenerative Agriculture: A Review of Agronomic and Environmental Impacts of Circular Nutrient Sources

This review evaluates recycled nitrogen fertilizers from urine, manure, compost, digestate, and biosolids as circular alternatives to synthetic nitrogen, assessing their agronomic performance, environmental impacts, and role in building regenerative agricultural systems.

Article Tier 2

Perception and impact of micropollutants in urine-based liquid fertilizer on crop production: A comprehensive review of Eco-sanitation practices

This review explores the promise and risks of using human urine as a crop fertilizer, noting it contains valuable nitrogen and phosphorus but also pharmaceuticals, heavy metals, and microplastics that can contaminate soil and enter food crops. The presence of microplastics in urine-derived fertilizer is identified as a safety concern that adds to the already complex risk calculus of eco-sanitation practices. The paper underscores how microplastics have permeated even novel, low-tech agricultural inputs, complicating otherwise sustainable approaches.

Article Tier 2

Countering the porcelain dream: key findings from an evaluation of the global nitrogen cycle, a fundamental characterization of fresh faeces, and a campus composting toilet

This thesis examines global sanitation challenges through a sustainability lens, focusing on nutrient recovery and the need to close elemental cycles to reduce long-term environmental burdens. Proper sanitation infrastructure is foundational to reducing the pollution that reaches waterways, including microplastics.

Article Tier 2

Circular Economy in Wastewater Management—The Potential of Source-Separating Sanitation in Rural and Peri-Urban Areas of Northern Finland and Sweden

Researchers evaluated regional-scale source-separation sanitation scenarios in sparsely populated northern Finland and Sweden, finding that black water separation and urine diversion can substantially improve nutrient recovery compared to conventional wastewater treatment, particularly in rural and peri-urban areas.

Share this paper