Abstract
EACH of the elements required for building up the frame of animals and plants is of equal importance from a scientific standpoint, but in agriculture the various salts and substances which yield food for crops or for cattle must necessarily be valued according to their cost. There are exceptions to this rule, no doubt. Gypsum is a cheap manure, but it has sometimes doubled the clover crop, and kainit salts are comparatively cheap. Yet for some crops, especially potatoes, in cases of a deficient supply of potash in the soil, they have sometimes proved invaluable. In general, however, cost and efficiency are closely associated, and as plants and animals are almost alike in their chemical composition the same rule as to the value of their contituents holds good. You may purchase starch and the carbo-hydrates at a much lower rate than the nitrogenous substances in food. Turnips, bread fruit, and bananas, consisting chiefly of carhohydrates, are sold by their respective erowers at a very different and much lower price than milk or peas, which are rich in albuminous elements. In every form nitrogen is always comparatively costly. The albumen in eggs, the fibrine in cereals, the casein in milk, and the legumin in peas and beans, all owe their importance and cost to this particular element, which is the source of force and vigour, of the labour of the hardest-worked cattle and men, of lean meat and muscle.
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E., H. Nitrogen in the Soil . Nature 33, 46–47 (1885). https://doi.org/10.1038/033046a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/033046a0