In the never ending search to improve agricultural returns, create better investments, higher yields and healthier soil, the question commonly turns to fertiliser and compost. However, there is a lot of confusion around as to which product fulfils which purpose and when one should be used over the other. To help you along your way here’s everything you need to know about fertiliser vs compost. We also have a great range of organic compost so choosing the right one for you is easy.
What is the difference between fertiliser and compost? Can one replace the other? Which one should you be using?
Fertiliser is a soil additive that contains a number of key nutrients which a plant needs to grow. These nutrients, at a basic level, are Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Potassium. Nitrogen, for stimulating leaf growth; phosphorus, for healthy root/flower/seeds/fruit development; and potassium, for strong stem growth and promoting flowering.
But if plants have been thriving on our planet for hundreds of millions of years without human intervention, why do they suddenly need fertiliser to thrive? The truth is that they don’t actually need us, if we left the plants alone.
However, we grow plants (crops) for a purpose. The plants take the nutrients from the soil to create fruits, grains, vegetables etc. We then take that produce away from the land to eat. Traditionally, the produce would fall to the floor, along with leaves, fallen branches, etc. It would then return the nutrients to the ground. Without this happening (and with little natural manure and other additives to sustain it) the soil slowly begins to become nutrientless. This is where fertiliser comes in to replace those lost nutrients.
Fertiliser is specifically focussed and targeted nutrients towards exactly what the plant needs. This is why there are so many different blends of fertiliser, because each plant species requires very specific amounts of different nutrients.
Compost is that fallen nutrient. It’s all the fallen leaves, food waste and branches which would otherwise find its way into the soil and replenish the ground’s nutrients in a natural cycle. Our Eco Organic Soil Improver available here at Eco is great for improving gardens as well as soil fertility.
Compost contains similar nutrients to that found in fertiliser, but it’s stored in organic matter. When you add fertiliser to the ground, the nutrients are available to the plant instantly. Compost, on the other hand, is a much slower release of nutrients, taking days/weeks/months to fully expel its nutrients.
Choosing peat-free compost also has lots of benefits not only for your garden but the environment as a whole. To read more why you should go peat-free, check out our blog here.
Fertiliser has a long standing environmental impact that you don’t get with compost applications. Fertiliser comprises “readily available” nutrients, which saturate the soil quickly and can be absorbed by the plants instantly. This is a great aspect of the additive however, it means that the nutrients are also very easily removed from the soil.
Heavy rainfall or a high water table can mean the nutrients are depleted from the soil incredibly quickly. The then increased nutrients can cause problematic and environmentally devastating algal blooms in nearby fresh water areas. In addition, fertiliser based chemicals have been known to find their ways into drinking water, causing a number of health complications in nearby populations. Fertiliser also does nothing to address problems will soil health; it does not address water retention or drainage, erosion or heavage.
Compost may have a slower release rate, and may require a slow transition into a primarily compost-based additive process. However, in the long run it produces higher quality, larger yields and a more hardy soil. In a study by WRAP, it was clearly demonstrated that "repeated [annual] applications of compost are a valuable means by which farmers can improve soil quality, potentially leading to increases in crop yields (through improved nutrient and water acquisition) and improved gross margins (from greater yields as well as less reliance on manufactured fertiliser and reduced energy costs through easier cultivation)”.
The report clearly highlights the value of an “integrated nutrient management plant” utilising both compost and manufactured fertiliser to improve agricultural returns and longevity.