Hello French Aucune plante ...

Published by

Hello French

Aucune plante n'a vocation à purifier l'eau. Elle absorbe par son complexe racinaire de l'eau et tout ou partie de la pollution dissoute que cette eau contient. Si cette pollution est importante, le corps de la plante  va saturer de cette pollution et mourrir.

Tout le liquide qui passe entre les racines des plantes, va laisser sur son passage une partie de la pollution qui sera automatiquement absorbée par le passage du liquide suivant. 

Un tertre de terre sert de filtre mais n'élimine pas la pollution, il l'a stocke.

Par contre les plantes sont gourmandes de certaines pollutions tel que l'urine. Mais et c'est toujours pareil, il faut que l'urine soit très diluée, qu'elle ne soit pas exposée trop longtemps à l'oxygène car l'urée se transforme en ammoniaque, un produit toxique pour les plantes.

Comme tout ce qui est biologique, il faut de la nuance et des quantités infimes

English

No plant is meant to purify water. It absorbs by its root complex water and all or part of the dissolved pollution that this water contains. If this pollution is important, the body of the plant will saturate this pollution and die.

All the liquid that passes between the roots of plants, will leave in its path a portion of the pollution that will be automatically absorbed by the passage of the next liquid.

A mound of earth serves as a filter but does not eliminate pollution, he stored it.

On the other hand, plants are greedy for certain pollutions such as urine. But it is always the same, the urine must be very diluted, it is not exposed too long to oxygen because the urea is transformed into ammonia, a toxic product for plants.

Like everything that is organic, it takes nuance and minute amounts

2 Comments

All you have said needs to be repeated many times to those not having a microbiological background. I believe a key factor and a direct answer to his question would be called "A microbial balance".  DNA microbes will biodegrade simple organic compounds. Their ph range is also very limited. To compliment total soil health the microbial balance must contain RNA microbes. They are the only microbe with the genetic code to reduce all organic compounds into their elemental form. In addition they will chelate any and all toxic metal compounds.  When balance is present  and within known parameters the urine will be converted to elemental nitrogen and hydrogen. The same process will convert the solid waste and toilet paper also into elements. Independent labs are suggested. 40 years of testing with zero pathogens and zero toxic compounds.  Great point on soil does not eliminate waste pollution.  The microbes do.   (a word assist for you. "If pollution is harmful, the plant will absorb the pollution and the plant will die).   Bon Chance!   Gui.

Published by

Permalink

All water that we drink already was polluted more than four times in the past, the problem is that humans contamination has overpassed the natural capacity of Earth, so it's our responsibility to re-purify it with sustainability.

Published by

Permalink

1 Comment

Allow me to fill in the facts. The centralized processing of water and waste water is the only problem. Nature has much more capacity than you could ever imagine. The US first error was using chlorine to kill pathogens. In the 1920,s our microbiological technology was still quite new. If the chlorine was not in the treatment cycle it would clean 100% of the water and waste and be pumped back into the fresh water systems. No more need to run the water table down or build $billion desalination facilities.  In regards to Total trash/pollution. The UN did a study and estimated 400 billion pounds of man made waste a year. Nature was estimated at 600 billion pounds a year. Together they equal 1 Trillion pounds  a year. = 1x10 to the 12th. The earths microbial capacity to biodegrade all organic compounds is 1x10 to the 24th pounds per year.  So you can see how silly that statement was.

 This information is kept secret in well protected facilities. We now call them libraries.    

Published by

Permalink