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The ethics of using bat guano?

Amber Trich

Active member
guano is more than just poop

guano is more than just poop

Im all for establishing bat houses but as far as collected the poop... I dont think its the same thing.

I think what makes bat/seabird guano so rich and diverse is the entire cave environment(dank, composty, and un-leached). Guano is not just manure... its everything: poop, pee, dead bodies, bodily fluids, insect bodies, stalactites, minerals, all kinds of microbes, ect...

My grow partner and I have been thinking a lot more about organics vs sustainability lately. It's definetly becoming a huge issue and I'm amped to see this discussion popping up!
 
barletta said:
"Sourced from uninhabited ancient mineralized deposits - to promote the production of vegetables, fruit & flowers....."

even though the cave itself is uninhabited by bats there is still an entire ecosystem that is being destroyed by the harvesting..
 

barletta

Bandaid
Veteran
Yeah, I guess it is only friendlier to the bats themselves lol. My next door neighbor keeps thinking that the bats with "the rabies" (she doesn't speak english too well, and I had no idea what the hell she was sayin for the longest time..) will die and fall in my yard, then my dogs will eat them, and get "the rabies". Still, friendlier is friendlier. The best option i guess would to be to set up multiple worm bins, and regulate who eats what. If I don't have that setup in a year or so, I will be buying the primal harvest
 

ixnay007

"I can't remember the last time I had a blackout"
Veteran
Amber Trich said:
Im all for establishing bat houses but as far as collected the poop... I dont think its the same thing.

I think what makes bat/seabird guano so rich and diverse is the entire cave environment(dank, composty, and un-leached). Guano is not just manure... its everything: poop, pee, dead bodies, bodily fluids, insect bodies, stalactites, minerals, all kinds of microbes, ect...

My grow partner and I have been thinking a lot more about organics vs sustainability lately. It's definetly becoming a huge issue and I'm amped to see this discussion popping up!

Without a doubt there's something more in the stuff mined from caves, but I don't think there's any reason to look down on the fresh stuff, especially since it will be chock full of insects that would otherwise be sucking your blood. Just the sense of these insects doing something useful for once adds a lot of value :D

It's also a lot more sustainable, and you'll be improving your local ecosystem.
 

organick

Member
Wow, one of those thread where I think "The human race isn't completely doomed".
Yes, I have a box of Guano (Witney Farms, Miricle Grow gets the profits, Bonus bad Karma).
Hopefully it will be the last I ever buy. Thank's organic soil posters and IC Mag.
 

Amber Trich

Active member
ixnay007 said:
Without a doubt there's something more in the stuff mined from caves, but I don't think there's any reason to look down on the fresh stuff, especially since it will be chock full of insects that would otherwise be sucking your blood. Just the sense of these insects doing something useful for once adds a lot of value :D

It's also a lot more sustainable, and you'll be improving your local ecosystem.

I just don't think it will impart the same flavor. Like I said before, I'm all for putting out bat houses to give bats a place to stay near me and chomp bugs.
I guess you could collect the poop... I hear more about pathogens from bat poop than from other wildgathered feces though.

I have collected deer poop to use, but I read that can harbor e. coli, though I havent had that problem.

My parents have an active bat house, and there is some build up of poop... but not a lot. It might take time to gather a significant amount.
 

ixnay007

"I can't remember the last time I had a blackout"
Veteran
Amber Trich said:
I just don't think it will impart the same flavor. Like I said before, I'm all for putting out bat houses to give bats a place to stay near me and chomp bugs.
I guess you could collect the poop... I hear more about pathogens from bat poop than from other wildgathered feces though.

I have collected deer poop to use, but I read that can harbor e. coli, though I havent had that problem.

My parents have an active bat house, and there is some build up of poop... but not a lot. It might take time to gather a significant amount.

Flavor I dunno, if you're looking for flowering ferts the bat poop you collect here won't be that great.. Insect heavy guano is more of a vegetative fert, you want the stuff from fruit bats for flowering.

Yeah, the poop should be handled carefully, they can contain a whole bunch of nifty pathogens, like most any fecal matter you really need to observe proper hygienic methods.. gloves, wash up afterwards, etc.

What would be a significant amount? A little goes a long way with guano.
 

Kenny Lingus

Active member
some bats loose their caves because it get filled with poisonous guano, and I believe if a few artificial caves where made with a smart guano collecting system that didn't disturb them it would be a good way to preserve bats in areas they're disappearing from.

In my country they sell subsided bat-cases (like bird-cases, but especially made for bats...)

I think I read that bats make up 25% of the mammal species, and they're widely spread all over the world.

Why are some bats guano so much more used than others btw???
 

ixnay007

"I can't remember the last time I had a blackout"
Veteran
Most protected caves do allow guano harvests, but it has to be done when the bats aren't there.. in some cases that isn't a long stretch of time, in others, the bats migrate, so they can work for longer periods of time without disturbing them.

Why? I think it's their diet, some bats eat mostly proteins (insects), so their guano is good for all sorts of fertilizer usage (more veg than anything else), some eat fruit, which makes for good flowering ferts.. I suppose the availability might also have something to do with it.
 

Kenny Lingus

Active member
^ I thought it had to do with diet yeah, but I just wonder why there is mostly the indonesian/Jamaican that is widely used for bloom. (Fruit bats maybe?)
Seabird guano for veg is almost evident just as they always lust in fish feasts and marine life...
 

ixnay007

"I can't remember the last time I had a blackout"
Veteran
Kenny Lingus said:
^ I thought it had to do with diet yeah, but I just wonder why there is mostly the indonesian/Jamaican that is widely used for bloom. (Fruit bats maybe?)
Seabird guano for veg is almost evident just as they always lust in fish feasts and marine life...

Yeah, it's their diets, it says here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit_bat
That Megabats (what a cool name) tend to live near the equator (tropical and subtropical regions), which makes sense, because there would need to be fruit year round.

Says also they carry the Marburg virus... mmm haemorrhagic fever.
 

quadracer

Active member
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/30/w...d7431fdc159043&ex=1212292800&pagewanted=print


May 30, 2008
Peru Guards Its Guano as Demand Soars Again
By SIMON ROMERO

ISLA DE ASIA, Peru — The worldwide boom in commodities has come to this: Even guano, the bird dung that was the focus of an imperialist scramble on the high seas in the 19th century, is in strong demand once again.

Surging prices for synthetic fertilizers and organic foods are shifting attention to guano, an organic fertilizer once found in abundance on this island and more than 20 others off the coast of Peru, where an exceptionally dry climate preserves the droppings of seabirds like the guanay cormorant and the Peruvian booby.

On the same islands where thousands of convicts, army deserters and Chinese indentured servants died collecting guano a century and a half ago, teams of Quechua-speaking laborers from the highlands now scrape the dung off the hard soil and place it on barges destined for the mainland.

“We are recovering some of the last guano remaining in Peru,” said Victor Ropón, 66, a supervisor from Ancash Province whose leathery skin reflects his years working on the guano islands since he was 17.

“There might be 10 years of supplies left, or perhaps 20, and then it will be completely exhausted,” said Mr. Ropón, referring to fears that the seabird population could be poised to fall sharply in the years ahead. It is a minor miracle that any guano at all is available here today, reflecting a century-old effort hailed by biologists as a rare example of sustainable exploitation of a resource once so coveted that the United States authorized its citizens to take possession of islands or keys where guano was found.

As a debate rages over whether global oil output has peaked, a parable may exist in the story of guano, with its seafaring treachery, the development of synthetic alternatives in Europe and a desperate effort here to prevent the deposits from being depleted.

“Before there was oil, there was guano, so of course we fought wars over it,” said Pablo Arriola, director of Proabonos, the state company that controls guano production, referring to conflicts like the Chincha Islands War, in which Peru prevented Spain from reasserting control over the guano islands. “Guano is a highly desirous enterprise.”

Guano is also an undeniably strenuous enterprise from the perspective of the laborers who migrate to the islands to collect the dung each year. In scenes reminiscent of open-pit gold mines on the mainland, the laborers rise before dawn to scrape the hardened guano with shovels and small pickaxes.

Many go barefoot, their feet and lower legs coated with guano by the time their shifts end in the early afternoon. Some wear handkerchiefs over their mouths and nostrils to avoid breathing in guano dust, which, fortunately, is almost odorless aside from a faint smell of ammonia.

“This is not an easy life, but it’s the one I chose,” said Bruno Sulca, 62, who oversees the loading of guano bags on barges at Isla Guañape, off the coast of northern Peru. Mr. Sulca and other workers earn about $600 a month, more than three times what manual laborers earn in the impoverished highlands.

Peru’s guano trade quixotically soldiers on after almost being wiped out by overexploitation. The dung will probably never be the focus of a boom as intense as the one in the 19th century, when deposits were 150 feet high, with export proceeds accounting for most of the national budget.

The guano on most islands, including Isla de Asia, south of the capital, Lima, now reaches less than a foot or so. But the guano that remains here is coveted when viewed in the context of the frenzy in Peru and abroad around synthetic fertilizers like urea, which has doubled in price to more than $600 a ton in the last year.

Guano in Peru sells for about $250 a ton while fetching $500 a ton when exported to France, Israel and the United States. While guano is less efficient than urea at releasing nitrates into the soil, its status as an organic fertilizer has increased demand, transforming it into a niche fertilizer sought around the world.

“Guano has the advantage of being chemical-free,” said Enrique Balmaceda, who cultivates organic mangoes in Piura, a province in northern Peru. “The problem is, there isn’t enough of it to meet demand with new crops like organic bananas competing for what’s available.”

That explains why Peru is so vigilant about preserving the remaining guano, an effort dating back a century to the creation of the Guano Administration Company, when Peru nationalized the islands, some of which were British-controlled, to stave off the industry’s extinction.

Since then, Peru’s government has restricted guano collection to about two islands a year, enabling the droppings to accumulate. Workers smooth slopes and build walls that retain the guano. Scientists even introduced lizards to hunt down ticks that infested the seabirds.

The guano administrators station armed guards at each of the islands to ward off threats to birds, which produce 12,000 to 15,000 tons of guano a year.

“The fishermen instigate the most mischief here,” said Rómulo Ybarra, 40, one of two guards stationed at Isla de Asia, which otherwise has no regular inhabitants. (The island has a tiny cabin called Casa del Chino, a reference to the Asian ancestry of former President Alberto K. Fujimori, who used to come here to unwind in solitude.)

“When the fishermen approach the island, their engines scare away the guanay,” Mr. Ybarra said, referring to the prized guanay cormorant. “And further out at sea, the fishing boats pursue the anchoveta, something we cannot control.”

The anchoveta, a six-inch fish in the anchovy family, is the main food of the seabirds who leave their droppings on these rainless islands. The biggest fear of Peru’s guano collectors is that commercial fishing fleets will deplete their stocks, which are increasingly wanted as fish meal for poultry and other animals as demand for meat products rises in Asia.

While the bird population has climbed to 4 million from 3.2 million in the past two years, that figure still pales in comparison with the 60 million birds at the height of the first guano rush. Faced with a dwindling anchoveta population, officials at Proabonos are considering halting exports of guano to ensure its supply to the domestic market.

Uriel de la Torre, a biologist who specializes in conserving the guanay cormorant and other seabirds, said that unless some measure emerged to prevent overfishing, both the anchovetas and the seabirds here could die off by 2030.

“It would be an inglorious conclusion to something that has survived wars and man’s other follies,” Mr. de la Torre said. “But that is the scenario we are facing: the end of guano.”

Andrea Zarate contributed reporting from Lima, Peru.
 

Pythagllio

Patient Grower
Veteran
I wonder if guano could be farmed ie setting up an enclosure and populating it with bats, give them everything they need etc.

Bat houses on high poles. High enough so they won't know you're stealing their shit when they're asleep. Big old street lamp strategically placed in or near the bat houses. Maybe an old 1000w HPS? The street lights attract bugs that come to worship, the bats eat the bugs, go home to bed and poop, poop, poop. Fat bats.
 

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