The goal is to increase the Earth's biomass. Anyone can take initiative by feeding birds, fertilizing, planting trees, and tagging animals. Science turbocharges these measures.
Biomass is dominated by trees.
Plants are 10% of ocean biomass and 98% of land biomass.
On land, most plants are not eaten, and in oceans, most plants are eaten. Oceans have 5 times as much consumer biomass as producer biomass.
For mammals and birds, biomass is dominated by domestic animals.
Mammal biomass is dominated by humans and cattle.
The larger the organism, the more accurate the population data. Populations for many small species are unknown.
Mammal biomass is approximately constant over the range of animal sizes.
Data from pantheria.org.
Metabolic power/mass scales as Mass-1/4.
The biomass distribution scales as Mass0, hence most mammal metabolic power is expended by small organisms, not large organisms.
Data from pantheria.org.
A human brain is 1.6 kg and uses 20 Watts.
Land Bkg Ocean Bkg Plants 3300000 Crustasian 4800 Plants, trees 2600000 Fish 4200 Bacteria 420000 Mollusk 1140 Fungi 72000 Plant 1000 Archaea 42000 Jellyfish 620 Protist 24000 Mammal 120 Crops 14000 Virus 100 Worm 1320 Virus 1100 Insect 1050 Amphibian 600 Arachnid 150 Mammal, wild 30 Reptile 18 Bird, wild 12 Mammal, human 360 Mammal, domestic 1000 Bird, domestic 30
World biomass Population Mass Bkg millions kg Whale, total 40 1.5 Dolphin, total 7 50 Seal, total 6 25 Whale, sperm 16 .40 40000 Whale, fin 6 .10 60000 Whale, S Bottlenose 3 .5 6000 Whale, blue 2.5 .02 125000 Whale, humpback 2.4 .080 30000 Whale, bowhead 2.2 .030 75000 Whale, bryde 1.4 .095 15000 Whale, sei 1.1 .057 20000 Whale, right .6 .01 60000 Whale, gray .6 .026 25000 Whale, orca .4 .1 4500 Dolphin, white-sided 4.9 41 120 Dolphin, orca .45 .1 4500 Dolphin, spotted .3 3 113 Dolphin, bottlenose .24 .6 400 Dolphin, striped .2 2 100 Seal, crabeater 1.6 8 204 Seal, harp 1.4 8 180 Seal, elephant .7 .5 1400 Seal, brown fur .4 2.1 185
World biomass Mass Population Bkg kg Dog, wild 3 Fox, red 1.2 8 Cat, wild .5 Bear, black .15 154 Bear, brown .06 278 Bear, polar .018 475 Jaguar .005 81 Leopard .004 54 Wolf, grey .002 40
World biomass (Bkg) Squirrel 7 Raccoon 3.8 Elephant 2.4 Rat 1.9 Kangaroo 1.2 Rabbit 1.1 Deer 1.0 Fox .8 Moose .58 Hippo .45
World biomass Population Mass Bkg millions kg Duck total .10 100 1.0 Goose total .07 20 3.75 Swan total .02 2 10 Duck, mallard .021 19 1.08 Duck, pintail .004 5.35 .8 Duck, long-tail .004 5 .74 Goose, Canadian .022 6 3.75 Goose, snow .019 6 3.2 Swan, mute .0072 .605 11.9 Swan, whooper .0021 .18 11.4 Swan, tundra .0018 .3 6.1 Swan, black .0017 .3 5.8 Swan, trumpeter .0005 .046 11.6
World biomass Population Mass Bkg millions kg Hawk, red-tailed .0028 2.6 1.06 Goshawk .0019 2 .956 Buzzard .0017 4 .43 Peregrine falcon .0012 1.2 1.0 Kestrel .0009 5 .184 Falcon, laughing .0009 1.6 .57 Hen Harrier .0005 1.3 .40 Hawk, roadside .0004 1.6 .275 Hawk, Eurasian .0003 1.5 .22 Merlin .0003 1.3 .195 Gyrfalcon .0002 .11 2.1 Eagle, golden .0007 .17 4.18 Eagle, snake .0002 .1 1.68 Eagle, bald .0001 .02 4.85 Eagle, hawk .0001 .1 .85 Heron, grey .0014 1.0 1.4 Egret, cattle .0012 5.4 .22 Heron, boat-billed .0003 1.6 .2
For Manhattan,
Mass Number per Number per Mass/area person hectare kg (Humans=1) Human 65 1 300 1 Cat, wild 3.9 .143 43 .0086 Pigeon .27 1.5 450 .0062 Rat .32 1.0 300 .0049 Squirrel .5 .03 7.5 .00023
Almost all vitamins fit into one pill, with the exception of calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and magnesium, which can be supplemented separately. The nutrient requirement for animals and plants is:
Human Bird Crop Supplement gram/day gram/day gram/kg Calories 2200 165 0 Protein 50 9 0 Potassium 3.5 .4 14 Potassium phosphate Phosphorus 1.0 .4 1.5 Potassium phosphate Calcium 1.0 .8 2 Calcium chloride Magnesium .35 .4 1.5 Magnesium chloride Iron .27 .2 .14 Zinc .075 .05 .038 Manganese .075 .05 .038 Copper .022 .02 .011 Nitrogen 0 0 15 Ammonium nitrate Sulfur 0 0 1.5 Ammonium sulfate
We assume a 75 kg human and a 1 kg bird. For other masses, scale accordingly. For crops, the nutrient requirement is in grams of nutrient required to produce 1 kg of biomass. Crop biomass is typically 1/2 edible food.
For young birds, calcium and phosphorus are especially important, for bones. For egg-laying birds, calcium is important for egg shells.
Bones are made of calcium and phosphorus, in a 2:1 ratio. For a 1 kg bird,
Calcium = 14.0 grams Phosphorus = 6.5 grams Potassium = 4 grams Magnesium = 1 grams
For bones,
Calcium fraction = .279 Phosphorus fraction = .130 Calcium/phosphorus ratio = 2.1
The best bone supplements are calcium chloride (CaCl2) and monopotassium phosphate (KH2PO4).
For a chicken egg,
Mass Calcium grams grams Egg total 60 1.95 White 36.6 .0023 Yolk 18.3 .028 Shell 5.1 1.92
Almost all the calcium is in the shell. Eggs are 3.2% calcium. Shells are 94% calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and calcium carbonate is 40% calcium.
An egg is typically 3% of the mass of the adult bird.
It takes 50 days for a bird to grow to adult size.
The left plot shows the protein and calorie content of food. Foods with high protein and low fat are in the lower right. Nuts are heavy in protein, especially peanuts.
The right plot shows how much calories and protein you get per dollar. The cheapest meats are pork, chicken, and turkey.
The plot shows the potassium, phosphorus, and calcium content of food. Calcium is abundant in cheese and milk and rare in other foods. Sesame is rich in calcium.
The plot shows the phosphorus and potassium content of food. Most nuts are rich in these elements.
For bird seed, what matters is calories and calcium, and the best seeds are sesame and nyger.
A simple and cheap fertilizer recipe is:
Relative mass Urea 4 Potassium chloride 4 Monoammonium phosphate 1 Calcium chloride 1 Magnesium chloride 1 Ammonium sulfate 1
Growing 1 kg of biomass requires the following elements:
Element Cheapest form Molecule Cost Fertilizer Element frac Element cost gram $ gram in fertilizer gram/$ Nitrogen 15 Urea CO(NH2)2 .025 26 .467 482 Potassium 15 Potassium chloride KCl .044 29 .524 340 Phosphorus 2 Monoammonium phosphate (NH4)2HPO4 .011 7 .269 185 Calcium 2 Calcium chloride CaCl2 .011 6 .361 182 Magnesium 2 Magnesium chloride MgCl2 .036 8 .255 55 Sulfur 2 Ammonium sulfate (NH4)2SO4 .025 8 .243 79 Total .152 84
Well-irrigated crops produce 1 kg of biomass per meter2 per year. Typical crops are 1/2 edible matter and 1/2 inedible matter. Trees can produce wood at a rate of 2 kg/meter2/year.
As an example, for nitrogen fertilizer,
Nitrogen requirement = n = = 15 grams to produce 1 kg of biomass Urea nitrogen fraction = u = = .456 Urea requirement = U = n / u = 33 grams Nitrogen cost per kg = c = = 482 gram/$ Nitrogen cost = C = n/c = .029 $
The appendix has a table with all possible fertilizer molecules.
Year -11000 Livestock -9500 Crops -6000 Crop rotation. 2-field system -4000 Ox power -3500 Horse 0 Trade network 900 3-field system 1492 Columbian exchange. Guano fertilizer introduced 1700 4-field system. Nitrogen-fixing plants 1800 Fertilizer becomes widespread 1850 Mechanization 1895 Refrigeration 1950 Pesticides 1980 Genetic engineering
English wheat yield:
Year Wheat yield (kg/hectare/year) 1500 .018 1550 .022 1600 .029 1650 .031 1700 .038 1750 .047 1800 .063 1850 .073 2020 .8
Crop locations are decided by rain, rivers, lakes, reservoirs, aquifers, and aqueducts. Prime farmland is for crops and subprime land is for grazing. There is 2.2 times as much grazing land as cropland, and agriculture is 38% of world land.
The plot shows the center of mass for crops.
Land can support more people with wheat than with beef, by a factor of 16. Sugar cane is more efficient than wheat by a factor of 16.
Farm productivity is expressed as kg/meter2/year of food. If we factor in the calorie content of the food, we can express this as food production power in Watts/meter2. The value for wheat is 16 times larger than for beef.
The table shows the production power for various foods, with a comparison to solar cells and wind turbines.
Production Energy/Mass Power Type of energy kg/meter2/yr MJoule/kg Watt/meter2 Solar cell - - 40 Electricity Wind turbine - - 15 Electricity Algae 10 16 5.1 Biomass Bamboo 2 16 1.0 Biomass Grass 1 16 .50 Biomass Typical tree .5 16 .25 Biomass Sugar cane 8 16 4.1 Food Wheat .5 14 .22 Food Milk .6 2.1 .040 Food Fish .1 9 .028 Food Goose (grazing) .1 9 .028 Food Beef (grazing) .05 9 .014 Food Tomato 8 .8 .20 Food Tomato, hydroponic 150 .8 3.8 Food
For most crops, 50% of the plant biomass is edible produce.
In 1850, a family of 4 could be supported by 40 acres, and this is the origin of the phrase "40 acres and a mule". This corresponds to 25 people/km2. At the time, world population was 8 people/km2 and today it's 50 people/km2.
It takes 120 Watts of food energy to support a human. If the calories come from cane sugar, then land can support 30000 people/km2.
Wild mammal biomass is 30 Bkg and human biomass is 360 Bkg.
Land is far cheaper in Brazil than Iowa. Land is 1/5 of the cost in Brazil and 1/2 the cost in Iowa.
Iowa pays less for fertilizer than Brazil, but they pay more for seeds.
Labor is only 1/15 the cost, for both Iowa and Brazil.
Costs are in $/acre/year.
Iowa Iowa Iowa Brazil Iowa cows corn soy soy grass Land 56 256 256 60 55 Labor 22.9 42.7 33.6 20 33 Seed - 114.4 49.2 25 - Machinery 5.2 70.2 64.5 40 20 Other 5.2 31.9 26.9 16 - Nitrogen 27.2 71.7 - - 58 Phosphorus 11.7 29.6 19.5 25 19 Potassium 12.0 18.3 27.9 35 - Lime - 15.7 15.7 15 - Herbicide 4.6 39.6 48.7 40 5 Insecticide - 18.4 - 10 - Fungicide - - - 25 - Other pesticide - - - 4 - Total 137.9 770.8 542.0 315 181
To minimize insects, use plants with nuts instead of berries. Most insects can't get the nuts whereas birds and mammals can.
The nuts with high calcium content are sesame, poppy, and chia. The tree nut with high calcium content is almond.
The ideal location for planting trees is near water, and it helps to fertilize the trees.
You need dense trees for birds in the winter.
Bird populations can be increased with plants that produce nuts or berries.
The atmospheric carbon increase of 4000 billion kg/year can be offset by planting 4 million km2 of trees. The fertilizer requirement is 340 billion $/year, and the value of the wood produced is substantially greater.
The amount of forest needed is:
Atmospheric carbon increase = C = 4000 billion kg/year Forest carbon capture rate = R = 1.0 carbon kg/meter2/year Forest needed to offset carbon = A = C/R = 4 million km2The value of wood produced is:
Wood commodity price = w = .3 $/kg Wood carbon mass fraction = c = .5 Value of wood produced = W = Cw/c = 2400 billion $/yearThe cost for nitrogen fertilizer is:
Wood nitrogen mass fraction = n = .01 Nitrogen requiremnet = N = Cn/c = 80 billion kg/year Price of nitrogen in fertilizer = p = 2.1 $/kg Total nitrogen price = P = p N = 170 billion $/year
Trees also need potassium, phosphorus, calcium, magnesium, and sulfur, and their total cost is similar to that of the nitrogen. The total fertilizer cost is double the nitrogen cost, or 340 billion $/year.
Trees should be planted close to water. For existing trees, fertilizer should go to large trees that are close to water.
For new trees, chose trees that will become tall and wide. The largest trees are sequoias, redwoods, douglas firs, and eucalyptus. The fastest growing tree is bamboo, which produces 1 carbon kg/meter2/year.
World forest carbon:
Carbon in atmosphere = 880 trillion kg Carbon in plants = 550 trillion kg Carbon in trees = 500 trillion kg Total human-generated carbon = 300 trillion kg Carbon from deforestation = 36 trillion kg Atmosphere carbon increase = 4 trillion kg/year Forest carbon capture rate = 45 trillion kg/year World forests Deforestation rate = .35 trillion kg/year Carbon from forest fires = .25 trillion kg/year World forest area = 39 million km2 Forest wood density = 11 kg/meter2 Total wood carbon harvested =4.56 trillion kg/year Wood for power + wood for industry Wood carbon for biomass power=1.59 trillion kg/year Wood carbon for industry =2.97 trillion kg/year
Mass (kg) Flighted Ostrich 104 Somali ostrich 90 Southern cassowary 45 Northern cassowary 44 Emu 33 Emperor penguin 32 Greater rhea 23 Dwarf cassowary 19.7 Lesser rhea 19.6 King penguin 13.6 Turkey 13.5 * Mute swan 11.9 * Wandering albatross 11.9 * Trumpeter swan 11.6 * Dalmatian pelican 11.5 * Kori bustard 11.4 * Whooper swan 11.4 * Andean condor 11.3 * Great bustard 10.6 * Cinereous vulture 9.5 * Cape vulture 8.8 * California condor 8.5 * Siberian crane 8 * Red-billed crane 8 * Ruppell's vulture 7.6 * Sarus crane 7 * Steller's sea eagle 6.7 * Black swan 6 * Bald eagle 4.85 * Canadian goose 3.8 * Mallard 1.2 *
Extinct birds:
Mass (kg) Flighted Dromornis stirtoni 500 Elephant bird 400 Brontornis 375 Kelenken 300 Giant moa 240 Titanis waleri 150 Argentavis 72 * New Zealand penguin 90 Pelagornis sandersi 30 * Sylviornis 30 Haast's eagle 12 * 1400 CE Cuban giant owl 9 *
The best down comes from eider ducks and muscovy ducks. Goose down dominates the bulk of the down market.
The quality of down feathers is measured by "fill power", which is inverse density. Bird down far outperforms synthetic fill and it's biodegradable.
Fill power (inches3/ounce) Eider duck down 1200 Goose down, highest quality 900 Goose down, high quality 800 Goose down, average quality 550 Typical synthetic 500 Small feathers 300
A nest can be harvested halfway through the incubation period, with 1 goose producing 21 grams of high-quality down. It can be harvested again after the young have departed for another 21 grams of lower-quality down.
The best down is eider down, and nest-harvested eider down commands a high price.
Eider down price = 2200 $/kg Yield of down from one nest = .021 kg/duck/year World eider down production = 4000 kg/year Iceland production fraction = .85 Canada production fraction = .12
Goose down with a 700 fill power costs 120 $/kg.
Down comes primarily from farmed geese and ducks.
Produce Value Population Killed Mass World mass Bkg/yr B$/yr B B/yr kg Bkg Down .12 6.8 - - - - Goose, farmed 3.2 4 .2 .84 4.5 .9 Goose, wild - - .02 - 4 .08 Duck, farmed 5.5 7 .9 3.7 1.5 1.4 Duck, wild - - .1 - 1.2 .12 Chicken, farmed 90 128 24 65 2 48 Turkey farmed 5.5 7 .22 .62 7.3 1.6 Swan, wild - - .002 - 11 .022
Most of the down that is produced is live plucked instead of harvested from moult. When buying down-filled goods, take care to check the source of the down.
Population in millions:
Duck total 100 Goose total 20 Swan total 2 Mallard 19 Canadian goose 6 Mute swan .6 Long-tailed duck 6.5 Snow goose 6 Tundra swan .3 Northern shoveler 5.8 Cackling goose 1.1 Black swan .3 Northern pintail 5.4 Greylag goose 1.05 Whooper swan .18 Gadwall 3.5 Magpie goose 1.0 Eider 3.5 Brant goose .56 Goldeneye 3.4 Cotton pygmy goose .4 Eurasian wigeon 3.0 Emperor goose .085 Tufted duck 2.8 Swan goose .08 Garganey 2.7 Pochard 2.4
For electricity, you wamt a large lithium-ion battery with 120 Volt AC, plus a gasoline generator. Solar cells and wind turbines are too vulnerable to weather. For heat, you can take advantage of the abundance of firewood with a wood stove.
The options for off-grid electricity are:
Power/Mass Power/$ Energy/Mass Watts/kg Watts/$ MJoule/kg Lithium-ion battery, 5V 100 1.1 .92 Lithium-ion battery, 12V 100 1.1 .6 Lithium-ion battery, 24V 100 1.1 .6 Lithium-ion battery, AC 100 1.1 .6 Battery pack with a 120 Volt AC outlet Generator, gasoline 100 10 - Solar cell 20 .6 - Wind turbine 10 1.0 - Water turbine 30 1.0 - Generator, crank 40 .35 - A human turns a crank Generator, bike chain 15 .088 - Extracts energy from the bike chain Generator, bike wheel 15 .17 - Extracts energy from the bike wheel by friction Stirling engine 100 10 - A heat source powers a generator
The energy used by electronic devices is:
Volts Watts Phone 5 .5 Assume the phone is on and playing a video Tablet 12 3 Small laptop 19 5 Large laptop 19 8
Gasoline generators have a good power/mass but they are inexplicably not made in small sizes. The smallest gasoline generators have a power of 1000 Watts and a mass of 10 kg.
The options for off-grid heat are:
Energy/Mass Energy/$ Mass/$ MJoule/kg MJoule/$ kg/$ Coal 32 320 10 Natural gas 55 250 4.5 Firewood 22 220 20 Gasoline 47 47 1.0 Propane 50 38 .75 Butane 50 38 .75 Lighter fluid Coal, matchlight 32 13 .4 Wax 45 11.2 .25 Coal, hookah 32 3.8 .12 Gel fuel 22 2.2 .10 Methanol, ethanol, diethylene glycol Solid fuel 30 .9 .031 Hexamine, trioxane Heat pack, iron powder 10 .89 .089 Lithium-ion battery, 5V .92 .010 .0092 Lithium-ion battery, 12V .8 .006 .0048 Lithium-ion battery, AC .8 .006 .0048
Hydroponics is the technique of growing plants in water rather than soil, where the water is fertilized with nutrients. Hydroponics can yield 100 times as much food as soil-based agriculture, and a person can be sustained with only 200 square meters of hydroponics.
Hydroponics is easy. One can buy a system that takes care of everything and one need only supply the system with water and fertilizer. One can further improve yield with greenhouses, lighting, and mirrors.
A "grow kit" takes care of supplying the plants with water. One need only supply the kit with water and fertilizer. Fertilizer comes in powder form and dissolves in the water. Kits cost $2 per plant site.
Putting a greenhouse around the kit amplifies the yield by allowing one to control temperature and humidity. A greenhouse also allows plants to be grown during the winter.
Mirrors can amplify the sunlight reaching the planet, and mirror film is cheap.
Lights can improve the growth rate and make it possible to grow plants 24 hours.
1 kg of nutrient powder is mixed with ton of water. The composition of a typical nutrient solution is
Parts per million Potassium 160 Nitrogen 150 Calcium 100 Phosphorus 40 Sulfur 40 Magnesium 30 Iron 2 Manganese .5 Zinc .3 Boron .2 Copper .1 Molybdenum .075Source
Hydroponics offers gains over field agriculture in many categories. The following table shows the amplification for each category in terms of hydroponic yield over field yield. The total amplification is the product of the amplification from each category.
Amplification factor Plant density 8 In terms of plants/meter2 Crops per year 4 Crop variety 2 Temperature contro l 2 LED lighting 2 Carbon dioxide enhancement 1.5
Cities often encourage wild cats to stay wild, and many have a "catch, sterilize, and release" program. Many also do censuses of cat colonies and have a network of colony caretakers.
The plague has closed down most of New York City's animal shelters.
New York City has the same number of wild cats as house cats.
Pet dogs in homes 300000 Pet cats in homes 600000 Wild cats 400000 Given to shelters 20000 per year Adoptions 14000 per year Euthanized 4000 per year NYC area 784 km2 NYC humans 8300000 Wild cats/area 5 cats/hectare
Wild cats kill on average .12 rats/day. The calorie intake is:
Cat mass = 4.5 kg Rat mass = .265 kg Cat food requirement = 218 Calories/day Rat kills/day = .12 Rats/day Calories in a rat = 800 Calories Calories from rats = 96 Calories/day
Average Oldest lifespan member years years Pine, bristlecone 4854 Cypress, Mediterranean 4500 Yew 4500 Cypress, fitzroya 3652 Sequoia 3200 Baobab, African 2450 Suji, giant 2400 Tortoise, aldabra giant 255 Tortoise, Galapagos giant 100 Whale, bowhead 100 211 Human 75 122 Whale, killer 80 Elephant, African 70 Elephant, Asian 89 Horse 62 Orangutan 55 Bear, Eurasian brown 50 Bear, polar 42 Cat 38 Dog 31 Rabbit 18 Macaw 70 Cockatoo, sulfur-crested 120 Flamingo, greater 83 Cockatoo 83 Condor, Andean 79 Albatros, leysan 66 Vulture, Egyptian 60 Eagle, American 25 50 Pigeon 4 15 Mourning dove 3 Sparrow 3 Robin 2 13
World population hinges on agricultural technology.
Year -11000 Pigs and sheep domesticated Fertile crescent -9500 First crops Fertile crescent -8500 Cattle domesticated India and Turkey -6200 Rice cultivation China -4500 Wheel -4000 Beadmaking discovered, using yeast Egypt -3500 First crops in the Americas -3000 Wine, beer, cheese -1900 House-drawn chariots Central Asia -1700 Wind-powered machines Babylon -1500 Seed drill Babylon 600 Alcohol distillation 900 3-field system. One field is fallow 1492 Columbia exchange. Corn and potatoes introduced to Europe Guano fertilizer introduced 1701 Seed drill of Jethro Tull 1720 4-field system. Wheat, clover (nitrogen fixation), turnips (deep roots), barley 1780 Breeding of livestock England 1784 Threshing machine, for separating seeds from hulls 1807 Potassium discovered. Proved to be a component of wood ash. Humphrey Davy 1809 Canned food 1842 Phosphate fertilizer 1866 Mendel publishes "Mendelian genetics" 1871 Pasteurization Louis Pasteur 1895 Refrigeration 1901 Gasoline tractor America 1913 Haber process for producing ammonia
To support a 1 kg bird you need 5.3 meters2 of algae.
Algae growth rate = G = 4 kg/meter2/year Algae food energy/mass = e = 12 MJoules/kg Bird calorie requirement = E = 253 MJoules/year = 165 Calories/day For a 1 kg bird Area per bird = A = E/(Ge) = 5.3 meters2
Animals Moves/Animal dt Longitude Latitude Duration Days Days Peregrine Falcon Hungary Soar 10 4000 .000095 21.0 46.7 .38 Soaring bird Gibraltar Africa 73 378 .000382 -5.6 36.0 .14 Black kite Gibraltar Marques 130 594 .00141 -5.6 36.1 .83 2019 Raptor Moessingen Nabu 1 1133543 .00150 -3.5 41.2 1705 Northern gannet Alderney 60 6057 .0023 -1.8 49.8 14 Little bustard Portugal Spain 17 10708 .00269 -.1 .3 39 Black kites Gibraltar 129 599 .0027 -5.6 36.1 1.6 Scopoli shearwater 22 1046 .0034 7.3 42.8 3.6 Scopoli shearwater free ranging 27 2021 .00372 2.8 40.6 7.5 Western marsh harrier Belgium 3 15967 .0044 4.3 51.3 57 Antwerp Common crane Lithuana 2016 1 360007 .00475 18.2 52.8 1711 Scopoli shearwater Pollonara 28 827 .00510 6.9 42.9 4.2 2015 Adlie penguin Adlie land 52 1658 .0052 140.0 -66.6 8.6 ** Lesser kestrels EBD 141 5702 .0056 -6.5 37.4 32 Heron egret telemetry 16 83373 .0066 -121.9 37.7 343 GreyHeadedAlbatross NewZealand 24 3895 .0072 -10.6 -55.8 28 Torres 2017 Western marsh harrier Groningen 4 246779 .00825 3.6 46.6 779 Common crane Lithuana 2015-2016 2 49556 .0092 15.5 51.3 579 Snares penguin incubation 2003 3 424 .0093 167.7 -48.1 3.95 Red kite Baden Wuerttemberg 1 37896 .0108 5.4 46.6 409 * download crash Masked boobies ocean desert 23 229 .0113 -109.5 -27.2 2.57 Eagle owl Reinhard Vohwinkel 21 24701 .0114 8.7 51.3 80 Bewick swans 9 11190 .0119 26.0 58.5 133 Eurasian oystercatcher Belgium 7 9647 .0131 3.8 51.2 112 Hypsignathus monstrosus Olson 10 943 .0139 15.6 .9 35 Common crane Sweden gps 19 31777 .0171 11.5 54.2 420 Hornbill NE India 6 3212 .0179 57.6 92.9 58 Yelkouan shearwater ChickRearing 51 157 .0217 13.4 35.0 3.41 2012 2014 Brown pelican Gulf Mex Gea 30 1818 .0240 -91.0 29.1 Egrets herons 3 32595 .0248 -80.5 36.0 ** Whooper swan Latvia 4 11931 .0315 22.0 56.8 376 Trumpeter hornbill KWA ZuluNata 35 695 .0339 30.3 -30.7 24 Northern harrier Ornitela 5 7112 .045 -121.7 38.8 316 Von der Deckens hornbill Kenya 17 11260 .0482 36.4 .4 542 Jetz Indian yellow nosed albatros 26 2460 .0523 79.4 -38.1 129 Amsterdam Is Boulinier Great egrets lifetrack 10 22599 .067 -78.6 37.4 392 Raptor tracking NYSDEC 7 13560 .095 -74.5 45.2 1288 Cougar coyote Utah Idaho 8 10422 .095 -122.6 43.4 Black-bellied plover Alaska 1 500 .118 -142.5 68.8 59 Baltic dublin Pakanen 25 2352 .169 30.8 15.4 397 Osprey S.E. Michigan 9 12466 .199 -83.0 34.9 4471 Antarctic petrel Antarctica 2016 75 64 .216 4.2 -71.1 14 SvarthamarenTarrooux Pelican landscaps func eco 16 6977 .237 33.1 23.1 Hurricane frigate MPIAB 8 2342 .249 -88.5 21.2 583 Buzzards, eagles 23 15606 .26 34.4 30.2 4058 Short eared owl N America 26 703 .27 -148.0 60.8 Loggerhead Canary Is Juvenile 5 1219 .298 -18.9 23.3 364 Brown pelican lamb 2017 81 2093 .30 -90.3 28.1 Black skimmer Andean Davenport 8 217 .335 -71.9 -19.2 73 2016 Wild Turkey Margadant 37 698 .34 -86.4 33.2 237 Black tailed godwit Senner 2015 30 580 .352 -.6 46.5 204 LongBilledCurlew MtWest 63 3064 .40 -112.6 34.3 976 Grey plovers Wadden Sea 13 751 .44 31.5 58.1 330 Grasshopper sparrow Vermont 24 581 .50 -80.2 33.1 290 Connecticut Warbler Alberta 5 690 .50 -70.8 13.0 344 Great knot EAAF 8 282 .504 129.1 43.2 142 Winchat British Saxicol Rubetra 20 653 .504 .7 26.0 329 **? Wood warbler Tottrup 2018 1 404 .52 14.8 BlackpollWarbler deluca 2015 5 575 .53 -71.2 24.6 Argentine barn swallow 9 505 .539 -53.8 -11.8 272 ** Great cormorant Lake Constance 17 616 .558 8.0 46.3 201 Mediterranean storm petrel Malta 7 370 .65 11.7 37.5 239 Solowki Larus 6 392 .677 32.4 62.5 265 Snowy owl N America 32 1047 .78 -70.8 65.3 African cuckoo Nigeria Iwajomo 5 1070 .820 10.2 9.2 877 2018 Canadian plover Bylot 19 412 .86 -17.3 26.7 Gadwall MPIAB 40 106 .989 12.1 48.3 105 Painted bunting ABM 2015 11 198 .99 -99.6 27.2 196 Pernis apivorus Byholm Finland 9 847 .995 17.5 32.3 842 Fork tailed flycatcher 28 329 1.01 -61.8 -10.4 333 Tyrannus Savana ** Sparrowhawk Armenia Levant 5 266 1.03 36.2 16.2 272 Broad winged hawk 20 370 1.29 Red faced cormorant SGS ASC 2 83 1.37 173.2 52.8 113 Hawk Marc Bechard 3 126 1.39 -73.3 -20.7 175 Great egret MPIAB 1 917 1.93 21.7 50.9 1767 Red necked stints EAAF 17 76 2.47 122.4 14.0 158 Swainsons hawks 42 107 2.31 Curlew sandpiper EAAF 13 74 2.85 120.2 17.3 211 ** Trumpeter hornbill MPIAB 2 188 3.26 30.3 -30.7 614 Osprey N.S. America Martell 78 577 3.55 -84.5 29.6 2048 Snowy Owl Therrien 8 110 6.0 -73.0 65.2 American bittern Huschle 10 195 7.5 -92.5 40.9 Meadowlark Vermont 10 21 12.8 -85.1 40.5 Oenanthe turdidae Uppsala 12 25 12.4 5.0 37.1 307 * Spotted eagle Lithuania 2017 4 149570 .0078 10.2 34.3 883 Spotted eagle NE Poland 3 1451 .0229 24.1 52.6 33 White tailed eagle Poland 2 6965 .048 22.4 52.7 320 Lifetrack bald eagle 4 24724 .18 -80.1 35.2 4450 Bald eagle British Colu 10 2731 .25 -128.1 54.3 683 Bald eagle Hiliaeetus 15 1995 .32 -128.1 53.6 428 Golden eagle hawkwatch 26 910 1.06 -114.7 45.2 965 Golden eagle Denali McInt 41 326 1.12 -133.4 58.2 365 Mallard Netherlands Kleyheeg 111 1455 .0115 4.9 52.0 17 Dabbling Duck Ottenby 32 13206 .051 15.2 55.8 674 Blue winged teal ASC 40 840 .23 -99.0 41.5 Stellers eider N Europe 19 593 .52 40.3 70.6 308 Long tailed duck GLS 2018 10 492 .54 24.2 61.0 267 Common Merganser 9 289 .59 Black scoter 48 642 1.01 Common eider Alaska 78 840 1.16 Long-tailed duck Alaska 59 445 1.7 Common eider Aleutian Peter 55 311 1.81 147.3 52.2 Long-tailed duck Yukon 14 91 2.22 Spectacled Eider Alaska 134 457 3.6 Pacific sea ducks migration 354 78 5.08 -126.1 54.8 3000 Surf scoter 16 455 6.0 Juvenile greylag geese 17 24381 .00110 9.0 47.8 27 Greater white goose mig 12 79624 .0031 28.3 55.6 247 Goose Wadden sea 9 17552 .0118 50.0 66.0 157 Greater white front goose N. Sea 81 13416 .059 43.8 63.2 222 Pink footed goose Chudziska 2016 1 256 .066 8.4 56.3 17 WhiteFrontGoose Greenland 4 1834 .083 -34.6 63.4 152 BarnacleGeese Greenland 6 1142 .126 -20.1 67.3 144 White fronted goose Nolet 2016 9 324 .132 5.1 51.9 15.9 Brant geese Boyd 2002 10 564 .15 -138.2 68.6 85 Barnacle goose Svalbard 2014 2 629 .153 .9 59.9 96 Bean goose Finnmark 3 1140 .175 20.6 65.0 200 White front goose Alterra 6 1227 .30 44.7 64.3 368 Brant geese Boyd 2005 23 598 .47 -127.2 59.1 Barnacle geese Barents 13 1623 .53 26.9 60.9 860 Pink-footed geese 21 802 .62 12.9 67.7 Bar-headed goose MPIAB 3 328 .84 75.4 33.2 277 Thick-billed murre C 2010 21 1488 .00127 -82.1 63.0 1.89 Thick-billed murre C 2013 116 760 .00189 -82.1 63.0 1.43 Thick billed murre 2011 7 2803 .00267 -82.1 63.0 7.5 Elliott Coates Thick-billed murre GC 2017 28 3711 .0073 -82.1 27 Thick-billed murre GD 2016 24 5107 .0079 -78.3 62.6 40.3 ** filename too short Thick-billed murre GM Canada 24 838 .0093 -75.8 72.9 7.8 Thick-billed murre G 2014 9 534 .0098 -88.0 74.1 5.2 Thick-billed murre GD 2015 51 878 .0108 -78.4 62.8 9.5 Thick-billed murre GM 2016 25 1372 .0158 -75.7 73.0 21.7 Alpine swift Spain Tarragona 17 311 .498 -9.3 12.7 155 Alpine swift Switz Biel 7 366 .499 -8.7 12.4 182 Alpine swift Switz Baden 49 392 .499 -7.1 12.67 196 Alpine swift Switz Lausanne 2 373 .499 -9.1 11.8 186 Alpine swift Turkey Pirasali 61 331 .499 33.3 9.8 165 Alpine swift Switz Lenzburg 35 378 .500 -8.1 12.5 189 Alpine swift Switz Luzern 8 469 .500 -6.2 13.9 234 Alpine swift Bulgaria Sofia 27 372 .500 22.5 9.7 186 Alpine swift Switz Solothurn 9 385 .501 -8.5 12.9 193 Homing pigeon Gagliardo 2011 47 28166 .0000189 10.6 43.5 .60 Pigeon anosmic visual 2 70330 .0000688 10.4 43.7 4.84 Familiar cue * Homing pigeon Pollonara 2017 35 177980 .00023 10.3 43.7 33.9 Pigeon Zannori 2020 51 5427 .00069 10.7 43.7 3.7 ** Pigeon Columbia Livia Santos2014 10 15974 .00064 8.9 47.5 10.1 Homing pigeon Gagliardo 2020 24 76062 .00033 10.3 43.7 17.7 Homing pigeon Gagliardo 2018 52 913 .00125 10.5 43.3 1.14 Juvenile homing pigeons 53 23862 .00163 8.7 50.1 39 Homing pigeon Gagliardo 2016 131 970 .00181 10.6 43.6 1.75 Homing pigeon Gagliardo 2014 19 2031 .0110 10.4 43.7 22.4 Homing pigeon Gagliardo 2021 209 1100 .0171 10.6 44.1 18.8 Homing pigeon Frankfurt 3 44842 .0197 8.6 50.1 884 Schiffner Wiltschko * White stork Oberschwaben 1 67600 .000230 15.6 9.3 48.0 White stork 2014 60 119430 .000408 6.5 45.8 49 White stork SW Germany 1 73200 .00104 8.9 47.8 76.3 White stork Bavaria 1 14040 .0047 10.9 49.8 66.2 White stork Poland 20 29349 .0047 27.7 37.0 118. White stork Sicily 7 12929 .0057 14.2 37.2 73.4 White stork e-obs MPIAB 2 26400 .0058 24.7 18.4 154 White stork e-obs GSM 5 14400 .0061 15.4 37.3 88 ** Unknown if same as Carlson White stork Vorarlberg.2016-19 4 83076 .00706 7.0 45.9 586 White stork Rheinland Pfalz 55 66600 .00764 1.2 41.3 509 2015-2019 White stork Rotics 2016 103 14280 .0101 20.4 36.3 144 White stork e-obs Carlson 2021 47 67538 .0126 13.2 51.3 798 White stork Tunisia 9 22747 .0191 17.3 23.5 290 White stork Rotics 2018 35 34489 .0195 27.1 27.2 673 White stork Greece evros delta 5 15400 .0196 26.0 27.9 301 White stork Uzbekistan 16 61637 .052 69.8 40.8 1218 White stork S Africa lifetrack 1 1935 .066 20.3 -31.9 128 White stork Moscow 10 44551 .089 31.5 24.7 405 White stork Armenia 10 13239 .108 45.5 37.3 341 White stork Bulgaria 1 661 .127 39.8 5.3 84 White stork Kosova 8 33368 .233 31.0 21.0 352.9 White stork S Africa MPIAB 6 838 .466 23.5 -25.0 391 White stork MPIAB 1991 2018 178 1895 .966 14.9 25.9 781 White stork GSM MPIAB 2018 2 42600 .97 32.4 24.1 193 * White stork Greece MPIAB 2 70 1.28 35.6 28.0 90 Gyps vulture Rocamadour2018 6 32930 .000047 1.6 44.8 1.55 Vulture S Africa Lifetrack 1 2012845 .000328 30.8 -23.9 660 Himalayan vulture Sherub 2016 22 76678 .00194 92.5 30.0 149 Griffon vulture Salzburg 2 18840 .00260 9.8 47.8 49 Albstadt Griffon vulture Croatia 1 32300 .00398 14.4 45.0 124 Black vulture SE USA 17 153309 .0048 -81.6 33.0 736 Himalayan griffon Bhutan MPIAB 2 22460 .0066 88.7 27.6 149 White backed vulture Namibia 15 23110 .0105 15.8 -19.3 244 Spiegel 2013 V2 ** Andean.condor Argentina 2013-18 8 620 .0107 -71.2 -41.3 6.64 Egyptian vulture 2012-2019 15 38489 .018 42.3 25.6 702 Mid-East, E. Africa Honey buzzard NE Poland 4 3360 .0304 16.5 31.8 102 Galapagos albatross 28 572 .0647 -84.4 -2.5 37.1 Turkey vulture NS America 359 601 .098 -92.8 27.9 59 Vulture Acopian full 64 10691 .106 -89.7 23.6 Hooded vulture Africa 19 16384 .120 29.3 -15.2 1426 Egyptian vulture MidEast EAfrica 22 26518 .41 42.3 25.5 560 Egyption vulture Tunisia 1 186 .210 10.1 36.2 39 Rough-legged buzzard 2 758 .77 13.3 62.1 587 Variable environment Rough-leggedBuzzard lifetrack 80 3645 1.97 48.2 62.0 551 Great black backed gull 2019 7 39360 .00172 8.5 54.8 68 Borrmann Caspian gull 1 252846 .00284 19.3 50.0 718 Black backed gull Garthe 7 7088 .0022 7.7 53.8 16 Herring gull Fifield Witless 8 25680 .0175 -55.4 46.7 449 Herring gulls Canada 6 24166 .0210 -55.3 46.8 507 * Herring Gull Brier Is 10 10450 .029 -66.7 44.1 303 Herring Gull Kent Is 16 3644 .053 -67.3 44.2 193 Herring Gull East Bay 15 1753 .129 -81.2 57.0 226 Herring gulls Clark Mass 5 2357 .20 471 Lesser black backed gull 120 711 .281 31.1 31.8 200 Wikelski 2015 Herring Gull Sable Is 17 2684 .32 859 Sabine gull Canadian Arctic 36 178 1.24 -96.1 15.8 Red backed shrike 2020 43 677 .527 23.6 7.5 357 Pedersen ** Shrike Scandinavia 2018 17 713 .53 22.6 7.7 378 Shrike Scandinavia 2019 27 686 .53 22.9 7.2 364 Red backed shrike Iberian 2017 7 629 .653 20.6 12.2 410 Trawling bat Giuggioli 2015 545 127 .00000019 -2.7 51.4 .000024 Jap greater horseshoe bat 2020 5 5327 .000060 141.6 42.7 .32 Straw colored fruit bat Africa 62 290 .0122 14.7 -2.0 3.54 2009-14 Fruit bat Ghana Sapir 2014 9 68 .0180 -.3 5.8 1.23 Fringe lipped bat Panama 2017 6 259 .0193 -79.8 9.2 5.0 Jones Bat frugivorous Specialization 11 68 .0481 -47.9 -22.0 3.3 Blue fin whale S Cal 2015 1 17170 .021 -119.9 34.1 360 Sperm whale Gulf Cal 25 180 .046 8.3 Great whale Azores 31 212 .120 -31.2 45.5 25.5 False killer whale Hawaiian Is 6 716 .120 -162.3 22.9 85.8 Sperm whale Gulf Mex 17 421 .21 88 Sperm whale NW Atlantic 1 55 .220 -74.0 35.9 12.1 Grey whale Russia Sakhalin 2011 1 243 .362 147.7 53.5 88 Blue whale E N Pacific 285 57 .40 -119.8 33.7 23 Humpback whale Hawaii 1995 2000 45 45 .586 -150.2 35.5 26.6 Fin whale Gulf Cal 2001 8 72 1.21 -112.1 27.4 Fin whale N Mediterranean 2003 8 20 6.92 3.7 41.1 142 Grey seals Sable Is 14 8888 .030 -6.5 37.4 267 Grey seal McConnel UK 1 2535 .095 -.6 56.0 Cat Australia 441 2398 .0039 138.7 -34.8 9.4 Cat New Zealand 232 1752 .0058 174.8 -41.2 10.2 Cat USA 153 4312 .0092 -76.8 37.8 40 Cat UK 100 182 .056 -5.0 50.3 10 Cat curious minds 2017 30 87 .736 175.5 -36.8 64 Cat Albany 11 74 1.45 -73.9 42.7 Elephant Java MPIAB 1 83370 .00058 101.9 -1.0 49 ** Elephant Kruger 2007 14 20263 .0313 31.7 -24.5 634 African elephant Wall 2014 2 11747 .0399 .6 14.3 469 African elephant etosha 2018 15 6666 .109 15.8 -19.1 728 Tsalyuk Forest elephant telemetry 34 1074 .390 12.7 .1 419 Wolf Alberta Lamtham 12 1263 .130 -113.0 55.9 Wolf Mongolia 2003-5 2 1840 .387 93.7 45.5 712 Jaguar Catinga 2 3478 .0454 -42.6 -8.7 158 Jaguar Taiama 13 3301 .067 -57.4 -16.9 222 Elk Banff 2018 31 4466 .070 -115.7 51.7 * Elk Banff 2020 175 9060 .235 -115.6 51.7 738 Baboon Strandburg Peshkin 2015 1 143729 .0000238 36.9 .3 3.42 ** Cattle Cameroon far north 33 5058 .000094 15.0 11.2 .47 Cattle Cameroon Logone 9 6712 .000076 15.0 11.2 .51 Irish hare N Ireland 2 1366 .00130 -6.1 54.9 1.77 Frigatebird Panama Iguana Is 9 1149 .00354 -80.1 7.9 4.08 Bison Dunn Ranch 9 12450 .0107 -94.1 40.5 133 ** Dog stray Prishtina 1 130 .0121 21.2 42.6 1.57 Swamp wallabie Australia 48 478 .0144 145.2 -38.5 6.9 Phillips Is Lyles flying fox Cambodia 2019 10 677 .0163 105.1 11.3 11.0 Black backed jackal Namibia 22 5940 .042 15.9 -19.1 252 Etosha Red fox Australia Scotia 14 6718 .0536 141.0 -33.2 360 Kruger African buffalo S Africa 7 3521 .0606 31.8 -24.6 214 White bearded wildebeest Kenya 36 7752 .0667 36.3 -1.7 517 Galapagos tortoise movement 2 38898 .0675 -90.9 -.5 2625 Movement ecology * Baboon S Africa Bonnell 2016 14 4417 .074 20.4 -34.5 327 Mongolian gazelle Mongolia 4 827 .135 106.6 47.3 111 Roe deer Italy 2005 2008 5 2202 .194 11.0 46.0 428 Cheetah S Africa 2014-15 1 1182 .256 27.1 -25.3 302 Pilanesberg Park King cobra Thailand Elapidae 7 1834 .354 101.9 14.5 649 MangabeyMonkey Uganda Waser1975 18 669 .428 30.4 .6 286 Horse Mongolia Przewalski 2007 1 1355 .53 93.5 45.5 720 Mountain caribou B Columb 195 1259 .58 -122.1 55.4 Tsavo lion study 3 718 .654 38.9 -3.8 469 Green python Australia CapeYork 28 82 1.91 143.3 -12.7 157 Brown bear Slovenia 1993 1999 22 86 3.55 14.3 45.9 306 Coyote Albany 32 71 4.4 -73.9 42.7 Kruger buffalo S Africa 165 160 5.62 31.8 -24.4 900 Galapagos tortoise hatchling 62 19 33.5 -90.5 -.7 634
We list the full set of fertilizer molecules.
Element Molecule Common name Element Fertilizer Element Solubility Human cost cost fraction edible g/$ g/$ ppt g/Litre Calcium CaCl2 Calcium chloride 182 504 361 745 * Calcium Ca(NO3)2 Calcium nitrate 35 142 244 1212 Calcium Ca(H2PO4)2 Monocalcium phosphate 171 20 * Calcium CaHPO4 Dicalcium phosphate 295 .2 * Calcium Ca3(PO4)2 Tricalcium phosphate 388 .02 * Calcium Ca(C2H3O2)2 Calcium acetate 253 347 * Calcium CaC6H10O6 Calcium lactate 184 58 * Calcium Ca3(C6H5O7)2 Calcium citrate 241 .85 * Calcium CaCO3 Calcium carbonate 400 .013 * Calcium CaC12H22O14 Calcium gluconate 93 low * Potassium KCl Potassium chloride 340 649 524 254 * Potassium K2SO4 Potassium sulfate 136 303 449 Potassium KH2PO4 Monopotassium phosphate 44 153 287 226 * Potassium K2HPO4 Dipotassium phosphate 13 1492 * Potassium K3PO4 Tripotassium phosphate 900 * Potassium KNO3 Potassium nitrate 126 387 Phosphorus (NH4)H2PO4 Monoammonium phosphate 185 689 269 360 Phosphorus (NH4)2HPO4 Diammonium phosphate 38 161 235 600 Phosphorus KH2PO4 Monopotassium phosphate 35 153 228 226 * Phosphorus Mg(H2PO4)2 Monomagnesium phosphate * Phosphorus MgHPO4 Dimagnesium phosphate * Phosphorus Mg3(PO4)2 Trimagnesium phosphate * Magnesium MgCl2 Magnesium chloride 55 217 255 * Magnesium MgSO4(H2O)7 Magnesium sulfate 33 336 99 Magnesium Mg(H2PO4)2 Monomagnesium phosphate * Magnesium MgHPO4 Dimagnesium phosphate * Magnesium Mg3(PO4)2 Trimagnesium phosphate * magnesium Mg(NO3)2 Magnesium nitrate 164 710 Magnesium MgS Magnesium sulfide 351 Nitrogen CO(NH2)2 Urea 482 1032 467 1079 Nitrogen (NH4)H2PO4 Monoammonium phosphate 84 689 122 360 Nitrogen (NH4)2HPO4 Diammonium phosphate 34 161 212 600 Nitrogen (NH4)2SO4 Ammonium sulfate 69 324 212 744 Nitrogen (NH4)NO3 Ammonium nitrate 350 150 Nitrogen KNO3 Potassium nitrate 139 Nitrogen Mg(NO3)2 Magnesium nitrate 189 710 Sulfur (NH4)2SO4 Ammonium sulfate 79 324 243 Sulfur K2SO4 Potassium sulfate 56 303 184 Sulfur MgSO4(H2O)7 Magnesium sulfate 44 336 130
Chloride Phosphate Sulfate Nitrate Cl PO4 SO4 NO3 g/$ g/$ g/$ g/$ Potassium K 649 153 303* 126 Calcium Ca 504* - 114 142* Calcium sulfate = Gypsum Magnesium Mg 217 - 336* 113* Nitrogoen NH3 283 698 163* - Ammonium nitrate is an explosive
For example, 1 dollar buys 649 grams of potassium chloride.
Urea = CO(NH2)2 = 1032 gram/$.
Mass (grams) Etruscan shrew 1.8 Bumblebee bat 2 Balachristan jerboa 4 Planigale 4.3 Ningaui 6.9 American shrew mole 10 Pygmy squirrel 16 Mouse 19 Dwarf hamster 23 Mouse lemur 30 Pygmy jerboa 34 Gerbil 71 Least weasel 76 Thick-tailed jerboa 80 Pygmy marmoset 100 Philippine tarsier 110 Sugar glider 140 Hamster 160 Flying squirrel 160 Degu 260 Pygmy rabbit 430 Hedgehog 450 Squirrel 500 Rat 500 Chinchilla 700 Guinea pig 910 Mink 1000 Fennec fox 1060 Muskrat 1100 Ferret 1500 Pygmy sloth 3000 Rabbit 3000 Cat 4000 Marmot 4000 Opossum 5000 Koala 8000 Beaver 20500 Otter 26000 Capybara 50000
The Bird Spa is at the Central Park lake at 101st street, on the south side isthmus.
Ducks can catch bread with a week of training. After a month they can make highlight-reel catches. Geese are too slow to catch.
Ducks can take off vertically. Hold out a piece of bread at waist height and a duck will jump and flap to get it.
Geese are gregarious and will eat out of your hand. Ducks will eat out of your hand after a week of familiarity.
Birds see the 3 colors that human see, plus an extra ultraviolet color.
The incubation temperature for chicken eggs is 37.5 Celsius (99.5 Fahrenheit).
Eggs should be placed with the pointed ends down and turned regularly (at least three times per day) until one to three days before hatching.
Incubation time days Duck 28 Goose 30 Swan 35 Turkey 28 Chicken 21 Pheasant 25 Pigeon 18 Canary 13 Ostrich 42