The cottonseed meal that is left generally is fed to ruminant livestock; the gossypol remaining in the meal is toxic to monogastric animals.
The cottonseed meal after being dried up can be used as a dry organic fertilizer.
Another thing he say is that in his experience, a srimp will eat cottonseed meal, which is good on account of it is cheap.
To nourish his camellias, which sit in gallon or larger pots, he applies a teaspoon of cottonseed meal in spring and another dose in summer, and that's it.
Maintaining the boxwood pattern has required relatively little work, with a spring fertilizing of cottonseed meal and Hollytone.
Sprinkle future planting beds with cottonseed meal, to add extra nitrogen, then cover with a quarter-inch layer of damp newspaper.
He then goes on to outline his own journey away from applying cottonseed meal and sewage sludge or urea and superphosphates.
The 1.5 million tons of cottonseed meal produced in the U.S. every year that is not suitable for humans or any other simple-stomach animal is even cheaper than soybean meal.
It is important to note that it has not been determined whether unauthorized cottonseed meal actually entered the feed supply.
Tips are offered for commercial fertilizer as well as less invasive organic treatments (e.g. cottonseed meal, 30 lbs.; bone meal 25 lbs.)