Ive been foliar spraying bloom chaos every day in early flower & now at day 11 bloom the plants seem 2 like it.. I wish I had that other nectar spray 2 mix in... not that they need it but juss 2 change it up with a different spray..
plants in the middle of there daily Bloom Chaos
View attachment 405039
try not to get that stuff on your skin perro
Agricultural[edit]
Roxarsone is a controversial arsenic compound used as a nutritional supplement for chickens
The toxicity of arsenic to
insects,
bacteria and
fungi led to its use as a wood preservative.
[43] In the 1950s a process of treating wood with
chromated copper arsenate (also known as CCA or
Tanalith) was invented, and for decades this treatment was the most extensive industrial use of arsenic. An increased appreciation of the toxicity of arsenic resulted in a ban for the use of CCA in consumer products; the
European Union and United States initiated this process in 2004.
[44][45] CCA remains in heavy use in other countries however, e.g. Malaysian rubber plantations.
[6]
Arsenic was also used in various agricultural insecticides and poisons. For example,
lead hydrogen arsenate was a common insecticide on
fruit trees,
[46] but contact with the compound sometimes resulted in
brain damage among those working the sprayers. In the second half of the 20th century,
monosodium methyl arsenate (MSMA) and
disodium methyl arsenate (DSMA) – less toxic organic forms of arsenic – have replaced lead arsenate in agriculture. With the exception of cotton farming the use of the organic arsenicals was phased out until 2013.
[47]
Arsenic is used as a feed additive in
poultry and
swine production, in particular in the U.S. to increase weight gain, improve
feed efficiency, and to prevent disease.
[48][49] An example is
roxarsone, which had been used as a
broiler starter by about 70% of U.S. broiler growers.
[50] The Poison-Free Poultry Act of 2009 proposes to ban the use of roxarsone in industrial swine and poultry production.
[51]Alpharma, a subsidiary of Pfizer Inc., which produces Roxarsone, voluntarily suspended sales of the drug in response to studies showing elevated levels of inorganic arsenic, a carcinogen, in treated chickens.
[52] A successor to Alpharma,
Zoetis, continues to sell
nitarsone, primarily for use in turkeys.
[52]