I'm skeptical. I know a vet who says otherwise, at least in horses. Is this finding you mentioned actually documented or is it just truthy enough to re-post? You know what I mean? Like, it's not from personal experience but sounds right enough. I occasionally catch myself doing this too, so I'm not picking on you. I just wonder who actually found that it worked? What species? Were there other environmental conditions? Etc.bubba1358 said:It has been found to be successful in worming applications. Also, it's drying properties would be useful in helping manures dry out faster, thereby depriving other pathogens of the moistures necessary for life.~gd said:DE may kill insects but it does NOT kill pathogens!
BTW, DE works fine for wheat storage in my experience. I had an outbreak of some moths in poorly stored wheat (ran out of airtight containers) and fixed it with DE and better packaging.