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Crustacean Meal Fertilizer 4-0-0

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Weight: 2 Pounds

Greenway Biotech · Made in California since 1989

Organic Crustacean Meal 4-0-0.
Nitrogen, calcium, and chitin in one amendment.

Premium crab and shrimp shell meal with 4% nitrogen, 12% calcium, 1.3% magnesium, and naturally occurring chitin — the structural fiber that feeds chitinase-producing soil microbes. CDFA registered, independently lab tested for heavy metals, and packaged in Madera, California.

Find your size → Calculate how much I need

4%

Slow-release organic nitrogen

12%

Calcium for cell wall integrity

1.3%

Magnesium for chlorophyll

2–3mo

Microbial release window

01 / Choose your size

Right-sized for the job.

Coverage figures below assume garden incorporation at the standard rate (5–10 lb per 100 sq ft per Planet Natural / Peaceful Valley; 5 lb per 100 sq ft per Down to Earth). Heavy-feeding crops and chitin-targeted applications run on the upper end — adjust per a current soil test.

Crustacean meal coverage by bag size at 5–10 lb per 100 sq ft
Bag Size Garden Coverage (5–10 lb / 100 sq ft) Container Volume (1 tbsp/gal mix) Best For
2 lb ~20–40 sq ft ~64 gallons of potting mix Patio containers, raised-bed top-up
5 lb ~50–100 sq ft ~160 gallons of potting mix Most popular — small vegetable beds
10 lb ~100–200 sq ft ~320 gallons of potting mix One full raised bed or 5–10 fruit trees
25 lb ~250–500 sq ft ~800 gallons of potting mix Multiple beds or orchard rows
50 lb ~500–1,000 sq ft ~1,600 gallons of potting mix Best value — market gardens, small acreage
02 / Ideal applications

One bag.
Six different jobs.

Crustacean meal is one of the few amendments that delivers organic nitrogen, structural calcium, and chitin in a single product. Each use case below leverages a different combination of those three.

Vegetable beds

Pre-plant incorporation at 5–10 lb per 100 sq ft 4–6 weeks before planting. Standard garden rate for tomatoes, peppers, brassicas, and root crops.

Fruit & landscape trees

1–2 lb per inch of trunk diameter, spread from the base to the drip line. New trees take 1–2 cups mixed into the backfill.

Containers & potting mix

1–2 tbsp per gallon of soil at planting, or 5 lb per cubic yard of media. Top-dress established pots every 4–6 weeks.

Transplants

1–2 tbsp per planting hole, mixed into the backfill and watered in well. Calcium and chitin support root-zone establishment.

Chitin / nematode-pressured fields

300–500 lb per acre banded in-row 4–6 weeks pre-plant. The peer-reviewed chitin amendment rate — not the N rate.

Compost activator

Roughly ½ cup per cubic foot (Fedco). The nitrogen and chitin accelerate decomposition and enrich the finished compost.

03 / Why crustacean meal

Three nutrients.
Chitin on top.

Most organic nitrogen sources deliver no calcium. Most calcium sources deliver no nitrogen. Crustacean meal is one of the few amendments that delivers both — plus chitin, the structural polysaccharide that no other common fertilizer supplies in meaningful quantity.

4%

Slow-release organic nitrogen.

Nitrogen is locked in the protein matrix of crustacean shells. Soil microbes break it down gradually over 2–3 months — the literature describes crustacean meal as ~75–85% water-insoluble N, so first-season availability is partial. In warm, biologically active soils, budget 40–60% of the rated N as available in the year of application. Apply 4–6 weeks ahead of planting.

12%

Calcium for cell wall integrity.

Calcium is essential for cell wall pectin cross-linking, membrane integrity, and fruit cell expansion. At 12% Ca, a 1,000 lb/ac application delivers ~120 lb Ca/ac — meaningful, and worth accounting for on already-calcareous soils. Adequate fruit calcium nutrition can contribute to lower blossom end rot incidence in tomatoes, peppers, and squash.

100%

Chitin — the soil biology multiplier.

Chitin is the second most abundant polysaccharide on earth after cellulose, and the structural fiber of crustacean exoskeletons. Research suggests soil amendment with chitin stimulates populations of chitinase-producing bacteria and fungi — including Actinobacteriota and Firmicutes — that may contribute to a more biologically active rhizosphere. For deeper background, see The Benefits of Chitin for Healthy Plants.

pH±0

Stable pH profile.

Unlike dolomite lime or oyster shell, crustacean meal has minimal effect on soil pH. Gardeners with well-balanced or already-alkaline soils can add calcium without pushing pH higher. If you need to raise soil pH significantly, Dolomite Lime is the appropriate amendment.

CDFA

State-registered, lab-tested.

Registered with the California Department of Food and Agriculture, meeting strict labeling and composition standards. Independently lab tested for heavy metal content with results consistently well below required limits.

♻️

Recycled marine byproduct.

Made from crab and shrimp shells — byproducts of the seafood processing industry that would otherwise be landfilled. Crustacean meal returns marine-derived nitrogen, calcium, and chitin back to terrestrial soils, closing a nutrient loop with no synthetic inputs.

04 / The science

Why chitin matters.

C8H13NO5chitin monomer

N-acetylglucosamine — the building block of crustacean shells

Chitin is a long-chain polysaccharide of N-acetylglucosamine units, the structural fiber in crustacean exoskeletons, insect cuticles, and many fungal cell walls. Unlike cellulose, it carries a nitrogen atom on every monomer, giving it a low C:N ratio (~4:1) and making it a substrate that soil microbes can colonize aggressively without immobilizing nitrogen the way high-carbon residues do.

When chitin enters the soil, it selectively stimulates populations of chitinase-producing organisms — Actinobacteriota, Firmicutes, and certain fungi. A 2025 cucumber pot trial published in Scientific Reports reported that chitin shell meal amendments shifted soil microbial communities dose-dependently and were associated with stronger plant growth at the higher amendment rates tested. Earlier work on root-knot nematode pressure in eggplant (Khan et al.) reported significant reductions in root galling with crab and shrimp powder amendments compared to untreated controls.

Practical implication for the grower: crustacean meal is best thought of as a slow-release nitrogen + calcium fertilizer that also provides chitin as a soil biology amendment. The N rate logic is straightforward; the chitin rate logic is different — nematode and microbiome effects in the literature use 0.1–1.0% of soil weight (equivalent to thousands of lb per acre), so practical field use targets 300–500 lb/ac banded in-row for a partial response. Caution on legumes: Horiuchi’s soybean nodulation work showed reduced nodulation above 0.5% w/w, so legume applications should stay at the low end.

For broader context on how soil biology drives nutrient cycling, see Soil Microbes & Plant Health and Best Nitrogen Fertilizer for Your Garden.

05 / Application rates

Pick your use.
Get your rate.

Rates below are drawn from university extension guidance, industry product labels, and the peer-reviewed chitin literature. Pick the tab that matches your job — the chitin/nematode tab uses a different rate logic than the standard nitrogen-budget tabs.

Vegetable gardens & raised beds

Quick answer: 5–10 lb per 100 sq ft, worked into the top 3–6 inches of soil 4–6 weeks before planting.

Vegetable garden crustacean meal rates by use type
UseRateSourceNotes
Broadcast & incorporate, garden beds5–10 lb per 100 sq ftPlanet Natural / Peaceful ValleyHoe or rake into top 4–6 inches of soil; 4–6 weeks pre-plant
New vegetable beds (general purpose)5 lb per 100 sq ftDown to Earth labelMixed into top 3 inches
Transplant holes1–2 tbsp per holeDown to Earth labelMix into backfill; water in well
Side-dress, established plants2–4 oz per plant, monthlyDown to Earth labelWork lightly into soil surface during the growing season
Heavy-feeding crops (cannabis, brassicas)~60 lb per 1,000 sq ftFedco / BiogreauxOr per soil test — roughly 2,600 lb/ac equivalent

📋 Soil Test First: Rates above are general guidelines based on typical garden conditions. Actual rates should be confirmed by a current soil test and consultation with your local cooperative extension service, since needs vary significantly by soil type, crop, and prior amendment history. Crustacean meal at 4% N is best used as a supplemental amendment alongside other organic sources rather than as the sole N source on large acreage.

Sources: Planet Natural / Peaceful Valley garden guide; Down to Earth Distributors product label; Fedco Seeds / Biogreaux application guidance.

Containers & potting mix

Quick answer: 1–2 tbsp per gallon of potting mix at planting, or 5 lb per cubic yard of media.

Container crustacean meal rates by application method
MethodRateSourceNotes
Mix into potting media at planting1–2 tbsp per gallon of soilDown to Earth labelBlend thoroughly with media before filling the container
Bulk potting mix preparation5 lb per cubic yard of mediaDown to Earth labelPre-blend with peat, perlite, and compost components
Top-dress established pots~1 tsp per gallon of soilGreenway Biotech guidanceWork into the top inch of soil; reapply every 4–6 weeks during active growth

Note: Container plants benefit from the slow-release nitrogen and calcium without the pH risk of lime-based calcium sources. Water thoroughly after application to activate microbial breakdown.

Sources: Down to Earth Distributors product label; Greenway Biotech container guidance.

Trees & shrubs

Quick answer: 1–2 lb per inch of trunk diameter, spread from the base to the drip line. New trees take 1–2 cups mixed into the backfill.

Tree and shrub crustacean meal rates by plant size and stage
Plant StageRateSourceNotes
New tree or shrub at planting1–2 cups per planting holeDown to Earth labelMix with backfill; water in well
Established trees & shrubs1–2 lb per inch of trunk diameterDown to Earth labelSpread from base to drip line; lightly incorporate into top 2″ of soil
Berry bushes (blueberry, raspberry, etc.)0.5–1 lb per plantGreenway Biotech / Down to Earth labelApply in early spring before new growth

Note: Split larger annual rates across two applications — one at bud break in spring and one in early summer — for more even nutrient availability through the growing season.

Sources: Down to Earth Distributors product label; Greenway Biotech berry guidance.

Field & row crops

Quick answer: 500–1,000 lb per acre broadcast and incorporated, or calculate from soil test N target.

Field crop crustacean meal rates by N target
N TargetCrustacean Meal 4-0-0 NeededSourceNotes
Row crops, general guideline500–1,000 lb per acreDown to Earth labelBroadcast and incorporate; adjust by crop demand and soil test
50 lb N/ac target~1,250 lb per acreStandard organic-N math(50 lb N × 100) ÷ 4% N = 1,250 lb product
100 lb N/ac target~2,500 lb per acreStandard organic-N mathBudget 40–60% first-season availability; apply 4–6 weeks pre-plant
150 lb N/ac target~3,750 lb per acreStandard organic-N mathOften more economical to pair with feather meal 12-0-0 at this rate

📋 Soil Test First: Field crop application rates above are general guidelines based on typical soil test levels and crop removal estimates. Actual rates should be confirmed by a current soil test and consultation with your local cooperative extension service, as needs vary significantly by soil type, crop variety, and regional conditions. Note: crustacean meal at 4% N is typically used as a supplemental amendment — for primary N supply on large acreage, growers often pair it with higher-N organic sources like Feather Meal 12-0-0 or Blood Meal 13-0-0.

Sources: Down to Earth Distributors product label; standard organic N-budget calculation per university extension guidance.

Chitin / nematode-suppression amendment

Quick answer: 300–500 lb per acre banded in-row, 4–6 weeks pre-plant. This is a chitin amendment rate, not an N rate.

Chitin-driven application rates from peer-reviewed research
ApplicationRateSourceNotes
Practical field banding for chitin benefit300–500 lb per acre, in-rowIndustry consensus / Down to Earth label4–6 weeks pre-plant; broadcast at this rate dilutes the chitin too much for a strong response
Pot trial — cucumber, root-knot nematodeUp to 4% w/w of soil2025 Scientific Reports (cucumber pot trial)4% rate yielded the greatest growth and nematode-suppression response in the trial
Pot trial — eggplant / M. incognitaCrab and shrimp powder amendmentsKhan et al., brinjal greenhouse trialSignificant reductions in root galling vs. control (p < 0.05); crab powder produced highest shoot and root growth
Legume cap (soybean nodulation)Stay at or below ~0.3% w/wHoriuchi soybean nodulation study0.1–0.3% stimulated nodulation; 0.5–1.0% reduced nodulation and dry matter

⚠ Read this carefully: Peer-reviewed nematode-suppression rates expressed as “% by weight of soil” convert to very high field-equivalent numbers (0.1% w/w of the top 6″ of soil ≈ 2,000 lb/ac; 0.3% ≈ 6,000 lb/ac). The 300–500 lb/ac banded rate is a practical compromise that delivers a partial chitin response without the cost of full pot-trial rates. Phytotoxicity has been reported at high w/w rates on sensitive crops — prawn/shrimp powder at 1% w/w was phytotoxic on chickpea in one trial. Use the legume cap and start conservatively on unfamiliar crops.

Sources: 2025 cucumber pot trial (Scientific Reports); Khan et al. brinjal/M. incognita greenhouse trial; Horiuchi soybean nodulation study; Down to Earth Distributors product label.

Compost activator

Quick answer: Roughly ½ cup per cubic foot of compost mix, layered between carbon-rich materials.

Compost activation rates by pile size
Compost VolumeRateSourceNotes
Per cubic foot of mix~½ cupFedco SeedsLayer between carbon-rich materials (leaves, straw, cardboard)
Per cubic yard of mix~8–10 lb (volume basis)Derived from Fedco27 cubic feet per yard; turn the pile regularly to incorporate evenly

Note: The nitrogen and chitin in crustacean meal accelerate decomposition and enrich the finished compost. Keep the pile moist and turn regularly for best results.

Sources: Fedco Seeds compost activator guidance.

06 / How to use & calculate

Incorporate.
Water in.
Wait 4–6 weeks.

Crustacean meal is a soil amendment, not a foliar spray. Microbial release drives nutrient availability, so timing and soil temperature matter as much as rate.

  1. 01

    Measure the area

    Calculate square footage (beds), gallons (containers), trunk diameter (trees), or cubic yards (compost). The calculator at right handles all four.

  2. 02

    Spread & incorporate

    Spread evenly over the area, then rake or till into the top 3–6 inches of soil. Incorporation matters — surface application slows nutrient release and amplifies the seafood odor.

  3. 03

    Water in thoroughly

    Water activates the soil microbes that drive nutrient release. Keep the soil evenly moist through the establishment period. Soil temperatures above 50°F support full microbial breakdown.

  4. 04

    Wait 4–6 weeks before planting

    Pre-plant timing allows protein hydrolysis to begin and minimizes odor. For side-dress and top-dress applications, water in immediately and resume normal irrigation. NOT for foliar spraying.

07 / Compare

Five organic amendments.
Different jobs.

Crustacean meal is one of the few amendments that bundles nitrogen, calcium, and a soil-biology amendment in one product — but it’s not always the right tool. Here’s how it stacks up.

Crustacean meal vs other organic nitrogen and calcium amendments
Product NPK Calcium Release Speed Best For
Crustacean Meal 4-0-0 (this product) 4-0-0 12% Slow (2–3 mo) Nitrogen + calcium + chitin in one amendment; pre-plant bed prep, transplant calcium, soil biology
Blood Meal 13-0-0 13-0-0 None Fast (1–3 wk) Quick nitrogen green-up; mid-season correction; leafy crops
Feather Meal 12-0-0 12-0-0 Trace Slow (3–5 mo) Season-long nitrogen for heavy feeders; orchards, perennials
Bone Meal 3-15-0 3-15-0 24% Slow (3–4 mo) Phosphate + calcium for root, bloom, and bulb development
Dolomite Lime 0-0-0 ~22% Ca, ~12% Mg Slow (months) Raising soil pH; calcium + magnesium without N or P
08 / Decision

Is this the right
amendment for you?

Crustacean meal is excellent for a specific set of jobs and a poor fit for others. Pick honestly — the right tool for the job converts better than the wrong one bought twice.

Best Choice For

  • Pre-plant bed preparation for tomatoes, peppers, brassicas, and root crops
  • Building soil biology over multiple seasons
  • Gardeners who need both nitrogen and calcium without changing pH
  • Fields with nematode pressure (300–500 lb/ac banded in-row)
  • Container plantings where slow, low-burn-risk nutrition is preferred
  • Compost piles needing both nitrogen and a biology activator
  • Organic growers seeking a low-input, marine-derived amendment

Consider Another Product If

  • You need fast nitrogen (within days) — try Blood Meal 13-0-0 for rapid green-up
  • You need season-long N at field-crop rates — Feather Meal 12-0-0 is more economical per lb of N
  • You need high phosphorus for flowering or root crops — pair with or substitute Bone Meal 3-15-0
  • You need to raise soil pH significantly — Dolomite Lime provides calcium and actively raises pH
  • Cold soil below 50°F where microbial activity is suppressed — use a soluble calcium source like Calcium Nitrate 15.5-0-0 instead
  • You’re fertilizing legumes at high rates — stay at or below ~0.3% w/w or use a non-chitin N source
10 / Safety & handling

Read this before
you apply.

Crustacean meal is a benign soil amendment, but it’s an animal-derived product with a strong seafood odor — a few handling rules keep both gardeners and pets safe.

  • PPE: Wear gloves when handling. Use eye protection and a dust mask when opening bags or applying in dry, windy conditions. Wash hands thoroughly after use.
  • Storage: Store sealed in a cool, dry place out of direct sunlight. Keep out of reach of children and pets. The seafood odor can attract dogs and wildlife — store bags securely.
  • Application: Incorporate into soil rather than leaving on the surface. Water in immediately after application to reduce odor and discourage animals. Allow 4–6 weeks before planting when used pre-plant.
  • Edible gardens: Crustacean meal is an animal-origin amendment. Incorporate into soil, avoid direct contact with harvestable plant parts, and follow good produce-safety practices. Allow it to be watered in before harvesting leafy greens.
  • First aid: Eye contact — flush with clean water for 15 minutes and seek medical attention if irritation persists. Skin — wash with soap and water. Ingestion — do not induce vomiting; contact Poison Control (1-800-222-1222). Refer to the Safety Data Sheet for complete safety information.
11 / FAQ

Common questions.
Honest answers.

If your question isn’t here, contact our team at questions@greenwaybiotech.com.

What is crustacean meal and what does it contain?

Crustacean meal is made from dried, ground crab and shrimp shells — byproducts of the seafood processing industry. It naturally contains 4% nitrogen, 12% calcium, and 1.3% magnesium, along with chitin, the structural polysaccharide in crustacean exoskeletons. The nitrogen is locked in a protein matrix and is released gradually over 2–3 months as soil microbes break the material down. For deeper background, see The Benefits of Chitin for Healthy Plants.

How does chitin in crustacean meal benefit the soil?

Chitin is the second most abundant polysaccharide on earth after cellulose. When added to soil, research suggests it stimulates populations of chitinase-producing bacteria and fungi — including Actinobacteriota and Firmicutes — that may contribute to a more biologically active root zone. This is an indirect biological effect that develops over several weeks as microbial populations respond to the chitin substrate. Peer-reviewed pot trials on cucumber and eggplant have reported associations between chitin amendment and reduced root-knot nematode galling, though field-scale responses are partial at practical application rates.

Will crustacean meal burn my plants?

Crustacean meal is a slow-release amendment with only 4% nitrogen, making it very unlikely to cause fertilizer burn when used at recommended rates. Nutrients are released gradually through microbial breakdown over 2–3 months. The much higher risk is on legumes at very high rates — published research shows reduced nodulation above ~0.5% w/w of soil. For legumes, stay at the low end (around 0.3% w/w or roughly 500 lb/ac and below).

How much do I actually apply per 100 sq ft?

The standard garden rate is 5–10 lb per 100 sq ft, broadcast and worked into the top 3–6 inches of soil 4–6 weeks before planting (Planet Natural / Peaceful Valley; Down to Earth label). Heavy-feeding crops like brassicas and root crops can use the upper end of that range, while lighter feeders and maintenance applications run closer to 5 lb. For transplants, 1–2 tbsp per planting hole is the standard add-in.

Does crustacean meal smell? What should I expect?

Yes — crustacean meal has a seafood odor, similar to dried shrimp or crab. The smell is most noticeable when the bag is first opened and immediately after application. Incorporating the meal into the top 3–6 inches of soil (rather than leaving it on the surface) and watering it in thoroughly will significantly reduce odor. The scent dissipates within a few days as the material begins to break down. It is noticeably milder than fish meal or blood meal.

Is crustacean meal safe around pets?

When applied as directed and watered into the soil, crustacean meal is generally safe in gardens with pets. However, the seafood scent may attract dogs and other animals, so water the product in well after application and monitor pets in the area for the first day or two. Discourage direct consumption of the meal in large amounts. Keep bags stored securely away from pets.

Will crustacean meal change my soil pH?

Crustacean meal has minimal impact on soil pH — unlike lime-based calcium sources such as dolomite or oyster shell, which actively raise pH. This makes crustacean meal a good calcium source for gardeners who need calcium without disturbing a well-balanced or already-alkaline soil pH. If you need to raise soil pH significantly, Dolomite Lime is the appropriate amendment.

Does crustacean meal provide phosphorus or potassium?

No — crustacean meal is rated 4-0-0, meaning it contains no significant available phosphate (P₂O₅) or soluble potash (K₂O). For crops with high phosphorus demand (flowering annuals, fruiting vegetables, bulb crops), pair with Bone Meal 3-15-0 or Fish Bone Meal 4-17-0. For potassium, Kelp Meal 2-0-4 or Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 are good organic-compatible options.

Can I use crustacean meal for nematode pressure?

Research suggests crustacean meal’s chitin content can contribute to suppression of root-knot nematodes by stimulating chitinase-producing soil organisms. Peer-reviewed pot trials (a 2025 cucumber study in Scientific Reports; brinjal/M. incognita work) report significant reductions in root galling vs. controls at high w/w rates. Practical field use targets 300–500 lb per acre banded in-row, 4–6 weeks pre-plant — a compromise that delivers a partial response without the cost of full pot-trial rates. Broadcast applications at the same rate dilute the chitin too much to fire the same microbiome response.

Why is the field-crop rate so much higher than for blood meal or feather meal?

Crustacean meal contains 4% N, vs. 13% for blood meal and 12% for feather meal — so for the same N target you need roughly 3× more product. At 50 lb N/ac that’s about 1,250 lb of crustacean meal vs. ~385 lb of feather meal. This is why crustacean meal is most often used as a supplemental amendment for its calcium and chitin contributions, with the main N supply coming from more concentrated organic sources like Feather Meal 12-0-0 or Blood Meal 13-0-0. For more on the trade-offs, see Best Nitrogen Fertilizer for Your Garden.

12 / Documents

Lab-tested.
State-registered.

Compliance and composition documents for our crustacean meal — CDFA registration, third-party heavy metal analysis, and the safety data sheet.

Ready to feed the soil?

Pick your bag. We’ll ship it.

Crustacean meal ships in 2-lb to 50-lb bags — from the patio container all the way up to small acreage. Free shipping on orders over $100, and every order is backed by our 90-day money-back guarantee.

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