It varies depending on how much natural precipitation is available, but in the driest parts of the US, a good corn crop can still be harvested from 6,000 gallons of water per bushel of grain harvested. That works out to about 3.7 acre-feet of water over the course of the growing season.
twice a day then the corn will grow happily .. ~yep , that's right .. ~!
Certain species of corn need more water than others to grow well. The average corn plant needs several annual inches of rain to grown effectively.
about 30 million gallons of water
10 cup of letters
the farmer fertilizes the corn with his urine and makes the corn grow nice and yellow<--- who ever put that is very immature A farmer uses biology to grow corn because he has to know the wheather condition in which corn can grow and location. He has to study about corn to help it grow and survive and biology= study of living things
They taught them how and where to plant corn, the best places to fish, and other useful information they needed to know and learn.
Though wheat does not require nearly as much water as rice does to grow, it does require a significant amount of water to keep the soil relatively moist in order for it to grow. A field of wheat does take a lot of water to grow. Just how much water depends on how big the field is.
16 stalks
they did not do much crops but they grew corn
12 inches
Yes, some farms do grow corn in Nevada, especially the north and eastern part of the state, not so much the western and southern portion.
Bt corn is made by introducing vector plasmids into agrobacterium by electroporation. Electroporation is the creation of transporent pores in the membrane of a cell, through the application of a high-voltage electrical pulse.