Corn likes it warm to hot and to be watered regularly. If you get plenty of rain, then don't water. If you live where it is dry, water regularly. If you fail to water often enough, your corn on the cob will not fill out completely. Regular watering, not overwatering is best.
corn needs a wet, semi-dry/humid climate to grow in.
Dry corn is dry and soaked corn is wet.
Relativily fertile soil is used for growth of plants, about every 3 years. You should change the corn to soybeans and let it die and decompose into the ground providing the nutrients corn needs to grow the next year.
Nope. Too cold, too dry, not enough sunlight for photosynthesis.
The corn that we eat is the seed part of the corn plant. Each little kernel is a fertilized seed, and if left to mature and dry can be planted and will grow a corn plant.
Dry corn weight compare to green corn weight...Green corn weightX0.43=Dry corn weight
Growing conditions would either be too dry, too wet, or too cold.
The average temperature needed to grow maize is 21*C.....
the dry stems of corn plants
dry and hot conditions are the best condition for firestick farming as the plant material used will be fossilised because of the lack of water and dry conditions.
This will depend upon the specific microorganism you are asking about. Many common human pathogens, such as E. coli and Salmonella, do not grow at all below a water activity level of about 0.95. However, there are some bacteria that tolerate extremely dry conditions and can grow in places like the Sahara Desert, in the bottom of the Salt Lake in Utah and in other harsh conditions.
Prickly Pear is of the Genus Opuntia, which is a cactus = hot, dry and arid