answersLogoWhite

0

How did cotton survive?

User Avatar

Anonymous

14y ago
Updated: 8/17/2019

they survive by camouflageing to there surrrding

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What did the slaves do on platations?

They worked the entire day in the cotton feilds picking the cotton, slaving in the hot sun for no pay, and little food to survive on.


What states does cotton come from?

Cotton plants survive best in sub-tropical geographies and are grown in those climes all over the world.


How did the slaves spent their days?

They worked the entire day in the cotton feilds picking the cotton, slaving in the hot sun for no pay, and little food to survive on.


How does bog cotton survive in bog lands?

Well, mostly bog cotton has a short life expectancy - due to the fact it's in water. So it doesn't. It DROWNS. Hope this helps!


Is it possible to eat a cotton t-shirt?

no because it does not have the healthy nutrients that we need to survive than the food we eat


What are the benefits of using flame retardant yarn comparison to cotton yarn?

Flame retardant yarn will not burn as fast as cotton yarn -- the benefit being that whomever is wearing the garment may be able to survive longer in a fire situation.


Is cotton a product?

Yes, cotton and cotton fibre bales are a product produced by a cotton farm. Likewise cotton thread or cotton material are products of cotton mills.


Where is cotton made?

Cotton grows on cotton shrubs on cotton farms.


Is cotton a mattress foam?

A cotton mattress is cotton. cotton is a plant.


What is a cotton stalk?

cotton stalks are the cotton plant residues after picking of cotton. these are simply cotton sticks.


How did the cotton gin allow American slavery to survive?

The cotton gin, invented by Eli Whitney in 1793, significantly increased the efficiency of cotton processing, making it much easier to separate cotton fibers from seeds. This surge in productivity led to a boom in cotton cultivation, particularly in the Deep South, which in turn increased the demand for enslaved labor to plant and harvest the crop. As cotton became a lucrative cash crop, the economic reliance on slavery deepened, allowing the institution to persist and expand in the United States for several more decades. This created a paradox where the technological advancement in agriculture reinforced and sustained the system of slavery.


How were people able to survive in the dry deserts of the Southwest?

They dug more than 500 miles of canals to carry waters to their fields. They also grew corn, cotton, beans, and squash.