Corn takes between one to two gallons per plant on a weekly basis. An acre of corn take 350,000 gallons of water over the 100 day growing cycle.
Generally speaking about 300 gallons per acre.
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.
30,000
An acre is a constant unit of measurement - an acre of anything is equal to an acre of anything else.
Only .2 of a gallon of gas
10000
On an average an acre of corn transpires- 3000-4000 gallons a day and a tree can transpire 40000 gallons per year, amounting to approximately 110 gallons a day. Transpiration varies for different types of plants and trees. There are various factors that effect transpiration like weather, type of tree, wind, humidity etc.
I think it might be a 3:1 ratio like water to rice but cornstarch so actually 30 gallons to 10 gallons of water
The average yield of corn per acre in Pennsylvania is approximately 150 bushels. The average soybean yield is 40 bushels per acre.
150 bushels per acre
For the 2009 crop season, Texas' average corn yield was 108 bushels per acre.
twice a day then the corn will grow happily .. ~yep , that's right .. ~!