As a fertilizer? As a fire suppressant agent? In what form? Using what currency? Is there an alternative that's cheaper to get store and use? Long term? Needs a lot more information
Christopher David Pannkuk has written: 'Legume residue management and rotation effects on soil nitrogen, productivity, and economics in wheat-based no-till systems' -- subject(s): Crop residues, Crop rotation, Crops and nitrogen, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Crops and nitrogen, Legumes, Nitrogen content, No-tillage, Soils, Winter wheat 'A winter wheat-fallow rotation' -- subject(s): Computer simulation, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Fallowing, Fallowing, Winter wheat
the economic important of a fungi is how they using asexual repruducing :)
Farmer's would plant a crop with less economic value after a crop with high economic value, because it would renew the soils nutrients/nitrogen for the high economic crop for the next year.
Muhammad Akram Khan has written: 'Nitrogen transformations in soils' -- subject(s): Data processing, Mathematical models, Nitrification, Nitrogen content, Soils 'A numerical simulation model to describe nitrogen movement in the soil with intermittent irrigation' -- subject(s): Data processing, Irrigated Soils, Mathematical models, Nitrogen content, Nitrogen fertilizers, Soil physics, Soils 'Challenge of Islamic economics' -- subject(s): Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Islam, Economics, Islam, Religious aspects of Economics
Nitrogen gas is valued based on its production cost, typically ranging from $0.30 to $2 per thousand cubic feet. In fertilizer form, nitrogen is priced at around $0.40 to $0.60 per pound. Its value is also influenced by market demand, supply, and global economic factors.
Wen-Yuan Huang has written: 'The economic and environmental consequences of nutrient management in agriculture' -- subject(s): Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Nitrogen fertilizers, Nitrogen fertilizers
Cyanobacteria are also known as blue or green algae. They are important economically because they provide food and can remove nitrogen from water sources.
Nitrogen is a gaseous element, that is, what is in nitrogen is nitrogen.
Solid nitrogen is called "nitrogen ice" or "nitrogen snow".
Nitrogen is!
Nitrogen atoms, of course. Naturally occurring nitrogen has two isotopes: nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15.
Nitrogen is simply nitrogen. It is an element