bananas
Warm fronts, definitely. It brings in sunshine and light rainstorms to feed the crops, followed by humidity to keep them moistened. It the healthiest for the plants, while cold fronts often drown them and tears them from the ground with the high winds.
Locations that are too hot for farming typically include arid desert regions, where extreme temperatures and low rainfall hinder crop growth. Conversely, very cold regions, such as the Arctic or parts of Antarctica, experience harsh winters and short growing seasons, making them unsuitable for agriculture. Additionally, areas with high humidity and heat can lead to crop diseases, while excessive cold can freeze plants and soil, further limiting viable farming areas.
Antarctica does not have crops as a product due to its harsh environment and freezing temperatures, which are not conducive to agriculture.
Cold weather. Look at what happened in Florida in early 2010.
Ground up dirt, Cold water, and a lot of sun.
resistance to the elements (such as cold and hail) and pests. Also they're engineered to have a larger crop
The address of the Garden Conservancy is: Po Box 219, Cold Spring, NY 10516
If you're referring to crop seed banks and not weed seed banks, the crop seed banks will help keep a record of many species and varieties of crop seeds that could be used to help re-propagate a particular type of food crop if it went extinct or was threatened somehow, creating more ability for food to be produced from those seeds that have been saved in the seed bank. If, however, you're referring to weed seed banks, they stay in the soil for much longer than a crop producer would like and will always propogate once conditions are right. Weeds are a threat to a crop because they compete with that crop for moisture, nutrients and sunlight, and if not controlled by herbicides can reduce yields or choke out a crop altogether, leaving the farmer less to harvest and leaving more people going hungry.
No. The climate of Tasmania is too cold to support significant banana crops. The main crops in Tasmania are wheat and barley.
They are easy to grow. They keep in cold storage for a long time, and you can plant new ones from them. They can also be used in many ways.
Climate change can impact food security in multiple ways, such as through extreme weather events, changes in temperature and precipitation patterns, and impacts on crop yields. These factors can disrupt food production, increase food prices, and affect crop quality, ultimately leading to food scarcity and malnutrition. Here is a simplified diagram illustrating this relationship: Climate Change --> Extreme Weather Events, Temperature/Precipitation Changes --> Crop Yield Reduction, Food Price Increases, Food Scarcity, Malnutrition.
its a cash crop