nitrogen :)
Some soil is, and some soil is not. It depends on how many living animals are in it and how many crops are planted.
soil exhastion
how is tilling of soil useful for the crops to grow in it
When we use soil over and over again we deplete the supply of minerals, if you do not replenish the soil then it will eventually lose its mineral supply.
Prairie soil will be best for growing crops.
This is not an advantage...crops should be rotated or you will deplete the nutrients in the soil.
Crop rotation is important because certain crops deplete nutrients from the soil and overplanting these crops can make the soil unable to support future crops. By rotating crops, this allows nutrients to replenish in the soil naturally, minimizing the need for artificial fertilizers.
You should rotate your crops so you don't deplete the soil by growing just one crop.
All plants will deplete the soil by the fact that they take nutrients from it. The art of the good gardener is to replace the nutrients taken.
Rotating your crops maintains the soil and doesn't deplete it of nutriments needed to grow each different crop...
This is not an advantage...crops should be rotated or you will deplete the nutrients in the soil.
Planting the same crop in the same soil tends to 1) deplete the nutrients needed for that specific crop and 2) allow the accumulation of dieases, parasites, bugs etc that prey on that crop.
Planting increased cash crops improves the local economy. If not done sustainably using good land management practices, it can deplete the soil in the area, making it unproductive for future generations.
Planting increased cash crops improves the local economy. If not done sustainably using good land management practices, it can deplete the soil in the area, making it unproductive for future generations.
crops cant effect soil crops just take fertilizers from the soil
Some soil is, and some soil is not. It depends on how many living animals are in it and how many crops are planted.
soil exhastion