fertilizer
calcium, nitrogen,phosphorous and potassium
calcium, nitrogen,phosphorous and potassium
The main nutrients in the soil that are needed by autotrophs are nitrogen and phosphorous.
No, generally you do not need a lot pf phosphorous to grow grass. Nitrogen is the most important.Grass consumes relatively more nitrogen than phosphorous and potassiumThis is why a lawn fertilizer typically have higher levels of nitrogen compared to the latter two. Example: 33-3-3 (33% nitrogen, 3% phosphorous, and 3% potassium)If you are unsure, you can have a soil test done through your local county extension office and they will be able to tell you if your soil is phosphorous deficient. Typically, this is not a concern, however.
That elements found in soil fertilizer are nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium.
Nitrogen, potassium, phosphorous there are some other ones too. these are the only ones I know
to help plants grow, with out these elements there would be no plants thus, there would be no life
No, plants can grow wherever they can obtain the basic nutrients of phosphorous, potassium and nitrogen. Phosphorous is the key nutrient for cell division, which contributes to growth. They obtain carbon and oxygen through their leaves, so they do not need soil.
Fertilizers are products of the chemical industry. Each soil need a specific fertilizer (with phosphorous, nitrogen, potassium, microelements).
they turn the nitogen gas into the nitrates and nitrites essential for the soil
nitrogen phosphorous arsenic antimony bismuth
nitrogen and phosphorous