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yes it is like food for the plants and vitamins
Plants need food to grow as human do. Plants need salts to grow, and plants use salts for their food.
yes
lack of water and fertilizer would not change the growth
I am not sure how
Yes,it could effect the growth of plants
Phosphates do. They are an effective fertilizer.
Insufficient fertilizer in plants can cause deficiency symptoms and slow plant growth. Excess fertilizer, meanwhile, can lead to salinity problems.
The dependent variable is the growth that depends upon (or results from) the application of fertilizer. The independent variable is the fertilizer itself.
yes it is like food for the plants and vitamins
Earthworm's poop or dung is like a super fertilizer.
Yes, any fertilizer will effect the plant's growth. It's just that inorganic fertilizers are made chemically instead of being made from naturally occurring ingredients.
well... ima guess... carbon dioxide
Fertilizer affects the growth and health of plants. Too much fertilizer can be as detrimental as not enough. Fertilizer is a combination of minerals that feed plants. As with other living things, plants need food to flourish. Although, there are small amounts of minerals in fertilizer, the three larger, basic ones are nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium.
Plants need food to grow as human do. Plants need salts to grow, and plants use salts for their food.
An independent variable is the variable in the experiment that affects the other variable. For example, in an experiment that tests the affect of the amount of fertilizer on plant growth, the amount of fertilizer is the independent variable and the plant growth is the dependent variable. This is because the plant growth DEPENDS on the amount of fertilizer.
fertilizer