there are sixteen nutrients needed by plant ,three nutrients it gets from air, water, soil and from other thirteen nutrients ,six are required in large amount called macro-nutrients and seven are required in small amount are called micro-nutrients .
plants need macro nutrients and micro nutrients. macro nutrients are needed at large quantity and micro nutrients are needed in small quantities. there are 10 macro nutrients and 6 micro nutrients.The 10 macro nutrients arecarbonhydrogenoxygennitrogenpotassiumcalciummagnesiumsulphurironphosphorousthe 6 micro nutrients aremolybdenumchlorineboronzinccoppermanganese
Macro
Breakdown and solubilization are the happenings to nutrients in compost piles. The nutrients decompose through consumption and excretion by macro- and micro-organisms. The waste products emerge as soluble macro- and micro-nutrients that can be taken in by soils and by such soil food web members as plant roots.
Macro nutrients = six nutrients are required by the plants in large quantities and hence these are called macro nutrients. Micro nutrients = iron , manganese , zinc , copper , molybdenum , boron and chlorine are the micro nutrients which used in small quantities.
Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), potassium (K) the three secondary macro nutrients: calcium (Ca), sulfur (S), magnesium (Mg)
the elements which are very essentiel for the growth of plants are called macro nutrients.these nutrients are required in fairly large quantity show they aare called macronutrients.
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The 3 macro-nutrients are fat, carbohdrates, and protein. Alcohol is also a macro-nutrient.
Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), potassium (K) the three secondary macro nutrients: calcium (Ca), sulfur (S), magnesium (Mg)
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Provision of macro- and micro-nutrients and of macro- and micro-organisms are ways that compost piles improve garden soils. Macro- and micro-nutrients can be deficient, excessive or present but inaccessible or unavailable if the form is not soluble whereas air and water pore spaces may be absent or sparse without the tunneling activities of macro-organisms. Compost piles promote ecosystems that have the air, moisture and nutrients that soil food web members, such as plant roots, and soils need through their incorporation of living and once-living animal and plant matter.