No form of cotton is a nutrient for humans.
Cotton is grown on bushes, made with nutrients from the soil, water and air.
if you plant something in cotton it grows by the humidity of the cotton without any soil needed.
Cotton requires a significant amount of nutrients because it is a heavy feeder crop, meaning it has high nutrient demands to support its growth and development. Nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium are essential for cotton to produce high yields of fiber. Proper nutrient management is crucial to ensure healthy cotton plants and maximize productivity.
The Cotton requires mass amounts of nutrients and sucks it from the soil, which is why farmers usually use crop rotation when producing cotton
Cotton plants require masive amounts of nutrients and they suck all the nutrients from the soil, what has been done to keep the soil useful is cotton farmers have begun crop rotating.
because it has more nutrients.
because the cotton that had been planted before had soaked up all of the nutrients in the soil so they needed new land to plant more cotton
Yes it can because the cotton wool can hold water and nutrients as much as soil it just means you have to use feader as well as water because cotton wool does not have any nutriants in it.
draining of nutrients from the soil
Cotton candy is made with sugar and food colouring. Therefore it falls under Staples because Staples nutrients are sugar and starch.
"Cotton soils" are just soils with a cotton crop growing on them. They can support maize, as well. Since cotton tends to pull a lot of nutrients out of soil, before a corn (maize) crop is planted, a nitrogen fixing crop is often added to the rotation.
For a seed to grow it needs nitrogen and as a matter of fact cotton doesn't contain nitrogen so it can't support seed growth. But fungus can grow.- If the cotton is kept moist and the proper nutrients supplied, seeds will grow in cotton very well.