carbohydrate
yes. The macro elements are carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, calcium and magnesium.
The large macro molecular structure of carbon allows for close packing of carbon atoms making them more dense, whereas in silicon, even though the structure is macromolecular, due to the silicon atom's large size, it cannot pack as closely as carbon thus having a lower density than carbon.
Inverse: these molecules are called macromolecules.The meaning of the prefix macro is great in the Greek language.
explain the elements of the micro environment in brief?
Reject, Transfer, Compensate
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen
yes. The macro elements are carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, calcium and magnesium.
DNA comes to mind.
Common macromolecules are hydro-carbon (hydrogen and carbon polymerized to macromolecules). For single element macro molecules, the example is carbon nanotubes.
Oxygen is not considered a primary or secondary macronutrient. It is a non-mineral nutrient.
proteins
Carbohydrates are macro molecules made by bonding a large number of glucose molecules. They are organic compounds. They contain elements Carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
Yes
Macro nutrient because it's essential for the growth of the bacteria!
Nitrogen is the main nutrient that compost produces. Dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich compost results from 30 to 1 ratios of carbon- to nitrogen-rich recyclables since the former supplies the energy and the latter the food. The breakdown of compostables and their interaction with one another and with air, heat, macro- and micro-organisms, and moisture yields calcium, copper, hydrogen, iron, manganese, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, potassium and zinc.
Phosphorous is a macronutrient.
micrp