Yes, biomass can be made into fertilizer.
Specifically, biomass includes renewable and recyclable organic matter formed through photosynthesis. It therefore involves food and food products; plants and plant residues and by-products; and trees and forest products as well as fresh and saltwater algae and plants. Additionally, it refers to nitrogen fixing bacteria and phosphorus fixing bacteria and fungi. Any and all of the above-mentioned biomasses serves as fertilizer.
Manure is a wonderful natural fertilization that helps plants grow.
not expensive but the process in which biomass is made is
All non-organic is non-biomass and thus the "not the example of biomass". For example, your tennis racket made of graphite and not the biomass, your wall is concretes and not the biomass and your glass windows is definitely made of glass and not the biomass (not taking account of the wood frame though).
To determine if a fertilizer powder affects plant growth using a graduated cylinder, you can measure the amount of water you apply to the plants with and without the fertilizer. By keeping the water volume consistent, you can ensure that any differences in growth are due to the fertilizer. After a set period, compare the heights or biomass of the plants from both groups. This method allows you to isolate the effect of the fertilizer while controlling for other variables.
Long term experimental analysis of Biomass Nitrogen, Carbon, Phoshorus and Potassium alongwith the physico-chemical analysis of the soil.
Link herbgardens.about.com/od/fertilizer/a/compost.htm
biomass is made from bunring waste products. THis can be done anywhere
Biomass
A bioliquid is a liquid biofuel made from biomass.
No, biomass doesn't necessarily have to be a fuel at all, nor does it have to be plant material.
The independent variable is the thing you are testing or the thing you control. The dependent variable is what you are measuring.
Corn, as this is what the biomass ethanol is made of. Research is pointing to algae becoming the next great biomass however, because of the substance's ability to produce oil.