It could.
Yes.. Agriculture is basically farming. Growing crops, cultivating land, raising livestock, etc etc. You could grow a vegetable garden. That's 'doing' agriculture.
A "45-ft vegetable garden" seems to be so skinny that perhaps it could be surrounded by a single row of 90 bricks.
A vegetable garden can be compared to the chloroplast organelle in plant cells. Just like how a garden captures sunlight and converts it into energy through photosynthesis, chloroplasts in plant cells capture sunlight to produce energy for the plant. Both the garden and chloroplasts are crucial for producing food and sustaining life.
How can Nicole improve the garden soil's fertility
You can name your garden based what is growing in it. For example, a flower garden could be called " Flower Fun". Or a veggie garden could be called " Good Garden of Veggies". If you have a fruit garden you could say " Fantastic Fruit garden" Or if you grow them all or any thing else I mentioned call it " Garden of Goodness". If you want to display your garden name to the public, write or paint it on a sign which can be readable.
Since the garden is 12 meters by 7 meters, it covers an area of 84 square meters. Based on your observation of 3 toads per square meter, you can estimate there could be around 252 toads in the vegetable garden.
Poisons could leach into it, garden sprays could poison it, a dead animal could rot in it. There are many things that can make a pond unfit to support life.
If there are no butterflies in your garden, it could disrupt the pollination of plants and affect the ecosystem's biodiversity. Butterflies play a crucial role in pollinating many flowering plants, so their absence may impact plant reproduction and the food chain within the garden.
Could be moss growing or algae, wash the path down with bleach, its not permanent but it will prevent it coming back for a while.
No, it could not, because the poison was specifically designed to kill rats, and was developed as a rat poison/killer, not a human poison/killer. It would still be considered rat poison, even if the human died from the rat poison.
A pademelon would not grow in a garden, as it is a small Australian marsupial and a member of the kangaroo family. A paddy melon, on the other hand, could quite conceivably grow in a garden, although it is more likely to be found growing wild in the Australian outback.