Approximately 36.7 bushels of spelt/acre. Yeilds for spelt are about 1 metric tonne/acre and a bushel is about 60 lbs. 2200/60 = 36.66 lbs
613. By the way, that's a really, really low yield for wheat. Less than 5 bushels per acre.
Depends on a lot of factors- but the average yield of well cultivated corn is 160 bushels per acre. A bushel of shelled, dried corn is 56 lbs. That is 8960 pounds, or about 4.48 tons.
Hot chili pepper per acre yield
You spelled it wrong.
The cotton yield forecast is 685 pounds per acre, down 367 pounds from last year's yield. See the related link below.
The average yield of corn per acre in Pennsylvania is approximately 150 bushels. The average soybean yield is 40 bushels per acre.
Around 150 bushels per acre average in 2010 according to Farm World: Corn yield was off greatly from 2009 figures in all Farm World states except Michigan, where it increased from 148 to 150 bushels per acre in 2010.
Your question needs clarification. A bushel is a unit of volume; an acre is a measure of area. If I asked you, "How many gallons in a square mile?", you would have difficulty answering that question. Your question is kind of the same thing.
The U.S. average yield for 2010 was 46.6 bushels/acre, 43.0 bu/a in 2011.
The state of Arizona provided some guidelines. If your soil has no nitrogen content at all, they recommend about 300 pounds of N fertilizer per acre, which is expected to yield 150-200 bushels of field corn.
12000 plants in one acer and producation 450-550
There are approximately 45,000 pecans in a bushel.