Biology, asked by Ayeshasinha844503, 9 months ago

A pitcher plant is kept in an insect free environment . How would you provide it with nitrogen? List at least two solutions Plz don't cheat from Google bcz I already checked into google

Answers

Answered by SonalRamteke
1

Answer:

You could give it a very tiny amount of fertilizer, like about 1/10–1/20th the usual dose. Some could be applied to the roots and some inside the pitchers. Just a teaspoon of the very dilute fertilizer into each pitcher. Only do this perhaps 2 or 3 times, like monthly from May to July. The insects they eat are only to provide them a tiny bit of nitrogen, so they only need a tiny bit. Almost any soluble fertilizer would work

Answered by iamprachi1999
4

Answer:

plant residues,animal manure and commercial fertilizers .

Explanation:

pitcher plant generally derives it's nitrogen from insect it feeds on but in an insect free environment following measures can be taken.

1.artificial fertiliser: it has addative nitrogen which can be leached down by water and absorbed by plant .

2.natural manure: since cells are rich in nitrogen as it is present in genetic material and other living component, animal manure and decaying plant can be supplief as fertiliserz to suplly tgat nitrogen to thr soil wich can be furthur abosorbed by the pitcher plant .

hope you find this helpfully. please rate the answer.

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