Geography, asked by sayanmondal2325, 13 hours ago

Changes in agriculture (sowing / harvesting etc.) during winter​

Answers

Answered by khushbuvishwakama
0

Answer:

All conditions experienced by a plant affect its health and hardiness. A lack of water may cause wilting and sometimes death in plants. Excess or a dearth of nutrients can also contribute to negative plant health. In this way, so too can weather conditions cause damage to plant vitality. Cold freezes the cells in a plant, causing damage and interrupts the pathways for nutrients and water to flow. In small branches and twigs, the living xylem is much more affected by cold than the cambium and phloem. This tissue is not dormant and the effects of cold in plants results in blackened stems and tissue death. Desiccation, sunscald, salt damage, heavy snow breakage and numerous other injuries are also how plants are affected by cold. Plant Growth and Temperatures The effects of cold in plants are most noticeable in plants that are marginally hardy or those that have not properly hardened off. Cold damage also shows up in early spring when a warm period encouraged new growth, which is particularly susceptible to a sudden freeze. Temperature is a huge factor that breaks dormancy in seeds and plants, starting the growing cycle anew.

Read more at Gardening Know How: Effects Of Cold In Plants: Why And How Plants Are Affected By Cold https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/plant-problems/environmental/why-cold-affects-plants.htm

Explanation:

Seeds of these crops are sown in the beginning of the winter season. After maturation of crops, they are harvested at the end of the winter season (April-May).

Sowing is the correct answer

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