Biology, asked by samarthrnt, 3 months ago

Seedlings of some plants are not grown in the field but transplanted.give reason​

Answers

Answered by balarajugodaba
3

Explanation:

Seedlings can be grown much closer together in a greenhouse in soil plugs than in the field, where the spacing needs to reflect the requirements of the older plant, at harvest time. Since it takes a couple weeks to grow the seedlings, that is significant time that can be used to actively grow crops in the field- Or if it’s the very end of winter, greenhouse starts give the farmer a couple weeks jump on the first planting, thus extending the growing season. If the natural growing season is, before global warming, let’s say 28 weeks, that’s enough time to plant 3 or 4, 50-60 day crops. By starting a couple weeks or so before spring and then growing each crop in the nursery before outplanting, a farmer may instead grow 4 or 5 crops in the same season, which can significantly increase the year’s production and profits.

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