enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Stocks-to-use ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stocks-to-use_ratio

    Beginning stocks represent the previous year’s ending or carry-over inventories. Total production represents the total grain produced in a given year. Total usage is the sum of all the end uses in which the stock of grain has been consumed. This would include human consumption, export programs, seed, waste, dockage and feed consumption ...

  3. Residue-to-product ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residue-to-product_ratio

    In climate engineering, the residue-to-product ratio (RPR) is used to calculate how much unused crop residue might be left after harvesting a particular crop. Also called the residue yield or straw/grain ratio, the equation takes the mass of residue divided by the mass of crop produced, and the result is dimensionless.

  4. Malt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malt

    The term "malt" refers to several products of the process: the grains to which this process has been applied, for example, malted barley; the sugar, heavy in maltose, derived from such grains, such as the baker's malt used in various breakfast cereals; single malt whisky, often called simply "single malt"; or a product based on malted milk ...

  5. Crop yield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crop_yield

    The seed multiplication ratio is the ratio between the investment in seed versus the yield. For example, if three grains are harvested for each grain seeded, the resulting multiplication ratio is 1:3, which is considered by some agronomists as the minimum required to sustain human life. [3]

  6. Malting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malting

    Traditional floor malting at Highland Park Distillery in Scotland. Malting is the process of steeping, germinating, and drying grain to convert it into malt.Germination and sprouting involve a number of enzymes to produce the changes from seed to seedling and the malt producer stops this stage of the process when the required enzymes are optimal.

  7. Land equivalent ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_equivalent_ratio

    Land equivalent ratio. The FAO defines land equivalent ratio (LER) as: [2] the ratio of the area under sole cropping to the area under intercropping needed to give equal amounts of yield at the same management level. It is the sum of the fractions of the intercropped yields divided by the sole-crop yields.

  8. Ecological efficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_efficiency

    Theoretically, it is easy to calculate ecological efficiency using the mathematical relationships above. It is often difficult, however, to obtain accurate measurements of the values involved in the calculation. Assessing ingestion, for example, requires knowledge of the gross amount of food consumed in an ecosystem as well as its caloric ...

  9. Grain quality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grain_quality

    In agriculture, grain quality depends on the use of the grain.In ethanol production, the chemical composition of grain such as starch content is important, in food and feed manufacturing, properties such as protein, oil and sugar are significant, in the milling industry, soundness is the most important factor to consider when it comes to the quality of grain.