enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Soil food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_food_web

    The soil food web is the community of organisms living all or part of their lives in the soil. It describes a complex living system in the soil and how it interacts with the environment, plants, and animals. Food webs describe the transfer of energy between species in an ecosystem. While a food chain examines one, linear, energy pathway through ...

  3. Soil ecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_ecology

    Soil is a variable mixture of broken and weathered minerals and decaying organic matter. Together with the proper amounts of air and water, it supplies, in part, sustenance for plants as well as mechanical support. The diversity and abundance of soil life exceeds that of any other ecosystem. Plant establishment, competitiveness, and growth is ...

  4. Atterberg limits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atterberg_limits

    Atterberg limits. The Atterberg limits are a basic measure of the critical water contents of a fine-grained soil: its shrinkage limit, plastic limit, and liquid limit. Depending on its water content, soil may appear in one of four states: solid, semi-solid, plastic and liquid. In each state, the consistency and behavior of soil are different ...

  5. Ecological threshold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_threshold

    Ecological threshold is the point at which a relatively small change or disturbance in external conditions causes a rapid change in an ecosystem. When an ecological threshold has been passed, the ecosystem may no longer be able to return to its state by means of its inherent resilience. Crossing an ecological threshold often leads to rapid ...

  6. Soil respiration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_respiration

    Carbon is stored in the soil as organic matter and is respired by plants, bacteria, fungi and animals. When this respiration occurs below ground, it is considered soil respiration. Temperature, soil moisture and nitrogen all regulate the rate of this conversion from carbon in soil organic compounds to CO 2. Many methods are used to measure soil ...

  7. Soil thermal properties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_thermal_properties

    The thermal properties of soil are a component of soil physics that has found important uses in engineering, climatology and agriculture. These properties influence how energy is partitioned in the soil profile. While related to soil temperature, it is more accurately associated with the transfer of energy (mostly in the form of heat ...

  8. Critical point (thermodynamics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_point...

    Supercritical ethane, fluid. [1] In thermodynamics, a critical point (or critical state) is the end point of a phase equilibrium curve. One example is the liquid–vapor critical point, the end point of the pressure–temperature curve that designates conditions under which a liquid and its vapor can coexist. At higher temperatures, the gas ...

  9. Ecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecology

    The simplified linear feeding pathways that move from a basal trophic species to a top consumer is called the food chain. Food chains in an ecological community create a complex food web. Food webs are a type of concept map that is used to illustrate and study pathways of energy and material flows. [7] [70] [71]