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I know that the regions of the planet with highest NPP are swamps and marshes on land, and regions of the ocean prone to algal blooms. So that'd be deltas and the like, I guess.

But is there any one particular plant with the highest NPP? Is it even really measurable on a species-by-species basis?

2007-07-24 08:03:03 · 3 answers · asked by Brian L 7 in Science & Mathematics Botany

3 answers

the highest net productivity was recorded in LAURENCIA papillosa(forsk).while the lowest wasin Dictyota barrtayresiana lamour.morethan 75%of the macrophytes had net productivty higherthan 15mg C(g dry wt)-1 dpower minus 1.and only macrophyte boergesenia forbesii had net production and respiration higher than 10.

2007-07-26 02:40:14 · answer #1 · answered by bharu 3 · 0 0

sure it may handle atmospheric carbon dioxide tiers and interior the destiny, burying biomass may be a very priced way of reducing atmospheric CO2 notably if that biomass is a byproduct of a few technique that has no commercial value. For politicians, this concept lacks the ching ching money rolling in attraction of a carbon tax and is not any longer thoroughly ecologicaly impartial.

2016-10-19 07:05:40 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

soybean?

2007-07-24 20:07:51 · answer #3 · answered by glenn t 7 · 0 0

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