-
1 фекальное удобрение
Русско-английский сельскохозяйственный словарь > фекальное удобрение
См. также в других словарях:
Cow dung — This article is about cattle feces. For feces used as fertiliser, see Manure. Fresh cow dung … Wikipedia
Glossary of environmental science — This is a glossary of environmental science.Environmental science is the study of interactions among physical, chemical, and biological components of the environment. Environmental science provides an integrated, quantitative, and… … Wikipedia
Newcastle disease — virus Virus classification Group: Group V (( )ssRNA) Order: Mononegavirales Family: Par … Wikipedia
Fecal coliforms — (sometimes faecal coliforms) are facultatively anaerobic, rod shaped, gram negative, non sporulating bacteria. They are capable of growth in the presence of bile salts or similar surface agents, oxidase negative, and produce acid and gas from… … Wikipedia
Chelates in animal nutrition — Zinc sample Poultry and his nutrition … Wikipedia
Andras Zicsi — András Zicsi András Zicsi, (7 février 1928 à Bucarest ), biologiste hongrois, représente, avec Gordon E. Gates, Gilberto Righi et Barrie G.M. Jamieson, un des grands spécialistes du XXe siècle de l évolution et de la systématique des Vers de … Wikipédia en Français
András Zicsi — Naissance 7 février 1928 Bucarest ( Hongrie) Nationalité Hongroise Champs Zoologie Renommé pour … Wikipédia en Français
faeces — noun /ˈfiːsiːz/ digested solid or semi solid waste material discharged from the bowels of an animal; excrement. Syn: excrement, faecal matter, guano, manure, euphemistic, night soil, hypocoristic … Wiktionary
Encopresis — Inability to control the elimination of stool (fecal incontinence). Encopresis can have a variety of causes, including inability to control the anal sphincter muscle or gastrointestinal problems, particularly chronic diarrhea and Crohn’s disease … Medical dictionary
Food web — A freshwater aquatic and terrestrial food web. A food web (or food cycle) depicts feeding connections (what eats what) in an ecological community. Ecologists can broadly lump all life forms into one of two categories called trophic levels: 1) the … Wikipedia