The average yield of corn per acre in Pennsylvania is approximately 150 bushels. The average soybean yield is 40 bushels per acre.
A lot of guys will tell ya a bushel to a bushel and a half per acre but i like to put out 2 bushels to the acre for a good stand.
Corn fits this definition by wind.
easy its 11040 plants
You can see definite statements about trees and oxygen in many places:* Two mature trees provide enough oxygen for a family of four. * One acre of trees removes 2.6 tons of CO2 per year. These statements do not take into account the types of trees, the number of trees per acre, the hours of sunlight, whether they are deciduous or coniferous, if the climate is warm or cold, if the trees are young or mature.However, using the factoid that "One acre of trees removes 2.6 tonnes of CO2 per year" the equivalent oxygen production rate would be about 1.6 tonnes per year. For 1000 acres 1.6 thousand tonnes.
The genes may be transferred to weeds during pollination.
For the 2009 crop season, Texas' average corn yield was 108 bushels per acre.
The five-year average corn yield for North Carolina is 109 bushels per acre.
Around 140 bushels per acre. See http://www.nass.usda.gov/Statistics_by_State/Minnesota/Publications/County_Estimates/2009/corn09.pdf
How many bushels of what? Corn? Barley? Wheat? Rice? Please be more specific when asking these types of questions.
You should achieve 183 bushels per acre, therefore 549,000 bushels for 3000 acres
dont know 4-8 people 1-2 meals depending on this 4 big portion........................8 i would small to ok
Around 150 bushels per acre average in 2010 according to Farm World: Corn yield was off greatly from 2009 figures in all Farm World states except Michigan, where it increased from 148 to 150 bushels per acre in 2010.
Depends on a lot of factors- but the average yield of well cultivated corn is 160 bushels per acre. A bushel of shelled, dried corn is 56 lbs. That is 8960 pounds, or about 4.48 tons.
fifty thousand bushels in a corn contract
How many kilograms of what?
50 bushels per acre is not uncommon, depending on the variety and other conditions.
Medieval rice farmers in Japan produced about 88 bushels of rice per acre. With today's farming methods as much as 241 bushels per acre are being reported.