aquatic energy biomass

  • 1Biomass —   As defined by the Energy Security Act (PL 96 294) of 1980, any organic matter which is available on a renewable basis, including agricultural crops and agricultural wastes and residues, wood and wood wastes and residues, animal wastes,… …

    Energy terms

  • 2Aquatic Species Program — The Aquatic Species Program was a research program in the United States launched in 1978 by President Jimmy Carter and was funded by the United States Department of Energy, [http://www.eere.energy.gov/biomass/pdfs/biodiesel from algae.pdf] which… …

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  • 3Aquatic ecosystem — An aquatic ecosystem is an ecosystem located in water bodies. Communities of organisms that are dependent on each other and on their environment live in aquatic ecosystems. The two main types of aquatic ecosystems are marine ecosystems and… …

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  • 4Renewable energy commercialization — The wind, Sun, and biomass are three renewable energy sources …

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  • 5renewable energy — any naturally occurring, theoretically inexhaustible source of energy, as biomass, solar, wind, tidal, wave, and hydroelectric power, that is not derived from fossil or nuclear fuel. Also called soft energy. [1970 75] * * * also called … …

    Universalium

  • 6Arundo donax — Giant Cane (Arundo donax) Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae …

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  • 7Список журналов издательства Springer — Содержание 1 Биомедицина и науки о жизни (Biomedical and Life Sciences) 2 З …

    Википедия

  • 8Nuclear power phase-out — A nuclear power plant at Grafenrheinfeld, Germany. Chancellor Angela Merkel s coalition announced on May 30, 2011, that Germany’s 17 nuclear power stations will be shut down by 2022, in a policy reversal following Japan s Fukushima Daiichi… …

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  • 9Pelagic zone — Aquatic layers Pelagic    Photic       Epipelagic …

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  • 10Food 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 …

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