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biomass

/bahy-oh-mas/US // ˈbaɪ oʊˌmæs //UK // (ˈbaɪəʊˌmæs) //

生物量,生物物质,生物质,生物质

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Ecology. the amount of living matter in a given habitat, expressed either as the weight of organisms per unit area or as the volume of organisms per unit volume of habitat.
    • : Energy. organic matter, especially plant matter, that can be converted to fuel and is therefore regarded as a potential energy source.

Examples

  • Other planned energy sources include biomass and geothermal technologies.

  • They’re using that to build biomass, to build cellular material.

  • In the last 25 to 30 years alone, 80% of insect biomass on the planet has vanished.

  • Thanks to modern breeding techniques, the larger russet can contain less iron per unit of biomass than the smaller fingerling, making the russet less nutrient-dense.

  • They argue that a full energy transition will produce a vast infrastructure building boom, across not just wind and solar, but biomass, geothermal, and hydrogen plants.

  • It is not uncommon for a harvest strategy to thin fish stocks by half or more from their original unfished biomass.

  • A major energy company has completed one of three planned conversions of a power plant from coal to biomass in Virginia.

  • The plants operated by Dominion will primarily use leftovers from nearby timbering work for the biomass fuel.

  • His own official bio describes him as a “founding member” of New Biomass Energy.

  • Here are the words she chose to omit from her op-ed: wind, solar, biomass, geothermal, efficiency, smart grid, and fuel economy.

  • The species is important in the over-all ecology; its biomass often exceeds that of larger species of vertebrates.