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BiomassThe weight of living tissues usually measured per unit area over a particular time interval. Can include the dead parts of organisms like bark, hair, and nails.
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Biomass[Gk. bios, life] The dry weight of organic matter comprising a group of organisms in a particular habitat.
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BiomassTotal amount of biotic material, usually expressed per unit surface area or volume, in a medium such as water. Material produced by the growth of micro-organisms, plants or animals. biomineralization [..]
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Biomass Organic nonfossil material of biological origin constituting a renewable energy source.
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BiomassBiomasse
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Biomassalso bio-mass, c. 1980, from bio- + mass (n.1).
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BiomassBiomass is a renewable energy source derived from living (or recently living) organisms, including dedicated energy crops and trees, agricultural food and feed crops, agricultural crop waste and resid [..]
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Biomassliving organisms, and the energy contained within them.
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BiomassLiving matter within an environmental area, for example plant material, vegetation, or agricultural waste used as a fuel or energy source.
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BiomassOrganic nonfossil material of biological origin. For example, trees and plants are biomass. Click for citation
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BiomassThe biological material derived from living or recently-deceased organisms. Usually, the term biomass is used to described plant material. In the garden, biomass is used to create compost or added in its raw form to garden beds to increase soil organic matter as it is decomposed by soil microorganisms.
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BiomassSubstance of living tissue, often a measure of weight or volume. Bipinnate
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Biomassthe total quantity of living matter in a given area or ecosystem.
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BiomassMaterials that are biological in origin, including organic material (both living and dead) from above and below ground, for example, trees, crops, grasses, tree litter, roots, and animals and animal waste. [4]
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Biomasstotal amount of organic material.
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BiomassThe mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time. Biomass can refer to species biomass, which is the mass of one or more species, or to community biomass, which is [..]
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BiomassThe total mass of all organisms, plant, animal or otherwise, in a given area. © Nature Education
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BiomassThe weight of total living organisms or of a species population per unit of area. biomass fuel
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Biomassthe organic material that makes up the body of a plant, animal, or other organism.
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BiomassTotal mass of living organisms in a particular population.
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Biomassthe total weight of all the animals and plants living in a given area. It may relate to only one species.
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Biomassthe total mass or amount of living organisms in a particular area or volume
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BiomassThe aggregate amount of living matter or a specific species within a specific habitat, or the total number of a specific species in a specific habitat.
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Biomassbiology - the weight of biological matter in a system, usually expressed as weight of carbon per unit area (g/m2) or weight of carbon per volume (mg/m3)
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BiomassAll organic matter that derives from the photosynthetic conversion of solar energy.(Source: European Commission,CUB)
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Biomasstotal weight of organic material present per unit of area or volume.
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BiomassLiving and recently dead biological material that can be used as a sustainable fuel.
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BiomassThe total mass of living organic matter in a particular area.
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BiomassAny organic matter, particularly available on a renewable or recurring basis such as trees and plants (residues and fibers containing cellulose or lingo-cellulose), but also poultry litter and animal [..]
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BiomassThe total mass of living organisms in a given area or volume; dead plant material can be included as dead biomass. Biomass includes products, by-products and waste derived from such material. ►Ce [..]
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BiomassBio-power, combustion of biomass resources for electricity generation.
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BiomassAccording to 10 CFR 451.2 [Title 10 Energy; Chapter II Department of Energy; Subchapter D Energy Conservation; Part 451 Renewable Energy Production Incentives], the term biomass means “biologically [..]
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Biomass(n) plant materials and animal waste used as fuel(n) the total mass of living matter in a given unit area
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Biomassmeasure of the amount of living material in an area, usually expressed in units of weight per unit volume
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Biomassthe total amount of living material within a given area. Compare to biodiversity. The biomass of a single whale can equal the biomass of many thousands of its planktonic prey belonging to numerous spe [..]
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Biomassthe amount of living matter (living organisms); this is expressed as weight per unit area or per unit volume
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Biomass(English) The total mass of all living material in a specific area, habitat, or region.
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Biomasswhen used in fisheries management it refers to the total population of a particular commercial fish species. Bycatch - ocean animals that are incidentally caught when fishing for other targeted animal [..]
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BiomassThe mass of living organisms in a given area, or material derived from organisms.
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BiomassBiomass fuel is a renewable source of fuel derived from plants. It can be used to generate electricity. Biomass boilers and stoves are becoming increasingly popular.
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BiomassBiomass is a type of renewable fuel derived from plants. It is increasingly being used to generate electricity. You can also buy biomass stoves and boilers.
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BiomassThis is the total weight of a number of organisms or population of a species.
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BiomassA measure of the abundance of an animal in term of the mass (weight) of the animals, stated as either the total mass of the animals in a given location or per unit area.
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BiomassElectricity generated by burning organic matter such as plants. Landfill gas is the most widely used resources for biomass energy generation.
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BiomassA renewable energy source comprised of organic matter that can be used as, or converted into, fuel.
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BiomassThe total weight of a group (or stock) of living organisms or of some defined fraction of it (e.g. spawners), in a given area, at a particular time.
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Biomassa measure of the biological material in a given habitat or species, often expressed as the weight of organisms per unit area.
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BiomassThe total dry organic matter or stored energy content of living organisms that is present at a specific time in a defined unit (community, ecosystem, crop, etc.) of the Earth's surface.
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BiomassAny plant-derived organic matter. Biomass available for energy on a sustainable basis includes herbaceous and woody energy crops, agricultural food and feed crops, agricultural crop wastes and residues, wood wastes and residues, aquatic plants, and other waste materials, including some municipal wastes. Biomass is a very heterogeneous and chemicall [..]
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BiomassThis is the total weight of a number of organisms or population of a species. It is possible for a fish population to have a high biomass and be overfished.
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BiomassThe total mass of organisms in a given place at a given time
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BiomassBiological Investigations of Marine Antarctic Systems and Stocks (SCAR/SCOR)
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BiomassBiological Investigations of Marine Antarctic Systems and Stocks
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BiomassOrganic non-fossil material of biological origin constituting a renewable energy source such as energy derived from plants. Alcohol fuels are produced from wood, sugarcane and corn. Firewood, crop res [..]
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BiomassEnergy from organic matter used directly for heat or to power a generator for electricity.
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BiomassA form of electricity derived from the burning of plant and organic matter. Landfill gas is one of the most widely used forms of biomass energy generation.
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Biomasstypically small base load generators. These are generally fueled by a wood-based fuel, which is often a waste material from sawmills or pulp mills.
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Biomass
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BiomassVarious biological materials used to create biofuels. BPA
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BiomassMass of organic matter. E.g., the “biomass removed in harvesting” refers to the amount of organic matter — mostly wood in trees, but also twigs and leaves — removed at harvest.
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BiomassIn the energy sector, biomass is defined as all organic matter of plant or animal origin, including municipal solid waste and agricultural and industrial waste. Biomass is converted into energy throug [..]
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BiomassBiological material that can be used as a fuel or exploited for industrial purposes (such as chemicals, fibers, plastics, etc.). In electricity generation, biomass consists of two types: closed-loop biomass (trees grown expressly for power production) and open-loop biomass (sawdust, tree trimmings, timber slash, wood chips, farm byproducts, animal [..]
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BiomassOrganic materials, such as wood by-products and agricultural wastes, that can be burned to produce energy or converted into a gas and used for fuel.
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BiomassThe total mass of matter such as plant material, vegetation, or agricultural waste.
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BiomassTotal living weight (generally in dry weight) of all organisms in a particular area or habitat. It is sometimes expressed as weight per unit area of land or per unit volume of water.
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BiomassThe total weight of all living organisms in a biological community.
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BiomassThe total amount of biotic material, usually expressed per unit surface area or volume of a medium such as water (WHO, 1979).
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BiomassPlant matter such as trees, grasses, agricultural crops or other biological material. It can provide a renewable source of electrical power, fuel, or chemical feedstocks.
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BiomassAny living or recently dead plant or animal material.
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BiomassAll of the living material in a given area; often refers to vegetation.
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BiomassThe total mass of a defined organism or group of organisms in a particular community or an ecosystem as a whole.
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BiomassAll of the living material in a given area; often refers to vegetation.
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BiomassAll of the living material in a given area; often refers to vegetation.
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BiomassThe weight of biological matter.
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BiomassBiomass is organic non-fossil material - i.e., masses of biological organisms, dead or alive, but not coal or oil, which is fossilized organic material.
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Biomassis the living materials (wood, vegetation, etc.) grown or produced expressly for use as fuel.
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BiomassThe total amount of living substance in a given area. It can include animals, micro-organisms and vegetation, such as wood or crop residue.
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BiomassOrganic non-fossil material of biological origin. For example, trees and plants are biomass.
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BiomassTotal mass of all the organisms of a given type and/or in a given area. (From Concise Dictionary of Biology, 1990) It includes the yield of vegetative mass produced from any given crop.
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BiomassA source of fuel made from living and recently-dead plant materials such as wood, leaves and the biodegradable part of industrial and municipal waste.
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Biomassthe mass (weight) of organisms in a community
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BiomassTotal mass of all the organisms of a given type and/or in a given area. (From Concise Dictionary of Biology, 1990) It includes the yield of vegetative mass produced from any given crop.
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BiomassOrganic nonfossil material of biological origin. For example, trees and plants are biomass.
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BiomassOrganic, non-fossil material available on a renewable basis. Biomass includes all biological organisms, dead or alive, and their metabolic by-products that haven't been transformed by geological processes into substances such a coal or petroleum.
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BiomassAny plant-derived organic matter. Biomass available for energy on a sustainable basis includes herbaceous and woody energy crops, agricultural food and feed crops, agricultural crop wastes and residues, wood wastes and residues, aquatic plants and other waste materials, including some municipal wastes. Biomass is a heterogeneous and chemically comp [..]
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BiomassA mass or clump of organic material consisting of living organisms feeding on the wastes in wastewater, dead organisms, and other debris. Also see ZOOGLEAL FILM and ZOOGLEAL MASS.
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BiomassPlant material or agricultural waste, which can be turned into a biofuel.
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BiomassThat part of a given habitat consisting of living matter, expressed as weight of organisms per unit area. Recommended biomass of worms for vermicomposting is about one pound per square foot surface ar [..]
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BiomassRenewable organic materials, such as wood, agricultural crops or wastes and municipal wastes, especially when used as a source of fuel or energy. At each stage of the agro-industrial fruit and vegetable processing industry, biomass by-products such as peels, seeds and unused flesh are produced. The RESFOOD project aims to minimise the biomass waste [..]
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BiomassThe living organisms found in a particular area i.e. soil biomass.
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BiomassThe amount of a living species, expressed as a concentration or weight per unit area.
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BiomassThe mass of material produced by living micoorganisms, plants, or animals.
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BiomassBiological material derived from living, or recently living organisms. It most often refers to plants or plant-based materials, which are specifically called lignocellulosic biomass.
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Biomassis all of the physical material, alive and dead, of biological origin for a designated sample or system. Biomass can be calculated as wet (including water mass) or dry (without). It is sometimes calculated on a carbon-specific basis, that is, the mass of all of the carbon excluding hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen or another element. For example, a 150-l [..]
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BiomassThe total mass of living matter within a given unit of environmental area.
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Biomassplants, crops, and trees; converted by solar fuel technologies into fuels and byproducts. See the Biomass Resource Information Clearinghouse
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BiomassThe complete dry weight of organic material found in the biosphere or less strictly, the matter in the biosphere that is contained in living organisms. [Biology; Campbell, Niel; 1118; 1990; Benjamin C [..]
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BiomassThe total dry weight of all organisms in a particular sample, population, or area.
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Biomassthe total dry weight of living organisms (or a particular species or group of organisms) in any given area.
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BiomassA renewable energy source, commonly used to refer to plant matter grown to generate heat or electricity. (see also: Biomass
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BiomassOrganic waste that can be converted to usable forms of energy such as heat or electricity, or crops grown specifically for that purpose.
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BiomassThe sum total of organic material in a specified area. Biomass fuel is fuel made from organic amtter. Biofuels are made from biomass.
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BiomassOrganic material of a non-fossil origin (living or recently dead plants and animals tissue) including aquatic, herbaceous, and woody plants, animal wastes, and portions of municipal wastes.
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BiomassThe total weight of a living organism or a population of organisms.
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Biomass is biological material derived from living, or recently living organisms. It most often refers to plants or plant-based materials which are specifically called lignocellulosic biomass. As an ener [..]
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BiomassOrganic nonfossil material of biological origin constituting a renewable energy source.
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BiomassAny organic material, such as wood, plants, and organic wastes, that can be turned into fuel.
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BiomassPlant material such as wood, grains, agricultural waste, and vegetation that can be used as an energy source
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BiomassOrganic materials, such as wood by products and agricultural wastes, that can be burned to produce energy or converted into a gas and used for fuel.
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BiomassThe total weight of all the biological material or the combined mass of all the animals and plants inhabiting a defined area; usually expressed as dry weight per area.
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BiomassBiological material from living, or recently living organisms such as trees, grasses, and agricultural crops. As an energy source, biomass can either be used directly, or converted into other energy products such as biofuel.
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BiomassBiological material derived from living or recently living organisms, usally referring to plants
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Biomassplant material, manure, or any other organic matter that is used as an energy source
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Biomassthe materials derived from photosynthesis (fossilised materials may or may not be included) such as forest, agricultural crops, wood and wood wastes, animal wastes, livestock operation residues, aquat [..]
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BiomassThe total weight of the organisms contituing a given trophic level or inhabiting a defined area. The standing crop, that is the total amount of living organic material in a given ecosystem. The total [..]
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BiomassTotal living weight (generally in dry weight) of all organisms in a particular area or habitat. It is sometimes expressed as weight per unit area of land or per unit volume of water.
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BiomassOrganic material derived from waste which is used as a renewable energy source to produce electricity and heat.
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BiomassRefers to energy technologies fuelled by anything derived from plant or animal matter including for example wood, straw or agricultural waste.
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BiomassAny plant-derived organic matter available on a renewable basis, including dedicated energy crops and trees, agricultural food and feed crops, agricultural crop wastes and residues, wood wastes and residues, aquatic plants, animal wastes, municipal wastes, and other waste materials.
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Biomass
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BiomassThe amount of living matter in a given habitat.
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Biomassthe biological mass, quantity of living matter, or dry weight of a particular species, within a habitat or geographical area. Biomass energy is stored in organic matter such as plants or animals and their waste products.
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BiomassThe mass, usually defined by dry weight, of all living organisms in an area or ecosystem.
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BiomassThe total weight or volume of organisms in a given area or volume.
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BiomassThe biomass is the mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time. Biomass can refer to species biomass, which is the mass of one or more species, or to community bio [..]
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BiomassThe biomass is the mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time. Biomass can refer to species biomass, which is the mass of one or more species, or to community bio [..]
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BiomassThe biomass is the mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time. Biomass can refer to species biomass, which is the mass of one or more species, or to community bio [..]
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BiomassBiomass is waste material from plants or animals that is not used for food or feed; it can be waste from farming (like wheat stalks) or horticulture (yard waste), food processing (like corn cobs), ani [..]
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BiomassBiomass is waste material from plants or animals that is not used for food or feed; it can be waste from farming (like wheat stalks) or horticulture (yard waste), food processing (like corn cobs), ani [..]
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