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biomass
[bahy-oh-mas]
noun
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.
biomass
/ ˈbaɪəʊˌmæs /
noun
the total number of living organisms in a given area, expressed in terms of living or dry weight per unit area
vegetable matter used as a source of energy
biomass
The total amount of living material in a given habitat, population, or sample. Specific measures of biomass are generally expressed in dry weight (after removal of all water from the sample) per unit area of land or unit volume of water.
Renewable organic materials, such as wood, agricultural crops or wastes, and municipal wastes, especially when used as a source of fuel or energy. Biomass can be burned directly or processed into biofuels such as ethanol and methane.
See more at biofuel
biomass
Material in growing or dead plants.
A Closer Look
Example Sentences
As they grow, they pull carbon dioxide from the air, which can later sink to the ocean floor as part of their biomass.
With fewer new trees, the report found that the trunks and branches of dead trees - known as woody biomass - became carbon emitters, rather than carbon absorbers, about 25 years ago.
Rapid urbanisation, industrial growth and land-use changes drove up fossil fuel use, vehicle emissions and biomass burning, sending aerosols into the atmosphere and dimming the Sun's rays.
Degraded forests may look intact from above, but they lose a significant portion of their biomass and ecological function.
Arbor Energy is, essentially, a poster child of the kind of biomass energy project California keeps saying it wants.
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