The answer is - it can not be taken out of the atmosphere.
The nitrogen, even though makes for about 78% of our atmosphere, and is by far the most abundant gas in it, we can not use it because it can not be taken out of the atmosphere as it is. If we take nitrogen in the form as it is in the atmosphere it is useless for both, humans and plants. It has to go through a process of ''fixation'' first before we can actually use it in our food.
C: the italian peninsula
see this map:
1.) Coastal environments, deserts, mountain environments, savanna grasslands, and forests.
2.) Each ecosystem has a different climate and people and animals who have adapted to these climates differently than the other environments. Each environment has its own resources there that the other might not have for them to survive.
~Anything you say huh, well I say sleep well tonight!
Answer:
High sea surface temperature and High rainfall
Explanation:
<em>El Niño</em> is a pattern of climate that causes the unusual warming of surface waters in the eastern part of the tropical Pacific Ocean. It affects the temperature of the ocean and changes the strength and speed of its currents, coastal fisheries' health, and local weather from South America to Australia and beyond.
It begins when warm water in the western part of the tropical Pacific Ocean moves toward the eastern part of the tropical Pacific Ocean along the equator. Usually, warm water pools near Indonesia and the Philippines, but during <em>El Niño</em>, the warmest water of the Pacific Ocean assembles at the eastern part of the tropical pacific ocean.
Moreover, trade winds weaken in the central and western part of the tropical Pacific Ocean that weaken the upwelling of nutrient-full cold water to cool warm surface water at the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. This warm surface water of eastern part of tropical Pacific Ocean warms the atmosphere that empowers moisture-rich air to develop into thunderstorms.
In this way <em>El Niño - Southern Oscillation Event </em>causes the rise in temperature of sea surface and high rainfall at eastern part of the tropical Pacific Ocean.