Plants need a mixture of sandy soil, loamy soil, and sand to grow well, preferably about 30% of each, because each supplies the plant with what it needs to grow. If there is no loam, the plant cannot receive as much nutrition and minerals from the clay and sand.
A nitrogen fixing bacterium Rhizobium enters roots of pea plant and grows to form root nodules . Mycorrhizal fungi also grow on roots of pea palnt.
Chia Pets are good examples
The coral reefs are mostly able to grow in clay like material that keeps the coral stable. They just need sand for certain corals and other grow on solid rock surfaces. It just depends if the coral is a Small polyp stoney corals or a large polyp stony or some other kind of soft coral.
mostly trees
Mostly in the Southern U.S.
If you mean clay soils, then yes. If you mean modeling clay, no.
plants that like water grow better in clay and plant that don't like water grow better in sand. like cactus
no
Chrysanthemums need well drained soil. So clay is not good. Sand or Miracle Grow as long as the Miracle Grow does not retain water.
They made clay and if they did they would have to be a clay maker when they grow up.
Indian grass will grow in soils from sand to clay. But will grow its best in sand.
they usually grow in your backyard
Sand ofcourse
caca poopy lol
Grass will grow in most any soil condition, but not clay. Grass is a plant, and it needs soil to be porous enough that water will be able to flow through; thus it will not grow in pure clay. However soils that have a mixture of loam and clay, or sand and clay, or loam and sand, will be suitable enough for grasses to grow in. But there are many species of grasses, and each species have their own specific conditions they like to grow in or grow best in.
Because soil has nutrients that clay and sand don't have
it depends on you zone but magnolia trees usually grow well in clay.