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Nitrogen fixing Rhizobium bacteria.
Yes, a bacterium known as rhizobium lives inside special nodules on the roots of soybeans and other legumes. Rhizobium is able to take gaseous nitrogen from the atmosphere and turn it into an organic form, which can be use by the plant. The bacteria gets a safe place to live inside the plant and the plant gets nitrogen from the bacteria.
The bacteria live in the plant cells, located on the root, and form nodules. These nodules convert nitrogen gas in the soil to usable energy for the plant. In return, the bacteria have a safe place to live and reproduce.
It contains bacteria that fix nitrogen in the soil. This provides this vital element not only for the legume but also other plants in the vicinity
rhizobium
Rhizobium.
No a legume is a type of plant and fungi are not plants.
Some plants like mushrooms and fungi can survive without sunlight.
Without sunlight, plants can not survive.
it is rhizobium
Rhizobium radicicola is a moneran that helps plants use Clusters of red pigments on euglenas that helps the organism find sunlight
mammals cant survived without green plants because that is their food and that how they live without green plants they will die.