Sulfur and Phosphorus are available to a small degree naturally in the soil. When they are depleted they can be added through fertilization or crop rotation. These traces are necessary for proper growth.
Animals are able to obtain phosphorus from plants that they may eat. It is also possible that animals that don't ingest plants can obtain phosphorus from the smaller animals that they may eat that do eat plants.
they eat plants and animals
Animals assimilate phosphorus by the foods that they eat. Phosphorus is in plant cells and is transferred to animals through the plants they eat, in turn carnivores obtain phosphorus from their prey that eat plants.
How do tuber plants reproduce?
Plants get phosphorus from soil and water, whereas animals get phosphorus by eating plants or other animals.
Not directly; plants obtain food from nutrients in the soil like nitrogen and phosphorus partially from decomposed plants, although they do not break down detritus, certain fungi, microorganisms, and insects do.
Plants reproduce and make new plants by seeds: They get planted or settle in an area and then grow to new plants. Seeds are not the only ways plants reproduce and make new plants. Some plants use bulbs, branches, pollen,etc.
Yes! Plants reproduce by making seed that grow into plants.
Almost all types of plants reproduce
No some plants reproduce sexually.
Mustard plants reproduce through seeds.
To plants, phosphorus is a vital nutrient (second only to nitrogen). Plants absorb phosphates through their root hairs. Phosphorus then passes on through the food chain when the plants are consumed by other organisms.