Yes
Nitrogen from the atmosphere primarily enters the soil through a process called nitrogen fixation, where certain bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen (N₂) into ammonia (NH₃) or related compounds. This process occurs in the root nodules of specific plants, like legumes, or in the soil by free-living bacteria. Once in the soil, nitrogen can be taken up by plants or further transformed by other soil microorganisms through processes like nitrification and denitrification. Ultimately, nitrogen becomes part of the food chain as it is absorbed by plants, which are then consumed by animals.
Nitrogen enters the food chain primarily through plants, which absorb it from the soil in the form of nitrates. Herbivores consume these plants, assimilating the nitrogen into their bodies. When carnivores eat herbivores, they obtain the nitrogen stored in the herbivores' tissues, allowing it to continue up the food chain. This transfer of nitrogen is essential for the growth and maintenance of proteins and nucleic acids in all living organisms.
Microorganisms living in the soil convert it through chemosynthesis.
I think it's called the 'nitrogen cycle' .
I think it's called the 'nitrogen cycle' .
Nitrogen is transformed into ammonia through a process called nitrogen fixation before it can be used by living organisms. Certain bacteria are responsible for this conversion, either through mutualistic relationships with plants or through free-living nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the soil.
The energy from the sun enters through autotrophs.
the nitrogen cycle
As with all living things adaptation is through evolution
yea it does
Yes, nitrogen is cycled through the Earth's atmosphere through a process known as the nitrogen cycle. This cycle involves various processes such as nitrogen fixation by bacteria, denitrification, and nitrification, leading to the conversion of nitrogen into different forms that can be used by living organisms.
Yes, this is the perspiration.