it depends on which living organisms you are talking about. Plants absorb it through their roots in the form of nitrate (NO3) or ammonia (NH4) or in the case of Nitrogen-fixing plants, they host a bacterial infection which undergoes di-nitrogen fixation within a nodule and makes the nitrogen for the plant. Many types of bacteria and other microorganisms possess the ability to fix atmospheric N2, which eukaryotes in general cannot do. Animals in general get their nitrogen by consuming other organisms or organic material.
no they do not they are not a living organism so No!
ALL live animals are living organisms.
Yes, apples are part of a living organism.
Because that is where they live.
No, a lung is not a living organism; it is an organ that is part of a living organism, such as a human or animal. Organs like the lung perform specific functions essential for survival, such as gas exchange. However, they cannot live independently outside of the organism.
Parasites are the name given to organisms that live on or in another organism. Example: fleas, ticks, and bacteria.
No live organisms have cells, a rock does not.
For real? I sware... frogs don't live in organisms... Environments. Sad.
The living part of an ecosystem is called an organism. An organism can be a plant or an animal. These organisms live in communities within the environment such as dessert, aquatic, or forest.
No, talking is not an organism. Talking is a behavior or action carried out by organisms, typically humans, as a means of communication. Organisms such as humans have the ability to talk, whereas the act of talking itself is not a living organism.
A living organism
Adaptatation allows the living organism to live in a given set of surroundings