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Yes, they are produced in the ribosomes of your cells.
Some plants produce strong odors in order to attract pollinators.
They don't 'eat' the soil - but they absorb moisture and nutrients from the soil in order to grow.
Nitrogen. Bacteria can convert or "fix" insoluable Nitrites into soluable Nitrates, which plants can absorb
Carbon dioxide gas enter the stomata of leaves and from this, water, photons of light and a few trace minerals plants make their own food.
Yes, they are produced in the ribosomes of your cells.
We produce carbon dioxide which we release into the atmosphere when we exhale. Trees absorb the carbon dioxide and in turn produce oxygen, which we need to breath. Green plants are the world's best air purifiers!
Logically there will be two processes. One will give message for requirement of the necessary protein. Other will send out the messenger RNA to produce the particular protein to ribosomes.
Some plants produce strong odors in order to attract pollinators.
Nitrogen is the most common one.
Well carbon is the gas that plants absorb in order to release oxygen
They produce chlorophyl in order to make energy through photosynthesis.
a process which plants do in order for them to produce their own food. Plants use the sunlight in the process.
They don't 'eat' the soil - but they absorb moisture and nutrients from the soil in order to grow.
Amino acids. There are twenty different amino acids that nature uses routinely to produce proteins. Nature has a very specific order for incorporating these amino acids to produce any specific protein. This order is coded by the genes of the organism and in an elaborate way, the code is interpreted into the order of amino acid incorporation during protein synthesis.
Nitrogen. Bacteria can convert or "fix" insoluable Nitrites into soluable Nitrates, which plants can absorb
No. Carbon Dioxide is one of the basic needs that plants need in order to survive.