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Q: What part of a plant serves as a home for nitrogen fixing bacteria?
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Which part a plant serves as a home for nitrogen-fixing bacteria?

nodules


Which part of a plant serves as home for nitrogen fixing bacteria?

Nodules


Where are nitrogen- fixing bacteria found?

Plant roots


Type of bacteria in pea plant roots that benefits the plant?

nitrogen-fixing bacteria by brazilianninja


Type of bacteria in Pea plant roots that benefit the plant?

nitrogen-fixing bacteria by brazilianninja


What is symbiotic nitrogen fixation?

Nitrogen fixation occurs in leguminous plant that have nitrogen fixing bacteria in the root nodule. The plants utilize the nitrogen from the nitrogen fixing bacteria. The bacteria utilize plant sugars formed via photosynthesis.


Is nitrogen fixing bacteria present in mustard plant?

you are idot


What do nitrogen fixing bacteria convert in the nitrogen cycle?

Nitrogen fixing bacteria are anaerobic bacteria present in the soil or in some plant roots that change nitrogen gas from the atmosphere into solid nitrogen compounds (e.g. ammonium salts) that plants can use in the soil.Nitrogen fixing bacteria that are symbiotic with plants use sugars supplied by the plant they live in to provide the metabolic energy to carry out this process.


What type of plant that can host the bacteria that can fix nitrogen?

many types of pea crop.. The roots of these plants house nitrogen fixing bacteria :) i think a type of potato plant does has them as well Pea, gram and ground nut (pea nut)


Name a nitrogen fixing bacteria of non leguminious plant?

Cyanobacteria can affix atmospheric nitrogen (N2).


What kind of relationships do plant have with nitrogen fixing bacteria?

It allows nitrogen atoms to continually cycle through the biosphere.


What do nitogen-fixing bacteria do?

Nitrogen fixing bacteria change nitrogen from the air into nitrogen compounds such as ammonia, nitrate, and nitrogen dioxide. They do so, through two living arrangements. One's as free living bacteria in the soil. The other's in association with plants of the Fabaceae and Leguminosae families, such as beans and peas. In this arrangement, the plant gives the bacteria sugars in the form of exudates [waste products]. In return, the bacteria provides the plant with nitrogen in forms that the plant can take in.