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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)
nitrogen-fixing bacteria by brazilianninja
nitrogen-fixing bacteria by brazilianninja
Legumes (e.g peas and beans). They form symbiotic relationships with Rhizobia bacteria which fix atmospheric nitrogen into nitrates which can be used by the plant.
No, because they are a type of bacteria. Even though bacteria can be bad there is also some good bacteria as well. We need the good bacteria for medicine like penicillin and other things
Special class of bacteria called Rhizomes live on the roots of leguminus plants. They take free nitrate and nitrites from the environment and change to a form that can be readily used by plants. Relationship between nitrogen fixing bacteria and plants is called Symbiosis.
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)
Jesse Blaine Holladay has written: 'Root development of certain annual legumes as influenced by soil type' -- subject(s): Legumes, Roots (Botany), Roots, Soils
Rhizobium.
nitrogen-fixing bacteria by brazilianninja
nitrogen-fixing bacteria by brazilianninja
Bacteria =========================== Specifically a particular type of bacteria that live in nodules on the roots of certain plants (eg the Legume family) called "Nitrogen Fixing Bacteria" . Not other bacteria decompose organic material and release nitrogen back into the atmosphere.
Aerobic bacteria must have oxygen to live.
a organ that has five parts
Legumes (e.g peas and beans). They form symbiotic relationships with Rhizobia bacteria which fix atmospheric nitrogen into nitrates which can be used by the plant.
There are two ogranisms that are nitrogen fixers:Free-living (non-symbiotic) bacteria, which live in the soil. This includes the cyanobacteria (or blue-green algae) Anabaena and Nostoc and such genera as Azotobacter, Beijerinckia, and ClostridiumMutualistic (symbiotic) bacteria, which live live in nodules in the roots of plants. This includes Rhizobium,associated with leguminous plants, and Spirillum lipoferum,associated with cereal grasses.Nitrogen fixing bacteria are microorganisms present in the soil or in plant roots that change nitrogen gas from the atmosphere into solid nitrogen compounds that plants can use in the soil.
"symbiotic"