No, because rhizobium is a prokaryote.
rhizobium looks like a red color colonies ra....
It is rod shaped.
Yes
Rhizobium.
Peter Malcolm Stephens has written: 'Competition between strains of Rhizobium trifolii for nodulation sites on the roots of white clover'
yeast, Rhizobium
Victor Manuel Morales has written: 'Cellulase production by Rhizobium' -- subject(s): Cellulase, Rhizobium 'Cellulase production by Rhizobium' -- subject(s): Cellulase, Rhizobium 'Cellulase production by Rhizobium' -- subject(s): Cellulase, Rhizobium
it helps by replenishing soil with nitrogen. Ex.- Rhizobium
Rhizobium belongs to the kingdom of monerans .
Joe Richard Cowles has written: 'Some properties of ribonucleotide reductase in Rhizobium species' -- subject- s -: Rhizobium
No, because rhizobium is a prokaryote.
rhizobium,streptomyces,E. coli are some of the helpful bacteria
Yes, a bacterium known as rhizobium lives inside special nodules on the roots of soybeans and other legumes. Rhizobium is able to take gaseous nitrogen from the atmosphere and turn it into an organic form, which can be use by the plant. The bacteria gets a safe place to live inside the plant and the plant gets nitrogen from the bacteria.
rhizobium looks like a red color colonies ra....
The bacteria live in the plant cells, located on the root, and form nodules. These nodules convert nitrogen gas in the soil to usable energy for the plant. In return, the bacteria have a safe place to live and reproduce.
No it is a Bacterium .