Cells, food, life spans, and places to live
nitrogen-fixing bacteria
Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
Nitrogen fixation is the process by which bacteria remove nitrogen from the air and make it available to plants.
Yes, plants can have bacteria living on and within their tissues. Some bacteria form symbiotic relationships with plants, providing benefits such as nitrogen fixation or protection against pathogens. However, some bacteria can also be harmful to plants, causing diseases.
somme bacteria have chlorophyll and are able to make their own food like green plants do
Nitrogen fixing bacteria, such as Rhizobium.
Plants are organisms that make their own food through photosynthesis, using sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into glucose. This process allows plants to produce their own energy for growth and survival.
A few examples are- They digest and keep our mouths clean. Break down plants and create more plants that make our oxygen. make cheese. See, bacteria are about 85-90 percent benificial depending on where you live.
Phototroph or photoautotroph...basically plants and photosynthetic bacteria
No group of animals make their own food. Only plants and some bacteria do.
There's tons of types of bacteria and tons of types of plants. not all bacteria help plants (in fact, many bacteria hurt plants), and not all plants can be helped by bacteria. it would be almost impossible to list every bacteria that helps plants, but one example would be the denytrifying bacteria that live on the roots of most legumes (plants such as peas, beans, and peanuts). these bacteria convert nitrogen from the soil (that gets into the soil when animal carcases rot or when lightning strikes the ground). Legumes can't use pure nitrogen. these bacteria combine it with oxygen and make it NO2 or NO3, which are both forms of nitrogen that plants can use. once the plant is done using the NO2 or NO3, different types of bacteria (called denitrifying bacteria) will convert the NO2 and NO3 back to pure nitrogen and put it back into the atmosphere where it can be used by other organisms. these are just two of the millions of types of bacteria in God's creation, but they are extremely helpfull to plants.
No, bacteria are not classified as plants. Bacteria are a separate domain of life, distinct from plants, animals, and fungi. Plants belong to the kingdom Plantae, while bacteria belong to the domain Bacteria.