Just look the question up. I think I have the same worksheet as u
It will break down into amonium NH4
Leguminous plants have nodules on their roots containing bacteria which can fix nitrogen contained in the air in the soil. This nitrogen becomes available to the plant, which uses the nitrogen as an essential part of the proteins of its cells. Other types of plant cannot do this, and have available only the nitrate which is already present in the water in the soil. Leguminous plants have nodules on their roots containing bacteria which can fix nitrogen contained in the air in the soil. This nitrogen becomes available to the plant, which uses the nitrogen as an essential part of the proteins of its cells. Other types of plant cannot do this, and have available only the nitrate which is already present in the water in the soil.
Plants need nitrogen to build proteins and nucleic acids.
plans take them both in and convert them both to a form we (and other animals) can use - sugars and proteins. decomposers are the type of bacteria that break dead things down - so convert the carbon in us to the CO2 form or into organic material in the soil and they also convert the nitrogen in living things into ammonium in the soil. the nitrogen fixing bacteria turn the nitrogen from the soil also into the ammonium. the ammonium is converted into nitrates by nitrifying bacteria which can be then used by plants and then we eat the plants...
proteins, containing the amino acids.
The main nutrient groups - fats, carbohydrates, and proteins - are all made of large molecules of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Protein also requires nitrogen, so without it, proteins can't be made, and as a result your body will be unable to form new tissues for growth and repair; DNA synthesis and enzyme production will also cease.
any food containing proteins.
Proteins that are themselves comprised from both 'the peptide bond' and the nitrogen-containing amino acids.
Amino acids
Decomposers release digestive hydrolytic enzymes into dead materials and absorb the organic material. They use the organic material containing carbon in respiration so CO2 is given out. They also convert proteins into NH3 which is released into the soil.
In the body, nitrogen is stored primarily in the form of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. Proteins are essential for various physiological processes and nitrogen is a crucial component of amino acids. Additionally, nitrogen can also be stored in other molecules like nucleic acids, which are composed of nitrogen-containing bases such as adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine.
Amino acids, which combine to make proteins, contain the elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.
Nucleic Acids
By eating proteins as proteins have nitrogen in it
Nitrogen is a key element. Proteins contain nitrogen and without nitrogen no protein.
The Urinary System rids the body of nitrogen-containing waste (urea, uric acid, and ammonia), which result from the breakdown of proteins and nucleic acids by the body's cells. It also maintains water, electrolyte, and acid-base balance of blood.
Plants and animals die and decomposers break down their nitrogen containing molecules to ammonia. All animals get the nitrogen they need by eating plants, by eating other animals that ate plants, or by eating animals that ate animals that ate plants.
Nearly all of the nitrogen in a diet is present as amino acids in proteins. The average nitrogen content of proteins was found to be around 16 percent.