Yes, legumes can be used for fertilizer due to their ability to fix nitrogen in the soil through a symbiotic relationship with bacteria in their root nodules. This process enriches the soil with nitrogen, which is essential for plant growth. Additionally, when legumes are turned into the soil as green manure or composted, they contribute organic matter and nutrients, further enhancing soil fertility.
Legumes have nitrogen-fixing bacteria found in nodules on their roots. Thus, they add nitrogen fertilizer to the soil.
How much fertilizer will be used and what kind of fertilizer.
Yes. It is a common fertilizer.
Most legumes have symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria in structures called root nodules. For that reason, they play a key role in crop rotation.When a legume plant dies in the field, for example following the harvest, all of its remaining nitrogen is released back into the soil. In the soil, the amino acids are converted to nitrate (NO3−), making the nitrogen available to other plants, thereby serving as fertilizer for future crops.
Yes, potassium nitrate can be used as a fertilizer in agriculture.
chicken poo is great fertilizer!
Peas and beans belong to a very special group of plants known as legumes. Legumes are plants which have a bacteria living symbiotically in their roots which "fix" nitrogen for use by the plants themselves and thos that eat the plants. By planting legumes every 3 years, the farmers were using a natural form of nitrogen fertilizer!
no
it used for fertilizer
it is used for clean the petrol wastage. gas is used to fertilizer plants.
Soybean seed is usually planted in order to enrich the soil in nitrogen before the next crop. Soybean and all legumes fix the nitrogen from the air into the soil, thanks to bacteria symbiotes who live in nodules around the soybean root.
hey man fertilizer is fertilizer i used 2 year old grass seed and it worked it ain't like food so yes it can be used lol