The six major groups of crops commonly found on a farm are grains, legumes, root crops, tubers, fruits, and vegetables. Grains include cereals like wheat and corn, while legumes encompass beans and peas that enrich the soil with nitrogen. Root crops, such as carrots and beets, and tubers like potatoes provide essential carbohydrates. Fruits and vegetables contribute vitamins and minerals essential for a balanced diet.
Cereals==seeds of grasses like wheat, oats, rice, and even corn Roots crops==parts of or whole roots of plants like carrots, beets Legumes==seeds found in pods and the pods like peas Fruit==classification of plants that have flesh surrounding the seeds like apricots, applies, mangoes Vegetables==plant parts used for human consumption (food) like yams, cauliflower, carrots
tap root and fibers roots
your mom and my grandma. get the difference ;)
Some common nitrogen-fixing plants used as rotation crops include legumes such as clover, alfalfa, soybeans, and peanuts. These plants have special root nodules that house nitrogen-fixing bacteria, helping improve soil fertility and reduce the need for synthetic fertilizers in agricultural fields.
well, beans are not root crops. They are just like rice which is a cereal so beans is a cereal.........:)
Root crops would basically be vegetables that are harvested in root form. Potatos, radishes, and carrots would be examples of root crops.
Tiny root is multicellular whereas root hair is unicellular
The nitrogen-fixing bacteria live in the root nodules of legumes.
Legumes enrich soil by adding nitrogen through their root nodules, which house nitrogen-fixing bacteria, such as Rhizobium. These bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen into a form that plants can use, effectively increasing the nitrogen content in the soil. As legumes grow and decompose, they release this nitrogen back into the soil, enhancing its fertility for subsequent crops. This symbiotic relationship benefits both the legumes and the surrounding ecosystem.
They are the same.
Root means solution in this context.