yes it is a motile organism
The scientific name for Rhizobium is Rhizobium leguminosarum.
most people believe that plantae are motile
Rhizobium bacteria do not have a true nucleus like eukaryotic cells do. They have a region called the nucleoid where genetic material is found, but it is not separated from the rest of the cell by a nuclear membrane. This makes Rhizobium bacteria prokaryotic.
They are motile if oxygen is present.
Motile algae have the ability to move independently through self-propulsion, using structures like flagella, cilia, or pseudopods. In contrast, non-motile algae lack these structures and rely on external factors like water currents or wind for movement.
The scientific name for Rhizobium is Rhizobium leguminosarum.
Rhizobium belongs to the kingdom of monerans .
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
If an organism is motile then it can move. Plants are not motile.
Plasmodium are motile.
Motile - The Moving or having the power to move spontaneously: motile spores. Archaea bacteria is motile.
motile
They have legs and can walk so theyre motile
Yes they are motile
most people believe that plantae are motile
Rhizobia are soil bacteria that fix nitrogen (diazotrophy) after becoming established inside root nodules of legumes (Fabaceae). Rhizobia require a plant host; they cannot independently fix nitrogen. Morphologically, they are generally gram negative, motile, non-sporulating rods.
yes