Like the plants in their nitrogen compounds?

Posted in nitrogen on Nov 06, 2009

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3 to “Like the plants in their nitrogen compounds?”


  1. Yaybob says:

    Nitrogen-fixing bacteria that live around the roots of plants to capture and convert atmospheric N2 into organic forms that plants absorb and exploit.
    From http://en. wikipedia. org / wiki / Nitrogen_fi …
    "Nitrogen fixation is the process that will convert the nitrogen from their natural, relatively inert molecular form (N2) into nitrogen and compounds such as ammonia, nitrate and nitrogen dioxide.
    "Nitrogen fixation is of course a number of different prokaryotes, as carried bacteria, Actinobacteria, and certain types of anaerobic bacteria. Microorganisms that fix nitrogen are called diazotrophic. Some higher plants and some animals) (termites, formed associations with diazotrophic. "

  2. Jack James says:

    Yes, provides for the fixation of nitrogen in a usable form for plants. Not all plants like legumes, associiated with nitrogen fixing bacteria.
    Most of the plants on their nitrogen directly from the soil as nitrates or ammonia (in the form of ammonium +). For confirmation, look at a lot of fertilizer. Or look at what the typical farmer in the Midwest U.S. spends annually on nitrogen fertilizer for their corn crop.

  3. Robbie B says:

    The terrain and the rain mostly, some through the conversion of sunlight



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