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Nitrogen fixing bacteria are found on the roots of bean plants. so explain how plant benfit bacteria.

2007-04-15 15:17:16 · 3 answers · asked by manal h 2 in Environment

3 answers

The bacteria receives sugars/carbohydrates from the plant.

2007-04-18 02:26:19 · answer #1 · answered by gerafalop 7 · 0 0

dazzling question. The mycorrhizae fungi appearing indoors the roots of plant existence is an important symbiotic relationship. Many plant species, which includes wheat, remember heavily on the nitrogen fixation that mycorrhizae carry out. with out this necessary fungi, plant existence does not inevitably die, in spite of the undeniable fact that the yield of the plant would perhaps be heavily hampered. as a result, there would perhaps be extra effective appropriate opposition between herbivores (particularly ruminants). shifting up the nutrition chain, if shrink trophic stages are scarce, the coolest trophic stages bypass via subsequently.

2016-11-24 21:30:02 · answer #2 · answered by willens 4 · 0 0

The plant can live in poor (acid) soils that bind nitrogen too tightly for the plant to absorb from the ground.

2007-04-15 15:21:49 · answer #3 · answered by a simple man 6 · 0 1

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