Science, asked by Princess2850, 10 months ago

*Rhizobium, present in the roots of leguminous plants, converts atmospheric nitrogen into nitrogenous compounds that can be used by the plant* explain these lines....in detail according to 7th std.... plsss explain it's argent in simple language plssss​

Answers

Answered by linkeshclass10th
2

Answer:

Explanation:

Rhizobium is a bacteria found in soil that helps in fixing nitrogen in leguminous plants. It attaches to the roots of the leguminous plant and produces nodules. These nodules fix atmospheric nitrogen and convert it into ammonia that can be used by the plant for its growth and development

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Answered by neilaanjana2007
1

Explanation:

Bacteria rhizobium takes up nitrogen from the air and converts it into a soluble form like nitrates. plants then take up these nitrates and use them to prepare their food. As plants cannot use atmospheric nitrogen directly, rhizobium converts it into nitrogenous compounds or nitrogen nitrates.

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