kkyylleerr kkyylleerr
  • 01-02-2021
  • Biology
contestada

What has to happen to atmospheric
nitrogen in order for it to become
available to plants?

Respuesta :

honeybee83
honeybee83 honeybee83
  • 01-02-2021

Answer:

To be used by plants, the N2 must be transformed through a process called nitrogen fixation. Fixation converts nitrogen in the atmosphere into forms that plants can absorb through their root systems.

Explanation:

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

what is a rule for the sequence 1.8, 2.85, 3.90, 4.95, 6
what does it mean by 2cm:1unit on a graph
The kinds of ribonucleic acid present in any plant cell will be [A] 2[B] 4[C] 3[D] 5
What percent of 50 is 18?
In William Stafford's essay A Way Of Writing, he writes, "If I [write] down something, that thing will help the next thing come, and I'm off." To which part of
Siltstone is made mostly of _____.
Which of the following properties of carbon give it particular importance to life?
Which lines contain a metaphor? a. "and left behind her, / bead upon bead, / the track of small feet / like dark fern seed." b. "like a queen who walks / down
real word problem representing 2x-125=400
For the reaction 2Na(s) + Cl_2(g) = 2NaCl(s), how many grams of NaCl could be produced from 103.0 g of Na and 13.0 L of Cl_2 (at STP)?