Rhizobium
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Assorted References
- nitrification
- In bacteria: Distribution in nature
…are free-living, whereas species of Rhizobium live in an intimate association with leguminous plants. Rhizobium organisms in the soil recognize and invade the root hairs of their specific plant host, enter the plant tissues, and form a root nodule. This process causes the bacteria to lose many of their free-living…
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- In bacteria: Distribution in nature
- soil organisms
- In soil organism
…relationship between the bacteria genus Rhizobium and leguminous plants and certain trees and shrubs. In return for secretions from their host that encourage their growth and multiplication, Rhizobia fix nitrogen in nodules of the host plant’s roots, providing nitrogen in a form usable by the plant.
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- In soil organism
symbiosis with
- Fabales
- In Fabales: Ecological and economic importance
(symbiosis) between legumes and Rhizobium bacteria, nitrogen gas (N2) is fixed into a compound and then becomes available to the biotic world. The legume plant furnishes a home and subsistence for the bacteria in root nodules. In a complex biosynthetic interaction between the host plant and the bacterium, nitrogen…
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- In Fabales: Ecological and economic importance
- Mimosoideae
- In Fabales: Classification of Fabaceae
…nodules containing the nitrogen-fixing bacterium Rhizobium on their roots.
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- In Fabales: Classification of Fabaceae
- Papilionoideae
- In Fabales: Classification of Fabaceae
The symbiotic relationship between Rhizobium and the plant, which takes place in root nodules and “fixes” atmospheric nitrogen into compounds useful to the plant, is most strongly developed in Papilionoideae legumes.
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- In Fabales: Classification of Fabaceae