Plants do not technically need nitrogen to survive, infact they need "Carbon Dioxide" Co2, but as Nitrogen makes up most of atmosphere (approx 95%) but they do need it for the color of the leaves and contains nutrients. Here is a link to a picture of what It looks like without nitrogen: http://www.progressivegardens.com/growers_guide/nitrogen.jpg
The surface of moon.
There is more than one step in nitrogen fixation but it can be seen as a flash of lightning heating the atmosphere, or in certain plants such as clover or alder.
All living things need nitrogen - it is a key part of both plant and animal tissue, and plants wouldn't be able to grow without it. We get our nitrogen by eating protein, but most plants have to get it from the soil. Garden plants use up a lot of nitrogen, so it needs to be replaced with fertilizer or you won't be able to keep growing plants on the same plot of land. In nature, some plants are able to pull nitrogen out of the air which helps replenish the soil, and when old plants die and rot the nitrogen returns to the ground. This doesn't happen in a garden if the plants are eaten for food or thrown away when they die.
It is very complicated.
you cant see an atom!
They provide hiding places for the fish, they will take in Nitrates completing the Nitrogen cycle, and they look nice!
Look at the air around you- do you see anything? About 80% of that air is nitrogen. As a gas, it has no color, no shape. Nothing to see here. Move along.
baby my h.
Organisms require nitrogen to build proteins, DNA, and other essential molecules needed for growth and function. Nitrogen is a crucial element for sustaining life as it is a key component of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. Without nitrogen, organisms would not be able to carry out vital biological processes.
How does pitbull look like without his glasses
Camouflage.
moneran