why are bacteria and fungi in soil decomposers?
they break down the dead remains and release the chemicals for the plants to use again - feeding and assimilation pass nitrogen (for example in protein molecules) along food chains
nitrogen cycle process
decomposition description
protein in dead plants and animals is broken down - ammonia is released into the soil
decomposition bacteria involved
decomposing bacteria
nitrification description
ammonia is converted to nitrites, and nitrites are converted into nitrates
nitrification bacteria involved
nitrifying bacteria
denitrification description
nitrates are converted to nitrogen gas (denitrification reduces the amount of nitrate in the soil and therefore makes the soil less fertile)
denitrification bacteria involved
denitrifying bacteria
nitrogen fixation description
nitrogen gas is converted to ammonia in bacteria which is used to make proteins, when the bacteria die their proteins decompose, releasing ammonia back into the soil
nitrogen fixation bacteria involved
nitrogen-fixing bacteria found in soil and in root nodules of plants
where do some nitrogen fixing bacteria live?
in nodules on the roots of legume plants - the bacteria receive glucose from the plant, while the plant absorbs ammonia from the bacteria in the nodule
what happens when the nitrogen fixing bacteria decomposes in the soil?
they make the soil much more fertile releasing ammonia which can be converted into nitrates - this is why farmers may rotate the crops they grow in each field