Quotation from: General Science

Written by: Bertha M. Clark


247. Bacteria as Nitrogen Gatherers. Soil from which crops are removed
year after year usually becomes less fertile, but the soil from which
crops of clover, peas, beans, or alfalfa have been removed is richer in
nitrogen rather than poorer. This is because the roots of these plants
often have on them tiny swellings, or tubercles, in which millions of
certain bacteria live and multiply. These bacteria have the remarkable
power of taking free nitrogen from the air in the soil and of combining
it with other substances to form compounds which plants can use. The
bacteria-made compounds dissolve in the soil water and are absorbed into
the plant by the roots. So much nitrogen-containing material is made by
the root bacteria of plants of the pea family that the soil in which
they grow becomes somewhat richer in nitrogen, and if plants which
cannot make nitrogen are subsequently planted in such a soil, they find
there a store of nitrogen. A crop of peas, beans, or clover is
equivalent to nitrogenous fertilizer and helps to make ready the soil
for other crops.

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