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A Handbook of Biology

BÏØLØGÏÇÅL ÑÏTRØGËÑ FÏXÅTÏØÑ

It is the reduction of

N2 by living organisms

in presence of

nitrogenase enzyme.

Very few

organisms can

utilise the nitrogen

in the form of N2 in

the air.

Only certain

prokaryotic species

have nitrogenase

enzyme and

capability to fix N2.

They are called N2

fixers.

1

2

3

Nitrogen-fixing microbes are of 2 types:

Free-living: E.g.

Azotobacter

& Beijerinckia

(aerobic microbes),

Rhodospirillum &

Bacillus (anaerobic),

cyanobacteria such as

Anabaena & Nostoc.

(AIPMT 2010)

Symbiotic:

E.g. Rhizobium.

SÝMBÏØTÏÇ BÏØLØGÏÇÅL ÑÏTRØGËÑ FÏXÅTÏØÑ



Legume-bacteria relationship: Most prominent symbiotic biological

nitrogen fixation relationship. Rhizobium species (rod-shaped) seen in

the roots of legumes such as alfalfa, sweet clover, sweet pea, lentils,

garden pea, broad bean, clover beans, etc.



The most common association on roots is as nodules.



The microbe, Frankia also produces N2 fixing nodules on the roots of

non-leguminous plants (Alnus).



Rhizobium and Frankia are free-living in soil, but as symbionts, can fix

atmospheric nitrogen.



Central part of a nodule is red or pink coloured due to the presence of

leguminous haemoglobin (leg- hamoglobin).



During biological nitrogen fixation, inactivation of nitrogenase by oxygen

poisoning is prevented by leg-hamoglobin.

(AIPMT 2015)