Almost four-fifths of the air is nitrogen, yet plants cannot use it as a gas. A team of bacteria must first turn it into forms life can absorb.
- Atmospheric nitrogen (N₂) is non-reactive, so nitrogen-fixing bacteria like Rhizobium (root nodules) and Azotobacter convert it to ammonia (fixation).
- Nitrifying bacteria ( Nitrosomonas , Nitrobacter ) convert ammonia to nitrite then nitrate (nitrification); plants assimilate these, and animals get nitrogen by eating plants.
- Decomposers return nitrogen as ammonia (ammonification), and denitrifying bacteria ( Pseudomonas ) convert nitrates back to N₂ gas (denitrification), completing the cycle; lightning also fixes some nitrogen.
NCERT Question 7 — Explain the processes involved in
During lightning strikes, a little atmospheric nitrogen is fixed into nitrogen oxides. Today most nitrogen is fixed artificially by the Haber-Bosch process (early 1900s), making ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen. This ‘Bread from Air’ enabled India’s Green Revolution and feeds billions, but it is energy-intensive (about 1–2% of global energy) and the overuse of fertilisers has degraded soil and water.