Submitted by Green-Tesseract t3_110rm4x in askscience
Let me elaborate. I know that plants need the help of bacteria in the soil to fix the nitrogen and some other nutrients, but I asking if a microbiome in the inside of the plants as such exists.
Humans have bacteria in the bowel and some other organs as well inside their bodies. Despite these organs are considered 'the outside' in humans (the digestive tract is just a tube of 'the outside' that goes across our body), they have a characteristic microbiome that mostly only lives there and plays a role in life.
To sum up, my question here is: do plants have bacteria inside them? Like going across their trunks and the sap or even inside the leaves?
azuth89 t1_j8bxvu6 wrote
Yes, it is in many ways different than ours but they have bacteria on an in them that helps crowd out more harnful organisms and process nutrients, many famously have very tight connections with fungi in their root systems to ferry nutrients and even signals arouns, things along those lines. They also have common but non lethal parasites just like animals in addition to .ore destructive ones.
The details vary with what kind of plant you're talking about.