Cliff's defines chemoautotrophs as organisms "that use energy obtained from inorganic substances" and heterotrophs as organisms that "obtain their energy by consuming organic substances produced by autotrophs". I understand this.
However, when i was reading cliff's biological diversity chapter, I got confused when he was explaining this paragraph, "nitrogen-fixing bacteria are heteterotrophs that fix nitrogen. Many of these bacteria have mutualistic relationships with plants; that is, both the bacteria and the host plant beenfit from an interdependent relationship. the bacteria lives in nodules, specialized structures in plant roots" (he doesnt state what type of nitrogen)
My question is, how can something that fixes an inorganic substance be a heterotroph. I felt like cliff's was contradicting himself and thats why I posted the question 🙂
Is he implying that the bacteria fixes nitrogen, but actually consumes products produced by it's host, in this case (the plant)?