Book Chapter10.2136/SSSABOOKSER5.2.C42
Nitrogen Mineralization, Immobilization, and Nitrification
Stephen C. Hart,John M. Stark,Eric A. Davidson,Mary K. Firestone +3 more
- 11 Sep 2018
- pp 985-1018
1K
TL;DR: The biogeochemical cycling of N in ecosystems can be divided into an external and an internal N cycle as mentioned in this paper, and the internal cycle consists of those processes that convert N from one chemical form to another or transfer N between ecosystem pools.
read more
Abstract: The biogeochemical cycling of N in ecosystems can be divided into an external and an internal N cycle. The external cycle includes those processes that add or remove N from ecosystems, such as: dinitrogen (N2) fixation, dry and wet N deposition, N fertilization, N leaching, runoff erosion, denitrification, and ammonia volatilization. The internal N-cycle consists of those processes that convert N from one chemical form to another or transfer N between ecosystem pools. Processes of the internal N-cycle include: plant assimilation of N, return of N to soil in plant litterfall and root turnover, N mineralization (the conversion of organic N to inorganic N), microbial immobilization of N (the uptake of inorganic N by microorganisms), and nitrification (the production of nitrite {N02-} and nitrate {N03-} from ammonium {NH/} or organic N) (Fig. 42-1). The significance of internal N-cycling processes can be illustrated by comparing the rates of these processes relative to external N-cycling rates. For example, Paul and Clark (1989) estimate that the sum of all output fluxes of the external N-cycle globally is about 0.25 x 1015 g-N yr1, while net N mineralization in soils is more than 14 times this amount (about 3.5 x 1015 g-N ye1). However, because net N mineralization is the difference between actual N mineralization and microbial immobilization of N, gross N mineralization rates may be over two orders of magnitude greater than all output fluxes of N combined (see below).
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Effects of straw returning and biochar on soil bacterial community diversity and co-occurrence network in paddy field
J. Ding,X. Li +1 more
TL;DR: Straw returning and biochar application significantly increased soil bacterial community diversity and altered the co-occurrence network structure in paddy field soil.
1
Chemolithotrophic microbiome of buried soil layers following volcanic eruptions: A potential huge carbon sink
TL;DR: In this article , the authors characterized the microbiomes and their metabolic potentials in organic soil layers buried following the volcanic eruption approximately 300 and 1,640 years ago, using bacterial and archaeal 16S rRNA gene sequencing.
1
A new conceptual framework explaining spatial variation in soil nitrous oxide emissions
Ziliang Zhang,William F. Eddy,Emily R. Stuchiner,Evan H. DeLucia,Wendy H. Yang +4 more
- 28 Nov 2023
TL;DR: A new conceptual framework explaining spatial variation in soil nitrous oxide emissions based on high spatial resolution measurements of soil nitrous oxide emissions, gross fluxes, and soil physicochemical properties.
Sustainability of land-application of class B biosolids on an arid soil
Huruy Ghebrehiwet Zerzghi
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the long-term sustainability of land application of Class B biosolids and concluded that longterm land application is sustainable, based on these studies.
1
References
Nitrogen limitation on land and in the sea: How can it occur?
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine both how the biogeochemistry of the nitrogen cycle could cause limitation to develop, and how nitrogen limitation could persist as a consequence of processes that prevent or reduce nitrogen fixation.
3.6K
Biochemical Ecology of Nitrification and Denitrification
W. Verstraete,D. D. Focht +1 more
- 01 Jan 1977
TL;DR: In terms of the global fluxes between aerial and terrestrial-aquatic systems, the simplified nitrogen cycle can be envisioned as a triangle where the only biologically reversible reaction occurs between ammonium and nitrate.
933
Diffusion method to prepare soil extracts for automated nitrogen-15 analysis
TL;DR: In this article, a diffusion method was developed for preparing soil KCl extracts for 15NH+4 and 15NO-3 analyses, which is ideal for preparing samples having low N mass (50-200 µg N) with no cross contamination.
690
Methodology for studying fluxes of soil mineral-N in situ
TL;DR: In this article, a methodology for studying fluxes of mineral-N in soils, based on sequential soil coring and in situ exposure of largely undisturbed soil columns confined within metal or PVC tubes is described and evaluated.
683