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.
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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).
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Citations
Nitrogen saturation and soil N availability in a high-elevation spruce and fir forest
TL;DR: A field study was conducted during the summer of 1995 to gain abetter understanding of the causes of nitrate (NO3-N)leaching and ongoing changes in soil nitrogen (N) availabilityin high-elevation spruce (Picea rubens) and fir (Abies fraseri) forests of the Great Smoky MountainsNational Park, Tennessee and North Carolina, U.S.A as mentioned in this paper.
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Stability of grassland soil C and N pools despite 25 years of an extreme climatic and disturbance regime
TL;DR: Wilcox et al. as mentioned in this paper studied the stability of grassland soil C and N pools despite 25 years of an extreme climatic and disturbance regime, and found that C pools were relatively stable.
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Past and present anthropic environmental stress reflect high susceptibility of natural freshwater ecosystems in Romania
Andreea Maria Iordache,Constantin Nechita,Tomáš Pluháček,Mihaela Iordache,Ramona Ionela Zgavarogea,Roxana Elena Ionete +5 more
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Carbon-sink potential of continuous alfalfa agriculture lowered by short-term nitrous oxide emission events
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Microbial nitrogen‐turnover processes within the soil profile of a nitrogen‐saturated spruce forest and their relation to the small‐scale pattern of seepage‐water nitrate
Boris Matejek,Christian G. Huber,Michael Dannenmann,Michael Kohlpaintner,Rainer Gasche,Axel Göttlein,Hans Papen +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the microbial N-turnover processes in three different forest soil layers [organic (O) layer, 0-10cm depth (M 1 ), 10-40cm depth(M 2 )] of a N-saturated spruce stand at the Hoglwald Forest (Bavaria, SW Germany).
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References
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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
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Methodology for studying fluxes of soil mineral-N in situ
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