Bacteria rather than Archaea dominate microbial ammonia oxidation in an agricultural soil
Max Planck Society · Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology
Abstract
Agricultural ecosystems annually receive approximately 25% of the global nitrogen input, much of which is oxidized at least once by ammonia-oxidizing prokaryotes to complete the nitrogen cycle. Recent discoveries have expanded the known ammonia-oxidizing prokaryotes from the domain Bacteria to Archaea. However, in the complex soil environment it remains unclear whether ammonia oxidation is exclusively or predominantly linked to Archaea as implied by their exceptionally high abundance. Here we show that Bacteria rather than Archaea functionally dominate ammonia oxidation in an agricultural soil, despite the fact that archaeal versus bacterial amoA genes are numerically more dominant. In soil microcosms, in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 62.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 78
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Archaea
- Biology
- Bacteria
- Soil microbiology
- Stable-isotope probing
- Nitrogen cycle
- Ammonia
- Microorganism
- Zero hunger