Ammonia-oxidizing archaea have more important role than ammonia-oxidizing bacteria in ammonia oxidation of strongly acidic soils
Chinese Academy of Sciences · Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
Abstract
Increasing evidence demonstrated the involvement of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) in the global nitrogen cycle, but the relative contributions of AOA and ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) to ammonia oxidation are still in debate. Previous studies suggest that AOA would be more adapted to ammonia-limited oligotrophic conditions, which seems to be favored by protonation of ammonia, turning into ammonium in low-pH environments. Here, we investigated the autotrophic nitrification activity of AOA and AOB in five strongly acidic soils (pH
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.56
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 58
Authors
4- LZLimei ZhangCorresponding
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
- HHHang‐Wei Hu
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
- JSJu‐Pei Shen
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
- JHJi‐Zheng He
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
Topics & keywords
- Nitrification
- Archaea
- Microcosm
- Biology
- Stable-isotope probing
- Autotroph
- Ammonia
- Ammonium
- Life in Land