articleEcologyMar 1, 2004Closed access

NITROGEN MINERALIZATION: CHALLENGES OF A CHANGING PARADIGM

University of California, Santa Barbara · North Carolina State University

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Abstract

Until recently, the common view of the terrestrial nitrogen cycle had been driven by two core assumptions—plants use only inorganic N and they compete poorly against soil microbes for N. Thus, plants were thought to use N that microbes “left over,” allowing the N cycle to be divided cleanly into two pieces—the microbial decomposition side and the plant uptake and use side. These were linked by the process of net mineralization. Over the last decade, research has changed these views. N cycling is now seen as being driven by the depolymerization of N-containing polymers by microbial (including mycorrhizal) extracellular enzymes. This releases organic N-containing monomers that may be used by either plants or…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Nitrogen cycle
  • Mineralization (soil science)
  • Microsite
  • Ecosystem
  • Cycling
  • Ecology
  • Terrestrial ecosystem
  • Biogeochemical cycle
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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