Nitrogen is present in the environment in a wide variety of chemical forms including organic nitrogen,
ammonium (),
nitrite (),
nitrate (),
nitrous oxide (),
nitric oxide (NO) or inorganic nitrogen gas (). Organic nitrogen may be in the form of a living organism,
humus or in the intermediate products of organic matter decomposition. The processes described in the nitrogen cycle transform nitrogen substances from one form to another. Many of these processes are carried out by
microbes, either in their effort to harvest energy or to accumulate nitrogen in a form needed for their growth. For example, the
nitrogenous wastes in animal
urine are broken down by
nitrifying bacteria in the soil to be used by plants. The diagram alongside shows how these processes fit together to form the nitrogen cycle.
Nitrogen fixation The conversion of nitrogen gas () into nitrates and nitrites through atmospheric, industrial and biological processes is called nitrogen fixation. Atmospheric nitrogen must be processed, or "
fixed", into a usable form to be taken up by plants. Between 5 and 10 billion kg per year are fixed by
lightning strikes, but most fixation is done by free-living or
symbiotic bacteria known as
diazotrophs. These bacteria have the
nitrogenase enzyme that combines gaseous nitrogen with
hydrogen to produce
ammonia, which is converted by the bacteria into other
organic compounds. Most biological nitrogen fixation occurs by the activity of
molybdenum (Mo)-nitrogenase, found in a wide variety of bacteria and some
Archaea. Mo-nitrogenase is a complex two-component
enzyme that has multiple metal-containing prosthetic groups. Bacteria and fungi convert this organic nitrogen into
ammonia and sometimes ammonium through a series of processes called ammonification or
mineralization. This is the last step in the nitrogen cycle step involving organic compounds. Myriad enzymes are involved including
dehydrogenases,
proteases, and
deaminases such as
glutamate dehydrogenase and
glutamine synthetase. Nitrogen mineralization and ammonification have a positive correlation with organic nitrogen in the soil, soil microbial biomass, and average annual precipitation. They also respond closely to changes in temperature. However, these processes slow in the presence of vegetation with high carbon to nitrogen ratios and fertilization with sugar. is anaerobic ammonium oxidation,
DNRA is dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium, and
COMAMMOX is complete ammonium oxidation.
Nitrification The conversion of ammonium to nitrate is performed primarily by soil-living bacteria and other nitrifying bacteria. In the primary stage of nitrification, the oxidation of ammonium () is performed by bacteria such as the
Nitrosomonas species, which converts ammonia to
nitrites (). Other bacterial species such as
Nitrobacter, are responsible for the oxidation of the nitrites () into
nitrates (). It is important for the
ammonia () to be converted to nitrates or nitrites because ammonia gas is toxic to plants. Due to their very high
solubility and because soils are highly unable to retain
anions, nitrates can enter
groundwater. Elevated nitrate in groundwater is a concern for drinking water use because nitrate can interfere with blood-oxygen levels in infants and cause
methemoglobinemia or blue-baby syndrome. File:Nitrogen cycle.jpg| Classical representation of nitrogen cycle File:Nitrogen Cycle 2.svg|alt=Diagram of nitrogen cycle above and below ground. Atmospheric nitrogen goes to nitrogen-fixing bacteria in legumes and the soil, then ammonium, then nitrifying bacteria into nitrites then nitrates (which is also produced by lightning), then back to the atmosphere or assimilated by plants, then animals. Nitrogen in animals and plants become ammonium through decomposers (bacteria and fungi).|Flow of nitrogen through the ecosystem. Bacteria are a key element in the cycle, providing different forms of nitrogen compounds able to be assimilated by higher organisms File:The Nitrogen Cycle.png| Simple representation of the nitrogen cycle. Blue represent nitrogen storage, green is for processes moving nitrogen from one place to another, and red is for the bacteria involved
Dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium Dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA), or nitrate/nitrite ammonification, is an
anaerobic respiration process. Microbes which undertake DNRA oxidise organic matter and use nitrate as an electron acceptor, reducing it to
nitrite, then
ammonium (). Some bacteria -
Nitrospira - oxidize ammonia to nitrate. The combined process is called
COMAMMOX = "COMplete AMMonia OXidation." Comammox is in many
ecosystems, for example,
freshwater. Comammox have been found it could be used in wastewater treatment.
Anaerobic ammonia oxidation The ANaerobic AMMonia OXidation process is also known as the
ANAMMOX process, an abbreviation coined by joining the first
syllables of each of these three words. This biological process is a
redox comproportionation reaction, in which
ammonia (the
reducing agent giving electrons) and
nitrite (the
oxidizing agent accepting electrons) transfer three
electrons and are converted into one molecule of
diatomic nitrogen () gas and two water molecules. This process makes up a major proportion of nitrogen conversion in the
oceans. The
stoichiometrically balanced formula for the ANAMMOX chemical reaction can be written as following, where an
ammonium ion includes the ammonia molecule, its
conjugated base: : (Δ
G° = ). == Marine nitrogen cycle ==