10 21 nitrogen cycle2

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Nitrogen Cycle Term: Legume

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Page 1: 10 21 Nitrogen Cycle2

Nitrogen Cycle

Term: Legume

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www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/04/090414110818.htm

• Go to sciencedaily.com & search for soybeans & aphids

• Read the Article from April 20th

• Are rhizobia specific to legume species• Do naturally occurring rhizobia or

commercially inoculated rhizobia provide better resistance?

• Does the source of the rhizobia influence the effectiveness of nitrogen fixation?

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Legumes

• Plants that have a symbiotic relationship with bacteria that grow in nodules on their roots.

• Soybeans – widely rotated with corn crops to revitalize soil

• Vetch & Clovers – Cover crops – green manure

• Clovers & Alfalfa - grown to improve hay crops & pasture.

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Other Legumes

• Red bud trees• Locust Trees• Beans• Peas• Most plants that form Pods

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Rhizobia• Rhizobia are specific to legume

species• The naturally occurring bacteria

were more effective at creating resistance against the aphid than the imported bacteria.

• Older generations of rhizobia are more effective than the new ones

• The rhizobia compete for space to grow on the roots

• Naturalized rhizobia are as effective in nitrogen fixation as the commercial ones.

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Nitrogen & Fertilizer• Industrialized countries began producing

chemical fertilizers after WWI– Haber Process

• Manufactured nitrogen begins with the production of ammonia (NH3).

• Ammonia is a gas that is produced when atmospheric N2 is combined with hydrogen from fossil fuels - also called anhydrous ammonia

• Stored under pressure• When fuel prices ↑, fertilizer prices ↑

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Ammonia Fertilizers

NH3

Nitric Acid

Sulfuric Acid

Phosphoric Acid

Carbon Dioxide

Anhydrous Ammonia

Ammonium Nitrate

Ammonium Sulfate

Ammonium Phosphate

Urea

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Nitrogen Fixation

• Conversion of Inert N2 into bio-usable forms

• atmospheric fixation by lightning • biological fixation by certain microbes

– alone– symbiotic relationship with some plants and

animals • industrial fixation – Haber Process

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Nitrification

• Nitrification – whatever form of ammonia is applied to the soil, it must be converted to be used by plants– NH3 + Nitrosomonas → NO2

– NO2 + Nitrobacter → NO3

• NO3 Very soluble form– Only held loosely by soil colloids (clay & humus)– ~ 5% of NO3 dissolves in water and is lost by leaching

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Denitrification

• In saturated soils• Anaerobic Conditions (No oxygen)• Bacteria convert NO3 to elemental

Nitrogen (N2) which is a gas and returns to atmosphere

• 30 -40% of applied Nitrogen if area has been flooded for 3-5 days

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Volatilization

• Occurs when urea is converted to ammonium carbonate

• Ammonium carbonate breaks down in warm moist soils to ammonia gas and carbon dioxide

• Ammonia gas evaporates into the atmosphere.

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Decay• The proteins made by plants enter and pass

through food webs just as carbohydrates do. • At each trophic level, their metabolism produces

organic nitrogen compounds that return to the environment, chiefly in excretions.

• The final beneficiaries of these materials are microorganisms of decay.

• They break down the molecules in excretions and dead organisms into ammonia.

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Carbon – Nitrogen Ratio• The rate of decomposition of decaying plants

depends on the C:N ratio• C:N ratios of 25:1 or less decompose quickly

and make Nitrogen available to plants (mineralization)

• C:N ratios of 25:1 or more cannot decompose with out drawing nitrogen out of the soil (immobilization)

• Humus has a C:N ratio of 12:1 and has completely decomposed

• Implications for mulch and composting

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The Nitrogen Cycle

• N2 - Nitrogen Gas 78% of air - Inert

• NH4 – Ammonium ion – Made by bacteria

• NH3 – Ammonia - Made by Haber-Bosch process. Industrial N fixation

• NO2 – Nitrite ion – Very toxic to plants – Bacteria convert it to Nitrate

• NO3 – Nitrate ion – Form used by plants Very soluble – quickly leaches out of soil

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