Concept information
This concept has been deprecated.
Preferred term
nitrogen fixation
Is replaced by
Definition
- [Henderson's] the process whereby atmospheric elemental nitrogen (dinitrogen, N2) is reduced to ammonia (NH3), and which is carried out in the living world only by some free-living bacteria and cyanobacteria and by a few groups of bacteria in symbiotic association with plants (the Rhizobium–legume association and the actinomycete–non-legume associations). The reaction is catalysed by the enzyme nitrogenase. Biological nitrogen fixation is the chief process by which atmospheric nitrogen enters the biosphere and becomes available as a nutrient to other organisms, although industrial nitrogen fixation is now of considerable significance. A smaller amount of atmospheric nitrogen is also fixed by conversion into nitrogen oxides by the action of lightning. see also nitrogen cycle.
Broader concept
Entry terms
- N2 fixation
Note
- [controlled by ] Staszewski 08.06.2013
Scope note
- US LTER controlled vocabulary
Creator
- herbert.schentz@umweltbundesamt.at
In other languages
-
French
URI
http://vocabs.lter-europe.net/EnvThes/USLterCV_377
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