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Carbon-to-nitrogen ratio is a poor predictor of low molecular weight organic nitrogen mineralization in soil
Authors:P. Roberts  R. Stockdale  Z. Iqbal  D.L. Jones
Affiliation:a School of the Environment & Natural Resources, Bangor University, Thoday Building, Deiniol Road, Bangor, Gwynedd LL57 2UW, UK
b Institute of Soil & Environmental Science, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Pakistan
c Nuclear Institute for Agriculture and Biology (NIAB), Faisalabad, Pakistan
Abstract:Carbon-to-nitrogen ratio (C:N) has frequently been shown to be a good predictor of the speed of organic residue decomposition and N mineralization in soil. While this relationship appears to work well for complex organic materials (e.g. plant litter), its applicability to smaller organic substrates containing N remains unknown. Here we evaluated whether the intrinsic properties of amino acids and peptides could be used to predict their rate of microbial uptake and subsequent N mineralization. In an agricultural grassland soil we found that C:N, molecular weight, aromaticity and sulphur content provided poor indicators of amino acid bioavailabilityand subsequent NH4+ release into soil. We therefore hypothesize that the position of amino acids along microbial biosynthetic pathways together with internal demand for individual amino acids rather than their C or N content is the primary determinant of N mineralization.
Keywords:Ammonification   Carbon mineralization   Dissolved organic nitrogen   DON   Nitrate   Nitrification   Nitrogen cycling
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