Soil Science

Nitrogen cycling (C:N < 20)

Residue breakdown

In this example, assume the residue has C:N = 15:1.

The microorganisms are composed of compounds which have C and N in a fixed ratio of about 10:1 (for bacteria). During respiration, much of the residue C is lost from the soil as CO₂, and they will actually obtain their required balance of C and N if the substrate C:N is about 20:1.

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Mineralisation

The residue contains more N than is required by the microorganisms. The excess is dumped in the soil solution as inorganic N and is available for plants to take up. This is termed mineralisation.

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Summary graph

Inorganic or plant available N increases steadily over time as the residues decompose. There are two common forms of inorganic N found in soil: ammonium ions and nitrate. N is initially mineralised as NH₄⁺, but in most soils, this is rapidly nitrified to NO₃⁻.

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