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Ubiquity and diversity of ammonia-oxidizing archaea in water columns and sediments of the ocean

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TLDR
Using PCR primers designed to specifically target archaeal amoA, AOA is found to be pervasive in areas of the ocean that are critical for the global nitrogen cycle, including the base of the euphotic zone, suboxic water columns, and estuarine and coastal sediments.
Abstract
Nitrification, the microbial oxidation of ammonia to nitrite and nitrate, occurs in a wide variety of environments and plays a central role in the global nitrogen cycle. Catalyzed by the enzyme ammonia monooxygenase, the ability to oxidize ammonia was previously thought to be restricted to a few groups within the β- and γ-Proteobacteria. However, recent metagenomic studies have revealed the existence of unique ammonia monooxygenase α-subunit (amoA) genes derived from uncultivated, nonextremophilic Crenarchaeota. Here, we report molecular evidence for the widespread presence of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) in marine water columns and sediments. Using PCR primers designed to specifically target archaeal amoA, we find AOA to be pervasive in areas of the ocean that are critical for the global nitrogen cycle, including the base of the euphotic zone, suboxic water columns, and estuarine and coastal sediments. Diverse and distinct AOA communities are associated with each of these habitats, with little overlap between water columns and sediments. Within marine sediments, most AOA sequences are unique to individual sampling locations, whereas a small number of sequences are evidently cosmopolitan in distribution. Considering the abundance of nonextremophilic archaea in the ocean, our results suggest that AOA may play a significant, but previously unrecognized, role in the global nitrogen cycle.

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Comparison of straw-biochar-mediated changes in nitrification and ammonia oxidizers in agricultural oxisols and cambosols

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the responses of nitrification on intensively managed agricultural soils following long-term biochar (BC) amendment using 42-day aerobic incubation, quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), and clone library approach, respectively.
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Dissolved carbon fixation by sponge–microbe consortia of deep water coral mounds in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean

TL;DR: Results suggest that sponge-associated chemoautotrophic/mixotrophic nitrifying prokaryotes may contribute to the observed CO2 assimilation by sponge-microbe consortia of H. thielei and R. nodastrella.
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Effects of olive mill wastewater on soil carbon and nitrogen cycling

TL;DR: It is suggested that land application of OMW is a promising practice for OMW management, even at rates approaching the soil water holding capacity, as well as a hypothesis consistent with the decrease in total Kjeldahl nitrogen content late in the season.
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The effects of rice-straw biochar addition on nitrification activity and nitrous oxide emissions in two Oxisols

TL;DR: In this article, the interactive impacts of 1% and 5% rice-straw biochar application on nitrification, ammonia oxidizer populations and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions over short periods of microcosm incubation in two agricultural Oxisols derived from granite (RGU) and tertiary red sandstone (RTU), respectively.
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Effect of biochar on nitrous oxide emission and its potential mechanisms

TL;DR: Examination of how applications of different dose of biochar to soil affect emission of N2O and the understanding of the underlying mechanisms are improved are improved to improve the understanding on the exact mechanisms altering N 2O emission.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen cycles: past, present, and future

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the natural and anthropogenic controls on the conversion of unreactive N2 to more reactive forms of nitrogen (Nr) and found that human activities increasingly dominate the N budget at the global and at most regional scales, and the terrestrial and open ocean N budgets are essentially dis-connected.
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Archaea in coastal marine environments.

TL;DR: Evidence for the widespread occurrence of unusual archaea in oxygenated coastal surface waters of North America is provided and it is suggested that these microorganisms represent undescribed physiological types of archaea, which reside and compete with aerobic, mesophilic eubacteria in marine coastal environments.
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Isolation of an autotrophic ammonia-oxidizing marine archaeon

TL;DR: The isolation of a marine crenarchaeote that grows chemolithoautotrophically by aerobically oxidizing ammonia to nitrite—the first observation of nitrification in the Archaea is reported, suggesting that nitrifying marine Cren archaeota may be important to global carbon and nitrogen cycles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Introducing DOTUR, a Computer Program for Defining Operational Taxonomic Units and Estimating Species Richness

TL;DR: A computer program, DOTUR, is developed, which assigns sequences to OTUs by using either the furthest, average, or nearest neighbor algorithm for each distance level, which addresses the challenge of assigning sequences to operational taxonomic units (OTUs) based on the genetic distances between sequences.
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