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Adjustment of microbial nitrogen use efficiency to carbon:nitrogen imbalances regulates soil nitrogen cycling

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  • Maria Mooshammer
  • Wolfgang Wanek
  • Ieda Hämmerle
  • Lucia Fuchslueger
  • Florian Hofhansl
  • Anna Knoltsch
  • Jörg Schnecker
  • Mounir Takriti
  • Margarete Watzka
  • Birgit Wild
  • Katharina M Keiblinger
  • Sophie Zechmeister-Boltenstern
  • Andreas Richter
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Article number3694
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>16/04/2014
<mark>Journal</mark>Nature Communications
Volume5
Number of pages7
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Microbial nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) describes the partitioning of organic N taken up between growth and the release of inorganic N to the environment (that is, N mineralization), and is thus central to our understanding of N cycling. Here we report empirical evidence that microbial decomposer communities in soil and plant litter regulate their NUE. We find that microbes retain most immobilized organic N (high NUE), when they are N limited, resulting in low N mineralization. However, when the metabolic control of microbial decomposers switches from N to C limitation, they release an increasing fraction of organic N as ammonium (low NUE). We conclude that the regulation of NUE is an essential strategy of microbial communities to cope with resource imbalances, independent of the regulation of microbial carbon use efficiency, with significant effects on terrestrial N cycling.