Nitrogen (N2) is always in the atmosphere however if you are talking about how it gets released into the atmosphere after it is fixated by lightning absorbed by plants and eaten by 1st level consumers when they or the plant itself decomposes nitrogen it is released back into atmosphere.
That's the short of it. Go to wikipedia or read a ecology journal if you wan't to know all the chemicals, reactions, etc in the process
-MD
Nitrogen is returned to the atmosphere through the process of denitrification, where bacteria convert nitrates in the soil back into nitrogen gas. This process completes the nitrogen cycle as nitrogen is released back into the atmosphere as a gas.
Nitrogen is returned to the atmosphere by a process called denitrification, where certain bacteria convert nitrates in the soil back into nitrogen gas which is then released into the air. This helps maintain the balance of nitrogen in the environment cyclically.
The form of nitrogen that is beneficial for the atmosphere is nitrogen gas (N2).
Denitrifying bacteria, such as Pseudomonas and Paracoccus species, carry out the process of denitrification, converting nitrates in the soil into free nitrogen gas. This process helps to return nitrogen gas back to the atmosphere, completing the nitrogen cycle.
The process of bacteria turning usable nitrogen into nitrogen gas is called denitrification. This occurs when certain bacteria convert nitrates or nitrites back into nitrogen gas, which is released into the atmosphere. This can result in a loss of available nitrogen for plants and other organisms.
Denitrification which is the process of nitrofen returning to the atmosphere which also involes denitrifying bacteria( convert nitrate back into nitrogen gas)
The process that releases nitrogen gas into the atmosphere is called nitrogen fixation. This process involves converting atmospheric nitrogen into forms that plants can use, either through natural processes like lightning or through human activities like industrial manufacturing. Once nitrogen is fixed, it can be taken up by plants and eventually returned to the atmosphere through processes like denitrification.
Atmosphere causes 78% nitrogen to be released as a gas
When organisms die, decomposers return nitrogen to the soil as ammonia. The ammonia may be taken up again by producers. Other soil bacteria convert nitrates into nitrogen gas in a process called denitrifrication. this process releases nitrogen into the atmosphere once again.
Converting nitrogen from a gas to a usable form by bacteria? It is either archaebacteria or eubacteria. I'm stuck on this exact question. My guess is archaebacteria since it is the most ancient bacteria. All forms of life use nitrogen and the beginning of life goes way back AARON T that's me
Nitrogen fixation is the process by which nitrogen gas is converted into a form that plants can use, predominantly by nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Denitrification is the process by which nitrogen is released from soil back into the atmosphere in the form of nitrogen gas.
Nitrogen is returned to the atmosphere through the process of denitrification, where bacteria convert nitrates in the soil back into nitrogen gas. This process completes the nitrogen cycle as nitrogen is released back into the atmosphere as a gas.
The process that returns nitrogen to the atmosphere is called denitrification. This biological process is carried out by certain bacteria that convert nitrates and nitrites in the soil back into nitrogen gas (Nā), which is then released into the atmosphere. Denitrification is a crucial part of the nitrogen cycle, helping to maintain the balance of nitrogen in ecosystems.
Nitrogen is returned to the atmosphere by a process called denitrification, where certain bacteria convert nitrates in the soil back into nitrogen gas which is then released into the air. This helps maintain the balance of nitrogen in the environment cyclically.
The process that has changed the percentage of nitrogen in the Earth's atmosphere is biological nitrogen fixation, where certain bacteria convert nitrogen gas into a form that plants can use. This has led to an increase in nitrogen levels over time.
called denitrification. This process releases nitrogen gas back into the atmosphere, completing the nitrogen cycle. Denitrification occurs under anaerobic conditions where bacteria use nitrates as an alternative electron acceptor in the absence of oxygen.
The most abundant gas in the Earth's atmosphere is nitrogen.