Nitrification is the microbial conversion of reduced forms of nitrogen (N) to nitrate (NO3−), and in fertilized soils it can lead to substantial N losses via NO3− leaching or nitrous oxide (N2O) production. To limit such problems, synthetic nitrification inhibitors have been applied but their performance differs between soils. In recent years, there has been an increasing interest in the occurrence of biological nitrification inhibition (BNI), a natural phenomenon according to which certain plants can inhibit nitrification through the release of active compounds in root exudates. Here, we synthesize the current state of research but also unravel knowledge gaps in the field. The nitrification process is discussed considering recent discoveri...
Abstract \ud Nitrification inhibitors are synthetic or natural compounds highly specific in inhibit...
Agriculture and livestock production systems are two major emitters of greenhouse gases. Methane wit...
Nitrification, a step in nitrogen (N) cycle, results in gaseous N emissions and NO3- leaching. In mo...
Nitrification is the microbial conversion of reduced forms of nitrogen (N) to nitrate (NO3−), and in...
International audienceBiological nitrification inhibition (BNI) has already led to several studies m...
The natural ability of plants to release chemical substances from their roots that have a suppressin...
Human activity has had the single largest influence on the global nitrogen (N) cycle by introducing ...
Nitrogen is one of the most important nutrients for plant growth and hence heavily applied in agricu...
Background: Agriculture is the single largest geo-engineering initiative that humans have initiated ...
INTRODUCTIONNitrification is one of the main nitrogen transforming microbial processes responsible o...
Nitrogen (N), the most critical and essential nutrient for plant growth, largely determines the prod...
The capacity of several plant species or landraces to inhibit nitrification in soil (biological nitr...
Nitrogen (N), being the most critical and essential nutrient for plant growth, largely determines th...
Abstract \ud Nitrification inhibitors are synthetic or natural compounds highly specific in inhibit...
Agriculture and livestock production systems are two major emitters of greenhouse gases. Methane wit...
Nitrification, a step in nitrogen (N) cycle, results in gaseous N emissions and NO3- leaching. In mo...
Nitrification is the microbial conversion of reduced forms of nitrogen (N) to nitrate (NO3−), and in...
International audienceBiological nitrification inhibition (BNI) has already led to several studies m...
The natural ability of plants to release chemical substances from their roots that have a suppressin...
Human activity has had the single largest influence on the global nitrogen (N) cycle by introducing ...
Nitrogen is one of the most important nutrients for plant growth and hence heavily applied in agricu...
Background: Agriculture is the single largest geo-engineering initiative that humans have initiated ...
INTRODUCTIONNitrification is one of the main nitrogen transforming microbial processes responsible o...
Nitrogen (N), the most critical and essential nutrient for plant growth, largely determines the prod...
The capacity of several plant species or landraces to inhibit nitrification in soil (biological nitr...
Nitrogen (N), being the most critical and essential nutrient for plant growth, largely determines th...
Abstract \ud Nitrification inhibitors are synthetic or natural compounds highly specific in inhibit...
Agriculture and livestock production systems are two major emitters of greenhouse gases. Methane wit...
Nitrification, a step in nitrogen (N) cycle, results in gaseous N emissions and NO3- leaching. In mo...