International audienceWe evaluated whether and how rapidly temperate forest tree species able to stimulate or inhibit nitrification (through biological nitrification inhibition, BNI) also influence denitrifier activity and abundance in soil and identified the main determinants of changes in denitrification. A reciprocal soil core transfer approach was implemented at a long-term experimental site between Douglas fir, a species assumed to stimulate nitrification, and stands of tree species with (spruce and Nordmann fir) or without (Corsican pine and beech) BNI capacity. Sixteen months after soil transfer, potential denitrification decreased in soils transferred from Douglas fir to another tree species and increased in soil cores transferred f...
Nitrification is the biological conversion of organic or inorganic nitrogen compounds from a reduced...
Uptake of ammonium and nitrate by the roots of spruce trees at a N-limited control site and a site s...
Australian native species grow competitively in nutrient limited environments, par- ticularly in nit...
International audienceSome forest tree species are able to carry out a process known as biological n...
International audienceSome temperate tree species are associated with very low soil nitrification ra...
Some temperate tree species are associated with very low soil nitrification rates, with important im...
For forest ecosystems, the relationship between root biomass, root growth and soil nitrification is ...
Douglas fir trees presumable stimulate nitrification in the soil. We studied in 21 French Douglas fi...
International audienceBiological nitrification inhibition (BNI) has already led to several studies m...
Nitrification occurs slowly in many acid Scots pine forest soils. We examined if bacterial community...
Little is known about how above-ground vegetation may differentially influence the below-ground micr...
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii [Mirb.] Franco) is the most common utilized introduced tree speci...
International audienceThe effects of five different tree species common in the temperate zone, i.e. ...
Graduation date: 2014Prior to 2005, ammonia oxidation, the first step of nitrification, was thought ...
In this study, we investigated how co-occurrence patters of ammonia and nitrite oxidizers, which dri...
Nitrification is the biological conversion of organic or inorganic nitrogen compounds from a reduced...
Uptake of ammonium and nitrate by the roots of spruce trees at a N-limited control site and a site s...
Australian native species grow competitively in nutrient limited environments, par- ticularly in nit...
International audienceSome forest tree species are able to carry out a process known as biological n...
International audienceSome temperate tree species are associated with very low soil nitrification ra...
Some temperate tree species are associated with very low soil nitrification rates, with important im...
For forest ecosystems, the relationship between root biomass, root growth and soil nitrification is ...
Douglas fir trees presumable stimulate nitrification in the soil. We studied in 21 French Douglas fi...
International audienceBiological nitrification inhibition (BNI) has already led to several studies m...
Nitrification occurs slowly in many acid Scots pine forest soils. We examined if bacterial community...
Little is known about how above-ground vegetation may differentially influence the below-ground micr...
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii [Mirb.] Franco) is the most common utilized introduced tree speci...
International audienceThe effects of five different tree species common in the temperate zone, i.e. ...
Graduation date: 2014Prior to 2005, ammonia oxidation, the first step of nitrification, was thought ...
In this study, we investigated how co-occurrence patters of ammonia and nitrite oxidizers, which dri...
Nitrification is the biological conversion of organic or inorganic nitrogen compounds from a reduced...
Uptake of ammonium and nitrate by the roots of spruce trees at a N-limited control site and a site s...
Australian native species grow competitively in nutrient limited environments, par- ticularly in nit...