Arttical on anaerobic resprition
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anaerobic respiration is the type of respiration it doesn't use oxygen it is used when there not enough to use oxygen for aerobic respiration
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Anaerobic respiration is widespread in the two domains of prokaryotes: the Bacteria and the Archaea. In anaerobic environments sulfate serves as terminal electron acceptor and is reduced to sulfide, giving rise to both the formation of metal sulfides in sediments and the evolution of hydrogen sulfide gas. Anaerobic respiration processes are involved in a wide range of reactions involving oxidized ions of metals (iron, manganese, chromium, uranium and others) and metalloids (arsenic, selenium). Anaerobic respiration has important economic implications, both favourable (e.g. conversion of bound nitrogen to nitrogen gas in water purification plants) and unfavourable (e.g. loss of available nitrogen in agricultural soils, corrosion of steel pipes mediated by sulfate‐reducing bacteria).
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Anaerobic respiration is widespread in the two domains of prokaryotes: the Bacteria and the Archaea. In anaerobic environments sulfate serves as terminal electron acceptor and is reduced to sulfide, giving rise to both the formation of metal sulfides in sediments and the evolution of hydrogen sulfide gas. Anaerobic respiration processes are involved in a wide range of reactions involving oxidized ions of metals (iron, manganese, chromium, uranium and others) and metalloids (arsenic, selenium). Anaerobic respiration has important economic implications, both favourable (e.g. conversion of bound nitrogen to nitrogen gas in water purification plants) and unfavourable (e.g. loss of available nitrogen in agricultural soils, corrosion of steel pipes mediated by sulfate‐reducing bacteria).
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