Biology, asked by nightread, 1 month ago

What is the difference between Nitrogen Fixation and Ammonification? What is the end product of both the processes?

Answers

Answered by khushikhan692
2

Answer:

Nitrogen fixation is the process by which atmospheric N2 is converted ultimately to ammonia. Ammonification is the breakdown of organic matter in which the nitrogen was already “fixed”.

Answered by sharmamanasvi007
6

Answer:

Nitrogen fixing is converting nitrogen into nitrogen-containing compounds.

Ammonification is when the organic ammonium is converted into ammonia.

Nitrogen fixation, any natural or industrial process that causes free nitrogen (N2), which is a relatively inert gas plentiful in air, to combine chemically with other elements to form more-reactive nitrogen compounds such as ammonia, nitrates, or nitrites.

Ammonification is the process by which the organically bound nitrogen of microbial, plant, and animal biomass is recycled after their death. Ammonification is carried out by a diverse array of microorganisms that perform ecological decay services, and its product is ammonia or ammonium ion.

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