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denitrifying

Denitrifying describes processes or organisms that perform denitrification, the microbial reduction of oxidized nitrogen compounds, primarily nitrate (NO3−), to nitrogen gases such as nitrogen (N2) or to nitrous oxide (N2O), under low-oxygen or anaerobic conditions. Denitrification is a key part of the nitrogen cycle, helping to return bioavailable nitrogen to the atmosphere and regulating nitrate levels in soils, sediments, and water bodies. Denitrifying organisms are mostly bacteria, including many facultative anaerobes, and some archaea.

The typical pathway proceeds in steps: nitrate to nitrite, nitrite to nitric oxide, nitric oxide to nitrous

Ecological and environmental significance: Denitrification removes nitrate from soils and water, reducing eutrophication and drinking-water pollution.

Factors affecting rates include carbon availability, electron donor quality, redox potential, pH, temperature, nitrate concentration, and

oxide,
and
nitrous
oxide
to
nitrogen
gas.
Each
step
is
catalyzed
by
specific
enzymes:
nitrate
reductase,
nitrite
reductase,
nitric
oxide
reductase,
and
nitrous
oxide
reductase.
Electron
donors
are
usually
organic
carbon
compounds
or
hydrogen,
and
the
process
occurs
under
anoxic
conditions
where
oxygen
is
scarce
or
absent.
Denitrifiers
are
common
in
soils,
sediments,
wetlands,
and
wastewater
treatment
systems.
Some
bacteria
perform
complete
denitrification
to
N2,
while
others
accumulate
N2O
if
the
final
step
is
inhibited
or
limited.
However,
nitrous
oxide
is
a
potent
greenhouse
gas,
so
incomplete
denitrification
or
conditions
that
favor
N2O
production
can
contribute
to
atmospheric
emissions.
In
wastewater
treatment,
controlled
denitrification
is
used
to
remove
nitrate
from
effluents;
some
systems
operate
under
anoxic
conditions
to
achieve
this.
competing
microbial
processes.
Measurement
often
involves
gas
analysis
for
N2
and
N2O
or
indirect
assays
of
nitrate
and
nitrite.
Denitrifying
organisms
play
a
central
role
in
environmental
nitrogen
cycling
and
have
applications
in
bioremediation
and
wastewater
treatment.