Respuesta :
The molecules of nitrogen in the urine are broken down into ammonium. - Step 5 ("Nitrogen is found in the urine, which gets broken down into ammonium through the process of ammonification.")
Then, ammonium is converted into nitrates by nitrifying bacteria. - Step 1 ("Ammonium can be absorbed by plants, but some is converted into nitrates which are better for plants to absorb. This is called nitrification.")
There are then two ways that the cycle can take... in the one related to the deer, follows the assimilation where the plants add the nitrogen to protein. - Step 6 ("Plants absorb the ammonium and begin assimilation, the process to add the nitrogen to protein.")
The deer then eats the plants and the nitrogen is again inside it and ready to be used and again released in urine. - Step 2 ("The deer eats the plants and uses the nitrogen-containing proteins for cell growth.")
The other way that the nitrogen may take is denitrification by denitrifying bacteria. - Step 4 ("Some of the nitrates are absorbed back into plants, but denitrification breaks down the nitrates into nitrogen gas released back into the atmosphere.")
This gas is then captured by nitrogen fixing bacteria, called nitrogen fixation. - Step 3 ("Bacteria in the soil conduct nitrogen fixation to convert nitrogen gas from the atmosphere into ammonium.")
The ammonium is now ready again for the process of ammonification.
Then, ammonium is converted into nitrates by nitrifying bacteria. - Step 1 ("Ammonium can be absorbed by plants, but some is converted into nitrates which are better for plants to absorb. This is called nitrification.")
There are then two ways that the cycle can take... in the one related to the deer, follows the assimilation where the plants add the nitrogen to protein. - Step 6 ("Plants absorb the ammonium and begin assimilation, the process to add the nitrogen to protein.")
The deer then eats the plants and the nitrogen is again inside it and ready to be used and again released in urine. - Step 2 ("The deer eats the plants and uses the nitrogen-containing proteins for cell growth.")
The other way that the nitrogen may take is denitrification by denitrifying bacteria. - Step 4 ("Some of the nitrates are absorbed back into plants, but denitrification breaks down the nitrates into nitrogen gas released back into the atmosphere.")
This gas is then captured by nitrogen fixing bacteria, called nitrogen fixation. - Step 3 ("Bacteria in the soil conduct nitrogen fixation to convert nitrogen gas from the atmosphere into ammonium.")
The ammonium is now ready again for the process of ammonification.
Answer: Smiple verison
Explanation:
Step 1 Ammonium can be absorbed by plants, but some is converted into nitrates which are better for plants to absorb
Step 2 The deer eats the plants and uses the nitrogen-containing proteins for cell growth
Step 3 Bacteria in the soil conduct nitrogen fixation to convert nitrogen gas from the atmosphere into ammonium
Step 4 Some of the nitrates are absorbed back into plants, but denitrification breaks down the nitrates into nitrogen gas released back into the atmosphere
Step 5 Nitrogen is found in the urine, which gets broken down into ammonium through the process of ammonification
Step 6 Plants absorb the ammonium and begin assimilation, the process to add the nitrogen to protein