Nutrient Mineralization and Immobilization
Mineralization and immobilization are the opposing microbial processes that convert nutrients between organic and inorganic forms, governing how much of the nutrient pool is available to plants at any time.
Definition
Mineralization is the microbial conversion of nutrients held in organic matter into soluble inorganic forms such as ammonium and phosphate; immobilization is the uptake of those inorganic nutrients into microbial biomass, temporarily removing them from the available pool.
Scope
This topic covers the microbial conversion of organic nutrients into plant-available mineral forms (mineralization) and the reverse assimilation of mineral nutrients into microbial biomass (immobilization), the controlling role of the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of residues, and the net release of nitrogen and other nutrients. It links decomposition to nutrient supply.
Core questions
- How do microbes convert organic nutrients into plant-available forms?
- What is immobilization and when does it dominate?
- How does the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of residues control net release?
- How do mineralization and immobilization determine nutrient timing?
Key concepts
- Mineralization of nitrogen and phosphorus
- Immobilization into microbial biomass
- Net mineralization and net immobilization
- Carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of residues
- Decomposition and nutrient release
- Microbial biomass turnover
Key theories
- Mineralization-immobilization turnover
- Mineralization and immobilization occur simultaneously, and their net balance, whether nutrients are released or tied up, depends on the energy and nutrient content of the substrate microbes are decomposing.
- Carbon-to-nitrogen ratio control
- When residues have a high carbon-to-nitrogen ratio, microbes draw mineral nitrogen from the soil to build biomass (net immobilization); when the ratio is low, surplus nitrogen is released (net mineralization), so residue quality governs nutrient timing.
Mechanisms
As microbes decompose organic residues for energy, they break the bonds holding nutrients, releasing surplus nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur as mineral ions when the substrate contains more nutrients than the microbes need. If the substrate is rich in carbon but poor in nutrients, microbes scavenge mineral nutrients from the soil solution to build their biomass, immobilizing them temporarily; the nutrients are released again when those microbes die and are themselves decomposed. The carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of the residue is the main control on which process dominates.
Clinical relevance
Mineralization and immobilization explain why incorporating high-carbon residues such as straw can temporarily starve a crop of nitrogen, while low-carbon residues and manures release nutrients quickly; managing residue quality and timing is central to synchronizing nutrient supply with crop demand and reducing losses.
History
The recognition that decomposition can both release and tie up nutrients, controlled by the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of organic inputs, became a foundational principle of soil fertility and nutrient management as soil biochemistry developed through the 20th century.
Key figures
- Eldor A. Paul
- Nyle C. Brady
- Ray R. Weil
Related topics
Seminal works
- paul2015
- brady2016
Frequently asked questions
- Why can adding straw to soil temporarily reduce nitrogen for crops?
- Straw has a high carbon-to-nitrogen ratio, so the microbes decomposing it need more nitrogen than the straw provides and draw mineral nitrogen from the soil into their biomass; this immobilization temporarily lowers the nitrogen available to plants until the microbes die and release it again.
- What is the difference between mineralization and immobilization?
- Mineralization converts nutrients from organic matter into plant-available inorganic forms, while immobilization does the reverse by locking inorganic nutrients into microbial biomass; both happen at once, and their net balance determines whether nutrients are released or withheld.