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Urease activity in soils

โœ Scribed by A. B. Lloyd; M. Jane Sheaffe


Publisher
Springer
Year
1973
Tongue
English
Weight
433 KB
Volume
39
Category
Article
ISSN
0032-079X

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โœฆ Synopsis


Bacteria which can hydrolyse urea are common in soils. Of six soils examined, some 17--30 per cent of the total bacterial populations, including aerobes, micro-aerophiles and anaerobes, could hydrolyse urea. One of the soils had been enriched with urea for at least ten years, yet the proportion of ureolytic bacteria (24 per cent) was similar to that of normal soils.

Addition of urea to a red-yellow podzolic soil low in available carbon and under different moisture conditions did not increase the total urease activity, the size of the bacterial population or the ratio of ureolytic to non-ureolytic bacteria. However, when available carbon as glucose was added with urea to this soil, nrease activity and size of the bacterial population both increased, but the ratio of ureolytic to non-ureolytic bacteria in the population remained unchanged.


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Urease activity in mammals
๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1944 ๐Ÿ› Elsevier Science ๐ŸŒ English โš– 389 KB

urea is a waste product in the nitrogen metabolism of mammals, and is excreted as such in the urine. This assumption has been supported by the fact that most attempts to demonstrate urease activity in the animal body failed or only a very slight activity could be demonstrated (T.