<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14942032#post14942032 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by capn_hylinur
I thought there were three strains
aerobic converting ammonia to nitrites
anerobic converting nitrites to nitrates
anoxic converting the nitrates to nitrogen gas.
It seems there is a general misconception in this thread.
When dealing with the nitrogen cycle in a reef, it may be assumed that there are
nitrifiers and
denitrifiers*.
Nitrifiers oxidize ammonia to nitrite, and then separately nitrite to nitrate. These bacteria are aerobic autotrophs. They are aerobic in that oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor, and autotrophic in that they use inorganic carbon (alkalinity) as their carbon source. Ammonia or nitrite, depending on the bacteria, are the electron donors. These bacteria are always aerobic, as oxygen must be the terminal electron acceptor.
Denitrifiers use a variety of pathways to reduce nitrate to ammonia or nitrogen gas. These bacteria are anaerobic bacteria, in that nitrate (and not oxygen) is the terminal electron acceptor. I will have to go check, but from a reefkeeping perspective, these bacteria are also likely to be exclusively heterotrophs, meaning they must use organic carbon as their carbon source. The organic carbon also serves as the electron donor and energy source.
While denitrifying bacteria are anaerobic, they live in anoxic (not anaerobic regions). This is where people tend to get confused.
Microorganisms are aerobic or anaerobic depending on whether they use oxygen or another oxidized molecule as the terminal electron acceptor.
Waters are oxic or anoxic depending on whether dissolved oxygen is present.
Waters that are anaerobic not only lack dissolved oxygen, but a suitable electron acceptor. So in our tanks, this would have to be a region depleted of nitrate and sulfate and iron and so on, which is highly unlikely. So from a reefkeeping perspective, our waters are oxic or anoxic (and not likely anaerobic).
I hope this clears things up,
Matt
* The chances of there being nitrogen fixing bacteria actually fixing nitrogen are small, simply due to the prevalence of organic and inorganic nitrogen in our tanks. Nitrogen fixers, if given the chance, will rely on any other nitrogen source other than dinitrogen simply because nitrogen fixation is such an energy intensive process. Someone else mentioned the ammonox process a while back, but this process requires super high concentrations of ammonia that are unlikely to be seen in our reefs.