Aerobes (Environmental Engineering) Organisms which require molecular oxygen as an electron acceptor for energy production. See anaerobes.
Aerobic process (Environmental Engineering) A process which requires molecular oxygen.
Amino acid (Environmental Engineering) A functional group which consists of a carbon with a carboxylic acid, "-COOH" and an amine, "-NH2." These compounds are the building blocks for proteins.
Anabolism (Environmental Engineering) Biosynthesis, the production of new cellular materials from other organic or inorganic chemicals.
Anaerobes (Environmental Engineering) A group of organisms that do not require molecular oxygen. These organisms, as well as all known life forms, require oxygen. These organisms obtain their oxygen from inorganic ions such as nitrate or sulfate or from protein.
Anaerobic process (Environmental Engineering) A process which only occurs in the absence of molecular oxygen.
Anoxic process (Environmental Engineering) A process which occurs only at very low levels of molecular oxygen or in the absence of molecular oxygen.
Autotrophic (Environmental Engineering) Organisms which utilize inorganic carbon for synthesis of protoplasm. Ecologists narrow the definition further by requiring that autotrophs obtain their energy from the sun. In microbiologist parlance, this would be a photoautotroph. See photoautotrophic and chemoautotrophic.
Biosynthesis (Environmental Engineering) Catabolism, the production of new cellular materials from other organic or inorganic chemicals.
Catabolism (Environmental Engineering) The production of energy by the degradation of organic compounds.
Browse Dictionary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z