Protein-nucleic acid interactions play a fundamental and critical role in a wide range of life activities. Accurate identification of nucleic acid-binding residues helps to understand the intrinsic mechanisms of the interactions. However, the accuracy and interpretability of existing computational methods for recognizing nucleic acid-binding residues need to be further improved. Here, we propose a novel method called GeSite based the domain adaptive protein language model and explainable E(3)-equivariant graph convolution neural network. Prediction results across multiple benchmark test sets demonstrate that GeSite is superior or comparable to state-of-the-art prediction methods. The performance comparison on low structure similarity and newly released test proteins demonstrates the robustness and generalization of the method. Detailed experimental results suggest that the advanced performance of GeSite lies in the well-designed nucleic acid-binding protein adaptive language model. Meanwhile, interpretability analysis exposes the perception of the prediction model on various remote and close functional domains, which is the source of its discernment. The data and source code of GeSite are freely accessible athttps://github.com/pengsl-lab/GeSite.