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Denitrification in freshwater and coastal marine ecosystems: Ecological and geochemical significance

TLDR
Denitrification occurs in essentially all river, lake, and coastal marine ecosystems that have been studied as discussed by the authors, and the major source of nitrate for denitrification in most river and lake sediments underlying an aerobic water column is nitrate produced in the sediments, not nitrate diffusing into the overlying water.
Abstract
Denitrification occurs in essentially all river, lake, and coastal marine ecosystems that have been studied. In general, the range of denitrification rates measured in coastal marine sediments is greater than that measured in lake or river sediments. In various estuarine and coastal marine sediments, rates commonly range between 50 and 250 µmol N m−2 h−1, with extremes from 0 to 1,067. Rates of denitrification in lake sediments measured at near-ambient conditions range from 2 to 171 µmol N m−2 h−1. Denitrification rates in river and stream sediments range from 0 to 345 µmol N m−2 h−1. The higher rates are from systems that receive substantial amounts of anthropogenic nutrient input. In lakes, denitrification also occurs in low oxygen hypolimnetic waters, where rates generally range from 0.2 to 1.9 µmol N liter−1 d−1. In lakes where denitrification rates in both the water and sediments have been measured, denitrification is greater in the sediments. The major source of nitrate for denitrification in most river, lake, and coastal marine sediments underlying an aerobic water column is nitrate produced in the sediments, not nitrate diffusing into the sediments from the overlying water. During the mineralization of organic matter in sediments, a major portion of the mineralized nitrogen is lost from the ecosystem via denitrification. In freshwater sediments, denitrification appears to remove a larger percentage of the mineralized nitrogen. N2 fluxes accounted for 76–100% of the sediment-water nitrogen flux in rivers and lakes, but only 15–70% in estuarine and coastal marine sediments. Benthic N2O fluxes were always small compared to N, fluxes. The loss of nitrogen via denitrification exceeds the input of nitrogen via N2 fixation in almost all river, lake, and coastal marine ecosystems in which both processes have been measured. Denitrification is also important relative to other inputs of fixed N in both freshwater and coastal marine ecosystems. In the two rivers where both denitrification measurements and N input data were available, denitrification removed an amount of nitrogen equivalent to 7 and 35% of the external nitrogen loading. In six lakes and six estuaries where data are available, denitrification is estimated to remove an amount of nitrogen equivalent to between 1 and 36% of the input to the lakes and between 20 and 50% of the input to the estuaries.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen cycles: past, present, and future

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the natural and anthropogenic controls on the conversion of unreactive N2 to more reactive forms of nitrogen (Nr) and found that human activities increasingly dominate the N budget at the global and at most regional scales, and the terrestrial and open ocean N budgets are essentially dis-connected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen limitation on land and in the sea: How can it occur?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine both how the biogeochemistry of the nitrogen cycle could cause limitation to develop, and how nitrogen limitation could persist as a consequence of processes that prevent or reduce nitrogen fixation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ubiquity and diversity of ammonia-oxidizing archaea in water columns and sediments of the ocean

TL;DR: Using PCR primers designed to specifically target archaeal amoA, AOA is found to be pervasive in areas of the ocean that are critical for the global nitrogen cycle, including the base of the euphotic zone, suboxic water columns, and estuarine and coastal sediments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Denitrification across landscapes and waterscapes: a synthesis.

TL;DR: It is suggested that terrestrial, freshwater, and marine systems in which denitrification occurs can be organized along a continuum ranging from (1) those in which nitrification and Denitrification are tightly coupled in space and time to (2) thoseIn aquatic ecosystems, N inputs influenceDenitrification rates whereas hydrology and geomorphology influence the proportion of N inputs that are denitrified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eutrophication of lakes cannot be controlled by reducing nitrogen input: Results of a 37-year whole-ecosystem experiment

TL;DR: Reducing nitrogen inputs increasingly favored nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria as a response by the phytoplankton community to extreme seasonal nitrogen limitation, and the lake remained highly eutrophic, despite showing indications of extreme nitrogen limitation seasonally.
References
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Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Eutrophication in the Coastal Marine Environment

TL;DR: Removal of phosphate from detergents is not likely to slow the eutrophication of coastal marine waters, and its replacement with nitrogen-containing nitrilotriacetic acid may worsen the situation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of nitrogen oxides on the atmospheric ozone content

TL;DR: In this paper, the probable importance of NO and NO2 in controlling the ozone concentrations and production rates in the stratosphere is pointed out and some processes which may lead to production of nitric acid are discussed.
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Production of NO2- and N2O by Nitrifying Bacteria at Reduced Concentrations of Oxygen

TL;DR: The results support the view that nitrification is an important source of N(2)O in the environment and that nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (Nitrobacter sp.) and the dinoflagellate Exuviaella sp.
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Acetylene inhibition of nitrous oxide reduction by denitrifying bacteria.

TL;DR: The data are consistent with the view that N/ Sub 2/O is an obligatory intermediate in the reduction of NO/sub 2//sup -/ to N/ sub 2/ in all of the three organisms studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of microbial dynamics in marine and freshwater sediments: Contrasts in anaerobic carbon catabolism1

TL;DR: The microbiota of freshwater and marine sediments serve similar roles in carbon degradation and nutrient regeneration, however, because of differences in the chemical environment between freshwater and Marine systems, distinct physiological groups of bacteria dominate terminal carbon catabolism in each system.
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