TY - JOUR
T1 - Denitrification-nitrification process in permeable coastal sediments
T2 - An investigation on the effect of salinity and nitrate availability using flow-through reactors
AU - Jiang, Shan
AU - Kavanagh, Mark
AU - Ibánhez, Juan Severino Pino
AU - Rocha, Carlos
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Chinese Society for Oceanography and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2021/9
Y1 - 2021/9
N2 - Permeable coastal sediments act as a reactive node in the littoral zone, transforming nutrients via a wide range of biogeochemical reactions. Reaction rates are controlled by abiotic factors, e.g., salinity, temperature or solute concentration. Here, a series of incubation experiments, using flow-through reactors, were conducted to simulate the biogeochemical cycling of nitrate (NO3−) and phosphorus (P) in permeable sediments under different NO3− availability conditions (factor I) along a salinity gradient (admixture of river and seawater, factor II). In an oligotrophic scenario, i.e., unamended NO3− concentrations in both river and seawater, sediments acted as a permanent net source of NO3− to the water column. The peak production rate occurred at an intermediate salinity (20). Increasing NO3− availability in river water significantly enhanced net NO3− removal rates within the salinity range of 0 to 30, likely via the denitrification pathway based on the sediment microbiota composition. In this scenario, the most active removal was obtained at salinity of 10. When both river and seawater were spiked with NO3, the highest removal rate switched to the highest salinity (36). It suggests the salinity preference of the NO3− removal pathway by local denitrifiers (e.g., Bacillus and Paracoccus) and that NO3− removal in coastal sediments can be significantly constrained by the dilution related NO3− availability. Compared with the obtained variation for NO3− reactions, permeable sediments acted as a sink of soluble reactive P in all treatments, regardless of salinity and NO3− input concentrations, indicating a possibility of P-deficiency for coastal water from the intensive cycling in permeable sediments. Furthermore, the net production of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in all treatments was positively correlated with the measured NO3− reaction rates, indicating that the DOC supply may not be the key factor for NO3− removal rates due to the consumption by intensive aerobic respiration. Considering the intensive production of recalcitrant carbon solutes, the active denitrification was assumed to be supported by sedimentary organic matter.
AB - Permeable coastal sediments act as a reactive node in the littoral zone, transforming nutrients via a wide range of biogeochemical reactions. Reaction rates are controlled by abiotic factors, e.g., salinity, temperature or solute concentration. Here, a series of incubation experiments, using flow-through reactors, were conducted to simulate the biogeochemical cycling of nitrate (NO3−) and phosphorus (P) in permeable sediments under different NO3− availability conditions (factor I) along a salinity gradient (admixture of river and seawater, factor II). In an oligotrophic scenario, i.e., unamended NO3− concentrations in both river and seawater, sediments acted as a permanent net source of NO3− to the water column. The peak production rate occurred at an intermediate salinity (20). Increasing NO3− availability in river water significantly enhanced net NO3− removal rates within the salinity range of 0 to 30, likely via the denitrification pathway based on the sediment microbiota composition. In this scenario, the most active removal was obtained at salinity of 10. When both river and seawater were spiked with NO3, the highest removal rate switched to the highest salinity (36). It suggests the salinity preference of the NO3− removal pathway by local denitrifiers (e.g., Bacillus and Paracoccus) and that NO3− removal in coastal sediments can be significantly constrained by the dilution related NO3− availability. Compared with the obtained variation for NO3− reactions, permeable sediments acted as a sink of soluble reactive P in all treatments, regardless of salinity and NO3− input concentrations, indicating a possibility of P-deficiency for coastal water from the intensive cycling in permeable sediments. Furthermore, the net production of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in all treatments was positively correlated with the measured NO3− reaction rates, indicating that the DOC supply may not be the key factor for NO3− removal rates due to the consumption by intensive aerobic respiration. Considering the intensive production of recalcitrant carbon solutes, the active denitrification was assumed to be supported by sedimentary organic matter.
KW - NO production and removal
KW - flow-through reactors
KW - permeable sediments
KW - salinity
KW - stable isotopes
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85109377029
U2 - 10.1007/s13131-021-1811-5
DO - 10.1007/s13131-021-1811-5
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85109377029
SN - 0253-505X
VL - 40
JO - Acta Oceanologica Sinica
JF - Acta Oceanologica Sinica
IS - 9
ER -