TY - JOUR
T1 - Nitrogen cycling in a deep ocean margin sediment (Sagami Bay, Japan)
AU - Glud, Ronnie Nøhr
AU - Thamdrup, C.
AU - Stahl, H
AU - Wenzhofer, F.
AU - Glud, A.
AU - Nomaki, H.
AU - Oguri, K.
AU - Revsbech, N. P.
AU - Kitazato, H.
N1 - KeyWords Plus: ANAEROBIC AMMONIUM OXIDATION; ISOTOPE PAIRING TECHNIQUE; MARINE-SEDIMENTS; IN-SITU; ESTUARINE SEDIMENT; COASTAL SEDIMENT; OXYGEN-UPTAKE; CONTINENTAL-MARGIN; SINKING PARTICLES; ORGANIC-MATTER
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - On the basis of in situ NO3- microprofiles and chamber incubations complemented by laboratory-based assessments of anammox and denitrification we evaluate the nitrogen turnover of an ocean margin sediment at 1450-m water depth. In situ NO3- profiles horizontally separated by 12 mm reflected highly variable NO3- penetration depths, NO3- consumption rates, and nitrification. On average the turnover time of the pore-water NO3- pool was similar to 0.2 d. Net release of NH4+ during mineralization (0.95 mmol m(-2) d(-1)) sustained a net efflux of ammonia (53%), nitrification (24%), and anammox activity (23%). The sediment had a relatively high in situ net influx of NO3- (1.44 mmol m(-2) d(-1)) that balanced the N-2 production as assessed by onboard tracer experiments. N2 production was attributed to prokaryotic denitrification (59%), anammox (37%), and foraminifera-based denitrification (4%). Anammox thereby represented an important nutrient sink, but the N2 production was dominated by denitrification. Despite the fact that NO3- stored inside foraminifera represented similar to 80% of the total benthic NO3- pool, the slow intracellular NO3- turnover that, on average, sustained foraminifera metabolism for 12-52 d, contributed only to a minor extent to the overall N-2 production. The microbial activity in the surface sediment is a net nutrient sink of similar to 1.1 mmol N m(-2) d(-1), which aligns with many studies performed in coastal and shelf environments. Continental margin areas can act as significant N sinks and play an important role in regional N budgets.
AB - On the basis of in situ NO3- microprofiles and chamber incubations complemented by laboratory-based assessments of anammox and denitrification we evaluate the nitrogen turnover of an ocean margin sediment at 1450-m water depth. In situ NO3- profiles horizontally separated by 12 mm reflected highly variable NO3- penetration depths, NO3- consumption rates, and nitrification. On average the turnover time of the pore-water NO3- pool was similar to 0.2 d. Net release of NH4+ during mineralization (0.95 mmol m(-2) d(-1)) sustained a net efflux of ammonia (53%), nitrification (24%), and anammox activity (23%). The sediment had a relatively high in situ net influx of NO3- (1.44 mmol m(-2) d(-1)) that balanced the N-2 production as assessed by onboard tracer experiments. N2 production was attributed to prokaryotic denitrification (59%), anammox (37%), and foraminifera-based denitrification (4%). Anammox thereby represented an important nutrient sink, but the N2 production was dominated by denitrification. Despite the fact that NO3- stored inside foraminifera represented similar to 80% of the total benthic NO3- pool, the slow intracellular NO3- turnover that, on average, sustained foraminifera metabolism for 12-52 d, contributed only to a minor extent to the overall N-2 production. The microbial activity in the surface sediment is a net nutrient sink of similar to 1.1 mmol N m(-2) d(-1), which aligns with many studies performed in coastal and shelf environments. Continental margin areas can act as significant N sinks and play an important role in regional N budgets.
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0024-3590
VL - 54
SP - 723
EP - 734
JO - Limnology and Oceanography
JF - Limnology and Oceanography
IS - 3
ER -