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Anammox and denitrification separately dominate microbial N-loss in water saturated and unsaturated soils horizons of riparian zones.

Authors :
Wang, Shanyun
Wang, Weidong
Zhao, Siyan
Wang, Xiaomin
Hefting, Mariet M.
Schwark, Lorenz
Zhu, Guibing
Source :
Water Research. Oct2019, Vol. 162, p139-150. 12p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Fertilized agroecosystems may show considerable leaching of the mobile nitrogen (N) compound NO 3 −, which pollutes groundwater and causes eutrophication of downstream waterbodies. Riparian buffer zones, positioned between terrestrial and aquatic environments, effectively remove NO 3 − and serve as a hotspot for N 2 O emissions. However, microbial processes governing NO 3 − reduction in riparian zones still remain largely unclear. This study explored the underlying mechanisms of various N-loss processes in riparian soil horizons using isotopic tracing techniques, molecular assays, and high-throughput sequencing. Both anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) and denitrification activity were maximized in the riparian fringe rather than in the central zones. Denitrifying anaerobic methane oxidation (damo) process was not detected. Interestingly, both contrasting microbial habitats were separated by a groundwater table, which forms an important biogeochemical interface. Denitrification dominated cumulative N-losses in the upper unsaturated soil, while anammox dominated the lower oxic saturated soil horizons. Archaeal and bacterial ammonium oxidation that couple dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) with a high cell-specific rate promoted anammox even further in oxic subsurface horizons. High-throughput sequencing and network analysis showed that the anammox rate positively correlated with Candidatus 'Kuenenia' (4%), rather than with the dominant Candidatus 'Brocadia'. The contribution to N-loss via anammox increased significantly with the water level, which was accompanied by a significant reduction of N 2 O emission (∼39.3 ± 10.6%) since N-loss by anammox does not cause N 2 O emissions. Hence, water table management in riparian ecotones can be optimized to reduce NO 3 − pollution by shifting from denitrification to the environmentally friendly anammox pathway to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. Image 1 • Horizontally anammox and denitrification rate maximized in riparian fringe zones. • Denitrification and anammox separately dominate N-loss in upper unsaturated and lower saturated soil horizons. • Anammox contribution increased with water-level rising accompanied with N 2 O reduction. • Optimizing water-table management can reduce NO 3 − moreover mitigating N 2 O emission. • Ammonium oxidation coupling DNRA promote anammox in riparian zones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
162
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137591172
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.06.052