197 research outputs found

    Toward resolving disparate accounts of the extent and magnitude of nitrogen fixation in the Eastern Tropical South Pacific oxygen deficient zone

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    © The Author(s), 2021. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Selden, C. R., Mulholland, M. R., Widner, B., Bernhardt, P., & Jayakumar, A. Toward resolving disparate accounts of the extent and magnitude of nitrogen fixation in the Eastern Tropical South Pacific oxygen deficient zone. Limnology and Oceanography, 66, (2021): 1950-1960, https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.11735.Examination of dinitrogen (N2) fixation in the Eastern Tropical South Pacific oxygen deficient zone has raised questions about the range of diazotrophs in the deep sea and their quantitative importance as a source of new nitrogen globally. However, technical considerations in the deployment of stable isotopes in quantifying N2 fixation rates have complicated interpretation of this research. Here, we report the findings of a comprehensive survey of N2 fixation within, above and below the Eastern Tropical South Pacific oxygen deficient zone. N2 fixation rates were measured using a robust 15N tracer method (bubble removal) that accounts for the slow dissolution of N2 gas and calculated using a conservative approach. N2 fixation was only detected in a subset of samples (8 of 125 replicated measurements) collected within suboxic waters (< 20 μmol O2 kg−1) or at the oxycline. Most of these detectable rates were measured at nearshore stations, or where surface productivity was high. These findings support the hypothesis that low oxygen/high organic carbon conditions favor non-cyanobacterial diazotrophs. Nevertheless, this study indicates that N2 fixation is neither widespread nor quantitatively important throughout this region.This work was funded by the National Science Foundation Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF-OCE) Grant OCE-1356056 to M.R.M. and A.J

    Multiple Metabolisms Constrain the Anaerobic Nitrite Budget in the Eastern Tropical South Pacific

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    The Eastern Tropical South Pacific is one of the three major oxygen deficient zones (ODZs) in the global ocean and is responsible for approximately one third of marine water column nitrogen loss. It is the best studied of the ODZs and, like the others, features a broad nitrite maximum across the low oxygen layer. How the microbial processes that produce and consume nitrite in anoxic waters interact to sustain this feature is unknown. Here we used 15N-tracer experiments to disentangle five of the biologically mediated processes that control the nitrite pool, including a high-resolution profile of nitrogen loss rates. Nitrate reduction to nitrite likely depended on organic matter fluxes, but the organic matter did not drive detectable rates of denitrification to N2. However, multiple lines of evidence show that denitrification is important in shaping the biogeochemistry of this ODZ. Significant rates of anaerobic nitrite oxidation at the ODZ boundaries were also measured. Lodate was a potential oxidant that could support part of this nitrite consumption pathway. We additionally observed N2 production from labeled cyanate and postulate that anammox bacteria have the ability to harness cyanate as another form of reduced nitrogen rather than relying solely on ammonification of complex organic matter. The balance of the five anaerobic rates measured—anammox, denitrification, nitrate reduction, nitrite oxidation, and dissimilatory nitrite reduction to ammonium—is sufficient to reproduce broadly the observed nitrite and nitrate profiles in a simple one-dimensional model but requires an additional source of reduced nitrogen to the deeper ODZ to avoid ammonium overconsumption. ©2017. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved

    High rates of N-2 fixation in temperate, western North Atlantic coastal waters expand the realm of marine diazotrophy

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    © The Author(s), 2019. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Mulholland, M. R., Bernhardt, P. W., Widner, B. N., Selden, C. R., Chappell, P. D., Clayton, S., Mannino, A., & Hyde, K. High rates of N-2 fixation in temperate, western North Atlantic coastal waters expand the realm of marine diazotrophy. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 33(7), (2019): 826-840, doi:10.1029/2018GB006130.Dinitrogen (N2) fixation can alleviate N limitation of primary productivity by introducing fixed nitrogen (N) to the world's oceans. Although measurements of pelagic marine N2 fixation are predominantly from oligotrophic oceanic regions, where N limitation is thought to favor growth of diazotrophic microbes, here we report high rates of N2 fixation from seven cruises spanning four seasons in temperate, western North Atlantic coastal waters along the North American continental shelf between Cape Hatteras and Nova Scotia, an area representing 6.4% of the North Atlantic continental shelf area. Integrating average areal rates of N2 fixation during each season and for each domain in the study area, the estimated N input from N2 fixation to this temperate shelf system is 0.02 Tmol N/year, an amount equivalent to that previously estimated for the entire North Atlantic continental shelf. Unicellular group A cyanobacteria (UCYN‐A) were most often the dominant diazotrophic group expressing nifH, a gene encoding the nitrogenase enzyme, throughout the study area during all seasons. This expands the domain of these diazotrophs to include coastal waters where dissolved N concentrations are not always depleted. Further, the high rates of N2 fixation and diazotroph diversity along the western North Atlantic continental shelf underscore the need to reexamine the biogeography and the activity of diazotrophs along continental margins. Accounting for this substantial but previously overlooked source of new N to marine systems necessitates revisions to global marine N budgets.Data presented in the body and supporting information of this manuscript have been deposited in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) repository, SeaBASS and is publicly available at the following DOI address: 10.5067/SeaBASS/CLIVEC/DATA 001. This work was supported by a grant from NASA Grant Number: NNX09AE45G to M. R. M., A. M., and K. H.; a grant from NSF to P. D. C; and the Jacques S. Zaneveld and Neil and Susan Kelley Endowed Scholarships to C. S. We thank NOAA for ship time and the captain and crew of NOAA vessels Delaware II and Henry Bigelow for assistance during field sampling. Data have been submitted to SeaBASS (https://seabass.gsfc.nasa.gov/), NASA's preferred archival repository

    Assessing phytoplankton nutritional status and potential impact of wet deposition in seasonally oligotrophic waters of the Mid‐Atlantic Bight

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    Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2018. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Research Letters 45 (2018): 3203-3211, doi:10.1002/2017GL075361.To assess phytoplankton nutritional status in seasonally oligotrophic waters of the southern Mid‐Atlantic Bight, and the potential for rain to stimulate primary production in this region during summer, shipboard bioassay experiments were performed using natural seawater and phytoplankton collected north and south of the Gulf Stream. Bioassay treatments comprised iron, nitrate, iron + nitrate, iron + nitrate + phosphate, and rainwater. Phytoplankton growth was inferred from changes in chlorophyll a, inorganic nitrogen, and carbon‐13 uptake, relative to unamended control treatments. Results indicated the greatest growth stimulation by iron + nitrate + phosphate, intermediate growth stimulation by rainwater, modest growth stimulation by nitrate and iron + nitrate, and no growth stimulation by iron. Based on these data and analysis of seawater and atmospheric samples, nitrogen was the proximate limiting nutrient, with a secondary limitation imposed by phosphorus. Our results imply that summer rain events increase new production in these waters by contributing nitrogen and phosphorus, with the availability of the latter setting the upper limit on rain‐stimulated new production.US National Science Foundation Grant Numbers: OCE‐1260454, OCE‐1260454, OCE‐12605742018-09-1

    Assessing Phytoplankton Nutritional Status and Potential Impact of Wet Deposition in Seasonally Oligotrophic Waters of the Mid-Atlantic Bight

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    To assess phytoplankton nutritional status in seasonally oligotrophic waters of the southern Mid-Atlantic Bight, and the potential for rain to stimulate primary production in this region during summer, shipboard bioassay experiments were performed using natural seawater and phytoplankton collected north and south of the Gulf Stream. Bioassay treatments comprised iron, nitrate, iron + nitrate, iron + nitrate + phosphate, and rainwater. Phytoplankton growth was inferred from changes in chlorophyll a, inorganic nitrogen, and carbon-13 uptake, relative to unamended control treatments. Results indicated the greatest growth stimulation by iron + nitrate + phosphate, intermediate growth stimulation by rainwater, modest growth stimulation by nitrate and iron + nitrate, and no growth stimulation by iron. Based on these data and analysis of seawater and atmospheric samples, nitrogen was the proximate limiting nutrient, with a secondary limitation imposed by phosphorus. Our results imply that summer rain events increase new production in these waters by contributing nitrogen and phosphorus, with the availability of the latter setting the upper limit on rain-stimulated new production. Plain Language Summary Human activities have substantially increased the atmospheric loading and deposition of biologically available nitrogen, an essential nutrient, to the surface ocean. Such atmospheric inputs to the ocean will likely impact on oceanic primary production by phytoplankton, and thus the marine ecosystem and ocean carbon cycling, although the scale and spatial distribution of such impacts are not well known. In this study, we used shipboard experiments, observations, and laboratory measurements to assess the potential impacts of atmospheric nitrogen deposition in rainfall on oceanic waters of the Mid-Atlantic Bight, off the U.S. eastern seaboard, during the summer. We find that the growth of phytoplankton in these waters is limited by the availability of nitrogen during summer, such that nitrogen added to the ocean by summer rain events can considerably stimulate phytoplankton primary production. However, the biological impact of these rainwater nitrogen inputs appears to be limited by the availability of another essential nutrient, phosphorus, which is present at relatively low concentrations in rainwater. This is the first study to directly examine the nutritional status of phytoplankton in relation to the impacts of rainwater nitrogen addition on primary production in oceanic waters off the U.S. East Coast

    城市水基础设施与地区收入差异分析

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    Despite the great achievement of eliminating poverty, the gap of income between different social classes is still enlarging, and infrastructure construction is deemed as valuable policy for controlling income inequality. This paper firstly testifies if water infrastructures exert significant influence on regional income, and then analyzes the co-mechanism among population, transportation and water infrastructures, and finally verifies heterogeneity of the influence. Empirical results show that: water infrastructure exerts significantly greater impact than population and transportation infrastructure on regional income; population factors and transportation effect on mode of the influence; regional difference exists, that’s eastern and central China show absolutely adverse effect of the influence with western and northern China. Therefore, investment on infrastructure construction needs to decline on, such as sewage, and construction plan should take consideration of, for instance, population of area, blocks, and water reservation, and etc
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