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1.
Denitrification in San Francisco Bay Intertidal Sediments   总被引:23,自引:17,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
The acetylene block technique was employed to study denitrification in intertidal estuarine sediments. Addition of nitrate to sediment slurries stimulated denitrification. During the dry season, sediment-slurry denitrification rates displayed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, and ambient NO3 + NO2 concentrations (≤26 μM) were below the apparent Km (50 μM) for nitrate. During the rainy season, when ambient NO3 + NO2 concentrations were higher (37 to 89 μM), an accurate estimate of the Km could not be obtained. Endogenous denitrification activity was confined to the upper 3 cm of the sediment column. However, the addition of nitrate to deeper sediments demonstrated immediate N2O production, and potential activity existed at all depths sampled (the deepest was 15 cm). Loss of N2O in the presence of C2H2 was sometimes observed during these short-term sediment incubations. Experiments with sediment slurries and washed cell suspensions of a marine pseudomonad confirmed that this N2O loss was caused by incomplete blockage of N2O reductase by C2H2 at low nitrate concentrations. Areal estimates of denitrification (in the absence of added nitrate) ranged from 0.8 to 1.2 μmol of N2 m−2 h−1 (for undisturbed sediments) to 17 to 280 μmol of N2 m−2 h−1 (for shaken sediment slurries).  相似文献   

2.
Microzonation of denitrification was studied in stream sediments by a combined O2 and N2O microsensor technique. O2 and N2O concentration profiles were recorded simultaneously in intact sediment cores in which C2H2 was added to inhibit N2O reduction in denitrification. The N2O profiles were used to obtain high-resolution profiles of denitrification activity and NO3 distribution in the sediments. O2 penetrated about 1 mm into the dark-incubated sediments, and denitrification was largely restricted to a thin anoxic layer immediately below that. With 115 μM NO3 in the water phase, denitrification was limited to a narrow zone from 0.7 to 1.4 mm in depth, and total activity was 34 nmol of N cm−2 h−1. With 1,250 μM NO3 in the water, the denitrification zone was extended to a layer from 0.9 to 4.8 mm in depth, and total activity increased to 124 nmol of N cm−2 h−1. Within most of the activity zone, denitrification was not dependent on the NO3 concentration and the apparent Km for NO3 was less than 10 μM. Denitrification was the only NO3-consuming process in the dark-incubated stream sediment. Even in the presence of C2H2, a significant N2O reduction (up to 30% of the total N2O production) occurred in the reduced, NO3-free layers below the denitrification zone. This effect must be corrected for during use of the conventional C2H2 inhibition technique.  相似文献   

3.
The seasonal variation and depth distribution of the capacity for denitrification and dissimilatory NO3 reduction to NH4+ (NO3 ammonification) were studied in the upper 4 cm of the sediment of Norsminde Fjord estuary, Denmark. A combination of C2H2 inhibition and 15N isotope techniques was used in intact sediment cores in short-term incubations (maximum, 4 h). The denitrification capacity exhibited two maxima, one in the spring and one in the fall, whereas the capacity for NO3 ammonification was maximal in the late summer, when sediments were progressively reduced. The denitrification capacity was always highest in the uppermost 1 cm of the sediment and declined with depth. The NO3 ammonification was usually higher with depth, but the maximum activity in late summer was observed within the upper 1 cm. The capacity for NO3 incorporation into organic material was investigated on two occasions in intact sediment cores and accounted for less than 5% of the total NO3 reduction. Denitrification accounted for between 13 and 51% of the total NO3 reduction, and NH4+ production accounted for between 4 and 21%, depending on initial rates during the time courses. Changes of the rates during the incubation were observed in the late summer, which reflected synthesis of denitrifying enzymes. This time lag was eliminated in experiments with mixed sediment because of preincubation with NO3 and alterations of the near-environmental conditions. The initial rates obtained in intact sediment cores therefore reflect the preexisting enzyme content of the sediment.  相似文献   

4.
Until recently, denitrification was thought to be the only significant pathway for N2 formation and, in turn, the removal of nitrogen in aquatic sediments. The discovery of anaerobic ammonium oxidation in the laboratory suggested that alternative metabolisms might be present in the environment. By using a combination of 15N-labeled NH4+, NO3, and NO2 (and 14N analogues), production of 29N2 and 30N2 was measured in anaerobic sediment slurries from six sites along the Thames estuary. The production of 29N2 in the presence of 15NH4+ and either 14NO3 or 14NO2 confirmed the presence of anaerobic ammonium oxidation, with the stoichiometry of the reaction indicating that the oxidation was coupled to the reduction of NO2. Anaerobic ammonium oxidation proceeded at equal rates via either the direct reduction of NO2 or indirect reduction, following the initial reduction of NO3. Whether NO2 was directly present at 800 μM or it accumulated at 3 to 20 μM (from the reduction of NO3), the rate of 29N2 formation was not affected, which suggested that anaerobic ammonium oxidation was saturated at low concentrations of NO2. We observed a shift in the significance of anaerobic ammonium oxidation to N2 formation relative to denitrification, from 8% near the head of the estuary to less than 1% at the coast. The relative importance of anaerobic ammonium oxidation was positively correlated (P < 0.05) with sediment organic content. This report of anaerobic ammonium oxidation in organically enriched estuarine sediments, though in contrast to a recent report on continental shelf sediments, confirms the presence of this novel metabolism in another aquatic sediment system.  相似文献   

5.
A sensitive NO2 biosensor that is based on bacterial reduction of NO2 to N2O and subsequent detection of the N2O by a built-in electrochemical N2O sensor was developed. Four different denitrifying organisms lacking NO3 reductase activity were assessed for use in the biosensor. The relevant physiological aspects examined included denitrifying characteristics, growth rate, NO2 tolerance, and temperature and salinity effects on the growth rate. Two organisms were successfully used in the biosensor. The preferred organism was Stenotrophomonas nitritireducens, which is an organism with a denitrifying pathway deficient in both NO3 and N2O reductases. Alternatively Alcaligenes faecalis could be used when acetylene was added to inhibit its N2O reductase. The macroscale biosensors constructed exhibited a linear NO2 response at concentrations up to 1 to 2 mM. The detection limit was around 1 μM NO2, and the 90% response time was 0.5 to 3 min. The sensor signal was specific for NO2, and interference was observed only with NH2OH, NO, N2O, and H2S. The sensor signal was affected by changes in temperature and salinity, and calibration had to be performed in a system with a temperature and an ionic strength comparable to those of the medium analyzed. A broad range of water bodies could be analyzed with the biosensor, including freshwater systems, marine systems, and oxic-anoxic wastewaters. The NO2 biosensor was successfully used for long-term online monitoring in wastewater. Microscale versions of the NO2 biosensor were constructed and used to measure NO2 profiles in marine sediment.  相似文献   

6.
Experiments demonstrated that Beggiatoa could induce a H2S-depleted suboxic zone of more than 10 mm in marine sediments and cause a divergence in sediment NO3 reduction from denitrification to dissimilatory NO3 reduction to ammonium. pH, O2, and H2S profiles indicated that the bacteria oxidized H2S with NO3 and transported S0 to the sediment surface for aerobic oxidation.  相似文献   

7.
Dissimilatory reduction of NO2 to N2O and NH4+ by a soil Citrobacter sp. was studied in an attempt to elucidate the physiological and ecological significance of N2O production by this mechanism. In batch cultures with defined media, NO2 reduction to NH4+ was favored by high glucose and low NO3 concentrations. Nitrous oxide production was greatest at high glucose and intermediate NO3 concentrations. With succinate as the energy source, little or no NO2 was reduced to NH4+ but N2O was produced. Resting cell suspensions reduced NO2 simultaneously to N2O and free extracellular NH4+. Chloramphenicol prevented the induction of N2O-producing activity. The Km for NO2 reduction to N2O was estimated to be 0.9 mM NO2, yet the apparent Km for overall NO2 reduction was considerably lower, no greater than 0.04 mM NO2. Activities for N2O and NH4+ production increased markedly after depletion of NO3 from the media. Amendment with NO3 inhibited N2O and NH4+ production by molybdate-grown cells but not by tungstate-grown cells. Sulfite inhibited production of NH4+ but not of N2O. In a related experiment, three Escherichia coli mutants lacking NADH-dependent nitrite reductase produced N2O at rates equal to the wild type. These observations suggest that N2O is produced enzymatically but not by the same enzyme system responsible for dissimilatory reduction of NO2 to NH4+.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of three metabolic inhibitors (acetylene, methanol, and allylthiourea [ATU]) on the pathways of N2 production were investigated by using short anoxic incubations of marine sediment with a 15N isotope technique. Acetylene inhibited ammonium oxidation through the anammox pathway as the oxidation rate decreased exponentially with increasing acetylene concentration; the rate decay constant was 0.10 ± 0.02 μM−1, and there was 95% inhibition at ~30 μM. Nitrous oxide reduction, the final step of denitrification, was not sensitive to acetylene concentrations below 10 μM. However, nitrous oxide reduction was inhibited by higher concentrations, and the sensitivity was approximately one-half the sensitivity of anammox (decay constant, 0.049 ± 0.004 μM−1; 95% inhibition at ~70 μM). Methanol specifically inhibited anammox with a decay constant of 0.79 ± 0.12 mM−1, and thus 3 to 4 mM methanol was required for nearly complete inhibition. This level of methanol stimulated denitrification by ~50%. ATU did not have marked effects on the rates of anammox and denitrification. The profile of inhibitor effects on anammox agreed with the results of studies of the process in wastewater bioreactors, which confirmed the similarity between the anammox bacteria in bioreactors and natural environments. Acetylene and methanol can be used to separate anammox and denitrification, but the effects of these compounds on nitrification limits their use in studies of these processes in systems where nitrification is an important source of nitrate. The observed differential effects of acetylene and methanol on anammox and denitrification support our current understanding of the two main pathways of N2 production in marine sediments and the use of 15N isotope methods for their quantification.  相似文献   

9.
Microsensors, including a recently developed NO3 biosensor, were applied to measure O2 and NO3 profiles in marine sediments from the upwelling area off central Chile and to investigate the influence of Thioploca spp. on the sedimentary nitrogen metabolism. The studies were performed in undisturbed sediment cores incubated in a small laboratory flume to simulate the environmental conditions of low O2, high NO3, and bottom water current. On addition of NO3 and NO2, Thioploca spp. exhibited positive chemotaxis and stretched out of the sediment into the flume water. In a core densely populated with Thioploca, the penetration depth of NO3 was only 0.5 mm and a sharp maximum of NO3 uptake was observed 0.5 mm above the sediment surface. In sediments with only few Thioploca spp., NO3 was detectable down to a depth of 2 mm and the maximum consumption rates were observed within the sediment. No chemotaxis toward nitrous oxide (N2O) was observed, which is consistent with the observation that Thioploca does not denitrify but reduces intracellular NO3 to NH4+. Measurements of the intracellular NO3 and S0 pools in Thioploca filaments from various depths in the sediment gave insights into possible differences in the migration behavior between the different species. Living filaments containing significant amounts of intracellular NO3 were found to a depth of at least 13 cm, providing final proof for the vertical shuttling of Thioploca spp. and nitrate transport into the sediment.  相似文献   

10.
Aerobic and anaerobic groundwater continuous-flow microcosms were designed to study nitrate reduction by the indigenous bacteria in intact saturated soil cores from a sandy aquifer with a concentration of 3.8 mg of NO3-N liter−1. Traces of 15NO3 were added to filter-sterilized groundwater by using a Darcy flux of 4 cm day−1. Both assimilatory and dissimilatory reduction rates were estimated from analyses of 15N2, 15N2O, 15NH4+, and 15N-labeled protein amino acids by capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. N2 and N2O were separated on a megabore fused-silica column and quantified by electron impact-selected ion monitoring. NO3 and NH4+ were analyzed as pentafluorobenzoyl amides by multiple-ion monitoring and protein amino acids as their N-heptafluorobutyryl isobutyl ester derivatives by negative ion-chemical ionization. The numbers of bacteria and their [methyl-3H]thymidine incorporation rates were simultaneously measured. Nitrate was completely reduced in the microcosms at a rate of about 250 ng g−1 day−1. Of this nitrate, 80 to 90% was converted by aerobic denitrification to N2, whereas only 35% was denitrified in the anaerobic microcosm, where more than 50% of NO3 was reduced to NH4+. Assimilatory reduction was recorded only in the aerobic microcosm, where N appeared in alanine in the cells. The nitrate reduction rates estimated for the aquifer material were low in comparison with rates in eutrophic lakes and coastal sediments but sufficiently high to remove nitrate from an uncontaminated aquifer of the kind examined in less than 1 month.  相似文献   

11.
Aquaspirillum magnetotacticum MS-1 grew microaerobically but not anaerobically with NO3 or NH4+ as the sole nitrogen source. Nevertheless, cell yields varied directly with NO3 concentration under microaerobic conditions. Products of NO3 reduction included NH4+, N2O, NO, and N2. NO2 and NH2OH, each toxic to cells at 0.2 mM, were not detected as products of cells growing on NO3. NO3 reduction to NH4+ was completely repressed by the addition of 2 mM NH4+ to the growth medium, whereas NO3 reduction to N2O or to N2 was not. C2H2 completely inhibited N2O reduction to N2 by growing cells. These results indicate that A. magnetotacticum is a microaerophilic denitrifier that is versatile in its nitrogen metabolism, concomitantly reducing NO3 by assimilatory and dissimilatory means. This bacterium appears to be the first described denitrifier with an absolute requirement for O2. The process of NO3 reduction appears well adapted for avoiding accumulation of several nitrogenous intermediates that are toxic to cells.  相似文献   

12.
13.
A method has been developed for measurement of denitrification activity in sediments by application of the acetylene inhibition technique. Acetylene-saturated water was injected, at close intervals, into sediment cores which were then incubated for a few hours at the in situ temperature. Frozen segments of the cores were assayed for accumulation of N2O by a combined gas extraction and detection system. The segments were thawed under a stream of helium from which N2O (and other gases) was collected in a liquid N2 trap, and the quantity of N2O was measured by gas chromatography. The maximum rate of denitrification in a coastal marine sediment was 35 nmol of N per cm3 of sediment per day at 2.5°C, and the rate of denitrification for the total sediment was 0.99 nmol of N per m2 per day.  相似文献   

14.
Dissimilatory NO3 reduction in sediments is often measured in bulk incubations that destroy in situ gradients of controlling factors such as sulfide and oxygen. Additionally, the use of unnaturally high NO3 concentrations yields potential rather than actual activities of dissimilatory NO3 reduction. We developed a technique to determine the vertical distribution of the net rates of dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) with minimal physical disturbance in intact sediment cores at millimeter-level resolution. This allows DNRA activity to be directly linked to the microenvironmental conditions in the layer of NO3 consumption. The water column of the sediment core is amended with 15NO3 at the in situ 14NO3 concentration. A gel probe is deployed in the sediment and is retrieved after complete diffusive equilibration between the gel and the sediment pore water. The gel is then sliced and the NH4+ dissolved in the gel slices is chemically converted by hypobromite to N2 in reaction vials. The isotopic composition of N2 is determined by mass spectrometry. We used the combined gel probe and isotopic labeling technique with freshwater and marine sediment cores and with sterile quartz sand with artificial gradients of 15NH4+. The results were compared to the NH4+ microsensor profiles measured in freshwater sediment and quartz sand and to the N2O microsensor profiles measured in acetylene-amended sediments to trace denitrification.Nitrate accounts for the eutrophication of many human-affected aquatic ecosystems (19, 21). Sediment bacteria may mitigate NO3 pollution by denitrification and anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), which produce N2 (13, 18). However, inorganic nitrogen is retained in aquatic ecosystems when sediment bacteria reduce NO3 to NH4+ by dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) (5, 12, 16, 39). Hence, DNRA contributes to rather than counteracts eutrophication (23). DNRA may be the dominant pathway of dissimilatory NO3 reduction in sediments that are rich in electron donors, such as labile organic carbon and sulfide (4, 8, 17, 38, 55). High rates of DNRA are thus found in sediments affected by coastal aquaculture (8, 36) and settling algal blooms (16).DNRA, denitrification, and the chemical factors that control the partitioning between them (e.g., sulfide) should ideally be investigated in undisturbed sediments. The redox stratification of sediments involves vertical concentration gradients of pore water solutes. These gradients are often very steep, and their measurement requires high-resolution techniques, such as microsensors (26, 42) and gel probes (9, 54). If, for instance, the influence of sulfide on DNRA and denitrification is to be investigated, one wants to know exactly the sulfide concentration in the layers of DNRA and denitrification activity, as well as the flux of sulfide into these layers. This information can easily be obtained using H2S and pH microsensors (22, 43). It is less trivial to determine the vertical distribution of DNRA and denitrification activity in undisturbed sediments. Denitrification activity can be traced using a combination of the acetylene inhibition technique (51) and N2O microsensors (1). Acetylene inhibits the last step of denitrification, and therefore, N2O accumulates in the layer of denitrification activity (44). This method underestimates the denitrification activity in sediments with high rates of coupled nitrification-denitrification because acetylene also inhibits nitrification (50).The vertical distribution of DNRA activity in undisturbed sediment has, to the best of our knowledge, never been determined; thus, the microenvironmental conditions in the layer of DNRA activity remain unknown. Until now, the influence of chemical factors on DNRA and denitrification in sediments has been assessed by slurry incubations (4, 12, 30), by flux measurements with sealed sediment cores (7, 47) or flowthrough sediment cores (16, 27, 37), and in one case, in reconstituted sediment cores sliced at centimeter-level resolution (39). Here, we present a new method, the combined gel probe and isotope labeling technique, to determine the vertical distribution of the net rates of DNRA in sediments. The sediments remain largely undisturbed and the NO3 amendments are within the range of in situ concentrations. The DNRA measurements can be related to the microprofiles of potential influencing factors measured in close vicinity of the gel probe. This allows DNRA activity to be directly linked with the microenvironmental conditions in the sediment.  相似文献   

15.
High-resolution NO3 profiles in freshwater sediment covered with benthic diatoms were obtained with a new microscale NO3 biosensor characterized by absence of interference from chemical species other than NO2 and N2O. Analysis of the microprofiles obtained indicated no nitrification during darkness, high rates of nitrification and a tight coupling between nitrification and denitrification during illumination, and substantial rates of NO3 assimilation during illumination. Nitrification during darkness could be induced by purging the bulk water with O2 gas, indicating that the stimulatory effect on nitrification by illumination was caused by algal production of O2. NH4+ addition did not stimulate nitrification during darkness when O2 was restricted to the upper 1-mm layer, and there was thus a low nitrification potential in the permanently oxic top 1 mm of the sediment.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

In coastal marine sediments, the interactions between NO3 ? reduction and transformations of Fe and S compounds often occur in a strong gradient of electron activity ("redoxcline"). Denitrification activity is observed throughout the NC3 ?‐containing surface zone, although the reduction step from N2O to N2 can be inhibited by H2S in the “redoxcline.”; Survival of denitrifiers is generally poor in NO3 ?‐free, reduced sediment; such populations are likely to employ Fe3+ reduction in their energy metabolism. At depth, the sediments often contain a larger capacity for “nitrate ammonification”; (dissimilatory NO3 ? reduction to NH4 +) than for denitrification. The “nitrate ammonification”; is found commonly among fermenting bacteria, although SO4 2? reducers may also be involved. In situ activities observed in whole sediment cores indicate that “nitrate ammonification”; may account for as much as one‐third of the carbon oxidation in organic‐rich sediments. The control of partitioning between denitrification and “nitrate ammonification”; at low NO3 ? concentrations is poorly investigated, but the larger metabolic capacity of fermenting and S O4 2?‐reducing baceria in relatively reduced sediment could be important. In addition to bacterial reduction, chemical NO3 ? reduction is possible where significant amounts of Fe2+ (or H2S) accumulate in the “redoxcline.”;  相似文献   

17.
A method for estimating denitrification and nitrogen fixation simultaneously in coastal sediments was developed. An isotope-pairing technique was applied to dissolved gas measurements with a membrane inlet mass spectrometer (MIMS). The relative fluxes of three N2 gas species (28N2, 29N2, and 30N2) were monitored during incubation experiments after the addition of 15NO3. Formulas were developed to estimate the production (denitrification) and consumption (N2 fixation) of N2 gas from the fluxes of the different isotopic forms of N2. Proportions of the three isotopic forms produced from 15NO3 and 14NO3 agreed with expectations in a sediment slurry incubation experiment designed to optimize conditions for denitrification. Nitrogen fixation rates from an algal mat measured with intact sediment cores ranged from 32 to 390 μg-atoms of N m−2 h−1. They were enhanced by light and organic matter enrichment. In this environment of high nitrogen fixation, low N2 production rates due to denitrification could be separated from high N2 consumption rates due to nitrogen fixation. Denitrification and nitrogen fixation rates were estimated in April 2000 on sediments from a Texas sea grass bed (Laguna Madre). Denitrification rates (average, 20 μg-atoms of N m−2 h−1) were lower than nitrogen fixation rates (average, 60 μg-atoms of N m−2 h−1). The developed method benefits from simple and accurate dissolved-gas measurement by the MIMS system. By adding the N2 isotope capability, it was possible to do isotope-pairing experiments with the MIMS system.  相似文献   

18.
Global nitrogen fixation contributes 413 Tg of reactive nitrogen (Nr) to terrestrial and marine ecosystems annually of which anthropogenic activities are responsible for half, 210 Tg N. The majority of the transformations of anthropogenic Nr are on land (240 Tg N yr−1) within soils and vegetation where reduced Nr contributes most of the input through the use of fertilizer nitrogen in agriculture. Leakages from the use of fertilizer Nr contribute to nitrate (NO3) in drainage waters from agricultural land and emissions of trace Nr compounds to the atmosphere. Emissions, mainly of ammonia (NH3) from land together with combustion related emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx), contribute 100 Tg N yr−1 to the atmosphere, which are transported between countries and processed within the atmosphere, generating secondary pollutants, including ozone and other photochemical oxidants and aerosols, especially ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) and ammonium sulfate (NH4)2SO4. Leaching and riverine transport of NO3 contribute 40–70 Tg N yr−1 to coastal waters and the open ocean, which together with the 30 Tg input to oceans from atmospheric deposition combine with marine biological nitrogen fixation (140 Tg N yr−1) to double the ocean processing of Nr. Some of the marine Nr is buried in sediments, the remainder being denitrified back to the atmosphere as N2 or N2O. The marine processing is of a similar magnitude to that in terrestrial soils and vegetation, but has a larger fraction of natural origin. The lifetime of Nr in the atmosphere, with the exception of N2O, is only a few weeks, while in terrestrial ecosystems, with the exception of peatlands (where it can be 102–103 years), the lifetime is a few decades. In the ocean, the lifetime of Nr is less well known but seems to be longer than in terrestrial ecosystems and may represent an important long-term source of N2O that will respond very slowly to control measures on the sources of Nr from which it is produced.  相似文献   

19.
Although previous research has demonstrated that NO3 inhibits microbial Fe(III) reduction in laboratory cultures and natural sediments, the mechanisms of this inhibition have not been fully studied in an environmentally relevant medium that utilizes solid-phase, iron oxide minerals as a Fe(III) source. To study the dynamics of Fe and NO3 biogeochemistry when ferric (hydr)oxides are used as the Fe(III) source, Shewanella putrefaciens 200 was incubated under anoxic conditions in a low-ionic-strength, artificial groundwater medium with various amounts of NO3 and synthetic, high-surface-area goethite. Results showed that the presence of NO3 inhibited microbial goethite reduction more severely than it inhibited microbial reduction of the aqueous or microcrystalline sources of Fe(III) used in other studies. More interestingly, the presence of goethite also resulted in a twofold decrease in the rate of NO3 reduction, a 10-fold decrease in the rate of NO2 reduction, and a 20-fold increase in the amounts of N2O produced. Nitrogen stable isotope experiments that utilized δ15N values of N2O to distinguish between chemical and biological reduction of NO2 revealed that the N2O produced during NO2 or NO3 reduction in the presence of goethite was primarily of abiotic origin. These results indicate that concomitant microbial Fe(III) and NO3 reduction produces NO2 and Fe(II), which then abiotically react to reduce NO2 to N2O with the subsequent oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III).  相似文献   

20.
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