Abstract: | Denitrification is a major mechanism for nitrogen removal from nitrogen-rich waters, but it requires oxygen-poor conditions. We assessed denitrification rates in nitrate-rich but also oxygen-rich river water during its stay in a floodplain. We measured diurnal oxygen fluctuations in floodwater along the river Rhine, and carried out an experiment to assess denitrification rates during day, evening and night. Denitrification in floodwater and flooded sediment were measured, comparing activity of periphyton and sediment from agricultural grasslands and reedbeds. Floodwater along the river Rhine was oxygen-saturated (> 10 mg O2/L) during the day, but oxygen largely disappeared during the night (0.4–0.8 mg O2/L). Independent of oxygen concentrations, denitrification in surface water alone hardly occurred. In flooded sediments, however, denitrification rates were much higher (1.1–1.5 mg N m–2 h–1), particularly at dark and oxygen-poor conditions (nighttime). In the experimental jars, reedbed-periphyton bacteria achieved similar denitrification rates as bacteria in sediment, but overall periphyton denitrification was of minor importance when calculated per square meter. Apart from oxygen levels, maximum denitrification appeared to be regulated by nitrate diffusion from water into the sediment, as the maximum quantity of N denitrified in the sediment equalled the quantity of N lossed from the surface water. Assessed 24-hr denitrification rates in the flooded floodplains (c. 15 mg N m–2 d–1) were similar in grasslands and reedbeds, and were rather low compared to rates in other floodplains. |