4.7 Article

Not All Nitrogen Is Created Equal: Differential Effects of Nitrate and Ammonium Enrichment in Coastal Wetlands

Journal

BIOSCIENCE
Volume 70, Issue 12, Pages 1108-1119

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biaa140

Keywords

reactive nitrogen; salt marshes; PIE LTER; nitrogen cycling; carbon cycling

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB 1902712]
  2. NSF [DEB 1902695, DEB 1902704, DEB 1354214, DEB 1350491, OCE 1637630]
  3. Dorr Foundation
  4. Department of the Interior Northeast Climate Science Center [DOI G12AC00001]
  5. Bullard Fellowship (Harvard University)
  6. National Academies of Science, Medicine, and Engineering Gulf Research Program
  7. NSF Biological Field Stations and Marine Laboratories program [DBI 1722553]
  8. [mgp84173]

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Excess reactive nitrogen (N) flows from agricultural, suburban, and urban systems to coasts, where it causes eutrophication. Coastal wetlands take up some of this N, thereby ameliorating the impacts on nearshore waters. Although the consequences of N on coastal wetlands have been extensively studied, the effect of the specific form of N is not often considered. Both oxidized N forms (nitrate, NO3-) and reduced forms (ammonium, NH4+) can relieve nutrient limitation and increase primary production. However, unlike NH4+, NO3- can also be used as an electron acceptor for microbial respiration. We present results demonstrating that, in salt marshes, microbes use NO3- to support organic matter decomposition and primary production is less stimulated than when enriched with reduced N. Understanding how different forms of N mediate the balance between primary production and decomposition is essential for managing coastal wetlands as N enrichment and sea level rise continue to assail our coasts.

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