4.8 Article

Nitrogen cycling in a tropical coral reef ecosystem under severe anthropogenic disturbance in summer: Insights from isotopic compositions

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 207, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2021.117824

Keywords

Coral reef; Nitrogen cycling; Nutrient; Isotope; Weizhou Island

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Devel-opment Program of China [2020YFA0607602]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41976127, 41676095, 41976140, 42003005]
  3. Scientific Research Foundation of the Third Institute of Oceanography [2020017]
  4. Science and Technology Innovation Commission of Shenzhen [JCYJ20160422153856130, KQTD20180412181334790]

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The complex nitrogen cycling processes in the coral reef ecosystem are effectively reflected in the isotopic compositions of seawater and sediment, with nitrate sources being largely regulated by a mix of precipitation and sewage influence. The study also reveals significant nitrogen mineralization-nitrification-denitrification processes in sediments, with nitrogen loss exceeding input.
Coral reefs, one of the most productive ecosystems, have been dramatically declining in recent decades. While studies contend a prominent correlation between coral reef degradation and increased anthropogenic nitrogen (N) loads, a quantitative description of the N sources and cycling processes in these ecologically important ecosystems is lacking. Through a comprehensive depiction of the delta N-15 compositions of seawaters and sediments, we systematically accessed the N cycling processes in the Weizhou coral reef ecosystem. The correlations between the nitrate (NO3-) concentrations and isotopic compositions (delta N-15/delta O-18-NO3-) indicated the pelagic NO3- loads were largely regulated by mixing between precipitation and sewage. Biological NO(3)(-)turnover processes appeared to be weak. In the sediments, N-2 fixation contributed about one-third of the sedimentary organic N, with the rest coming from the settlement of pelagic organic N. We also uncovered significant sedimentary mineralization-nitrification-denitrification processes in which the N loss was greater than the input. While pelagic N significantly contributed to the sedimentary N, the N export from the sediments to surface seawater was potentially short-circuited by the high N retention and recycling efficiencies of the organisms in the coral reef ecosystem. Overall, this study shows that the complex N cycling processes in the ecosystem are effectively reflected in the isotopic compositions of seawater and sediment, thus adding an important dimension to understanding the N cycling in coral reef ecosystems.

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