4.7 Article

High N2O reduction potential by denitrification in the nearshore site of a riparian zone

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 813, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152458

Keywords

Nitrous oxide; Riparian zone; Denitrification; Ammonium oxidation; N2O-producers; N2O-reducers

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91851204]
  2. Excellent Innovation Project of Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, CAS [RCEES-EEI-2019-02]

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The study revealed that N2O emission was lower in nearshore sites compared to offshore sites in riparian zones, with denitrification dominating nearshore emissions; N2O emission was influenced by NH4+-N content and denitrifier communities; N2O-producing community was dominated by nirS-harbouring bacteria, while N2O-reducing community was dominated by nosZ I-harbouring bacteria.
As a potent atmospheric greenhouse as and a major source of ozone depletion, nitrous oxide (N2O) emission has been given increasing attention in aquatic systems, particularly at the aquatic-terrestrial interfaces, such as riparian zones. However, the microbial mechanisms regulating N2O emission in riparian zones remain unknown. Here, we measured the contributions of denitrification and ammonium oxidation to N2O emission along with the abundance and community structure of nirK-, ntiS-, nosZ I- and nosZ II-harbouring bacteria in both surface sediments (0-10 cm) and overlying water along a lake riparian zone (including nearshore sites and offshore sites). Overall, the nearshore sites of the riparian zones emitted less N2O than the offshore sites. Nearshore N2O emission was dominated by denitrification with a high N2O reduction rate, whereas offshore N2O emission was driven by ammonium oxidation. Furthermore, N2O derived from ammonium oxidation was influenced by the NH4+-N content, and denitrification N2O was modulated by denitrifier communities. The N2O-producing community was dominated by nirS-harbouring bacteria, while the N2O-reducing community was dominated by nosZ I-harbouring bacteria. The relative abundance of Hydrogenophilales from nirS-denitrifiers and Chlorofiexi unclassified from nosZ II-type communities influenced the N2O produced by denitrification, according to high-throughput sequencing analysis. Additionally, we also found lower levels of N2O production per unit volume in overlying water, which were 3-4 orders of magnitude less than in the surface sediment. Overall, we propose that using riparian zones can be an effective management tool for N2O mitigation by enhancing the N2O reduction process of denitrification and decreasing ammonium oxidation.

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