4.7 Article

Denitrification Temperature Dependence in Remote, Cold, and N-Poor Lake Sediments

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 1161-1173

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017WR021680

Keywords

nitrogen cycle; activation energy

Funding

  1. Spanish Government through Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [CGL2010-19737, CGL2013-45348-P, CGL2016-80124-C2-1-P, FPU12-00644]

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The reservoir size and pathway rates of the nitrogen (N) cycle have been deeply modified by the human enhancement of N fixation, atmospheric emissions, and climate warming. Denitrification (DEN) transforms nitrate into nitrogenous gas and thus removes reactive nitrogen (N-r) back to the atmospheric reservoir. There is still a rather limited knowledge of the denitrification rates and their temperature dependence across ecosystems; particularly, for the abundant cold and N-poor freshwater systems (e.g., Arctic and mountain lakes). We experimentally investigated the denitrification rates of mountain lake sediments by manipulating nitrate concentration and temperature on field collected cores. DEN rates were nitrate limited in field conditions and showed a large potential for an immediate DEN increase with both warming and higher N-r load. The estimated activation energy (E-a) for denitrification at nitrate saturation was 467 kJmol(-1) (Q(10) 1.70.4). The apparent E-a increased with nitrate (M) limitation as E-a=46+419 [NO3-](-1). Accordingly, we suggest that climate warming may have a synergistic effect with N emission reduction to readjusting the N cycle. Changes of nitrate availability might be more relevant than direct temperature effects on denitrification.

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