4.6 Article

The biogeochemical controls of N2O production and emission in landfill cover soils:: the role of methanotrophs in the nitrogen cycle

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 2, Issue 3, Pages 298-309

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1462-2920.2000.00106.x

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Emissions of N2O from cover soils of both abandoned (> 30 years) and active landfills greatly exceed the maximum fluxes previously reported for tropical soils, suggesting high microbial activities for N2O production. Low soil matrix potentials (< -0.7 MPa) indicate that nitrification was the most likely mechanism of N2O formation during most of the time of sampling. Soil moisture had a strong influence on N2O emissions. The production of N2O was stimulated by as much as 20 times during laboratory incubations, when moisture was increased from -2.0 MPa to -0.6 MPa. Additional evidence from incubation experiments and delta(13)C analyses of fatty acids (18:1) diagnostic of methanotrophs suggests that N2O is formed in these soils by nitrification via methanotrophic bacteria. In a NH3(g)-amended landfill soil, the rate of N2O production was significantly increased when incubated with 100 ppmv methane compared with 1.8 ppmv (atmospheric) methane. Preincubation of a landfill soil with 1% CH4 for 2 weeks resulted in higher rates of N2O production when subsequently amended with NH3(g) relative to a control soil preincubated without CH4. At one location, at the soil depth (9-16 cm) of maximum methane consumption and N2O production, we observe elevated concentrations of organic carbon and nitrogen and distinct minima in delta(15)N (+1.0 parts per thousand) and delta(13)C (-33.8 parts per thousand) values for organic nitrogen and organic carbon respectively. A delta(13)C value of -39.3 parts per thousand was measured for 18:1 carbon fatty acids in this soil, diagnostic of type II methanotrophs. The low delta(15)N value for organic nitrogen is consistent with N-2 fixation by type II methanotrophs. These observations all point to a methanotrophic origin for the organic matter at this depth. The results of this study corroborate previous reports of methanotrophic nitrification and N2O formation in aqueous and soil environments and suggest a predominance of type II rather than type I or type X methanotrophs in this landfill soil.

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