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Increased Nitrogen Loading Facilitates Nitrous Oxide Production through Fungal and Chemodenitrification in Estuarine and Coastal Sediments.

Xiaofei LiDengzhou GaoYe LiYan-Ling ZhengHongpo DongXia LiangMin LiuLijun Hou
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
Estuarine and coastal environments are assumed to contribute to nitrous oxide (N 2 O) emissions under increasing nitrogen loading. However, isotopic and molecular mechanisms underlying N 2 O production pathways under elevated nitrogen concentration remain poorly understood. Here we used microbial inhibition, isotope mass balance, and molecular approaches to investigate N 2 O production mechanisms in estuarine and coastal sediments through a series of anoxic incubations. Site preference of the N 2 O molecule increased due to increasing nitrate concentration, suggesting the changes in N 2 O production pathways. Enhanced N 2 O production under high nitrate concentration was not mediated by bacterial denitrification, but instead was mainly regulated by fungal denitrification. Elevated nitrate concentration increased the contribution of fungal denitrification to N 2 O production by 11-25%, whereas it decreased bacterial N 2 O production by 16-33%. Chemodenitrification was also enhanced by high nitrate concentration, contributing to 13-28% of N 2 O production. Elevated nitrate concentration significantly mediated nirK -type denitrifiers structure and abundance, which are the keystone taxa driving N 2 O production. Collectively, these results suggest that increasing nitrate concentration can shift N 2 O production pathways from bacterial to fungal and chemodenitrification, which are mainly responsible for the enhanced N 2 O production and have widespread implications for N 2 O projections under ongoing nitrogen pollution in estuarine and coastal ecosystems.
Keyphrases
  • heavy metals
  • nitric oxide
  • microbial community
  • risk assessment
  • wastewater treatment
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  • single molecule