Abstract

Abstract. Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a trace gas that contributes to the greenhouse effect and stratospheric ozone depletion. The N2O yield from nitrification (moles N2O-N produced per mole ammonium-N consumed) has been used to estimate marine N2O production rates from measured nitrification rates and global estimates of oceanic export production. However, the N2O yield from nitrification is not constant. Previous culture-based measurements indicate that N2O yield increases as oxygen (O2) concentration decreases and as nitrite (NO2−) concentration increases. Here, we have measured yields of N2O from cultures of the marine β-proteobacterium Nitrosomonas marina C-113a as they grew on low-ammonium (50 μM) media. These yields, which were typically between 4 × 10−4 and 7 × 10−4 for cultures with cell densities between 2 × 102 and 2.1 × 104 cells ml−1, were lower than previous reports for ammonia-oxidizing bacteria. The observed impact of O2 concentration on yield was also smaller than previously reported under all conditions except at high starting cell densities (1.5 × 106 cells ml−1), where 160-fold higher yields were observed at 0.5% O2 (5.1 μM dissolved O2) compared with 20% O2 (203 μM dissolved O2). At lower cell densities (2 × 102 and 2.1 × 104 cells ml−1), cultures grown under 0.5% O2 had yields that were only 1.25- to 1.73-fold higher than cultures grown under 20% O2. Thus, previously reported many-fold increases in N2O yield with dropping O2 could be reproduced only at cell densities that far exceeded those of ammonia oxidizers in the ocean. The presence of excess NO2− (up to 1 mM) in the growth medium also increased N2O yields by an average of 70% to 87% depending on O2 concentration. We made stable isotopic measurements on N2O from these cultures to identify the biochemical mechanisms behind variations in N2O yield. Based on measurements of δ15Nbulk, site preference (SP = δ15Nα−δ15Nβ), and δ18O of N2O (δ18O-N2O), we estimate that nitrifier-denitrification produced between 11% and 26% of N2O from cultures grown under 20% O2 and 43% to 87% under 0.5% O2. We also demonstrate that a positive correlation between SP and δ18O-N2O is expected when nitrifying bacteria produce N2O. A positive relationship between SP and δ18O-N2O has been observed in environmental N2O datasets, but until now, explanations for the observation invoked only denitrification. Such interpretations may overestimate the role of heterotrophic denitrification and underestimate the role of ammonia oxidation in environmental N2O production.

Highlights

  • The atmospheric concentration of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) has risen steadily over the last century

  • Nitrifier-denitrification depends on the presence of nitric oxide (NO)−2 to produce N2O (Ritchie and Nicholas, 1972; Poth and Focht, 1985; Yoshida, 1988), and the accumulation of NO−2 in environments such as oxygen deficient zones (ODZs) could contribute to increased N2O production in these regions

  • This study was designed to test the impact of O2 and NO−2 concentrations on the N2O yield of marine ammonia

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Summary

Introduction

The atmospheric concentration of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) has risen steadily over the last century. Processes in the microbial nitrogen cycle are the largest source of atmospheric N2O and 20% of this source may come from the oceans (IPCC, 2007). Humans have greatly increased the amount of fixed nitrogen entering the oceans (Galloway et al, 1995), and the functioning of marine microbial ecosystems is shifting in response (Fulweiler et al, 2007; Beman et al, 2005; Naqvi et al, 2000). Understanding the impact of anthropogenic activity on the size of the marine N2O source requires knowledge of which microbes are involved in N2O production and how the production is controlled by chemical variables. L. Casciotti: Biogeochemical controls and isotopic signatures of nitrous oxide production

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