Abstract
As the important benthic animal in coastal wetlands, crab bioturbation may significantly affect the nitrogen (N) budgets by regulating microbial N transformation processes. However, the response of interaction between different microbial N processes to crab bioturbation remains poorly understood. Here, a 30-day microcosmic experiment was conducted using sediment collected from the Yangtze Estuary wetland, followed by the determination of temporal variations of physicochemical parameters, N removal (denitrification plus anammox, which is defined as N2 production) and retention rates (nitrate dissimilatory reduction to ammonium, DNRA) as well as relevant gene abundances in response to different crabs densities. The results showed that crab bioturbation simultaneously promoted the rates of N2 production and DNRA processes. These two process rates were positively associated with the intensity of crab bioturbation, which was supported by molecular analysis of relevant functional gene abundance. Crab bioturbation was more beneficial to DNRA than N2 production. Due to this disproportionate stimulation, crab bioturbation increased the importance of DNRA, indicating that N retention was becoming more significant under crab bioturbation in estuarine and coastal wetlands. The variations of sediment total organic carbon and oxygen availability driven by crab bioturbation were the critical factors mediating the changes in microbial N removal and retention. Overall, our findings highlighted that crab bioturbation can affect the N budgets in estuarine and coastal wetlands by altering the competition between microbial N removal and retention.
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