Abstract

The redox landscape of Earth’s ocean-atmosphere system has changed dramatically throughout Earth history. Although Earth’s protracted oxygenation is undoubtedly the consequence of cyanobacterial oxygenic photosynthesis, the relationship between biological O2 production and Earth’s redox evolution remains poorly understood. Existing models for Earth’s oxygenation cannot adequately explain the nearly 2.5 billion years delay between the origin of oxygenic photosynthesis and the oxygenation of the deep ocean, in large part owing to major deficiencies in our understanding of the coevolution of O2 and Earth’s key biogeochemical cycles (e.g., the N cycle). For example, although possible links between O2 and N scarcity have been previously explored, the consequences of N2 limitation for net biological O2 production have not been examined thoroughly. Here, we revisit the prevailing view that N2 fixation has always been able to keep pace with P supply and discuss the possibility that bioavailable N, rather than P, limited export production for extended periods of Earth’s history. Based on the observation that diazotrophy occurs at the expense of oxygenesis in the modern ocean, we suggest that an N-limited biosphere may be inherently less oxygenic than a P-limited biosphere—and that cyanobacterial diazotrophy was a primary control on the timing and tempo of Earth’s oxygenation by modulating net biogenic O2 fluxes. We further hypothesize that negative feedbacks inhibit the transition between N and P limitation, with the implication that the pervasive accumulation of O2 in Earth’s ocean-atmosphere system may not have been an inevitable consequence of oxygenic photosynthesis by marine cyanobacteria.

Highlights

  • Cyanobacteria are responsible for two major metabolic innovations: (1) oxygenic photosynthesis and (2) aerobic N2 fixation

  • Aerobic diazotrophy was a critical cyanobacterial innovation on par with oxygenic photosynthesis in terms of ecological impact, but it is likely that its environmental context and its contribution to global N cycling has varied dramatically through time

  • We hypothesize that low O2 availability may perpetuate low O2 conditions in the surface ocean, and anoxia at depth, by promoting extensive denitrification and the maintenance of conditions that are unfavorable for diazotrophy, both aerobic and anaerobic

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cyanobacteria are responsible for two major metabolic innovations: (1) oxygenic photosynthesis and (2) aerobic N2 fixation The former initiated the protracted oxygenation of Earth’s oceanatmosphere system and eventually set the stage for the evolution of complex animal life (reviewed by Lyons et al, 2014). It remains unclear why biospheric O2 production failed to result in stably oxygenated surface environments and deep ocean oxygenation for ∼2.5 billion years after cyanobacterial emergence

OXYGENATION AND DENITRIFICATION
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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