Abstract

Mechanisms of N removal in permeable sediments were examined using sediment columns packed with southeastern US continental shelf sands. While significant N 2 production was observed in oxic SAB sands, the addition of 20 μM 15NO 3 − tracer in oxic sediment columns for periods of up to 12 days yielded a delayed production of 29N 2 and 30N 2 which, at the end of the incubation period, was still small relative to previously measured total N 2 production rates. Possible explanations for these results include N removal via tightly coupled nitrification–denitrification in microenvironments isolated from the bulk porewater or denitrification mediated by aerobic denitrifiers. The addition of 15NO 3 − to porewater at levels above natural concentrations caused N assimilation and increases in sediment respiration rates in oxic columns, indicating N limitation. Delays in achieving steady-state denitrification rates following disturbances may be associated with deep penetration of O 2 in advective regimes and amplified by isolation of respiration and denitrification in reactive microenvironments. Isolation of microzone denitrification, delays in achieving steady-state conditions, and the response of sediment community respiration and denitrification rates to increases in low background NO 3 − may interfere with the accuracy of denitrification rate measurements in sandy sediments on oligotrophic continental shelves with isotope pairing and traditional core incubation techniques. In columns with anoxic outflow, the immediate appearance of 29N 2 and 30N 2 following 15NO 3 − addition indicates that denitrification in suboxic or anoxic sands relies on external sources of NO 3 − rather than only on in situ nitrification, which is the main NO 3 − source for denitrification in oxic SAB sands.

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