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Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions

Nitrate can be reduced to other N inorganic species via denitrification and incorporated into organic matter by immobilization; however, the effect of biotic/abiotic and redox condition on immobilization and denitrification processes from a single system are not well documented. We hypothesize nitra...

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Autores principales: Kizewski, Fiona R., Kaye, Jason P., Martínez, Carmen Enid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6611582/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31276538
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218752
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author Kizewski, Fiona R.
Kaye, Jason P.
Martínez, Carmen Enid
author_facet Kizewski, Fiona R.
Kaye, Jason P.
Martínez, Carmen Enid
author_sort Kizewski, Fiona R.
collection PubMed
description Nitrate can be reduced to other N inorganic species via denitrification and incorporated into organic matter by immobilization; however, the effect of biotic/abiotic and redox condition on immobilization and denitrification processes from a single system are not well documented. We hypothesize nitrate (NO(3)(-)) transformation pathways leading to the formation of dissolved- and solid-phase organic N are predominantly controlled by abiotic reactions, but the formation of soluble inorganic N species is controlled by redox condition. In this study, organic matter in the form of leaf compost (LC) was spiked with (15)NO(3)(-) and incubated under oxic/anoxic and biotic/abiotic conditions at pH 6.5. We seek to understand how variations in environmental conditions impact NO(3)(-) transformation pathways through laboratory incubations. We find production of NH(4)(+) is predominantly controlled by redox whereas NO(3)(-) conversion to dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) and immobilization in solid-phase N are predominantly controlled by abiotic processes. Twenty % of added (15)N-NO(3)(-) was incorporated into DON under oxic conditions, with abiotic processes accounting for 85% of the overall incorporation. Nitrogen immobilization processes resulted in N concentrations of 4.1–6.6 μg N (g leaf compost)(-1), with abiotic processes accounting for 100% and 66% of the overall (biotic+abiotic) N immobilization under anoxic and oxic conditions, respectively. (15)N-NMR spectroscopy suggests (15)NO(3)(-) was immobilized into amide/aminoquinones and nitro/oxime under anoxic conditions. A fraction of the NH(4)(+) was produced abiotically under anoxic conditions (~10% of the total NH(4)(+) production) although biotic organic N mineralization contributed to most of NH(4)(+) production. Our results also indicate Fe(II) did not act as an electron source in biotic-oxic incubations; however, Fe(II) provided electrons for NO(3)(-) reduction in biotic-anoxic incubations although it was not the sole electron source. It is clear that, under the experimental conditions of this investigation, abiotic and redox processes play important roles in NO(3)(-) transformations. As climatic conditions change (e.g., frequency/intensity of rainfall), abiotic reactions that shift transformation pathways and N species concentrations from those controlled by biota might become more prevalent.
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spelling pubmed-66115822019-07-12 Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions Kizewski, Fiona R. Kaye, Jason P. Martínez, Carmen Enid PLoS One Research Article Nitrate can be reduced to other N inorganic species via denitrification and incorporated into organic matter by immobilization; however, the effect of biotic/abiotic and redox condition on immobilization and denitrification processes from a single system are not well documented. We hypothesize nitrate (NO(3)(-)) transformation pathways leading to the formation of dissolved- and solid-phase organic N are predominantly controlled by abiotic reactions, but the formation of soluble inorganic N species is controlled by redox condition. In this study, organic matter in the form of leaf compost (LC) was spiked with (15)NO(3)(-) and incubated under oxic/anoxic and biotic/abiotic conditions at pH 6.5. We seek to understand how variations in environmental conditions impact NO(3)(-) transformation pathways through laboratory incubations. We find production of NH(4)(+) is predominantly controlled by redox whereas NO(3)(-) conversion to dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) and immobilization in solid-phase N are predominantly controlled by abiotic processes. Twenty % of added (15)N-NO(3)(-) was incorporated into DON under oxic conditions, with abiotic processes accounting for 85% of the overall incorporation. Nitrogen immobilization processes resulted in N concentrations of 4.1–6.6 μg N (g leaf compost)(-1), with abiotic processes accounting for 100% and 66% of the overall (biotic+abiotic) N immobilization under anoxic and oxic conditions, respectively. (15)N-NMR spectroscopy suggests (15)NO(3)(-) was immobilized into amide/aminoquinones and nitro/oxime under anoxic conditions. A fraction of the NH(4)(+) was produced abiotically under anoxic conditions (~10% of the total NH(4)(+) production) although biotic organic N mineralization contributed to most of NH(4)(+) production. Our results also indicate Fe(II) did not act as an electron source in biotic-oxic incubations; however, Fe(II) provided electrons for NO(3)(-) reduction in biotic-anoxic incubations although it was not the sole electron source. It is clear that, under the experimental conditions of this investigation, abiotic and redox processes play important roles in NO(3)(-) transformations. As climatic conditions change (e.g., frequency/intensity of rainfall), abiotic reactions that shift transformation pathways and N species concentrations from those controlled by biota might become more prevalent. Public Library of Science 2019-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6611582/ /pubmed/31276538 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218752 Text en © 2019 Kizewski et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kizewski, Fiona R.
Kaye, Jason P.
Martínez, Carmen Enid
Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions
title Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions
title_full Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions
title_fullStr Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions
title_full_unstemmed Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions
title_short Nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: Influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions
title_sort nitrate transformation and immobilization in particulate organic matter incubations: influence of redox, iron and (a)biotic conditions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6611582/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31276538
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218752
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