Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/111411
Title: Nitrogen loss processes in response to upwelling in a Peruvian coastal setting dominated by denitrification - A mesocosm approach
Authors: Schulz, Kai G.
Achterberg, Eric P.
Arístegui, Javier 
Bach, Lennart T.
Baños, Isabel 
Boxhammer, Tim
Erler, Dirk
Igarza, Maricarmen
Kalter, Verena
Ludwig, Andrea
Löscher, Carolin
Meyer, Jana
Meyer, Judith
Minutolo, Fabrizio
Von Der Esch, Elisabeth
Ward, Bess B.
Riebesell, Ulf
UNESCO Clasification: 251001 Oceanografía biológica
Issue Date: 2021
Journal: Biogeosciences 
Abstract: Upwelling of nutrient-rich deep waters make eastern boundary upwelling systems (EBUSs), such as the Humboldt Current system, hot spots of marine productivity. Associated settling of organic matter to depth and consecutive aerobic decomposition results in large subsurface water volumes being oxygen depleted. Under these circumstances, organic matter remineralisation can continue via denitrification, which represents a major loss pathway for bioavailable nitrogen. Additionally, anaerobic ammonium oxidation can remove significant amounts of nitrogen in these areas. Here we assess the interplay of suboxic water upwelling and nitrogen cycling in a manipulative offshore mesocosm experiment. Measured denitrification rates in incubations with water from the oxygen-depleted bottom layer of the mesocosms (via 15N label incubations) mostly ranged between 5.5 and 20gnmolgN2gL-1gh-1 (interquartile range), reaching up to 80gnmolgN2gL-1gh-1. However, actual in situ rates in the mesocosms, estimated via Michaelis-Menten kinetic scaling, did most likely not exceed 0.2-4.2gnmolgN2gL-1gh-1 (interquartile range) due to substrate limitation. In the surrounding Pacific, measured denitrification rates were similar, although indications of substrate limitation were detected only once. In contrast, anammox (anaerobic ammonium oxidation) made only a minor contribution to the overall nitrogen loss when encountered in both the mesocosms and the Pacific Ocean. This was potentially related to organic matter Cg/gN stoichiometry and/or process-specific oxygen and hydrogen sulfide sensitivities. Over the first 38gd of the experiment, total nitrogen loss calculated from in situ rates of denitrification and anammox was comparable to estimates from a full nitrogen budget in the mesocosms and ranged between g1/4g1 and 5.5gmolgNgL-1. This represents up to g1/4g20g% of the initially bioavailable inorganic and organic nitrogen standing stocks. Interestingly, this loss is comparable to the total amount of particulate organic nitrogen that was exported into the sediment traps at the bottom of the mesocosms at about 20gm depth. Altogether, this suggests that a significant portion, if not the majority of nitrogen that could be exported to depth, is already lost, i.e. converted to N2 in a relatively shallow layer of the surface ocean, provided that there are oxygen-deficient conditions like those during coastal upwelling in our study. Published data for primary productivity and nitrogen loss in all EBUSs reinforce such conclusion.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/111411
ISSN: 1726-4170
DOI: 10.5194/bg-18-4305-2021
Source: Biogeosciences [ISSN 1726-4170], v. 18 (14), p. 4305-4320, (Julio 2021)
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