Ubiquitous anaerobic ammonium oxidation in inland waters of China: an overlooked nitrous oxide mitigation process
Publication date
2015-11-27
Authors
Zhu, Guibing
Wang, Shanyun
Zhou, Leiliu
Wang, Yu
Zhao, Siyan
Xia, Chao
Wang, Weidong
Zhou, Rong
Wang, Chaoxu
Jetten, Mike S M
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Abstract
Denitrification has long been regarded as the only pathway for terrestrial nitrogen (N) loss to the atmosphere. Here we demonstrate that large-scale anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), an overlooked N loss process alternative to denitrification which bypasses nitrous oxide (N2O), is ubiquitous in inland waters of China and contributes significantly to N loss. Anammox rates in aquatic systems show different levels (1.0-975.9 μmol N m(-2) h(-1), n = 256) with hotspots occurring at oxic-anoxic interfaces and harboring distinct biogeochemical and biogeographical features. Extrapolation of these results to the China-national level shows that anammox could contribute about 2.0 Tg N yr(-1), which equals averagely 11.4% of the total N loss from China's inland waters. Our results indicate that a significant amount of the nitrogen lost from inland waters bypasses denitrification, which is important for constructing more accurate climate models and may significantly reduce potential N2O emission risk at a large scale.
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Zhu, G, Wang, S, Zhou, L, Wang, Y, Zhao, S, Xia, C, Wang, W, Zhou, R, Wang, C, Jetten, M S M, Hefting, M M, Yin, C & Qu, J 2015, 'Ubiquitous anaerobic ammonium oxidation in inland waters of China : an overlooked nitrous oxide mitigation process', Scientific Reports, vol. 5, pp. 17306. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep17306