خيارات البحث
النتائج 21 - 30 من 2,548
PM2.5 composition and sources in the San Joaquin Valley of California: A long-term study using ToF-ACSM with the capture vaporizer
2022
Sun, Peng | Farley, Ryan N. | Li, Lijuan | Srivastava, Deepchandra | Niedek, Christopher R. | Li, Jianjun | Wang, Ningxin | Cappa, Christopher D. | Pusede, Sally E. | Yu, Zhenhong | Croteau, Philip | Zhang, Qi
The San Joaquin Valley (SJV) of California has suffered persistent particulate matter (PM) pollution despite many years of control efforts. To further understand the chemical drivers of this problem and to support the development of State Implementation Plan for PM, a time-of-flight aerosol chemical speciation monitor (ToF-ACSM) outfitted with a PM₂.₅ lens and a capture vaporizer has been deployed at the Fresno-Garland air monitoring site of the California Air Resource Board (CARB) since Oct. 2018. The instrument measured non-refractory species in PM₂.₅ continuously at 10-min resolution. In this study, the data acquired from Oct. 2018 to May 2019 were analyzed to investigate the chemical characteristics, sources and atmospheric processes of PM₂.₅ in the SJV. Comparisons of the ToF-ACSM measurement with various co-located aerosol instruments show good agreements. The inter-comparisons indicated that PM₂.₅ in Fresno was dominated by submicron particles during the winter whereas refractory species accounted for a major fraction of PM₂.₅ mass during the autumn associated with elevated PM₁₀ loadings. A rolling window positive matrix factorization analysis was applied to the organic aerosol (OA) mass spectra using the Multilinear Engine (ME-2) algorithm. Three distinct OA sources were identified, including vehicle emissions, local and regional biomass burning, and formation of oxygenated species. There were significant seasonal variations in PM₂.₅ composition and sources. During the winter, residential wood burning and oxidation of nitrogen oxides were major contributors to the occurrence of haze episodes with PM₂.₅ dominated by biomass burning OA and nitrate. In autumn, agricultural activities and wildfires were found to be the main cause of PM pollution. PM₂.₅ concentrations decreased significantly after spring and were dominated by oxygenated OA during March to May. Our results highlight the importance of using seasonally dependent control strategies to mitigate PM pollution in the SJV.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Nitrogen input leads to the differential accumulation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the low- and high-density fractions in sewage-irrigated farmland soil
2022
Hui, Kunlong | Cui, Yini | Tan, Wenbing
Because of a shortage of water resources, sewage irrigation has become a popular management tool for farmland soil in arid areas of China; however, this has led to the accumulation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in soil. Soil is an important component of ecosystems, and nitrogen is an important nutrient required for plant growth. Nitrogen input can alter the physical, chemical, and biological processes in soil and thus lead to changes in soil organic matter and organic pollutants. However, whether these changes affect the accumulation of PAHs and whether such accumulation differs in the low-density fraction (LF) and high-density fraction (HF) of soil remains unclear. In this study, the response of PAHs in soil to nitrogen input (0, 100, 200, and 300 kg N ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹, respectively), including differences in LF and HF, were investigated through field experiments in a typical sewage-irrigated area. The results showed that nitrogen input could increase the concentrations of PAHs in soil from (7.6 ± 1.1) × 10³ to (10.4 ± 0.6) × 10³ μg kg⁻¹ and lead to striking differences between the LF ((5.06 ± 0.75) × 10³ to (1.89 ± 0.18) × 10³ μg kg⁻¹) and HF ((2.54 ± 0.36) × 10³ to (8.54 ± 0.44) × 10³ μg kg⁻¹). Given the significant increase in global nitrogen input, our findings have implications for the optimization and management of agricultural activities in sewage irrigation areas, such as soil investigation before fertilization, the use of soil improvers, and the improvement of soil planting measures.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Effect of zinc and iron oxide nanoparticles on plant physiology, seed quality and microbial community structure in a rice-soil-microbial ecosystem
2022
Afzal, Shadma | Singh, Nand K.
In this study, we assessed the impact of zinc oxide (ZnO) and iron oxide (FeO) (<36 nm) nanoparticles (NPs) as well as their sulphate salt (bulk) counterpart (0, 25, 100 mg/kg) on rice growth and seed quality as well as the microbial community in the rhizosphere environment of rice. During the rice growing season 2021–22, all experiments were conducted in a greenhouse (temperature: day 30 °C; night 20 °C; relative humidity: 70%; light period: 16 h/8 h, day/night) in rice field soil. Results showed that low concentrations of FeO and ZnO NPs (25 mg/kg) promoted rice growth (height (29%, 16%), pigment content (2%, 3%)) and grain quality parameters such as grains per spike (8%, 9%), dry weight of grains (12%, 14%) respectively. As compared to the control group, the Zn (2%) and Fe (5%) accumulations at their respective low concentrations of NP treatments showed stimulation. Interestingly, our results showed that at low concentration of both the NPs the soil microbes had more diversity and richness than those in the bulk treated and control soil group. Although a number of phyla were affected by the presence of NPs, the strongest effects were observed for change in the abundance of the three phyla for Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Planctomycetes. The rhizosphere environment was notably enriched with potential streptomycin producers, carbon and nitrogen fixers, and lignin degraders with regard to functional groups of microorganisms. However, microbial communities mainly responsible for chitin degradation, ammonia oxidation, and nitrite reduction were found to be decreased. The results from this study highlight significant changes in several plant-based endpoints, as well as the rhizosphere soil microorganisms. It further adds information to our understanding of the nanoscale-specific impacts of important micronutrient oxides on both rice and its associated soil microbiome.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Nitrous oxide emission in altered nitrogen cycle and implications for climate change
2022
Aryal, Babita | Gurung, Roshni | Camargo, Aline F. | Fongaro, Gislaine | Treichel, Helen | Mainali, Bandita | Angove, Michael J. | Ngo, Huu Hao | Guo, Wenshan | Puadel, Shukra Raj
Natural processes and human activities play a crucial role in changing the nitrogen cycle and increasing nitrous oxide (N₂O) emissions, which are accelerating at an unprecedented rate. N₂O has serious global warming potential (GWP), about 310 times higher than that of carbon dioxide. The food production, transportation, and energy required to sustain a world population of seven billion have required dramatic increases in the consumption of synthetic nitrogen (N) fertilizers and fossil fuels, leading to increased N₂O in air and water. These changes have radically disturbed the nitrogen cycle and reactive nitrogen species, such as nitrous oxide (N₂O), and have impacted the climatic system. Yet, systematic and comprehensive studies on various underlying processes and parameters in the altered nitrogen cycle, and their implications for the climatic system are still lacking. This paper reviews how the nitrogen cycle has been disturbed and altered by anthropogenic activities, with a central focus on potential pathways of N₂O generation. The authors also estimate the N₂O–N emission mainly due to anthropogenic activities will be around 8.316 Tg N₂O–N yr⁻¹ in 2050. In order to minimize and tackle the N₂O emissions and its consequences on the global ecosystem and climate change, holistic mitigation strategies and diverse adaptations, policy reforms, and public awareness are suggested as vital considerations. This study concludes that rapidly increasing anthropogenic perturbations, the identification of new microbial communities, and their role in mediating biogeochemical processes now shape the modern nitrogen cycle.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Nitrogen effects on grassland biomass production and biodiversity are stronger than those of phosphorus
2022
Li, Weibin | Gan, Xiaoling | Jiang, Yuan | Cao, Fengfeng | Lü, Xiao-Tao | Ceulemans, Tobias | Zhao, Chuanyan
Human-induced nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) enrichment have profound effects on grassland net primary production (NPP) and species richness. However, a comprehensive understanding of the relative contribution of N vs. P addition and their interaction on grassland NPP increase and species loss remains elusive. We compiled data from 80 field manipulative studies and conducted a meta-analysis (2107 observations world-wide) to evaluate the individual and combined effects of N and P addition on grassland NPP and species richness. We found that both N addition and P addition significantly enhanced grassland above-ground NPP (ANPP; 33.2% and 14.2%, respectively), but did not affect total NPP, below-ground NPP (BNPP), and species evenness. Species richness significantly decreased with N addition (11.7%; by decreasing forbs) probably due to strong decreased soil pH, but not with P addition. The combined effects of N and P addition were generally stronger than the individual effects of N or P addition, and we found the synergistic effects on ANPP, and additive effects on total NPP, BNPP, species richness, and evenness within the combinations of N and P addition. In addition, N and P addition effects were strongly affected by moderator variables (e.g. climate and fertilization type, duration and amount of fertilizer addition). These results demonstrate a higher relative contribution of N than P addition to grassland NPP increase and species loss, although the effects varied across climate and fertilization types. The existing data also reveals that more long-term (≥5 years) experimental studies that combine N and P and test multifactor effects in different climate zones (particularly in boreal grasslands) are needed to provide a more solid basis for forecasting grassland community response and C sequestration response to nutrient enrichment at the global scale.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Response surface model based emission source contribution and meteorological pattern analysis in ozone polluted days
2022
Chen, Ying | Zhu, Yun | Lin, Che-Jen | Arunachalam, Saravanan | Wang, Shuxiao | Xing, Jia | Chen, Duohong | Fan, Shaojia | Fang, Tingting | Jiang, Anqi
Urban and regional ozone (O₃) pollution is a public health concern and causes damage to ecosystems. Due to the diverse emission sources of O₃ precursors and the complex interactions of air dispersion and chemistry, identifying the contributing sources of O₃ pollution requires integrated analysis to guide emission reduction plans. In this study, the meteorological characteristics leading to O₃ polluted days (in which the maximum daily 8–h average O₃ concentration is higher than the China Class II National O₃ Standard (160 μg/m³)) in Guangzhou (GZ, China) were analyzed based on data from 2019. The O₃ formation regimes and source apportionments under various prevailing wind directions were evaluated using a Response Surface Modeling (RSM) approach. The results showed that O₃ polluted days in 2019 could be classified into four types of synoptic patterns (i.e., cyclone, anticyclone, trough, and high pressure approaching to sea) and were strongly correlated with high ambient temperature, low relative humidity, low wind speed, variable prevailing wind directions. Additionally, the cyclone pattern strongly promoted O₃ formation due to its peripheral subsidence. The O₃ formation was nitrogen oxides (NOₓ)-limited under the northerly wind, while volatile organic compounds (VOC)-limited under other prevailing wind directions. Anthropogenic emissions contributed largely to the O₃ formation (54–78%) under the westerly, southwesterly, easterly, southeasterly, or southerly wind, but only moderately (35–47%) under the northerly or northeasterly wind. Furthermore, as for anthropogenic contributions, local emission contributions were the largest (39–60%) regardless of prevailing wind directions, especially the local NOₓ contributions (19–43%); the dominant upwind regional emissions contributed 12–46% (e.g., contributions from Dongguan were 12–20% under the southeasterly wind). The emission control strategies for O₃ polluted days should focus on local emission sources in conjunction with the emission reduction of upwind regional sources.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]N2O and NO production and functional microbes responding to biochar aging process in an intensified vegetable soil
2022
Zhang, Xi | Zhang, Junqian | Song, Mengxin | Dong, Yubing | Xiong, Zhengqin
Vegetable soils with high nitrogen input are hotspots of nitrous oxide (N₂O) and nitric oxide (NO), and biochar amended to soil has been documented to effectively decrease N₂O and NO emissions. However, the aging effects of biochar on soil N₂O and NO production and the relevant mechanisms are not thoroughly understood. A¹⁵N tracing microcosm study was conducted to clarify the responses of N₂O and NO production pathways to the biochar aging process in vegetable soil. The results showed that autotrophic nitrification was the predominant source of N₂O production. Biochar aging increased the O-containing functional groups while lowering the aromaticity and pore size. Fresh biochar enhanced the AOB-amoA gene abundance and obviously stimulated N₂O production by 15.5% via autotrophic nitrification and denitrification. In contrast, field-aged biochar markedly weakened autotrophic nitrification and denitrification and thus decreased N₂O production by 17.0%, as evidenced by the change in AOB-amoA and nosZI gene abundances. However, the amendment with artificially lab-aged biochar had no effect on N₂O production. With the extension of aging time, biochar application reduced the soil NO production dominated by nitrification. Changes in the N₂O and NO fluxes were closely associated with soil NH₄⁺-N and NO₂⁻-N contents, indicating that autotrophic nitrification played a critical role in NO production. Overall, our study demonstrated that field-aged biochar suppressed N₂O production via autotrophic nitrification and denitrification by regulating associated functional genes, but not for lab-aged biochar or fresh biochar. These findings improved our insights regarding the implications of biochar aging on N₂O and NO mitigation in vegetable soils.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Evaluating the effects of aquaculture on the freshwater lake from the perspective of plankton communities: The diversity, co-occurrence patterns and their underlying mechanisms
2022
Xu, Huimin | Zhao, Dayong | Zeng, Jin | Mao, Zhigang | Gu, Xiaohong | Wu, Qinglong L.
Aquaculture has significant impacts on freshwater lakes, but plankton communities, as key components of the microbial food web, are rarely considered when assessing the impacts of aquaculture. Revealing the dynamics of plankton communities, including bacterioplankton, phytoplankton and zooplankton, under anthropological disturbances is critical for predicting the freshwater ecosystem functioning in response to future environmental changes. In the present study, we examined the impacts of aquaculture on water quality, plankton diversity and the co-occurrence patterns within plankton metacommunities in a shallow freshwater lake. The study zones are influenced by the 20-year historical intensive aquaculture, but now they are undergoing either ecological aquaculture or ecological restoration. Our results showed that ecological aquaculture was more efficient in nitrogen removal than ecological restoration. Moreover, lower bacterioplankton diversity but higher phytoplankton and zooplankton diversity were found in the ecological aquaculture and ecological restoration zones compared to the control zone. The lower network connectivity of the plankton metacommunities in the ecological aquaculture and ecological restoration zones indicated the decreasing complexity of potential microbial food web, suggesting a possible lower resistance of the plankton metacommunities to future disturbance. Furthermore, plankton communities of different trophic levels were driven under distinct mechanisms. The bacterioplankton community was primarily affected by abiotic factors, whereas the phytoplankton and zooplankton communities were explained more by trophic interactions. These results revealed the impacts of aquaculture on the plankton communities and their potential interactions, thereby providing fundamental information for better understanding the impacts of aquaculture on freshwater ecosystem functioning.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Arsenic resistance and horizontal gene transfer are associated with carbon and nitrogen enrichment in bacteria
2022
Neethu, C.S. | Saravanakumar, C. | Purvaja, R. | Robin, R.S. | Ramesh, R.
Coastal waters are confluences receiving large amounts of point and non-point sources of pollution. An attempt was made to explore microbial community interactions in response to carbon, nitrogen and metal pollution. Additionally, experiments were designed to analyze the influence of these factors on horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Shift in bacterial diversity dynamics by arsenic stress and nutrient addition in coastal waters was explored by metagenomics of microcosm setups. Phylogenetic analysis revealed equal distribution of Gammaproteobacteria (29%) and Betaproteobacteria (28%) in control microcosm. This proportional diversity from control switched to unique distribution of Gammaproteobacteria (44.5%)> Flavobacteria (17.7%)> Bacteriodia (11.92%)> Betaproteobacteria (11.52%) in microcosm supplemented with carbon, nitrogen and metal (C + N + M). Among metal-stressed systems, alpha diversity analysis indicated highest diversity of genera in C + N + M followed by N + M > C+M> metal alone. Arsenic and ampicillin sensitive E. coli XL1 blue and environmental strains (Vibrio tubiashii W85 and E. coli W101) were tested for efficiency of uptake of plasmid (P) pUCminusMCS (arsBᴿampᴿ) under varying stress conditions. Transformation experiments revealed that combined effect of carbon, nitrogen and metal on horizontal gene transfer (HGT) was significantly higher (p < 0.01) than individual factors. The effect of carbon on HGT was proved to be superior to nitrogen under metal stressed conditions. Presence of arsenic in experimental setups (P + M, P + N + M and P + C + M) enhanced the HGT compared to non-metal counterparts supplemented with carbon or nitrogen. Arsenic resistant bacterial isolates (n = 200) were tested for the ability to utilize various carbon and nitrogen substrates and distinct positive correlation (p < 0.001) was found between arsenic resistance and utilization of urea and nitrate. However, evident positive correlation was not found between carbon sources and arsenic resistance. Our findings suggest that carbon and nitrogen pollution in aquatic habitats under arsenic stress determine the microbial community dynamics and critically influence uptake of genetic material from the surrounding environment.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Long-term changes in atmospheric nitrogen deposition and stream water nitrate leaching from forested watersheds in western Japan
2021
Chiwa, Masaaki
Japan receives nitrogenous air pollutants via long-range transport from China. However, emissions of nitrogenous air pollutants in China have stabilized or decreased in recent years. This study examined both the long-term trends in atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition from the 1990s to the 2010s and the response of stream water nitrate (NO₃⁻) leaching from forested areas in western Japan. A long-term (1992–2018) temporal analysis of atmospheric N deposition in Fukuoka (western Japan) was conducted. Atmospheric bulk N deposition was collected at forested sites in a suburban forest (Swₑₛₜ) and a rural forest (Rwₑₛₜ) in western Japan during 2009–2018. Stream water samples were also collected from four locations at sites Swₑₛₜ and Rwₑₛₜ during the same period. Results showed that atmospheric N deposition in Fukuoka started to decrease from the mid-2000s at an annual rate of −2.5% yr⁻¹. The decrease in atmospheric N deposition was attributable mainly to decreased atmospheric ammonium (NH₄⁺) deposition, which caused greater contribution of NO₃⁻ deposition to atmospheric N deposition. Concentrations of NO₃⁻ in the stream water samples from three of the four locations decreased significantly at an annual rate of −3.7 to −0.7% yr⁻¹. However, stream water NO₃⁻ concentrations increased in one watershed where understory vegetation has been deteriorating owing to the increased deer population. This might weaken the recovery of N leaching from forested areas.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]