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Effects of warming and elevated O3 concentrations on N2O emission and soil nitrification and denitrification rates in a wheat-soybean rotation cropland
2020
Wang, Yuanyuan | Hu, Zhenghua | Shang, Dongyao | Xue, Ying | Islam, A.R.M Towfiqul | Chen, Shutao
The effects of warming and elevated ozone (O₃) concentrations on nitrous oxide (N₂O) emission from cropland has received increasing attention; however, the small number of studies on this topic impedes understanding. A field experiment was performed to explore the role of warming and elevated O₃ concentrations on N₂O emission from wheat-soybean rotation cropland from 2012 to 2013 using open-top chambers (OTCs). Experimental treatments included ambient temperature (control), elevated temperature (+2 °C), elevated O₃ (100 ppb), and combined elevated temperature (+2 °C) and O₃ (100 ppb). Results demonstrate that warming significantly increased the accumulative amount of N₂O (AAN) emitted from the soil-winter wheat system due to enhanced nitrification rates in the wheat farmland and nitrate reductase activity in wheat leaves. However, elevated O₃ concentrations significantly decreased AAN emission from the soil-soybean system owing to reduced nitrification rates in the soybean farmland. The combined treatment of warming and elevated O₃ inhibited the emission of N₂O from the soybean farmland. Additionally, both the warming and combined treatments significantly increased soil nitrification rates in winter wheat and soybean croplands and decreased denitrification rates in the winter wheat cropping system. Our results suggest that global warming and elevated O₃ concentrations will strongly affect N₂O emission from wheat-soybean rotation croplands.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Biological nitrification inhibitor for reducing N2O and NH3 emissions simultaneously under root zone fertilization in a Chinese rice field
2020
Yao, Yuanlin | Zeng, Ke | Song, Yuzhi
Rice fields significantly contribute to the global N₂O and NH₃ emissions. Nitrification inhibitors (NIs) show promise in decreasing N₂O emission, but they can increase NH₃ volatilization under traditional broadcasting. Root zone fertilization (RZF) can mitigate NH₃ volatilization, but it may pose a high risk to N₂O emission. Additionally, most chemical NIs have limited availability and potential for environmental contamination, in contrast, biological NIs, such as methyl 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl) propionate (MHPP), are easily available and eco-friendly. However, the effects of RZF combined with MHPP on N₂O and NH₃ emissions are unknown. Therefore, a field experiment was conducted in a Chinese rice field with five treatments at 210 kg urea-N ha⁻¹ (BC: 3-split surface broadcasting; BC + MHPP: BC with MHPP; RZ, root zone fertilization; RZ + MHPP, RZF with MHPP; RZ + MHPP + NBPT, RZF with MHPP and NBPT). The results showed that although RZ eliminated NH₃ volatilization, it significantly increased total N₂O emission by 761% compared with BC due to the stimulation of nitrification by mid-season aeration (MSA) and the trigger of denitrification by a large amount of NO₃⁻. Nearly 90% N₂O was emitted at MSA stage for RZF treatments, and their N₂O fluxes were exponentially related to the soil NO₃⁻-N concentrations in the 7–20 cm deep soil layer. RZ + MHPP greatly reduced the peak values of N₂O flux due to the suppression of nitrification by MHPP and then less production of NO₃⁻ for denitrification, its total N₂O emission was 79% lower compared with that of RZ. However, RZ + MHPP + NBPT further increased the total N₂O emission by 1044% compared with that of BC. Compared to BC, the RZF practice reduced total NH₃ volatilization by 88–92% regardless use of NIs. RZF had no influence on CH₄ emissions and enhanced the rice yields. In conclusion, RZF + MHPP is a promising strategy for simultaneously reducing N₂O and NH₃ emissions in rice fields.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Simultaneous energy harvest and nitrogen removal using a supercapacitor microbial fuel cell
2020
Cai, Teng | Jiang, Nan | Zhen, Guangyin | Meng, Lijun | Song, Jialing | Chen, Gang | Liu, Yanbiao | Huang, Manhong
The insufficient removal of pollutants and bioelectricity production have become a bottleneck for high-concentration saline wastewater treatment through microbial fuel cell (MFC) technology. Herein, a novel supercapacitor MFC (SC-MFC) was constructed with carbon nanofibers composite electrodes to investigate pollutant removal ability, power generation, and electrochemical properties using real landfill leachate. The possible extracellular electron transfer and nitrogen element conversion pathways in the bioanode were also analyzed. Results showed that the SC-MFC had higher pollutant removal rates (COD: 59.4 ± 1.2%; NH₄⁺-N: 78.2 ± 1.6%; and TN: 77.8 ± 1.2%), smaller internal impedance Rₜ (∼6 Ω), higher exchange current density i₀ (2.1 × 10⁻⁴ A cm⁻²), and a larger catalytic current j₀ (704 μA cm⁻²) with 60% leachate than those with 10% and 20% leachate, resulting in a power output of 298 ± 22 mW m⁻². Ammonium could be incorporated by chemoautotrophic bacteria to produce organic compounds that could be further utilized by heterotrophs to generate power when biodegradable organic matters are depleted. Three conversion pathways of nitrogen might be involved, including NH₄⁺ diffusion from anode to cathode chamber, nitrification, and the denitrification process. Additionally, cyclic voltammetry tests showed that both the direct electron transfer (DET) and the mediator electron transfer in bioanode were involved and dominated by DET. The microbial analysis revealed that the bioanode was dominated by salt-tolerant denitrifying bacteria (38.5%), which was deduced to be the key functional microorganism. The electrochemically active bacteria decreased significantly from 61.7% to 4% over three stages of leachate treatment. Overall, the SC-MFC has demonstrated the potential for wastewater treatment along with energy harvesting and provides a new avenue toward sustainable leachate management.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]N2O emissions and product ratios of nitrification and denitrification are altered by K fertilizer in acidic agricultural soils
2020
Li, Zhiguo | Xia, Shujie | Zhang, Runhua | Zhang, Runqin | Chen, Fang | Liu, Yi
Potassium (K) fertilizer plays an important role in increasing crop yield, quality, and nitrogen use efficiency. However, little is known about its environmental impacts, such as its effects on emissions of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N₂O). A nitrogen-15 (¹⁵N) tracer laboratory experiment was therefore performed in an acidic agricultural soil in the suburbs of Wuhan, central China, to determine the effects of K fertilizer on N₂O emissions and nitrification/denitrification product ratios under N fertilization. During 15-d incubation periods with a fixed initial N concentration (80 mg kg⁻¹), K application increased average N₂O emission rates significantly (1.6–10.8-fold) compared to the control treatment. N₂O emissions derived from nitrification and denitrification both increased in K-treated soil, and denitrification contributed more to the increase; its contribution ratio rose from 32% without K fertilizer to 53% with 300 mg kg⁻¹ of K applied. The increase in N₂O emissions under K fertilization is probably due to an increase in the activity of denitrifying microorganisms and acid-resistant nitrifying microorganisms caused by higher K⁺ concentrations and lower soil pH. Combined treatment with potassium chloride (KCl) and N fertilizer produced lower N₂O emissions than combined treatment with potassium sulfate (K₂SO₄) and N fertilizer during 15-d incubation periods. Our results imply that there are significant interaction effects between N fertilizers and K fertilizers on N₂O emissions. In particular, combining N fertilizers with fertilizers that reduce soil acidity or contain Cl or K ions may significantly affect agricultural N₂O emissions.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Application of sewage sludge containing environmentally-relevant silver sulfide nanoparticles increases emissions of nitrous oxide in saline soils
2020
Wu, Jingtao | Bai, Yunfei | Lu, Bingkun | Li, Cui | Menzies, Neal W. | Bertsch, Paul M. | Wang, Zhanke | Wang, Peng | Kopittke, Peter M.
Silver (Ag) is released from a range of products and accumulates in agricultural soils as silver sulfide (Ag₂S) through the application of Ag-containing biosolids as a soil amendment. Although Ag₂S is comparatively stable, its solubility increases with salinity, potentially altering its impacts on microbial communities due to the anti-microbial properties of Ag. In this study, we investigated the impacts of Ag on the microbially mediated N cycle in saline soils by examining the relationship between the (bio)availability of Ag₂S and microbial functioning following the application of Ag₂S-containing sludge. Synchrotron-based X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) revealed that the Ag₂S was stable within the soil, although extractable Ag concentrations increased up to 18-fold in soils with higher salinity. However, the extractable Ag accounted for <0.05% of the total Ag in all soils and had no impact on plant biomass or soil bacterial biomass. Interestingly, at high soil salinity, Ag₂S significantly increased cumulative N₂O emissions from 80.9 to 229.2 mg kg⁻¹ dry soil (by 180%) compared to the corresponding control sludge treatment, which was ascribed to the increased abundance of nitrification and denitrification-related genes (amoA, nxrB, narG, napA, nirS, and nosZ) and increased relative abundance of denitrifiers (Rhodanobacter, Salinimicrobium, and Zunongwangia). Together, our findings show that the application of Ag₂S-containing sludge to a saline soil can disrupt the N cycle and increase N₂O emissions from agroecosystems.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Cyanotoxin impact on microbial-mediated nitrogen transformations at the interface of sediment-water column in surface water bodies
2020
Li, Hanyan | Hollstein, Marielle | Podder, Aditi | Gupta, Vedansh | Barber, Michael | Goel, Ramesh
Harmful cyanobacterial blooms produce lethal toxins in many aquatic ecosystems experiencing eutrophication. This manuscript presents results on the effects of cyanotoxins on the aerobic microbial communities residing at the interface of sediments and water columns with the ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) as the model microbial community. Microcystin-LR (MC-LR), a heavily researched cyanotoxin variant, was used as the model cyanotoxin. To measure cyanotoxin influence on the activity of nitrifying microbial communities, an enriched culture of AOBs collected from an ongoing partial nitrification-nitritation reactor was examined for its exposure to 1, 5 and 10 μg/L of MC-LR. The nitritation kinetics experiment demonstrated MC-LR’s ability at 1, 5, and 10 μg/L concentrations to prevent ammonium oxidation with statistically significant differences in nitritation rates between the blanks and spiked samples (One-way ANOVA, p < 0.05). Significantly decreased dissolved oxygen (DO) consumption during oxygen update batch tests demonstrated toxin’s influence on AOB’s oxidizing capabilities when exposed to even lower concentrations of 0.75, 0.5, and 0.25 μg/L of MC-LR in a separate set of experiments. Based on competitive kinetics, the MC-LR inhibition coefficient-the concentration needed to produce half-maximum inhibition of the mixed community AOBs was determined to be 0.083 μg/L. The stress tests proved the recovery of nitritation to some extent at lower MC-LR concentrations (1 and 5 μg/L), but significant irreversible inhibition was recorded when the AOB population was exposed to 10 μg/L MC-LR. The comparisons of amoA gene expressions corresponded well with nitrifying kinetics. All concentrations of MC-LR spiking were determined to produce a discernible impact on the AOB nitritation rate by either destroying the bacterial cell or immediately inhibiting the amoA gene expression.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Sertraline inhibits top-down forces (predation) in microbial food web and promotes nitrification in sediment
2020
Li, Yi | Miao, Yuanyuan | Zhang, Wenlong | Yang, Nan | Niu, Lihua | Zhang, Huanjun | Wang, Longfei
Sertraline is a widely used antidepressant that becomes an aquatic pollutant through metabolic excretion and improper disposal. Determining the impact of sertraline on benthic microbial ecosystems is important for the transformation of river biogenic elements. However, the molecular initiating event induced by sertraline is more readily observed at higher levels, such as the individual or population level of larger organisms, and the effect is not pronounced in benthic organisms, which are directly involved in nitrogen transformation. Therefore, this study used DNA metabarcoding to analyze the effect of sertraline on the microbial ecosystem and material cycles in river sediment through the lens of a microbial food web. The presence of sertraline in the river sediment enhanced the mineralization capacity of nitrogen and increased the accumulation of nitrate in the sediment. Sertraline affected the structure of the microbial food web by stimulating different successions of bacteria and eukaryotes. A structural equation model revealed that sertraline affected the microbial food web model through top-down forces (predation) by reducing the trophic transfer efficiency from metazoans to protozoans. This effect resulted in decreases in the trophic transfer efficiency from protozoans to bacteria and increases in nitrogen mineralization capacity. This was followed by a gradual increase in the nitrification reaction under the action of nitrifying bacteria, increasing the threat to the ecological health of rivers. The results show that sertraline affects the material cycle of river ecosystems and emphasizes that the assessment of the ecological risks of sertraline needs to be considered from the perspective of the material cycle of ecosystems.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Applying microbial indicators of hydrocarbon toxicity to contaminated sites undergoing bioremediation on subantarctic Macquarie Island
2020
van Dorst, Josie | Wilkins, Daniel | King, Catherine K. | Spedding, Tim | Hince, Greg | Zhang, Eden Quxian | Crane, Sally | Ferrari, Belinda
Microorganisms are useful biological indicators of toxicity and play a key role in the functioning of healthy soils. In this study, we investigated the residual toxicity of hydrocarbons in aged contaminated soils and determined the extent of microbial community recovery during in-situ bioremediation at subantarctic Macquarie Island. Previously identified microbial indicators of hydrocarbon toxicity were used to understand interactions between hydrocarbon concentrations, soil physicochemical parameters and the microbial community. Despite the complexity of the field sites, which included active fuel storage areas with high levels of soil heterogeneity, multiple spill events and variable fuel sources, we observed consistent microbial community traits associated with exposure to high concentrations of hydrocarbons. These included; reductions in alpha diversity, inhibition of nitrification potential and a reduction in the ratio of oligotrophic to copiotrophic species. These observed responses and the sensitivity of microbial communities in the field, were comparable to sensitivity estimates obtained in a previous lab-based mesocosm study with hydrocarbon spiked soils. This study provides a valuable and often missing link between the quite disparate conditions of controlled lab-based spiking experiments and the complexity presented by ‘real-world’ contaminated field sites.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Nitrate sources and biogeochemical processes in karst underground rivers impacted by different anthropogenic input characteristics
2020
Yang, Pingheng | Wang, Yuyang | Wu, Xinyu | Chang, Longran | Ham, Brian | Song, Lisheng | Groves, Chris
Nitrate is one of the most common pollution sources in groundwater, particularly in highly vulnerable karst aquifers. The potential for nitrification and denitrification within karst aquifers varies in different settings depending on the extent of anthropogenic inputs, so that accurate identification of nitrate sources can be difficult. Geochemical data and dual nitrate isotopes were measured in this study, incorporating a Bayesian isotopic mixing model, and used to identify nitrate sources, nitrification and denitrification, and quantitatively determine nitrate sources under different extents of anthropogenic inputs in three karst catchments within Chongqing Municipality, SW China: Laolongdong (an urbanized area), Qingmuguan (a suburban village), and Shuifang Spring (a protected natural area). At the Laolongdong catchment, the groundwater was in a reducing condition and enriched in δ¹⁵NNO₃ (averaging 18.9 ± 6.9‰) and δ¹⁸ONO₃ (averaging 8.5 ± 4.6‰). Manure and sewage waste were the main contributing nitrate sources. A slope of 1.8: 1 of the dual isotopes suggested a denitrification process occurring in anaerobic conduit flow. Within the Qingmuguan catchment, groundwater had average δ¹⁵NNO₃ and δ¹⁸ONO₃ values of 9.7 ± 3.5‰, and 1.9 ± 3.4‰, respectively. The data showed evidence for nitrification, and the contribution of soil organic nitrogen was 52.1%, followed by a contribution of 44.8% from manure and wastewater. At the Shuifang Spring catchment, the mean δ¹⁵NNO₃ and δ¹⁸ONO₃ values in groundwater were 8.8 ± 2.9‰, 2.3 ± 4.6‰, respectively. Nitrification was the dominant process and most of the nitrate was derived from soil organic nitrogen. This study suggests that karst underground rivers overlain by urban land use undergo denitrification, while the suburban and relatively pristine karst aquifers are dominated by nitrification, allowing development of a conceptual model for nitrate sources and transformations in karst aquifers from the categories of land use (i.e., urban, suburban, and pristine areas).Anthropogenic activities can change biogeochemical nitrogen dynamics of vulnerable karst aquifers, such that the groundwater overlain by an urban settlement has undergone denitrification, while suburban and pristine areas have been dominated by nitrification.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Low temperature advanced nitrogen and sulfate removal from landfill leachate by nitrite-anammox and sulfate-anammox
2020
Wu, Linuo | Yan, Zhibin | Li, Jin | Huang, Shan | Li, Zhi | Shen, Mingyu | Peng, Yongzhen
Under anaerobic conditions, ammonium (NH₄⁺) can react with nitrite (NO₂⁻) and sulfate (SO₄²⁻), termed nitrite-anammox (NirAnammox) and sulfate-anammox (Sulfammox), respectively. However, how to remove NH₄⁺ and SO₄²⁻ together from leachate is unclear. In this study, NirAnammox and Sulfammox cooperatively achieved nitrogen and sulfate removal from leachate using a biological process at low temperature (14–15 °C). NH₄⁺, total nitrogen (TN), and SO₄²⁻ concentrations in the influent were 610–700, 670–900, 1870–1920 mg/L, respectively, and 10 ± 1, 35 ± 3, and 897.7 ± 10 mg/L, respectively, in the effluent. Sulfammox, and NirAnammox (including partial nitrification) removed 44.2% and 35.46% of the NH₄⁺, respectively. Therefore, because leachate contains high concentrations of NH₄⁺ and SO₄²⁻, NirAnammox and Sulfammox can easily occur together, with nitrogen removal by Sulfammox being more than NirAnammox. The relative abundance of dominant bacteria of the Sulfammox were 10–20 times that of Candidatus Kuenenia (NirAnammox) in each reactor. Organic matter negatively affected NirAnammox, but not Sulfammox. Dissolved oxygen negatively affected both.
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