细化搜索
结果 1-10 的 241
Long-term N and S addition and changed litter chemistry do not affect trembling aspen leaf litter decomposition, elemental composition and enzyme activity in a boreal forest
2019
Wang, Qi | Kwak, Jin-Hyeob | Choi, Woo-Jung | Chang, Scott X.
The effect of long-term nitrogen (N) and sulfur (S) deposition on litter mass loss and changes in carbon (C), N, and S composition and enzyme activities during litter decomposition was investigated in a boreal forest. This study included four N × S treatments: control (CK), N application (30 kg N ha−1 yr−1), S application (30 kg S ha−1 yr−1), and N plus S application (both at 30 kg ha−1 yr−1). Two experiments were conducted for 22 months: 1) a common litter decomposition experiment with litter bags containing a common litter (same litter chemistry) and 2) an in-situ litter decomposition experiment with litter from each treatment plot (and thus having different litter chemistry). Litterbags were placed onto the four treatment plots to investigate the direct effect of N and S addition and the combined effect of N and/or S addition and litter chemistry on litter decomposition, respectively. Regardless of the source of litter, N and/or S addition affected C, N and S composition at a certain period of the experiment but did not affect litter mass loss and enzyme activity throughout the experiment, indicating that the N and S addition rates were below the critical level required to affect C and N cycling in the studied ecosystem. However, the greater change in N composition per unit of litter mass loss in the N addition treatment than in the other treatments in the common litter but not in the in-situ litter experiment, suggests that the effect of N addition on N loss and retention depends on the initial litter chemistry. We conclude that the studied N and S addition rates did not affect litter decomposition and elemental cycling in the studied forest ecosystem even though the N and S addition rates were much greater than their ambient deposition rates.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Contrasting exchanges of nitrogen and phosphorus across the sediment–water interface during the drying and re-inundation of littoral eutrophic sediment
2019
Liu, Cheng | Du, Yiheng | Chen, Kaining | Ma, Shuzhan | Chen, Bingfa | Lan, Yuanming
High water level fluctuations (WLFs) lead to periodic drying and re-inundation of sediments in the littoral area of eutrophic lakes. In this study, a series of littoral sediment cores were dried for different periods (5–30 d) and rewetted for 48 h. The sediment cores that dried for 30 d were then re-inundated for 90 d. The exchanges of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) across the sediment–water interface (SWI) and the mechanisms were studied. The results showed that ammonium nitrogen (NH4+–N) fluxes increased after 5–25 d of drying, which was followed by an obvious decrease after 30 d of drying. The decreased NH4+–N fluxes remained at low levels during the 90 d re-inundation period. The soluble reactive P (SRP) fluxes decreased significantly after 15 d of drying. However, further re-inundation increased the SRP fluxes to their initial levels. The decreased water content and porosity, the oxidation of the sediment during drying, and the associated transformations of the N and P fractions in the sediment from drying to re-inundation influenced the exchanges of NH4+–N and SRP across the SWI. The decrease of labile NH4+–N in the sediment during drying was non-reversible, while the transformations between redox sensitive P (Fe-P) and aluminum-bound P were more likely to be reversible from drying to re-inundation. The increase of Fe-P during drying and dissolution of Fe-P during the re-inundation were responsible for the development of SRP fluxes from drying to re-inundation. Therefore, the periodic drying and re-inundation of the littoral eutrophic sediments reduced the release of NH4+–N but accelerated the release of SRP from the sediment. This should be given more consideration for the remediation and management of eutrophication in the lake and other similar lakes with high WLFs.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Nitrogen addition promotes the transformation of heavy metal speciation from bioavailable to organic bound by increasing the turnover time of organic matter: An analysis on soil aggregate level
2019
Li, Renfei | Tan, Wenbing | Wang, Guoan | Zhao, Xinyu | Dang, Qiuling | Yu, Hanxia | Xi, Beidou
Nitrogen (N) addition can change physicochemical properties and biogeochemical processes in soil, but whether or not these changes further affect the transport and transformation of heavy metal speciation is unknown. Here, a long-term (2004–2016) field experiment was conducted to assess the responses of different heavy metal speciation in three soil aggregate fractions to N additions in a temperate agroecosystem of North China. The organic matter turnover time was quantified based on changes in δ13C following the conversion from C3 (wheat) to C4 crop (corn). Averagely, N addition decreases and increases the heavy metal contents in bioavailable and organic bound fractions by 27.5% and 16.6%, respectively, suggesting N addition promotes the transformation of heavy metal speciation from bioavailable to organic bound, and such a promotion in a small aggregate fraction is more remarkable than that in a large aggregate fraction. The transformations of heavy metal speciation from bioavailable to organic bound in all soil aggregate fractions are largely dependent on the increments in the turnover time of organic matter. The increase in organic matter turnover time induced by N addition may inhibit the desorption of heavy metals from organic matter by prolonging the interaction time between heavy metals and organic matter and enhance the capacity of organic matter to adsorb heavy metals by increasing the humification degree and functional group. Our work can provide insights into the accumulation, migration, and transformation of heavy metals in soils in the context of increasing global soil N input from a microenvironmental perspective.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Environmental fate and microbial effects of monensin, lincomycin, and sulfamethazine residues in soil
2019
D'Alessio, Matteo | Durso, Lisa M. | Miller, Daniel N. | Woodbury, Brian | Ray, Chittaranjan | Snow, Daniel D.
The impact of commonly-used livestock antibiotics on soil nitrogen transformations under varying redox conditions is largely unknown. Soil column incubations were conducted using three livestock antibiotics (monensin, lincomycin and sulfamethazine) to better understand the fate of the antibiotics, their effect on nitrogen transformation, and their impact on soil microbial communities under aerobic, anoxic, and denitrifying conditions. While monensin was not recovered in the effluent, lincomycin and sulfamethazine concentrations decreased slightly during transport through the columns. Sorption, and to a limited extent degradation, are likely to be the primary processes leading to antibiotic attenuation during leaching. Antibiotics also affected microbial respiration and clearly impacted nitrogen transformation. The occurrence of the three antibiotics as a mixture, as well as the occurrence of lincomycin alone affected, by inhibiting any nitrite reduction, the denitrification process. Discontinuing antibiotics additions restored microbial denitrification. Metagenomic analysis indicated that Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria, and Chloroflexi were the predominant phyla observed throughout the study. Results suggested that episodic occurrence of antibiotics led to a temporal change in microbial community composition in the upper portion of the columns while only transient changes occurred in the lower portion. Thus, the occurrence of high concentrations of veterinary antibiotic residues could impact nitrogen cycling in soils receiving wastewater runoff or manure applications with potential longer-term microbial community changes possible at higher antibiotic concentrations.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Removal characteristics of a composite active medium for remediation of nitrogen-contaminated groundwater and metagenomic analysis of degrading bacteria
2019
Li, Shuo | Zhang, Yuling | Qian, Hong | Deng, Zhiqun | Wang, Xi | Yin, Siqi
To investigate the removal characteristics of ammonium-nitrogen (NH₄⁺-N), nitrite-nitrogen (NO₂⁻-N), nitrate-nitrogen (NO₃⁻-N), and total nitrogen from groundwater by a degradable composite active medium, kinetics, thermodynamics, and equilibrium adsorption, experiments were performed using scoria and degrading bacteria immobilized on scoria. Removal of NH₄⁺-N, NO₂⁻-N, and NO₃⁻-N was conducted in adsorption experiments using different times, initial concentrations, pH values, and groundwater chemical compositions (Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺, HCO₃⁻, CO₃²⁻, Fe²⁺, Mn²⁺, and SO₄²⁻). The results showed that the removal of nitrogen by the composite active medium was obviously better than that of scoria alone. The removal rates of NH₄⁺-N (C₀ = 5 mg/L), NO₂⁻-N (C₀ = 5 mg/L), and NO₃⁻-N (C₀ = 100 mg/L) by the composite active medium within 1 h were 96.05%, 82.40%, and 83.16%, respectively. The adsorption kinetics were well fitted to a pseudo-second order model, whereas the equilibrium adsorption agreed with the Freundlich model. With changes in the pH, variation in the removal could be attributed to the combined effect of hydrolysis and competitive ion adsorption, and the optimum pH was 7. Different concentration conditions, hardness, alkalinity, anions, and cations showed different promoting and inhibiting effects on the removal of nitrogen. A careful examination of ionic concentrations in adsorption batch experiments suggested that the sorption behavior of nitrogen onto the immobilized medium was mainly controlled by ion exchange. The degrading bacteria on the scoria surface were eluted and analyzed by metagenomic sequencing. There were significant differences in the number of operational taxons, relative abundances, and community diversity among degrading bacteria after adsorption of the three forms of nitrogen. The relative abundance of degrading bacteria was highest after NO₃⁻-N removal, and the diversity was highest after NO₂⁻-N removal. Pseudomonas and Serratia were the dominant genera that could efficiently remove NH₄⁺-N and NO₂⁻-N.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Cooperation between partial-nitrification, complete ammonia oxidation (comammox), and anaerobic ammonia oxidation (anammox) in sludge digestion liquid for nitrogen removal
2019
Wu, Linuo | Shen, Mingyu | Li, Jin | Huang, Shan | Li, Zhi | Yan, Zhibin | Peng, Yongzhen
The challenge of sludge digester liquor treatment is its high ammonium nitrogen (NH₄⁺-N) concentration. Early reports found that complete ammonia oxidation (comammox) was not present and anaerobic ammonia oxidation (anammox) was difficult to achieve in most sludge digester liquor treatments. In this study, NH₄⁺-N removal by cooperation between partial-nitrification, comammox, and anammox processes was achieved in a sequencing batch reactor (SBR) for sludge digester liquor treatment. The results showed that 2100–2200 mg/L of NH₄⁺-N was removed in the SBR with 98.82% removal efficiency. In addition, 55.11% of NH₄⁺-N was converted to nitrite nitrogen (NO₂⁻-N) by partial-nitrification, 25.43% of NH₄⁺-N was converted to nitrate nitrogen (NO₃⁻-N) by comammox, and 18.28% of NH₄⁺-N was removed by anammox. During the operation, in the SBR, the relative abundance of the dominant ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (Chitinophagaceae) was 18.89%, that of the dominant anammox bacteria (Candidatus Kuenenia) was 0.10%, and that of the dominant comammox bacteria (Nitrospira) was 0.20%. Therefore, the high nitrogen removal efficiency in this system was considered the result of the combination of the three processes. These results showed that comammox and anammox could play very important roles in nitrogen transformation and energy-saving in nitrogen removal systems.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Responses of forest ecosystems in Europe to decreasing nitrogen deposition
2019
Schmitz, Andreas | Sanders, Tanja G.M. | Bölte, Andreas | Bussotti, Filippo | Dirnböck, Thomas | Johnson, Jim | Peñuelas, Josep | Pollastrini, Martina | Prescher, Anne-Katrin | Sardans, Jordi | Verstraeten, Arne | de Vries, Wim
Average nitrogen (N) deposition across Europe has declined since the 1990s. This resulted in decreased N inputs to forest ecosystems especially in Central and Western Europe where deposition levels are highest. While the impact of atmospheric N deposition on forests has been receiving much attention for decades, ecosystem responses to the decline in N inputs received less attention. Here, we review observational studies reporting on trends in a number of indicators: soil acidification and eutrophication, understory vegetation, tree nutrition (foliar element concentrations) as well as tree vitality and growth in response to decreasing N deposition across Europe. Ecosystem responses varied with limited decrease in soil solution nitrate concentrations and potentially also foliar N concentrations. There was no large-scale response in understory vegetation, tree growth, or vitality. Experimental studies support the observation of a more distinct reaction of soil solution and foliar element concentrations to changes in N supply compared to the three other parameters. According to the most likely scenarios, further decrease of N deposition will be limited. We hypothesize that this expected decline will not cause major responses of the parameters analysed in this study. Instead, future changes might be more strongly controlled by the development of N pools accumulated within forest soils, affected by climate change and forest management.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Biochar can mitigate methane emissions by improving methanotrophs for prolonged period in fertilized paddy soils
2019
Wu, Zhen | Song, Yanfeng | Shen, Haojie | Jiang, Xueyang | Li, Bo | Xiong, Zhengqin
Biochar application to fertilized paddy soils has been recommended as an effective countermeasure to mitigate methane (CH₄) emissions, but its mechanism and effective duration has not yet been adequately elucidated. A laboratory incubation experiment was performed to gain insight into the combined effects of fresh and six-year aged biochar on potential methane oxidation (PMO) in paddy soils with ammonium or nitrate-amendment. Results showed that both ammonium and nitrate were essential for CH₄ oxidation though high ammonium (4 mM) inhibited PMO as compared to low ammonium (1 mM and 2 mM), and that nitrate was better in promoting PMO than ammonium. Moreover, ammonium-amendment promoted type I pmoA, and nitrate-amendment enhanced type II pmoA abundance. Both fresh and aged biochar increased PMO as well as nitrification by enhancing the total, type I and type II methanotrophs as compared to the control. Increased soil PMO with mineral N input in both six-year aged biochar and fresh biochar amendment, indicating that biochar mitigated CH₄ by promoting PMO for prolonged period in fertilized paddy soils.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Sediment characterisation and spatial distribution of heavy metals in the sediment of a tropical freshwater wetland of Indo-Burmese province
2019
Kalita, Suravi | Sarma, Hari Prasad | Devi, Arundhuti
The sediment characterisation of wetlands belonging to the Northeastern Region of India particularly regarding the assessment of sediment carbon stock is very scanty. The presently available literature on the wetlands cannot be employed as a common model for managing the wetlands of the Northeastern Region of India as wetlands are a sensitive ecosystem with a different origin or endogenous interventions. Thereby, this research was conducted on Deepor Beel for investigating the spatial and seasonal variation of sediment parameters, the relationship between the parameters and pollution status of the wetland. Results revealed that the study area is of an acidic nature with a sandy clay loam type texture. Organic carbon, total nitrogen and available nitrogen were higher in sediments in the monsoon period. The mean stock of the sediment carbon pool of Deepor Beel is estimated to be 2.5 ± 0.7 kg m−2. The average non-residual fraction percentage (63.2%) of Pb was higher than the residual fraction. Zn content ∼490 mg kg−1 exceeding its effect range medium (ERM) was determined to suggest frequent biological adverse effects. Highest metal enrichment factor (EF) values were shown by Zn and Pb, which ranged between 78 and 255. Risk assessment code (RAC) values of Pb between 21 and 29% indicated its high bio-accessibility risk. Pearson's coefficient matrix revealed a low degree of positive correlation between organic carbon content and metal concentration. Principal component analysis revealed that the first component comprising of EC, basic cations and metals accounted for 62.3% of variance while the second component (OM, OC, TN, AN, AP) and the third component (pH) accounted for 21.8% and 7.0% of the variance, respectively. The present study revealed the adverse impact of human inputs on the Deepor Beel quality status.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Nitrogen deposition affects both net and gross soil nitrogen transformations in forest ecosystems: A review
2019
Cheng, Yi | Wang, Jing | Chang, Scott X. | Cai, Zucong | Müller, Christoph | Zhang, Jinbo
Nitrogen (N) deposition has rapidly increased and is influencing forest ecosystem processes and functions on a global scale. Understanding process-specific N transformations, i.e., gross N transformations, in forest soils in response to N deposition is of great significance to gain mechanistic insights on the linkages between global N deposition and N availability or loss in forest soils. In this paper, we review factors controlling N mineralization, nitrification and N immobilization, particularly in relation to N deposition, discuss the limitations of net N transformation studies, and synthesize the literature on the effect of N deposition on gross N transformations in forest ecosystems. We found that more than 97% of published papers evaluating the effect of N deposition (including N addition experiments that simulate N deposition) on soil N cycle determined net rates of mineralization and nitrification, showing that N deposition significantly increased those rates by 24.9 and 153.9%, respectively. However, studies on net N transformation do not provide a mechanistic understanding of the effect of N deposition on N cycling. To date, a small number of studies (<20 published papers) have directly quantified the effect of N deposition on gross N transformation rates, limiting our understanding of the response of soil N cycling to N deposition. The responses to N deposition of specific N transformation processes such as autotrophic nitrification, heterotrophic nitrification, dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium, N mineralization, and N immobilization are poorly studied. Future research needs to use more holistic approaches to study the impact of N deposition on gross N transformation rates, N loss and retention, and their microbial-driven mechanisms to provide a better understanding of the processes involved in N transformations, and to understand the differential responses between forest and other ecosystems.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]