Regulation of nitrification in the land-ocean contact area of the Rhone River plume (NW Mediterranean)

被引:44
|
作者
Bianchi, M
Feliatra
Lefevre, D
机构
[1] Univ Mediterranee, CNRS INSU, UPR 223, Lab Microbiol Marine, F-13288 Marseille 9, France
[2] Univ Mediterranee, CNRS INSU, UPR 6535, Lab Oceanol & Biogeochim, F-13288 Marseille 9, France
关键词
nitrification rates; Mediterranean Sea; plume; seasonal cycle; ammonium oxidisers; nitrite oxidisers;
D O I
10.3354/ame018301
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The study of natural conditions controlling nitrification processes was undertaken in the estuarine area of the Rhone River (NW Mediterranean Sea) over an annual cycle. Nitrification rates (N-oxidation rates, CO2 fixation rates, specific counts of ammonium and nitrite oxidisers) as well as environmental parameters (temperature, salinity, suspended matter, inorganic nitrogen) were measured monthly over a 1 yr period. Depth profiles were obtained in low salinity plume water, at the edge of the plume (intermediate salinity) and in the sea, to study the evolution of nitrification processes from the mouth of the river to the sea of both the brackish surface layer and the bottom nepheloid layer. Nitrification rates in the surface plume generally declined with distance from the river and with increasing salinity, whereas nitrification rates in the benthic nepheloid layer exhibited little spatial variation. This was illustrated by high variability of activities in the plume (50 +/- 37 and 33 +/- 21 nM N oxidised h(-1) for ammonium and nitrite oxidation rates respectively) versus lower variability in the benthic nepheloid layer (30 +/- 8 and 22 +/- 6 nM N oxidised h(-1) for ammonium and nitrite oxidation rates respectively). Nitrification rates in both the plume and benthic nepheloid layer were higher in the summer (142 to 175 nM N oxidised h(-1) for ammonium oxidation and 64 to 96 nM N oxidised h(-1) for nitrite oxidation) than during the winter months (5 to 30 nM N oxidised h(-1) for both activities). Highest N-oxidation rates were related to low salinity in the surface layer, corresponding to the highest concentrations of ammonium from the river water. Ammonium oxidation (AO) is regulated by in situ ammonium concentration (r(2) = 0.741, p = 0.0001, n = 132) and nitrite oxidation (NO) by the ammonium oxidation rate (r(2) = 0.850, p = 0.0001, n = 132). AO rate = 14.5 + 10 [NH4+] and NO rate = 4.7 + 0.56 AO rate. Q(10) values were calculated for ammonium oxidation (2.72) and nitrite oxidation (3.08) rates. The counts of nitrifiers reached 10(6) cell dm(-3), representing less than 2 % of the total bacterial counts. Nitrogen N-oxidation rates were correlated to nitrifying cell abundances (r = 0.89 to 0.99), and the activities per cell ranged from 1.2 to 1.9 x 10(-15) mol N oxidised cell(-1) d(-1). The biomass production of the ammonium oxidisers was demonstrated by the decrease of N oxidised/C fixed ratio from 15.8 in winter to 10.8 in summer, in spite of the increase of AO rate in summer. A seasonal fluctuation of N oxidised/C fixed ratio for nitrite oxidisers was not demonstrated; however, the ratio increased from 21.8 +/- 4.4 in winter to 29.3 +/- 2.9 in summer. We estimated that 10% (winter) and 20% (summer) of ammonium was nitrified at the mouth of the river. During summer, nitrification is supported by the flux of ammonium from in situ mineralisation and contributes to nitrate excess in the plume. The contribution of nitrification to the N requirement of the primary producers was estimated to be 14 % at the edge of the plume (intermediate salinity) and 66% at the sea station.
引用
收藏
页码:301 / 312
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] River basin sediment dynamics and interactions within the UK Land-Ocean Interaction Study: the context
    Leeks, GJL
    Walling, DE
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 1999, 13 (07) : 931 - 934
  • [22] Radionuclide deposition in the Rhone River Prodelta (NW Mediterranean sea) in response to the December 2003 extreme flood
    Miralles, J.
    Arnaud, M.
    Radakovitch, O.
    Marion, C.
    Cagnat, X.
    MARINE GEOLOGY, 2006, 234 (1-4) : 179 - 189
  • [23] Influence of the organic matter composition on benthic oxygen demand in the Rhone River prodelta (NW Mediterranean Sea)
    Pastor, Lucie
    Deflandre, Bruno
    Viollier, Eric
    Cathalot, Cecile
    Metzger, Edouard
    Rabouille, Christophe
    Escoubeyrou, Karine
    Lloret, Emily
    Pruski, Audrey M.
    Vetion, Gilles
    Desmalades, Martin
    Buscail, Roselyne
    Gremare, Antoine
    CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH, 2011, 31 (09) : 1008 - 1019
  • [24] In situ oxygen uptake rates by coastal sediments under the influence of the Rhone River (NW Mediterranean Sea)
    Lansard, Bruno
    Rabouille, Christophe
    Denis, Lionel
    Grenz, Christian
    CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH, 2008, 28 (12) : 1501 - 1510
  • [25] Global coastal segmentation and its river catchment contributors:: A new look at land-ocean linkage
    Meybeck, M
    Dürr, HH
    Vörösmarty, CJ
    GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 2006, 20 (01)
  • [26] Land-ocean interaction in modern delta formation and development: A case study of the Pearl River delta,China
    李春初
    雷亚平
    何为
    戴志军
    Science China Chemistry, 2001, (S1) : 63 - 71
  • [27] Seasonal changes in the chemical composition and reactivity of dissolved organic matter at the land-ocean interface of a subtropical river
    Liyang Yang
    Qiong Cheng
    Wan-E Zhuang
    Hui Wang
    Wei Chen
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2019, 26 : 24595 - 24608
  • [28] Macro-litter in surface waters from the Rhone River: Plastic pollution and loading to the NW Mediterranean Sea
    Castro-Jimenez, Javier
    Gonzalez-Fernandez, Daniel
    Fornier, Michel
    Schmidt, Natascha
    Sempere, Richard
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2019, 146 : 60 - 66
  • [29] Inner shelf paleoenvironmental evolution as a function of land-ocean interactions in the vicinity of the Guadiana River, SW Iberia
    Mendes, I.
    Rosa, F.
    Dias, J. A.
    Schoenfeld, J.
    Ferreira, O.
    Pinheiro, J.
    QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2010, 221 (1-2) : 58 - 67
  • [30] Land-ocean interaction in modern delta formation and development: A case study of the Pearl River delta, China
    Li, CC
    Lei, YP
    He, W
    Dai, ZJ
    SCIENCE IN CHINA SERIES B-CHEMISTRY, 2001, 44 (Suppl 1): : 63 - 71