Denitrification across landscapes and waterscapes : a synthesis

dc.contributor.author Seitzinger, Sybil P.
dc.contributor.author Harrison, John A.
dc.contributor.author Bohlke, John K.
dc.contributor.author Bouwman, A. F.
dc.contributor.author Lowrance, R. Richard
dc.contributor.author Peterson, Bruce J.
dc.contributor.author Tobias, Craig R.
dc.contributor.author Van Drecht, G.
dc.date.accessioned 2011-07-21T13:54:20Z
dc.date.available 2011-07-21T13:54:20Z
dc.date.issued 2006-12
dc.description Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of Ecological Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ecological Applications 16 (2006): 2064–2090, doi:10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[2064:DALAWA]2.0.CO;2. en_US
dc.description.abstract Denitrification is a critical process regulating the removal of bioavailable nitrogen (N) from natural and human-altered systems. While it has been extensively studied in terrestrial, freshwater, and marine systems, there has been limited communication among denitrification scientists working in these individual systems. Here, we compare rates of denitrification and controlling factors across a range of ecosystem types. We suggest that terrestrial, freshwater, and marine systems in which denitrification occurs can be organized along a continuum ranging from (1) those in which nitrification and denitrification are tightly coupled in space and time to (2) those in which nitrate production and denitrification are relatively decoupled. In aquatic ecosystems, N inputs influence denitrification rates whereas hydrology and geomorphology influence the proportion of N inputs that are denitrified. Relationships between denitrification and water residence time and N load are remarkably similar across lakes, river reaches, estuaries, and continental shelves. Spatially distributed global models of denitrification suggest that continental shelf sediments account for the largest portion (44%) of total global denitrification, followed by terrestrial soils (22%) and oceanic oxygen minimum zones (OMZs; 14%). Freshwater systems (groundwater, lakes, rivers) account for about 20% and estuaries 1% of total global denitrification. Denitrification of land-based N sources is distributed somewhat differently. Within watersheds, the amount of land-based N denitrified is generally highest in terrestrial soils, with progressively smaller amounts denitrified in groundwater, rivers, lakes and reservoirs, and estuaries. A number of regional exceptions to this general trend of decreasing denitrification in a downstream direction exist, including significant denitrification in continental shelves of N from terrestrial sources. Though terrestrial soils and groundwater are responsible for much denitrification at the watershed scale, per-area denitrification rates in soils and groundwater (kg N·km−2·yr−1) are, on average, approximately one-tenth the per-area rates of denitrification in lakes, rivers, estuaries, continental shelves, or OMZs. A number of potential approaches to increase denitrification on the landscape, and thus decrease N export to sensitive coastal systems exist. However, these have not generally been widely tested for their effectiveness at scales required to significantly reduce N export at the whole watershed scale. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship This work was supported in part by grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation (EAR0355366, DEB0332237, DEB0443439) and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NNG04GL68G). en_US
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.citation Ecological Applications 16 (2006): 2064–2090 en_US
dc.identifier.doi 10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[2064:DALAWA]2.0.CO;2
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/1912/4707
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Ecological Society of America en_US
dc.relation.uri https://doi.org/10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[2064:DALAWA]2.0.CO;2
dc.subject Continental shelf en_US
dc.subject Denitrification en_US
dc.subject Estuaries en_US
dc.subject Lakes en_US
dc.subject Nitrogen en_US
dc.subject Oxygen minimum zones en_US
dc.subject Rivers en_US
dc.subject Sediments en_US
dc.subject Soils en_US
dc.title Denitrification across landscapes and waterscapes : a synthesis en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dspace.entity.type Publication
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