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Effects of sterilization techniques on chemodenitrification and N 2 O production in tropical peat soil microcosms
Chemodenitrification – the non-enzymatic process of nitrite reduction – may be an important sink for fixed nitrogen in tropical peatlands. Rates and products of chemodenitrification are dependent on O2, pH, Fe2+ concentration, and organic matter composition, which are variable across peat soils. Ass...
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Published in: | Biogeosciences 2019-12, Vol.16 (23), p.4601-4612 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Chemodenitrification – the non-enzymatic process of nitrite reduction –
may be an important sink for fixed nitrogen in tropical peatlands. Rates and
products of chemodenitrification are dependent on O2, pH, Fe2+
concentration, and organic matter composition, which are variable across peat
soils. Assessing abiotic reaction pathways is difficult because
sterilization and inhibition agents can alter the availability of reactants by
changing iron speciation and organic matter composition. We compared six
commonly used soil sterilization techniques – γ irradiation,
chloroform, autoclaving, and the use of three different chemical inhibitors (mercury, zinc, and
azide) – for their compatibility with chemodenitrification assays
for tropical peatland soils (organic-rich, low-pH soil from the eastern
Amazon). Out of the six techniques, γ irradiation resulted in soil
treatments with the lowest cell viability and denitrification activity and
the least effect on pH, iron speciation, and organic matter composition. Nitrite
depletion rates in γ-irradiated soils were highly similar to
untreated (live) soils, whereas other sterilization techniques showed
deviations. Chemodenitrification was a dominant process of nitrite
consumption in tropical peatland soils assayed in this study. Nitrous oxide (N2O) is
one possible product of chemodenitrification reactions. Abiotic N2O
production was low to moderate (3 %–16 % of converted nitrite), and
different sterilization techniques lead to significant variations on
production rates due to inherent processes or potential artifacts. Our work
represents the first methodological basis for testing the abiotic
denitrification and N2O production potential in tropical peatland soil. |
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ISSN: | 1726-4189 1726-4189 |
DOI: | 10.5194/bg-16-4601-2019 |