Departamento de Oceanografía and Centro de Investigación Oceanográfica en el Pacífico Sur-Oriental (COPAS), Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile.
PLoS One. 2011;6(6):e20539. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0020539. Epub 2011 Jun 7.
Nitrogen fixation is an essential process that biologically transforms atmospheric dinitrogen gas to ammonia, therefore compensating for nitrogen losses occurring via denitrification and anammox. Currently, inputs and losses of nitrogen to the ocean resulting from these processes are thought to be spatially separated: nitrogen fixation takes place primarily in open ocean environments (mainly through diazotrophic cyanobacteria), whereas nitrogen losses occur in oxygen-depleted intermediate waters and sediments (mostly via denitrifying and anammox bacteria). Here we report on rates of nitrogen fixation obtained during two oceanographic cruises in 2005 and 2007 in the eastern tropical South Pacific (ETSP), a region characterized by the presence of coastal upwelling and a major permanent oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). Our results show significant rates of nitrogen fixation in the water column; however, integrated rates from the surface down to 120 m varied by ∼30 fold between cruises (7.5±4.6 versus 190±82.3 µmol m(-2) d(-1)). Moreover, rates were measured down to 400 m depth in 2007, indicating that the contribution to the integrated rates of the subsurface oxygen-deficient layer was ∼5 times higher (574±294 µmol m(-2) d(-1)) than the oxic euphotic layer (48±68 µmol m(-2) d(-1)). Concurrent molecular measurements detected the dinitrogenase reductase gene nifH in surface and subsurface waters. Phylogenetic analysis of the nifH sequences showed the presence of a diverse diazotrophic community at the time of the highest measured nitrogen fixation rates. Our results thus demonstrate the occurrence of nitrogen fixation in nutrient-rich coastal upwelling systems and, importantly, within the underlying OMZ. They also suggest that nitrogen fixation is a widespread process that can sporadically provide a supplementary source of fixed nitrogen in these regions.
固氮是一种将大气中的氮气生物转化为氨的重要过程,因此补偿了通过反硝化和厌氧氨氧化而导致的氮损失。目前,认为这些过程导致海洋中氮的输入和损失在空间上是分开的:固氮主要发生在开阔的海洋环境中(主要通过固氮蓝藻),而氮损失发生在缺氧的中层水和沉积物中(主要通过反硝化和厌氧氨氧化细菌)。在这里,我们报告了在 2005 年和 2007 年两次在东热带南太平洋(ETSP)进行的海洋学考察中获得的固氮速率,该地区的特点是存在沿海上升流和一个主要的永久性缺氧区(OMZ)。我们的结果表明水柱中有显著的固氮速率;然而,两次考察之间从海面到 120 米的综合速率变化了约 30 倍(7.5±4.6 与 190±82.3 µmol m(-2) d(-1))。此外,2007 年测量到了 400 米深度的速率,这表明缺氧次表层对综合速率的贡献比有氧真光层(48±68 µmol m(-2) d(-1))高约 5 倍(574±294 µmol m(-2) d(-1))。同时进行的分子测量在表层和次表层水中检测到了固氮酶还原酶基因 nifH。nifH 序列的系统发育分析表明,在测量到的最高固氮速率时存在着多样的固氮群落。因此,我们的结果表明固氮作用发生在营养丰富的沿海上升流系统中,而且重要的是,发生在下面的 OMZ 中。它们还表明,固氮作用是一个广泛存在的过程,可以在这些地区偶尔提供固定氮的补充来源。