Heisterkamp Ines M, Schramm Andreas, de Beer Dirk, Stief Peter
Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Microsensor Group, Bremen, Germany.
Aarhus University, Department of Bioscience, Microbiology, Aarhus, Denmark.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2016 Jun 13;82(13):4028-4034. doi: 10.1128/AEM.00396-16. Print 2016 Jul 1.
The Pacific white shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) is widely used in aquaculture, where it is reared at high stocking densities, temperatures, and nutrient concentrations. Here we report that adult L. vannamei shrimp emit the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) at an average rate of 4.3 nmol N2O/individual × h, which is 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than previously measured N2O emission rates for free-living aquatic invertebrates. Dissection, incubation, and inhibitor experiments with specimens from a shrimp farm in Germany indicated that N2O is mainly produced in the animal's gut by microbial denitrification. Microsensor measurements demonstrated that the gut interior is anoxic and nearly neutral and thus is favorable for denitrification by ingested bacteria. Dinitrogen (N2) and N2O accounted for 64% and 36%, respectively, of the nitrogen gas flux from the gut, suggesting that the gut passage is too fast for complete denitrification to be fully established. Indeed, shifting the rearing water bacterial community, a diet component of shrimp, from oxic to anoxic conditions induced N2O accumulation that outlasted the gut passage time. Shrimp-associated N2O production was estimated to account for 6.5% of total N2O production in the shrimp farm studied here and to contribute to the very high N2O supersaturation measured in the rearing tanks (2,099%). Microbial N2O production directly associated with aquacultured animals should be implemented into life cycle assessments of seafood production.
The most widely used shrimp species in global aquaculture, Litopenaeus vannamei, is shown to emit the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) at a particularly high rate. Detailed experiments reveal that N2O is produced in the oxygen-depleted gut of the animal by bacteria that are part of the shrimp diet. Upon ingestion, these bacteria experience a shift from oxic to anoxic conditions and therefore switch their metabolism to the anaerobic denitrification process, which produces N2O as an intermediate and dinitrogen (N2) gas as an end product. The N2O/N2 production ratio is unusually high in the shrimp gut, because denitrification cannot be fully established during the short gut passage time of food-associated bacteria. Nitrous oxide emission directly mediated by L. vannamei contributes significantly to the overall N2O emission from aquaculture facilities.
太平洋白虾(凡纳滨对虾)在水产养殖中广泛应用,养殖时其放养密度、温度和营养浓度都很高。在此我们报告,成年凡纳滨对虾排放温室气体一氧化二氮(N₂O)的平均速率为4.3纳摩尔N₂O/个体×小时,这比之前测量的自由生活水生无脊椎动物的N₂O排放速率高1至2个数量级。对德国一家养虾场的样本进行解剖、培养和抑制剂实验表明,N₂O主要由动物肠道内的微生物反硝化作用产生。微传感器测量表明,肠道内部缺氧且接近中性,因此有利于摄入的细菌进行反硝化作用。氮气(N₂)和N₂O分别占来自肠道的氮气通量的64%和36%,这表明肠道通过速度太快,无法使反硝化作用完全进行。实际上,将虾的饮食成分之一——养殖水体细菌群落从有氧条件转变为无氧条件,会导致N₂O积累,且这种积累持续时间超过肠道通过时间。据估计,在此研究的养虾场中,与虾相关的N₂O产生量占总N₂O产生量的6.5%,并导致养殖池中测量到的极高的N₂O过饱和度(2099%)。与水产养殖动物直接相关的微生物N₂O产生应纳入海产品生产的生命周期评估中。
全球水产养殖中使用最广泛的虾类——凡纳滨对虾,被证明以特别高的速率排放强效温室气体一氧化二氮(N₂O)。详细实验表明,N₂O是由动物缺氧肠道内作为虾食物一部分的细菌产生的。摄入后,这些细菌经历从有氧到无氧的条件转变,因此将其代谢转换为厌氧反硝化过程,该过程产生N₂O作为中间产物,氮气(N₂)气体作为最终产物。在虾肠道中,N₂O/N₂产生比例异常高,因为在与食物相关的细菌短暂的肠道通过时间内,反硝化作用无法完全进行。凡纳滨对虾直接介导的一氧化二氮排放对水产养殖设施的总体N₂O排放有显著贡献。