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Nitrogen fixation: Anthropogenic enhancement‐environmental response
Author(s) -
Galloway James N.,
Schlesinger William H.,
Levy Hiram,
Michaels Anthony,
Schnoor Jerald L.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1029/95gb00158
Subject(s) - environmental science , fertilizer , soil water , sink (geography) , biogeochemistry , nitrogen , ecology , environmental chemistry , soil science , chemistry , biology , geography , cartography , organic chemistry
In the absence of human activities, biotic fixation is the primary source of reactive N, providing about 90–130 Tg N yr −1 (Tg = 10 12 g) on the continents. Human activities have resulted in the fixation of an additional ≈140 Tg N yr −1 by energy production (≈20 Tg N yr −1 ), fertilizer production (≈80 Tg N yr −1 ), and cultivation of crops (e.g., legumes, rice) (≈40 Tg N yr −1 ). We can only account for part of this anthropogenic N. N 2 O is accumulating in the atmosphere at a rate of 3 Tg N yr −1 . Coastal oceans receive another 41 Tg N yr −1 via rivers, much of which is buried or denitrified. Open oceans receive 18 Tg N yr −1 by atmospheric deposition, which is incorporated into oceanic N pools (e.g., NO 3 − , N 2 ). The remaining 80 Tg N yr −1 are either retained on continents in groundwater, soils, or vegetation or denitrified to N 2 . Field studies and calculations indicate that uncertainties about the size of each sink can account for the remaining anthropogenic N. Thus although anthropogenic N is clearly accumulating on continents, we do not know rates of individual processes. We predict the anthropogenic N‐fixation rate will increase by about 60% by the year 2020, primarily due to increased fertilizer use and fossil‐fuel combustion. About two‐thirds of the increase will occur in Asia, which by 2020 will account for over half of the global anthropogenic N fixation.