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Widespread nitrogen fixation in sediments from diverse deep‐sea sites of elevated carbon loading
Author(s) -
Dekas Anne E.,
Fike David A.,
Chadwick Grayson L.,
GreenSaxena Abigail,
Fortney Julian,
Con Stephanie A.,
Dawson Katherine S.,
Orphan Victoria J.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/1462-2920.14342
Subject(s) - nitrogen fixation , benthic zone , ammonium , biology , diazotroph , sediment , environmental chemistry , nitrogen , chemosynthesis , ecosystem , oceanography , ecology , hydrothermal vent , paleontology , geology , chemistry , bacteria , organic chemistry , hydrothermal circulation
Summary Nitrogen fixation, the biological conversion of N 2 to NH 3 , is critical to alleviating nitrogen limitation in many marine ecosystems. To date, few measurements exist of N 2 fixation in deep‐sea sediments. Here, we conducted > 400 bottle incubations with sediments from methane seeps, whale falls and background sites off the western coast of the United States from 600 to 2893 m water depth to investigate the potential rates, spatial distribution and biological mediators of benthic N 2 fixation. We found that N 2 fixation was widespread, yet heterogeneously distributed with sediment depth at all sites. In some locations, rates exceeded previous measurements by > 10×, and provided up to 30% of the community anabolic growth requirement for nitrogen. Diazotrophic activity appeared to be inhibited by pore water ammonium: N 2 fixation was only observed if incubation ammonium concentrations were ≤ 25 μM, and experimental additions of ammonium reduced diazotrophy. In seep sediments, N 2 fixation was dependent on CH 4 and coincident with sulphate reduction, consistent with previous work showing diazotrophy by microorganisms mediating sulphate‐coupled methane oxidation. However, the pattern of diazotrophy was different in whale‐fall and associated reference sediments, where it was largely unaffected by CH 4 , suggesting catabolically different diazotrophs at these sites.