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Denitrification hot spots: dominant role of invasive macrophyte Trapa natans in removing nitrogen from a tidal river
Author(s) -
Tall Laure,
Caraco Nina,
Maranger Roxane
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
ecological applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.864
H-Index - 213
eISSN - 1939-5582
pISSN - 1051-0761
DOI - 10.1890/11-0061.1
Subject(s) - macrophyte , eutrophication , environmental science , denitrification , aquatic plant , ecosystem , vegetation (pathology) , tidal river , ecology , hydrology (agriculture) , nutrient , nitrogen , estuary , biology , chemistry , geology , medicine , geotechnical engineering , pathology , organic chemistry
Rivers receive large amounts of nitrogen (N) from their watershed and are the final sites of nutrient processing before delivery to coastal waters. Transformations of dissolved inorganic N (DIN) to gaseous N within rivers can impact both coastal eutrophication and greenhouse gas emissions. Vegetated shallows of rivers are sites of active metabolism and may act as hot spots for N transformation, but little is known about the variability of denitrification within shallows or the role of vegetation structure in controlling this variability. We measured in situ N loss and accumulation of N 2 and N 2 O in vegetated shallows of the tidal Hudson River and used regression models to determine the role of plant species in different monospecific beds in ecosystem N loss. N 2 production was highly variable between vegetated shallows and was associated with species‐driven differences in dissolved oxygen (DO) dynamics during the ebb tide. N 2 production was extremely high (37–71 mmol N·m −2 ·d −1 ) in beds with invasive floating‐leaved plants ( Trapa natans ) but was insignificant in submersed native vegetation ( Vallisneria americana ). In Trapa sites, N 2 production was strongly related to metabolism. Change in DO concentrations in the surrounding water due to atmospheric venting by the plants during ebb tide, combined with changes in water temperatures, explained 87% of the variation of the observed N 2 production. Despite these high denitrification losses, beds acted as N 2 O sinks where N 2 O concentrations became undersaturated during ebb tide. An estimate of summertime N 2 production in Trapa beds, based on continuously measured oxygen and temperature by moored sondes, suggests that these beds are a major seasonal hot spot for N removal. Large Trapa beds represent only 2.7% of the total area of the tidal Hudson, but they remove between 70% and 100% of the total N retained in this river reach during summer months. Although they are active for only three months of the year, Trapa shallows contribute to as much as 25% of the annual N removal. Trapa activity represents an important ecosystem service, modulated by its impacts on DO as a function of Trapa 's growth form trait and modulated by the physical properties of the environment.

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