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Oxidation of ammonia and methane in an alkaline, saline lake
Author(s) -
Joye Samantha B.,
Connell Tracy L.,
Miller Laurence G.,
Oremland Ronald S.,
Jellison Robert S.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
limnology and oceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 197
eISSN - 1939-5590
pISSN - 0024-3590
DOI - 10.4319/lo.1999.44.1.0178
Subject(s) - anoxic waters , ammonia , water column , environmental chemistry , methane , anaerobic oxidation of methane , chemistry , surface water , environmental science , geology , oceanography , environmental engineering , organic chemistry
The oxidation of ammonia (NH 3 ) and methane (CH 4 ) was investigated in an alkaline saline lake, Mono Lake, California (U.S.A.). Ammonia oxidation was examined in April and July 1995 by comparing dark 14 CO 2 fixation rates in the presence or absence of methyl fluoride (MeF), an inhibitor of NH 3 oxidation. Ammonia oxidizer‐mediated dark 14 CO 2 fixation rates were similar in surface (5–7 m) and oxycline (11–15 m) waters, ranging between 70–340 and 89–186 nM d −1 , respectively, or 1–7% of primary production by phytoplankton. Ammonia oxidation rates ranged between 580–2,830 nM d −1 in surface waters and 732–1,548 nM d −1 in oxycline waters. Methane oxidation was examined using a 14 CH 4 tracer technique in July 1994, April 1995, and July 1995. Methane oxidation rates were consistently higher in July, and rates in oxycline and anaerobic bottom waters (0.5–37 and 7–48 nM d −1 , respectively) were 10‐fold higher than those in aerobic surface waters (0.04–3.8 nM d −1 ). The majority of CH 4 oxidation, in terms of integrated activity, occurred within anoxic bottom waters. Water column oxidation reduced the potential lake‐atmosphere CH 4 flux by a factor of two to three. Measured oxidation rates and water column concentrations were used to estimate the biological turnover times of NH 3 and CH 4 . The NH 3 pool turns over rapidly, on time scales of 0.8 d in surface waters and 10 d within the oxycline, while CH 4 is cycled on 10 3 ‐d time scales in surface waters and 10 −2 time scales within oxycline and bottom waters. Our data suggest an important role for NH 3 oxidation in alkaline, saline lakes since the process converts volatile NH 3 to soluble NO 2 − , thereby reducing loss via lake‐atmosphere exchange and maintaining nitrogen in a form that is readily available to phyto‐plankton.

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