Nonlinear Response of Riverine N2O Fluxes to Oxygen and Temperature

被引:82
|
作者
Venkiteswaran, Jason J. [1 ]
Rosamond, Madeline S. [1 ]
Schiff, Sherry L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Waterloo, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
NITROUS-OXIDE EMISSIONS; DISSOLVED-OXYGEN; REGRESSION TREES; DENITRIFICATION; RATIOS; DYNAMICS; EXCHANGE; ONTARIO; CYCLES; MODEL;
D O I
10.1021/es500069j
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
One-quarter of anthropogenically produced nitrous oxide (N2O) comes from rivers and estuaries. Countries reporting N2O fluxes from aquatic surfaces under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change typically estimate anthropogenic inorganic nitrogen loading and assume a fraction becomes N2O. However, several studies have not confirmed a linear relationship between dissolved nitrate (NO3-) and river N2O fluxes. We apply recursive partitioning analysis to examine the relationships between N2O flux and NO3-, dissolved oxygen (DO), temperature, land use and surficial geology in the Grand River, Canada, a seventh-order river in an agricultural catchment with substantial urban population. Results suggest that N2O flux is high when hypoxia exists. Temperature, not NO3-, was the primary correlate of N2O flux when hypoxia does not occur suggesting NO3- is not limiting N2O production and Further increases in NO3- may not lead to comparable increases in N2O flux. This work indicates that a linear relationship between NO3- and N2O is unlikely to exist in most agricultural and urban impacted river systems. Most N2O is produced during hypoxia so quantifying the extent of hypoxia is a necessary first step to quantifying N2O fluxes in lotic systems. Predicted increases in riverine hypoxia via eutrophication and increased temperature due to climate change may drive nonlinear increases in N2O production.
引用
收藏
页码:1566 / 1573
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] NO and N2O fluxes from agricultural soils in Beijing area
    Margaret WALSH
    David SCHIMEL
    Dennis OJIMA
    ProgressinNaturalScience, 2004, (06) : 27 - 32
  • [22] Experimental assessment of N2O background fluxes in grassland systems
    Neftel, Albrecht
    Flechard, Chris
    Ammann, Christof
    Conen, Franz
    Emmenegger, Lukas
    Zeyer, Kerstin
    TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 2007, 59 (03) : 470 - 482
  • [23] N2O fluxes from the littoral zone of a Chinese reservoir
    Yang, M.
    Geng, X. M.
    Grace, J.
    Jia, Y. F.
    Liu, Y. Z.
    Jiao, S. W.
    Shi, L. L.
    Lu, C.
    Zhou, Y.
    Lei, G. C.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2015, 12 (15) : 4711 - 4723
  • [24] Effects of slurry acidification on soil N2O fluxes and denitrification
    Malique, Francois
    Wangari, Elizabeth
    Andrade-Linares, Diana Rocio
    Schloter, Michael
    Wolf, Benjamin
    Dannenmann, Michael
    Schulz, Stefanie
    Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
    JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION AND SOIL SCIENCE, 2021, 184 (06) : 696 - 708
  • [25] Impacts of N2O Oversaturated Sewage Effluents on the Spatial Distribution of Riverine N2O: Insights from Sanya Estuaries, Hainan Province
    Qin, Dajun
    Geng, Jing
    Ren, Bingnan
    Yang, Bo
    WATER, 2024, 16 (24)
  • [26] SEASONAL-VARIATION OF N2O FLUXES AT A TROPICAL SAVANNA SITE - SOIL CONSUMPTION OF N2O DURING THE DRY SEASON
    DONOSO, L
    SANTANA, R
    SANHUEZA, E
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1993, 20 (13) : 1379 - 1382
  • [27] Decomposition of N2O by microwave discharge of N2O/He or N2O/Ar mixtures
    Tsuji, M
    Tanoue, T
    Kumagae, J
    Nakano, K
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS PART 1-REGULAR PAPERS BRIEF COMMUNICATIONS & REVIEW PAPERS, 2001, 40 (12): : 7091 - 7097
  • [28] KINETICS OF THE DECOMPOSITION OF N2O AT HIGH TEMPERATURE
    GRAVEN, WM
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1959, 81 (23) : 6190 - 6192
  • [29] TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF DISSOCIATIVE ATTACHMENT IN N2O
    CHANTRY, PJ
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1969, 51 (08): : 3369 - &
  • [30] N2O, NO and NO2 fluxes from a grassland: Effect of soil pH
    Yamulki, S
    Harrison, RM
    Goulding, KWT
    Webster, CP
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 1997, 29 (08): : 1199 - 1208