Flow regulates biological NO3 -and N2O production in a turbid
sub-tropical stream
Abstract
Streams play a critical role in attenuating the excess reactive nitrogen
generated from human activities. These systems can consequently also
emit significant amounts of N2O, a potent greenhouse gas. Models and
manipulative experiments now suggest that hydrology regulates the
balance between nitrogen removal and N2O production. We aimed to
empirically test this hypothesis by measuring changes in the
concentration and isotopic composition of NO3- (δ18O, δ15N) and N2O
(δ18O, δ15N, site preference) in hyporheic sediments and surface water
of a 30 m reach over eight days of falling stream discharge (2.7 to 1.8
m3 s-1). The stream was persistently heterotrophic
(productivity/respiration: 0.005 - 0.2), while changes in conductivity,
δ18O-H2O, and 222Rn indicated that hyporheic mixing decreased and net
groundwater inputs increased as discharge declined. The shallow
groundwater had high inorganic N concentrations (2 – 10 mg l-1), but
increased groundwater inputs could not fully explain the concurrent
increases in NO3- (1 – 3 mg N l-1) and N2O (700 to 1000 % saturation)
in the surface water. Biologically, rather than solely hydrologically,
regulated stream nitrogen export was confirmed by changes in N2O and
NO3- isotopic composition. However, isotope patterns indicated that
nitrification, not denitrification, increased surface water NO3- and N2O
concentrations as hyporheic exchange decreased. These findings
empirically demonstrate how flow dynamics regulate biological NO3-
production as well as transport, with implications for predicting
aquatic N2O emissions.