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Global role of vanadium for nitrogen fixation in extratropical forests
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  • Romain Darnajoux,
  • Shannon Haynes,
  • Marie Renaudin,
  • Nicolas Magain,
  • Sessina Dani,
  • Spencer Koonin,
  • Jolanta Miadlikowska,
  • Yoshitaka Uchida,
  • Takamitsu Ohigashi,
  • Diane Haughland,
  • François Lutzoni,
  • Jean Philippe Bellenger,
  • Xinning Zhang
Romain Darnajoux
Princeton University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Shannon Haynes
Princeton University
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Marie Renaudin
Université de Sherbrooke Faculté des Sciences
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Nicolas Magain
Université de Liège
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Sessina Dani
Princeton University
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Spencer Koonin
Princeton University
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Jolanta Miadlikowska
Duke University
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Yoshitaka Uchida
Hokkaido University
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Takamitsu Ohigashi
Hokkaido University
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Diane Haughland
University of Alberta Faculty of Science
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François Lutzoni
Duke University
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Jean Philippe Bellenger
Université de Sherbrooke Faculté des Sciences
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Xinning Zhang
Princeton University
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Abstract

Biological nitrogen fixation by nitrogenase is often assumed to rely exclusively on molybdenum as an enzymatic cofactor, despite molybdenum scarcity in terrestrial ecosystems and recent demonstrations of vanadium nitrogenase (V-Nase) activity in cryptogamic organisms, collectively responsible for over 40% of terrestrial biological nitrogen input. Here we highlight a global role for vanadium in nitrogen biogeochemistry in extratropical forests’ cryptogams. Measurements in bryophytes and cyanolichens from three continents indicate V-Nase activity in each forest surveyed. We use V-Nase regulation by molybdenum content and nitrogen fixation rates to estimate the global contribution of vanadium to nitrogen fixation by extratropical cryptogams as 30%, with human activities likely responsible for a 30% relative decrease since pre-industrial times. This newly discovered global role of vanadium forces a reevaluation of the nitrogen cycle, where including nitrogenase enzymatic heterogeneity will help better predict the response of the terrestrial carbon sink to global change and understand species biogeography.