Fuente: Nature - Issue - nature.com science feeds
 Expuesto el: miércoles, 21 de abril de 2010 18:54
 Autor: Philip G. Taylor
 Asunto: Stoichiometric control of organic carbon–nitrate relationships from soils to the sea
| Stoichiometric control of organic   carbon–nitrate relationships from soils to the sea  Nature   464, 1178 (2010). doi:10.1038/nature08985    Authors:   Philip G. Taylor & Alan R. Townsend The   production of artificial fertilizers, fossil fuel use and leguminous   agriculture worldwide has increased the amount of reactive nitrogen in the   natural environment by an order of magnitude since the Industrial Revolution.   This reorganization of the nitrogen cycle has led to an increase in food   production, but increasingly causes a number of environmental problems. One   such problem is the accumulation of nitrate in both freshwater and coastal   marine ecosystems. Here we establish that ecosystem nitrate accrual exhibits   consistent and negative nonlinear correlations with organic carbon   availability along a hydrologic continuum from soils, through freshwater   systems and coastal margins, to the open ocean. The trend also prevails in   ecosystems subject to substantial human alteration. Across this diversity of   environments, we find evidence that resource stoichiometry (organic   carbon:nitrate) strongly influences nitrate accumulation by regulating a   suite of microbial processes that couple dissolved organic carbon and nitrate   cycling. With the help of a meta-analysis we show that heterotrophic microbes   maintain low nitrate concentrations when organic carbon:nitrate ratios match   the stoichiometric demands of microbial anabolism. When resource ratios drop   below the minimum carbon:nitrogen ratio of microbial biomass, however, the   onset of carbon limitation appears to drive rapid nitrate accrual, which may   then be further enhanced by nitrification. At low organic carbon:nitrate   ratios, denitrification appears to constrain the extent of nitrate accretion,   once organic carbon and nitrate availability approach the 1:1 stoichiometry   of this catabolic process. Collectively, these microbial processes express   themselves on local to global scales by restricting the threshold ratios   underlying nitrate accrual to a constrained stoichiometric window. Our   findings indicate that ecological stoichiometry can help explain the fate of   nitrate across disparate environments and in the face of human disturbance. | 
 
