Forests lose essential nitrogen in surprising way, find scientists
2014-11-03
(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. – Even during summer dry spells, some patches of soil in forested watersheds remain waterlogged. Researchers have discovered that these patches act as hot spots of microbial activity that remove nitrogen from groundwater and return it to the atmosphere, as reported in a Nov. 3 article in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Nitrogen is a critically important nutrient for plant growth in the forest. Denitrification removes this nutrient from the ecosystem and can reduce the growth and productivity of the forest.
The research contributes to a better understanding of how and where nitrogen is processed in the environment. ''Nitrogen is the nutrient that most often limits rates of plant growth, yet the cycling and fate of nitrogen in forests has been difficult to track, especially when it is lost in gaseous form,'' explains, co-author Christine Goodale, associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Cornell University.
"This study will enable us to better understand the fate of nitrogen in forests," adds Sarah Wexler, who led the research while a postdoctoral associate at the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Cornell, now working in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, UK.
The research took place in the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, where the atmosphere deposits five to seven pounds per acre of nitrogen per year. The forest is part of the National Science Foundation's Long Term Ecological Research program.
At sites throughout the forest, the research team measured the presence of nitrate, a form of nitrogen that is highly mobile and reactive in the environment, and determined whether the nitrate is a result of atmospheric deposition or nitrification. Wexler says the researchers differentiated sources of nitrate and show that some of the nitrate was lost to the atmosphere by looking at nitrate at the atomic level using naturally occurring stable isotopes.
"The isotopic composition of the nitrogen and oxygen in nitrate provides a natural way to directly track the details of nitrogen cycling. Finding isotopic evidence for denitrification in shallow groundwater in summer, when the groundwater was not draining to the stream, may explain both the reduction in stream nitrogen export and why denitrification has not been seen in the stream itself,'' says Wexler.
The researchers determined the importance of denitrification in patches of shallow groundwater, which have largely been overlooked control points for nitrogen loss from temperate forested watersheds. "The importance of these fragmented patches to the nitrogen cycle had not been properly appreciated before this study," says co-author Kevin McGuire, associate director of the Virginia Water Resources Research Center in the College of Natural Resources and Environment at Virginia Tech.
Most nitrogen is deposited by rain, and temperate forests receive much larger inputs of nitrogen from the atmosphere than they export to streams. Once nitrogen leaves the forest in a stream, it can become a water pollutant. Denitrification removes this pollutant and can therefore improve water quality in downstream lakes and estuaries. "In some ecosystems, there have been long-term declines in stream water export of nitrogen when inputs have remained elevated," Goodale says.
''Understanding the fate of this nitrogen has been a challenge because denitrification – a gaseous loss of nitrogen to the atmosphere – is notoriously difficult to measure," says co-author Peter Groffman, an expert on denitrification at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies. "Climate change, especially increases in precipitation, could be increasing the amount of waterlogged patches in the forest. Thus climate change could be increasing denitrification and its effects on forest growth and productivity -- a negative outcome -- and on water quality – a positive outcome."
INFORMATION:
The study will be available on Nov. 3 here: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/recent
Photo: https://cornell.box.com/goodale
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2014-11-03
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Every year, nearly 4,000 children go to emergency rooms after swallowing button batteries — the flat, round batteries that power toys, hearing aids, calculators, and many other devices. Ingesting these batteries has severe consequences, including burns that permanently damage the esophagus, tears in the digestive tract, and in some cases, even death.
To help prevent such injuries, researchers at MIT, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Massachusetts General Hospital have devised a new way to coat batteries with a special material that prevents them ...
2014-11-03
New research from the Center for Vital Longevity (CVL) at UT Dallas offers a different approach for looking at the way the brain operates on a network level, and could eventually lead to new clinical diagnostic criteria for age-related memory disorders.
The latest findings, published the week of Nov. 3 in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, focus on how brain areas communicate with one another to form brain networks, and how brain networks may change as we age.
"Brain networks consist of groups of highly interactive nodes, ...
2014-11-03
Targeting emissions of non-CO2 gases and air pollutants with climate effects might produce smaller benefits for long-term climate change than previously estimated, according to a new integrated study of the potential of air pollution and carbon dioxide mitigation.
High hopes have been placed on limiting emissions of so-called short-lived climate forcers (SLCF) such as methane and soot for protecting human health, vegetation and limiting temperature increase.
These emissions originate from a broad variety of sources, including diesel engines, stoves, cows, and coal mines. ...
2014-11-03
In a study published today in PNAS, Dr William Roberts of Bristol's School of Geographical Sciences and colleagues use computer models to simulate a Heinrich event in Hudson Bay, Canada, adjusting the models to consider freshwater influx only, changing ice sheet height only or both factors together.
Dr Roberts said: "There's lots of evidence to suggest that changing the height of the ice sheets could change atmospheric circulation or even ocean circulation but the role this forcing might play during Heinrich events has generally been overlooked. Our study aimed to ...
2014-11-03
A Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) led team has developed a simple "coat of armor" to encase small batteries, rendering them harmless if they are ever swallowed. Children, particularly infants and young toddlers, can ingest these batteries, leading to serious damage to their esophagus as well as other gut tissue, and sometimes, death. Such incidents are on the rise, yet up until now, no solutions have been directed at the battery itself. The new work, published online November 3, 2014 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offers a simple, cost-effective ...
2014-11-03
Note: A graphic of the "telomerator" being inserted into a circular synthetic chromosome is available at: https://nyumc.box.com/s/zpticyfat5479vcnl9y8
NYU Langone yeast geneticists report they have developed a novel tool — dubbed "the telomerator" — that could redefine the limits of synthetic biology and advance how successfully living things can be engineered or constructed in the laboratory based on an organism's genetic, chemical base-pair structure.
Synthetic biologists aim to use such "designer" microorganisms to produce novel medicines, nutrients, ...
2014-11-03
When fossil fuels are burned, other climate-forcing gases are produced in addition to long-lasting carbon dioxide. Diesel combustion in vehicles or coal in power plants creates soot particles, which also contribute to global warming, albeit only briefly as they disappear quickly from the atmosphere. Short-lived climate pollutants (also known as Short Lived Climate Forcers or SLCF) caused by human activities include methane and sulphur dioxide, and to a lesser extent fluorocarbons. They all have a measurable impact on the climate.
Politicians and industry have been considering ...
2014-11-03
Scientists have identified a mechanism that could turn out to be a big contributor to warming in the Arctic region and melting sea ice.
The research was led by scientists from the US Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). They studied a long-wavelength region of the electromagnetic spectrum called far infrared. It's invisible to our eyes but accounts for about half the energy emitted by the Earth's surface. This process balances out incoming solar energy.
Despite its importance in the planet's energy budget, it's difficult to measure ...
2014-11-03
SOLAR – Made to order ...
With the addition of a dash of a common solvent, researchers realized an efficiency gain of about 36 percent for organic solar cells. A team led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Kai Xiao added diiodooctane -- 3 percent of the weight of the entire solution -- to a blend of polymers and fullerene derivatives and saw the cell's power conversion efficiency jump from 4.5 percent to 7.1 percent. An added benefit is that the technique requires no additional processing, which means lower costs and higher production efficiency. While similar efficiency ...
2014-11-03
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — When NASA's Dawn spacecraft visited the asteroid Vesta in 2011, it showed that deep grooves that circle the asteroid's equator like a cosmic belt were probably caused by a massive impact on Vesta's south pole. Now, using a super high-speed cannon at NASA's Ames Research Center, Brown University researchers have shed new light on the violent chain of events deep in Vesta's interior that formed those surface grooves, some of which are wider than the Grand Canyon.
"Vesta got hammered," said Peter Schultz, professor of earth, environmental, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Forests lose essential nitrogen in surprising way, find scientists