Xiaoxi Sun , Beichen Wang , Jian Yang , Hui Yu , Bingfu Yao , Mingxian Han , Shenyan Dai , Teng Wen , Jibin Han , Xiying Zhang , Jinbo Zhang , Hongchen Jiang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Saline lakes are experiencing significant changes in salinity and organic matter content due to climate change. However, the specific impacts of these environmental changes on the production processes of nitrous oxide (N2O)—particularly nitrification and denitrification—in saline lake sediments are still poorly understood, leading to significant uncertainty in current estimates of greenhouse gas (GHG) emission from these ecosystems. Here, we employed 15N-isotope labeling, functional gene quantification, and structural equation modeling to elucidate N2O production pathways and rates in surface sediments along a salinity gradient (0.7–149.3 g/L) within Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) lakes undergoing rapid desalination and organic carbon enrichment. The results identified saline lake sediments as hotspots for N2O production, with nitrification contributing an average of 43.51 % to N2O flux and reaching up to 91.73 % in specific high-salinity habitats, highlighting its previously underestimated significance. Salinity was found to limit N2O production through both nitrifying and denitrifying processes in lake sediments, although dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the sediment could counteract the limitation caused by salt. Low-salinity systems (<35 g/L) exhibited predominant salinity-related inhibition of denitrification, whereas high-salinity systems (>35 g/L) displayed DOC-mediated counteraction of salinity stress, stimulating both denitrification and heterotrophic nitrification through alterations in microbial community structure (e.g., reflected by nir/nos ratios). This finding illustrates that climate-driven freshening and organic carbon loading synergistically exacerbate N2O emissions in saline lakes. While denitrification remains dominant, heterotrophic nitrification pathways are increasingly significant under saline conditions. This highlights susceptibility of cryosphere-affected ecosystems to hydrological disturbances, and emphasizes the necessity of refining global GHG inventories by incorporating context-dependent N2O source partitioning.
期刊介绍:
Water Research, along with its open access companion journal Water Research X, serves as a platform for publishing original research papers covering various aspects of the science and technology related to the anthropogenic water cycle, water quality, and its management worldwide. The audience targeted by the journal comprises biologists, chemical engineers, chemists, civil engineers, environmental engineers, limnologists, and microbiologists. The scope of the journal include:
•Treatment processes for water and wastewaters (municipal, agricultural, industrial, and on-site treatment), including resource recovery and residuals management;
•Urban hydrology including sewer systems, stormwater management, and green infrastructure;
•Drinking water treatment and distribution;
•Potable and non-potable water reuse;
•Sanitation, public health, and risk assessment;
•Anaerobic digestion, solid and hazardous waste management, including source characterization and the effects and control of leachates and gaseous emissions;
•Contaminants (chemical, microbial, anthropogenic particles such as nanoparticles or microplastics) and related water quality sensing, monitoring, fate, and assessment;
•Anthropogenic impacts on inland, tidal, coastal and urban waters, focusing on surface and ground waters, and point and non-point sources of pollution;
•Environmental restoration, linked to surface water, groundwater and groundwater remediation;
•Analysis of the interfaces between sediments and water, and between water and atmosphere, focusing specifically on anthropogenic impacts;
•Mathematical modelling, systems analysis, machine learning, and beneficial use of big data related to the anthropogenic water cycle;
•Socio-economic, policy, and regulations studies.