| Literature DB >> 33007671 |
Hao Jiang1, Wenlu Lan2, Tianshen Li3, Zhifang Xu4, Wenjing Liu4, Ke Pan5.
Abstract
To offset estuarine eutrophication, interest is increasing in restoring oyster reefs and expanding oyster aquaculture. However, ecosystem-scale evidence is lacking on oyster assemblages' impacts on estuarine pelagic nitrogen (N) cycling. Using a multiple-isotope approach and isotope-mixing model, we examined the sources, transformations, and influence of intensive oyster aquaculture on N pollution in a subtropical estuary. The salinity-dependent NO3- and NH4+ concentrations and their correlations with isotopic signals (δ15N-NO3-, δ18O-NO3-, δ15N-NH4+) indicated the nutrient spatial distribution in low-salinity areas was largely regulated by mixing between freshwater and seawater. However, the intensive oyster aquaculture greatly increased nitrification in the estuary. In high-salinity areas where oyster assemblages were absent, the assimilation of NO3- by phytoplankton became dominant and sharply increased the δ15N-NO3- and δ18O-NO3-. Soil organic nitrogen and fertilizer, domestic sewage, and wastewater treatment plants were the major NO3- sources in the estuary, while internal nitrification contributed 20.6% to the NO3- pool. Oyster biodeposits comprised up to one-third of the particulate organic matter in the water column, and as much as 47.3% of the NH4+ pool could be from the oysters. Our study shows that oysters significantly contribute to the pelagic nutrient pools and N transformations, adding an important dimension to our understanding of oyster assemblages' impacts on estuarine N cycling.Entities:
Keywords: Isotope mixing model; Nitrogen; Oyster; Sources; Transformations
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33007671 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2020.116431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236