The "DARK MATTER" of nitrogen fixation

2011 
Biological nitrogen fixation is the largest input of fixed nitrogen into the oceans and thus a key parameter in controlling primary productivity. Despite the importance of nitrogen fixation there is major controversy about its magnitude on a global scale, due to a gap in the marine nitrogen cycle on the input side. While this gap suggests that the nitrogen cycle is currently not in balance and the oceans are losing more nitrogen than they gain, stable isotope measurements from sediment cores suggest that the nitrogen cycle has been in balance over the last 3000 years. To resolve this paradox it has been suggested that marine nitrogen fixation is currently underestimated. We used a revised method to measure nitrogen fixation and compared it with the prior, widely applied method. Our study reveals that over the whole Atlantic Ocean the prior method underestimated nitrogen fixation rates. In certain areas the mean fixationrate increased over six fold when measured with the revised protocol. The magnitude of the difference is not stable but rather highly variable on a coarse geographic scale. We suspected that species composition has a great influence on the magnitude of underestimation of nitrogen fixation rates by the prior method, a theory we could confirm with a laboratory experiment. Taken together, our results imply that there is an urgent need to agree on a common protocol for nitrogen fixation rate measurements to assess the true potential of this nitrogen input process and be able to model the future development, given man-made climate changes
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []