Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet

<jats:p>Abstract. Nitrogen inputs and microbial nitrogen cycling were investigated along a 79 km transect into the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) during the main ablation season in summer 2010. The depletion of dissolved nitrate and production of ammonium (relative to icemelt) in cryoconite holes...

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Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Telling, J, Stibal, M, Anesio, AM, Tranter, M, Nias, I, Cook, J, Bellas, C, Lis, G, Wadham, JL, Sole, A, Nienow, P, Hodson, A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus GmbH 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3093302/
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-9-2431-2012
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spelling ftunivliverpool:oai:livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk:3093302 2023-05-15T16:21:05+02:00 Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet Telling, J Stibal, M Anesio, AM Tranter, M Nias, I Cook, J Bellas, C Lis, G Wadham, JL Sole, A Nienow, P Hodson, A 2012 http://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3093302/ https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-9-2431-2012 en eng Copernicus GmbH Collapse authors list. Telling, J, Stibal, M, Anesio, AM, Tranter, M, Nias, I orcid:0000-0002-5657-8691 , Cook, J, Bellas, C, Lis, G, Wadham, JL, Sole, A et al (show 2 more authors) , Nienow, P and Hodson, A (2012) Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet. BIOGEOSCIENCES, 9 (7). pp. 2431-2442. Article NonPeerReviewed 2012 ftunivliverpool https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-9-2431-2012 2023-01-19T23:55:38Z <jats:p>Abstract. Nitrogen inputs and microbial nitrogen cycling were investigated along a 79 km transect into the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) during the main ablation season in summer 2010. The depletion of dissolved nitrate and production of ammonium (relative to icemelt) in cryoconite holes on Leverett Glacier, within 7.5 km of the ice sheet margin, suggested microbial uptake and ammonification respectively. Positive in situ acetylene assays indicated nitrogen fixation both in a debris-rich 100 m marginal zone and up to 5.7 km upslope on Leverett Glacier (with rates up to 16.3 μmoles C2H4 m−2 day−1). No positive acetylene assays were detected > 5.7 km into the ablation zone of the ice sheet. Potential nitrogen fixation only occurred when concentrations of dissolved and sediment-bound inorganic nitrogen were undetectable. Estimates of nitrogen fluxes onto the transect suggest that nitrogen fixation is likely of minor importance to the overall nitrogen budget of Leverett Glacier and of negligible importance to the nitrogen budget on the main ice sheet itself. Nitrogen fixation is however potentially important as a source of nitrogen to microbial communities in the debris-rich marginal zone close to the terminus of the glacier, where nitrogen fixation may aid the colonization of subglacial and moraine-derived debris. </jats:p> Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier Greenland Ice Sheet Leverett Glacier The University of Liverpool Repository Greenland Leverett Glacier ENVELOPE(-147.583,-147.583,-85.633,-85.633) Biogeosciences 9 7 2431 2442
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Liverpool Repository
op_collection_id ftunivliverpool
language English
description <jats:p>Abstract. Nitrogen inputs and microbial nitrogen cycling were investigated along a 79 km transect into the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) during the main ablation season in summer 2010. The depletion of dissolved nitrate and production of ammonium (relative to icemelt) in cryoconite holes on Leverett Glacier, within 7.5 km of the ice sheet margin, suggested microbial uptake and ammonification respectively. Positive in situ acetylene assays indicated nitrogen fixation both in a debris-rich 100 m marginal zone and up to 5.7 km upslope on Leverett Glacier (with rates up to 16.3 μmoles C2H4 m−2 day−1). No positive acetylene assays were detected > 5.7 km into the ablation zone of the ice sheet. Potential nitrogen fixation only occurred when concentrations of dissolved and sediment-bound inorganic nitrogen were undetectable. Estimates of nitrogen fluxes onto the transect suggest that nitrogen fixation is likely of minor importance to the overall nitrogen budget of Leverett Glacier and of negligible importance to the nitrogen budget on the main ice sheet itself. Nitrogen fixation is however potentially important as a source of nitrogen to microbial communities in the debris-rich marginal zone close to the terminus of the glacier, where nitrogen fixation may aid the colonization of subglacial and moraine-derived debris. </jats:p>
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Telling, J
Stibal, M
Anesio, AM
Tranter, M
Nias, I
Cook, J
Bellas, C
Lis, G
Wadham, JL
Sole, A
Nienow, P
Hodson, A
spellingShingle Telling, J
Stibal, M
Anesio, AM
Tranter, M
Nias, I
Cook, J
Bellas, C
Lis, G
Wadham, JL
Sole, A
Nienow, P
Hodson, A
Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet
author_facet Telling, J
Stibal, M
Anesio, AM
Tranter, M
Nias, I
Cook, J
Bellas, C
Lis, G
Wadham, JL
Sole, A
Nienow, P
Hodson, A
author_sort Telling, J
title Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet
title_short Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet
title_full Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet
title_fullStr Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet
title_full_unstemmed Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet
title_sort microbial nitrogen cycling on the greenland ice sheet
publisher Copernicus GmbH
publishDate 2012
url http://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3093302/
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-9-2431-2012
long_lat ENVELOPE(-147.583,-147.583,-85.633,-85.633)
geographic Greenland
Leverett Glacier
geographic_facet Greenland
Leverett Glacier
genre glacier
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Leverett Glacier
genre_facet glacier
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Leverett Glacier
op_relation Collapse authors list. Telling, J, Stibal, M, Anesio, AM, Tranter, M, Nias, I orcid:0000-0002-5657-8691 , Cook, J, Bellas, C, Lis, G, Wadham, JL, Sole, A et al (show 2 more authors) , Nienow, P and Hodson, A (2012) Microbial nitrogen cycling on the Greenland Ice Sheet. BIOGEOSCIENCES, 9 (7). pp. 2431-2442.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-9-2431-2012
container_title Biogeosciences
container_volume 9
container_issue 7
container_start_page 2431
op_container_end_page 2442
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