Abstract
AbstractNitrous oxide (N2O) is a potent greenhouse gas of primarily microbial origin. Aerobic and anoxic emissions are commonly ascribed to nitrification and denitrification, respectively. Beyond this established dichotomy, we quantitatively prove that heterotrophic denitrification can significantly contribute to aerobic nitrogen turnover and N2O emissions in complex microbiomes exposed to frequent oxic/anoxic transitions. Planktonic, nitrification-inhibited denitrifying enrichments respired over a third of the influent organic substrate with nitrate at high oxygen concentrations. N2O accounted for up to one quarter of the aerobically respired nitrate. The constitutive detection of all denitrification enzymes in both anoxic and oxic periods highlight the selective advantage offered by metabolic preparedness in dynamic environments. We posit that aerobic denitrification and associated N2O formation is currently underestimated in dynamic microbial ecosystems.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory