Frontiers in Marine Science (May 2022)

Multiple Lenses of N-Isotopes Reveal Active Dissolved Organic Nitrogen Cycling in a Subtropical Estuary and Marginal Sea

  • Xiaosong Zhong,
  • Xiaosong Zhong,
  • Maojun Yan,
  • Wenqi Xu,
  • Zhenwei Yan,
  • Zhenwei Yan,
  • Feng Xu,
  • Feng Xu,
  • Shuhang Dong,
  • Shuhang Dong,
  • Yu Xin,
  • Yu Xin,
  • Xiaoyong Shi,
  • Xiaoyong Shi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2022.855479
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) is an important component of the marine nitrogen (N) inventory and plays an essential role in N cycling in global estuaries and marginal seas. Understanding DON cycling is important but challenging. Global estuaries and marginal seas are experiencing significant anthropogenic impacts and have intensive physical/biochemical gradients. Therefore, high-quality DON concentration and N-isotope (δ15N–DON) data are very difficult to obtain. To enrich this knowledge, we take the Changjiang Estuary and the adjacent East China Sea shelf seas as a representative example and analyzed multiple isotopes and the concentrations of nitrate (NO3−), particulate nitrogen (PN), and DON. N isotopes combined with optimum multiparameter analysis proved to be very informative. This integrated analysis discriminates active DON production and consumption from a seemingly conservative distribution pattern of DON. The study area was divided into DON production zones 1 and 2 (P-zone 1 and 2) and DON consumption zones 1 and 2 (C-zone 1 and 2). For P-zone 1, the PN-originated DON elevated the δ15N–DON, while in P-zone 2, the DON excreted by phytoplankton was characterized by low δ15N and lowered δ15N–DON. DON consumption occurred in the NO3− depleted surface waters (C-zone 1) as well as the shelf middle and bottom waters (C-zone 2). This study discovers and consolidates the active and dynamical zoning of DON cycling from the estuary to the offshore marginal sea and establishes a useful means that is of valuable reference to DON cycling studies in global estuaries and marginal seas.

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