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@ARTICLE{Wu:902969,
author = {Wu, Di and Senbayram, Mehmet and Moradi, Ghazal and
Mörchen, Ramona and Knief, Claudia and Klumpp, Erwin and
Jones, Davey L. and Well, Reinhard and Chen, Ruirui and Bol,
Roland},
title = {{M}icrobial potential for denitrification in the hyperarid
{A}tacama {D}esert soils},
journal = {Soil biology $\&$ biochemistry},
volume = {157},
issn = {0038-0717},
address = {Amsterdam [u.a.]},
publisher = {Elsevier Science},
reportid = {FZJ-2021-04715},
pages = {108248 -},
year = {2021},
abstract = {The hyperarid soils of the Atacama Desert, Chile, contain
the largest known nitrate deposits in the world. They also
represent one of the most hostile environments for microbial
life anywhere in the terrestrial biosphere. Despite known
for its extreme dryness, several heavy rainfall events
causing localised flash flooding have struck Atacama Desert
core regions during the last five years. It remains unclear,
however, whether these soils can support microbial
denitrification. To answer this, we sampled soils along a
hyperaridity gradient in the Atacama Desert and conducted
incubation experiments using a robotized continuous flow
system under a He/O2 atmosphere. The impacts of four
successive extreme weather events on soil-borne N2O and N2
emissions were investigated, i) water addition, ii) NO3−
addition, iii) labile carbon (C) addition, and iv) oxygen
depletion. The 15N–N2O site-preference (SP) approach was
further used to examine the source of N2O produced.
Extremely low N2O fluxes were detected shortly after water
and NO3− addition, whereas pronounced N2O and N2 emissions
were recorded after labile-C (glucose) amendment in all
soils. Under anoxia, N2 emissions increased drastically
while N2O emissions decreased concomitantly, indicating the
potential for complete denitrification at all sites.
Although increasing aridity significantly reduced soil
bacterial richness, microbial potential for denitrification
and associated gene abundance (i.e., napA, narG, nirS, nirK,
cnorB, qnorB and nosZ) was not affected. The N2O15N site
preference values based on two end-member model suggested
that fungal and bacterial denitrification co-contributed to
N2O production in less arid sites, whereas bacterial
denitrification dominated with increasing aridity. We
conclude that soil denitrification functionality is
preserved even with lowered microbial richness in the
extreme hyperarid Atacama Desert. Future changes in land-use
or extreme climate events therefore have a potential to
destabilize the immense reserves of nitrate and induce
significant N2O losses in the region.},
cin = {IBG-3},
ddc = {540},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)IBG-3-20101118},
pnm = {2173 - Agro-biogeosystems: controls, feedbacks and impact
(POF4-217)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-2173},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
UT = {WOS:000643701100016},
doi = {10.1016/j.soilbio.2021.108248},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/902969},
}