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| One incubation chamber on RV POLARTSTERN. In this chamber the samples are prepared for later measurements [Credit: T. Baustian/GEOMAR] |
Despite scientific efforts, the nitrogen budget suffers from an apparent dilemma. The analysis of ocean sediment as a long-term climate archive has shown that the amounts of fixed nitrogen equaled those of released nitrogen for the past 3000 years. However, modern measurements in the ocean demonstrate that the amounts of released nitrogen exceed the amounts of nitrogen being fixed. These results leave a “gap” in the nitrogen budget and show inconsistencies between past, long-term reconstruction and short-term measurements.
In 2010, the GEOMAR microbiologist Wiebke Mohr pointed out that these inconsistencies could be partially due to the methods widely used to measure modern biological nitrogen fixation. Following this finding, scientists from GEOMAR, Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel (CAU), Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology (MPI) Bremen and Dalhousie University in Halifax (Canada) tested a new approach in the Atlantic Ocean which had been suggested by Mohr: The results of the study are now presented in the international journal Nature.
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| Closeup of water samples in an icubation chamber [Credit: M. Visbeck/GEOMAR] |
Groβkopf and his colleagues also analyzed the composition of the microbial community and found a correlation between the kind of microorganisms in the water and the difference in rates that the two methods revealed. “With the old method, the rate measured changes according to where the microorganisms live, closer to the surface or deeper in the water. The new method circumvents this bias”, Groβkopf emphasizes.
The “gap” in the nitrogen budget, however, cannot be entirely closed even with improved measurements of nitrogen fixation. “This is also due to the fact that we still don’t know all the microorganisms responsible for all these processes”, Groβkopf says. Professor Ruth Schmitz-Streit, microbiologist at the CAU and co-author of the “Nature” article, adds: “Within the Collaborative Research Centre 754 we just identified seven new clusters of nitrogen-fixing microorganisms, and many species are still waiting to be found.”
For Professor Julie LaRoche, who leads the research group at GEOMAR, this study is an important demonstration that scientific methods have to be carefully tested before their application. During an international workshop at GEOMAR in February 2012 LaRoche already advocated uniform and reliable methods in the analysis of biogeochemical fluxes in the ocean. “We have to work globally on a common basis in order to compare our results”, LaRoche highlights.
Source: Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel (GEOMAR) [August 10, 2012]







