Bioturbation Effects of Chironomid Larvae on Nitrogen Release and Ammonia-Oxidizing Bacteria Abundance in Sediments

Xing, X; Liu, L; Yan, W; Wu, T; Zhao, L; Wang, X

HERO ID

4745756

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2018

HERO ID 4745756
In Press No
Year 2018
Title Bioturbation Effects of Chironomid Larvae on Nitrogen Release and Ammonia-Oxidizing Bacteria Abundance in Sediments
Authors Xing, X; Liu, L; Yan, W; Wu, T; Zhao, L; Wang, X
Journal Water
Volume 10
Issue 4
Abstract The purpose of this work was to reveal the Chironomid larvae bioturbation impact on N release and to find the mechanism of bioturbation to N conversion at the SWI (sediment-water interface). Sampling at four points during a 35-day incubation experiment was conducted. Two in situ techniques (microelectrode and Peeper) were used to capture more realistic and accurate microenvironment information around U-shaped corridors. The results demonstrate that the concentrations of ammonia nitrogen (NH4+) and nitrate nitrogen (NO3-) decreased by 21.26% and 19.50% in sediment and increased by 8.65% and 49.82% in the overlying water compared to the control treatment, respectively. An inverse relationship was observed between NH4+ and NO3- concentrations in pore water in Chironomid larvae treatment, and they were significantly negatively/positively correlated with AOB (ammonia-oxidizing bacteria) abundance, respectively. This study confirmed that the Chironomid larvae bioturbation promoted the N (NH4+ and NO3-) release from sediment by in situ techniques, and a part of NH(4)(+)converted into NO3- during their flow into the overlying water through the nitrification affected by AOB. Furthermore, the main depth of bioturbation influence is approximately 12 cm below the SWI and the most significant bioturbation effect was observed from days 15 to 25.
Doi 10.3390/w10040512
Wosid WOS:000434954900166
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Keyword Chironomid larvae; bioturbation; ammonia nitrogen; nitrate nitrogen; ammonia-oxidizing bacteria