Abstract:
Little is known about fixed nitrogen (N)
transformation and elimination at diffuse hydrothermal vents
where anoxic fluids are mixed with oxygenated crustal
seawater prior to discharge. Oceanic N sinks that remove
bio-available N ultimately affect chemosynthetic primary
productivity in these ecosystems. Using 15N paired isotope
techniques, we determined potential rates of fixed N
loss pathways (denitrification, anammox) and dissimilatory
nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) in sulfidic
hydrothermal vent fluids discharging from the subsurface at
several sites at Axial Volcano and the Endeavour Segment on
the Juan de Fuca Ridge.We also measured physico-chemical
parameters (i.e., temperature, pH, nutrients, H2S and N2O
concentrations) as well as the biodiversity and abundance
of chemolithoautotrophic nitrate-reducing, sulfur-oxidizing
-proteobacteria (SUP05 cluster) using sequence analysis
of amplified small subunit ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA)
genes in combination with taxon-specific quantitative
polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) assays. Denitrification
was the dominant N loss pathway in the subsurface
biosphere of the Juan de Fuca Ridge, with rates of
up to 1000 nmolNl−1 day−1. In comparison, anammox
rates were always <5 nmolNl−1 day−1 and below the
detection limit at most of the sites. DNRA rates were
up to 150 nmolNl−1 day−1. These results suggest that
bacterial denitrification out-competes anammox in sulfidic
hydrothermal vent waters. Taxon-specific qPCR revealed that
-proteobacteria of the SUP05 cluster sometimes dominated
the microbial community (SUP05/total bacteria up to 38 %).
Significant correlations were found between fixed N loss
(i.e., denitrification, anammox) rates and in situ nitrate and
dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) deficits in the fluids,
indicating that DIN availability may ultimately regulate N
loss in the subsurface. Based on our rate measurements, and
on published data on hydrothermal fluid fluxes and residence
times, we estimated that up to 10 TgNyr−1 could globally
be removed in the subsurface biosphere of hydrothermal
vents systems, thus, representing a small fraction of the total
marine N loss ( 275 to >400 TgNyr−1).