Effect
of Water Chemistry and Hydrodynamics on Nitrogen Transformation Activity
and Microbial Community Functional Potential in Hyporheic Zone Sediment
Columns
posted on 2017-04-09, 00:00authored byYuanyuan Liu, Chongxuan Liu, William C. Nelson, Liang Shi, Fen Xu, Yunde Liu, Ailan Yan, Lirong Zhong, Christopher Thompson, James K. Fredrickson, John M. Zachara
Hyporheic zones (HZ) are active biogeochemical
regions where groundwater and surface water mix. N transformations
in HZ sediments were investigated in columns with a focus on understanding
how the dynamic changes in groundwater and surface water mixing affect
microbial community and its biogeochemical function with respect to
N transformations. The results indicated that denitrification, DNRA,
and nitrification rates and products changed quickly in response to
changes in water and sediment chemistry, fluid residence time, and
groundwater–surface water exchange. These changes were accompanied
by the zonation of denitrification functional genes along a 30 cm
advective flow path after a total of 6 days’ elution of synthetic
groundwater with fluid residence time >9.8 h. The shift of microbial
functional potential toward denitrification was correlated with rapid
NO3– reduction collectively affected
by NO3– concentration and fluid residence
time, and was resistant to short-term groundwater-surface water exchange
on a daily basis. The results implied that variations in microbial
functional potential and associated biogeochemical reactions in the
HZ may occur at space scales where steep concentration gradients present
along the flow path and the variations would respond to dynamic HZ
water exchange over different time periods common to natural and managed
riverine systems.