On the fate of anthropogenic nitrogen
Top Cited Papers
- 6 January 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 106 (1), 203-208
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0810193105
Abstract
This article provides a synthesis of literature values to trace the fate of 150 Tg/yr anthropogenic nitrogen applied by humans to the Earth9s land surface. Approximately 9 TgN/yr may be accumulating in the terrestrial biosphere in pools with residence times of ten to several hundred years. Enhanced fluvial transport of nitrogen in rivers and percolation to groundwater accounts for ≈35 and 15 TgN/yr, respectively. Greater denitrification in terrestrial soils and wetlands may account for the loss of ≈17 TgN/yr from the land surface, calculated by a compilation of data on the fraction of N2O emitted to the atmosphere and the current global rise of this gas in the atmosphere. A recent estimate of atmospheric transport of reactive nitrogen from land to sea (NOx and NHx) accounts for 48 TgN/yr. The total of these enhanced sinks, 124 TgN/yr, is less than the human-enhanced inputs to the land surface, indicating areas of needed additional attention to global nitrogen biogeochemistry. Policy makers should focus on increasing nitrogen-use efficiency in fertilization, reducing transport of reactive N to rivers and groundwater, and maximizing denitrification to its N2 endproduct.Keywords
This publication has 94 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simulated chronic nitrogen deposition increases carbon storage in Northern Temperate forestsGlobal Change Biology, 2007
- Isotopic evidence for large gaseous nitrogen losses from tropical rainforestsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Assessment and management of long-term nitrate pollution of ground water in agriculture-dominated watershedsJournal of Hydrology, 2004
- Decadal-scale fates of tracers added to oak and pine stands under ambient and elevated N inputs at the Harvard Forest (USA)Forest Ecology and Management, 2004
- Nutrient inputs to the coastal ocean through submarine groundwater discharge: controls and potential impactJournal of Hydrology, 2004
- Long-Term Nitrogen Additions and Nitrogen Saturation in Two Temperate ForestsEcosystems, 2000
- The fate of 15N-labelled nitrogen deposition in coniferous forest ecosystemsForest Ecology and Management, 1998
- Technical Report: Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Sources and ConsequencesEcological Applications, 1997
- Growth response and recovery of 15N-fertilizer one and eight growing seasons after application to lodgepole pine in British ColumbiaForest Ecology and Management, 1994
- Groundwater fluxes in the global hydrologic cycle: past, present and futureJournal of Hydrology, 1993