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Eco-metrics scientists advance understanding of nitrogen cycling in stream networks
Ashley Helton's research modeling nitrogen cycling in river networks has certainly made a big "splash."  As an M.S. Student sponsored by Eco-metrics, Inc at the University of Georgia’s Odum School of Ecology, Ms. Helton worked under the direction of Geoffrey Poole and UGA researcher Judy Meyer, as part of the "LINX-II"  project.  The LINX-II project was a collaboration among 31 aquatic scientists from different U.S. universities to study how nitrate, a form of nitrogen pollution, is transported within and removed from stream water.  Results from their work, including Helton’s model results, are reported in the March 13th issue of the journal Nature.  A less technical summary of the research implications also appears in the same journal.

In the first phase of their study, the research scientists tagged nitrate with a rare, non-radioactive isotope of nitrogen, 15N. They then added the tagged nitrate to 72 different streams reaches across the U.S. and Puerto Rico, carefully measuring how rapidly the tagged nitrate was carried downstream.  As the nitrogen passed through the experimental stream reaches, the scientists found that the nitrate was removed from stream water by tiny organisms such as algae, fungi and bacteria living on the streambed.  In addition, a considerable fraction was permanently removed from streams by a bacterially-mediated process known as denitrification, which converts nitrate to nitrogen gas that then escapes harmlessly to the atmosphere.  The researcher’s concluded that streams and rivers converted a substantial amount of nitrate to nitrogen gas, and the rate of conversion increased as nitrate concentrations rose.  However, conversion rates did not rise as fast as increases in nitrogen concentration.  Thus, the efficiency of denitrification (the fraction of nitrate in stream water that is converted to nitrogen gas) dropped rapidly as nitrate concentrations increased.

Although these field experiments showed what happened to nitrate in individual stream reaches, the scientists turned to Ms. Helton to help them understand what the findings meant when considering entire stream networks, which develop as small streams flow together to form larger streams and eventually rivers.  Based on the field experiments, Helton developed a computer simulation model to study nitrate removal from water within river networks.  The model showed that streambed biota were most effective at removing nitrate from stream networks when the streams were not overloaded by nitrate pollution from sources such as fertilizers and wastes from human activities.  Additionally, she found that most of the nitrate removal occurred in small headwater streams when nitrate pollution rates were low.  In contrast, under higher nitrate pollution levels, the biota in small streams could be overwhelmed with nitrate, allowing the nitrate to flow downstream and be removed by organisms in larger rivers.  If the nitrate pollution levels were sufficient to overwhelm the large rivers, too, then most of the nitrate would make its way to lakes or coastal oceans, where it can cause noxious algal blooms and lead to oxygen depletion and death of fish and shellfish.  Such oxygen starved “dead zones” have been reported recently in the Gulf of Mexico.  Ms. Helton’s work, along with that of the larger group of scientists, was funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation.
 
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