lec 15 Flashcards

1
Q

which has a larger effect on bodies of water: N, or P?

A

both are really important. ultimately P has more of an effect, but in the short term (weeks to months) N has a large effect too

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2
Q

what is the Redfield ratio? what is its significance?

A

redfield ratio is 106:16:1 for C:N:P
it is generally what stable bodies of water stay at

we can look at N:P ratio to see which is more limiting
if N:P > 16, there is more N –> P is limiting
if N:P < 16, there is less N –> N is limiting

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3
Q

what are heterocysts?

A

things used in N fixation by cyanobacteria - good indicators for cyanobacteria biomass

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4
Q

what is the main source of N?

A

atmospheric N (makes up like 78% of the atmosphere)

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5
Q

what are our many forms of nitrogen’s redox states?

A

NH4+ is oxidized, NO3- is reduced, and theres also gaseous N2, NO, and N2O

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6
Q

what is one problem assoc w fixing N?

A

very costly, since N has triple bonds which are difficult to break

since this pathway is costly, N fixation does not occur if NO3 or NH4 are available

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7
Q

what is the point of nitrification?

A

redox reaction where electron gained from oxidation of NH4+ to NO2- provides energy to reduce CO2 to organic carbon

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8
Q

what is ammoniafication? what are the two processes by which it can occur in oxic/anoxic conditions?

A

ammonia is created as a byproduct of many animals, due to organic N being consumed

in oxic conditions, ammoniafication is excretion
in anoxic conditions, ammoniafication is fermentation

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9
Q

what is assimilation? how can N be assimilated, and what form is preferred? are other forms taken up?

A

the active uptake of a chemical - in this case, inorganic N
this occurs in the form of ammonia, nitrate, or nitrite, where ammonia is the form that organisms use. nitrates and nitrites are still taken up, but they must first be converted to ammonia before use.

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9
Q

what can denitrification be framed as? why does it occur?

A

denitrification can be though as the exit point from the N cycle.

when N is not taken up, it moves to nitrate/nitrite
in anoxic conditions, NO3- becomes NO –> N2O –> N2
problem! transition from N2O to N2 req carbon, so if carbon isn’t readily available itll diffuse out the water column as N2O, which is a really big greenhouse gas

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10
Q

what is the solubility of oxygen compared to that of nitrogen gas? why?

A

nitrogen is less soluble bc it has more bonds that need to be broken (triple vs double)

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11
Q

what are the enzymes involved in turning unusable nitrate to usable ammonia? how do nitrates compare to ammonia in terms of energy?

A

nitrate reductase converts nitrate into nitrite, and nitrite reductase converts nitrite into ammonia
this process is expensive! ammonium has higher potential energy, so turning nitrate into ammonia works against the energy gradient (doesn’t naturally occur)

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12
Q

how can some bacteria and archaea fix nitrogen? what are the conditions for this to occur?

A

nitrogen can be fixed using the nitrogenase enzyme
nitrogenase is inactivated by the presence of oxygen, so organisms either need to be in anoxic environments or prevent oxygen from reaching the enzyme (ex heterocysts prevent oxygen from reaching the enzyme)

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13
Q

what happens when DO is high in conc and there is plenty of ammonia?

A

ammonia has higher potential energy than nitrites/nitrates, which bacteria can exploit to free up this energy and use it for themselves
aka we get nitrification!

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14
Q

if denitrification produces N2O or N2, why is necessary at times?

A

when N is too high in a lake, it needs to get removed
also useful for anoxic lakes that need to respire, since nitrates can be used in unideal situations

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15
Q

review: explain the following processes!
- assimilation
- nitrogen fixation
- nitrification
- denitrification

A

assimilation: the process by which N is made usable for an organism. ammonium is the usable form, so nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase are needed to convert NO3 and NO2, respectively, into ammonium.

nitrogen fixation: a process used by some bacteria and archaea to convert N2 into usable ammonium via the nitrogenase enzyme. requires an anoxic environment since oxygen fucks up the enzyme

nitrification: a redox reaction performed by bacteria in which ammonia is oxidized (loses electrons) in order to convert CO2 into organic carbon (chemoautotrophy)

denitrification: the process by which nitrates become nitric oxide, nitrous oxide, and eventually nitrogen gas

16
Q

in a stratified lake, what forms of nitrogen exist in the epilimnion? hypolimnion?

A

epilimnion usually carries nitrates, since nitrification works on ammonium to convert it to nitrate

conversely, hypolimnion is dominated by ammonium, since denitrification removes nitrate and organisms naturally produce ammonium