Global inland-water nitrogen cycling has accelerated in the Anthropocene

Inland waters are an important component of the global nitrogen (N) cycle, functioning not only as land-to-sea transporters but also as active biogeochemical reactors. However, the latter role is not well understood regarding mechanisms, quantities or on a global scale. It remains unclear whether, when, how and why global inland-water biogeochemical N cycling has changed. Here we analyse the dynamic global inland-water N cycling processes in the Anthropocene by quantifying the long-term changes in different N forms, including their inputs to inland waters, transformation pathways, retention within inland waters, and river export to oceans. Using a spatially explicit, mechanistic, coupled hydrology and biogeochemistry model, we show that, during 1900–2010, the increase in total nitrogen (TN) river loading (from 27 to 68 Tg yr−1) resulted in an increase in TN export to oceans (from 20 to 42 Tg yr−1), despite an increase in inland-water retention (from 25% to 39%) primarily due to gaseous loss and burial. Moreover, the relative contributions of ammonium (NH4+), nitrate/nitrite (NOx) and organic nitrogen (ON) changed because of threefold increases in global inland-water mineralization (transforming ON to NH4+) and N burial in sediments, a fourfold increase in nitrification (transforming NH4+ to NOx) and a sixfold increase in denitrification (transforming NOx to mainly N2).

Authors

PBL Authors
Lex Bouwman Arthur Beusen
Other authors
J. Wang
L.Vilmin
W.J. van Hoek
X.Liu
J.J. Middelburg

Specifications

Publication title
Global inland-water nitrogen cycling has accelerated in the Anthropocene
Publication date
9 August 2024
Publication type
Article
Page count
21
Publication language
English
Magazine
Nature water
Issue
2
Product number
5811