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Nitrogen fixation on marine particles is important in the global ocean

02.19.25 | University of Copenhagen - Faculty of Science

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How on Earth?

It has puzzled scientists for years whether and how bacteria, that live from dissolved organic matter in marine waters, can carry out N 2 fixation. It was assumed that the high levels of oxygen combined with the low amount of dissolved organic matter in the marine water column would prevent the anaerobic and energy consuming N 2 fixation.

Already in the 1980s it was suggested that aggregates, so-called “marine snow particles”, could possibly be suitable sites for N 2 fixation, and this was recently confirmed. Still, it has been an open question why the bacteria carrying out this N 2 fixation can be found worldwide in the ocean. Moreover, the global magnitude and the distribution of the activity have been unknown.

Until now..

In a new study, researchers from the Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research in Germany, Technical University of Denmark, and the University of Copenhagen demonstrate, by use of mechanistic mathematical models, that bacteria attached to marine snow particles can fix N 2 over a wide range of temperatures in the global oceans, from the tropics to the poles, and from the surface to the abyss. The study also shows that the activity of these bacteria accounts for about 10% of the overall N 2 fixation in the global ocean. The study has just been published in the prestigious Science Advances.

- “It has been almost five years since we started this work when I was a postdoc at the University of Copenhagen explains first-author Subhendu Chakraborty. Then he added “but it was definitely worth the effort, since the results are quite a breakthrough. Indeed our study disputes the long-standing paradigms that oceanic N 2 fixation is exclusively restricted to surface waters of the tropical and subtropical oceans and that cyanobacteria are the only important diazotrophs.”

With their mechanistic models the researchers could also show a distinct latitudinal distribution of the bacteria fixing N 2 on marine snow particles, with highest rates in the oxygen minimum zones found in large regions of the global ocean. Moreover, it was shown that particle-associated bacteria can fix N 2 at a much broader temperature range than cyanobacteria.

- “The magnitude of the N 2 fixation and the distinct distribution of the particle-associated activity relative to what is known for cyanobacteria are highly interesting”, says Lasse Riemann, Professor at the Department of Biology and co-author of the study. He continues: “By fixing N 2 mostly below the surface layers, the bacterial activity associated with particles is expected to have indirect and delayed impact on the oceanic nitrogen cycle compared to that of cyanobacteria. These insights may be particularly important when trying to predict plankton productivity in the future ocean impacted by global warming”.

The researchers hope their study will inspire future work on microbial life on marine particles, due to its seemingly pivotal role in the cycling of many nutrients in the ocean.

Science Advances

10.1126/sciadv.adq4693

Nitrogen fixation on marine particles is important in the global ocean

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Helle Blaesild
University of Copenhagen - Faculty of Science
helleb@bio.ku.dk

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Copenhagen - Faculty of Science. (2025, February 19). Nitrogen fixation on marine particles is important in the global ocean. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LN2EQ741/nitrogen-fixation-on-marine-particles-is-important-in-the-global-ocean.html
MLA:
"Nitrogen fixation on marine particles is important in the global ocean." Brightsurf News, Feb. 19 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LN2EQ741/nitrogen-fixation-on-marine-particles-is-important-in-the-global-ocean.html.