Nitrogen (N) is a limiting nutrient for life in the ocean and the atmospheric pool of dinitrogen gas (N2) is only accessible to a limited group of microbes. Classically, those N2-fixers were supposed to be mainly present in nutrient depleted surface waters. But also in oxygen poor deep waters, such as e.g. present in the tropical Oceans or in the Baltic Sea, N2-fixers are present. Not much is known about these microbes and their potential to contribute to the N-budget of the ocean, but they may be of critical importance in the future, as human-made climate change leads to a loss of oxygen from the ocean. This phenomenon is called ocean deoxygenation and it is a result of global warming. Because a systematic investigation of N2-fixation in oxygen poor waters and its controls and feedbacks is missing; the exploration of this important but largely understudied topic was addressed by ‘NITROX- Nitrogen Regeneration under changing oxygen conditions' project.
The specific goals of NITROX were to
1. identify which microbes are involved in N2 fixation in oxygen depleted waters using molecular genetic methods
2. measure how much N2 fixation takes place in those waters
3. understand how the N2 fixation in those waters is regulated, and how it will respond to further oxygen loss from the water.
Over the course of NITROX it has been found that a feedback regulation between N2 fixation, primary production by algae and cyanobacteria, and their degradation after they die and sink out of the surface water, exists. This means that oxygen poor conditions favor N2 fixation, through the higher availability of N algae can grow. As soon as those algae die and sink down to low oxygen waters, they are degraded, a process that consumes oxygen. Thus, oxygen is progressively being lost from those waters until they are completely anoxic and possibly a toxic substance, hydrogen sulfide can evolve. This development would in principle mean that oxygen poor waters would continuously expand, but as we found during NITROX, extreme anoxia with hydrogen sulfide being produced stops N2 fixation and with that primary production. In consequence, no more organic material is produced and exported, and oxygen consumption in deeper waters decreases. Thus, this is the first prove of a feedback cycle driven by bacteria, which can counteract one of the consequences of climate change, namely Ocean deoxygenation.