Coastal systems are increasingly impacted by over-enrichment of nutrients, which has cascading effects for ecosystem functioning. Oyster restoration and aquaculture are both hypothesized to mitigate excessive nitrogen (N) loads via benthic denitrification. The degree to which these management activities perform similar functions for removing N, however, has not been extensively examined in New England, a place where nutrient runoff is high and increasing oyster (Crassostrea virginica) restoration and aquaculture activity is taking place. Here, we use a novel in situ methodology to directly measure net N2 and O2 fluxes across the sediment-water interface in a shallow (~1 m) coastal pond in southern Rhode Island. We collected data seasonally ...
In coastal ecosystems, suspension-feeding bivalves can remove nitrogen though uptake and assimilatio...
At a restored reef site and a control site in the Choptank River, Maryland, USA, we partially quanti...
Nitrogen pollution is one of the primary threats to coastal water quality globally, and governmental...
Excess nitrogen (N) loading and resulting eutrophication plague coastal ecosystems globally. Much wo...
Like many ecosystem functions in marine and terrestrial environments, nutrient processing varies dra...
Oyster reef restoration can significantly increase benthic denitrification rates. Methods applied to...
Oyster restoration efforts and aquaculture have increased globally to counteract the overall decline...
Human activities have resulted in an array of stressors to coastal ecosystems. In the context of eco...
Measurements of nutrient exchange were made in restored oyster reefs and creek sediments in 2014 and...
Fluxes of N2-N (denitrification), dissolved ammonium, nitrate plus nitrite, and dissolved oxygen wer...
In this three-year, seasonal study of sediment nitrogen (N) biogeochemistry, we used stable isotope ...
Benthic deposition of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N)-rich oyster biodeposits may increase denitrificati...
Oysters are estuarine ecosystem engineers, in that their physical structure and biological function ...
1. Like many ecosystem functions in marine and terrestrial environments, nutrient processing varies ...
In coastal ecosystems, suspension-feeding bivalves can remove nitrogen though uptake and assimilatio...
At a restored reef site and a control site in the Choptank River, Maryland, USA, we partially quanti...
Nitrogen pollution is one of the primary threats to coastal water quality globally, and governmental...
Excess nitrogen (N) loading and resulting eutrophication plague coastal ecosystems globally. Much wo...
Like many ecosystem functions in marine and terrestrial environments, nutrient processing varies dra...
Oyster reef restoration can significantly increase benthic denitrification rates. Methods applied to...
Oyster restoration efforts and aquaculture have increased globally to counteract the overall decline...
Human activities have resulted in an array of stressors to coastal ecosystems. In the context of eco...
Measurements of nutrient exchange were made in restored oyster reefs and creek sediments in 2014 and...
Fluxes of N2-N (denitrification), dissolved ammonium, nitrate plus nitrite, and dissolved oxygen wer...
In this three-year, seasonal study of sediment nitrogen (N) biogeochemistry, we used stable isotope ...
Benthic deposition of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N)-rich oyster biodeposits may increase denitrificati...
Oysters are estuarine ecosystem engineers, in that their physical structure and biological function ...
1. Like many ecosystem functions in marine and terrestrial environments, nutrient processing varies ...
In coastal ecosystems, suspension-feeding bivalves can remove nitrogen though uptake and assimilatio...
At a restored reef site and a control site in the Choptank River, Maryland, USA, we partially quanti...
Nitrogen pollution is one of the primary threats to coastal water quality globally, and governmental...