Publication | Closed Access
High Nitrite Levels off Northern Peru: A Signal of Instability in the Marine Denitrification Rate
166
Citations
11
References
1986
Year
EngineeringIntensified DenitrificationMarine ChemistryHigh Nitrite LevelsOceanographyEarth ScienceMarine Denitrification RateOrganic GeochemistryPeruvian CoastNutrient StoichiometryEstuarine CirculationOceanic DenitrificationMarine GeologyBiogeochemistryBiogeochemical CycleSedimentologySediment TransportNutrient CycleNorthern PeruGeochemistry
During February and March 1985, nitrite levels along the northern (approximately 7 degrees to 10 degrees S) Peruvian coast were unusually high. These accumulations occurred in oxygen-deficient waters, suggesting intensified denitrification. In a shallow offshore nitrite maximum, concentrations were as high as 23 micromoles per liter (a record high). Causes for the unusual conditions may include a cold anomaly that followed the 1982-83 El Niño. The removal of combined nitrogen (approximately 3 to 10 trillion grams of nitrogen per year) within zones of new or enhanced denitrification observed between 7 degrees to 16 degrees S suggests a significant increase in oceanic denitrification.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1