In News
- According to a new Report, Nitrogen levels are on a decline in the ‘nitrogen-rich world’ and plants and animals may face consequences.
Key Findings
- Imbalance in Availability:
- An imbalance in nitrogen availability has been reported across the globe, with some places having an excess and others a shortage of the element.
- Shrinking Locations:
- Nitrogen availability has been shrinking in grasslands in central North America for a hundred years.
- Many forests in North America and Europe have also suffered from nutritional declines for several decades or longer due to the same reason.
- Tropical and boreal forests may be particularly vulnerable.
- Factors responsible for Nitrogen decline:
- CO2 and nitrogen: Plants grow quickly when exposed to high carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations. Thus, their demand for nitrogen also goes up.
- High CO2 levels dilute plant nitrogen, triggering a cascade of effects that lower the availability of nitrogen.
- Warming and disturbances, including wildfire.
- Eutrophication: When excessive nitrogen accumulates in the streams, inland lakes and coastal bodies of water, it could sometimes result in eutrophication
- CO2 and nitrogen: Plants grow quickly when exposed to high carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations. Thus, their demand for nitrogen also goes up.
- Negative effects:
- Imbalance of nitrogen has been hurting aquatic and terrestrial life that feed on it.
- Cattle grazing these areas have had less protein in their diets over time.
- Slower and smaller growth: Without nitrogen, an essential nutrient, plants grow slowly and produce smaller flowers and fruits. Their leaves turn yellowish and are less nutritious to insects, birds and animals.
- Insect apocalypse: Plants with low nitrogen levels can encourage swarming in some species of locusts.
- Low nitrogen availability could limit plants’ ability to capture CO2 from the atmosphere.
- Eutrophication leads to harmful algal blooms, dead zones and fish kills.
- Production by Human: Human production of nitrogen is now five times higher than it was 60 years, according to a 2017 study.
- Effects in Human: In humans, high levels of nitrogen in the groundwater are linked to intestinal cancers and miscarriages and can be fatal for infants.
Declining nitrogen in natural ecosystems
- Nitrogen (N) availability is key to the functioning of ecosystems and the cycling of nutrients and energy through the biosphere.
- The productivity of ecosystems and their capacity to support life depends on access to reactive nitrogen.
- Over the past century, humans have more than doubled the global supply of reactive N through industrial and agricultural activities.
- However, long-term records demonstrate that N availability is declining in many regions of the world.
- Reactive N inputs are not evenly distributed, and global changes—including elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels and rising temperatures—are affecting ecosystem N supply relative to demand.
Nitrogen Cycle
- It is the circulation of nitrogen in various forms through nature.
- Nitrogen, a component of proteins and nucleic acids, is essential to life on Earth. Although 78 percent by volume of the atmosphere is nitrogen gas, this abundant reservoir exists in a form unusable by most organisms.
- Through a series of microbial transformations, however, nitrogen is made available to plants, which in turn ultimately sustain all animal life.
- The steps, which are not altogether sequential, fall into the following classifications:
- nitrogen fixation,
- nitrogen assimilation,
- ammonification,
- nitrification, and
- denitrification.
Image Courtesy: Britannica
Way Ahead
- The strong indications of declining nitrogen availability in many places and contexts are another important reason to rapidly reduce our reliance on fossil fuels.
- Sprinkling nitrogen but at the right time and in the right amount is needed.
Source: DTE
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