201214Apr09:18

Life's dependence of nitrogen

Information
published 14 April 2012 | modified 04 October 2024

 

Nitrogen is an essential, fundamental building block for life. Without an adequate supply of nitrogen, crops do not thrive and fail to reach their maximum production potential. In many ecosystems, nitrogen is the limiting element for growth.

However, when present in excess, reactive nitrogen causes a range of negative environmental effects, poses risks to human health, and consequently can have negative economic and social consequences. While synthetic nitrogen fertilizers increase crop production, unintended releases of reactive nitrogen to the broader environment through agricultural runoff can contaminate ground water, rivers and estuaries. Another major source of reactive nitrogen is the combustion of fossil fuels, which creates nitrogen oxides (NOX) in the atmosphere.

In the air, excess reactive nitrogen contributes to higher levels of ozone in the lower atmosphere, causing respiratory ailments and damaging vegetation.

From the atmosphere, nitrogen falls to the surface, generating a series of effects — corrosion of buildings, bridges and other human-made structures, acidification of soils and water bodies, and inadvertent fertilization of trees and grasslands, creating unnatural growth rates, nutrient imbalances, and decreasing biodiversity. Leaching out of the soils, reactive nitrogen can make ground water and surface water unfit for human consumption. Reactive nitrogen also promotes eutrophication in coastal ecosystems, which deteriorates fish habitat and aquatic biodiversity.

Eventually, most reactive nitrogen is converted back to harmless nitrogen gas by soil and aquatic bacteria called “denitrifiers”, but a portion is converted to nitrous oxide, which contributes to both the greenhouse effect and to stratospheric ozone depletion. Once released into the environment, nitrogen cascades from one negative environmental impact to another.

While an excess of reactive nitrogen exists in industrialized countries, too little nitrogen is available in many developing countries, thus limiting the ability of local agriculture to meet the basic challenge of producing enough food to sustain the population and to contribute to economic development. Insufficient nitrogen and other agricultural nutrient inputs can also lead to land degradation, soil erosion, desertification and their attendant long-term environmental and economic consequences

(Background information derived from Woods Hole Research Center website)

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