The saltmarsh habitats across England, and the remainder of the UK, can remediate nutrients such as ammonium, nitrate and phosphate that may otherwise pollute the marine environment. Multiple processes can contribute to this remediation, across varying timescales, including sediment burial and plant/microbial uptake.
Nitrate, that can also lead to marine dead zones when in excess, can be microbially-processed through denitrification, which transforms it to the environmentally benign di-nitrogen gas (N2).
The rates at which denitrification proceeds can vary due to sediment context, and over seasonal cycles of vegetation/microbial production and loss. The Environment Agency (EA) is particularly interested in quantifying variation in rates across contexts and season in saltmarshes under their remit i.e. in England.
Extending a pilot study in 2023/2024, based on one marsh in one estuary in two seasons, and working with Bangor University and their Wetland Hydroperiod Simulator, we aim to provide key data on denitrification rates to understand this important nitrogen removal process. This understanding can inform extensions to the Centre for Fisheries and Aquacultural Sciences’ (CEFAS) Combined Phytoplankton and Macroalgae (CPM) model.