- Write by:
-
Monday, July 18, 2022 - 17:32:29
-
450 Visit
-
Print
Mining News Pro - New research has shown that in the complex, dynamic aquatic environments some microbes call home, there might not always be enough copper available for denitrification, an important process that helps the earth fight climate change.
Denitrification is the digestive process that microbes go through after feeding, which is aided by the metals they consume. The process involves gaining energy by chemically reducing nitrate and releasing a harmless byproduct: nitrogen, the gas that makes up 78% of the earth’s atmosphere.
However, if copper isn’t present, instead of releasing nitrogen during denitrification, the organisms release nitrous oxide, the third most potent greenhouse gas, 50% of which comes from microbes in aquatic ecosystems.
“Material in a beaker is not the same as material in the environment,” Daniel Giammar, who’s leading the research, said in a media statement. “A big part of our approach was to take real materials from real environmental systems and bring them to the lab and look at them in controlled ways.”
The findings underscore the outsized role of copper when it comes to the release of nitrous oxide.
“At regular, background levels, these systems may not have enough metals to carry out the process,” Neha Sharma, a Ph.D. student in Giammar’s lab, said.
To better understand how copper affected the gas’s release in these systems, Sharma and senior scientist Elaine Flynn went to the source. Working with three US Department of Energy labs—Oak Ridge and Argonne national laboratories and the Savannah River Site—Sharma and Flynn collected microbes from wetlands and riverbeds. When they analyzed how much copper was in the systems, they realized it wasn’t enough to complete denitrification.
“Then we wanted to see, if we manually added copper, would it affect the release of nitrous oxide,” Sharma said. “It did. All of the nitrous oxide was converted into other things, but no harmful greenhouse gases.”
In Sharma’s view, this finding could point to new ways to curb a warming atmosphere.
“If we put a bit of metal into the natural systems, it might mitigate the release of N2O,” she said. It also could have a more immediate effect for researchers who study climate.
“Currently, models that are predicting the release of gases from various systems do not account for these factors,” Sharma pointed out. “They know factors like food availability or temperature might affect greenhouse gas release, but they don’t include the effect of metals on this aspect of greenhouse gases.”
The researcher believes that for people to truly understand and make useful predictions about climate, climate models need to incorporate all of the real-world complexity present in specific ecosystems.
Short Link:
https://www.miningnews.ir/En/News/621773
Top copper producer Codelco reported a decline in quarterly output due to lower quality ore at its aging Chilean mines — ...
When former boss Mark Cutifani left Anglo American Plc in mid-April 2022, things had rarely looked better for the ...
Chile President Gabriel Boric said on Thursday he is targeting an increase in the country’s annual copper output by 1 ...
Brazilian miner Vale SA sees no impact from BHP Group’s bid for Anglo American on the latter’s Minas-Rio project, its ...
Marex Group Plc and a group of the London-based firm’s shareholders raised about $292 million in a US initial public ...
Copper miner Antofagasta Plc is holding meetings with investors this week for its first dollar bond offering in nearly ...
Copper needs to reach $12,000 a ton — a 20% jump from this week’s high — to incentivize large-scale investments in new ...
India is in talks with several countries seeking partnerships for technical help on lithium processing, said four ...
Teck Resources, Canada’s largest diversified miner, saw its copper production jump by 74% in the first three months of ...
No comments have been posted yet ...