| Literature DB >> 17535432 |
Galina Churkina1, Kristina Trusilova, Mona Vetter, Frank Dentener.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The amount of reactive nitrogen deposited on land has doubled globally and become at least five-times higher in Europe, Eastern United States, and South East Asia since 1860 mostly because of increases in fertilizer production and fossil fuel burning. Because vegetation growth in the Northern Hemisphere is typically nitrogen-limited, increased nitrogen deposition could have an attenuating effect on rising atmospheric CO2 by stimulating the vegetation productivity and accumulation of carbon in biomass.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17535432 PMCID: PMC1894630 DOI: 10.1186/1750-0680-2-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carbon Balance Manag ISSN: 1750-0680
Figure 1Changes in land carbon uptake in response to increasing nitrogen deposition and both nitrogen deposition and forest regrowth. The presented values are differences in net carbon uptake modelled with and without increasing atmospheric nitrogen deposition for mature, young and middle-aged forests. The bars show global carbon uptake averaged for 1980's and 1990's.
Residual land carbon sink
| 1980's (Pg C/yr) | 1990's (Pg C/yr) | |
| IPCC 2001 [19] | -0.3–3.8 | incomplete |
| House et al. [20] | 0.3–4.0 | 1.6–4.8 |
| Townsend et al. [11] | n/a | 0.3–1.3 |
| Holland et al. [12] | n/a | 1.5–2.0 |
| This study | 0.62–2.33 | 0.75–2.21 |
| Nadelhoffer et al. [10] | n/a | 0.25 |
| This study | 0.34–1.62 | 0.4–1.85 |
Negative values represent atmospheric CO2 increase (or land sources), positive numbers depict atmospheric CO2 decrease (land sinks).
Figure 2Changes in annual atmospheric nitrogen deposition based on TM3 model simulations from 1860 to 2000. Black arrows on the plot show years when forests were assumed to be planted in simulations with middle-aged and young forests.