| Literature DB >> 24132996 |
Thomas Dirnböck1, Ulf Grandin, Markus Bernhardt-Römermann, Burkhardt Beudert, Roberto Canullo, Martin Forsius, Maria-Theresia Grabner, Maria Holmberg, Sirpa Kleemola, Lars Lundin, Michael Mirtl, Markus Neumann, Enrico Pompei, Maija Salemaa, Franz Starlinger, Tomasz Staszewski, Aldona Katarzyna Uziębło.
Abstract
Chronic nitrogen (N) deposition is a threat to biodiversity that results from the eutrophication of ecosystems. We studied long-term monitoring data from 28 forest sites with a total of 1,335 permanent forest floor vegetation plots from northern Fennoscandia to southern Italy to analyse temporal trends in vascular plant species cover and diversity. We found that the cover of plant species which prefer nutrient-poor soils (oligotrophic species) decreased the more the measured N deposition exceeded the empirical critical load (CL) for eutrophication effects (P = 0.002). Although species preferring nutrient-rich sites (eutrophic species) did not experience a significantly increase in cover (P = 0.440), in comparison to oligotrophic species they had a marginally higher proportion among new occurring species (P = 0.091). The observed gradual replacement of oligotrophic species by eutrophic species as a response to N deposition seems to be a general pattern, as it was consistent on the European scale. Contrary to species cover changes, neither the decrease in species richness nor of homogeneity correlated with nitrogen CL exceedance (ExCLemp N). We assume that the lack of diversity changes resulted from the restricted time period of our observations. Although existing habitat-specific empirical CL still hold some uncertainty, we exemplify that they are useful indicators for the sensitivity of forest floor vegetation to N deposition.Entities:
Keywords: air pollution; critical load; eutrophication; long-term ecological research; monitoring; plant species diversity
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24132996 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863