Impact of Nitrogen Deposition on the Species Richness of Grasslands
Natural Environment Research Council · The Open University · +1 more institution
Abstract
A transect of 68 acid grasslands across Great Britain, covering the lower range of ambient annual nitrogen deposition in the industrialized world (5 to 35 kg Nha-1 year-1), indicates that long-term, chronic nitrogen deposition has significantly reduced plant species richness. Species richness declines as a linear function of the rate of inorganic nitrogen deposition, with a reduction of one species per 4-m2 quadrat for every 2.5 kg Nha-1 year-1 of chronic nitrogen deposition. Species adapted to infertile conditions are systematically reduced at high nitrogen deposition. At the mean chronic nitrogen deposition rate of central Europe (17 kg Nha-1 year-1), there is a 23% species reduction compared with grasslands…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 40.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
4- CSCarly StevensCorresponding
Natural Environment Research Council, The Open University, Villanova University
- NBNancy B. Dise
Natural Environment Research Council, The Open University, Villanova University
- JOJ. O. Mountford
Natural Environment Research Council, The Open University, Villanova University
- DGDavid Gowing
Natural Environment Research Council, The Open University, Villanova University
Topics & keywords
- Species richness
- Deposition (geology)
- Nitrogen
- Transect
- Quadrat
- Environmental science
- Ecosystem
- Ecology
- Life in Land