Impact of Nitrogen Deposition on the Species Richness of Grasslands

Carly Stevens(Natural Environment Research Council), Nancy B. Dise(Natural Environment Research Council), J. O. Mountford(Natural Environment Research Council), David Gowing(Natural Environment Research Council)
Science
March 19, 2004
Cited by 1,542

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 receiving the lowest levels of nitrogen deposition.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis