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Factors influencing nitrogen retention in forest soils.
1991
Duckworth C.M.S. | Cresser M.S.
Changes in pigment concentration and composition in Norway spruce induced by long-term exposure to low levels of ozone.
1995
Mikkelsen T.N. | Dodell B. | Lutz C.
Effects of ammonia on periphytic communities.
1990
Niederlehner B.R. | Cairns J. Jr.
Critical loads for nitrogen deposition on forest ecosystems.
1989
Schulze E.D. | Vries W. de | Hauhs M. | Rosen K. | Rasmussen L. | Tamm C.O. | Nilsson J.
Blood mercury concentrations in four sympatric gull species from South Western France: Insights from stable isotopes and biologging
2022
Jouanneau, William | Sebastiano, Manrico | Rozen-Rechels, David | Harris, Stephanie M. | Blévin, Pierre | Angelier, Frédéric | Brischoux, François | Gernigon, Julien | Lemesle, Jean-Christophe | Robin, Frédéric | Cherel, Yves | Bustamante, Paco | Chastel, Olivier
Mercury (Hg) is a toxic trace element widely distributed in the environment, which particularly accumulates in top predators, including seabirds. Among seabirds, large gulls (Larus sp) are generalist feeders, foraging in both terrestrial and marine habitats, making them relevant bioindicators of local coastal Hg contamination. In the present study, we reported blood Hg concentrations in adults and chicks of four different gull species breeding on the French Atlantic coast: the European herring gull (Larus argentatus), the Lesser black-backed gull (L. fuscus), the Great black-backed gull (L. marinus) and the Yellow-legged gull (L. michahellis). We also investigated the potential role of foraging ecology in shaping Hg contamination across species, using the unique combination of three dietary tracers (carbon, nitrogen and sulfur stable isotopes) and biologging (GPS tracking). A high concentration of Hg was associated with high trophic position and a marine diet in gulls, which was corroborated by birds’ space use strategy during foraging trips. Adults of all four species reached Hg concentrations above reported toxicity thresholds. Specifically, adults of Great black-backed gulls had a high trophic marine specialized diet and significantly higher Hg concentrations than the three other species. Blood Hg was 4–7 times higher in adults than in chicks, although chicks of all species received mainly marine and high trophic position prey, which is expected to be the cause of blood Hg concentrations of toxic concern. By using both stable isotopes and GPS tracking, the present study provides compelling insights on the main feeding habits driving Hg contamination in a seabird assemblage feeding in complex coastal environments.
Show more [+] Less [-]Combined biochar and double inhibitor application offsets NH3 and N2O emissions and mitigates N leaching in paddy fields
2022
He, Tiehu | Yuan, Junji | Xiang, Jian | Lin, Yongxin | Luo, J. (Jiafa) | Lindsey, S. B. (Stuart B.) | Liao, Xia | Liu, Deyan | Ding, Weixin
The effects of combined biochar and double inhibitor application on gaseous nitrogen (N; nitrous oxide [N₂O] and ammonia [NH₃]) emissions and N leaching in paddy soils remain unclear. We investigated the effects of biochar application at different rates and double inhibitor application (hydroquinone [HQ] and dicyandiamide [DCD]) on NH₃ and N₂O emissions, N leaching, as well as rice yield in a paddy field, with eight treatments, including conventional urea N application at 280 kg N ha⁻¹ (CN); reduced N application at 240 kg N ha⁻¹ (RN); RN + 7.5 t ha⁻¹ biochar (RNB1); RN + 15 t ha⁻¹ biochar (RNB2); RN + HQ + DCD (RNI); RNB1 + HQ + DCD (RNIB1); RNB2 + HQ + DCD (RNIB2); and a control without N fertilizer. When compared with N leaching under RN, biochar application reduced total N leaching by 26.9–34.8% but stimulated NH₃ emissions by 13.2–27.1%, mainly because of enhanced floodwater and soil NH₄⁺-N concentrations and pH, and increased N₂O emission by 7.7–21.2%, potentially due to increased soil NO₃⁻-N concentrations. Urease and nitrification inhibitor addition decreased NH₃ and N₂O emissions, and total N leaching by 20.1%, 21.5%, and 22.1%, respectively. Compared with RN, combined biochar (7.5 t ha⁻¹) and double inhibitor application decreased NH₃ and N₂O emissions, with reductions of 24.3% and 14.6%, respectively, and reduced total N leaching by up to 45.4%. Biochar application alone or combined with double inhibitors enhanced N use efficiency from 26.2% (RN) to 44.7% (RNIB2). Conversely, double inhibitor application alone or combined with biochar enhanced rice yield and reduced yield-scaled N₂O emissions. Our results suggest that double inhibitor application alone or combined with 7.5 t ha⁻¹ biochar is an effective practice to mitigate NH₃ and N₂O emission and N leaching in paddy fields.
Show more [+] Less [-]Nano agrochemical zinc oxide influences microbial activity, carbon, and nitrogen cycling of applied manures in the soil-plant system
2022
Shah, Ghulam Mustafa | Ali, Hifsa | Ahmad, Iftikhar | Kāmrān, Muḥammad | Hammad, Mohkum | Shah, Ghulam Abbas | Bakhat, Hafiz Faiq | Waqar, Atika | Guo, Jianbin | Dong, Renjie | Rashid, Muhammad Imtiaz
The widespread use of nano-enabled agrochemicals in agriculture for remediating soil and improving nutrient use efficiency of organic and chemical fertilizers is increasing continuously with limited understanding on their potential risks. Recent studies suggested that nanoparticles (NPs) are harmful to soil organisms and their stimulated nutrient cycling in agriculture. However, their toxic effects under natural input farming systems are just at its infancy. Here, we aimed to examine the harmful effects of nano-agrochemical zinc oxide (ZnONPs) to poultry (PM) and farmyard manure (FYM) C and N cycling in soil-plant systems. These manures enhanced microbial counts, CO₂ emission, N mineralization, spinach yield and N recovery than control (unfertilized). Soil applied ZnONPs increased labile Zn in microbial biomass, conferring its consumption and thereby reduced the colony-forming bacterial and fungal units. Such effects resulted in decreasing CO₂ emitted from PM and FYM by 39 and 43%, respectively. Further, mineralization of organic N was reduced from FYM by 32%, and PM by 26%. This process has considerably decreased the soil mineral N content from both manure types and thereby spinach yield and plant N recoveries. In the ZnONPs amended soil, only about 23% of the applied total N from FYM and 31% from PM was ended up in plants, whereas the respective fractions in the absence of ZnONPs were 33 and 53%. Hence, toxicity of ZnONPs should be taken into account when recommending its use in agriculture for enhancing nutrient utilization efficiency of fertilizers or soil remediation purposes.
Show more [+] Less [-]Growth and photosynthetic responses to ozone of Siebold's beech seedlings grown under elevated CO2 and soil nitrogen supply
2022
Watanabe, Makoto | Li, Jing | Matsumoto, Misako | Aoki, Takuro | Ariura, Ryo | Fuse, Tsuyoshi | Zhang, Yazhuo | Kinose, Yoshiyuki | Yamaguchi, Masahiro | Izuta, Takeshi
Ozone (O₃) is a phytotoxic air pollutant, the adverse effects of which on growth and photosynthesis are modified by other environmental factors. In this study, we examined the combined effects of O₃, elevated CO₂, and soil nitrogen supply on Siebold's beech seedlings. Seedlings were grown under combinations of two levels of O₃ (low and two times ambient O₃ concentration), two levels of CO₂ (ambient and 700 ppm), and three levels of soil nitrogen supply (0, 50, and 100 kg N ha⁻¹ year⁻¹) during two growing seasons (2019 and 2020), with leaf photosynthetic traits being determined during the second season. We found that elevated CO₂ ameliorated O₃-induced reductions in photosynthetic activity, whereas the negative effects of O₃ on photosynthetic traits were enhanced by soil nitrogen supply. We observed three-factor interactions in photosynthetic traits, with the ameliorative effects of elevated CO₂ on O₃-induced reductions in the maximum rate of carboxylation being more pronounced under high than under low soil nitrogen conditions in July. In contrast, elevated CO₂-induced amelioration of the effects of O₃ on stomatal function-related traits was more pronounced under low soil nitrogen conditions. Although we observed several two- or three-factor interactions of gas and soil treatments with respect to leaf photosynthetic traits, the shoot to root dry mass (S/R) ratio was the only parameter for which a significant interaction was detected among seedling growth parameters. O₃ caused a significant increase in S/R under ambient CO₂ conditions, whereas no similar effects were observed under elevated CO₂ conditions. Collectively, our findings reveal the complex interactive effects of elevated CO₂ and soil nitrogen supply on the detrimental effects of O₃ on leaf photosynthetic traits, and highlight the importance of taking into consideration differences between the responses of CO₂ uptake and growth to these three environmental factors.
Show more [+] Less [-]Anthropogenic air pollutants reduce insect-mediated pollination services
2022
Ryalls, James M.W. | Langford, Ben | Mullinger, Neil J. | Bromfield, Lisa M. | Nemitz, Eiko | Pfrang, Christian | Girling, Robbie D.
Common air pollutants, such as nitrogen oxides (NOₓ), emitted in diesel exhaust, and ozone (O₃), have been implicated in the decline of pollinating insects. Reductionist laboratory assays, focused upon interactions between a narrow range of flowering plant and pollinator species, in combination with atmospheric chemistry models, indicate that such pollutants can chemically alter floral odors, disrupting the cues that foraging insects use to find and pollinate flowers. However, odor environments in nature are highly complex and pollination services are commonly provided by suites of insect species, each exhibiting different sensitivities to different floral odors. Therefore, the potential impacts of pollution-induced foraging disruption on both insect ecology, and the pollination services that insects provide, are currently unknown. We conducted in-situ field studies to investigate whether such pollutants could reduce pollinator foraging and as a result the pollination ecosystem service that those insects provide. Using free-air fumigation, we show that elevating diesel exhaust and O₃, individually and in combination, to levels lower than is considered safe under current air quality standards, significantly reduced counts of locally-occurring wild and managed insect pollinators by 62–70% and their flower visits by 83–90%. These reductions were driven by changes in specific pollinator groups, including bees, flies, moths and butterflies, and coincided with significant reductions (14–31%) in three different metrics of pollination and yield of a self-fertile test plant. Quantifying such effects provides new insights into the impacts of human-induced air pollution on the natural ecosystem services upon which we depend.
Show more [+] Less [-]Simultaneous removal of COD and NH4+-N from domestic sewage by a single-stage up-flow anaerobic biological filter based on Feammox
2022
Ma, Ding | Wang, Jin | Li, Hao | Che, Jian | Yue, Zhengbo
In recent years, Feammox has made it possible to remove NH₄⁺-N under anaerobic conditions; however, its application in practical wastewater treatment processes has not been extensively reported. In this study, an up-flow anaerobic biological filter based on limonite (Lim-UAF) was developed to facilitate long-term and stable treatment of domestic sewage. Lim-UAF achieved the highest removal efficiency of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and NH₄⁺-N at a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 24 h (Stage II). Specifically, the COD and NH₄⁺-N content decreased from 240.8 and 30.0 mg/L to about 7.5 and 0.35 mg/L, respectively. To analyze the potential nitrogen removal mechanism, the Lim-UAF was divided into three layers according to the height of the reactor. The results showed that COD and NH₄⁺-N removal had remarkable characteristics in Lim-UAF. More than 55.0% of influent COD was removed in the lower layer (0–30 cm) of Lim-UAF, while 60.2% of NH₄⁺-N was removed in the middle layer (30–60 cm). Microbial community analysis showed that the community structure in the middle and upper layers (60–90 cm) was relatively similar, but quite different from that of the lower layer. Heterotrophic bacteria were dominant in the lower layer, whereas iron-reducing and iron-oxidizing bacteria were enriched in the upper and middle layers. The formation of secondary minerals (siderite and Fe(OH)₃) indicated that the Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox cycle occurred in Lim-UAF, which was triggered by the Feammox and NDFO processes. In summary, limonite was used to develop a single-stage wastewater treatment process for simultaneously removing organic matter and NH₄⁺-N, which has excellent application prospects in domestic sewage treatment.
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