Affiner votre recherche
Résultats 1-10 de 66
Microplastics trapped in soil aggregates of different land-use types: A case study of Loess Plateau terraces, China Texte intégral
2022
Cheung, Joys H. Y. | Huiyan, | An, Shaoshan | Zhao, Junfeng | Xiao, Li | Li, Haohao | Huang, Qian
Land-use types may affect soil aggregates' stability and organic carbon (OC) distribution characteristics, but little is known about the effects on the distribution characteristics of microplastics (MPs) in the aggregates. Hence, the MPs abundance of soil aggregates and analyzed aggregates’ stability, composition, and OC content from two soil layers of four land-use types in Gansu Province were investigated in this study. The total MPs abundances in woodland, farmland (wheat, maize, and potato), orchard, and intercropping (potato + apple orchard) of top and deep soils were 1383.3 and 1477.9, 1324.6 and 931.1, 1757.1 and 1930.9, 2127.2 and 1998.0, 1335.9 and 886.7, and 1777.5 and 1683.3 items kg⁻¹, respectively. The largest MPs abundance was detected in the >5 mm fractions of topsoil in potato (3077.3 items kg⁻¹), followed by maize (3044.7 items kg⁻¹) and intercropping (2718.4 items kg⁻¹). In the topsoil, the total MPs abundance increased significantly with decreasing aggregate stability, and also was positively correlated with bulk density, microbial biomass, and total nitrogen contents of bulk soil. Summarizing, the abundance distribution of MPs correlates with the soil aggregate characteristics of the different land-use types.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Investigation of the spatially varying relationships of PM2.5 with meteorology, topography, and emissions over China in 2015 by using modified geographically weighted regression Texte intégral
2020
Yang, Qian | Yuan, Qiangqiang | Yue, Linwei | Li, Tongwen
PM₂.₅ pollution is caused by multiple factors and determining how these factors affect PM₂.₅ pollution is important for haze control. In this study, we modified the geographically weighted regression (GWR) model and investigated the relationships between PM₂.₅ and its influencing factors. Experiments covering 368 cities and 9 urban agglomerations were conducted in China in 2015 and more than 20 factors were considered. The modified GWR coefficients (MGCs) were calculated for six variables, including two emission factors (SO₂ and NO₂ concentrations), two meteorological factors (relative humidity and lifted index), and two topographical factors (woodland percentage and elevation). Then the spatial distribution of MGCs was analyzed at city, cluster, and region scales. Results showed that the relationships between PM₂.₅ and the different factors varied with location. SO₂ emission positively affected PM₂.₅, and the impact was the strongest in the Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei (BTH) region. The impact of NO₂ was generally smaller than that of SO₂ and could be important in coastal areas. The impact of meteorological factors on PM₂.₅ was complicated in terms of spatial variations, with relative humidity and lifted index exerting a strong positive impact on PM₂.₅ in Pearl River Delta and Central China, respectively. Woodland percentage mainly influenced PM₂.₅ in regions of or near deserts, and elevation was important in BTH and Sichuan. The findings of this study can improve our understanding of haze formation and provide useful information for policy-making.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Trends in surface water chemistry in afforested Welsh catchments recovering from acidification, 1991–2012 Texte intégral
2019
Broadmeadow, S.B. | Nisbet, T.R. | Forster, J.
A key criterion of the UK Government's policy on sustainable forest management is safeguarding the quality and quantity of water. Forests and forestry management practices can have profound effects on the freshwater environment. Poor forest planning or management can severely damage water resources at great cost to other water users; in contrast good management that restores and maintains the natural functions of woodland can benefit the whole aquatic ecosystem.Forests and forest management practices can affect surface water acidification. Monitoring of water chemistry in ten forest and two moorland acid-sensitive catchments in upland Wales commenced in 1991. The streams were selected to supplement the United Kingdom Upland Waters Monitoring Network (UWMN) with additional examples of afforested catchments. Analysis of 22 years of water chemistry data revealed trends indicative of recovery from acidification. Excess sulphate exhibited a significant coherent decline, accompanied by increases in pH and “charge-balance based” acid neutralising capacity (CB-ANC). Alkalinity and “alkalinity-based” acid neutralising capacity (AB-ANC) exhibited fewer trends, possibily due to the variable responses of the organic - carbonate species to increasing pH in these low alkalinity streams. Whilst total anthropogenic acidity declined, dissolved organic carbon and Nitrate-Nitrogen (NNO₃) concentrations have risen, and the contribution of NNO₃ to acidification has increased.Between-stream variability was analysed using Principal Component Analysis of the trend slopes. Hierarchical clustering of the changes in stream water chemistry indicated three distinct clusters with no absolute distinction between moorland and forest streams. Redundancy analysis was used to test for significant site-specific variables that explained differences in the trend slopes, with rainfall, crop age, base cation concentration and forest cover being significant explanatory variables.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Land-use type affects N2O production pathways in subtropical acidic soils Texte intégral
2018
Zhang, Yushu | Ding, Hong | Zheng, Xiangzhou | Ren, Xiangyun | Cardenas, L. (Laura) | Carswell, Alison | Misselbrook, T. (Tom)
The change in land-use from woodland to crop production leads to increased nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. An understanding of the main N2O sources in soils under a particular land can be a useful tool in developing mitigation strategies. To better understand the effect of land-use on N2O emissions, soils were collected from 5 different land-uses in southeast China: shrub land (SB), eucalyptus plantation (ET), sweet potato farmland (SP), citrus orchard (CO) and vegetable growing farmland (VE). A stable isotope experiment was conducted incubating soils from the different land use types at 60% water holding capacity (WHC), using 15NH4NO3 and NH415NO3 to determine the dominant N2O production pathway for the different land-uses. The average N2O emission rates for VE, CO and SP were 5.30, 4.23 and 3.36 μg N kg−1 dry soil d−1, greater than for SB and ET at 0.98 and 1.10 μg N kg−1 dry soil d−1, respectively. N2O production was dominated by heterotrophic nitrification for SB and ET, accounting for 51 and 50% of N2O emissions, respectively. However, heterotrophic nitrification was negligible (<8%) in SP, CO and VE, where autotrophic nitrification was a primary driver of N2O production, accounting for 44, 45 and 66% for SP, CO and VE, respectively. Denitrification was also an important pathway of N2O production across all land-uses, accounting for 35, 35, 49, 52 and 32% for SB, ET, SP, CO and VE respectively. Average N2O emission rates via autotrophic nitrification, denitrification and heterotrophic nitrification increased significantly with gross nitrification rates, NO3− contents and C:N ratios respectively, indicating that these were important factors in the N2O production pathways for these soils. These results contribute to our understanding and ability to predict N2O emissions from different land-uses in subtropical acidic soils and in developing potential mitigation strategies.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Vegetation community change in Atlantic oak woodlands along a nitrogen deposition gradient Texte intégral
2016
Wilkins, Kayla | Aherne, Julian
Atlantic old sessile oak woodlands are of high conservation importance in Europe, listed in the European Union (EU) Habitats Directive Annex I, and known for their rich bryophyte communities. Their conservation status ranges from unfavourable to bad across their known distribution, which is predominantly within the UK and Ireland, but also extends into Iberia and Brittany. The objectives of this study were to determine if nitrogen (N) deposition, a known driver of terrestrial biodiversity loss, was a significant predictor of community composition in old sessile oak woodlands (i.e., EU Habitats Directive Annex I class: 91A0), and to identify significant changes in individual plant species and community-level abundance (i.e., change points) along an N deposition gradient. Relevé data from 260 Irish oak woodland plots were evaluated using Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA) and Threshold Indicator Taxa ANalysis (TITAN). Nitrogen deposition accounted for 14% of the explainable variation in the dataset (inertia = 0.069, p < 0.005). A community scale change point of 13.2 kg N ha−1 yr−1 was indicated by TITAN, which falls within the current recommended critical load (CL) range for acidophilous Quercus-dominated (oak) woodlands (10–15 kg N ha−1 yr−1). The results suggest that the current CL is sufficient for maintaining a core group of indicator species in old sessile oak woodlands, but many nutrient sensitive species may disappear even at the CL range minimum.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Road salt is more toxic to wood frog embryos from polluted ponds Texte intégral
2022
Forgione, Mia E. | Brady, Steven P.
Organisms that rely on aquatic habitats in roaded landscapes face a growing array of consequences from pollution, especially due to freshwater salinization. Critically, these consequences can vary from population to population depending on exposure histories and evolutionary responses. Prior studies using transplant and common garden experiments have found that aquatic-stage wood frogs (Rana sylvatica) from roadside populations are less fit in the wild and more sensitive to road salt than their counterparts from woodland populations away from roads. While this pattern is consistent with local maladaptation, unresolved insights into the timing and duration of these effects leave open the possibility that negative outcomes are countered during development. Here, we asked whether the survival disadvantage of roadside wood frogs is stage-specific, and whether this disadvantage reverses before metamorphosis. We used a common garden road salt exposure experiment and a field-based reciprocal transplant experiment to examine differences in survival across life-history stage and with respect to population type. In each experimental context, roadside embryos showed a survival disadvantage relative to woodland embryos, and this disadvantage was not reversed prior to metamorphosis. We also found that salt exposure delayed metamorphosis more strongly for roadside than woodland populations. Together, these results suggest that local maladaptation in aquatic-stage wood frogs is driven by embryonic sensitivity to salt and that roadside populations are further compromised by delayed developmental rates. Future studies should consider which embryonic traits fail to adapt to salt toxicity, and how those traits might correlate with terrestrial trait variation.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Artificial light at night promotes bottom-up changes in a woodland food chain Texte intégral
2022
Lockett, Martin T. | Rasmussen, Rebecca | Arndt, Stefan K. | Hopkins, Gareth R. | Jones, Therésa M.
Artificial light at night (ALAN) is a recognised disruptor of biological function and ecological communities. Despite increasing research effort, we know little regarding the effect of ALAN on woody plants, including trees, or its indirect effects on their colonising invertebrates. These effects have the potential to disrupt woodland food webs by decreasing the productivity of invertebrates and their secretions, including honeydew and lerps, with cascading effects on other fauna. Here, we cultivated juvenile river red gums (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) for 40 weeks under experimentally manipulated light (ALAN) or naturally dark (control) conditions. To assess direct impacts on tree growth, we took multiple measures of growth at four time periods, and also measured physiological function, biomass and investment in semi-mature trees. To assess experimentally the direct and indirect (tree-mediated) impacts of ALAN on invertebrates, from 19 weeks onwards, we matched and mismatched trees with their original ALAN environments. We colonised trees with a common herbivore of E. camaldulensis, the red gum lerp psyllid (Glycaspis nr. brimblecombei) and then measured the effects of current and historic tree lighting treatment on the psyllid life cycle. Our data revealed direct effects of ALAN on tree morphology: E. camaldulensis trees exposed to ALAN shifted biomass allocation away from roots and into leaves and increased specific leaf area. However, while the intensity of ALAN was sufficient to promote photosynthesis (net carbon gain) at night, this did not translate into variation in tree water status or photosystem adaptation to dim night-time light for ALAN-exposed trees. We found some evidence that ALAN had broad-scale community effects—psyllid nymphs colonising ALAN trees produced more lerps—but we found no other direct or indirect impacts of ALAN on the psyllid life cycle. Our results suggest that trees exposed to ALAN may share morphological responses with trees under dim daylight conditions. Further, ALAN may have significant ‘bottom-up’ effects on Eucalyptus woodland food webs through both trees and herbivores, which may impact higher trophic levels including woodland birds, mammals and invertebrates.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Evidence for differential effects of reduced and oxidised nitrogen deposition on vegetation independent of nitrogen load Texte intégral
2016
van den Berg, Leon J.L. | Jones, Laurence | Sheppard, Lucy J. | Smart, S. M. (Simon M.) | Bobbink, Roland | Dise, Nancy B. | Ashmore, M. R. (Mike R.)
Nitrogen (N) deposition impacts natural and semi-natural ecosystems globally. The responses of vegetation to N deposition may, however, differ strongly between habitats and may be mediated by the form of N. Although much attention has been focused on the impact of total N deposition, the effects of reduced and oxidised N, independent of the total N deposition, have received less attention. In this paper, we present new analyses of national monitoring data in the UK to provide an extensive evaluation of whether there are differences in the effects of reduced and oxidised N deposition across eight habitat types (acid, calcareous and mesotrophic grasslands, upland and lowland heaths, bogs and mires, base-rich mires, woodlands). We analysed data from 6860 plots in the British Countryside Survey 2007 for effects of total N deposition and N form on species richness, Ellenberg N values and grass:forb ratio. Our results provide clear evidence that N deposition affects species richness in all habitats except base-rich mires, after factoring out correlated explanatory variables (climate and sulphur deposition). In addition, the form of N in deposition appears important for the biodiversity of grasslands and woodlands but not mires and heaths. Ellenberg N increased more in relation to NHx deposition than NOy deposition in all but one habitat type. Relationships between species richness and N form were habitat-specific: acid and mesotrophic grasslands appear more sensitive to NHx deposition while calcareous grasslands and woodlands appeared more responsive to NOy deposition. These relationships are likely driven by the preferences of the component plant species for oxidised or reduced forms of N, rather than by soil acidification.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Habitat type-based bioaccumulation and risk assessment of metal and As contamination in earthworms, beetles and woodlice Texte intégral
2009
Vermeulen, Frouke | Brink, Nico W. van den | D'Havé, Helga | Mubiana, Valentine K. | Blust, Ronny | Bervoets, Lieven | Coen, Wim De
The present study investigated the contribution of environmental factors to the accumulation of As, Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn in earthworms, beetles and woodlice, and framed within an exposure assessment of the European hedgehog. Soil and invertebrate samples were collected in three distinct habitat types. Results showed habitat-specific differences in soil and invertebrate metal concentrations and bioaccumulation factors when normalized to soil metal concentration. Further multiple regression analysis showed residual variability (habitat differences) in bioaccumulation that could not be fully explained by differences in soil metal contamination, pH or organic carbon (OC). Therefore, the study demonstrated that in bioaccumulation studies involving terrestrial invertebrates or in risk assessment of metals, it is not sufficient to differentiate habitat types on general soil characteristics such as pH and/or OC alone. Furthermore, simple generic soil risk assessments for Cd and Cu showed that risk characterization was more accurate when performed in a habitat-specific way. Our study provided essential insights into habitat-specific accumulation patterns with respect to factors influencing metal bioaccumulation, BAFs, and site-specific risk assessment.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Source-pathway-receptor investigation of the fate of trace elements derived from shotgun pellets discharged in terrestrial ecosystems managed for game shooting Texte intégral
2009
Sneddon, Jennifer | Clemente, Rafael | Riby, Philip | Lepp, N. W. (Nicholas W)
Spent shotgun pellets may contaminate terrestrial ecosystems. We examined the fate of elements originating from shotgun pellets in pasture and woodland ecosystems. Two source-receptor pathways: i) soil-soil pore water-plant and ii) whole earthworm/worm gut contents - washed and unwashed small mammal hair were investigated. Concentrations of Pb and associated contaminants were higher in soils from shot areas than controls. Arsenic and lead concentrations were positively correlated in soils, soil pore water and associated biota. Element concentrations in biota were below statutory levels in all locations. Bioavailability of lead to small mammals, based on concentrations in washed body hair was low. Lead movement from soil water to higher trophic levels was minor compared to lead adsorbed onto body surfaces. Lead was concentrated in earthworm gut and some plants. Results indicate that managed game shooting presents minimal risk in terms of element transfer to soils and their associated biota.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]