Royal Society Open Science (Jan 2015)

Nitrogen deposition and multi-dimensional plant diversity at the landscape scale

  • Tobias Roth,
  • Lukas Kohli,
  • Beat Rihm,
  • Valentin Amrhein,
  • Beat Achermann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.150017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4

Abstract

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Estimating effects of nitrogen (N) deposition is essential for understanding human impacts on biodiversity. However, studies relating atmospheric N deposition to plant diversity are usually restricted to small plots of high conservation value. Here, we used data on 381 randomly selected 1 km2 plots covering most habitat types of Central Europe and an elevational range of 2900 m. We found that high atmospheric N deposition was associated with low values of six measures of plant diversity. The weakest negative relation to N deposition was found in the traditionally measured total species richness. The strongest relation to N deposition was in phylogenetic diversity, with an estimated loss of 19% due to atmospheric N deposition as compared with a homogeneously distributed historic N deposition without human influence, or of 11% as compared with a spatially varying N deposition for the year 1880, during industrialization in Europe. Because phylogenetic plant diversity is often related to ecosystem functioning, we suggest that atmospheric N deposition threatens functioning of ecosystems at the landscape scale.

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