Chemical footprints of anthropogenic nitrogen deposition on recent soil C : N ratios in Europe

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Abstract

Long-term human interactions with the natural landscape have produced a plethora of trends and patterns of environmental disturbances across time and space. Nitrogen deposition, closely tracking energy and land use, is known to be among the main drivers of pollution, affecting both freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems. We present a statistical approach for investigating the historical and geographical distribution of nitrogen deposition and the impacts of accumulation on recent soil carbon-to-nitrogen ratios in Europe. After the second Industrial Revolution, large swaths of land emerged characterized by different atmospheric deposition patterns caused by industrial activities or intensive agriculture. Nitrogen deposition affects soil C : N ratios in a still recognizable way despite the abatement of oxidized and reduced nitrogen emissions during the last 2 decades. Given a seemingly disparate land-use history, we focused on ~10 000 unmanaged ecosystems, providing statistical evidence for a rapid response of nature to the chronic nitrogen supply through atmospheric deposition.

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Mulder, C., Hettelingh, J. P., Montanarella, L., Pasimeni, M. R., Posch, M., Voigt, W., & Zurlini, G. (2015). Chemical footprints of anthropogenic nitrogen deposition on recent soil C : N ratios in Europe. Biogeosciences, 12(13), 4113–4119. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-4113-2015

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