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Detection of temporal trends in atmospheric deposition of inorganic nitrogen and sulphate to forests in Europe

Authors :
Arne Verstraeten
Walter Seidling
Antti-Jussi Lindroos
Carmen Iacoban
Philip O'Dea
Elena Vanguelova
Morten Ingerslev
Vladislav Apuhtin
Manuel Nicolas
Peter Waldner
Uwe Fischer
Mathieu Jonard
Lars Vesterdal
Karin Hansen
Gunilla Pihl Karlsson
Aldo Marchetto
Daniel Žlindra
Ferdinand Kristoefel
Nicholas Clarke
Ülle Napa
Zora Lachmanová
Albert Bleeker
Michela Rogora
Henning Meesenburg
Anna Kowalska
Sue Benham
Juan Molina
Richard Fischer
Martin Lorenz
James Johnson
Claus Schimming
Maria Schmitt
Volker Mues
Anne Thimonier
Andis Lazdins
Oliver Granke
UCL - SST/ELI/ELIE - Environmental Sciences
Source :
Atmospheric Environment, Vol. 95, p. 363-374 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2014.

Abstract

Atmospheric deposition to forests has been monitored within the International Cooperative Programme on Assessment and Monitoring of Air Pollution Effects on Forests (ICP Forests) with sampling and analyses of bulk precipitation and throughfall at several hundred forested plots for more than 15 years. The current deposition of inorganic nitrogen (nitrate and ammonium) and sulphate is highest in central Europe as well as in some southern regions. We compared linear regression and Mann-Kendall trend analysis techniques often used to detect temporal trends in atmospheric deposition. The choice of method influenced the number of significant trends. Detection of trends was more powerful using monthly data compared to annual data. The slope of a trend needed to exceed a certain minimum in order to be detected despite the short-term variability of deposition. This variability could to a large extent be explained by meteorological processes, and the minimum slope of detectable trends was thus similar across sites and many ions. The overall decreasing trends for inorganic nitrogen and sulphate in the decade to 2010 were about 2% and 6%, respectively. Time series of about 10 and 6 years were required to detect significant trends in inorganic nitrogen and sulphate on a single plot. The strongest decreasing trends were observed in western central Europe in regions with relatively high deposition fluxes, whereas stable or slightly increasing deposition during the last 5 years was found east of the Alpine region as well as in northern Europe. Past reductions in anthropogenic emissions of both acidifying and eutrophying compounds can be confirmed due to the availability of long-term data series but further reductions are required to reduce deposition to European forests to levels below which significant harmful effects do not occur according to present knowledge. © 2014 The Authors.

Details

ISSN :
13522310
Volume :
95
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmospheric Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2fe5da1f718d3c4348be8ec38687eacd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2014.06.054