Matson Pamela, Lohse Kathleen A, Hall Sharon J
Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences, Institute of International Studies, Earth Systems Degree Program, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, 650 725-6812, USA.
Ambio. 2002 Mar;31(2):113-9. doi: 10.1579/0044-7447-31.2.113.
The sources and distribution of anthropogenic nitrogen (N), including N fertilization and N fixed during fossil-fuel combustion, are rapidly becoming globally distributed. Responses of terrestrial ecosystems to anthropogenic N inputs are likely to vary geographically. In the temperate zone, long-term N inputs can lead to increases in plant growth and also can result in over-enrichment with N, eventually leading to increased losses of N via solution leaching and trace-gas emissions, and in some cases, to changes in species composition and to ecosystem decline. However, not all ecosystems respond to N deposition similarly; their response depends on factors such as successional state, ecosystem type, N demand or retention capacity, land-use history, soils, topography, climate, and the rate, timing, and type of N deposition. We point to some of the conditions under which anthropogenic impacts can be significant, some of the factors that control variations in response, and some areas where uncertainty is large due to limited information.
人为氮(N)的来源和分布,包括氮肥施用以及化石燃料燃烧过程中固定的氮,正迅速在全球范围内扩散。陆地生态系统对人为氮输入的响应可能因地理位置而异。在温带地区,长期的氮输入可导致植物生长增加,但也可能导致氮的过度富集,最终导致通过溶液淋溶和微量气体排放造成的氮损失增加,在某些情况下,还会导致物种组成的变化和生态系统衰退。然而,并非所有生态系统对氮沉降的响应都相同;它们的响应取决于诸如演替状态、生态系统类型、氮需求或保留能力、土地利用历史、土壤、地形、气候以及氮沉降的速率、时间和类型等因素。我们指出了一些人为影响可能显著的条件、一些控制响应变化的因素,以及一些由于信息有限而不确定性较大的领域。