Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Virginia Tech, Cheatham Hall, Blacksburg, VA, United States of America.
United States Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 18;13(10):e0205296. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205296. eCollection 2018.
Atmospheric deposition of nitrogen (N) influences forest demographics and carbon (C) uptake through multiple mechanisms that vary among tree species. Prior studies have estimated the effects of atmospheric N deposition on temperate forests by leveraging forest inventory measurements across regional gradients in deposition. However, in the United States (U.S.), these previous studies were limited in the number of species and the spatial scale of analysis, and did not include sulfur (S) deposition as a potential covariate. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of how tree growth and survival for 71 species vary with N and S deposition across the conterminous U.S. Our analysis of 1,423,455 trees from forest plots inventoried between 2000 and 2016 reveals that the growth and/or survival of the vast majority of species in the analysis (n = 66, or 93%) were significantly affected by atmospheric deposition. Species co-occurred across the conterminous U.S. that had decreasing and increasing relationships between growth (or survival) and N deposition, with just over half of species responding negatively in either growth or survival to increased N deposition somewhere in their range (42 out of 71). Averaged across species and conterminous U.S., however, we found that an increase in deposition above current rates of N deposition would coincide with a small net increase in tree growth (1.7% per Δ kg N ha-1 yr-1), and a small net decrease in tree survival (-0.22% per Δ kg N ha-1 yr-1), with substantial regional and among-species variation. Adding S as a predictor improved the overall model performance for 70% of the species in the analysis. Our findings have potential to help inform ecosystem management and air pollution policy across the conterminous U.S., and suggest that N and S deposition have likely altered forest demographics in the U.S.
大气氮(N)沉降通过多种机制影响森林的种群动态和碳(C)吸收,这些机制在树种间存在差异。先前的研究通过利用区域氮沉降梯度上的森林清查测量值来估计大气氮沉降对温带森林的影响。然而,在美国,这些先前的研究在物种数量和分析的空间尺度上都受到限制,并且没有将硫(S)沉降作为潜在的协变量。在这里,我们全面分析了 71 个树种的生长和存活如何随大气 N 和 S 沉降在整个美国大陆范围内发生变化。我们对 2000 年至 2016 年间清查的森林样地中 1423455 棵树的分析表明,分析中绝大多数物种(n = 66,或 93%)的生长和/或存活受到大气沉降的显著影响。在整个美国大陆范围内共存的物种,其生长(或存活)与 N 沉降之间存在下降和上升关系,超过一半的物种在其分布范围内的某个地方对增加的 N 沉降表现出负响应(66 个物种中的 42 个)。然而,在物种和整个美国大陆范围内平均来看,我们发现,与目前氮沉降速率相比,沉积量的增加将与树木生长的净少量增加(每增加 Δ kg N ha-1 yr-1 增加 1.7%)和树木存活的净少量减少(每增加 Δ kg N ha-1 yr-1 减少 0.22%)相对应,这存在着大量的区域和物种间差异。将 S 添加为预测因子可以提高分析中 70%物种的整体模型性能。我们的研究结果有可能帮助指导整个美国大陆的生态系统管理和空气污染政策,并表明 N 和 S 沉降可能已经改变了美国的森林种群动态。