The Ecosystems Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, 7 MBL Street, Woods Hole, MA, 02543, USA.
Ambio. 2021 Apr;50(4):759-763. doi: 10.1007/s13280-020-01429-2. Epub 2021 Feb 3.
Disruption of the global nitrogen cycle by humans results primarily from activities associated with food and energy production. Since the middle of the twentieth century, human activities have more than doubled inputs of nitrogen to the Earth's ecosystems. This new nitrogen is in chemically and biologically active forms (reactive N) and moves through the environment causing an array of health and environmental problems. Research published in Ambio for the past three decades has been documenting this major global-scale problem and has catalyzed the formation of a science-led initiative, the International Nitrogen Initiative (INI), which has informed policies to manage the global nitrogen cycle. Currently, gaps and opportunities in nitrogen pollution policies still exist and require new interdisciplinary science to help to place the nitrogen management challenge in the context of the other environmental grand challenges of our time including climate change and biodiversity loss because their solutions will be interconnected.
人类活动对全球氮循环的破坏主要源自与食物和能源生产相关的活动。自 20 世纪中叶以来,人类活动向地球生态系统输入的氮增加了一倍多。这些新的氮以化学和生物活性形式(活性氮)存在,并在环境中移动,导致一系列健康和环境问题。过去 30 年来,《AMBIO》上发表的研究报告记录了这一重大的全球性问题,并促成了一个以科学为导向的倡议——国际氮倡议(INI)的形成,该倡议为管理全球氮循环提供了政策建议。目前,在氮污染政策方面仍存在差距和机遇,需要新的跨学科科学来帮助将氮管理挑战置于我们这个时代其他环境重大挑战(包括气候变化和生物多样性丧失)的背景下,因为这些问题的解决方案是相互关联的。