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Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records

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Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records. / Stevens, Carly; Smart, S.M.; Henrys, P. et al.
In: Ecological Indicators, Vol. 20, 2012, p. 196-203.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Stevens, C, Smart, SM, Henrys, P, Maskell, LC, Crowe, A, Simkin, J, Preston, CD, Cheffings, C, Whitfield, C, Rowe, E, Gowing, DJG & Emmett, BA 2012, 'Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records', Ecological Indicators, vol. 20, pp. 196-203. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.02.027

APA

Stevens, C., Smart, S. M., Henrys, P., Maskell, L. C., Crowe, A., Simkin, J., Preston, C. D., Cheffings, C., Whitfield, C., Rowe, E., Gowing, D. J. G., & Emmett, B. A. (2012). Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records. Ecological Indicators, 20, 196-203. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.02.027

Vancouver

Stevens C, Smart SM, Henrys P, Maskell LC, Crowe A, Simkin J et al. Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records. Ecological Indicators. 2012;20:196-203. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.02.027

Author

Stevens, Carly ; Smart, S.M. ; Henrys, P. et al. / Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records. In: Ecological Indicators. 2012 ; Vol. 20. pp. 196-203.

Bibtex

@article{8ed693f2f8aa4bdfa26909b3f0b6cf29,
title = "Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records",
abstract = "Large areas of Great Britain currently receive nitrogen (N) deposition at rates which exceed the thresholds above which there is risk of damage to sensitive components of the ecosystem (critical loads for nutrient nitrogen and critical levels for ammonia), and are predicted to continue to do so. Excess N can damage semi-natural ecosystems. Lichens are potentially sensitive to air quality because they directly utilise nutrients deposited from the atmosphere thus may be good indicators of air quality. We used data from the British Lichen Society (BLS) database, which records the presence of all lichen taxa growing in Britain at 10 km resolution. The probability of presence of a taxa at a given level of N deposition was analysed together with driver data for climate, change in sulphur deposition, land-use and N deposition using generalised additive models (GAMs). Many taxa showed negative responses to N deposition with reductions in the probability of presence as N deposition increased. In all of the habitats, there were a mix of terricolous taxa which showed negative or no significant relationship with N deposition. Most of the taxa with negative relationships with N deposition started to decline in prevalence at the lowest levels of deposition found in this study. Levels of deposition over which a negative response apparently occurs are lower than those at which critical loads have been set for some habitats. These findings suggest that some terricolouslichen taxa are sensitive to atmospheric N deposition and even low levels of nitrogen deposition could be damaging terricolouslichen communities making then potentially good indicators of N deposition.",
author = "Carly Stevens and S.M. Smart and P. Henrys and L.C. Maskell and A. Crowe and J. Simkin and C.D. Preston and C. Cheffings and C. Whitfield and E. Rowe and D.J.G. Gowing and B.A. Emmett",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.02.027",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "196--203",
journal = "Ecological Indicators",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Terricolous lichens as indicators of nitrogen deposition: Evidence from national records

AU - Stevens, Carly

AU - Smart, S.M.

AU - Henrys, P.

AU - Maskell, L.C.

AU - Crowe, A.

AU - Simkin, J.

AU - Preston, C.D.

AU - Cheffings, C.

AU - Whitfield, C.

AU - Rowe, E.

AU - Gowing, D.J.G.

AU - Emmett, B.A.

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Large areas of Great Britain currently receive nitrogen (N) deposition at rates which exceed the thresholds above which there is risk of damage to sensitive components of the ecosystem (critical loads for nutrient nitrogen and critical levels for ammonia), and are predicted to continue to do so. Excess N can damage semi-natural ecosystems. Lichens are potentially sensitive to air quality because they directly utilise nutrients deposited from the atmosphere thus may be good indicators of air quality. We used data from the British Lichen Society (BLS) database, which records the presence of all lichen taxa growing in Britain at 10 km resolution. The probability of presence of a taxa at a given level of N deposition was analysed together with driver data for climate, change in sulphur deposition, land-use and N deposition using generalised additive models (GAMs). Many taxa showed negative responses to N deposition with reductions in the probability of presence as N deposition increased. In all of the habitats, there were a mix of terricolous taxa which showed negative or no significant relationship with N deposition. Most of the taxa with negative relationships with N deposition started to decline in prevalence at the lowest levels of deposition found in this study. Levels of deposition over which a negative response apparently occurs are lower than those at which critical loads have been set for some habitats. These findings suggest that some terricolouslichen taxa are sensitive to atmospheric N deposition and even low levels of nitrogen deposition could be damaging terricolouslichen communities making then potentially good indicators of N deposition.

AB - Large areas of Great Britain currently receive nitrogen (N) deposition at rates which exceed the thresholds above which there is risk of damage to sensitive components of the ecosystem (critical loads for nutrient nitrogen and critical levels for ammonia), and are predicted to continue to do so. Excess N can damage semi-natural ecosystems. Lichens are potentially sensitive to air quality because they directly utilise nutrients deposited from the atmosphere thus may be good indicators of air quality. We used data from the British Lichen Society (BLS) database, which records the presence of all lichen taxa growing in Britain at 10 km resolution. The probability of presence of a taxa at a given level of N deposition was analysed together with driver data for climate, change in sulphur deposition, land-use and N deposition using generalised additive models (GAMs). Many taxa showed negative responses to N deposition with reductions in the probability of presence as N deposition increased. In all of the habitats, there were a mix of terricolous taxa which showed negative or no significant relationship with N deposition. Most of the taxa with negative relationships with N deposition started to decline in prevalence at the lowest levels of deposition found in this study. Levels of deposition over which a negative response apparently occurs are lower than those at which critical loads have been set for some habitats. These findings suggest that some terricolouslichen taxa are sensitive to atmospheric N deposition and even low levels of nitrogen deposition could be damaging terricolouslichen communities making then potentially good indicators of N deposition.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.02.027

DO - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.02.027

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

SP - 196

EP - 203

JO - Ecological Indicators

JF - Ecological Indicators

ER -