
Tissue N content of mosses, which has been shown to be an indicator of enhanced N, was studied at a range of locations dominated either by wet or dry deposited and oxidised and reduced forms of N. Tissue N responded differently to wet and dry deposited N. For a 1 kg ha(-1) y(-1) increase in N deposition, tissue N increased by 0.01% at wet deposition sites but by 0.03% at sites dominated by dry deposited NH3. Tissue N at wet deposition sites responded more to concentrations of NO3- and NH4+ in precipitation (r(2) 0.63) than to total N deposition (r(2) 0.27), concentration explaining 66% of the variation in tissue N, wet deposition 33%. The study clearly concludes that tissue N concentration in mosses provides a good indication of N deposition at sites where deposition is dominated by NH3, and is also valuable in identifying vegetation exposed to large concentrations of NH4+ or NO3-, in wet deposition dominated areas, such as hilltops and wind exposed woodland edges.
Air Movements, Concentration, concentration, Air Pollutants, Nitrogen, Agriculture, Acid Rain, Bryophyta, tissue N, deposition, nitrogen, United Kingdom, Trees, Tissue N, Geographic Information Systems, Animal Husbandry, Deposition, Environmental Monitoring
Air Movements, Concentration, concentration, Air Pollutants, Nitrogen, Agriculture, Acid Rain, Bryophyta, tissue N, deposition, nitrogen, United Kingdom, Trees, Tissue N, Geographic Information Systems, Animal Husbandry, Deposition, Environmental Monitoring
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