Authors
Gareth K Phoenix, W Kevin Hicks, Steve Cinderby, Johan CI Kuylenstierna, William D Stock, Frank J Dentener, Ken E Giller, Amy T Austin, Rod DB Lefroy, Ben S Gimeno, Mike R Ashmore, Philip Ineson
Publication date
2006/3
Journal
Global change biology
Volume
12
Issue
3
Pages
470-476
Publisher
Blackwell Science Ltd
Description
Increased atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition is known to reduce plant diversity in natural and semi‐natural ecosystems, yet our understanding of these impacts comes almost entirely from studies in northern Europe and North America. Currently, we lack an understanding of the threat of N deposition to biodiversity at the global scale. In particular, rates of N deposition within the newly defined 34 world biodiversity hotspots, to which 50% of the world's floristic diversity is restricted, has not been quantified previously. Using output from global chemistry transport models, here we provide the first estimates of recent (mid‐1990s) and future (2050) rates and distributions of N deposition within biodiversity hotspots. Our analysis shows that the average deposition rate across these areas was 50% greater than the global terrestrial average in the mid‐1990s and could more than double by 2050, with 33 of 34 hotspots …
Total citations
20062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320243152920324448405750474335364135382414