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Nitrogen deposition causes eutrophication in bryophyte communities in central and northern European forests

James Weldon, Julian Merder, Marco Ferretti, Ulf Grandin

2022Annals of Forest Science12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Key message Our results indicate that nitrogen deposition is likely to adversely affect forest bryophyte communities, having negative impacts in terms of increased dominance of nitrophilic species at the expense of N-sensitive species and a decrease in evenness. Context Elevated atmospheric deposition of nitrogen (N) has long been recognised as a threat to biodiversity and, despite declines in European emission levels, will remain a threat in the future. Aims It has proven difficult to show clear large-scale impacts of N deposition on vascular forest understorey species, and few studies have looked at impacts on forest bryophytes. Here, we assess the impact of nitrogen deposition on forest bryophyte communities. Methods We used data from 187 plots included in European monitoring schemes to analyse the relationship between levels of throughfall nitrogen deposition and bryophyte taxonomic and functional diversity and community nitrogen preference. Results We found that nitrogen deposition is significantly associated with increased bryophyte community nitrogen preference and decreases in species evenness. Conclusion Our results indicate that nitrogen deposition is likely to adversely affect forest bryophyte communities, having negative impacts in terms of increased dominance of nitrophilic species at the expense of N-sensitive species and a decrease in species evenness.

Topics & Concepts

BryophyteSpecies evennessEcologyDominance (genetics)BiodiversityEnvironmental scienceEutrophicationSpecies richnessBiologyNutrientGeneBiochemistryBryophyte Studies and RecordsPeatlands and Wetlands EcologyLichen and fungal ecology
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