An empirical inferential method of estimating nitrogen deposition to Mediterranean-type ecosystems: the San Bernardino Mountains case study

Environ Pollut. 2015 Aug:203:69-88. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2015.03.028. Epub 2015 Apr 8.

Abstract

The empirical inferential method (EIM) allows for spatially and temporally-dense estimates of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition to Mediterranean ecosystems. This method, set within a GIS platform, is based on ambient concentrations of NH3, NO, NO2 and HNO3; surface conductance of NH4(+) and NO3(-); stomatal conductance of NH3, NO, NO2 and HNO3; and satellite-derived LAI. Estimated deposition is based on data collected during 2002-2006 in the San Bernardino Mountains (SBM) of southern California. Approximately 2/3 of dry N deposition was to plant surfaces and 1/3 as stomatal uptake. Summer-season N deposition ranged from <3 kg ha(-1) in the eastern SBM to ∼ 60 kg ha(-1) in the western SBM near the Los Angeles Basin and compared well with the throughfall and big-leaf micrometeorological inferential methods. Extrapolating summertime N deposition estimates to annual values showed large areas of the SBM exceeding critical loads for nutrient N in chaparral and mixed conifer forests.

Keywords: Complex terrain; Critical loads; Forests; Inferential deposition model; Nitrogen deposition.

MeSH terms

  • California
  • Ecosystem
  • Nitrogen / analysis*
  • Plant Stomata / metabolism
  • Plants / metabolism
  • Seasons
  • Tracheophyta

Substances

  • Nitrogen