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Strategic roadmap to assess forest vulnerability under air pollution and climate change

TitoloStrategic roadmap to assess forest vulnerability under air pollution and climate change
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2022
AutoriDe Marco, Alessandra, Sicard P., Feng Z., Agathokleous E., Alonso R., Araminienė V., Augustatis A., Badea O., Beasley J.C., Branquinho C., Bruckman V.J., Collalti A., David-Schwartz R., Domingos M., Du E., H. Gomez Garcia, Hashimoto S., Hoshika Y., Jakovljević T., McNulty S., Oksanen E., Y. Khaniabadi Omidi, Prescher A.-K., Saitanis C.J., Sase H., Schmitz A., Voigt G., Watanabe M., Wood M.D., Kozlov M.V., and Paoletti E.
RivistaGlobal Change Biology
Volume28
Paginazione5062-5085
ISSN13541013
Parole chiaveadverse event, Air pollution, Climate change, ecosystem, forest, Forests, tree, Trees
Abstract

Although it is an integral part of global change, most of the research addressing the effects of climate change on forests have overlooked the role of environmental pollution. Similarly, most studies investigating the effects of air pollutants on forests have generally neglected the impacts of climate change. We review the current knowledge on combined air pollution and climate change effects on global forest ecosystems and identify several key research priorities as a roadmap for the future. Specifically, we recommend (1) the establishment of much denser array of monitoring sites, particularly in the South Hemisphere; (2) further integration of ground and satellite monitoring; (3) generation of flux-based standards and critical levels taking into account the sensitivity of dominant forest tree species; (4) long-term monitoring of N, S, P cycles and base cations deposition together at global scale; (5) intensification of experimental studies, addressing the combined effects of different abiotic factors on forests by assuring a better representation of taxonomic and functional diversity across the 73,000 tree species on Earth; (6) more experimental focus on phenomics and genomics; (7) improved knowledge on key processes regulating the dynamics of radionuclides in forest systems; and (8) development of models integrating air pollution and climate change data from long-term monitoring programs. © 2022 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Note

cited By 8

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85130251870&doi=10.1111%2fgcb.16278&partnerID=40&md5=5ec5186b7bd9b171d0e9d11d350b080a
DOI10.1111/gcb.16278
Citation KeyDeMarco20225062