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Modelling study of soil C, N and pH response to air pollution and climate change using European LTER site observations

TitoloModelling study of soil C, N and pH response to air pollution and climate change using European LTER site observations
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2018
AutoriHolmberg, M., Aherne J., Austnes K., Beloica J., De Marco Alessandra, Dirnböck T., Fornasier M.F., Goergen K., Futter M., Lindroos A.-J., Krám P., Neirynck J., Nieminen T.M., Pecka T., Posch M., Pröll G., Rowe E.C., Scheuschner T., Schlutow A., Valinia S., and Forsius M.
RivistaScience of the Total Environment
Volume640-641
Paginazione387-399
ISSN00489697
Parole chiaveAir pollution, Climate change, Climate models, Climate warming, Deposition, Dynamic models, Ecosystems, environmental change, forestry, Integrated monitoring, Long-term ecological research, Organic carbon, Pollution control, Positive ions, Soil base saturation, soil chemistry, Soil mechanics, Soil moisture, Soil organic carbon and nitrogen, Trans-boundary air pollutions
Abstract

Current climate warming is expected to continue in coming decades, whereas high N deposition may stabilize, in contrast to the clear decrease in S deposition. These pressures have distinctive regional patterns and their resulting impact on soil conditions is modified by local site characteristics. We have applied the VSD+ soil dynamic model to study impacts of deposition and climate change on soil properties, using MetHyd and GrowUp as pre-processors to provide input to VSD+. The single-layer soil model VSD+ accounts for processes of organic C and N turnover, as well as charge and mass balances of elements, cation exchange and base cation weathering. We calibrated VSD+ at 26 ecosystem study sites throughout Europe using observed conditions, and simulated key soil properties: soil solution pH (pH), soil base saturation (BS) and soil organic carbon and nitrogen ratio (C:N) under projected deposition of N and S, and climate warming until 2100. The sites are forested, located in the Mediterranean, forested alpine, Atlantic, continental and boreal regions. They represent the long-term ecological research (LTER) Europe network, including sites of the ICP Forests and ICP Integrated Monitoring (IM) programmes under the UNECE Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (LRTAP), providing high quality long-term data on ecosystem response. Simulated future soil conditions improved under projected decrease in deposition and current climate conditions: higher pH, BS and C:N at 21, 16 and 12 of the sites, respectively. When climate change was included in the scenario analysis, the variability of the results increased. Climate warming resulted in higher simulated pH in most cases, and higher BS and C:N in roughly half of the cases. Especially the increase in C:N was more marked with climate warming. The study illustrates the value of LTER sites for applying models to predict soil responses to multiple environmental changes. © 2017 Elsevier B.V.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85048505168&doi=10.1016%2fj.scitotenv.2018.05.299&partnerID=40&md5=fb7319b0795929671f04d1ecaea45240
DOI10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.05.299
Citation KeyHolmberg2018387