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Ecological effects of nitrogen deposition in the western United States

January 1, 2003

In the western United States vast acreages of land are exposed to low levels of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition, with interspersed hotspots of elevated N deposition downwind of large, expanding metropolitan centers or large agricultural operations. Biological response studies in western North America demonstrate that some aquatic and terrestrial plant and microbial communities are significantly altered by N deposition. Greater plant productivity is counterbalanced by biotic community changes and deleterious effects on sensitive organisms (lichens and phytoplankton) that respond to low inputs of N (3 to 8 kilograms N per hectare per year). Streamwater nitrate concentrations are elevated in high-elevation catchments in Colorado and are unusually high in southern California and in some chaparral catchments in the southwestern Sierra Nevada. Chronic N deposition in the West is implicated in increased fire frequency in some areas and habitat alteration for threatened species. Between hotspots, N deposition is too low to cause noticeable effects or has not been studied.

Publication Year 2003
Title Ecological effects of nitrogen deposition in the western United States
DOI 10.1641/0006-3568(2003)053[0404:EEONDI]2.0.CO;2
Authors M.E. Fenn, Jill Baron, E.B. Allen, H.M. Rueth, K. R. Nydick, L. Geiser, W.D. Bowman, J.O. Sickman, T. Meixner, D.W. Johnson, P. Neitlich
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title BioScience
Index ID 1015031
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Fort Collins Science Center