http://www.cnr.it/ontology/cnr/individuo/prodotto/ID66753
Air pollution impact on forests in a changing climate. In: Forests and Society Responding to Global Drivers of Change (Articolo in rivista)
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- Label
- Air pollution impact on forests in a changing climate. In: Forests and Society Responding to Global Drivers of Change (Articolo in rivista) (literal)
- Anno
- 2010-01-01T00:00:00+01:00 (literal)
- Alternative label
Lorenz M., Clarke N., Paoletti E., Bytnerowicz A., Grulke N., Lukina N., Sase H., Staelens J. (2010)
Air pollution impact on forests in a changing climate. In: Forests and Society Responding to Global Drivers of Change
(literal)
- Http://www.cnr.it/ontology/cnr/pubblicazioni.owl#autori
- Lorenz M., Clarke N., Paoletti E., Bytnerowicz A., Grulke N., Lukina N., Sase H., Staelens J. (literal)
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- Http://www.cnr.it/ontology/cnr/pubblicazioni.owl#numeroVolume
- Titolo
- Air pollution impact on forests in a changing climate. In: Forests and Society Responding to Global Drivers of Change (literal)
- Abstract
- Growing awareness of air pollution effects on forests has, from the early
1980s on, led to intensive forest damage research and monitoring. This has fostered
air pollution control, especially in Europe and North America, and to a smaller extent
also in other parts of the world. At several forest sites in these regions, there are first
indications of a recovery of forest soil and tree conditions that may be attributed to
improved air quality. This caused a decrease in the attention paid by politicians and
the public to air pollution effects on forests. But air pollution continues to affect the
structure and functioning of forest ecosystems not only in Europe and North America
but even more so in parts of Russia, Asia, Latin America, and Africa. At the political
level, however, attention to climate change is focussed on questions of CO2 emission
and carbon sequestration. But ecological interactions between air pollution including
CO2 and O3 concentrations, extreme temperatures, drought, insects, pathogens, and
fire, as well as the impact of ecosystem management practices, are still poorly understood.
Future research should focus on the interacting impacts on forest trees and
ecosystems. The integrative effects of air pollution and climatic change, in particular
elevated O3, altered nutrient, temperature, water availability, and elevated CO2, will
be key issues for impact research. An important improvement in our understanding
might be obtained by the combination of long-term multidisciplinary experiments with
ecosystem-level monitoring, and the integration of the results with ecosystem modelling
within a multiple-constraint framework. (literal)
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