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1.
J Environ Manage ; 181: 681-686, 2016 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27566937

ABSTRACT

Environmental quality standards (EQS) specify the maximum permissible concentration or level of a specific environmental stressor. Here, a procedure is proposed to derive EQS that are specific to a representative species pool and conditional on confounding environmental factors. To illustrate the procedure, a dataset was used with plant species richness observations of grasslands and forests and accompanying soil nitrate-N and pH measurements collected from 981 sampling sites in the Netherlands. Species richness was related to soil nitrate-N and pH with quantile regression allowing for interaction effects. The resulting regression models were used to derive EQS for nitrate conditional on pH, quantified as the nitrate-N concentrations at a specific pH level corresponding with a species richness equal to 95% of the species pool, for both grasslands and forest communities. The EQS varied between 1.8 mg/kg nitrate-N at pH 9-65 mg/kg nitrate-N at pH 4. EQS for forests and grasslands were similar, but EQS based on Red List species richness were considerably lower (more stringent) than those based on overall species richness, particularly at high pH levels. The results indicate that both natural background pH conditions and Red List species are important factors to consider in the derivation of EQS for soil nitrate-N for terrestrial ecosystems.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring/standards , Nitrates/analysis , Plants , Soil/chemistry , Biodiversity , Ecosystem , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Forests , Grassland , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Netherlands , Regression Analysis
2.
Environ Pollut ; 200: 120-5, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25705854

ABSTRACT

Quantifying relationships between species richness and single environmental factors is challenging as species richness typically depends on multiple environmental factors. Recently, various methods have been proposed to tackle this challenge. Using a dataset comprising field observations of grassland vegetation and measured pH values, we compared three methods for deriving species richness response curves. One of the methods estimates species richness close to the maximum species richness observed at the sites, whereas the other two provide estimates of the potential species richness along the environmental gradient. Our response curves suggest that potential species richness of grasslands is slightly more sensitive to acidification than realized plant species richness. However, differences in corresponding environmental quality standards (EQS) for acidification were small compared to intrinsic spatial differences in natural soil pH, indicating that natural background values are more important to consider in the derivation of EQS for pH than methodological differences between the three approaches.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Plants/classification , Environment , Soil
3.
Glob Chang Biol ; 20(12): 3814-22, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24895112

ABSTRACT

Nutrient pollution presents a serious threat to biodiversity conservation. In terrestrial ecosystems, the deleterious effects of nitrogen pollution are increasingly understood and several mitigating environmental policies have been developed. Compared to nitrogen, the effects of increased phosphorus have received far less attention, although some studies have indicated that phosphorus pollution may be detrimental for biodiversity as well. On the basis of a dataset covering 501 grassland plots throughout Europe, we demonstrate that, independent of the level of atmospheric nitrogen deposition and soil acidity, plant species richness was consistently negatively related to soil phosphorus. We also identified thresholds in soil phosphorus above which biodiversity appears to remain at a constant low level. Our results indicate that nutrient management policies biased toward reducing nitrogen pollution will fail to preserve biodiversity. As soil phosphorus is known to be extremely persistent and we found no evidence for a critical threshold below which no environmental harm is expected, we suggest that agro-environmental schemes should include grasslands that are permanently free from phosphorus fertilization.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Conservation of Natural Resources/methods , Fertilizers/adverse effects , Grassland , Phosphorus/adverse effects , Soil Pollutants/adverse effects , Soil/chemistry , Europe , Fertilizers/analysis , Geography , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Models, Theoretical , Phosphorus/analysis , Soil Pollutants/analysis
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