205 research outputs found
Effects of air pollution on natural vegetation and crops
The present report is being submitted for the consideration of the Working Group on Effects in accordance with the request of the Executive Body for the Convention on Longrange Transboundary Air Pollution in the 2012–2013 workplan for the implementation of the Convention (ECE/EB.AIR/109/Add.2, items 3.1 (c) and 3.5).
The report of the International Cooperative Programme on Effects of Air Pollution on Natural Vegetation and Crops presents the results of ozone impacts on ecosystem
services and biodiversity, and the results of the pilot study on mosses as biomonitors of persistent organic pollutants as part of the European moss survey conducted in 2010/11. In addition, the results of the workplan items common to all programmes are presented
Twenty eight years of ICP Vegetation: an overview of its activities
Here we look back at the activities and achievements in the 28 years of the International Cooperative Programme on the Effects of Air Pollution on Natural Vegetation and Crops (ICP Vegetation). The ICP Vegetation is a subsidiary body of the Working Group on Effects of the UNECE Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (LTRAP), established in 1979. An important role of the ICP Vegetation is to provide evidence for air pollution impacts on vegetation in support of policy development and review of the LRTAP Convention and its Protocols. The activities and participation in the ICP Vegetation have grown over the years. The main activities include:
• Collate evidence of ozone impacts on vegetation, assess spatial patterns and temporal trends across Europe;
• Develop dose-response relationships, establish critical levels for vegetation and provide European risk maps of ozone impacts;
• Reviewing the literature on ozone impacts on vegetation and produce thematic scientific reports and policy-relevant brochures;
• Determine spatial patterns and temporal trends of heavy metals, nitrogen and persistent organic pollutants concentrations in mosses as a biomonitoring tool of atmospheric deposition of these compounds
Application of novel image base estimation of invisible leaf injuries in relation to morphological and photosynthetic changes of Phaseolus vulgaris L. exposed to tropospheric ozone
This study aimed to evaluate the degree of Phaseolus vulgaris L. (bean) leaf tissue injury caused by
tropospheric ozone. To validate O3 symptoms at the microscopic level, Evans blue staining together with
an image processing method for the removal of distortions and calculation of dead leaf areas was applied.
Net photosynthetic rate (PN), stomatal conductance (gs) and intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) were
determined to evaluate leaf physiological responses to ozone. It was found that both resistant and
sensitive varieties of bean were damaged by ozone; however, the size of necrotic and partially destroyed
leaf area in the sensitive genotype (S156) was bigger (1.18%, 2.18%) than in the resistant genotype (R123),
i.e. 0.02% and 0.50%. Values of net photosynthetic rates were lower in the sensitive genotype in ambient
air conditions, than in the resistant genotype in ambient air conditions. We further found that there was
a correlation between physiological and anatomical injuries; net photosynthetic rate (PN) was negatively
correlated with percentage of necrotic area of both genotypes, while stomatal conductance (gs), intercellular
CO2 concentration (Ci) were positively correlated with percentage of necrotic tissue of both genotypes. Moreover, visible injures in both genotypes were positively correlated with percentage of anatomical injures. In conclusion, the presented combinations of morphological, anatomical and physiological markers allowed differential diagnosis of ozone injury
Biomonitoring of Atmospheric Pollution with Heavy Metals in the Copper Mine Vicinity Located near Radovis, Republic of Macedonia
This investigation was undertaken to determine the atmospheric pollution with heavy metals due to copper mining Bucim near Radovis, the Republic of Macedonia. Moss samples (Hyloconium splendens and Pleurozium schrebery) were used for biomonitoring the possible atmospheric pollution with heavy metals in mine vicinity. Sixteen elements (Al, As, Ba, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, K,
Mn, Na, Ni, Pb, Sr, and Zn) were analysed by application of flame and electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry (FAAS and ETAAS) and atomic emission spectrometry with inductively coupled plasma (ICP-AES). The obtained values were statistically processed using nonparametric and parametric analysis. The median value for copper obtained from moss samples (10 mg/kg) was much lower compared with the same values for the whole territory of the Republic of Macedonia (22 mg/kg). The range of values (2.1–198 mg/kg) shows much higher content of this element in the samples taken from the study area compared to the appropriate values for the whole territory of Macedonia. The association of elements As, Cd, Cu, Fe, Pb, and Zn was singled out by factor analysis as a characteristic anthropogenic group of elements. Maps of area deposition were made for this group of elements, wherefrom correlation of these anthropogenic born elements was confirmed
Ozone affects plant, insect, and soil microbial communities. A threat to terrestrial ecosystems and biodiversity
Elevated tropospheric ozone concentrations induce adverse effects in plants. We reviewed how ozone affects (i) the composition and diversity of plant communities by affecting key physiological traits; (ii) foliar chemistry and the emission of volatiles, thereby affecting plant-plant competition, plant-insect interactions, and the composition of insect communities; and (iii) plant-soil-microbe interactions and the composition of soil communities by disrupting plant litterfall and altering root exudation, soil enzymatic activities, decomposition, and nutrient cycling. The community composition of soil microbes is consequently changed, and alpha diversity is often reduced. The effects depend on the environment and vary across space and time. We suggest that Atlantic islands in the Northern Hemisphere, the Mediterranean Basin, equatorial Africa, Ethiopia, the Indian coastline, the Himalayan region, southern Asia, and Japan have high endemic richness at high ozone risk by 2100
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