A coherent signature of anthropogenic nitrogen deposition to remote watersheds of the Northern Hemisphere

Holtgrieve, GW; Schindler, DE; Hobbs, WO; Leavitt, PR; Ward, EJ; Bunting, L; Chen, G; Finney, BP; Gregory-Eaves, I; Holmgren, S; Lisac, MJ; Lisi, PJ; Nydick, K; Rogers, LA; Saros, JE; Selbie, DT; Shapley, MD; Walsh, PB; Wolfe, AP

HERO ID

2036702

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2011

Language

English

PMID

22174250

HERO ID 2036702
In Press No
Year 2011
Title A coherent signature of anthropogenic nitrogen deposition to remote watersheds of the Northern Hemisphere
Authors Holtgrieve, GW; Schindler, DE; Hobbs, WO; Leavitt, PR; Ward, EJ; Bunting, L; Chen, G; Finney, BP; Gregory-Eaves, I; Holmgren, S; Lisac, MJ; Lisi, PJ; Nydick, K; Rogers, LA; Saros, JE; Selbie, DT; Shapley, MD; Walsh, PB; Wolfe, AP
Journal Science
Volume 334
Issue 6062
Page Numbers 1545-1548
Abstract Humans have more than doubled the amount of reactive nitrogen (Nr) added to the biosphere, yet most of what is known about its accumulation and ecological effects is derived from studies of heavily populated regions. Nitrogen (N) stable isotope ratios (15N:14N) in dated sediments from 25 remote Northern Hemisphere lakes show a coherent signal of an isotopically distinct source of N to ecosystems beginning in 1895 ± 10 years (±1 standard deviation). Initial shifts in N isotope composition recorded in lake sediments coincide with anthropogenic CO2 emissions but accelerate with widespread industrial Nr production during the past half century. Although current atmospheric Nr deposition rates in remote regions are relatively low, anthropogenic N has probably influenced watershed N budgets across the Northern Hemisphere for over a century.
Doi 10.1126/science.1212267
Pmid 22174250
Wosid WOS:000298091400050
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English