Atmospheric nitrogen deposition is related to plant biodiversity loss at multiple spatial scales

Author:

van der Plas Fons1ORCID,Hautier Yann2,Ceulemans Tobias3,Alard Didier4,Bobbink Roland5,Diekmann Martin6,Dise Nancy B.7,Dorland Edu8,Dupré Cecilia6,Gowing David9,Stevens Carly10

Affiliation:

1. Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation Group Wageningen University Wageningen The Netherlands

2. Ecology and Biodiversity Group, Department of Biology Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

3. Department Biology UAntwerpen Antwerpen Belgium

4. Université de Bordeaux, INRAE, BIOGECO Pessac France

5. B‐WARE Research Centre Radboud University Nijmegen The Netherlands

6. Institute of Ecology, FB 2 University of Bremen Bremen Germany

7. UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Bush Estate Edinburgh UK

8. KWR Water Research Institute Nieuwegein Netherlands

9. School of Environment, Earth and Ecosystem Sciences Open University Milton Keynes UK

10. Lancaster Environment Centre Lancaster University Lancaster UK

Abstract

AbstractDue to various human activities, including intensive agriculture, traffic, and the burning of fossil fuels, in many parts of the world, current levels of reactive nitrogen emissions strongly exceed pre‐industrial levels. Previous studies have shown that the atmospheric deposition of these excess nitrogen compounds onto semi‐natural terrestrial environments has negative consequences for plant diversity. However, these previous studies mostly investigated biodiversity loss at local spatial scales, that is, at the scales of plots of typically a few square meters. Whether increased atmospheric nitrogen deposition also affects plant diversity at larger spatial scales remains unknown. Here, using grassland plant community data collected in 765 plots, across 153 different sites and 9 countries in northwestern Europe, we investigate whether relationships between atmospheric nitrogen deposition and plant biodiversity are scale‐dependent. We found that high levels of atmospheric nitrogen deposition were associated with low levels of plant species richness at the plot scale but also at the scale of sites and regions. The presence of 39% of plant species was negatively associated with increasing levels of nitrogen deposition at large (site) scales, while only 1.5% of the species became more common with increasing nitrogen deposition, indicating that large‐scale biodiversity changes were mostly driven by “loser” species, while “winner” species profiting from high N deposition were rare. Some of the “loser” species whose site presence was negatively associated with atmospheric nitrogen deposition are listed as “threatened” in at least some EU member states, suggesting that nitrogen deposition may be a key contributor to their threat status. Hence, reductions in reactive nitrogen emissions will likely benefit plant diversity not only at local but also at larger spatial scales.

Publisher

Wiley

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