Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4402929 Procedia Environmental Sciences 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Given the fact of growing deposition of atmospheric nitrogen (N) in terrestrial biosphere, it is critical to get a better understanding of potential changes in terrestrial N cycle causing from the increasing deposited N. In this study, a global scale process-based Terrestrial Biogeochemical Nitrogen Cycle (TBNC) model originally developed by Lin et al., (2000) has been improved and applied to quantify the changes of terrestrial N cycle under the scenarios of N deposition at conditions in 1993 and 2050 (Galloway et al., 2004). Sensitivity analysis and empirical validation indicated the reliability of the model for addressing the complexity of current N cycle changes and its capacity for investigating long-term scenarios in the future. Under the growing rates of 34% and 77% as in NOy (all oxidized forms of N including N2O) and NHx (NH3 and NH4+), depositions, the model results show that ammonium and nitrate in surface soil are predicted to increase about 10% and 23%, while other N pools have no obvious change. Major N fluxes in soil, i.e. denitrification, ammonium volatilization, nitrate leaching, gaseous losses (mainly N2O and NO) and nitrification, are predicted to increase about 10-25%. The responses of major biome classes show that an increase rate of 10% as in ammonium accumulation is predicted to occur in temperate forests, while temperate shrublands and grasslands are the most important nitrate reservoir with an increase rate of 20% in response to future N depositions. Generally, TBNC model could help us to quantitatively understand and explain the causes and consequences of spatiotemporal changes of global N cycle, and thereby provide a means of estimating the potential responses of terrestrial ecosystems to alteration of the global N cycle, especially from human impacts.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Ecology