PLANT ATMOSPHERE EXCHANGE OF AMMONIA

被引:165
作者
SUTTON, MA
SCHJORRING, JK
WYERS, GP
机构
[1] ROYAL VET & AGR UNIV, CTR ECOL & ENVIRON, DK-1871 FREDERIKSBERG, DENMARK
[2] NETHERLANDS ENERGY RES FDN, 1755 ZG PETTEN, NETHERLANDS
来源
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES | 1995年 / 351卷 / 1696期
关键词
D O I
10.1098/rsta.1995.0033
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The results of recent controlled environment and micrometeorological measurements of NH3 fluxes are presented to highlight the processes controlling NH3 plant-atmosphere exchange. The presence of NH4+ in leaf tissues results in the existence of an NH3 'compensation point' concentration for substomatal tissues (chi(s)), so that both emission and deposition are possible from stomata. In addition, NH3 may deposit efficiently on to leaf cuticles, short-circuiting any stomatal emission, so that a 'canopy compensation point' (chi(c)) may be defined that is smaller than chi(s). Ammonia is generally deposited to nitrogen limited ecosystems, indicating a small chi(s) and small leaf cuticle resistance (R(w)). In contrast, fluxes over croplands are typically bidirectional and may reflect a larger chi(s) as a consequence of greater N supply. The paper discusses the processes defining R(w) (humidity, acidic pollutants) and chi(s) (plant phenology, species, N nutrition) and proposes a new resistance approach, which integrates chi(s) and R(w) into one model. Estimating long term bidirectional NH3 fluxes is still uncertain, though it is now possible to apply a single model concept to a range of ecosystem types and satisfactorily infer NH3 fluxes over diurnal time scales.
引用
收藏
页码:261 / 276
页数:16
相关论文
共 48 条
[32]   FIELD INVESTIGATIONS OF AMMONIA EXCHANGE BETWEEN BARLEY PLANTS AND THE ATMOSPHERE .1. CONCENTRATION PROFILES AND FLUX DENSITIES OF AMMONIA [J].
SCHJOERRING, JK ;
KYLLINGSBAEK, A ;
MORTENSEN, JV ;
BYSKOVNIELSEN, S .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 1993, 16 (02) :161-167
[33]   FIELD INVESTIGATIONS OF AMMONIA EXCHANGE BETWEEN BARLEY PLANTS AND THE ATMOSPHERE .2. NITROGEN REALLOCATION, FREE AMMONIUM CONTENT AND ACTIVITIES OF AMMONIUM-ASSIMILATING ENZYMES IN DIFFERENT LEAVES [J].
SCHJOERRING, JK ;
KYLLINGSBAEK, A ;
MORTENSEN, JV ;
BYSKOVNIELSEN, S .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 1993, 16 (02) :169-178
[34]  
SCHJOERRING JK, 1991, TRACE GAS EMISSIONS, P267
[35]  
SCHJORRING JK, 1995, IN PRESS ATMOS ENV A, V29
[36]   DEPOSITION OF ATMOSPHERIC AMMONIA TO MOORLANDS [J].
SUTTON, MA ;
MONCRIEFF, JB ;
FOWLER, D .
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 1992, 75 (01) :15-24
[37]   DRY DEPOSITION OF REDUCED NITROGEN [J].
SUTTON, MA ;
ASMAN, WAH ;
SCHJORRING, JK .
TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 1994, 46 (04) :255-273
[38]   THE EXCHANGE OF AMMONIA BETWEEN THE ATMOSPHERE AND PLANT-COMMUNITIES [J].
SUTTON, MA ;
PITCAIRN, CER ;
FOWLER, D .
ADVANCES IN ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, VOL 24, 1993, 24 :301-393
[39]  
SUTTON MA, 1993, Q J ROY METEOR SOC, V119, P1047, DOI 10.1256/smsqj.51309
[40]   THE EXCHANGE OF ATMOSPHERIC AMMONIA WITH VEGETATED SURFACES .1. UNFERTILIZED VEGETATION [J].
SUTTON, MA ;
FOWLER, D ;
MONCRIEFF, JB .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1993, 119 (513) :1023-1045