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Mapping spatial and temporal trends of atmospheric deposition of nitrogen at the landscape level in Germany 2005, 2015 and 2020 and their comparison with emission data

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Stefan Nickel, Winfried Schröder, Annekatrin Dreyer, Barbara Völksen, Barbara Völksen

Summary

Researchers used moss biomonitoring across Germany as part of the European Moss Survey to map atmospheric nitrogen deposition in 2005, 2015, and 2020, finding an overall 8% increase between 2015 and 2020 that did not match emission inventory trends, highlighting a gap between reported emissions and actual deposition.

Mosses are particularly suitable for recording the accumulation of atmospheric substance inputs in large areas at relatively many locations. In Europe, this has been done every five years since 1990 as part of the European Moss Survey. In this framework, mosses were collected at up to 7312 sites in up to 34 countries and chemically analyzed for metals (since 1990), nitrogen (since 2005), persistent organic pollutants (since 2010) and microplastic (since 2015). The present investigation aimed at determining the nitrogen accumulated in three-year-old shoots from mosses collected in Germany in 2020 by quality-controlled sampling and chemical analysis according to the European Moss Survey Protocol (ICP Vegetation 2020). The spatial structure of the measurement values was analyzed by means of Variogram Analysis, and the respective function was used for Kriging-Interpolation. In addition to mapping the nitrogen values according to the international classification, maps based on 10 percentile classes were calculated. Maps for the Moss Survey 2020 data were compared with respective maps produced from the 2005 and 2015 Moss Survey data. Trends in Germany-wide nitrogen medians over the past three campaigns (2005, 2015 and 2020) show that nitrogen medians decreased by -2 % between 2005 and 2015 and increased by +8 % between 2015 and 2020. These differences are not significant and do not match the emission trends. Therefore, emission register data needs to be controlled by monitoring nitrogen deposition with technical and biological samplers and deposition modelling.

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