Tallying nitrogen's increasing impact.For most of agricultural history, nitrogen has been a precious commodity. Only specialized bacteria and lightning could convert atmospheric nitrogen into biologically usable forms. Today, however, fertilizers and fossil fuels have made nitrogen so freely available that it has become too much of a good thing. In a review of nitrogen's effects across the environmental spectrum, a team of ecologists headed by Peter M. Vitousek of Stanford University Stanford University, at Stanford, Calif.; coeducational; chartered 1885, opened 1891 as Leland Stanford Junior Univ. (still the legal name). The original campus was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. David Starr Jordan was its first president. has concluded in no uncertain terms that human activities have dramatically increased the flow of nitrogen into the biological world-doubling the natural rate at which it is made available on land-with "serious and long-term" consequences. "We are now the dominant force in the nitrogen cycle," says ecologist G. David Tilman G. David Tilman (formerly "Titman")[1]) born in 1949 in Aurora, Illinois, is a prominent American ecologist. Tilman is best known for his work on the role of resource competition in community structure and on the role of biodiversity in ecosystem functioning. of the University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher. http://umn.edu/. Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. in St. Paul, one of the report's eight authors. "Humans are controlling more nitrogen than all natural processes." The Ecological Society of America The Ecological Society of America (ESA) is a professional society for ecologists located in the United States. It has about 9,000 members. The society was formed at a meeting at Columbus Ohio, on December 28,1915, with the aims to: Although none of the data or processes summarized in the report is new, a synthesis was needed, says John M. Blair. "When people think of global change, they usually think of climate change and increasing carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure. ," says Blair, a soil ecologist at Kansas State University Kansas State University, main campus at Manhattan; coeducational; land-grant and state supported; chartered and opened 1863. There is an additional campus at Salina. Among the university's research facilities are the J. R. in Manhattan. But the growth and reach of human population has a global impact in other ways. "The nitrogen cycle is a terrific example of that." The ecologists trace most of the new nitrogen in the system to three human activities. The use of commercial fertilizer is the biggest source, and it is increasing sharply, especially in developing countries. Of all the manufactured fertilizer used through 1990, half was applied to crops in the 1980s. Increased global cultivation of legumes Legumes A family of plants that bear edible seeds in pods, including beans and peas. Mentioned in: Cholesterol, High legumes (l and other crops that harbor nitrogen-fixing bacteria also adds to the influx. The burning of fossil fuels provides the third major source of newly available nitrogen compounds. These activities funnel about 140 million metric tons of nitrogen into the environment each year, the ecologists estimate-an amount roughly equivalent to 10 million semi trucks of dry nitrogen fertilizer, says Tilman. The clearing of wildlands liberates perhaps another 70 million metric tons of nitrogen that had been stored in biomass. The nitrogen glut is evident throughout the biogeochemical cycle, according to the report. Nitrous oxide nitrous oxide or nitrogen (I) oxide, chemical compound, N2O, a colorless gas with a sweetish taste and odor. Its density is 1.977 grams per liter at STP. It is soluble in water, alcohol, ether, and other solvents. , a potent greenhouse gas (SN: 9/18/93, p. 180), is accumulating in the atmosphere and can eat away at the stratospheric strat·o·spher·ic adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of the stratosphere. 2. Extremely or unreasonably high: "money borrowed at today's stratospheric rates of interest" ozone layer. Other nitrogen compounds contribute to smog and acid deposition. They alter the pH and nutrient balance of soils and waters, triggering a cascade of effects (SN: 2/11/95, p. 90; 7/22/89, p. 56). Researchers now think that the excess nitrogen is diminishing biological diversity in some areas. European heathlands, long adapted to nitrogen-poor conditions, are giving way to Eurasian grasses under the fertilizing effects of nitrogen. Such changes in species composition (SN: 12/7/96, p. 356) may be the newest and most surprising of nitrogen's consequences, says Vitousek. The trends are likely to continue, in step with the growing, urbanizing world population, the ecologists say. They see a need for more efficient fertilizer use and greater control of nitrogen emissions. |
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