Cover image for Nitrogen cycling in the Americas : natural and anthropogenic influences and controls
Title:
Nitrogen cycling in the Americas : natural and anthropogenic influences and controls
Publication Information:
Dordrecht : Springer, 2006.
ISBN:
9781402055171
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Electronic Access:
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Summary

Summary

The rate of creation of reactive nitrogen (NR) on the earth has dramatically increased in the last half century mainly due to the production of N-fertilizer through the Haber-Bosch process, fossil fuel combustion, and the cultivation of plants that fix N from the atmosphere. The anthropogenic production of NR has been especially high in developed countries of the temperate zone, such as the USA and Canada, where severe eutrophication of estuaries and coastal zones, acidification of lakes and streams, loss of biodiversity, and reduced forest productivity have become common environmental problems associated with increasing nitrogen loads to ecosystems.

However, important drivers responsible for the increase of the production of NR in the temperate zone are increasingly influencing the nitrogen cycle in rapidly developing regions of the world, such as the Tropics and Sub-Tropics, including most of the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean. Advances in our understanding of the nitrogen cycle and the impact of anthropogenic activities on regional to global scales depend on the expansion of scientific studies to these fast-developing regions.

This book presents a series of studies from across the Americas whose aim is to highlight key natural processes that control nitrogen cycling as well as discuss the main anthropogenic influences on the nitrogen cycle in both the tropical and temperate regions of the Americas.


Table of Contents

Luiz A. Martinelli and Robert W. HowarthLuiz A. Martinelli and Robert W. Howarth and Elvira Cuevas and Solange Filoso and Amy T. Austin and Loreta Donoso and Vera Huszar and Dennis Keeney and Luciene L. Lara and Carlos Llerena and George McIssac and Ernesto Medina and Jorge Ortiz-Zayas and Donald Scavia and David W. Schindler and Doris Soto and Alan TownsendDavid W. Schindler and Peter J. Dillon and Hans SchreierAmy T. Austin and Gervasio Pineiro and Marina Gonzalez-PoloSolange Filoso and Luiz Antonio Martinelli and Robert W. Howarth and Elizabeth W. Boyer and Frank DentenerJulio A. BaisreJorge R. Ortiz-Zayas and Elvira Cuevas and Olga L. Mayol-Bracero and Loreto Donoso and Ivonne Trebs and Debora Figueroa-Nieves and William H. McDowellMercy J. Borbor-Cordova and Elizabeth W. Boyer and William H. McDowell and Charles A. HallR.W. Howarth and D.P. Swaney and E.W. Boyer and R. Marino and N. Jaworski and C. GoodaleDonald Scavia and Suzanne B. BrickerM.M.C. Bustamante and E. Medina and G.P. Asner and G.B. Nardoto and D.C. Garcia-MontielVera L.M. Huszar and Nina F. Caraco and Fabio Roland and Jonathan Cole
Prefacep. 1-2
Sources of reactive nitrogen affecting ecosystems in Latin America and the Caribbean: current trends and future perspectivesp. 3
A review of anthropogenic sources of nitrogen and their effects on Canadian aquatic ecosystemsp. 25
More is less: agricultural impacts on the N cycle in Argentinap. 45
Human activities changing the nitrogen cycle in Brazilp. 61
Assessment of nitrogen flows into the Cuban landscapep. 91
Urban influences on the nitrogen cycle in Puerto Ricop. 109
Nitrogen and phosphorus budgets for a tropical watershed impacted by agricultural land use: Guayas, Ecuadorp. 135
The influence of climate on average nitrogen export from large watersheds in the Northeastern United Statesp. 163
Coastal eutrophication assessment in the United Statesp. 187
Nitrogen cycling in tropical and temperate savannasp. 209
Nutrient-chlorophyll relationships in tropical-subtropical lakes: do temperate models fit?p. 239