Issues in Ecology, Issue 15: Excess Nitrogen in the U.S. Environment: Trends, Risks, and Solutions

It is not surprising that humans have profoundly altered the global nitrogen (N) cycle in an effort to feed 7 billion people, because nitrogen is an essential plant and animal nutrient. Food and energy production from agriculture, combined with industrial and energy sources, have more than doubled the amount of reactive nitrogen circulating annually on land. Humanity has disrupted the nitrogen cycle even more than the carbon (C) cycle. We present new research results showing widespread effects on ecosystems, biodiversity, human health, and climate, suggesting that in spite of decades of research quantifying the negative consequences of too much available nitrogen in the biosphere, solutions remain elusive. There have been important successes in reducing nitrogen emissions to the atmosphere and this has improved air quality. Effective solutions for reducing nitrogen losses from agriculture have also been identified, although political and economic impediments to their adoption remain.
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Is Part Of ESA's Issues in Ecology series.
Collection Link http://www.esa.org/ecoed/index.php?P=AdvancedSearch&Q=Y&F1=%22Issues+...
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Drought & Water-Ecosystem Services Collection Off
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Pedagogical Use Description This report can be used for general information, classroom reading and discussion, and as a springboard for more information research. The report illustrates applications of ecology as it relates to our society and environment.
Keywords nitrogen cycle, carbon cycle, agriculture, climate change
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Primary Author Affiliation Cornell University, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology;
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency;
Office of Air and Radiation, U.S.Environmental Protection Agency;
USDA-ARS, Southeast Watershed Research;
National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health;
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences;
Washington State University, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences;
Colorado State University, Department of Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences;
University of Virginia, Environmental Sciences Department;
The Woods Hole Research Center;
National Park Service Air Resources Division;
National Laboratory for Agriculture and the Environment, USDAARS;
International Plant Nutrition Institute;
Cornell University, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology;
U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Assessment Program;
INSTAAR, Dept of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology & Environmental Studies Program, University of Colorado, Boulder
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Rights Copyright 2012 by Eric A. Davidson, Mark B. David, James N. Galloway, Christine L. Goodale, Richard Haeuber, John A. Harrison, Robert W. Howarth, Dan B. Jaynes, R. Richard Lowrance, B. Thomas Nolan, Jennifer L. Peel, Robert W. Pinder, Ellen Porter, Clifford S. Snyder, Alan R. Townsend, and Mary H. Ward and the Ecological Society of America.
Resource Editor Unknown
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Date Of Record Submission 2012-01-27

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