Publications
NIBIOs employees contribute to several hundred scientific articles and research reports every year. You can browse or search in our collection which contains references and links to these publications as well as other research and dissemination activities. The collection is continously updated with new and historical material.
2006
Authors
T. Larssen E. Lydersen D. Tang Yi He Jixi Gao H. Liu Lei Duan H.M. Seip R.D. Vogt Jan Mulder M. Shao Yan-Hui Wang H. Shang X. Zhang Svein Solberg Wenche Aas Tonje Økland O. Eilertsen V. Angell Quanru Liu D. Zhao Renjun Xiang J. Xiao J. LuoAbstract
Acid rain emerged as an important environmental problem in China in the late 1970s. Many years of record economic growth have been accompanied by increased energy demand, greater coal combustion, and larger emissions of pollutants. As a result of significant emissions and subsequent deposition of sulfur, widespread acid rain is observed in southern and southwestern China. In fact, the deposition of sulfur is in some places higher than what was reported from the ?black triangle? in central Europe in the early 1980s. In addition, nitrogen is emitted from agriculture, power production, and a rapidly increasing number of cars. As a result, considerable deposition of pollutants occurs in forested areas previously thought to be pristine. Little is known about the effects of acid deposition on terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in China. In this article, we present the current situation and what to expect in the future, largely on the basis of results from a five-year Chinese?Norwegian cooperative project. In the years ahead, new environmental challenges must be expected if proper countermeasures are not put into place.
Authors
Petter NilsenAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Bal Ram Singh Zhihui Yang Sissel HansenAbstract
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Authors
Alhaji S. Jeng Roshan M. Bajracharya Bed M. Dahal Bishal K. Sitaula Subodh ShermaAbstract
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Authors
Erik Lysøe Sonja Klemsdal Rasmus J. N. Frandsen Thomas Johansen U. Thrane Henriette GieseAbstract
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Authors
Rein Drenkhan Märt HansoAbstract
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Abstract
Dissolved aluminium was fractionated in the field and the laboratory using a cation exchange method. Although absolute differences between results obtained from field and laboratory fractionations were generally small, relative differences, expressed as the ratio between labile aluminium determined after laboratory fractionation (Alll) and that obtained after field fractionation (Allf), could be large. The differences found were not statistically significant, although this may simply reflect the spread in the results. Alll/Allf had no apparent relationship with the temperature difference between the field and the lab. Although some significant correlations were found between Alll/Allf and H+, no significant correlations were found with the equivalent relative difference in {H+} between the lab and the field. Neither was any significant correlation found with dissolved organic carbon.