Publications

Lukasova, V; Bicarova, S; Buchholcerova, A; Adamcikova, K (2022). Low sensitivity of Pinus mugo to surface ozone pollution in the subalpine zone of continental Europe. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY, 66(11), 2311-2324.

Abstract
High altitudes have been exposed to enhanced levels of surface ozone (O-3) concentrations over recent decades compared to the pre-industrial era. The responses of vegetation to this toxic pollutant are species-specific and depend on the climate conditions. In this paper, we explored the reaction of Pinus mugo (P. mugo) to O-3-induced stress in the continental climate of an ozone-rich mountain area in the High Tatra Mountains (Western Carpathians). The effects of O-3 doses modelled by a deposition model, O-3 concentrations and other factors on P. mugo were identified from (a) satellite-based data via NDVI (normalised differenced vegetation index) over 2000-2020 and (b) visible injury on needle samples gathered from P. mugo individuals at ground-truth sites in 2019 and 2020. Analysing the NDVI trend, we observed non-significant changes (p > 0.05) in the greenness of P. mugo despite growing in an environment with the average seasonal O-3 concentration around 51.6 ppbv, the maximum hourly concentrations more than 90 ppbv and increasing trend of O-3 doses by 0.1 mmol m(-2) PLA (plant leaf area) year(-1). The visible O-3 injury of samples collected at study sites was low (mean injury observed on 1-10% of needles' surface), and the symptoms of injury caused by other biotic and abiotic factors prevailed over those caused by O-3. In addition, the correlation analyses between NDVI and the climatic factors indicated a significant (p < 0.05) and positive relationship with photosynthetic active radiation (R = 0.45) in July, and with stomatal conductance (R = 0.52) and temperature factor (R = 0.43) in August. Therefore, we concluded that the positive effect of climate conditions, which support the growth processes of P. mugo, may suppress the negative effect of the mean O-3 doses of 17.8 mmol m(-2) PLA accumulated over the growing season.

DOI:
10.1007/s00484-022-02359-2

ISSN:
1432-1254