The results of this pilot-study proved the feasibility of the method, however, should be corroborated by further investigations based on a sample set that allows for generalization of the findings and might even include other moss species. A comparison of technical measurements with the biomonitoring method could lead to a more general acceptance of the results.
To evaluate a new N-monitoring program in the framework of the UN-ECE ICP-Vegetation program using mosses as bioindicators, 490 moss samples were collected at 220 sites in Austria and analyzed for total N (N content) and delta(15)N signatures. Within-site variability of N content and delta(15)N signatures was tested for the first time on a large scale and was extremely low compared to between-site variability. N content in moss tissue ranged between 0.76% and 1.99% and delta(15)N signatures between -10.04 and -2.45. Altitude was significantly correlated with N content (P=0.021) and delta(15)N signatures (P<0.001). When comparing moss data to deposition data from 35 measurement sites, significant correlations between N content and N deposition (P=0.014) were found. Increasing delta(15)N signatures provided evidence for a change in N source and its respective isotopic composition with altitude, e.g., due to long-distance transport of reactive N or as a result of changes in the wetdry deposition ratio. Our study underlines that N deposition can generally be estimated by N content in mosses on a large scale, but that this approach has certain limitations, especially in areas with large differences in altitude and precipitation.
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