2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2006.01145.x
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The Park Grass Experiment 1856–2006: its contribution to ecology

Abstract: Summary 1The Park Grass Experiment, begun in 1856, is the oldest ecological experiment in existence. Its value to science has changed and grown since it was founded to answer agricultural questions. In recent times the experiment has shown inter alia how: plant species richness, biomass and pH are related; community composition responds to climatic perturbation and nutrient additions; soil is acidified and corrected by liming. It also provided one of the first demonstrations of the evolution of adaptation at a… Show more

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Cited by 356 publications
(314 citation statements)
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“…By increasing the amount of N available to plants, nitrogen deposition can contribute to carbon uptake in N-limited (e.g., temperate) ecosystems (Melillo et al 1995;Schimel 1995;Trumbore 2000) but can also lead to changes in plant species, microbial community composition, and soil pH (Boggs 2005;Silvertown 2006). Changes in vegetation allocation strategy, litter quality, and soil microbes can lead to large C losses belowground that more than offset C gains associated with increased aboveground productivity (Mack et al 2004).…”
Section: Productivity and Soil Carbon Storagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…By increasing the amount of N available to plants, nitrogen deposition can contribute to carbon uptake in N-limited (e.g., temperate) ecosystems (Melillo et al 1995;Schimel 1995;Trumbore 2000) but can also lead to changes in plant species, microbial community composition, and soil pH (Boggs 2005;Silvertown 2006). Changes in vegetation allocation strategy, litter quality, and soil microbes can lead to large C losses belowground that more than offset C gains associated with increased aboveground productivity (Mack et al 2004).…”
Section: Productivity and Soil Carbon Storagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…One reason for this is that long-term investigations of ecological assemblages, particularly with the goal of monitoring background turnover, are not especially attractive to funding agencies, and do not fit neatly into grant cycles, or even the career span of a single researcher. There are notable exceptions of course, including the Park Grass Experiment (Silvertown et al 2006), and the Continuous Plankton Recorder (Richardson et al 2006), and an upsurge in new longterm monitoring projects such as the Long Term Ecological Network (www.lternet.edu) and the National Ecological Observatory Network (www.neoninc.org). Researchers often use spatial patterns as a surrogate for temporal ones-but these are not necessarily equivalent.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…von Marilaun 1896; p. 74). For more than 150 years, the Rothamsted Park Grasslands experiment has applied different fertiliser treatments to experimental plots; nitrate is applied as a sodium salt (Silvertown et al 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%