Weathering rates in catchments calculated by different methods and their relationship to acidic inputs D. C. BainS. J. Langan OriginalPaper Pages: 1051 - 1056
Acidity of podzolic soils subjected to sulphur pollution near a Cu-Ni smelter at the Kola Peninsula Natalia LukinaVyacheslav Nikonov OriginalPaper Pages: 1057 - 1062
Effects of acid deposition on Dutch forest ecosystems W. de VriesE. E. J. M. LeetersC. M. A. Hendriks OriginalPaper Pages: 1063 - 1068
Rates and processes of mineral weathering in soils developed on greywackes and shales in the Southern Uplands of Scotland D. C. BainD. M. L. DuthieC. M. Thomson OriginalPaper Pages: 1069 - 1074
A preliminary review of weathering rates in relation to their method of calculation for acid sensitive soil parent materials S. J. LanganM. E. HodsonM. J. Wilson ReviewPaper Pages: 1075 - 1081
Interactions between anthropogenic sulphate and marine salts in the Bs horizons of acidic soils in Scotland H. AndersonS. PeacockR. C. Ferrier OriginalPaper Pages: 1083 - 1088
The seasonal variation in soil water acid neutralizing capacity in peaty podzols in Mid-Wales P. J. ChapmanB. ReynoldsH. S. Wheater OriginalPaper Pages: 1089 - 1094
Cations adsorbed to soil organic matter — A regulatory factor for the release of organic carbon and hydrogen ions from soils to waters U. SkyllbergT. Magnusson OriginalPaper Pages: 1095 - 1100
Modelling the response of terrestrial ecosystems to acidification and desiccation scenarios J. KrosG. J. ReindsM. Bollen OriginalPaper Pages: 1101 - 1106
Simulated effects of acid deposition on podzolic soils: Consequences of process and parameter aggregation A. Nissinen OriginalPaper Pages: 1107 - 1112
Apparent pH independence of charge in forest organic surface soil horizons Donald S. RossRichmond J. Bartlett OriginalPaper Pages: 1113 - 1118
The role of organic horizons and canopy to modify the chemistry of acidic deposition in some forest ecosystems H. ShibataF. SatohT. Sakuma OriginalPaper Pages: 1119 - 1124
Nutrient balance in Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forest 1. Design of experiments Gunnar AbrahamsenKarl Jan Erstad OriginalPaper Pages: 1125 - 1130
Effects of acidity of the water culture solution on uptake of nutrients by the root of Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) and Japanese cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa) Haruo Matsui OriginalPaper Pages: 1131 - 1136
Acidification and nutrient imbalance in forest soils subjected to nitrogen deposition M. I. MakarovV. V. Kiseleva OriginalPaper Pages: 1137 - 1142
Nutrient balance in Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forest. 5. Tree growth in a field plot experiment Petter NilsenGunnar Abrahamsen OriginalPaper Pages: 1143 - 1148
Nutrient balance in Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forest. 2. Effects of plant growth and N-deposition on soil solution and leachate chemistry in a lysimeter experiment G. SandvikT. A. SognG. Abrahamsen OriginalPaper Pages: 1149 - 1154
Nutrient balance in Scots pine (Plnus sylvestris L.) forest. 3. Fluxes of N2O from lysimeter as influenced by nitrogen input B. K. SitaulaL. R. BakkenG. Abrahamsen OriginalPaper Pages: 1155 - 1159
Nutrient balance in Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forest 4. Testing the nutrient cycling model (NuCM) T. A. SognG. A. SandvikG. Abrahamsen OriginalPaper Pages: 1161 - 1166
Leaching of nitrogen from small forest catchments having different deposition and different stores of nitrogen L. BringmarkH. Kvarnäs OriginalPaper Pages: 1167 - 1172
Effects of nitrogen load to the forest floor in sitka spruce stands (Picea sitchensis) as affected by difference in deposition and spruce aphid infestations L. B. PedersenJ. Bille-Hansen OriginalPaper Pages: 1173 - 1178
Nitrogen deposition and leaching in European forests — Preliminary results from a data compilation Gundersen P. OriginalPaper Pages: 1179 - 1184
Spatial heterogeneity of soil solution chemistry in a mature Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) stand B. ManderscheidE. Matzner OriginalPaper Pages: 1185 - 1190
Reaction of mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal Scots pine fine roots along a deposition gradient of air pollutants in eastern Germany B. MünzenbergerB. SchminckeR. F. Hüttl OriginalPaper Pages: 1191 - 1196
Soil solution chemistry and element budgets of three Scots pine ecosystems along a deposition gradient in north-eastern Germany W. SchaafM. WeisdorferR. F. Huettl OriginalPaper Pages: 1197 - 1202
Evidence for acidification of sensitive Scottish soils by atmospheric deposition Catherine WhiteAbdulkadir DawodMalcolm Cresser OriginalPaper Pages: 1203 - 1208
Effects of acid deposition on acidity and exchangeable cations in podzols of the Kola Peninsula G. KoptsikI. Mukhina OriginalPaper Pages: 1209 - 1214
Effect of acid deposition on forested catchment in the western Tokyo, Japan M. BabaM. OkazakiT. Hashitani OriginalPaper Pages: 1215 - 1220
International Co-operative Programme on Assessment and Monitoring of Air Pollution Effects on Forests-ICP Forests- M. Lorenz OriginalPaper Pages: 1221 - 1226
A hypothesis of plant susceptibility to atmospheric pollution based on intrinsic nitrogen metabolism: Why acidity really is the problem John PearsonAdrian Soares OriginalPaper Pages: 1227 - 1232
Sensitivity of plants to acidic soils exemplified by the forest grass Bromus benekenii Ursula Falkengren-GrerupJörg BrunetMaud E. Quist OriginalPaper Pages: 1233 - 1238
Sensitivity of forest-floor mosses in boreal forests to nitrogen and sulphur deposition R. Mäkipää OriginalPaper Pages: 1239 - 1244
Hygroscopic salts on the leaf surface as a possible cause of forest decline symptoms J. Burkhardt OriginalPaper Pages: 1245 - 1250
Response of a Norway spruce forest ecosystem to drought/rewetting experiments at Solling, Germany K. BlanckN. LamersdorfD. Murach OriginalPaper Pages: 1251 - 1256
A gas-exchange study of the differential response of Quercus species to long-term fumigations with a gradient of sulphur dioxide G. LorenziniA. PanicucciC. Nali OriginalPaper Pages: 1257 - 1262
Deposition gradients and foliar and soil leachate concentrations of air pollutants in Scots pine stands of S.-E. Finland and the Karelian Isthmus, N.-W. Russia I. LummeV. ArkhipovI. Kettunen OriginalPaper Pages: 1263 - 1268
Crown status of holm oak (Quercus ilex L.) trees as related to phenology and environmental stress F. BussottiM. FerrettiC. Tani OriginalPaper Pages: 1269 - 1274
Pinus radiata site quality study in the Basque Country (Spain) using nutritional and physiographical criteria P. L. PalaciosH. CasadoF. J. Castillo OriginalPaper Pages: 1275 - 1280
Mycorrhizal status of a Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) plantation affected by pollution from a phosphate fertilizer plant M. RudawskaB. Kieliszewska-RokickaJ. Oleksyn OriginalPaper Pages: 1281 - 1286
Effects of acid deposition on tree roots in Swedish forest stands H. PerssonH. Majdi OriginalPaper Pages: 1287 - 1292
Recent trends in beech tree health in southern Britain and the influence of soil type S. A. PowerM. R. AshmoreK. A. Ling OriginalPaper Pages: 1293 - 1298
Concentrations and depositions of SO2, SO4 2− etc. in a Chongqing suburban forested area J. ShenQ. ZhaoT. Totsuka OriginalPaper Pages: 1299 - 1304
Effect of simulated acid rain on the growth of Japanese conifers grown with or without fertilizer Y. KohnoH. MatsumuraT. Kobayashi OriginalPaper Pages: 1305 - 1310
Effects of ambient air pollution on wheat and rice yield in Pakistan R. MaggsA. WahidM. R. Ashmore OriginalPaper Pages: 1311 - 1316
Are seedlings reasonable surrogates for trees? An analysis of ozone impacts on Quercus rubra J. M. KellyL. SamuelsonS. Wullschleger OriginalPaper Pages: 1317 - 1324
Ozone and drought stress — Interactive effects on the growth and physiology of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) P. E. KarlssonE.-L. MedinL. Skärby OriginalPaper Pages: 1325 - 1330
Effects of ozone on birch (Betula pendula Roth.) clones E. PääkkönenT. HolopainenL. Kärenlampi OriginalPaper Pages: 1331 - 1336
Long-term effects of ozone on Fagus sylvatica L. — An open-top chamber exposure study Georg H. M. KrauseFriedrich-Eberhard Höckel OriginalPaper Pages: 1337 - 1342