Growth of field-grown ash trees (Fraxinus excelsior) exposed to ozone episodes J. J. CollsJ. J. J. WiltshireM. H. Unsworth OriginalPaper Pages: 1343 - 1348
Critical levels of O3 for wood production of European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) L. MortensenA. Bastrup-BirkH. Ro-Poulsen OriginalPaper Pages: 1349 - 1354
Critical level for ozone to protect agricultural crops: Interaction with water availability J. Fuhrer OriginalPaper Pages: 1355 - 1360
Relation between sulphur concentrations in the Scots pine needles and the air in northernmost Europe H. RaitioJ.-P. TuovinenP. Anttila OriginalPaper Pages: 1361 - 1366
The use of individual tree statistics to quantify effects in an ‘acid mist’ experiment with mature trees J. N. CapeR. I. SmithL. J. Sheppard OriginalPaper Pages: 1367 - 1372
Response of a white clover indicator system to tropospheric ozone at eight locations in the United States Allen S. HeagleJoseph E. MillerJoanne Rebbeck OriginalPaper Pages: 1373 - 1378
Morphological responses among crop species to full-season exposures to enhanced concentrations of atmospheric CO2 and O3 C. MulchiB. RudorffR. Pausch OriginalPaper Pages: 1379 - 1386
Ozone effects on Aleppo pine seedlings (Pinus halepensis Mill.) grown in open-top chambers S. ElviraR. AlonsoB. S. Gimeno OriginalPaper Pages: 1387 - 1392
Effects of gaseous air pollutants on secondary chemistry of Scots pine and norway spruce seedlings P. KainulainenJ. K. HolopainenJ. Oksanen OriginalPaper Pages: 1393 - 1398
The individual and combined effects of ozone and simulated acid rain on chlorophyll contents, carbon allocation and biomass accumulation of armand pine seedlings Y. ShanZ. FengT. Totsuka OriginalPaper Pages: 1399 - 1404
The relative tolerance of some Eucalyptus species to ozone exposure R. J. MonkF. Murray OriginalPaper Pages: 1405 - 1411
Long term in situ measurements of gas exchange in a Norway spruce canopy at ambient and elevated ozone levels using a light weight chamber system — System designs and first results Teis N. MikkelsenHelge Ro-Poulsen OriginalPaper Pages: 1413 - 1418
Effect of acidic deposition on hybrid poplar- primary or predisposing stress? Gary D. HoganS. J. Taylor OriginalPaper Pages: 1419 - 1424
Effects of air pollution on the searching behaviour of an insect parasitoid I. M. GateS. McNeillM. R. Ashmore OriginalPaper Pages: 1425 - 1430
Effects of gaseous air pollutants on aphid performance on Scots pine and Norway spruce seedlings J. K. HolopainenP. KainulainenJ. Oksanen OriginalPaper Pages: 1431 - 1436
Growth responses and foliar sensitivities of native herbaceous species to ozone exposures E. BergmannJ. BenderH. J. Weigel OriginalPaper Pages: 1437 - 1442
Ozone pollution modifies the response of sugarbeet to the herbicide phenmedipham J. DixonM. R. HullG. E. Sanders OriginalPaper Pages: 1443 - 1448
Effects of nitric oxide and ozone on spring wheat (Triticum aestivum) S. NussbaumM. GeissmannJ. Fuhrer OriginalPaper Pages: 1449 - 1454
Ozone sensitivity of Phaseolus vulgaris in relation to cultivar differences, growth stage and growing conditions K. VandermeirenL. De TemmermanN. Hookham OriginalPaper Pages: 1455 - 1460
Ozone effects on dry matter partitioning and chlorophyll fluorescence during plant development of wheat G. SojaA.-M. Soja OriginalPaper Pages: 1461 - 1466
Towards unravelling the complex interactions between microclimate, ozone dose, and ozone injury in clover G. R. BallsD. Palmer-BrownG. E. Sanders OriginalPaper Pages: 1467 - 1472
Results from the UN/ECE ICP-Crops indicate the extent of exceedance of the critical levels of ozone in Europe J. BentonJ. FuhrerG. Sanders OriginalPaper Pages: 1473 - 1478
Quantifying the fine scale (1km × 1km) exposure and effects of ozone. Part 1. Methodology and application for effects on forests Fowler D.Smith R. I.Brown M. OriginalPaper Pages: 1479 - 1484
Quantifying the fine scale (1km × 1km) exposure, dose and effects of ozone: Part 2 estimating yield losses for agricultural crops M. BrownR. CoxM. R. Ashmore OriginalPaper Pages: 1485 - 1490
Estimation of the uncertainty in crop loss predictions through statistical modelling of the AOT40 levels for ozone R. I. SmithC. W. AndersonI. Castro Rivadeneyra OriginalPaper Pages: 1491 - 1496
Uptake and assimilation of atmospheric NO2 — N by spruce needles (Picea abies): A field study M. AmmannP. von BallmoosC. Brunold OriginalPaper Pages: 1497 - 1502
Clover Sweden — A national three-year study of the effects of tropospheric ozone on Trifolium subterraneum, L. G. Pihl KarlssonH. PleijelL. Skärby OriginalPaper Pages: 1503 - 1508
Surface ozone concentrations and exposures during growing season at the Lithuanian rural site R. Girgzdiene OriginalPaper Pages: 1509 - 1514
Bioindication of ozone in Estonia by using the tobacco variety Bel W3 A. KoppelE. Sild OriginalPaper Pages: 1515 - 1519
Biomonitoring ozone phytotoxicity in eastern Spain B. S. GimenoJ. PeñuelasR. A. Reinert OriginalPaper Pages: 1521 - 1526
Effects of ozone on calcareous grassland communities M. R. AshmoreR. H. ThwaitesA. J. Morton OriginalPaper Pages: 1527 - 1532
Bush bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L) leaf injury, photosynthesis and stomatal functions under elevated ozone levels M. A. SalamG. Soja OriginalPaper Pages: 1533 - 1538
An integrated analysis of sulfur emissions, acid deposition and climate change J. AlcamoM. KrolM. Posch OriginalPaper Pages: 1539 - 1550
Combined effects of nitrogen and elevated CO2 on soils from controlled environment studies D. W. JohnsonR. F. WalkerJ. T. Ball OriginalPaper Pages: 1551 - 1556
Forest biogeochemistry interactions among greenhouse gases and N deposition Lars-Owe Nilsson OriginalPaper Pages: 1557 - 1562
Influence of acid rain on CO2 consumption by rock weathering: Local and global scales P. Amiotte SuchetA. ProbstJ. L. Probst OriginalPaper Pages: 1563 - 1568
Assessment of the use of principal components analysis to relate air and precipitation chemistry to climate J. M. JonesT. D. DaviesS. R. Dorling OriginalPaper Pages: 1569 - 1574
Climate confounds detection of chemical trends related to acid deposition in upper Midwest lakes in the USA Katherine E. WebsterPatrick L. Brezonik OriginalPaper Pages: 1575 - 1580
Impact of sulphur and nitrogen deposition on plant species assemblages in natural vegetation Sven BråkenhielmLiu Qinghong OriginalPaper Pages: 1581 - 1586
A statistical approach to decompose ecological variation Liu QinghongSven Bråkenhielm OriginalPaper Pages: 1587 - 1592
Throughfall and canopy buffering in three sitka spruce stands in Denmark L. B. PedersenK. HansenM. F. Hovmand OriginalPaper Pages: 1593 - 1598
Covered catchment experiment at Gårdsjön: changes in runoff chemistry after four years of experimentally reduced acid deposition Filip MoldanHans HultbergIngvar Andersson OriginalPaper Pages: 1599 - 1604
Response of soil water chemistry and fine-roots to clean rain in a spruce forest ecosystem at Solling, FRG M. BredemeierA. DohrenbuschD. Murach OriginalPaper Pages: 1605 - 1611
Indirect effects of N and S deposition on a Norway spruce ecosystem. An update of findings within the Skogaby project Lars-Owe NilssonKarin Wiklund OriginalPaper Pages: 1613 - 1622
Nitrex: The timing of response of coniferous forest ecosystems to experimentally-changed nitrogen deposition A. TietemaR. F. WrightN. Van Breemen OriginalPaper Pages: 1623 - 1628
Factors influencing nitrogen saturation in Sitka spruce stands in Wales, UK B. A. EmmettP. A. StevensB. Reynolds OriginalPaper Pages: 1629 - 1634
Ecological studies in the ratanica catchment (Carpathian foothills, S Poland) — An overview K. GrodzińskaG. Szarek OriginalPaper Pages: 1635 - 1640
Sulphur isotope characteristics of two north Bohemian forest catchments M. NovákS. H. BottrellJ. Černý OriginalPaper Pages: 1641 - 1646
Acidic deposition, ecosystem processes, and nitrogen saturation in a high elevation Southern Appalachian watershed S. C. NodvinH. Van MiegroetD. W. Johnson OriginalPaper Pages: 1647 - 1652
The exman project—Biogeochemical fluxes in plantation forests on acid soils T. CumminsC. BeierN. Lamersdorf OriginalPaper Pages: 1653 - 1658