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Sources of reactive nitrogen affecting ecosystems in Latin America and the Caribbean: current trends and future perspectives
Authors:Luiz A Martinelli  Robert W Howarth  Elvira Cuevas  Solange Filoso  Amy T Austin  Loreta Donoso  Vera Huszar  Dennis Keeney  Luciene L Lara  Carlos Llerena  George McIssac  Ernesto Medina  Jorge Ortiz-Zayas  Donald Scavia  David W Schindler  Doris Soto  Alan Townsend
Institution:1. CENA, Av. Centenário 303, 13416-000, Piracicaba, SP, Brazil
2. Ecology & Environmental Biology Department, Cornell University, E311 Corson Hall, Cornell, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA
3. Department of Biology, College of Natural Sciences, University of Puerto Rico, PO Box 23360, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 00931-3360
4. Faculty of Agronomy, University of Buenos Aires and IFEVA-CONICET, Avenida San Martín 4453, C1417DSE, Buenos Aires, Argentina
5. Instituto Venezuelano de Investigaciones Científicas – IVIC, Centro de Ecología, IVIC, Aptdo. 21827, Caracas, 1020-A, Venezuela
6. Departamento de Botanica, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Museo Nacional, Quinta da Boa Vista s/n, S?o Cristóv?o – Rio de Janeiro, 20940040, RJ, Brasil
7. Agriculture and Biosystems Engineering, Iowa State University, 3402 Eisenhower Ave., Ames, Iowa, 50010, USA
8. Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
9. Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina, Apartado 456, Lima, Peru
10. Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, w-503 Turner Hall, 1102 South Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA
11. Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Laboratory Plant Physiological Ecology, Centro de Ecología, IVIC, Aptdo. 21827, Caracas, 1020-A, Venezuela
12. Institute for Tropical Ecosystems Studies, University of Puerto Rico, PO Box 23341, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 00931-3341
13. School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, G520 Dana 1115, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109, USA
14. Ecology Department, University of Alberta, Z 811, Biological Sciences Bldg., 114 St – 89 Ave, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, T6G 2E1
15. Universidad Austral de Chile, Casilla 1327, Puerto Montt, Chile
16. INSTAAR and EPO-Biology, University of Colorado, 1560 30th St., Boulder, CO, 80309, USA
Abstract:While the amount of reactive nitrogen circulating at the global level has increased markedly in the last century, the effects of this increase are largely seen at the regional level due to interacting ecological and socio-economic factors. In contrast with most other regions of the world, Latin America and the Caribbean (LA-Ca) stand out due to the fact that the major input of reactive nitrogen (Nr) still occurs naturally via biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) in natural ecosystems as opposed to anthropogenic inputs of synthetic fertilizer, fossil fuel combustion and cropping with leguminous species. Largely due to economic reasons, the consumption of fertilizer N in the LA-Ca region is still low in comparison with the average consumption of the world. However, the fertilizer N consumption is increasing at a much faster rate than that in developed regions of the world, like USA and Canada. The Nr production through BNF in cultivated plants that fix nitrogen (C-BNF) is 5 times lower than that occurring naturally in Latin America, but is still equivalent to 16% of the world C-BNF. The cultivation of nitrogen-fixing crop species in the LA-Ca region is also increasing, almost entirely due to the expansion of soybean fields in the central and northern regions of Brazil and the Pampa region of Argentina. Other anthropogenic activities in the region that contribute to an increase in the circulation of reactive nitrogen include the impact of biomass burning and urbanization. In the last decade, an average of 47,000 km2 per year of forests was burned in the LA-Ca region. The environmental impact of urban centers in the LA-Ca region has become very important, since an intense urbanization process is occurring in this region, at an intensity that far exceeds urban development in the northern hemisphere. The consequences of increased urbanization include increased emissions of NO x to the atmosphere due to the fossil fuel combustion, and the lack of sewage treatment facilities in most cities of the LA-Ca result in a large volume of untreated sewage discharged into surface waters, creating serious environmental problems. The combination of rapid urbanization and agricultural intensification in this region suggest that concern is warranted for the potential for increase in the circulation of reactive nitrogen in the very near future. At the same time, the opportunity still exists to mitigate some of the consequences of human impact on the nitrogen cycle in a region that still maintains a large fraction of its natural ecosystems intact.
Keywords:Biomass burning  Caribbean  Latin America  Nitrogen  Reactive agriculture  Urbanization
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