Current estimates of forest yield losses attributable to ozone
pollution amount to c. 10% over Europe as
a whole. This figure is derived from a synthesis of all European studies
using trees for which AOT40
exposure values are available. However, the choice of 40 nl l−1
as the threshold concentration for
demonstrable effects has led to debate, and this value might not be
low enough to predict ozone effects
in Scandinavia, where concentrations are lower than in southern Europe,
and chronic injury resulting
from cumulative exposure is observed. This ‘level I’
approach provides a useful means for mapping
physiologically effective concentrations but has significant
shortcomings in that it is unable to take
environmental conditions into account. In order to produce a
mechanism capable of predicting yield
losses resulting from ozone pollution at specific sites and for
individual species, the effective ozone dose,
a product of conductance and concentration, must be calculated.
Process-based models relating the
environment (temperature, humidity/saturation deficit, incident
light and soil moisture content) to
conductance are available for a number of species (oak, Scots pine,
Norway spruce, Sitka spruce, beech
and poplar). Effective ozone doses could therefore be calculated, and
the relationships between effective
dose and yield loss could be determined by revisiting existing data
for which only concentrations or
AOT40 values are available at present. Yield loss must be the growth
parameter with which ozone
damage is expressed, since visible injury does not necessarily represent
severe injury to the plant, whilst
visibly unaffected plants may be significantly compromised in terms of
biomass accumulation. For
conifers, premature needle drop, although indicative of ozone pollution,
might not represent a significant
reduction in growth since older needles are, functionally, relatively unimportant.
When revisiting old experiments the question should also be asked
‘what is an appropriate control
treatment’. It is unrealistic to expect ambient O3
concentrations on a global scale to return to pre-industrialization levels,
and therefore the use of a charcoal-filtered treatment is probably unrealistic.
In
addition, charcoal filters will remove some of the NOx, and
therefore on nutrient deficient soils (typical
of many forest soils) the ‘control’ treatment might
represent a reduced supply of nitrogen, making it
difficult to disentangle the ozone effect per se.
The stage has therefore been reached where ‘level II’
ozone exposure mapping (i.e. based on effective
dose at the physiological level) is possible for a number of species. As
financial considerations become
increasingly important, the scientific community must aim to provide better
estimates of O3-induced
yield losses so that long-term environmental audits can be performed.