Ignacio González-Fernández
Complutense University of Madrid
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ignacio González-Fernández.
Environmental Pollution | 2011
R. Alonso; Marta G. Vivanco; Ignacio González-Fernández; Victoria Bermejo; Inmaculada Palomino; Juan Luis Garrido; Susana Elvira; Pedro Salvador; B. Artíñano
Tropospheric ozone (O(3)) is considered one of the most important air pollutants affecting human health. The role of peri-urban vegetation in modifying O(3) concentrations has been analyzed in the Madrid region (Spain) using the V200603par-rc1 version of the CHIMERE air quality model. The 3.7 version of the MM5 meteorological model was used to provide meteorological input data to the CHIMERE. The emissions were derived from the EMEP database for 2003. Land use data and the stomatal conductance model included in CHIMERE were modified according to the latest information available for the study area. Two cases were considered for the period April-September 2003: (1) actual land use and (2) a fictitious scenario where El Pardo peri-urban forest was converted to bare-soil. The results show that El Pardo forest constitutes a sink of O(3) since removing this green area increased O(3) levels over the modified area and over down-wind surrounding areas.
Environmental Pollution | 2011
Javier Sanz; Victoria Bermejo; Russell B. Muntifering; Ignacio González-Fernández; B.S. Gimeno; S. Elvira; R. Alonso
An assessment of the effects of tropospheric ozone (O(3)) levels and substrate nitrogen (N) supplementation, singly and in combination, on phenology, growth and nutritive quality of Briza maxima was carried out. Two serial experiments were developed in Open-Top Chambers (OTC) using three O(3) and three N levels. Increased O(3) exposure did not affect the biomass-related parameters, but enhanced senescence, increased fiber foliar content (especially lignin concentration) and reduced plant life span; these effects were related to senescence acceleration induced by the pollutant. Added N increased plant biomass production and improved nutritive quality by decreasing foliar fiber concentration. Interestingly, the effects of N supplementation depended on meteorological conditions and plant physiological activity. N supplementation counteracted the O(3)-induced senescence but did not modify the effects on nutritive quality. Nutritive quality and phenology should be considered in new definitions of the O(3) limits for the protection of herbaceous vegetation.
Science of The Total Environment | 2016
Javier Sanz; Ignacio González-Fernández; S. Elvira; Russell B. Muntifering; R. Alonso; Victoria Bermejo-Bermejo
Annual Dehesa-type pastures comprise semi-natural vegetation communities dominated by annual species characteristic of the Mediterranean basin areas of Southern Europe. This study analyses all the datasets available on the effects of ozone (O3) on annual pasture species in order to review and propose new exposure- and flux-based O3 critical levels (CLes) following the methodology of the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP). Based on the potential effect on pastures main ecosystem services, the availability of data and the statistical significance of the regressions, three variables have been selected for establishing CLes: total above-ground biomass, consumable food value (CFV), as a nutritional quality index, and reproductive capacity based on flower and seed production. New CLes proposed for a 10% loss (with 95% confidence intervals between brackets) of above-ground biomass and reproductive capacity were, respectively, AOT40=3.1 (2.6, 3.8) and 2.0 (1.5, 2.8) ppmh and POD1=12.2 (8.9, 15.5) and 7.2 (1.1, 13.3) mmolm(-2). The provisional AOT40- and POD1-based CLes for CFV were 2.3 (1.6, 4.0) ppmh and 4.6 (2.7, 6.5) mmolm(-2) respectively. By using only O3-sensitive species for the exposure and dose-response functions, the proposed CLes should be used for risk assessments. Their use for quantifying O3 damage may lead to an overestimation of the effects.
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2017
Ignacio González-Fernández; Javier Sanz; Héctor Calvete-Sogo; Susana Elvira; R. Alonso; Victoria Bermejo-Bermejo
Ozone (O3) critical levels have been established under the Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution Convention to assess the risk of O3 effects in European vegetation. A recent review study has led to the development of O3 critical levels for annual Mediterranean pasture species using plants growing in well-watered pots at a coastal site and under low levels of competition. However, uncertainties remain in the extrapolation of the O3 sensitivity of these species under natural conditions. The response of two O3-sensitive annual Mediterranean pasture Trifolium species at the coastal site was compared with the response of the same species growing at a continental site, in natural soil and subject to water-stress and inter-specific competition, representing more closely their natural habitat. The slopes of exposure- and dose-response relationships derived for the two sites showed differences in the response to O3 between sites attributed to differences in environmental growing conditions, growing medium and the level of inter-specific competition, but the effect of the individual factors could not be assessed separately. Dose-based O3 indices partially explained differences due to environmental growing conditions between sites. The slopes showed that plants were more sensitive to O3 at the continental site, but homogeneity of slopes tests revealed that results from both experimental sites may be combined. Although more experimental data considering complex inter-specific competition situations and the effect of important interactive factors such as nitrogen would be needed, these results confirm the validity of applying the current flux-based O3 critical level under close to natural growing conditions. The AOT40-based O3 critical level derived at the coastal site was also considered a suitable risk indicator in close to natural growing conditions in the absence of soil moisture limitations on plant growth.
Environmental Pollution | 2018
Héctor García-Gómez; Sheila Izquieta-Rojano; Laura Aguillaume; Ignacio González-Fernández; Fernando Valiño; David Elustondo; J.M. Santamaría; Anna Avila; Andrzej Bytnerowicz; Victoria Bermejo; R. Alonso
In Mediterranean areas, dry deposition is a major component of the total atmospheric N input to natural habitats, particularly to forest ecosystems. An innovative approach, combining the empirical inferential method (EIM) for surface deposition of NO3- and NH4+ with stomatal uptake of NH3, HNO3 and NO2 derived from the DO3SE (Deposition of Ozone and Stomatal Exchange) model, was used to estimate total dry deposition of inorganic N air pollutants in four holm oak forests under Mediterranean conditions in Spain. The estimated total deposition varied among the sites and matched the geographical patterns previously found in model estimates: higher deposition was determined at the northern site (28.9 kg N ha-1 year-1) and at the northeastern sites (17.8 and 12.5 kg N ha-1 year-1) than at the central-Spain site (9.4 kg N ha-1 year-1). On average, the estimated dry deposition of atmospheric N represented 77% ± 2% of the total deposition of N, of which surface deposition of gaseous and particulate atmospheric N averaged 10.0 ± 2.9 kg N ha-1 year-1 for the four sites (58% of the total deposition), and stomatal deposition of N gases averaged 3.3 ± 0.8 kg N ha-1 year-1 (19% of the total deposition). Deposition of atmospheric inorganic N was dominated by the surface deposition of oxidized N in all the forests (means of 54% and 42% of the dry and total deposition, respectively). The relative contribution of NO2 to dry deposition averaged from 19% in the peri-urban forests to 11% in the most natural site. During the monitoring period, the empirical critical loads provisionally proposed for ecosystem protection (10-20 kg N ha-1 year-1) was exceeded in three of the four studied forests.
Atmospheric Environment | 2013
Ignacio González-Fernández; Victoria Bermejo; S. Elvira; D. de la Torre; A. González; L. Navarrete; Javier Sanz; H. Calvete; Héctor García-Gómez; A. López; J. Serra; A. Lafarga; A.P. Armesto; A. Calvo; R. Alonso
Atmospheric Environment | 2014
Héctor Calvete-Sogo; Susana Elvira; Javier Sanz; Ignacio González-Fernández; Héctor García-Gómez; Laura Sánchez-Martín; R. Alonso; Victoria Bermejo-Bermejo
Procedia environmental sciences | 2011
Pedro Salvador; B. Artíñano; Mar Viana; Xavier Querol; Andrés Alastuey; Ignacio González-Fernández; R. Alonso
Atmospheric Environment | 2010
Ignacio González-Fernández; Victoria Bermejo; Susana Elvira; Javier Sanz; B.S. Gimeno; R. Alonso
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016
Héctor García-Gómez; Laura Aguillaume; Sheila Izquieta-Rojano; Fernando Valiño; Anna Avila; David Elustondo; J.M. Santamaría; Andrés Alastuey; Héctor Calvete-Sogo; Ignacio González-Fernández; R. Alonso