Mats Fröberg
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Mats Fröberg.
Nature Communications | 2013
Lars Gamfeldt; Tord Snäll; Robert Bagchi; Micael Jonsson; Lena Gustafsson; Petter Kjellander; María C Ruiz-Jaen; Mats Fröberg; Johan Stendahl; Christopher D. Philipson; Grzegorz Mikusiński; Erik Andersson; Bertil Westerlund; Henrik Andrén; Fredrik Moberg; Jon Moen; Jan Bengtsson
Forests are of major importance to human society, contributing several crucial ecosystem services. Biodiversity is suggested to positively influence multiple services but evidence from natural systems at scales relevant to management is scarce. Here, across a scale of 400,000 km2, we report that tree species richness in production forests shows positive to positively hump-shaped relationships with multiple ecosystem services. These include production of tree biomass, soil carbon storage, berry production and game production potential. For example, biomass production was approximately 50% greater with five than with one tree species. In addition, we show positive relationships between tree species richness and proxies for other biodiversity components. Importantly, no single tree species was able to promote all services, and some services were negatively correlated to each other. Management of production forests will therefore benefit from considering multiple tree species to sustain the full range of benefits that the society obtains from forests.
Science of The Total Environment | 2015
Julia K. Hytteborn; Johan Temnerud; Richard B. Alexander; Elizabeth W. Boyer; Martyn N. Futter; Mats Fröberg; Joel Dahné; Kevin Bishop
Factors affecting total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations in 215 watercourses across Sweden were investigated using parameter parsimonious regression approaches to explain spatial and temporal variabilities of the TOC water quality responses. We systematically quantified the effects of discharge, seasonality, and long-term trend as factors controlling intra-annual (among year) and inter-annual (within year) variabilities of TOC by evaluating the spatial variability in model coefficients and catchment characteristics (e.g. land cover, retention time, soil type). Catchment area (0.18-47,000 km2) and land cover types (forests, agriculture and alpine terrain) are typical for the boreal and hemiboreal zones across Fennoscandia. Watercourses had at least 6 years of monthly water quality observations between 1990 and 2010. Statistically significant models (p<0.05) describing variation of TOC in streamflow were identified in 209 of 215 watercourses with a mean Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency index of 0.44. Increasing long-term trends were observed in 149 (70%) of the watercourses, and intra-annual variation in TOC far exceeded inter-annual variation. The average influences of the discharge and seasonality terms on intra-annual variations in daily TOC concentration were 1.4 and 1.3 mg l(-1) (13 and 12% of the mean annual TOC), respectively. The average increase in TOC was 0.17 mg l(-1)year(-1) (1.6% year(-1)). Multivariate regression with over 90 different catchment characteristics explained 21% of the spatial variation in the linear trend coefficient, less than 20% of the variation in the discharge coefficient and 73% of the spatial variation in mean TOC. Specific discharge, water residence time, the variance of daily precipitation, and lake area, explained 45% of the spatial variation in the amplitude of the TOC seasonality. Because the main drivers of temporal variability in TOC are seasonality and discharge, first-order estimates of the influences of climatic variability and change on TOC concentration should be predictable if the studied catchments continue to respond similarly.
Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2010
Maria I. Khalili; Johan Temnerud; Mats Fröberg; Erik Karltun; Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer
In this study, we used a large data set on nitrogen (N) and carbon (C) from Swedish boreal soils and lake waters to investigate N and C interactions between soils and lake waters. To link thousands ...
Global Change Biology | 2012
Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer; Mats Fröberg; Erik Karltun; Maria I. Khalili; Dolly N. Kothawala; Johan Temnerud; Lars J. Tranvik
Forest Ecology and Management | 2011
Mats Fröberg; Karna Hansson; Dan Berggren Kleja; Ghasem Alavi
Biogeochemistry | 2011
Mats Fröberg; Edward Tipping; Johan Stendahl; Nicholas Clarke; Charlotte L. Bryant
Forest Ecology and Management | 2013
Karna Hansson; Mats Fröberg; Heljä-Sisko Helmisaari; Dan Berggren Kleja; Bengt A. Olsson; Mats Olsson; Tryggve Persson
Geoderma | 2013
Mats Fröberg; Harald Grip; Edward Tipping; Magnus Svensson; Monika Strömgren; Dan Berggren Kleja
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2014
Stefan Löfgren; Mats Fröberg; Jun Yu; Jakob Nisell; Bo Ranneby
Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science | 2012
Mats Fröberg