Renate Alber
Environment Agency
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Featured researches published by Renate Alber.
Environmental Pollution | 2010
Harry Harmens; D.A. Norris; Eiliv Steinnes; Eero Kubin; Juha Piispanen; Renate Alber; Yuliya Aleksiayenak; Oleg Blum; Munevver Coskun; Maria Dam; L. De Temmerman; J.A. Fernández; Marina Frolova; M. V. Frontasyeva; L. González-Miqueo; Krystyna Grodzińska; Zvonka Jeran; Szymon Korzekwa; M. Krmar; Kestutis Kvietkus; Sébastien Leblond; Siiri Liiv; Sigurður H. Magnússon; Blanka Maňkovská; Roland Pesch; Åke Rühling; J.M. Santamaría; Winfried Schröder; Zdravko Špirić; Ivan Suchara
In recent decades, mosses have been used successfully as biomonitors of atmospheric deposition of heavy metals. Since 1990, the European moss survey has been repeated at five-yearly intervals. Although spatial patterns were metal-specific, in 2005 the lowest concentrations of metals in mosses were generally found in Scandinavia, the Baltic States and northern parts of the UK; the highest concentrations were generally found in Belgium and south-eastern Europe. The recent decline in emission and subsequent deposition of heavy metals across Europe has resulted in a decrease in the heavy metal concentration in mosses for the majority of metals. Since 1990, the concentration in mosses has declined the most for arsenic, cadmium, iron, lead and vanadium (52-72%), followed by copper, nickel and zinc (20-30%), with no significant reduction being observed for mercury (12% since 1995) and chromium (2%). However, temporal trends were country-specific with sometimes increases being found.
Environmental Pollution | 2011
Harry Harmens; D.A. Norris; David Cooper; Gina Mills; Eiliv Steinnes; Eero Kubin; Lotti Thöni; J.R. Aboal; Renate Alber; A. Carballeira; Munevver Coskun; L. De Temmerman; Marina Frolova; L. González-Miqueo; Zvonka Jeran; Sébastien Leblond; Siiri Liiv; Blanka Maňkovská; Roland Pesch; Jarmo Poikolainen; Åke Rühling; J.M. Santamaría; P. Simonèiè; Winfried Schröder; Ivan Suchara; Lilyana Yurukova; Harald G. Zechmeister
In 2005/6, nearly 3000 moss samples from (semi-)natural location across 16 European countries were collected for nitrogen analysis. The lowest total nitrogen concentrations in mosses (<0.8%) were observed in northern Finland and northern UK. The highest concentrations (≥ 1.6%) were found in parts of Belgium, France, Germany, Slovakia, Slovenia and Bulgaria. The asymptotic relationship between the nitrogen concentrations in mosses and EMEP modelled nitrogen deposition (averaged per 50 km × 50 km grid) across Europe showed less scatter when there were at least five moss sampling sites per grid. Factors potentially contributing to the scatter are discussed. In Switzerland, a strong (r(2) = 0.91) linear relationship was found between the total nitrogen concentration in mosses and measured site-specific bulk nitrogen deposition rates. The total nitrogen concentrations in mosses complement deposition measurements, helping to identify areas in Europe at risk from high nitrogen deposition at a high spatial resolution.
Environmental Pollution | 2012
Harry Harmens; Ilia Ilyin; Gina Mills; J.R. Aboal; Renate Alber; Oleg Blum; Munevver Coskun; L. De Temmerman; J.A. Fernández; Rui Figueira; M. V. Frontasyeva; Barbara Godzik; Natalia Goltsova; Zvonka Jeran; Szymon Korzekwa; Eero Kubin; Kestutis Kvietkus; Sébastien Leblond; Siiri Liiv; Sigurður H. Magnússon; Blanka Maňkovská; Olgerts Nikodemus; Roland Pesch; Jarmo Poikolainen; Dragan Radnović; Åke Rühling; J.M. Santamaría; Winfried Schröder; Zdravko Špirić; Trajče Stafilov
Previous analyses at the European scale have shown that cadmium and lead concentrations in mosses are primarily determined by the total deposition of these metals. Further analyses in the current study show that Spearman rank correlations between the concentration in mosses and the deposition modelled by the European Monitoring and Evaluation Programme (EMEP) are country and metal-specific. Significant positive correlations were found for about two thirds or more of the participating countries in 1990, 1995, 2000 and 2005 (except for Cd in 1990). Correlations were often not significant and sometimes negative in countries where mosses were only sampled in a relatively small number of EMEP grids. Correlations frequently improved when only data for EMEP grids with at least three moss sampling sites per grid were included. It was concluded that spatial patterns and temporal trends agree reasonably well between lead and cadmium concentrations in mosses and modelled atmospheric deposition.
Environmental Pollution | 2015
Harry Harmens; David Norris; Katrina Sharps; Gina Mills; Renate Alber; Yuliya Aleksiayenak; Oleg Blum; S.-M. Cucu-Man; Maria Dam; L. De Temmerman; Antoaneta Ene; J.A. Fernández; Javier Martínez-Abaigar; M. V. Frontasyeva; Barbara Godzik; Zvonka Jeran; Pranvera Lazo; Sébastien Leblond; Siiri Liiv; Sigurður H. Magnússon; Blanka Maňkovská; G. Pihl Karlsson; Juha Piispanen; Jarmo Poikolainen; J.M. Santamaría; Mitja Skudnik; Zdravko Špirić; Trajče Stafilov; Eiliv Steinnes; Claudia Stihi
In recent decades, naturally growing mosses have been used successfully as biomonitors of atmospheric deposition of heavy metals and nitrogen. Since 1990, the European moss survey has been repeated at five-yearly intervals. In 2010, the lowest concentrations of metals and nitrogen in mosses were generally found in northern Europe, whereas the highest concentrations were observed in (south-)eastern Europe for metals and the central belt for nitrogen. Averaged across Europe, since 1990, the median concentration in mosses has declined the most for lead (77%), followed by vanadium (55%), cadmium (51%), chromium (43%), zinc (34%), nickel (33%), iron (27%), arsenic (21%, since 1995), mercury (14%, since 1995) and copper (11%). Between 2005 and 2010, the decline ranged from 6% for copper to 36% for lead; for nitrogen the decline was 5%. Despite the Europe-wide decline, no changes or increases have been observed between 2005 and 2010 in some (regions of) countries.
Annals of Forest Science | 2017
Winfried Schröder; Stefan Nickel; Simon Schönrock; Roman Schmalfuß; Werner Wosniok; Michaela Meyer; Harry Harmens; M. V. Frontasyeva; Renate Alber; Julia Aleksiayenak; Lambe Barandovski; Oleg Blum; A. Carballeira; Maria Dam; Helena Danielsson; Ludwig de Temmermann; Anatoly M. Dunaev; Barbara Godzik; Katrin S. Hoydal; Zvonka Jeran; Gunilla Pihl Karlsson; Pranvera Lazo; Sébastien Leblond; Jussi Lindroos; Siiri Liiv; Sigurður H. Magnússon; Blanka Mankovska; Encarnación Núñez-Olivera; Juha Piispanen; Jarmo Poikolainen
Key messageMoss surveys provide spatially dense data on environmental concentrations of heavy metals and nitrogen which, together with other biomonitoring and modelling data, can be used for indicating deposition to terrestrial ecosystems and related effects across time and areas of different spatial extension.ContextFor enhancing the spatial resolution of measuring and mapping atmospheric deposition by technical devices and by modelling, moss is used complementarily as bio-monitor.AimsThis paper investigated whether nitrogen and heavy metal concentrations derived by biomonitoring of atmospheric deposition are statistically meaningful in terms of compliance with minimum sample size across several spatial levels (objective 1), whether this is also true in terms of geostatistical criteria such as spatial auto-correlation and, by this, estimated values for unsampled locations (objective 2) and whether moss indicates atmospheric deposition in a similar way as modelled deposition, tree foliage and natural surface soil at the European and country level, and whether they indicate site-specific variance due to canopy drip (objective 3).MethodsData from modelling and biomonitoring atmospheric deposition were statistically analysed by means of minimum sample size calculation, by geostatistics as well as by bivariate correlation analyses and by multivariate correlation analyses using the Classification and Regression Tree approach and the Random Forests method.ResultsIt was found that the compliance of measurements with the minimum sample size varies by spatial scale and element measured. For unsampled locations, estimation could be derived. Statistically significant correlations between concentrations of heavy metals and nitrogen in moss and modelled atmospheric deposition, and concentrations in leaves, needles and soil were found. Significant influence of canopy drip on nitrogen concentration in moss was proven.ConclusionMoss surveys should complement modelled atmospheric deposition data as well as other biomonitoring approaches and offer a great potential for various terrestrial monitoring programmes dealing with exposure and effects.
Environmental Pollution | 2008
Winfried Schröder; Roland Pesch; Cordula Englert; Harry Harmens; Ivan Suchara; Harald G. Zechmeister; Lotti Thöni; Blanka Maňkovská; Zvonka Jeran; Krystyna Grodzińska; Renate Alber
Journal of Soils and Sediments | 2010
Winfried Schröder; Marcel Holy; Roland Pesch; Harry Harmens; Ilia Ilyin; Eiliv Steinnes; Renate Alber; Yuliya Aleksiayenak; Oleg Blum; Mahmut Coşkun; Maria Dam; Ludwig De Temmerman; Marina Frolova; M. V. Frontasyeva; Laura Gonzalez Miqueo; Krystyna Grodzińska; Zvonka Jeran; Szymon Korzekwa; M. Krmar; Eero Kubin; Kestutis Kvietkus; Sébastien Leblond; Siiri Liiv; Sigurður H. Magnússon; Blanka Maňkovská; Juha Piispanen; Åke Rühling; J.M. Santamaría; Zdravko Špirić; Ivan Suchara
Atmospheric Environment | 2010
Winfried Schröder; Marcel Holy; Roland Pesch; Harry Harmens; Hilde Fagerli; Renate Alber; Mahmut Coşkun; Ludwig De Temmerman; Marina Frolova; Laura González-Miqueo; Zvonka Jeran; Eero Kubin; Sébastien Leblond; Siiri Liiv; Blanka Maňkovská; Juha Piispanen; J.M. Santamaría; Primož Simonèiè; Ivan Suchara; Lilyana Yurukova; Lotti Thöni; Harald G. Zechmeister
Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 2009
Marcel Holy; Roland Pesch; Winfried Schröder; Harry Harmens; Ilia Ilyin; Renate Alber; Yuliya Aleksiayenak; Oleg Blum; Mahmut Coşkun; Maria Dam; Ludwig De Temmerman; Natalia Fedorets; Rui Figueira; Marina Frolova; M. V. Frontasyeva; Natalia Goltsova; Laura Gonzalez Miqueo; Krystyna Grodzińska; Zvonka Jeran; Szymon Korzekwa; M. Krmar; Eero Kubin; Kestutis Kvietkus; Martin Hage Larsen; Sébastien Leblond; Siiri Liiv; Sigurður H. Magnússon; Blanka Maňkovská; Raluca Mocanu; Juha Piispanen
Umweltwissenschaften Und Schadstoff-forschung | 2008
Winfried Schröder; Cordula Englert; Roland Pesch; Harald G. Zechmeister; Lotti Thöni; Ivan Suchara; Blanka Maňkovská; Zvonka Jeran; Harry Harmens; Krystyna Grodzińska; Renate Alber