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Dive into the research topics where Vicent Calatayud is active.

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Featured researches published by Vicent Calatayud.


Environmental Pollution | 2014

Evidence of widespread ozone-induced visible injury on plants in Beijing, China.

Zhaozhong Feng; Jingsong Sun; Wuxing Wan; Enzhu Hu; Vicent Calatayud

Despite the high ozone levels measured in China, and in Beijing in particular, reports of ozone-induced visible injury in vegetation are very scarce. Visible injury was investigated on July and August 2013 in the main parks, forest and agricultural areas of Beijing. Ozone injury was widespread in the area, being observed in 28 different species. Symptoms were more frequent in rural areas and mountains from northern Beijing, downwind from the city, and less frequent in city gardens. Among crops, injury to different types of beans (genera Phaseolus, Canavalia and Vigna) was common, and it was also observed in watermelon, grape vine, and in gourds. Native species such as ailanthus, several pines and ash species were also symptomatic. The black locust, the rose of Sharon and the Japanese morning glory were among the injured ornamental plants. Target species for broader bio-monitoring surveys in temperate China have been identified.


Environmental Pollution | 2011

Responses of evergreen and deciduous Quercus species to enhanced ozone levels

Vicent Calatayud; Júlia Cerveró; Esperanza Calvo; Francisco-José García-Breijo; José Reig-Armiñana; M. J. Sanz

Plants of one evergreen oak (Quercus ilex) and three deciduous oaks (Q. faginea, with small leaves; Q. pyrenaica and Q. robur, with large leaves) were exposed both to filtered air and to enhanced ozone levels in Open-Top Chambers. Q. faginea and Q. pyrenaica were studied for the first time. Based on visible injury, gas exchange, chlorophyll content and biomass responses, Q. pyrenaica was the most sensitive species, and Q. ilex was the most tolerant, followed by Q. faginea. Functional leaf traits of the species were related to differences in sensitivity, while accumulated ozone flux via stomata (POD1.6) partly contributed to the observed differences. For risk assessment of Mediterranean vegetation, the diversity of responses detected in this study should be taken into account, applying appropriate critical levels.


Environmental Pollution | 2000

Spatial pattern of ozone injury in Aleppo pine related to air pollution dynamics in a coastal–mountain region of eastern Spain

M. J. Sanz; Vicent Calatayud; Esperanza Calvo

In eastern Spain, studies combining the tracking and meso-scale circulations of air pollutants with the evaluation of their effects on plants have been undertaken since 1994. Meso-scale processes are very important from the point of view of how and where forest ecosystems are affected by point sources and regional air pollution in the Mediterranean area. The first results of these field surveys show that in 1994, 1995 and 1996, the distribution pattern of ozone visual injury (chlorotic mottle) in Pinus halepensis correlated with the penetration of pollutants transported by the sea-breeze into coastal valleys of Castellón (eastern Spain). In this tree species, longer needles are associated with higher chlorotic mottle, and ozone injury seems to be among the factors affecting needle retention and crown transparency.


Environmental Pollution | 2010

Contrasting ozone sensitivity in related evergreen and deciduous shrubs

Vicent Calatayud; Francisco Marco; Júlia Cerveró; Gerardo Sanchez-Peña; M. J. Sanz

Plant responses to enhanced ozone levels have been studied in two pairs of evergreen-deciduous species (Pistacia terebinthus vs. P. lentiscus; Viburnum lantana vs. V. tinus) in Open Top Chambers. Ozone induced widespread visible injury, significantly reduced CO(2) assimilation and stomatal conductance (g(s)), impaired Rubisco efficiency and regeneration capacity (V(c,max,)J(max)) and altered fluorescence parameters only in the deciduous species. Differences in stomatal conductance could not explain the observed differences in sensitivity. In control plants, deciduous species showed higher superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity than their evergreen counterparts, suggesting metabolic differences that could make them more prone to redox imbalances. Ozone induced increases in SOD and/or peroxidase activities in all the species, but only evergreens were able to cope with the oxidative stress. The relevancy of these results for the effective ozone flux approach and for the current ozone Critical Levels is also discussed.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2002

EuroBionet: A Pan-European Biomonitoring Network for Urban Air Quality Assessment

Andreas Klumpp; Wolfgang Ansel; Gabriele Klumpp; N. Belluzzo; Vicent Calatayud; N. Chaplin; Jean Pierre Garrec; H. J. Gutsche; M. Hayes; H. W. Hentze; Harry Kambezidis; O. Laurent; Josep Peñuelas; Stine Rasmussen; Àngela Ribas; Helge Ro-Poulsen; S. Rossi; M. J. Sanz; H. Shang; N. Sifakis; Phillippe Vergne

EuroBionet, the ‘European Network for the Assessment of Air Quality by the Use of Bioindicator Plants’, is an EU-funded cooperative project currently consisting of public authorities and scientific institutes from 12 cities in 8 countries. In 2000, the bioindicator plants tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum Bel W3), poplar (Populus nigra ‘Brandaris’), spiderwort (Tradescantia sp. clone 4430), Italian rye grass (Lolium multiflorum italicum) and curly kale (Brassica oleracea acephala) were exposed to ambient air at 90 monitoring sites according to standardised methods. Visible injuries and growth parameters were assessed and the accumulation of toxic substances in leaves determined. The exposure of tobacco resulted in a gradient with low levels of ozone-induced foliar injury in N and NW Europe, and medium to high values in the southern and central regions. The results of heavy metal and sulphur analyses in rye grass samples generally showed low to very low sulphur and low to medium heavy metal concentrations in leaves. In some cities, however, local hot spots of heavy metal contamination were detected. Analyses of the PAH contents in curly kale leaves gave low to medium values, with locally elevated levels at traffic-exposed sites.


Environmental Pollution | 2009

Deciduous shrubs for ozone bioindication: Hibiscus syriacus as an example.

Elena Paoletti; Anna Maria Ferrara; Vicent Calatayud; Júlia Cerveró; Fabio Giannetti; M. J. Sanz; William J. Manning

Ozone-like visible injury was detected on Hibiscus syriacus plants used as ornamental hedges. Weekly spray of the antiozonant ethylenediurea (EDU, 300ppm) confirmed that the injury was induced by ambient ozone. EDU induced a 75% reduction in visible injury. Injury was more severe on the western than on the eastern exposure of the hedge. This factor of variability should be considered in ozone biomonitoring programmes. Seeds were collected and seedlings were artificially exposed to ozone in filtered vs. not-filtered (+30ppb) Open-Top Chambers. The level of exposure inducing visible injury in the OTC seedlings was lower than that in the ambient-grown hedge. The occurrence of visible injury in the OTC confirmed that the ozone sensitivity was heritable and suggested that symptomatic plants of this deciduous shrub population can be successfully used as ozone bioindicators. EDU is recommended as a simple tool for diagnosing ambient ozone visible injury on field vegetation.


Fungal Biology | 2002

A synopsis of Lichenostigma subgen. Lichenogramma (Arthoniales) with a key to the species

Vicent Calatayud; Pere Navarro-Rosinés; Josef Hafellner

A synopsis of the subgenus of lichenicolous fungi Lichenogramma is presented. It comprises eight species of Lichenostigma with oval to elongate ascomata connected to superficial strands of vegetative hyphae. Five of them are described here as new: Lichenostigma diploiciae (on Diploicia subcanescens); L. epipolina (on Diplotomma epipolium); L. gracilis (on Acarospora fuscata); L. rouxii (on Squamarina spp.); and L. subradians (on Acarospora spp., mainly subgen. Acarospora). The concept of the genus Lichenostigma is enlarged to accommodate also species with submuriform ascospores. A key to all the species of the subgenus is provided.


Environmental Pollution | 2015

Assessing the effects of ambient ozone in China on snap bean genotypes by using ethylenediurea (EDU).

Xiangyang Yuan; Vicent Calatayud; Lijun Jiang; William J. Manning; Felicity Hayes; Yuan Tian; Zhaozhong Feng

Four genotypes of snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) were selected to study the effects of ambient ozone concentration at a cropland area around Beijing by using 450 ppm of ethylenediurea (EDU) as a chemical protectant. During the growing season, the 8h (9:00-17:00) average ozone concentration was very high, approximately 71.3 ppb, and AOT40 was 29.0 ppm.h. All genotypes showed foliar injury, but ozone-sensitive genotypes exhibited much more injury than ozone-tolerant ones. Compared with control, EDU significantly alleviated foliar injury, increased photosynthesis rate and chlorophyll a fluorescence, Vcmax and Jmax, and seed and pod weights in ozone-sensitive genotypes but not in ozone-tolerant genotypes. EDU did not significantly affect antioxidant contents in any of the genotypes. Therefore, EDU effectively protected sensitive genotypes from ambient ozone damage, while protection on ozone-tolerant genotypes was limited. EDU can be regarded as a useful tool in risk assessment of ambient ozone on food security.


Tree Physiology | 2016

Differences in ozone sensitivity among woody species are related to leaf morphology and antioxidant levels.

Pin Li; Vicent Calatayud; Feng Gao; Johan Uddling; Zhaozhong Feng

Ozone (O3) sensitivity varies greatly among plant species. Leaf traits such as stomatal conductance, antioxidant capacity and leaf morphology and anatomy may play important roles in controlling this variation, but the relative contributions of each trait remain elusive. In this study, we examined the differences in O3 sensitivity among 29 deciduous and evergreen woody species used for urban greening in China in an open-top chamber experiment. Elevated O3 caused visible injury and reductions in net photosynthesis, and these effects differed significantly among species. The deciduous species Sorbaria sorbifolia, Hibiscus syriacus and Fraxinus chinensis were the most sensitive, while evergreen species ranked among the most tolerant. O3 sensitivity was linked to both low leaf mass per area (LMA) and low leaf area-based antioxidant levels, but not to variation in leaf mass-based antioxidant levels or stomatal conductance. The well-known and easily measured leaf trait LMA thus represents a potentially useful metric for O3 risk assessment and for selecting appropriate species for urban greening in O3-polluted areas.


Lichenologist | 2003

Three new species of Stigmidium s. l. (lichenicolous ascomycetes) on Acarospora and Squamarina

Vicent Calatayud; Dagmar Triebel

Abstract Stigmidium cartilagineae Calatayud & Triebel (on the apothecial discs of Squamarina cartilaginea ), a lichenicolous fungus belonging to Stigmidium s. str., is described as new. Two other species of Stigmidium s. l. with a net of branched and anastomosing, rudimentary interascal filaments are also described as new to science: Stigmidium rouxianum Calatayud & Triebel (on Acarospora cervina ) and S. squamarinicola Calatayud & Triebel (on the thallus of Squamarina spp.). They are related to Stigmidium psorae and treated here as ‘ Stigmidium ’ psorae group. To facilitate discussion of the distinguishing features of this group, a table comparing the terms referring to hamathecial hyphae in pyrenocarpous ascomycetes is presented.

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M. J. Sanz

University of Valencia

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Zhaozhong Feng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Josep Peñuelas

Spanish National Research Council

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