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Hewitt, D.

Ozone effects in high sugar grass pasture

https://doi.org/10.5285/e0bcdc39-ab79-413c-bf76-d6ffbc510f15
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Data includes raw shoot biomass and yield, production and gas exchange, nodulation and N-fixation and forage quality data, including relative and consumable food values. The impacts of ozone on the growth and functioning of high-sugar ryegrass pasture mesocosms was assessed in year 2013. Pasture mesocosms, containing perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L) and white clover (Trifolium repens L), were grown in the early spring and exposed to ozone in solardomes from late April 2013 to the end of September 2013. Ozone (30, 35, 40, 45, 52, 67 parts per billion (ppb) treatment means) had a large effect on the pasture mesocosms. The work was carried out as part of a NERC funded PhD. Project number NEC04456.
Publication date: 2017-04-21
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Format

Comma-separated values (CSV)

Spatial information

Study area
Spatial representation type
Tabular (text)
Spatial reference system
WGS 84

Temporal information

Temporal extent
2013-04-01    to    2013-09-30

Provenance & quality

The impacts of ozone on the growth and functioning of high-sugar ryegrass (HSG) pasture mesocosms was assessed in year 2013. Pasture mesocosms, containing perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L) and white clover (Trifolium repens L), were grown in the early spring and exposed to ozone in solardomes from late April 2013 to the end of September 2013. Ozone (30, 35, 40, 45, 52, 67 parts per billion (ppb) treatment means) had a large effect on the pasture mesocosms, including causing ozone-injury and reduced shoot biomass growth, reduced gas exchange and net primary productivity of pasture mesocosms, reduced nodulation and nitrogen fixation in clover, and negative impacts on forage quality. Flux-based dose-response relationships were constructed for biomass, N-fixation and forage quality parameters. In general, a good fit (r squared) may be found with below-ground variables, and new dose-response relationships developed may assist in the development of new critical levels for impacts of ozone on pasture vegetation. Effect of ozone on shoot biomass and injury rate may reduce over time as vegetation acclimates to high ozone levels. Data was first recording in the field in field notebooks, and was then transferred to electronic copies (MS Excel worksheets). Data was then exported as .csv files for ingestion into the Environmental Information Data Centre.

Licensing and constraints

This dataset is made available under the terms of the Open Government Licence

Cite this dataset as:
Hewitt, D. (2017). Ozone effects in high sugar grass pasture. NERC Environmental Information Data Centre. https://doi.org/10.5285/e0bcdc39-ab79-413c-bf76-d6ffbc510f15

Correspondence/contact details

Mills, G.
UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
Environment Centre Wales, Deiniol Road
Bangor
Gwynedd
LL57 2UW
UNITED KINGDOM
 enquiries@ceh.ac.uk

Author

Hewitt, D.
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology

Other contacts

Custodian
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre
 info@eidc.ac.uk
Publisher
NERC Environmental Information Data Centre
 info@eidc.ac.uk

Additional metadata

Topic categories
environment
INSPIRE theme
Environmental Monitoring Facilities
Keywords
Abergwyngregyn , biomass , Environmental risk , ozone , pasture , Pollution , Solardomes , Solar Domes
Last updated
15 April 2025 07:22