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Since the 1950s, the pines native to the San Bernardino Mountains
in Southern California have shown symptoms of decline that have
proven to result from exposure to ozone, a major plant-damaging gas
in photochemical oxidant air pollution. Because of their proximity
to major urban areas, the San Bernardino Mountains have served as a
natural laboratory for studying effects of oxidant and acidic air
pollution on a mixed-conifer forest. This volume presents a body of
research conducted over more than thirty years, including an
intensive interdisciplinary five-year study begun in 1991. Chapters
include studies of the relationships of biogeography and climate to
the region's air pollution, the chemical and physiological
mechanisms of ozone injury, as well as the impacts of
nitrogen-containing pollutants and natural stresses on polluted
forests. The synthesis of such long-term studies provides insights
into the combined influences of pollutants on ecosystem function in
forested regions with Mediterranean-type climates.
This volume presents a body of research conducted over more than
thirty years, including an intensive interdisciplinary five-year
study begun in 1991. Chapters include studies of the relationships
of biogeography and climate to the region's air pollution, the
chemical and physiological mechanisms of ozone injury, as well as
the impacts of nitrogen-containing pollutants and natural stresses
on polluted forests.
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