S
Steve Cinderby
Researcher at Stockholm Environment Institute
Publications - 73
Citations - 5202
Steve Cinderby is an academic researcher from Stockholm Environment Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Participatory GIS & Geographic information system. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 69 publications receiving 4562 citations. Previous affiliations of Steve Cinderby include University of York.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Global assessment of nitrogen deposition effects on terrestrial plant diversity: a synthesis.
Roland Bobbink,Kevin Hicks,James N. Galloway,Till Spranger,Rob Alkemade,Mike Ashmore,Mercedes M. C. Bustamante,Steve Cinderby,Eric A. Davidson,Frank Dentener,Bridget A. Emmett,Jan Willem Erisman,Mark E. Fenn,Frank S. Gilliam,Annika Nordin,Linda H. Pardo,W. de Vries +16 more
TL;DR: Ecosystems thought of as not N limited, such as tropical and subtropical systems, may be more vulnerable in the regeneration phase, in situations where heterogeneity in N availability is reduced by atmospheric N deposition, on sandy soils, or in montane areas.
Journal ArticleDOI
Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition in World Biodiversity Hotspots: the Need for a Greater Global Perspective in Assessing N Deposition Impacts
Gareth K. Phoenix,W. Kevin Hicks,Steve Cinderby,Johan C.I. Kuylenstierna,William D. Stock,William D. Stock,Frank Dentener,Ken E. Giller,Amy T. Austin,Rod D. B. Lefroy,Ben S. Gimeno,Mike Ashmore,Philip Ineson +12 more
TL;DR: Using output from global chemistry transport models, this article provided the first estimates of recent (mid-1990s) and future (2050) rates and distributions of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition within biodiversity hotspots.
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Inventorying emissions from nature in Europe
David Simpson,Wilfried Winiwarter,Gunnar Börjesson,Steve Cinderby,Antonio Ferreiro,Alex Guenther,C. Nicholas Hewitt,Robert W. Janson,M. Aslam K. Khalil,Susan M. Owen,Tom Pierce,Hans Puxbaum,Martha J. Shearer,Ute Skiba,Rainer Steinbrecher,Leonor Tarrasón,Mats G. Öquist +16 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a new set of guidelines has been developed for assessing the emissions of sulphur, nitrogen oxides, NH3, CH4, and nonmethane volatile organic compounds (NMVOC) from biogenic and other natural sources in Europe.
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A comparison of North American and Asian exposure-response data for ozone effects on crop yields.
Lisa Emberson,Lisa Emberson,Patrick Büker,Mike Ashmore,Mike Ashmore,Gina Mills,Lawrence S. Jackson,Madhoolika Agrawal,M.D. Atikuzzaman,Steve Cinderby,Magnuz Engardt,C. Jamir,Kazuhiko Kobayashi,Nguyen Thi Kim Oanh,Q. F. Quadir,A. Wahid +15 more
TL;DR: This paper found that Asian grown wheat and rice cultivars are more sensitive to ozone than the North American dose-response relationships would suggest, and that the Asian data showed that at ambient ozone concentrations found at the study sites (which vary between ∼35-75 ppb 4-8h growing season mean), yield losses for wheat, rice and legumes range between 5-48, 3-47 and 10-65%, respectively.
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Acidification in developing countries: ecosystem sensitivity and the critical load approach on a global scale.
TL;DR: Approximate maps show an increasing risk of acidification in 2050 in extended regions of southern and eastern Asia, as well as parts of southern Africa, in comparison to 1990.