7,414 research outputs found
Linking remote-sensing estimates of land cover and census statistics on land use to produce maps of land use of the conterminous United States
Human use of the land has a large effect on the structure of terrestrial ecosystems and the dynamics of biogeochemical cycles. For this reason, terrestrial ecosystem and biogeochemistry models require moderate resolution (e.g., ≤0.5°) information on land use in order to make realistic predictions. Few such data sets currently exist. To create a land use data set of sufficient resolution, we developed models relating land cover data derived from optical remote sensing and a census database on land use for the conterminous United States. The land cover product used was from the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme DISCover global product, derived from 1 km advanced very high resolution radiometer imagery, with 16 land cover classes. Land use data at state-level resolution came from the U.S. Department of Agriculture\u27s Major Land Uses database, aggregated into four general land use categories: Cropland, Pasture/Range, Forest, and Other. We developed and applied models relating these data sets to generate maps of land use in 1992 for the conterminous United States at 0.5° spatial resolution
The Hawaiian Islands as a Model System for Ecosystem Studies
The Hawaiian Islands encompass an extraordinary range of
variation in climate and soil age in a small area; the younger volcanoes are also
extraordinary for their lack of variation in relief or topography, parent material,
and biota (before widespread invasions by alien species). Consequently,
in Hawai'i the independent and interactive effects of temperature, precipitation,
and soil age on ecosystem structure and function can be evaluated with a power
that is beyond the reach of studies elsewhere. Not only are extreme conditions
well represented in Hawai'i, but there are also complete gradients between the
extremes, allowing the determination of the relationships as well as the differences
among sites. My colleagues and I have established two sets of sites that
make use of these gradients: the Mauna Loa Environmental Matrix, a set of
lava flows ('a'a versus pahoehoe, old versus young) that cover a broad elevational
range on the wet east versus dry northwest flank of Mauna Loa; and a
chronosequence of sites that reaches from Kilauea (~300 yr old) to Kaua'i
(~4,100,000yr old) at 1200 m elevation, 2500 mm annual precipitation. These
sites are being used to determine climatic and developmental controls of ecosystem
function. I report some of the early results here
Brief increases in corticosterone affect morphology, stress responses, and telomere length, but not post-fledging movements, in a wild songbird
Organisms are frequently exposed to challenges during development, such as
poor weather and food shortage. Such challenges can initiate the hormonal
stress response, which involves secretion of glucocorticoids. Although the
hormonal stress response helps organisms deal with challenges, long-term
exposure to high levels of glucocorticoids can have morphological, behavioral,
and physiological consequences, especially during development. Glucocorticoids
are also associated with reduced survival and telomere shortening. To
investigate whether brief, acute exposures to glucocorticoids can also produce
these phenotypic effects in free-living birds, we exposed wild tree swallow
(Tachycineta bicolor) nestlings to a brief exogenous dose of cort once per day
for five days and then measured their morphology, baseline and stress-induced
corticosterone levels, and telomere length. We also deployed radio tags on a
subset of nestlings, which allowed us to determine the age at which tagged
nestlings left the nest (fledged) and their pattern of presence and absence at
the natal site during the post-breeding period. Corticosterone-treated
nestlings had lower mass, higher baseline and stress-induced corticosterone,
and reduced telomeres; other metrics of morphology were affected weakly or not
at all. Our treatment resulted in no significant effect on survival to
fledging, fledge age, or age at first departure from the natal site, and we
found no negative effect of corticosterone on inter-annual return rate. These
results show that brief acute corticosterone exposure during development can
have measurable effects on phenotype in free-living tree swallows.
Corticosterone may therefore mediate correlations between rearing environment
and phenotype in developing organisms, even in the absence of prolonged
stressors.Comment: 35 pages, 4 figures, 1 appendi
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Potential ecosystem-level effects of genetic variation among populations of Metrosideros polymorpha from a soil fertility gradient in Hawaii.
This study assessed intrinsic differences in tissue quality and growth rate among populations of Metrosideros polymorpha native to sites with a range of soil fertilities. We collected seedlings from three Hawaiian mesic forests that were either phosphorus-limited, nitrogen-limited, or relatively fertile. These individuals were grown in a common garden under a factorial high/low, N/P fertilization regime for 1.5 years and then harvested to determine genetic divergence; aboveground growth rate; and lignin, N, and P concentrations in leaves and roots. Allozyme analyses indicated that the three groups had genetically diverged to some degree (genetic distance = 0.036-0.053 among populations). Relative growth rate did not differ significantly among the populations. Senescent leaves from the fertile-site population had the highest N concentrations (due to low N resorption) and had lower lignin concentrations than plants from the N-limited site. Across treatments, P concentrations in senescent leaves were highest in plants from the fertile and P-limited site. Root tissue quality did not generally differ significantly among populations. Since decomposition rate of senescent leaves in this system is related positively to N concentration and negatively to lignin concentration, senescent leaves from the fertile-site population may have a genetic tendency toward faster decay than the others. The intrinsic qualities of the three populations may provide positive feedbacks on nutrient cycling at each site-nutrient availability may be raised to some degree at the fertile site, and reduced at the N- or P-limited sites. Our results suggest that even a small degree of genetic differentiation among groups can influence traits related to nutrient cycling
Nodule Biomass of the Nitrogen-fixing Alien Myrica faya Ait. in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
Myricafaya forms a nitrogen-fixing symbiosis in which fixation
takes place in specialized root nodules. The biomass of these nodules was greater
in open-grown than shaded individuals of Myricafaya, and was greater in large
than small individuals. All Myricafaya examined, including seedlings and those
growing epiphytically, had active nodules. Nitrogen fixation by invading Myrica
faya could alter patterns of primary succession in Hawaii Volcanoes National
Park
Effects of Extreme Drought on Vegetation of a Lava Flow on Mauna Loa, Hawai'i
Effects of an extreme drought were examined along an elevational
gradient on Mauna Loa Volcano, Hawai'i. The composition, vigor, and
survivorship of plants were examined on a 2400-yr-old pahoehoe lava flow at
three elevations: 1755,2000, and 2195 m above sea level. Three plant species,
Coprosma ernodeoides A. Gray, Styphelia tameiameiae (Cham. & ScWechtend.)
F. v. Muell., and Vaccinium reticulatum Sm., were encountered most frequently
at the three sites. Greatest mortality occurred at the site at 2000 m elevation,
where the drought caused a shift from a slight excess of precipitation over
evaporation to a large excess of evaporation. Occasional severe droughts may
play an important part in shaping primary succession in this region
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