101 research outputs found

    Observation and Prediction of Soil Water Under Different Types of Vegetation

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    Soil water trends were monitored during the 1971 growing season on the Anoka Sand Plain in east-central Minnesota. Soils were sampled under four vegetation densities, ranging from old field through increasing amounts of oak overstory. There was no difference over the sampled period in total soil water content (to 100 cm) on the four sites. Differences were found in water content of individual soil horizons, and especially in the surface horizon (0 to 10 cm). A model of evapotranspiration was used to simulate the observed trends and the prediction and observations were closely correlated (r2 ~ 0 .91)

    Nitrogen mineralization, nitrification and denitrification in upland and wetland ecosystems

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    Nitrogen mineralization, nitrification, denitrification, and microbial biomass were evaluated in four representative ecosystems in east-central Minnesota. The study ecosystems included: old field, swamp forest, savanna, and upland pin oak forest. Due to a high regional water table and permeable soils, the upland and wetland ecosystems were separated by relatively short distances (2 to 5 m). Two randomly selected sites within each ecosystem were sampled for an entire growing season. Soil samples were collected at 5-week intervals to determine rates of N cycling processes and changes in microbial biomass. Mean daily N mineralization rates during five-week in situ soil incubations were significantly different among sampling dates and ecosystems. The highest annual rates were measured in the upland pin oak ecosystem (8.6 g N m −2 yr −1 ), and the lowest rates in the swamp forest (1.5 g N m −2 yr −1 ); nitrification followed an identical pattern. Denitrification was relatively high in the swamp forest during early spring (8040 ÎŒg N 2 O−N m −2 d −1 ) and late autumn (2525 ÎŒg N 2 O−N m −2 d −1 ); nitrification occurred at rates sufficient to sustain these losses. In the well-drained uplands, rates of denitrification were generally lower and equivalent to rates of atmospheric N inputs. Microbial C and N were consistently higher in the swamp forest than in the other ecosystems; both were positively correlated with average daily rates of N mineralization. In the subtle landscape of east-central Minnesota, rates of N cycling can differ by an order of magnitude across relatively short distances.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47791/1/442_2004_Article_BF00320810.pd

    Carbon Sequestration by Perennial Energy Crops: Is the Jury Still Out?

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    Properties of soils and tree wood tissue across a Lake States sulfate deposition gradient /

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    no.13
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