287 research outputs found
Soil respiration in a northeastern US temperate forest: a 22âyear synthesis
To better understand how forest management, phenology, vegetation type, and actual and simulated climatic change affect seasonal and interâannual variations in soil respiration (Rs), we analyzed more than 100,000 individual measurements of soil respiration from 23 studies conducted over 22 years at the Harvard Forest in Petersham, Massachusetts, USA. We also used 24 siteâyears of eddyâcovariance measurements from two Harvard Forest sites to examine the relationship between soil and ecosystem respiration (Re).
Rs was highly variable at all spatial (respiration collar to forest stand) and temporal (minutes to years) scales of measurement. The response of Rs to experimental manipulations mimicking aspects of global change or aimed at partitioning Rs into component fluxes ranged from â70% to +52%. The response appears to arise from variations in substrate availability induced by changes in the size of soil C pools and of belowground C fluxes or in environmental conditions. In some cases (e.g., logging, warming), the effect of experimental manipulations on Rs was transient, but in other cases the time series were not long enough to rule out longâterm changes in respiration rates. Interâannual variations in weather and phenology induced variation among annual Rs estimates of a magnitude similar to that of other drivers of global change (i.e., invasive insects, forest management practices, N deposition). At both eddyâcovariance sites, aboveground respiration dominated Re early in the growing season, whereas belowground respiration dominated later. Unusual aboveground respiration patternsâhigh apparent rates of respiration during winter and very low rates in midâtoâlate summerâat the Environmental Measurement Site suggest either bias in Rs and Re estimates caused by differences in the spatial scale of processes influencing fluxes, or that additional research on the hardâtoâmeasure fluxes (e.g., wintertime Rs, unaccounted losses of CO2 from eddy covariance sites), daytime and nighttime canopy respiration and its impacts on estimates of Re, and independent measurements of flux partitioning (e.g., aboveground plant respiration, isotopic partitioning) may yield insight into the unusually high and low fluxes. Overall, however, this dataârich analysis identifies important seasonal and experimental variations in Rs and Re and in the partitioning of Re aboveâ vs. belowground
Soil respiration in a northeastern US temperate forest: a 22âyear synthesis
To better understand how forest management, phenology, vegetation type, and actual and simulated climatic change affect seasonal and interâannual variations in soil respiration (Rs), we analyzed more than 100,000 individual measurements of soil respiration from 23 studies conducted over 22 years at the Harvard Forest in Petersham, Massachusetts, USA. We also used 24 siteâyears of eddyâcovariance measurements from two Harvard Forest sites to examine the relationship between soil and ecosystem respiration (Re).
Rs was highly variable at all spatial (respiration collar to forest stand) and temporal (minutes to years) scales of measurement. The response of Rs to experimental manipulations mimicking aspects of global change or aimed at partitioning Rs into component fluxes ranged from â70% to +52%. The response appears to arise from variations in substrate availability induced by changes in the size of soil C pools and of belowground C fluxes or in environmental conditions. In some cases (e.g., logging, warming), the effect of experimental manipulations on Rs was transient, but in other cases the time series were not long enough to rule out longâterm changes in respiration rates. Interâannual variations in weather and phenology induced variation among annual Rs estimates of a magnitude similar to that of other drivers of global change (i.e., invasive insects, forest management practices, N deposition). At both eddyâcovariance sites, aboveground respiration dominated Re early in the growing season, whereas belowground respiration dominated later. Unusual aboveground respiration patternsâhigh apparent rates of respiration during winter and very low rates in midâtoâlate summerâat the Environmental Measurement Site suggest either bias in Rs and Re estimates caused by differences in the spatial scale of processes influencing fluxes, or that additional research on the hardâtoâmeasure fluxes (e.g., wintertime Rs, unaccounted losses of CO2 from eddy covariance sites), daytime and nighttime canopy respiration and its impacts on estimates of Re, and independent measurements of flux partitioning (e.g., aboveground plant respiration, isotopic partitioning) may yield insight into the unusually high and low fluxes. Overall, however, this dataârich analysis identifies important seasonal and experimental variations in Rs and Re and in the partitioning of Re aboveâ vs. belowground
Carbon Control on Terrestrial Ecosystem Function Across Contrasting Site Productivities: The Carbon Connection Revisited
Understanding how altered soil organic carbon (SOC) availability affects microbial communities and their function is imperative in predicting impacts of global change on soil carbon (C) storage and ecosystem function. However, the response of soil microbial communities and their function to depleted C availability in situ is unclear. We evaluated the role of soil C inputs in controlling microbial biomass, community composition, physiology, and function by (1) experimentally excluding plant C inputs in situ for 9 yr in four temperate forest ecosystems along a productivity gradient in Oregon, USA; and (2) integrating these findings with published data from similar Câexclusion studies into a global metaâanalysis. Excluding plant C inputs for 9 yr resulted in a 13% decrease in SOC across the four Oregon sites and an overall shift in the microbial community composition, with a 45% decrease in the fungal : bacterial ratio and a 13% increase in Gramâpositive : Gramânegative bacterial ratio. Although gross N mineralization decreased under C exclusion, decreases in gross N immobilization were greater, resulting in increased net N mineralization rates in all but the lowestâproductivity site. Microbial biomass showed a variable response to C exclusion that was method dependent; however, we detected a 29% decrease in Câuse efficiency across the sites, with greater declines occurring in lessâproductive sites. Although extracellular enzyme activity increased with C exclusion, C exclusion resulted in a 31% decrease in microbial respiration across all sites. Our metaâanalyses of published data with similar Câexclusion treatments were largely consistent with our experimental results, showing decreased SOC, fungal : bacterial ratios, and microbial respiration, and increased Gramâpositive : Gramânegative bacterial ratio following exclusion of C inputs to soil. Effect sizes of SOC and respiration correlated negatively with the duration of C exclusion; however, there were immediate effects of C exclusion on microbial community composition and biomass that were unaltered by duration of treatment. Our fieldâbased experimental results and analyses demonstrate unequivocally the dominant control of C availability on soil microbial biomass, community composition, and function, and provide additional insight into the mechanisms for these effects in forest ecosystems
Nitrogen dynamics in a small arctic watershed: retention and downhill movement of 15N
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Ecological Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ecological Monographs 80 (2010): 331-351, doi:10.1890/08-0773.1.We examined short- and long-term nitrogen (N) dynamics and availability along an arctic
hillslope in Alaska, USA, using stable isotope of nitrogen (15N), as a tracer. Tracer levels of
15NH4+ were sprayed once onto the tundra at six sites in four tundra types; heath (crest), tussock
with high and low water flux (mid- and foot-slope), and wet sedge (riparian). 15N in vegetation
and soil was monitored to estimate retention and loss over a 3-yr period.
Nearly all 15NH4+ was immediately retained in the surface moss-detritus-plant layer and >
57 % of the 15N added remained in this layer at the end of the second year. Organic soil was the
second largest 15N sink. By the end of the third growing season, the moss-detritus-plant layer
and organic soil combined retained â„ 87 % of the 15N added except at the mid-slope site with
high water flux, where recovery declined to 68 %. At all sites, non-extractable and non-labile-N
pools were the principal sinks for added 15N in the organic soil.
Hydrology played an important role in downslope movement of dissolved 15N. Crest and
mid-slope with high water flux sites were most susceptible to 15N losses via leaching perhaps
because of deep permeable mineral soil (crest) and high water flow (mid-slope with high water
flux). Late spring melt-season also resulted in downslope dissolved-15N losses, perhaps because
of an asynchrony between N release into melt water and soil immobilization capacity. We
conclude that separation of the rooting zone from the strong sink for incoming N in the moss
detritus-plant layer, rapid incorporation of new N into relatively recalcitrant soil-N pools within
the rooting zone, and leaching loss from the upper hillslope would all contribute to the strong N
limitation of this ecosystem. An extended snow-free season and deeper depth of thaw under
warmer climate may significantly alter current N dynamics in this arctic ecosystem.Funding was
provided by NSF grant #0444592. Additional support was provided by Toolik Field Station
Long Term Ecological Research program, funded by National Science Foundation, Office of Polar Programs
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Soil Respiration in a Northeastern US Temperate Forest: A 22-Year Synthesis
To better understand how forest management, phenology, vegetation type, and actual and simulated climatic change affect seasonal and inter-annual variations in soil respiration (R), we analyzed more than 100,000 individual measurements of soil respiration from 23 studies conducted over 22 years at the Harvard Forest in Petersham, Massachusetts, USA. We also used 24 site-years of eddy-covariance measurements from two Harvard Forest sites to examine the relationship between soil and ecosystem respiration (R).
R was highly variable at all spatial (respiration collar to forest stand) and temporal (minutes to years) scales of measurement. The response of R to experimental manipulations mimicking aspects of global change or aimed at partitioning R into component fluxes ranged from â70% to +52%. The response appears to arise from variations in substrate availability induced by changes in the size of soil C pools and of belowground C fluxes or in environmental conditions. In some cases (e.g., logging, warming), the effect of experimental manipulations on R was transient, but in other cases the time series were not long enough to rule out long-term changes in respiration rates. Inter-annual variations in weather and phenology induced variation among annual R estimates of a magnitude similar to that of other drivers of global change (i.e., invasive insects, forest management practices, N deposition). At both eddy-covariance sites, aboveground respiration dominated R early in the growing season, whereas belowground respiration dominated later. Unusual aboveground respiration patternsâhigh apparent rates of respiration during winter and very low rates in mid-to-late summerâat the Environmental Measurement Site suggest either bias in R and R estimates caused by differences in the spatial scale of processes influencing fluxes, or that additional research on the hard-to-measure fluxes (e.g., wintertime R, unaccounted losses of CO from eddy covariance sites), daytime and nighttime canopy respiration and its impacts on estimates of R, and independent measurements of flux partitioning (e.g., aboveground plant respiration, isotopic partitioning) may yield insight into the unusually high and low fluxes. Overall, however, this data-rich analysis identifies important seasonal and experimental variations in R and R and in the partitioning of R above- vs. belowground.Organismic and Evolutionary Biolog
Are intuitions about moral relevance susceptible to framing effects?
Various studies have reported that moral intuitions about the permissibility of acts are subject to framing effects. This paper reports the results of a series of experiments which further examine the susceptibility of moral intuitions to framing effects. The main aim was to test recent speculation that intuitions about the moral relevance of certain properties of cases might be relatively resistent to framing effects. If correct, this would provide a certain type of moral intuitionist with the resources to resist challenges to the reliability of moral intuitions based on such framing effects. And, fortunately for such intuitionists, although the results canât be used to mount a strident defence of intuitionism, the results do serve to shift the burden of proof onto those who would claim that intuitions about moral relevance are problematically sensitive to framing effects
Carbon cycling and budget in a forested basin of southwestern Hokkaido, northern Japan
Quantification of annual carbon sequestration is very important in order to assess the function of forest ecosystems in combatting global climate change and the ecosystem responses to those changes. Annual cycling and budget of carbon in a forested basin was investigated to quantify the carbon sequestration of a cool-temperate deciduous forest ecosystem in the Horonai stream basin, Tomakomai Experimental Forest, northern Japan. Net ecosystem exchange, soil respiration, biomass increment, litterfall, soil-solution chemistry, and stream export were observed in the basin from 1999â2001 as a part of IGBP-TEMA project. We found that 258 g C mâ2 yearâ1 was sequestered annually as net ecosystem exchange (NEE) in the forested basin. Discharge of carbon to the stream was 4 g C mâ2 yearâ1 (about 2% of NEE) and consisted mainly of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). About 43% of net ecosystem productivity (NEP) was retained in the vegetation, while about 57% of NEP was sequestered in soil, suggesting that the movement of sequestered carbon from aboveground to belowground vegetation was an important process for net carbon accumulation in soil. The derived organic carbon from aboveground vegetation that moved to the soil mainly accumulated in the solid phase of the soil, with the result that the export of dissolved organic carbon to the stream was smaller than that of dissolved inorganic carbon. Our results indicated that the aboveground and belowground interaction of carbon fluxes was an important process for determining the rate and retention time of the carbon sequestration in a cool-temperate deciduous forest ecosystem in the southwestern part of Hokkaido, northern Japan
Reconstructing terrestrial nutrient cycling using stable nitrogen isotopes in wood
Although recent anthropogenic effects on the global nitrogen (N) cycle have been significant, the consequences of increased anthropogenic N on terrestrial ecosystems are unclear. Studies of the impact of increased reactive N on forest ecosystemsâimpacts on hydrologic and gaseous loss pathways, retention capacity, and even net primary productivityâ have been particularly limited by a lack of long-term baseline biogeochemical data. Stable nitrogen isotope analysis (ratio of Âčâ”N to ÂčâŽN, termed ÎŽÂčâ”N) of wood chronologies offers the potential to address changes in ecosystem N cycling on millennial timescales and across broad geographic regions. Currently, nearly 50 studies have been published utilizing wood ÎŽÂčâ”N records; however, there are significant differences in study design and data interpretation. Here, we identify four categories of wood ÎŽÂčâ”N studies, summarize the common themes and primary findings of each category, identify gaps in the spatial and temporal scope of current wood ÎŽÂčâ”N chronologies, and synthesize methodological frameworks for future research by presenting eight suggestions for common methodological approaches and enhanced integration across studies. Wood ÎŽÂčâ”N records have the potential to provide valuable information for interpreting modern biogeochemical cycling. This review serves to advance the utility of this technique for long-term biogeochemical reconstructions
Climate and species affect fine root production with long-term fertilization in acidic tussock tundra near Toolik Lake, Alaska
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2007. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oecologia 153 (2007): 643-652, doi:10.1007/s00442-007-0753-8.Long-term fertilization of acidic tussock tundra has led to changes in plant species
composition, increases in aboveground production and biomass and substantial losses of soil
organic carbon (SOC). Root litter is an important input to SOC pools, though little is known
about fine root demography in tussock tundra. In this study, we examined the response of fine
root production and live standing fine root biomass to short- and long-term fertilization, as
changes in fine root demography may contribute to observed declines in SOC. Live standing
fine root biomass increased with long-term fertilization, while fine root production declined,
reflecting replacement of the annual fine root system of Eriophorum vaginatum, with the long-lived
fine roots of Betula nana. Fine root production increased in fertilized plots during an
unusually warm growing season, but remained unchanged in control plots, consistent with
observations that B. nana shows a positive response to climate warming. Calculations based on
a few simple assumptions suggest changes in fine root demography with long-term fertilization
and species replacement could account for between 20 and 39% of observed declines in SOC
stocks.This project was supported by National Science Foundation research grants 9810222,
9911681, 0221606 and 0528748
Pulseâlabeling studies of carbon cycling in Arctic tundra ecosystems: The contribution of photosynthates to methane emission
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94952/1/gbc790.pd
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