89 research outputs found

    Ökobilanz der Umweltwirkung landwirtschaftlicher Betriebe im AllgĂ€u

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    Die Methode der Ökobilanz wurde auf 18 GrĂŒnlandbetrieben in drei unterschiedlichen NutzungsintensitĂ€tsgruppen (intensiv, extensiviert, ökologisch gemĂ€ĂŸ dem Bayerischen Kulturlandschaftsprogramm) im AllgĂ€u angewendet. FĂŒr die einzelnen Betriebe werden die Umweltwirkungen grafisch abgeschĂ€tzt und Schwachstellen aufgezeigt. Die großen Spannweiten einzelner Parameter weisen neben methodischen und untersuchungsbedingten StörgrĂ¶ĂŸen auf das jeweilige einzelbetriebliche ökologische Optimierungspotential hin, welches im Detail identifiziert wird. Damit kann die Ökobilanz fĂŒr den Landwirt, die Beratung und die Gestaltung von Agrarumweltprogrammen eine wichtige Entscheidungsgrundlage fĂŒr die Gestaltung einer den Naturhaushalt schonenden und pflegenden Bewirtschaftung darstellen. aus: HAAS, G., F. WETTERICH 1999: Ökobilanz der Umweltwirkung landwirtschaftlicher Betriebe im AllgĂ€u. Z. f. angewandte Umweltforschung, Jg. 12, H. 3, 368-37

    Nutrient cycle on organic farms: stall balance of a suckler herd and beef bulls

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    In organic agriculture, the internal farm nutrient cycle must be quantified to ensure high system productivity along with environmentally sound production processes. In contrast to common farmgate and field balances, budgeting at the stable level is seldom undertaken. When budgeting mixed farming systems, a substantial lack of nutrients can be detected in the nutrient flow chain "forage and straw input - stable - manure output". Therefore, stable balances focus on a central component of whole farm nutrient budgets for developing efficient nutrient management strategies. At the experimental farm for organic agriculture Wiesengut in Hennef, Germany, all solid mass flows for a suckler herd and a herd of beef bulls were measured. Relative balance values obtained for dry matter and C (45 to 56%), N (16 to 36%), P (-7 to 22.5%), K (0 to 13%) and ash (-4 to 7%) showed a wide range. Balances are very sensitive to variations in mass flow and nutrient content for components with high nutrient contents and/or a large contribution to total mass flow (e.g. manure, silage). In developing strategies to minimize N losses, by reducing N surplus in the ration, it has to be considered, that in contrast to dairy farms, a suckler herd for beef production integrated in an organic farm has to adapt to crop production demands. from: HAAS, G., B. CASPARI, U. KÖPKE 2002: Nutrient cycle on organic farms: stall balance of a suckler herd and beef bulls. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems 64, 225-230

    Ökobilanz der Landwirtschaft im AllgĂ€u: Umweltwirkungskategorien Landschaftsbild, Biotop- und Artenschutz

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    In einer Ökobilanz von 18 AllgĂ€uer GrĂŒnlandbetrieben in den IntensitĂ€tsstufen "intensiv", "extensiviert" und "ökologisch" bildeten die Umweltwirkungsbereiche Landschaftsbild sowie Biotop- und Artenvielfalt wesentliche Kernelemente. Generell ist die Situation in diesen beiden Kategorien im AllgĂ€u unbefriedigend. Die Betriebe des Ökologischen Landbaus wirken im Mittel positiver auf die Biotop- und Artenvielfalt sowie das Landschaftsbild. In Ökobilanzen der Landwirtschaft sind Biotop- und Artenvielfalt sowie Landschaftsbild aufgrund des hohen landwirtschaftlichen Einflusses als obligate Kategorien zu integrieren. Dabei mĂŒssen Abstriche bei Untersuchungstiefe und Detailtreue zugunsten von pragmatischen und aufwandeffizienten BewertungsansĂ€tzen vorgenommen werden. aus: WETTERICH, F, G. HAAS 2000: Ökobilanz der Landwirtschaft im AllgĂ€u: Umweltwirkungskategorien Landschaftsbild, Biotop- und Artenschutz. Natur und Landschaft 75/12, 474-480

    Comparing intensive, extensified and organic grassland farming in southern Germany by process life cycle assessment

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    To reduce the environmental burden of agriculture, suitable methods to comprehend and assess the impact on natural resources are needed. One of the methods considered is the life cycle assessment (LCA) method, which was used to assess the environmental impacts of 18 grassland farms in three different farming intensities - intensive, extensified, and organic - in the AllgĂ€u region in southern Germany. Extensified and organic compared with intensive farms could reduce negative effects in the abiotic impact categories of energy use, global warming potential and ground water mainly by renouncing mineral nitrogen fertilizer. Energy consumption of intensive farms was 19.1 GJ/ha and 2.7 GJ/t milk, of extensified and organic farms 8.7 and 5.9 GJ/ha along with 1.3 and 1.2 GJ/t milk, respectively. Global warming potential was 9.4, 7.0 and 6.3 t CO2-equivalents/ha and 1.3, 1.0 and 1.3 t CO2-equivalents/t milk for the intensive, extensified and organic farms, respectively. Acidification calculated in SO2-equivalents was high, but the extensified (119 kg SO2/ha) and the organic farms (107 kg SO2/ha) emit a lower amount compared with the intensive farms (136 kg SO2/ha). Eutrophication potential computed in PO4-equivalents was higher for intensive (54.2 kg PO4/ha) compared with extensified (31.2 kg PO4/ha) and organic farms (13.5 kg PO4/ha). Farmgate balances for N (80.1, 31.4 and 31.1 kg/ha) and P (5.3, 4.5 and -2.3 kg/ha) for intensive, extensified and organic farms, respectively, indicate the different impacts on ground and surface water quality. Analysing the impact categories biodiversity, landscape image and animal husbandry, organic farms had clear advantages in the indicators number of grassland species, grazing cattle, layout of farmstead and herd management, but indices in these categories showed a wide range and are partly independent of the farming system. from: HAAS, G., F. WETTERICH, U. KÖPKE 2001: Comparing intensive, extensified and organic grassland farming in southern Germany by process life cycle assessment. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 83/1-2, 43-53

    Permafrost, landscape and ecosystem responses to late Quaternary warm stages in Northeast Siberia

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    Permafrost, landscape and ecosystem responses to late Quaternary warm stages in Northeast Siberia S. Wetterich1, F. Kienast2, L. Schirrmeister1, M. Fritz1, A. Andreev3, P. Tarasov4 1Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Department of Periglacial Research, Potsdam, Germany; 2Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum, Research Station for Quaternary Palaeontology, Weimar, Germany; 3Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Cologne, Germany; 4Institute of Geological Sciences, Free University Berlin, Germany Perennially frozen ground is widely distributed in Arctic lowlands and beyond. Permafrost responds sensitive to changes in climate conditions. Climate-driven dynamics of landscape, sedimentation and ecology in periglacial regions are frequently recorded in permafrost deposits. The study of late Quaternary permafrost can therefore reveal past glacial-interglacial and stadialinterstadial environmental dynamics. One of the most striking processes under warming climate conditions is the extensive thawing of permafrost (thermokarst) and subsequent surface subsidence. Thermokarst basins promote the development of lakes, whose sedimentological and paleontological records give insights into past interglacial and interstadial (warm). In this paper we present results of qualitative and quantitative reconstructions of climate and environmental conditions for the last Interglacial (MIS 5e, Kazantsevo; ca. 130 to 115 ka ago), the lateglacial AllerĂžd Interstadial (ca. 13 to 11 uncal. ka BP), and the early Holocene (ca. 10.5 to 8 uncal. ka BP). The study was performed in course of the IPY project #15 ‘Past Permafrost’ with permafrost deposits exposed at the coasts of the Dmitry Laptev Strait (East Siberian Sea, East Siberia). The reconstruction based on fossil-rich findings of plants (pollen, macro-remains) and invertebrates (beetles, chironomids, ostracods gastropods). Interglacial vegetation dynamics are reflected in the pollen records by changes from early interglacial grass-sedge-tundra to shrub-tundra during the interglacial thermal optimum followed by grass-sedge-tundra vegetation at the end of the Kazantsevo warm period. Terrestrial beetle and plant remains prove the former existence of open forest tundra with Dahurian larch, grey alder and boreal shrubs interspersed with patches of steppes and meadows during the interglacial thermal optimum. Mean temperature reconstructions of the warmest month (MTWA, TJuly) for the interglacial thermal optimum are based on quantitative chironomid transfer functions revealed a TJuly of 12.9 ± 0.9 °C. The TJuly reconstructed by plant macrofossils amounts to 13.2 ± 0.5 °C, and the pollen-based TJuly reaches 14.3 ± 3.3 °C. Low net precipitation is reflected by steppe plants and beetles. The temperature reconstruction based on three independent approaches. Nethertheless, all methods consistently indicate an interglacial TJuly about 10 °C higher than today, which is interpreted as a result of a combination of increased insolation and higher climatic continentality during the last Interglacial. Grass-sedge dominated tundra vegetation occurred during the lateglacial to Holocene transition which was replaced by shrub tundra during the early Holocene. The presence of Salix and Betula pollen reflects temperatures about 4 °C higher than present between 12 to 11 uncal. ka BP, during the AllerĂžd Interstadial, but shrubs disappeared in the following Younger Dryas stadial, reflecting a climate deterioration. Alnus fruticosa, Betula nana, Poaceae and Cyperaceae dominate early Holocene pollen spectra. Pollen-based reconstructions point to TJuly 4 °C warmer than present. Shrubs gradually disappeared from coastal areas after 7.6 uncal. ka BP when vegetation cover became similar to modern wet tundra. Thermokarst acted as response to warming conditions on landscape scale in permafrost regions. Concurrent changes in relief, hydrology and ecosystems are obvious and detectable by analyses of the paleontological record preserved in thermokarst deposits

    Late Quaternary records from the Chatanika River valley near Fairbanks (Alaska).

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    Perennially-frozen deposits are considered as excellent paleoenvironmental archives similar to lacustrine, deep marine, and glacier records because of the long-term and good preservation of fossil records under stable permafrost conditions. A permafrost tunnel in the Vault Creek Valley (Chatanika River Valley, near Fairbanks) exposes a sequence of frozen deposits and ground ice that provides a comprehensive set of proxies to reconstruct the late Quaternary environmental history of Interior Alaska. The multi-proxy approach includes different dating techniques (radiocarbon-accelerator mass spectrometry [AMS 14C], optically stimulated luminescence [OSL], thorium/uranium radioisotope disequilibria [230Th/U]), as well as methods of sedimentology, paleoecology, hydrochemistry, and stable isotope geochemistry of ground ice. The studied sequence consists of 36-m-thick late Quaternary deposits above schistose bedrock. Main portions of the sequence accumulated during the early and middle Wisconsin periods. The lowermost unit A consists of about 9-m-thick ice-bonded fluvial gravels with sand and peat lenses. A late Sangamon (MIS 5a) age of unit A is assumed. Spruce forest with birch, larch, and some shrubby alder dominated the vegetation. High presence of Sphagnum spores and Cyperaceae pollen points to mires in the Vault Creek Valley. The overlying unit B consists of 10-m-thick alternating fluvial gravels, loess-like silt, and sand layers, penetrated by small ice wedges. OSL dates support a stadial early Wisconsin (MIS 4) age of unit B. Pollen and plant macrofossil data point to spruce forests with some birch interspersed with wetlands around the site. The following unit C is composed of 15-m-thick ice-rich loess-like and organic-rich silt with fossil bones and large ice wedges. Unit C formed during the interstadial mid-Wisconsin (MIS 3) and stadial late Wisconsin (MIS 2) as indicated by radiocarbon ages. Post-depositional slope processes significantly deformed both, ground ice and sediments of unit C. Pollen data show that spruce forests and wetlands dominated the area. The macrofossil remains of Picea, Larix, and Alnus incana ssp. tenuifolia also prove the existence of boreal coniferous forests during the mid-Wisconsin interstadial, which were replaced by treeless tundra-steppe vegetation during the late Wisconsin stadial. Unit C is discordantly overlain by the 2-m-thick late Holocene deposits of unit D. The pollen record of unit D indicates boreal forest vegetation similar to the modern one. The permafrost record from the Vault Creek tunnel reflects more than 90 ka of periglacial landscape dynamics triggered by fluvial and eolian accumulation, and formation of ice-wedge polygons and post-depositional deformation by slope processes. The record represents a typical Wisconsin valley-bottom facies in Central Alaska

    The genesis of Yedoma Ice Complex permafrost – grain-size endmember modeling analysis from Siberia and Alaska

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    The late Pleistocene Yedoma Ice Complex is an ice-rich and organic-bearing type of permafrost deposit widely distributed across Beringia and is assumed to be especially prone to deep degradation with warming temperature, which is a potential tipping point of the climate system. To better understand Yedoma formation, its local characteristics, and its regional sedimentological composition, we compiled the grain-size distributions (GSDs) of 771 samples from 23 Yedoma locations across the Arctic; samples from sites located close together were pooled to form 17 study sites. In addition, we studied 160 samples from three non-Yedoma ice-wedge polygon and floodplain sites for the comparison of Yedoma samples with Holocene depositional environments. The multimodal GSDs indicate that a variety of sediment production, transport, and depositional processes were involved in Yedoma formation. To disentangle these processes, a robust endmember modeling analysis (rEMMA) was performed. Nine robust grain-size endmembers (rEMs) characterize Yedoma deposits across Beringia. The study sites of Yedoma deposits were finally classified using cluster analysis. The resulting four clusters consisted of two to five sites that are distributed randomly across northeastern Siberia and Alaska, suggesting that the differences are associated with rather local conditions. In contrast to prior studies suggesting a largely aeolian contribution to Yedoma sedimentation, the wide range of rEMs indicates that aeolian sedimentation processes cannot explain the entire variability found in GSDs of Yedoma deposits. Instead, Yedoma sedimentation is controlled by local conditions such as source rocks and weathering processes, nearby paleotopography, and diverse sediment transport processes. Our findings support the hypothesis of a polygenetic Yedoma origin involving alluvial, fluvial, and niveo-aeolian transport; accumulation in ponding waters; and in situ frost weathering as well as postdepositional processes of solifluction, cryoturbation, and pedogenesis. The characteristic rEM composition of the Yedoma clusters will help to improve how grain-size-dependent parameters in permafrost models and soil carbon budgets are considered. Our results show the characteristic properties of ice-rich Yedoma deposits in the terrestrial Arctic. Characterizing and quantifying site-specific past depositional processes is crucial for elucidating and understanding the trajectories of this unique kind of ice-rich permafrost in a warmer future

    Rapid Fluvio-Thermal Erosion of a Yedoma Permafrost Cliff in the Lena River Delta

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    The degradation of ice-rich permafrost deposits has the potential to release large amounts of previously freeze-locked carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) with local implications, such as affecting riverine and near-shore ecosystems, but also global impacts such as the release of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Here, we study the rapid erosion of the up to 27.7 m high and 1,660 m long Sobo-Sise yedoma cliff in the Lena River Delta using a remote sensing-based time-series analysis covering 53 years and calculate the mean annual sediment as well as C and N release into the Lena River. We find that the Sobo-Sise yedoma cliff, which exposes ice-rich late Pleistocene to Holocene deposits, had a mean long-term (1965–2018) erosion rate of 9.1 m yr–1 with locally and temporally varying rates of up to 22.3 m yr–1. These rates are among the highest measured erosion rates for permafrost coastal and river shoreline stretches. The fluvio-thermal erosion led to the release of substantial amounts of C (soil organic carbon and dissolved organic carbon) and N to the river system. On average, currently at least 5.2 × 106 kg organic C and 0.4 × 106 kg N were eroded annually (2015–2018) into the Lena River. The observed sediment and organic matter erosion was persistent over the observation period also due to the specific configuration of river flow direction and cliff shore orientation. Our observations highlight the importance to further study rapid fluvio-thermal erosion processes in the permafrost region, also because our study shows increasing erosion rates at Sobo-Sise Cliff in the most recent investigated time periods. The organic C and N transport from land to river and eventually to the Arctic Ocean from this and similar settings may have severe implications on the biogeochemistry and ecology of the near-shore zone of the Laptev Sea as well as for turnover and rapid release of old C and N to the atmosphere

    Holocene thermokarst and pingo development in the Kolyma Lowland (NE Siberia)

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    Ground ice and sedimentary records of a pingo exposure reveal insights into Holocene permafrost, landscape and climate dynamics. Early to mid‐Holocene thermokarst lake deposits contain rich floral and faunal paleoassemblages, which indicate lake shrinkage and decreasing summer temperatures (chironomid‐based TJuly) from 10.5 to 3.5 cal kyr BP with the warmest period between 10.5 and 8 cal kyr BP. Talik refreezing and pingo growth started about 3.5 cal kyr BP after disappearance of the lake. The isotopic composition of the pingo ice (ÎŽ18O − 17.1 ± 0.6‰, ÎŽD −144.5 ± 3.4‰, slope 5.85, deuterium excess −7.7± 1.5‰) point to the initial stage of closed‐system freezing captured in the record. A differing isotopic composition within the massive ice body was found (ÎŽ18O − 21.3 ± 1.4‰, ÎŽD −165 ± 11.5‰, slope 8.13, deuterium excess 4.9± 3.2‰), probably related to the infill of dilation cracks by surface water with quasi‐meteoric signature. Currently inactive syngenetic ice wedges formed in the thermokarst basin after lake drainage. The pingo preserves traces of permafrost response to climate variations in terms of ground‐ice degradation (thermokarst) during the early and mid‐Holocene, and aggradation (wedge‐ice and pingo‐ice growth) during the late Holocene

    Volume elements of spacetime and a quartet of scalar fields

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    Starting with a `bare' 4-dimensional differential manifold as a model of spacetime, we discuss the options one has for defining a volume element which can be used for physical theories. We show that one has to prescribe a scalar density \sigma. Whereas conventionally \sqrt{|\det g_{ij}|} is used for that purpose, with g_{ij} as the components of the metric, we point out other possibilities, namely \sigma as a `dilaton' field or as a derived quantity from either a linear connection or a quartet of scalar fields, as suggested by Guendelman and Kaganovich.Comment: 7 pages RevTEX, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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