Publications
For recent publications, please see Google Scholar links available on our Who We Are page.
Filter by Year: All | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1997 | 1996 | 1995 |
2009
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Leaf retention is important in transferring energy from riparian trees to stream food webs. Retention increases with geomorphic complexity such as substrate coarseness, sinuosity, and the presence of debris dams. High discharge can reduce retention, particularly when streams lack physical trapping features. Travertine formations, caused by calcium carbonate deposition, can alter stream morphology. To date, however, we know of no study testing the effect of travertine on leaf retention. This study capitalized on a river restoration project in Fossil Creek, Arizona, where water was returned to the channel after a century of diversion. We examined how the fixed factors Flow (before and after restoration) and Morphology (travertine and riffle-pool sites) affected leaf retention. Leaf retention was higher in sites where travertine forms barriers across the river, relative to sites with riffle-pool morphology. Most leaves retained in travertine reaches were concentrated at the bottom of pools formed between dams. Although flow restoration did not alter retention rates across all sites, it diminished them at travertine sites, indicating an interaction between stream flow and morphology. We conclude that stream complexity and leaf retention are enhanced by travertine deposition but that high discharge can reduce the retentive capacity of in-stream structures.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Soil microbial organisms are central to carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) transformations in soils, yet not much is known about the stable isotope composition of these essential regulators of element cycles. We investigated the relationship between C and N availability and stable C and N isotope composition of soil microbial biomass across a three million year old semiarid substrate age gradient in northern Arizona. The <em>δ</em><sup>15</sup>N of soil microbial biomass was on average 7.2‰ higher than that of soil total N for all substrate ages and 1.6‰ higher than that of extractable N, but not significantly different for the youngest and oldest sites. Microbial <sup>15</sup>N enrichment relative to soil extractable and total N was low at the youngest site, increased to a maximum after 55,000 years, and then decreased slightly with age. The degree of <sup>15</sup>N enrichment of microbial biomass correlated negatively with the C:N mass ratio of the soil extractable pool. The <em>δ</em><sup>13</sup>C signature of soil microbial biomass was 1.4‰ and 4.6‰ enriched relative to that of soil total and extractable pools respectively and showed significant differences between sites. However, microbial <sup>13</sup>C enrichment was unrelated to measures of C and N availability. Our results confirm that <sup>15</sup>N, but not <sup>13</sup>C enrichment of soil microbial biomass reflects changes in C and N availability and N processing during long-term ecosystem development.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Ratios of nitrogen (N) isotopes in leaves could elucidate underlying patterns of N cycling across ecological gradients. To better understand global-scale patterns of N cycling, we compiled data on foliar N isotope ratios (δ<sup>15</sup>N), foliar N concentrations, mycorrhizal type and climate for over 11 000 plants worldwide. Arbuscular mycorrhizal, ectomycorrhizal, and ericoid mycorrhizal plants were depleted in foliar δ<sup>15</sup>N by 2‰, 3.2‰, 5.9‰, respectively, relative to nonmycorrhizal plants. Foliar δ<sup>15</sup>N increased with decreasing mean annual precipitation and with increasing mean annual temperature (MAT) across sites with MAT ≥ −0.5°C, but was invariant with MAT across sites with MAT < −0.5°C. In independent landscape-level to regional-level studies, foliar δ<sup>15</sup>N increased with increasing N availability; at the global scale, foliar δ<sup>15</sup>N increased with increasing foliar N concentrations and decreasing foliar phosphorus (P) concentrations. Together, these results suggest that warm, dry ecosystems have the highest N availability, while plants with high N concentrations, on average, occupy sites with higher N availability than plants with low N concentrations. Global-scale comparisons of other components of the N cycle are still required for better mechanistic understanding of the determinants of variation in foliar δ<sup>15</sup>N and ultimately global patterns in N cycling.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
The physical state of water on Mars has fundamental ramifications for both climatology and astrobiology. The widespread presence of “softened” Martian landforms (such as impact craters) can be attributed to viscous creep of subsurface ground ice. We present laboratory experiments designed to determine the minimum amount of ice necessary to mobilize topography within Martian permafrost. Our results show that the jammed-to-mobile transition of icy sand packs neither occurs at fixed ice content nor is dependent on temperature or stress, but instead correlates strongly with the maximum dry packing density of the sand component. Viscosity also changes rapidly near the mobility transition. The results suggest a potentially lower minimum volatile inventory for the impact-pulverized megaregolith of Mars. Furthermore, the long-term preservation of partially relaxed craters implies that the ice content of Martian permafrost has remained close to that at the mobility transition throughout Martian history.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Soil is the largest reservoir of organic carbon (C) in the terrestrial biosphere and soil C has a relatively long mean residence time. Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) concentrations generally increase plant growth and C input to soil, suggesting that soil might help mitigate atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> rise and global warming. But to what extent mitigation will occur is unclear. The large size of the soil C pool not only makes it a potential buffer against rising atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub>, but also makes it difficult to measure changes amid the existing background. Meta-analysis is one tool that can overcome the limited power of single studies. Four recent meta-analyses addressed this issue but reached somewhat different conclusions about the effect of elevated CO<sub>2</sub> on soil C accumulation, especially regarding the role of nitrogen (N) inputs. Here, we assess the extent of differences between these conclusions and propose a new analysis of the data. The four meta-analyses included different studies, derived different effect size estimates from common studies, used different weighting functions and metrics of effect size, and used different approaches to address nonindependence of effect sizes. Although all factors influenced the mean effect size estimates and subsequent inferences, the approach to independence had the largest influence. We recommend that meta-analysts critically assess and report choices about effect size metrics and weighting functions, and criteria for study selection and independence. Such decisions need to be justified carefully because they affect the basis for inference. Our new analysis, with a combined data set, confirms that the effect of elevated CO<sub>2</sub> on net soil C accumulation increases with the addition of N fertilizers. Although the effect at low N inputs was not significant, statistical power to detect biogeochemically important effect sizes at low N is limited, even with meta-analysis, suggesting the continued need for long-term experiments.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
<div id="ASec1" class="AbstractSection">
<h3 class="Heading">Background</h3>
<p class="Para">Forests can sequester carbon dioxide, thereby reducing atmospheric concentrations and slowing global warming. In the U.S., forest carbon stocks have increased as a result of regrowth following land abandonment and in-growth due to fire suppression, and they currently sequester approximately 10% of annual US emissions. This ecosystem service is recognized in greenhouse gas protocols and cap-and-trade mechanisms, yet forest carbon is valued equally regardless of forest type, an approach that fails to account for risk of carbon loss from disturbance.</p>
</div>
<div id="ASec2" class="AbstractSection">
<h3 class="Heading">Results</h3>
<p class="Para">Here we show that incorporating wildfire risk reduces the value of forest carbon depending on the location and condition of the forest. There is a general trend of decreasing risk-scaled forest carbon value moving from the northern toward the southern continental U.S.</p>
</div>
<div id="ASec3" class="AbstractSection">
<h3 class="Heading">Conclusion</h3>
<p class="Para">Because disturbance is a major ecological factor influencing long-term carbon storage and is often sensitive to human management, carbon trading mechanisms should account for the reduction in value associated with disturbance risk.</p>
</div>
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Elevated atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> tends to stimulate plant productivity, which could either stimulate or suppress the processing of soil carbon, thereby feeding back to atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> concentrations. We employed an acid-hydrolysis-incubation method and a net nitrogen-mineralization assay to assess stability of soil carbon pools and short-term nitrogen dynamics in a Florida scrub-oak ecosystem after six years of exposure to elevated CO<sub>2</sub>. We found that soil carbon concentration in the slow pool was 27% lower in elevated than ambient CO<sub>2</sub> plots at 0–10 cm depth. The difference in carbon mass was equivalent to roughly one-third of the increase in plant biomass that occurred in the same experiment. These results concur with previous reports from this ecosystem that elevated CO<sub>2</sub> stimulates microbial degradation of relatively stable soil organic carbon pools. Accordingly, elevated CO<sub>2</sub> increased net N mineralization in the 10–30 cm depth, which may increase N availability, thereby allowing for continued stimulation of plant productivity by elevated CO<sub>2</sub>. Our findings suggest that soil texture and climate may explain the differential response of soil carbon among various long-term, field-based CO<sub>2</sub> studies. Increased mineralization of stable soil organic carbon by a CO<sub>2</sub>-induced priming effect may diminish the terrestrial carbon sink globally.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
<div class="page" title="Page 1">
<div class="layoutArea">
<div class="column">
1. Despite the importance of microorganisms for leaf litter decomposition in streams, little is known about which factors affect community composition of bacterial and fungal communities. Standard morphological techniques probably underestimate microbial diversity.
2. We used terminal restriction fragment length polymorphisms of the ITS regions for fungi, and the 16S region for bacteria, to compare fungal and bacterial communities on four cross types of cottonwood leaves (Populus fremontii, P. angustifolia, and their naturally occurring F1 and backcross hybrids). Decomposing leaves were studied in two Arizona rivers that differ in water chemistry and macroinvertebrates.
3. Hybridising cottonwoods are an ideal model system to test how genetic differences in leaf litter chemistry affect microbial communities because cross types have different decomposition rates and leaf litter chemistry. Leaves were incubated in litter bags for
2 weeks and brought to the laboratory for genetic analysis. Communities were analysed using non-metric multi dimensional scaling (NMDS) and diversity indices.
4. Fungal and bacterial communities differed between the two rivers, even when growing on identical substrates. There were also significant differences in microbial communities among the four cross types, indicating that genetically based differences in leaf litter translate to differences in microbial communities.
5. Diversity increased along the hybridising complex from P. fremontii to P. angustifolia, with hybrids showing intermediate values. Fungal and bacterial diversity were significantly higher on cross types with higher tannin concentrations and slower decomposition rates. 6. Environmental conditions most strongly structured microbial communities, but within an environment, genetic-based differences in leaf litter quality yielded differences in diversity and community structure.
7. Molecular tools are making it possible to understand patterns of microbial diversity in river ecosystems, paving the way for a better understanding of how differences in microbial species affect ecosystem processes and higher trophic levels.
</div>
</div>
</div>
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
A scrub-oak woodland has maintained higher aboveground biomass accumulation after 11 years of atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> enrichment (ambient +350 μmol CO<sub>2</sub> mol<sup>−1</sup>), despite the expectation of strong nitrogen (N) limitation at the site. We hypothesized that changes in plant available N and exploitation of deep sources of inorganic N in soils have sustained greater growth at elevated CO<sub>2</sub>. We employed a suite of assays performed in the sixth and 11th year of a CO<sub>2</sub> enrichment experiment designed to assess soil N dynamics and N availability in the entire soil profile. In the 11th year, we found no differences in gross N flux, but significantly greater microbial respiration (<em>P≤</em>0.01) at elevated CO<sub>2</sub>. Elevated CO<sub>2</sub> lowered extractable inorganic N concentrations (<em>P</em>=0.096) considering the whole soil profile (0–190 cm). Conversely, potential net N mineralization, although not significant in considering the entire profile (<em>P</em>=0.460), tended to be greater at elevated CO<sub>2</sub>. Ion-exchange resins placed in the soil profile for approximately 1 year revealed that potential N availability at the water table was almost 3 × greater than found elsewhere in the profile, and we found direct evidence using a <sup>15</sup>N tracer study that plants took up N from the water table. Increased microbial respiration and shorter mean residence times of inorganic N at shallower depths suggests that enhanced SOM decomposition may promote a sustained supply of inorganic N at elevated CO<sub>2</sub>. Deep soil N availability at the water table is considerable, and provides a readily available source of N for plant uptake. Increased plant growth at elevated CO<sub>2</sub> in this ecosystem may be sustained through greater inorganic N supply from shallow soils and N uptake from deep soil.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Dam decommissioning projects, although numerous, rarely include complete sets of data before and after restoration for evaluating the ecological consequences of such projects. In this study, we used a before-after control-impact (BACI) design to assess changes in leaf litter decomposition and associated macroinvertebrate and fungal decomposers following dam decommissioning in Fossil Creek, Arizona, USA. Leaf litterbags were deployed in a relatively pristine site above the dam and a highly disturbed site below the dam where over 95% of the flow was previously diverted for hydropower generation. Leaf litter decomposition was significantly slower below the dam both measurement years (pre- and post-restoration) with no site-year interaction, indicating that decomposition in this stream section was not affected by increased flow. In contrast, both macroinvertebrates and fungi differed significantly above and below the dam prior to restoration but were similar post-restoration, supporting the concept that decomposer communities can quickly rebound following reintroduction of full flow. Our results indicate that some aquatic ecosystem variables can return to a more natural state following ecological restoration activities such as water flow restoration.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
We compared energy fluxes between a site converted from ponderosa pine (<em>Pinus ponderosa</em>) forest to sparse grassland by a severe wildfire 10 years ago and a nearby, unburned forest. We used eddy covariance and associated instruments to measure total radiation, net radiation, albedo, and fluxes of energy into latent heat, sensible heat, and the soil. Total radiation, vapor pressure deficit, and air temperature were similar for each site. Compared to the unburned site, net radiation efficiency (net radiation/total radiation) was 30% lower and albedo 30% higher at the burned site. The magnitude of sensible and latent heats varied seasonally at both sites. Sensible heat was the major component of the energy balance in cold or dry seasons, whereas latent heat was the major component in the warm and wet season. Soil heat flux was the smallest in magnitude of the measured energy fluxes. Compared with the unburned forest, the burn-created grassland generally had lower sensible and latent heats, but greater soil heat flux for both soil cooling in winter and warming in summer. The grassland had similar maximum air temperature as the forest, and warmer surface soil temperature during the summer. Thus, the lower albedo and greater sensible heat of the forest did not produce a warmer site compared with the grassland, apparently because of the cooling effect of greater latent heat in the forest. Our results suggest only small changes in site air temperature, but larger changes in site surface soil temperature by shifts from forest to grassland caused by severe fire in northern Arizona ponderosa pine forests.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Observations and measurements were made of physical and ecological changes that have occurred since 1985 at a tundra site near Healy, Alaska. Air temperatures decreased (1985 through 1999) while permafrost warmed and thawed creating thermokarst terrain, probably as a result of increased snow depths. Permafrost, active layer and ground-ice conditions at the Healy site are the result of the interaction of climatic, ecologic and other factors. The slow accumulation of ground ice in an intermediate permafrost layer formed by upward freezing from the permafrost surface leads to long-term differential frost heave and microrelief. When ground ice in the permafrost melts, the ground surface settles differentially resulting in thermokarst terrain (pits, gullies). Windblown snow fills the thermokarst depressions causing further warming and thawing of the underlying permafrost — a positive feedback effect that enhances permafrost degradation. Thermokarst-induced changes in relief alter the near-surface hydrology and ecological processes. Changes in vegetation included differential tussock growth and mortality and a shift in moss species abundance and relative productivity, depending on microtopographic position created by the thermokarst terrain. Water redistribution towards thermokarst depressions caused adjacent higher areas to become drier and resulted in increased moss mortality and shrub abundance.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
This study reports the aboveground biomass response of a fire-regenerated Florida scrub-oak ecosystem exposed to elevated CO<sub>2</sub> (1996–2007), from emergence after fire through canopy closure. Eleven years exposure to elevated CO<sub>2</sub> caused a 67% increase in aboveground shoot biomass. Growth stimulation was sustained throughout the experiment; although there was significant variability between years. The absolute stimulation of aboveground biomass generally declined over time, reflecting increasing environmental limitations to long-term growth response. Extensive defoliation caused by hurricanes in September 2004 was followed by a strong increase in shoot density in 2005 that may have resulted from reopening the canopy and relocating nitrogen from leaves to the nutrient-poor soil. Biomass response to elevated CO<sub>2</sub> was driven primarily by stimulation of growth of the dominant species, <em>Quercus myrtifolia</em>, while <em>Quercus geminata</em>, the other co-dominant oak, displayed no significant CO<sub>2</sub> response. Aboveground growth also displayed interannual variation, which was correlated with total annual rainfall. The rainfall × CO<sub>2</sub> interaction was partially masked at the community level by species-specific responses: elevated CO<sub>2</sub> had an ameliorating effect on <em>Q. myrtifolia</em> growth under water stress. The results of this long-term study not only show that atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> concentration had a consistent stimulating effect on aboveground biomass production, but also showed that available water is the primary driver of interannual variation in shoot growth and that the long-term response to elevated CO<sub>2</sub> may have been caused by other factors such as nutrient limitation and disturbance.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
The effects of elevated CO<sub>2</sub> on plant growth and insect herbivory have been frequently investigated over the past 20 years. Most studies have shown an increase in plant growth, a decrease in plant nitrogen concentration, an increase in plant secondary metabolites and a decrease in herbivory. However, such studies have generally overlooked the fact that increases in plant production could cause increases of herbivores per unit area of habitat. Our study investigated leaf production, herbivory levels and herbivore abundance per unit area of leaf litter in a scrub-oak system at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, under conditions of ambient and elevated CO<sub>2</sub>, over an 11-year period, from 1996 to 2007. In every year, herbivory, that is leafminer and leaftier abundance per 200 leaves, was lower under elevated CO<sub>2</sub> than ambient CO<sub>2</sub> for each of three species of oaks, <em>Quercus myrtifolia, Quercus chapmanii</em> and <em>Quercus geminata</em>. However, leaf litter production per 0.1143 m<sup>2</sup> was greater under elevated CO<sub>2</sub> than ambient CO<sub>2</sub> for <em>Q. myrtifolia</em> and <em>Q. chapmanii</em>, and this difference increased over the 11 years of the study. Leaf production of <em>Q. geminata</em> under elevated CO<sub>2</sub> did not increase. Leafminer densities per 0.1143 m<sup>2</sup> of litterfall for <em>Q. myrtifolia</em> and <em>Q. chapmanii</em> were initially lower under elevated CO<sub>2</sub>. However, shortly after canopy closure in 2001, leafminer densities per 0.1143 m<sup>2</sup> of litter fall became higher under elevated CO<sub>2</sub> and remained higher for the remainder of the experiment. Leaftier densities per 0.1143 m<sup>2</sup> were also higher under elevated CO<sub>2</sub> for <em>Q. myrtifolia</em> and <em>Q. chapmanii</em> over the last 6 years of the experiment. There were no differences in leafminer or leaftier densities per 0.1143 m<sup>2</sup> of litter for <em>Q. geminata</em>. These results show three phenomena. First, they show that elevated CO<sub>2</sub> decreases herbivory on all oak species in the Florida scrub-oak system. Second, despite lower numbers of herbivores per 200 leaves in elevated CO<sub>2</sub>, increased leaf production resulted in higher herbivore densities per unit area of leaf litter for two oak species. Third, they corroborate other studies which suggest that the effects of elevated CO<sub>2</sub> on herbivores are species specific, meaning they depend on the particular plant species involved. Two oak species showed increases in leaf production and herbivore densities per 0.1143 m<sup>2</sup> in elevated CO<sub>2</sub> over time while another oak species did not. Our results point to a future world of elevated CO<sub>2</sub> where, despite lower plant herbivory, some insect herbivores may become more common.
Read Abstract / Download .PDF / Read Publication
Climate change in high latitudes can lead to permafrost thaw, which in ice-rich soils can result in ground subsidence, or thermokarst. In interior Alaska, we examined seasonal and annual ecosystem CO<sub>2</sub> exchange using static and automatic chamber measurements in three areas of a moist acidic tundra ecosystem undergoing varying degrees of permafrost thaw and thermokarst development. One site had extensive thermokarst features, and historic aerial photography indicated it was present at least 50 years prior to this study. A second site had a moderate number of thermokarst features that were known to have developed concurrently with permafrost warming that occurred 15 years prior to this study. A third site had a minimal amount of thermokarst development. The areal extent of thermokarst features reflected the seasonal thaw depth. The “extensive” site had the deepest seasonal thaw depth, and the “moderate” site had thaw depths slightly, but not significantly deeper than the site with “minimal” thermokarst development. Greater permafrost thaw corresponded to significantly greater gross primary productivity (GPP) at the moderate and extensive thaw sites as compared to the minimal thaw site. However, greater ecosystem respiration (R<sub>eco</sub>) during the spring, fall, and winter resulted in the extensive thaw site being a significant net source of CO<sub>2</sub> to the atmosphere over 3 years, while the moderate thaw site was a CO<sub>2</sub> sink. The minimal thaw site was near CO<sub>2</sub> neutral and not significantly different from the extensive thaw site. Thus after permafrost thaw, initial periods of increased GPP and net CO<sub>2</sub> uptake could be offset by elevated R<sub>eco</sub>during the winter, spring, and fall.