Movement of Organic Matter

The entire ecosystem relies on the recycling of organic matter (and the nutrients it contains), including dead plants, animals, and other organisms. Decomposition of organic matter and its movement through the ecosystem is an important component of the food web.

The propagating response of inner shelf circulation to wind relaxations along the central California Coast

Poster Number: 
395
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Libe Washburn

Following relaxations prevailing equatorward winds, warm water from the Santa Barbara Channel flows poleward around Point Conception and along the central California coast. Sequences of satellite sea surface temperature images show the events as bands of warm water extending up to 20 km offshore. Characteristics of these flows were examined using time series of currents and temperature from an array of moorings along the inner shelf (15 m depth), a mooring on the mid-shelf (100 m depth), and surface current observations from high frequency radars.

Feeding by the Oribatid Mite Scheloribates Alters Microbial Activity and Carbon Cycling

Poster Number: 
392
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Kyle Wickings

Oribatid mites are among the most diverse soil mesofauna, and they possess a variety of metabolic and morphological feeding adaptations. Unfortunately, our understanding of the mechanisms by which oribatids may influence decomposition dynamics is incomplete. A microcosm experiment was conducted in which corn and oak leaf litter were incubated in the presence and absence of actively feeding oribatid mites Scheloribates sp. Our objective was to quantify the effects of Scheloribates sp. on microbial activity and carbon cycling within litter.

Soil Organic Matter Responses to Chronic Nitrogen Additions at the Harvard Forest

Poster Number: 
382
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Richard Bowden

The Chronic Nitrogen Addition Experiment at the Harvard Forest was initiated in 1988 to better understand the process of forest N saturation due to anthropogenic N deposition. Presently, there is great interest in understanding and quantifying impacts of deliberate (forest fertilization) or inadvertent (atmospheric deposition) additions of nitrogen on forest growth as a means to enhance forest uptake of atmospheric C and subsequent storage within biomass and soil.

Aeolian flux of microorganisms in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica

Poster Number: 
380
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Marie Sabacka

The McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica (MCM) forms one of the most extreme deserts on Earth. It consists of a mosaic of permanently ice-covered lakes, ephemeral streams, exposed soils, and glaciers. Microorganisms are the only life forms occupying these landscape units. Given the relatively low and seasonal growth rates of these organisms, we contend that the distribution of microorganisms within this environment is controlled by physical factors.

Niwot Ridge LTER Program: Alpine Ecosystems as Early Warning Systems

Poster Number: 
377
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Mark Williams

The Niwot Ridge (NWT) LTER site was one of the five original LTER sites established in 1980. The LTER program is based at the University of Colorado-Boulder and is administered through the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) and in cooperation with the Mountain Research Station, with special use permits from the US Forest Service.

Determining organic matter sources to CH4 production and bubbling from Alaskan lakes using stable isotopes and radiocarbon ages

Poster Number: 
363
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Laura Brosius

Methane production in Siberian thaw lakes is estimated to be 3.8 Tg CH4 yr -1. When entered into global models, this estimate increases northern wetland CH4 emissions (<6-40 Tg CH4 yr -1) by 10-63% (Walter et al 2006). Methane release of this magnitude from Siberian and other northern lakes, such as those in Alaska, may be linked to the rich carbon resources available to sediment-dwelling methanogens.

Alder strategies for phosphorus assimilation across a boreal forest successional sequence

Poster Number: 
355
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Michaela Swanson

Ecosystem processes in northern systems depend heavily on inputs of biologically fixed nitrogen (N) from A. tenuifolia, which contributes the majority of N accumulated during boreal forest succession. However because of the high phosphorus (P) demands of this plant, we hypothesize that N-fixation inputs are controlled by the ability of alder to assimilate P through associations with ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF), which produce enzymes that mobilize organic and recalcitrant P forms.

Arctic LTER: Goals and Results

Poster Number: 
347
Presenter/Primary Author: 
John Hobbie

The goal of the Arctic LTER is to predict the future ecological characteristics of Arctic Alaska based upon our knowledge of the controls of ecosystem structure and function as exerted by physical setting and geologic factors, climatic factors, biotic factors, and the changes in fluxes of water and materials from land to water.

Dynamics of Water-Stable Soil Aggregates in Arctic Soils

Poster Number: 
336
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Rodney Simpson

Arctic warming has been linked to changes in carbon cycling in this region. Cold temperatures and anoxic conditions in the Arctic inhibit microbial activity, lowering decomposition rates. As a result mineralization rates are low, resulting in nitrogen-limited-system, further reducing biological activity. Evidence has shown that eliminating this constraint on nutrient availability results in a vegetation shift and loss of soil carbon; however, the mechanisms behind soil carbon loss are not understood.

Linking Carbon Quality to In-stream Nitrogen Processing, Boulder Creek, Colorado

Poster Number: 
335
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Rebecca Barnes

Dissolved organic matter (DOM) dominates the material and energy fluxes within aquatic ecosystems. Carbon fuels the majority of microbial processes, including those that regulate in-stream nitrogen constituents. DOM sources and in situ transformations determine its chemical nature and lability within aquatic systems. Boulder Creek, which is located in the Colorado Front Range and spans an ecosystem gradient from the Continental Divide to the high plains, receives excess atmospheric nitrogen deposition due to its proximity to population centers and agricultural lands.

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