1 / 13

Soil Carbon under the Snowpack in a Continuous Coniferous Forest

Soil Carbon under the Snowpack in a Continuous Coniferous Forest. Daniel P. Bradley February 19 th , 2011 Winter Ecology. Mountain Research Station, University of Colorado, Boulder EBIO 4100, Sec 570. Life in the Winter Soils.

faith
Download Presentation

Soil Carbon under the Snowpack in a Continuous Coniferous Forest

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Soil Carbon under the Snowpack in a Continuous Coniferous Forest Daniel P. Bradley February 19th, 2011 Winter Ecology Mountain Research Station, University of Colorado, Boulder EBIO 4100, Sec 570

  2. Life in the Winter Soils • Soil microbes in snow covered soils are respiring every minute, consuming available nutrients, and off-gassing them as CO2 (King 08). • Our class experiment: 18.536 g (0.653 oz) of carbon could be converted into CO2 in 186 days (Oct 25 – May 1), in ~100 cm2 (Winter Eco 11). • Winter soil: An ideal environment for microbial life.

  3. Pro’s and Con’s of Winter Microbial Life Pro’s Con’s • Highly protected • Predatory, UV • Highly stable • Temperature • Water supply • via the snowpack, varying (Brooks 96) • A specialized niche • Food Supply • High, but non-replenishing • Temperature • Not ideal for metabolic processes

  4. The Food Supply • The food supply in a finite amount • We can assume that the amount of food is equal throughout the forest.

  5. Question • If food is limited by the cover of the snowpack, does the depth of the snowpack affect the amount of carbon (food) in the soil? • HA : There is a difference in soil carbon between sites of varying snowpack. • HO : There is not a difference in soil carbon

  6. Methods • A deep and shallow site were found on Feb 5th • Five samples for each site were taken, with 2 sub sites for each site, from the top 5cm of the soil. • The soils were refrigerated maintain metabolic processes • The soils were then sieved, weighed into 5 gram samples • The samples were dried, combusted and weighed. • Percent differences and averages were derived.

  7. The Sites CU Mountain Research Station - Google Earth

  8. Results • The data show that there was a significant difference (p-value ≤ 0.05) in soil carbon between the sites

  9. The Data • p-value = 0.0165 (paired t-test) • Mean percent difference: deep=0.1057, shallow=0.3322

  10. The Data • p-value = 0.0113 • (paired t-test) • Mean difference, in grams: deep=0.0056, shallow=0.0182

  11. Discussion • The shallow snowpack had more carbon underneath it, why? • Carbon is limiting for microbes, lower carbon indicates higher microbe populations/activity (Nemergut 11). • Temperature swings. • What is affecting snowpack? • Wind, Precipitation • What is affecting the amount of carbon (litter) under the snowpack? • Beetle kill?

  12. Summary • Snowpack does have an affect on the microbial population of the soil, via carbon. • More snowpack, more respiration, more carbon consumed.

  13. Literature Cited • Brooks, Paul D., Mark W. Williams, and Steven Schmidt. "Microbial Activity under Alpine Snowpacks, Niwot Ridge, Colorado " Biogeochemistry 32.2 (1996). 93-113. Mark Williams. Web. 25 Jan. 2011. • King , A. J., A. F. Meyer, and S. K. Schmidt. "High Levels of Microbial Biomass and Activity in Unvegetated Tropical and Temperate Alpine Soils." Soil Biology and Biochemistry 40.10 (2008): 2605-610. ScienceDirect. Web. 25 Jan. 2011. • Nemergut, Diana, CU-Boulder, INSTAAR. Personal interview. 16 Feb. 2011. • Winter Ecology 2011, and T. Kittle. TS. CU-Boulder, Mountain Research Station.

More Related