1 / 34

Summary of the Talk

Critical Zone Observatories quantifying the chain of impact between geosphere and biosphere Steve Banwart, U. Sheffield, UK SoilTrEC: Soil Transformations in European Catchments FP7 Large Integrating Project. Summary of the Talk. Overview of Critical Zone Science

hina
Download Presentation

Summary of the Talk

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. Critical Zone Observatories quantifying the chain of impact between geosphere and biosphereSteve Banwart, U. Sheffield, UKSoilTrEC: Soil Transformations in European CatchmentsFP7 Large Integrating Project

  2. Summary of the Talk • Overview ofCritical Zone Science • The soils research exemplar: SoilTrEC project • International developments in Critical Zone science

  3. Earth’s Critical Zone

  4. Critical Zone Observatory Program • “Real progress will required problem focused, multidisciplinary field work in natural observatories where detailed, long-term observations can be made using a variety of disciplinary tools.” (US National Academy of Science Report, BROES, 2001) • The approach to observation is motivated by: • hypothesis testing, • process understanding across temporal and spatial scales • mathematical model development, • Utilising multiple sensor and sampling methods, • Often high-density instrument arrays, • Time series/real time measurements of coupled process dynamics, • Combining large data sets with numerical simulation

  5. Coupled Process Dynamics Across Spatial and Temporal Scales Basin Watershed Soil profile Grain Molecular

  6. CZOs are magnets for multidisciplinary research • Soil Science • Physical Geography • Hydrology • Molecular Ecology • Microbiology • Geochemistry • Engineering • Computer Science • Economics • Management Science • Sociological Sciences • … and many others

  7. The Perfect Storm In March 2010, the UK Chief Scientist stated that humanity faced a perfect storm of converging challenges within the next 40 years. • Increase in population to over 9.3 billion by 2050. • Doubling in demand for food • Doubling in demand for fuel • More than 50% increase in demand for clean water • … all while mitigating and adapting to the impacts of global climate change. During recent weeks several of these projections have been updated. • Human population is expected to reach 9.7 billion by 2050 • Greenhouse gas levels for N2O and CH4 have just exceeded previous records • CO2 levels are increasing faster at the moment than in previous years • Agricultural yields are projected to decrease overall due to insufficient water The Storm is growing in intensity Critical Zone Observatories are international focal points for basic science, testbeds for interdisciplinary solutions, and incubators for commercial innovation. Research challenges: • Hindcasting to understand change • Forecasting to find solutions • International integration to match the urgency

  8. The Chain of Impact

  9. Earth’s Critical Zone: the architecture Treetop to Bedrock Food and fibre production Filtering water Transforming nutrients Carbon storage Biological habitat Gene pool Soil Ecosystem Services - the heart of Earth’s Critical Zone EU Thematic Strategy for Soil Protection, EC (2006) outlines policy to address threats to soil services.

  10. Critical Zone ServicesThe Chain of Impact GHGs and Climate Regulation Food and fibre production Carbon Storage Nutrient Transformation Biological Habitat Gene Pool Filtering Water Parent Material – forming soil Baseflow to rivers Storing and transmitting heat Repository for hazardous wastes Physical scaffold for landscapes Attenuating contaminants Storing and transmitting water

  11. Critical Zone Observatories Banwart et al. (2011). Vadose Zone Journal, CZO special issue, 10, 974–987.

  12. Damma Glacier CZOSwitzerland PI: S.M Bernasconi, ETH and the BigLink Project Team

  13. Fuchsenbigl CZO, AustriaPIs: Winfried Blum, Georg Lair, BOKU

  14. Lysina CZO, Czech Republic Even-Aged Norway Spruce Plantation at Lysina PIs: Martin Novak, PavelKram Czech Geological Survey

  15. Koiliaris CZO, CretePI: Nik Nikolaidis, TUC

  16. Earth’s Critical Zone: the services • Mass and energy flows deliver goods and services: • filtration of water • new soil • food, fuel, fibre • transformation of nutrients and pollutants • thermal energy • carbon storage • waste isolation • scaffold for landscapes

  17. Modelling Structure in SoilTrEC Data collection and analysis of CZO soils Small Plot Experiments Laboratory experiments Modelling Hydrology, Nutrient dynamics, Reactive transport (HYDRUS, CAST) Biodiversity, Food web dynamics, Life cycle analysis Plant, Weathering, Aggregate formation (PROSUM, CAST, ForSAFE) Spatial Scale 1D-Integrated Critical Zone (ICZ) Model Watershed Hydrology and transport (SWAT-ICZ) Upscaling with GIS (GEOSTATISTICS) Evaluation of soil ecosystem services, life cycle and monitory value

  18. Nikolaidis N. and Bidoglio G., Sustainable Agriculture Reviews, in press.

  19. Carbon Amendments – Soil Fertility and Structure Slide courtesy of Nikolaos Nikolaidis, Technical U. Crete

  20. 1D-ICZ Model – C/N/P and Soil Structure Module Simulation of 2 year of Compost Addition Carbon sequestration Water Stable Aggregates – soil fertility Porosity & Bulk Density – soil structure Slide courtesy of Nikolaos Nikolaidis, Technical U. Crete

  21. 1D-ICZ Model – Plant Module Results Biomass Production Slide courtesy of Nikolaos Nikolaidis, Technical U. Crete

  22. Soil Function Status of Koiliaris CZO Water Filtration and Transformation Carbon Sequestration

  23. Soil Function Status of Koiliaris CZO Biomass Production Biodiversity

  24. Soil Threats – Erosion at Koiliaris CZO SWAT Model Simulations

  25. Soil Sustainability – by design • Design of land use through computational simulation • Model of soil processes embedded within Critical Zone process model • Parameterisation via web-accessible GIS • Scenario analysis for mitigation of/adaptation to environmental change • Valuation of full range of critical zone services

  26. Nature, 474, 151-152, 9 June, 2011 Nature

  27. International CZO Networks c$100M in new funding committed for CZO research worldwide since 2008 • NSF CZO programme • EC SoilTrEC project • French Network of River Basins • German AquaDiva Project • German Helmholtz Centres TERENO network of CZOs • 2014 workshop in Perth, Australia on CZOs for the Southern Hemisphere • Interest from China in a programme of Critical Zone research International Steering Committee Steve Banwart, Jerome Gaillardet, Marty Goldhaber, Sue Trumbore, Don Sparks Project and network collaboration on: • Shared sites and data • Numerical simulation approaches • PhD and post-doc training

  28. Site Network on Environmental Gradients

  29. CZOs to Focus International Science H1: CZ ecosystem services will be particularly vulnerable to extreme events; droughts, heat waves and floods. Real-time monitoring of critical zone processeswith forecasting simulations within heavily instrumented CZOs H2: Climate and land use gradient experiments today can shed light on ecosystem services response to future environmental and social change. Study CZ ecosystem services on a climate gradient from equatorial Africato Artic Europe and along a land use gradient within climate zones.

  30. Global Experimental Design CZO Networks along gradients of climate Map from World Climate. http://www.climate-charts.com/index.html

  31. Global Experimental Design CZO Networks along gradients of land use Map from: UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, Land Degradation Assessment in Drylands

  32. International CZO Research Agenda Available as download from www.czen.org

  33. NGL - Food for Thought • AquaDiva CZ biosphere project • Linking above- and below- ground biodiversity • Prof Kirsten Kuesel, University of Jena • “Drill the Ridge” deep CZ exploration • October 2013 workshop in Denver, USA • Define the lower boundary of CZ • Rock mass interaction with water circulation • Linking technology development to basic science • Prof. Cliff Reibe, U. Wyoming • NGL pioneered this science 20 years ago • NGL globally leading science strengths in deep CZ exploration • NGL technology leaders in deep CZ exploration

  34. END

More Related