Soil processes and tree growth at shooting ranges in a boreal forest reflect contamination history and lead-induced changes in soil food webs

2015 ◽  
Vol 518-519 ◽  
pp. 320-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salla Selonen ◽  
Heikki Setälä
Author(s):  
Joshua P. Schimel ◽  
F. Stuart Chapin III

Forest ecosystems typically occur in moderate environments where growing season rainfall is adequate to support tree growth and where nongrowing season conditions are not too extreme. The Alaskan boreal forests, however, occur at the limit of the forest biome, in an environment that is climatically extreme, with strong physical gradients. The seasonal variation in temperature is among the greatest on earth, with winter temperatures as low as –50ºC and summer growing season temperatures that can reach +30ºC (Chapter 4). The growing season is short, the climate is semi-arid, and growing season rainfall is limited. Forests exist in the region because evapotranspiration is also limited. Steep south-facing slopes can be too dry to support tree growth (Chapter 6). In contrast, in flat, low-lying areas, low evapotranspiration combined with permafrost produces wetlands despite the low rainfall. Regular drought makes the forest highly susceptible to fires. At large scales (many square kilometers), the boreal forest experiences regular, extensive fires that destroy whole stands, resetting succession (Chapter 17). This regular fire cycle produces a patchwork mosaic of forest stands in different successional stages across the landscape (Dyrness et al. 1986, Kasischke and Stocks 2000; Chapter 7). In large rivers (e.g., the Tanana), the cutting and filling of meander loops washes away some forest stands while depositing new silt bars for colonization and succession (Zasada 1986). At the landscape scale, the biogeochemical cycles in the boreal forest are therefore dominated by landscape structure (e.g., dry uplands vs. wet lowlands) and by disturbance (particularly fire). At smaller scales, however, the strong feedbacks between plant and soil processes control much of the functioning of individual forest stands, and possibly the rate of transition among successional stages. In this chapter, we discuss how microbial processes in the boreal forest produce unusual patterns of nutrient cycling that drive the overall functioning of boreal forest stands. Figure 14.1 illustrates the linkages between plant and microbial communities that dominate the functioning of the boreal forest soil system. In the feedbacks between plant and soil processes, plants drive the loop largely through inputs of organic materials.


Agronomy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 1745
Author(s):  
Amanda K. Hodson ◽  
Jordan M. Sayre ◽  
Maria C.C.P. Lyra ◽  
Jorge L. Mazza Rodrigues

Composting is an effective strategy to process agricultural and urban waste into forms that may be beneficial to crops. The objectives of this orchard field study were to characterize how a dairy manure compost and a food waste compost influenced: (1) soil nitrogen and carbon pools, (2) bacterial and nematode soil food webs and (3) tree growth and leaf N. The effects of composts were compared with fertilized and unfertilized control plots over two years in a newly planted almond orchard. Both dairy manure compost and food waste compost increased soil organic matter pools, as well as soil nitrate and ammonium at certain time points. Both composts also distinctly altered bacterial communities after application, specifically those groups with carbon degrading potential, and increased populations of bacterial feeding nematodes, although in different timeframes. Unique correlations were observed between nematode and bacterial groups within compost treatments that were not present in controls. Food waste compost increased trunk diameters compared to controls and had greater relative abundance of herbivorous root tip feeding nematodes. Results suggest that recycled waste composts contribute to biologically based nitrogen cycling and can increase tree growth, mainly within the first year after application.


2018 ◽  
Vol 428 ◽  
pp. 46-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadia I. Maaroufi ◽  
Kristin Palmqvist ◽  
Lisbet H. Bach ◽  
Stef Bokhorst ◽  
Antonia Liess ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (52) ◽  
pp. E8406-E8414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin P. Girardin ◽  
Olivier Bouriaud ◽  
Edward H. Hogg ◽  
Werner Kurz ◽  
Niklaus E. Zimmermann ◽  
...  

Considerable evidence exists that current global temperatures are higher than at any time during the past millennium. However, the long-term impacts of rising temperatures and associated shifts in the hydrological cycle on the productivity of ecosystems remain poorly understood for mid to high northern latitudes. Here, we quantify species-specific spatiotemporal variability in terrestrial aboveground biomass stem growth across Canada’s boreal forests from 1950 to the present. We use 873 newly developed tree-ring chronologies from Canada’s National Forest Inventory, representing an unprecedented degree of sampling standardization for a large-scale dendrochronological study. We find significant regional- and species-related trends in growth, but the positive and negative trends compensate each other to yield no strong overall trend in forest growth when averaged across the Canadian boreal forest. The spatial patterns of growth trends identified in our analysis were to some extent coherent with trends estimated by remote sensing, but there are wide areas where remote-sensing information did not match the forest growth trends. Quantifications of tree growth variability as a function of climate factors and atmospheric CO2 concentration reveal strong negative temperature and positive moisture controls on spatial patterns of tree growth rates, emphasizing the ecological sensitivity to regime shifts in the hydrological cycle. An enhanced dependence of forest growth on soil moisture during the late-20th century coincides with a rapid rise in summer temperatures and occurs despite potential compensating effects from increased atmospheric CO2 concentration.


2018 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
pp. 100-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Abgrall ◽  
E. Forey ◽  
L. Mignot ◽  
M. Chauvat

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantin B. Gongalsky ◽  
Andrey S. Zaitsev ◽  
Daniil I. Korobushkin ◽  
Ruslan A. Saifutdinov ◽  
Konstantin O. Butenko ◽  
...  

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