NMR Investigations of Natural Organic Matter in Forest Ecosystems Chris E. Johnson Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering Syracuse University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Report of St. Petersburg Team O.G. Chertov, M.A. Nadporozhskaya E.V. Abakumov Biological Research Institute St. Petersburg State University 2005 INTAS.
Advertisements

Working Group on Soil Biodiversity Dr Jonathan Leake.
.University of Alberta Bachelor of Science in Forest Management or Forest Business management.
Can microbial functional traits predict the response and resilience of decomposition to global change? Steve Allison UC Irvine Ecology and Evolutionary.
Surprising natural variation in nutrient availability and nutrient resorption Craig See SUNY-ESF Photo: USFS.
Ecological Engineering - Maleny Effluent Irrigated Rainforest and Wetland Irrigation Australia Conference 2-6 June 2014.
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is an important property of lake ecosystems, resulting from the decomposition of organic matter stored in soils and of plankton.
Decomposition. © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Respiration Grazer system Decomposer system Net primary productivity Dead organic matter (a) Forest.
Formatting Guidelines Color –Same color for all font or alternate between headings and text but use no more than 2 colors Font –No smaller than 20 (except.
ROYAL SHIT.
Project: Effects of micro- and macrobioturbation produced by soil fauna on the stabilisation of organic matter in agricultural soils DFG SPP 1090 Justus.
The saprotrofic food chain in terrestrial ecosystems : Soil Biota What controls the community / food web structure? Top-down or bottom-up? (predation or.
Shifting allocation & nutrient pools affect C stocks.
Big Walnut Creek Forest A study of soil and tree species Brett Bohlander Brittany Mohrman Tory Pavlovich.
Nitrogen Utilization by Saprophytic Fungi in a Managed Forest Ecosystem Brian Strahm.
Dynamics of the Northern Hardwood Ecosystem Yuqiong Hu, Jeff Plakke, Sharon Shattuck, Erin Wiley.
Soils & Biology.
PRESENTED BY: ANDREW CARROLL WINTER ECOLOGY: SPRING SEMESTER 2013 MOUNTAIN RESEARCH STATION, UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO, BOULDER Bark Beetle’s Affect on Winter.
Carbon and forest management Robert Matthews Forest Research Biometrics, Surveys and Statistics Division Alice Holt Research Station, Farnham.
Box 1 CO 2 mitigation potential of managed grassland: An example Franzluebbers et al. (2000; Soil Biol. Biochem. 32: ) quantified C sequestration.
SIRLE TRESTIP University of Tartu Cagliari 2011
Science, Environmental Science & the Scientific Method
Comparing aquatic macroinvertebrates communities between native and invasive plant species in Mill Creek Shelly Wesner Department of Biological Sciences,
Forest Destruction Chapter 11.5 – 11.6 Forest Destruction Chapter 11.5 – 11.6 Kevin Arocha Steven Marquez.
1 William P. Cunningham University of Minnesota Mary Ann Cunningham Vassar College Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for.
Site Description This research is being conducted as a part of the Detritus Input and Removal Treatments Project (DIRT), a cross-continental experiment.
Nitrogen-use efficiency of a sweetgum forest in elevated CO 2 Richard J. Norby 1 and Colleen M. Iversen 2 1 Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN;
SOIL ORGANIC MATTER: Can the LTER network be leveraged to inform science and policy?
Ecosystem Disturbances and Ecosystem Services Chapter 3.
Soils - Field Characterization, Collection, and Laboratory Analysis Readings – Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology, by Chapin (Ch. 3) Understanding.
The Effects of Elevated Carbon Dioxide on Microarthropods Jarret M. Childers. Undergraduate at Northern Arizona University. Environmental Science: Management.
1 NMR Samples Types of NMR tubes Sample preparation.
Mixed Oak Ecosystem: Field and Lab Data Integration Deborah Hudleston Catherine Resler Mary Walton Chris Weber.
Impact of Native Tree Species Foliage on Aquatic Invertebrate Communities Branden Birth Department of Biological Sciences, York College of Pennsylvania.
Environmental Science. What is environmental science? Environmental science is a mulitdisciplinary academic field that integrates physical, biological.
Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology Part 2. BioGeoChemical Cycles The movement of matter within and between ecosystems involving biological, geologic and chemical.
Soil Basics AP Environmental Science. SOIL ≠ DIRT.
LAST PERSON STADING ECOLOGY EDITION. 1. A certain plant requires moisture, oxygen, carbon dioxide, light, and minerals in order to survive. This statement.
T13-1 Soil Science & Management, 4E Chapter 13 Soil Sampling and Testing.
Earth, Ecological, & Environmental Sciences
Principles of Dendrochronology. 1.Uniformitarianism Principle James Hutton, British geologist (published 1785–1788) “The present is the key to the past.”
Δ 13 C Variation from Plants to Soil Jonathan Harris MEA 760 NCSU.
Bell Ringer: Feb. 11 th, 2015 Brainstorming: List everything you remember about Ecology.
Comparison of Soils and Plants at Prairie Ridge: % C and % N Lori Skidmore.
Above and Below ground decomposition of leaf litter Sukhpreet Sandhu.
Introduction to Ecosystems. Ecology Ecology is the study of the relationships between biotic and abiotic factors.
Daily net carbon exchange as a mediator of heterotrophic soil respiration across two forest chronosequences Jared L. DeForest, Asko Noormets, and Jiquan.
Carbon sequestration rates in organic layers of soils under the Grey poplar (Populus x canescens) stands impacted by heavy metal pollution. Agnieszka MEDYŃSKA-JURASZEK.
Insights into Forest Soil Carbon Dynamics from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chris E. Johnson Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering Syracuse.
Mr. Solomon Kilburn & Mrs
A.EKBLAD & P.HÖGBERG Plant and Soil 219: , 2000
Aim: How is primary and secondary ecological succession different?
Organic Matter Characterization in Forest Soils
Nature of science Ms. Fernandez.
Soil Organic Matter Chris Johnson.
John P. Holdren Director, The Woods Hole Research Center
David A. Ussiri and Chris E. Johnson; Syracuse University
Comparative efficiency in nutrient retention between natural ecosystems vegetation and agro-systems vegetation Iuliana Florentina Gheorghe Ecological.
Will Hubbard Brook Soils Be a Source
Land Management, Mycorrhizal Diversity, and Soil Carbon Sequestration
Biodiversity Conservation and Restoration
MEL241: Energy Conversion
Co2 co2 Organic matter when broken down releases N into the system at the same time releasing co2 into the atmosphere. Leaching causes an indirect release.
Shan Shan1, Spencer Stutenroth1, Melany Fisk1*
Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology Part 2.
Mass and Nutrient Loss in Decaying Hardwood Boles at Hubbard Brook
Chandeleur Islands in Lousiana before and after Katrina
Estimating Mineral Weathering Rates in Catskills Watersheds
SB4. Students will assess the dependence of all organisms on one another and the flow of energy and matter within their ecosystem. c. Relate environmental.
The Usefulness of NMR Quantum Computing
Presentation transcript:

NMR Investigations of Natural Organic Matter in Forest Ecosystems Chris E. Johnson Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering Syracuse University

Forest Ecosystem Analysis

NMR Applications in Forest Ecosystem Studies 1.Plant tissues: −Wood quality −Response to environmental stress −Litter quality

1.Plant tissues: −Wood quality −Response to environmental stress −Litter quality 2.Soil organic matter: −Decomposition −Accumulation and role as microbial substrate NMR Applications in Forest Ecosystem Studies

1.Plant tissues: −Wood quality −Response to environmental stress −Litter quality 2.Soil organic matter: −Decomposition −Accumulation and role as microbial substrate 3.Aquatic organic matter: −Similarity to soil organic matter −Substrate for aquatic organisms NMR Applications in Forest Ecosystem Studies

Northern Hardwood Forest

Plant Tissues – Wood and Bark

Spectral Integration Alkyl-CO-Alkyl-CAryl C COOH/ Amide O Aryl

Plant Tissues – In situ Decomposition

Sampling with replication Replication is crucial for: Avoiding spurious conclusions Statistical hypothesis testing  (CPMAS method may be the only viable option)

Plant Tissues – (Fresh) Beech Bark

Plant Tissues – Wood & Bark

NMR analysis of soils

Soils – Humification of Organic Matter

Soil vs. Soil Solution SoilsSoil Solutions

Contrasting Soil and Solution Composition: % Aromatic C

Approaches to Quantification 1. Bloch Decay (i.e. Direct Polarization)

Oa Horizon Soil

Approaches to Quantification 2. Spin (Ac)counting

Approaches to Quantification 3. Correction Factors (from VCT Experiments) Oa Horizon Soil

Approaches to Quantification 4. Spectral Editing Approaches a.Proton Spin Relaxation Editing (PSRE) b.RE storation of S pectra via T CH and T O ne R ho (T1  H ) E diting (RESTORE)

Conclusions 1.NMR analyses provide useful information for ecological studies.  An ideal application for low-field instruments. 2.Replication is essential for most ecological applications.  Replication means high sample numbers.  High sample numbers mean CPMAS may be the only viable option. 3.Limited quantitative reliability of the CPMAS method is a problem.  Without reliable approaches to quantification, NMR will remain a supportive technology in ecosystem science