382 results — topic: Soil Science

Dataset

Model output and meta-analysis data from INTERFACE paper

Model output and meta-analysis data from model-experiment comparison that came out of INTERFACE workshop. Includes output from five soil carbon models and a meta-analysis of warming and litter addition experiments. Code is posted at: https://github.com/bsulman/INTERFACE-model-experiment-synthesis

Sulman, Benjamin2018DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.6981842
Dataset

Soil moisure values

Stark, Jordan, Lehman, Rebecca, Crawford, Lake2017DOI: 10.5061/dryad.772h7/3
Dataset

Data from: How persistent are the impacts of logging roads on Central African forest vegetation?

1. Logging roads can trigger tropical forest degradation by reducing the integrity of the ecosystem and providing access for encroachment. Therefore, road-management is crucial in reconciling selective logging and biodiversity conservation. Most logging roads are abandoned after timber harvesting, h

Kleinschroth, Fritz, Healey, John R., Sist, Plinio2017DOI: 10.5061/dryad.51p4fCited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: Growth and carbon relations of mature Picea abies trees under 5 years of free-air CO2 enrichment

Are mature forests carbon limited? To explore this question, we exposed ca. 110-year-old, 40-m tall Picea abies trees to a 550-ppm CO2 concentration in a mixed lowland forest in NW Switzerland. The site receives substantial soluble nitrogen (N) via atmospheric deposition, and thus, trees are unlikel

Klein, Tamir, Bader, Martin K. F., Leuzinger, Sebastian2017DOI: 10.5061/dryad.29mb7Cited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: Trait-mediated community assembly: distinguishing the signatures of biotic and abiotic filters

Conflicting hypotheses predict how traits mediate species establishment and community assembly. Traits of newly establishing individuals are predicted to converge, or be more similar to the resident, preexisting community, when the biotic or abiotic environment favors a single best phenotype, but ar

Loughnan, Deirdre, Gilbert, Benjamin2017DOI: 10.5061/dryad.512p5Cited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: Evidence for enemy release and increased seed production and size for two invasive Australian acacias

Invasive plants are hypothesized to have higher fitness in introduced areas due to their release from pathogens and herbivores and the relocation of resources to reproduction. However, few studies have tested this hypothesis in native and introduced regions. A biogeographical approach is fundamental

Correia, Marta, Montesinos, Daniel, French, Kristine2017DOI: 10.5061/dryad.f1kc3Cited 1 times
Dataset

Soil moisture across the elevation range of Valeriana edulis

Climate station data from the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory to test for effect of elevation on soil moisture. See README.txt for column descriptions.

Petry, William K., Soule, Judith D., Iler, Amy M.2016DOI: 10.5061/dryad.1cf8p/4
Dataset

Data from: Leaf traits of African woody savanna species across climate and soil fertility gradients: evidence for conservative vs. acquisitive resource use strategies

1. Establishing trade-offs among traits and the degree to which they co-vary along environmental gradients has become a key focal point in the effort to develop community ecology into a predictive science. While there is evidence for these relationships across global datasets, they are often too bro

Wigley, Benjamin J., Slingsby, Jasper A., Diaz, Sandra2016DOI: 10.5061/dryad.v240bCited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: Effects of soil resources on expression of a sexual conflict over timing of stigma receptivity in a mixed-mating plant

While environmental factors strongly influence plant growth and reproduction, less is known about environmental effects on sexual selection and sexual conflict. In this study on mixed-mating Collinsia heterophylla we investigated whether soil resource environment affected traits associated with sexu

Lankinen, Asa, Hydbom, Sofia2016DOI: 10.5061/dryad.2598kCited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: Deciphering the adjustment between environment and life history in annuals: lessons from a geographically-explicit approach in Arabidopsis thaliana

The role that different life-history traits may have in the process of adaptation caused by divergent selection can be assessed by using extensive collections of geographically-explicit populations. This is because adaptive phenotypic variation shifts gradually across space as a result of the geogra

Manzano-Piedras, Esperanza, Marcer, Arnald, Alonso-Blanco, Carlos2015DOI: 10.5061/dryad.6nv8dCited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: Pinus ponderosa alters nitrogen dynamics and diminishes the climate footprint in natural ecosystems of Patagonia

1. Evaluating climate effects on plant-soil interactions in terrestrial ecosystems remains challenging due to the fact that floristic composition co-varies with climate, particularly along rainfall gradients. It is difficult to separate effects of precipitation per se from those mediated indirectly

Hess, Laura J. T., Austin, Amy T.2015DOI: 10.5061/dryad.gd905Cited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: A test for a cost of opportunism in invasive species in the Commelinaceae

Many invasive species can respond opportunistically to favorable growing conditions. In a previous work, we found that invasive species in the family Commelinaceae were more opportunistic than their noninvasive congeners and could therefore outperform noninvasive relatives in an environment with abu

Burns, Jean H., Halpern, Stacey L., Winn, Alice A.2014DOI: 10.5061/dryad.8107qCited 1 times
Student Paper

The effect of monocotyledon and dicotyledon plants on soil porosity

Turk J.2003
Article

Integrating experimental and gradient methods in ecological climate change research

Dunne J. A., Saleska S. R., Fischer M. L.2003Ecology
Article

Subalpine meadow flowering phenology responses to climate change: integrating experimental and gradient methods

We integrated experimental and natural gradient field methods to investigate effects of climate change and variability on flowering phenology of 11 subalpine meadow shrub, forb, and graminoid species in Gunnison County, Colorado (USA). At a subalpine meadow site, overhead electric radiant heaters ad

Dunne J. A., Harte J., Taylor K. J.2003Ecological MonographsDOI: 10.1890/0012-9615(2003)073[0069:smfprt]2.0.co;2Cited 455 times
Student Paper

The effects of plant succession and ant nest on soil organic matter and soil moisture

An earthflow that occurred in Gunnison County, Colorado created a natural laboratory to study plant succession. Plant succession and ants can effect the soil composition of grounds left bare and depleted of organic matter by the landslide. This study was conducted to examine if the described success

Rizo R.2002
Article

Plant community composition mediates both large transient decline and predicted long-term recovery of soil carbon under climate warming

We integrated two methods, experimental heating and observations across natural climate gradients, to elucidate both short‐ and long‐term climatic controls on ecosystem carbon storage and to investigate carbon‐cycle feedbacks to climate in montane meadows. A 10‐year heating experiment warmed and dri

Saleska S. R., Shaw M., Fischer M. L.2002Global Biogeochemical CyclesDOI: 10.1029/2001gb001573Cited 122 times
Dataset

Aqueous geochemical dynamics of metals and rare earth elements in an acid rock drainage-impacted alpine watershed

Numerous mountain watersheds in the Colorado Mineral Belt (CMB) are impacted by acid rock drainage (ARD) and acid mine drainage (AMD), which mobilize metals and rare earth elements (REEs) into surface waters. In the upper Roaring Fork watershed near Independence Pass, natural ARD from a highly miner

Athena Bolin