Collaborative Proposal: MSB-FRA: A macrosystems ecology framework for continental-scale prediction and understanding of lakes
合作提案:MSB-FRA:用于大陆尺度预测和湖泊理解的宏观系统生态学框架
基本信息
- 批准号:1638539
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 50.26万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Continuing Grant
- 财政年份:2016
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2016-10-15 至 2023-09-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
Lakes are recognized as hotspots for processing carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus and thus are critical for understanding how human activities affect global cycles of these essential nutrients. However, to estimate the total contribution of lakes in the United States to these global cycles, they have to rely on measurements from a small number of well-studied lakes because scientists do not have the resources to study every lake all the time. The resulting extrapolations to estimate global cycles and predict future change have many uncertainties. Consequently, it is important to understand where and when information from small subsets of lakes can be accurately applied to the wide variety of lake types and landscape settings across the continental United States. To improve future extrapolation efforts and to understand the role of lakes in global nutrient cycles, this award will build an unprecedented database that combines nutrient measurements from existing government and university monitoring programs (for about 15,000 lakes) with lake and landscape characteristics from national publicly-available digital maps for all lakes in the continental United States (about 130,000 lakes). Using this novel and unprecedented database, three components will be studied that are needed to determine the contribution of lakes to continental nutrient cycles. First, lake nutrients will be studied jointly rather than individually to provide insights into the conditions in which cycles are linked or not, which will help to reduce uncertainty in continental estimates of lake nutrients. Second, as scientists expand their studies from a few lakes to the entire continent, the relationships between lake nutrients and their landscape controls can differ in strength and even direction among different regions, further contributing to uncertainties in continental understanding of lake nutrient cycles. Finally, compiling data on every lake increases the chance of discovering novel environmental conditions that have not previously been studied, yet may play important roles in continental-scale nutrient cycles. Through these important research activities, scientists will increase their confidence in estimating the effects of lakes on global cycles. This award contributes to the broader scientific community because the database will be made publicly-available in a timely manner to complement the National Ecological Observatory program and to developing open-source advanced computer tools for analyzing large datasets for this and other big-data studies. In addition, the diverse team (by gender, career-level, and discipline) will train and mentor early-career scientists in interdisciplinary, team-based, and data-intensive science to be leaders in addressing challenging questions such as how future land use intensification and changes in global climate will affect lakes and the services they provide. Ecosystems, such as lakes, are complex, heterogeneous, and strongly influenced by their ecological context?environmental or anthropogenic factors that operate at multiple scales. This complexity makes extrapolating site-level estimates of ecological services, state, and function challenging. The overarching goal of this research is to understand and predict patterns in the three major nutrients for all continental US lakes to inform estimates of lake contributions to continental and global cycles of nitrogen, phosphorus, and carbon. The proposed work will address three important phenomena that limit scientists? ability to extrapolate freshwater nutrients at continental scales. (1) Because cycles of nitrogen, phosphorus, and carbon in inland water interact with each other and are often affected by similar controls, they should be considered as linked, not isolated. (2) As studies expand to view the whole continent, interactions between driver variables at different scales (cross-scale interactions) also increase. (3) A hallmark of the Anthropocene is the rise of novelty in ecosystems--new environmental conditions or new combinations of conditions. Such novelty may confound extrapolation in unknown ways. The proposed research is an unprecedented effort that will: address these important phenomena, develop new continental-scale data products for aquatic macrosystems ecology, and contribute novel, data-intensive analytical methods from computer science and statistics. This award will answer five research questions related to the above phenomena using two approaches. First, funds will be used to build a large, integrated database of all lakes in the continental United States (called LAGOS-US) that includes measures of in situ nutrients collected from tens of thousands of lakes, and ecological-context metrics calculated for all 130,000 continental lakes using geographic information systems and remote sensing datasets. Second, analyses of the database will be conducted for each research question using existing and novel statistical and computer science analytical tools to improve macrosystems ecology knowledge of freshwater nutrients. This award will complement the National Ecological Observatory strengths by providing data for a broader range of aquatic ecosystems and by providing the ecological context for the six continental Observatory lake sites. This award will result in four major intellectual contributions to macrosystems ecology. (1) The identification of regions where coupling and decoupling of nutrients occur, leading to a more comprehensive understanding of relationships between ecological context drivers and linked nutrient cycles. (2) Increased understanding of the types and spatial structure of ecological contexts that are more likely to lead to cross-scale interactions. (3) The identification of the role that novelty in ecological context plays in continental-scale predictions. (4) The transformation of understanding of the ecological contexts that influence biogeochemical cycles at macroscales and lake contributions to these cycles. Given the likely prevalence of such phenomena in other macrosystems, the results will be transferable to other ecosystem types, and more broadly to macrosystems ecology.
项目成果
期刊论文数量(37)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
Augmented Multi-Task Learning by Optimal Transport
通过最佳传输增强多任务学习
- DOI:10.1137/1.9781611975673.3
- 发表时间:2019
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:Liu, B.;Tan, P.N.;and Zhou, J
- 通讯作者:and Zhou, J
A geography of lake carbon cycling: Geography of lake carbon cycling
湖泊碳循环地理学:湖泊碳循环地理学
- DOI:10.1002/lol2.10078
- 发表时间:2018
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:7.8
- 作者:Seekell, David A.;Lapierre, Jean-François;Cheruvelil, Kendra Spence
- 通讯作者:Cheruvelil, Kendra Spence
A framework to develop joint nutrient criteria for lake eutrophication management in eutrophic lakes
- DOI:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2020.125883
- 发表时间:2021-03
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:6.4
- 作者:Zhongyao Liang;Yaoyang Xu;Qianlinglin Qiu;Yong Liu;Wentao Lu;T. Wagner
- 通讯作者:Zhongyao Liang;Yaoyang Xu;Qianlinglin Qiu;Yong Liu;Wentao Lu;T. Wagner
Granular measures of agricultural land use influence lake nitrogen and phosphorus differently at macroscales
农业土地利用的细化措施在宏观尺度上对湖泊氮和磷的影响不同
- DOI:10.1002/eap.2187
- 发表时间:2020
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:5
- 作者:Stachelek, Jemma;Weng, W.;Carey, C. C.;Kemanian, A. R.;Cobourn, K. M.;Wagner, T.;Weathers, K. C.;Soranno, P. A.
- 通讯作者:Soranno, P. A.
Enhancing Predictive Modeling of Nested Spatial Data through Group-Level Feature Disaggregation
- DOI:10.1145/3219819.3220091
- 发表时间:2018-07
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:Boyang Liu;P. Tan;Jiayu Zhou
- 通讯作者:Boyang Liu;P. Tan;Jiayu Zhou
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Ephraim Hanks其他文献
Ephraim Hanks的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Ephraim Hanks', 18)}}的其他基金
Statistical Approaches for Spatio-Temporal Stochastic Population Models
时空随机总体模型的统计方法
- 批准号:
2015273 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 50.26万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
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