Collaborative Research: MRA: Resolving and scaling litter decomposition controls from leaf to landscape in North American drylands
合作研究:MRA:解决和扩展北美旱地从树叶到景观的垃圾分解控制
基本信息
- 批准号:2307197
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 15.03万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Continuing Grant
- 财政年份:2024
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2024-01-01 至 2028-12-31
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
Drylands (arid and semi-arid ecosystems) cover nearly half the world’s land surface and are socioeconomically critical, globally supporting a third of the human population and more than half the livestock. Drylands also play a dominant role in global cycles of nutrients and carbon. Decomposition of dead plant material such as leaves and branches is a key biological process that affects the availability of nutrients to plants and the cycling of carbon between the biosphere and the atmosphere. Scientific understanding of decomposition in drylands is limited relative to wetter ecosystems, and appears to be affected by mechanisms uniquely important to these systems, such as solar radiation and short periods of moisture availability. In addition, drylands are characterized by extreme variation in environmental conditions through space and time, but knowledge is currently insufficient to characterize this variability sufficiently to develop predictive decomposition models. This project will reveal a quantitative understanding of dryland decomposition from small to large spatial scales, ultimately building a model to predict decomposition across scales. It will do so by leveraging data and resources of the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON). This will substantially advance predictive capability for cycling of nutrients and carbon over the vast drylands of North America. This project will support several educational initiatives, including a course module where art and science majors collaborate to develop skills for visual communication of scientific ideas. A successful educational outreach platform, the Interactive Model of Leaf Decomposition, will be expanded to encompass drylands. Drylands support billions of people and represent large unknowns in forecasts of future carbon cycling and climate. This work will advance understanding of ecological processes in drylands, which is critical for informed land management decisions in the face of environmental change.A central challenge to developing an improved predictive understanding of dryland ecosystem function is that decomposition is often measured in locations not representative of where decaying organic material resides. Extreme spatial heterogeneity in drylands exacerbates the scaling challenges of quantifying such a microbial-controlled, macrosystem process. Coarse-scale averaging of environmental controls may fail to capture critical small-scale patterns and processes regulating decomposition. Available decomposition models typically do not capture cross-scale drivers and environmental heterogeneity. To address this knowledge gap, this project will develop a quantitative understanding of dryland decomposition that scales from the microsite to the North American dryland region, by joining field, remote sensing, and a hierarchical continuum of models in a spatially-nested approach that leverages the power of NEON. The project will develop a process understanding of the environmental controls over decomposition across microsites using field and controlled environment studies to formulate a microbial explicit model of decomposition. The project will capture the spatial variation of decaying organic material distribution, environmental conditions, and decomposition at dryland NEON sites. These data will validate a microbial explicit model and inform a reduced complexity model operating at larger spatial scales. Regional scaling of decaying organic material pools will be based on hierarchically-nested spatial scales of remotely-sensed imagery to characterize microsite distributions from four NEON focal sites to the North American dryland region. This explicit hierarchically-next hierarchical-nested model will be able to propagate the fine scale distribution of drivers to coarse scale emergent behavior via a process level understanding of the system. This integrated, system-orientated research that will significantly improve understanding and prediction of litter decomposition at spatial scales ranging from the microsite to the North American drylands region. The project will also provide cross-disciplinary career development opportunities for a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and postdoctoral scientists.This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
旱地(干旱和半干旱生态系统)覆盖了世界近一半的陆地表面,具有重要的社会经济意义,支撑着全球三分之一的人口和一半以上的牲畜。旱地在全球养分和碳循环中也起着主导作用。枯死植物的叶和枝等物质的分解是一个关键的生物过程,它影响植物对营养物质的可利用性以及生物圈和大气之间的碳循环。相对于较湿润的生态系统,对旱地分解的科学理解是有限的,并且似乎受到对这些系统特别重要的机制的影响,例如太阳辐射和短时间的水分可用性。此外,旱地的特点是环境条件在空间和时间上的极端变化,但目前的知识不足以充分描述这种变化,从而开发预测分解模型。该项目将揭示从小到大的空间尺度对旱地分解的定量理解,最终建立一个模型来预测跨尺度的分解。它将利用国家生态观测站网络(NEON)的数据和资源来实现这一目标。这将大大提高对北美广大旱地养分和碳循环的预测能力。该项目将支持几个教育项目,包括一个课程模块,让艺术和科学专业的学生合作开发科学思想的视觉交流技能。一个成功的教育推广平台“树叶分解互动模型”将扩展到旱地。旱地养活着数十亿人,在未来碳循环和气候预测中也存在很大的未知因素。这项工作将促进对旱地生态过程的理解,这对于面对环境变化的明智土地管理决策至关重要。发展对旱地生态系统功能的改进的预测性理解的一个主要挑战是,分解通常是在不代表腐烂的有机物质所在的地点测量的。干旱地区极端的空间异质性加剧了量化这种微生物控制的宏观系统过程的规模挑战。环境控制的粗尺度平均可能无法捕获调节分解的关键小规模模式和过程。现有的分解模型通常不能捕获跨尺度驱动因素和环境异质性。为了解决这一知识差距,该项目将通过结合实地、遥感和利用NEON功能的空间嵌套方法中的分层连续模型,对从微型站点到北美旱地地区的旱地分解进行定量理解。该项目将利用实地和受控环境研究,发展对微生物分解过程的环境控制的理解,以制定微生物明确的分解模型。该项目将捕捉旱地NEON站点的腐烂有机物质分布、环境条件和分解的空间变化。这些数据将验证微生物显式模型,并为在更大空间尺度上运行的降低复杂性模型提供信息。腐烂有机物质池的区域尺度将基于遥感图像的分层嵌套空间尺度,以表征从四个NEON焦点点到北美旱地地区的微站点分布。这种明确的层次-下一个层次-嵌套模型将能够通过对系统的过程级理解,将驱动程序的精细尺度分布传播到粗糙尺度的紧急行为。这一综合的、以系统为导向的研究将显著提高从微型站点到北美旱地地区的空间尺度上对凋落物分解的理解和预测。该项目还将为本科生、研究生和博士后科学家提供跨学科的职业发展机会。该奖项反映了美国国家科学基金会的法定使命,并通过使用基金会的知识价值和更广泛的影响审查标准进行评估,被认为值得支持。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Daryl Moorhead其他文献
Daryl Moorhead的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Daryl Moorhead', 18)}}的其他基金
EAGER: MSB: Collaborative Research: Chemical and Microbial Mechanisms Linking Litter Quality and Decomposition Rate
EAGER:MSB:合作研究:将垫料质量和分解率联系起来的化学和微生物机制
- 批准号:
0946257 - 财政年份:2009
- 资助金额:
$ 15.03万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
U.S.-New Zealand Cooperative Research: Ecosystem Dynamics in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica: A Modeling Synthesis
美国-新西兰合作研究:南极洲麦克默多干谷的生态系统动力学:建模综合
- 批准号:
9996161 - 财政年份:1999
- 资助金额:
$ 15.03万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
U.S.-New Zealand Cooperative Research: Ecosystem Dynamics in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica: A Modeling Synthesis
美国-新西兰合作研究:南极洲麦克默多干谷的生态系统动力学:建模综合
- 批准号:
9804949 - 财政年份:1998
- 资助金额:
$ 15.03万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
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