OOS 30
Ecology in the Critical Zone

Tuesday, August 11, 2015: 1:30 PM-5:00 PM
328, Baltimore Convention Center
Organizer:
Kathleen A. Lohse
Co-organizer:
Whendee Silver
Moderator:
Kathleen A. Lohse
The critical zone is the Earth's heterogeneous thin outer veneer extending from the top of the canopy to the base of weathered bedrock and sustains life through its provision of critical zone services such as climate regulation and water purification. Ecological processes are integral to critical zone processes, yet little integration of the field of ecology has taken place in critical zone science and observatories. The goal of this symposium is to bridge the gap between critical zone science and ecology and attract more ecologists to the critical zone observatories and critical zone science by highlighting key insights provided by ecologists in the critical zone and gaps in critical zone science that could be filled by ecologists-- thus the need for them in this frontier.
1:30 PM
Exploring relationships between microbial ecology and soil organic matter stability in deep tropical soil profiles
Alain F. Plante, University of Pennsylvania; Maddie Stone, University of Pennsylvania
1:50 PM
Urbanization effects on nitrogen dynamics in the critical zone
Peter M. Groffman, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
2:10 PM
Microbial ecology in the high elevation, mixed-conifer critical zone
Rachel E. Gallery, University of Arizona; Dawson Fairbanks, University of Arizona; Virginia Rich, University of Arizona; Margretta Murphy, University of Arizona; Rebecca Lybrand, University of Arizona; Nicole A. Trahan, University of Wyoming; David J.P. Moore, University of Arizona
2:30 PM
Linking critical zone currencies to states of river ecosystems
Mary Power, University of California Berkeley
2:50 PM
Ecohydrology in the critical zone: Vegetation response to spatial and temporal variability in available water
Paul D. Brooks, University of Utah; Holly R. Barnard, University of Colorado; Christina Tague, University of Calfornia, Santa Barbara; Ying Fan Reinfelder, Rutgers University; James McNamara, Boise State University; Reed Maxwell, Colorado School of Mines
3:10 PM Cancelled
OOS 30-6
Depth for time substitutions within the critical zone: The biogeochemistry and microbial ecology of soil depth (widthdrawn)
Stephen C. Hart, University of California, Merced; Emma L. Aronson, UC Riverside; Rachel Gallery, University of Arizona
3:30 PM
3:40 PM
Aeolian transported and deposited microbial communities differ along an elevation gradient in the Southern Sierra CZO
Emma L. Aronson, UC Riverside; Clifford S. Riebe, University of Wyoming; Sarah Aciego, University of Michigan; Molly Blakowski, University of Michigan; Stephen C. Hart, University of California, Merced; Chelsea Carey, University of California, Riverside
4:00 PM
Controls on potential iron reduction in soils from diverse ecosystems
Wendy H. Yang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Jonathan Treffkorn, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Daniel Liptzin, University of Colorado, Boulder
4:20 PM
Examining ecosystem function in space and time within the critical zone through the lenses of ecology and biogeography
Greg A. Barron-Gafford, University of Arizona; Rebecca L. Minor, University of Arizona; Maggie Heard, University of Arizona; Leland F. Sutter, University of Arizona; Julia Yang, University of Arizona; University of Kansas; Daniel Potts, SUNY Buffalo State
4:40 PM
The role of elevation and time in structuring soil microbial communities in the Sierra Nevada, California
Chelsea J. Carey, University of California; Stephen C. Hart, University of California, Merced; Clifford S. Riebe, University of Wyoming; Sarah Aciego, University of Michigan; Molly Blakowski, University of Michigan; Emma L. Aronson, UC Riverside
5:00 PM
Patterns of plant available water storage capacity in montane Idaho and California
Aaron Fellows, USDA Agricultural Research Service; Michael Goulden, University of California, Irvine; Gerald Flerchinger, USDA Agricultural Research Service