Award Abstract # 1637459
LTER: The Role of Biogeochemical and Community Openness in Governing Ecological Change in Arctic Ecosystems

NSF Org: DEB
Division Of Environmental Biology
Recipient: THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY
Initial Amendment Date: February 6, 2017
Latest Amendment Date: December 15, 2021
Award Number: 1637459
Award Instrument: Continuing Grant
Program Manager: Paco Moore
fbmoore@nsf.gov
 (703)292-5376
DEB
 Division Of Environmental Biology
BIO
 Directorate for Biological Sciences
Start Date: March 1, 2017
End Date: March 31, 2022 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $6,761,998.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $5,719,957.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2017 = $2,253,999.00
FY 2019 = $1,152,000.00

FY 2020 = $1,186,958.00

FY 2021 = $62,946.00
History of Investigator:
  • Kevin Griffin (Principal Investigator)
    griff@ldeo.columbia.edu
  • Edward Rastetter (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • George Kling (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Laura Gough (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Phaedra Budy (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Edward Rastetter (Former Principal Investigator)
  • William Bowden (Former Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Kevin Griffin (Former Co-Principal Investigator)
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Marine Biological Laboratory
7 M B L ST
WOODS HOLE
MA  US  02543
(508)289-7243
Sponsor Congressional District: 09
Primary Place of Performance: Marine Biological Laboratory
MA  US  02543-1015
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
09
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): M2XKLRTA9G44
Parent UEI: M2XKLRTA9G44
NSF Program(s): LONG TERM ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Primary Program Source: 01001718DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
01002223DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT

01002122DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT

01001920DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT

01002021DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 1195, 7218, 9178, 9251
Program Element Code(s): 119500
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.074

ABSTRACT

The Arctic is one of the fastest warming regions on Earth and as such may well provide an idea of the future changes likely to occur further south. This warming has increased disturbances such as wildfire as well as thawing of permafrost in ecosystems of Northern Alaska. As a result of this warming and increased disturbance, animal and plant communities on land and in streams and lakes are changing. Underlying these community changes are changes in the availability and cycling of nutrients, in the amount of carbon stored in soils and vegetation, and in the exchange of carbon dioxide and nutrients between arctic landscapes and the atmosphere and downstream rivers and oceans. Collectively, these changes may have profound effects, not just on the arctic ecosystems, but globally, with implications for humans. A better understanding of these changes can lead to better predictions of the future, and those predictions could provide the basis for better planning. To understand these changes, scientists with the Arctic Long-Term Ecological Research (ARC-LTER) Project monitor long-term changes in terrestrial, stream, and lake ecosystems in the vicinity of Toolik Lake, Alaska. They make observations of the recovery of these ecosystems from natural and experimentally imposed disturbances, and initiate and maintain long-term experiments designed to understand interactions among arctic species, nutrient cycles, and the connections among terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems on the arctic landscape. Scientists working at the ARC-LTER site will engage students from Barrow, Alaska, run a program for journalists, and participate in short courses for Alaskan Natives in three communities, all designed to increase the public understanding of Arctic Ecology. Briefings to national and state land managers and resource managers will help provide scientific knowledge that can inform policy.

The research is organized around the concepts of ecosystem openness and landscape connectivity. Biogeochemical openness is the degree to which ecosystems depend on external sources of nutrients and organic carbon versus nutrients recycled within the ecosystem and organic carbon produced locally by photosynthesis. Community openness is the degree to which the movement of organisms in and out of the ecosystem determines community and food-web structure. Finally, landscape connectivity describes the nature and strength of interactions among ecosystems on the landscape and the resultant propagation of responses to disturbances across the landscape. Components of the arctic landscape differ widely in biogeochemical and community openness. Research at the ARC-LTER will compare key ecosystems of the Arctic to determine how their degree of openness governs their responses to climate variation and to acute disturbance such as fire and surface slumping associated with permafrost thaw. The proposed research will also determine how the responses to climate and disturbance are mediated by landscape connectivity and the movement of nutrients, carbon, and organisms across arctic landscapes. To accomplish these goals, ARC-LTER research will include continued long-term fertilizer and warming experiments; monitoring of chemical budgets, community changes, and species movements; monitoring recovery of tundra, rivers, and lakes that were previously fertilized; establishing new larger greenhouses in different aged landscapes; blocking fish movement into a lake connected to migratory streams and adding fish to a lake currently isolated from a stream network; and searching for correlations between terrestrial production and aquatic metabolism and nutrient concentrations. This research will support two undergraduate student researchers per year and provide opportunities for students working on other projects to work on Arctic LTER sites and experiments.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Parker, Samuel P. and Bowden, William B. and Flinn, Michael B. and Giles, Courtney D. and Arndt, Kyle A. and Bene, Joshua P. and Jent, Derrick G. "Effect of particle size and heterogeneity on sediment biofilm metabolism and nutrient uptake scaled using two approaches" Ecosphere , v.9 , 2018 10.1002/ecs2.2137 Citation Details
Roy, Austin and Suchocki, Matthew and Gough, Laura and McLaren, Jennie R. "Above- and belowground responses to long-term herbivore exclusion" Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research , v.52 , 2020 https://doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2020.1733891 Citation Details
Lindén, Elin and Gough, Laura and Olofsson, Johan "Large and small herbivores have strong effects on tundra vegetation in Scandinavia and Alaska" Ecology and Evolution , v.11 , 2021 https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7977 Citation Details
Longo, William M. and Huang, Yongsong and Russell, James M. and Morrill, Carrie and Daniels, William C. and Giblin, Anne E. and Crowther, Josue "Insolation and greenhouse gases drove Holocene winter and spring warming in Arctic Alaska" Quaternary Science Reviews , v.242 , 2020 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106438 Citation Details
Vansomeren, Lindsay L. and Barboza, Perry S. and Gustine, David D. and Syndonia Bret-Harte, M. "Variation in 15 N and 13 C values of forages for Arctic caribou: effects of location, phenology and simulated digestion: Variation in 15 N and 13 C values of forages fo" Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry , v.31 , 2017 10.1002/rcm.7849 Citation Details
O'Connor, Michael T. and Cardenas, M. Bayani and Neilson, Bethany T. and Nicholaides, Kindra D. and Kling, George W. "Active Layer Groundwater Flow: The Interrelated Effects of Stratigraphy, Thaw, and Topography" Water Resources Research , v.55 , 2019 https://doi.org/10.1029/2018WR024636 Citation Details
Ward, Collin P. and Cory, Rose M. "Assessing the prevalence, products, and pathways of dissolved organic matter partial photo-oxidation in arctic surface waters" Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts , v.22 , 2020 https://doi.org/10.1039/C9EM00504H Citation Details
Trusiak, Adrianna and Treibergs, Lija A. and Kling, George W. and Cory, Rose M. "The role of iron and reactive oxygen species in the production of CO 2 in arctic soil waters" Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta , v.224 , 2018 10.1016/j.gca.2017.12.022 Citation Details
Koltz, Amanda M. and Asmus, Ashley and Gough, Laura and Pressler, Yamina and Moore, John C. "The detritus-based microbial-invertebrate food web contributes disproportionately to carbon and nitrogen cycling in the Arctic" Polar Biology , 2017 10.1007/s00300-017-2201-5 Citation Details
Rastetter, Edward B. and Kwiatkowski, Bonnie L. "An approach to modeling resource optimization for substitutable and interdependent resources" Ecological Modelling , v.425 , 2020 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2020.109033 Citation Details
Euskirchen, E. S. and Bret-Harte, M. S. and Shaver, G. R. and Edgar, C. W. and Romanovsky, V. E. "Long-Term Release of Carbon Dioxide from Arctic Tundra Ecosystems in Alaska" Ecosystems , v.20 , 2017 10.1007/s10021-016-0085-9 Citation Details
(Showing: 1 - 10 of 112)

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