Environmental Science & Technology Theses and Dissertations
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/2748
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Item A Competitive Interaction and Dominance Experiment Between the Vegetative Marsh Species Phragmites australis and Spartina Cynosuroides Under Elevated Nitrogen and Salinity Levels(2013) Arthur, Michelle Lynn; Baldwin, Andrew; Environmental Science and Technology; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)In recent decades the invasive plant Phragmites australis (common reed) has spread throughout Chesapeake Bay marshes, lowering plant community biodiversity. Excess nutrient loading and salinity intrusion due to sea-level rise make these marshes vulnerable to invasions. This study examined the interaction between Phragmites australis and the native Spartina cynosuroides (big cordgrass) to determine whether dominance of one species was detected across a range of salinity and nitrogen treatments. Aboveground biomass production of P. australis was greater than S. cynosuroides at lower salinities; however, S. cynosuroides maintained biomass production as salinity increased. Fv/Fm ratios were measured as an indirect measurement of plant tissue physiological health; only Spartina maintained the ratio at higher salinities. Nitrogen addition increased Phragmites biomass and Fv/Fm ratio at higher salinities. Results suggest salinity and nitrogen interactively affect Phragmites biomass production, and that the negative effect of increased salinity on Phragmites spread can be mitigated by nitrogen runoff.Item THE EFFECTS OF FUTURE GLOBAL CHANGE ON ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI AND SOIL CARBON: USING URBANIZATION AS A SURROGATE FOR FUTURE CONDITIONS IN FIELD STUDIES(2012) Wolf, Julie; Needelman, Brian; Environmental Science and Technology; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)Carbon, fixed photosynthetically by plants, cycles through plant, microbial biomass, soil, and atmospheric carbon pools. The effects of global change on this cycling will impact future levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide, but are poorly understood. In urban areas, temperature and carbon dioxide concentrations are often elevated to levels that simulate near-future climate changes. These elevations are not sudden, uniform step increases but are gradual and variable; as such urbanization may provide a means to simulate the effects of near-future climate changes. The dissertation research encompasses two studies utilizing urban macroclimate to study the effects of future climate change. In the first study, plots containing a common imported soil and seed bank were established at three locations along a 50 km urban-to-rural transect. In these plots, plant community development, temperature, carbon dioxide concentrations, and other factors had been monitored for five years. Subsequently, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal structures in bulk soil were quantified. These fungi receive carbon directly from plant roots, grow into bulk soil, and can transfer immobile soil minerals to their plant hosts. In contrast to expectations, fewer fungal structures were found closer to the urban side of the transect. The second study was an observational study of soil carbon in minimally managed, long-undisturbed soils located at varying distances from urban areas. In sampling sites at 62 golf courses, similar communities of cool-season grasses had been undisturbed for at least 25 years. At each site, total and active soil carbon and many potential explanatory factors were measured and examined with multiple regression analysis. Contrary to expectations, soil carbon was positively correlated with warmer February-only mean daily minimum soil temperatures, suggesting that winter temperatures are more important than mean annual temperature for soil C storage in temperate grassland. Other correlations, including positive correlations with soil cation exchange capacity, soil lead levels, and tropospheric ozone exposure during the peak ozone season, were also detected. Potential mechanisms for the detected relationships are explored. The results of both experiments demonstrate that commonly-held expectations based on single-factor global change experiments or models are not always borne out in complex natural systems.