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Networking
DIRT: Extending an LTER Project to ILTER
Kristin Vanderbilt, Sevilleta LTER
The DIRT (Detritus Input and Removal Treatments) project, which has been
part of the Harvard Forest and Andrews Forest LTER research programs for
several years, took on an international dimension in November 2000 with
the establishment of DIRT experimental plots at the Sikfokut Forest ILTER
site in Hungary. This collaboration between Hungarian and U.S. scientists
is a example of how research questions can be successfully addressed across
networks to extend the range of inferences possible and to strengthen
ties between LTER and ILTER communities.
The
long-term objective of the DIRT project is to examine how rates and sources
of plant litter inputs (aboveground and belowground) affect the accumulation
and dynamics of soil organic matter and nutrient cycling in forests over
decadal time scales. Short-term objectives include studies of soil enzymes,
the soil community, soil respiration, and nitrogen cycling to evaluate
how rapidly different forest ecosystems respond to litter manipulations.
A network of DIRT sites has been established on which parallel measurements
will be made in order to address these questions at locations with different
climate, soil, and vegetation characteristics.
| Treatment |
Manipulation |
| Control |
normal litter inputs |
Double Litter |
twice aboveground litter inputs |
No Litter |
aboveground litter excluded from plots |
No Roots |
roots excluded from plots by lined trenches |
| No Inputs |
no aboveground litter and no roots |
|
Table 1. |
The
DIRT experiment was initiated at Harvard Forest LTER, MA in 1990 by Knute
Nadelhoffer with the construction of 18 litter manipulation plots based
on six treatments (Table 1). A DIRT experiment was also initiated in 1991
at Bousson Experimental Forest, PA by Rich Bowden of Allegheny College.
Kate Lajtha of Oregon State University established a DIRT experiment at
Andrews Forest LTER, OR in 1997. While these U.S. sites have different
forest types and fertilities, a site with a high rate of nitrogen deposition
was sought in order to extend the pollution gradient over which controls
on soil organic matter formation and nutrient cycling could be studied.
Kate Lajtha identified Sikfokut Forest as a high N deposition candidate
for a DIRT site while on a field trip there during the 1999 Central and
Eastern European ILTER Conference. Dr. Janos Toth of the University of
Debrecen, the director of Sikfokut, was interested in collaboration and
the project was born. Funding to establish the DIRT plots at Sikfokut
came from the Hungarian Academy of Science.
Janos
Toth and Kate Lajtha secured funding from the Hungarian Academy of Science
and NSF for reciprocal scientist exchanges between the US and Hungarian
DIRT sites, which has enabled several US researchers to visit Sikfokut
to demonstrate methods for measuring soil processes. Bruce Caldwell (Oregon
State University) has led the soil enzyme research work at Sikfokut. Rich
Bowden demonstrated the soda lime technique for measuring soil respiration
in May of 2002. Kate Lajtha and two graduate students measured N mineralization
at Sikfokut in April 2002. Kristin Vanderbilt, with NSF International
Postdoctoral Fellowship funding, helped establish the plots, installed
Prenart lysimeters to monitor soil solution chemistry and is also studying
changes in the soil community. Hungarian visits to U.S. DIRT sites include
that of Istvan Fekete, Ph.D. student at the University of Debrecen, to
Andrews Forest in March 2002. Janos Toth and Maria Papp from the University
of Debrecen will visit Andrews Forest and Harvard Forest DIRT sites in
September 2002.
Results
of the DIRT study will have many applications, particularly with respect
to understanding how global change may influence soil carbon stocks. The
DIRT experiment will greatly enhance what little is known about long-term
processes of humification and controls on soil C fluxes in forests. Already,
cross-site comparisons of soil respiration between Harvard Forest and
Bousson DIRT plots indicate that site fertility has a significant effect
on total respiration and partitioning of respiration between roots and
aboveground litter (Bouden, pers. comm.). Soil enzyme data from Andrews
Forest and Sikfokut suggest that the microbial community respond to reduced
litter levels within a few years of treatment (Caldwell, pers. comm.).
Sikfokut
Forest nicely complements the US DIRT sites, and will be a valuable reference
point for how a forest subjected to decades of high N deposition responds
to changes in litter quantity.
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