Cary potential nitrogen mineralization data 1994 to 2005
The Forest Response to Stress and Damage (frequently referred to as FORSTAD) and long term forest monitoring project began in 1992 to study how mixed-oak forests respond to multiple forms of environmental change. The research took place at Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in the Hudson Valley of New York. FORSTAD included several sub-projects including (1) air pollution and nutrient cycling, (2) spongy moth dynamics, (3) small mammal dynamics and (4) vegetation dynamics.This dataset is a contribution to the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, and is part of the Long term monitoring of forest ecosystems: air pollution and nutrient cycling archive.
To understand the effects of air pollution on forests, the chemistry of the precipitation as it fell onto and through the forest was measured. In addition, the chemistry of the soil where tree roots grew as well as the chemistry of leaves were measured. Lastly, to understand how the microbes in soil were affected by pollution, the breakdown of plant material into nitrogen that could be taken up by tree roots was measured. This latter process is called nitrogen cycling or nitrogen mineralization. The measurements included throughfall amount and chemistry, soil solution amount and chemistry, foliar chemistry, litterfall and frassfall amount and carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) concentration, potential N mineralization and nitrification. Datasets include, soil water, throughfall, leaf litter and nitrogen cycling.
The data presented here are extractable amounts of ammonium and nitrate (expressed as the concentration of N in micrograms N/gram dry weight soil), and the rates of nitrogen mineralization and nitrification (expressed as a rate of micrograms N/ gram dry weight soil/ day). Data are site-wide means for each soil horizon.
File list:
pj_ltm_data_n_mineralization_metadata.pdf - contains complete project metadata, personnel, methodology, and definitions for data variables in data file.
pj_ltm_data_n_mineralization_1994-2005.csv
Funding
General Reinsurance Corporation, Long-term monitoring of critical environmental problems
LTREB: Effects of Insect Defoliation on Nitrogen Loss from Forest Ecosystems
Directorate for Biological Sciences
Find out more...NYSERDA, Monitoring the deposition & effects of air pollution in the Hudson Valley
LTREB: Exotic Pests, Nitrogen Saturation, and Nutrient Cycling in a Northeastern Forest
Directorate for Biological Sciences
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