Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission."

Transcription

1 Non-Native Invasive Earthworms as Agents of Change in Northern Temperate Forests Author(s): Patrick J. Bohlen, Stefan Scheu, Cindy M. Hale, Mary Ann McLean, Sonja Migge, Peter M. Groffman, Dennis Parkinson Source: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, Vol. 2, No. 8 (Oct., 2004), pp Published by: Ecological Society of America Stable URL: Accessed: 11/11/ :53 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit organization founded in 1995 to build trusted digital archives for scholarship. We work with the scholarly community to preserve their work and the materials they rely upon, and to build a common research platform that promotes the discovery and use of these resources. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. Ecological Society of America is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

2 REVIEWS REVIEWS REVIEWS Non-native invasive earthworms as agents of change in northern temperate forests I Patrick J Bohlen1, Stefan Scheu2, Cindy M Hale3, Mary Ann McLean4, Sonja Migge5, Peter M Groffman6, and Dennis Parkinson7 I Exotic earthworms from Europe and Asia are invading many northern forests in North America that currently lack native earthworms, providing an opportunity to assess the role of this important group of invertebrates in forest ecosystems. Research on earthworm invasions has focused on changes in soil structure and carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling that occur following invasion. These changes include the mixing of organic and mineral soil horizons, decreases in soil C storage, and equivocal effects on N cycling. Less well studied are changes in the soil foodwebs that accompany earthworm invasion. Soils of north temperate forests harbor a tremendous diversity of microorganisms and invertebrates, whose distribution and abundance can be substantially altered by earthworm invasion. Furthermore, invasive earthworms can affect understory plant communities, raising concerns over the loss of rare native herbs in some areas. The ecological consequences of earthworm invasion are mediated through physical, geochemical, and biological effects. These effects vary with different earthworm species, as well as with the characteristics of the site being invaded. Earthworm invasions may have important interactions with other rapid changes predicted for northern forests in the coming decades, including climate and land-use change, increased nutrient deposition, and other biological invasions. Front Ecol Environ 2004; 2(8): Northern forests are experiencing multiple stresses and changes, including nutrient deposition and acidification, disease and pest outbreaks, changing climate, and biological invasions (Aber et al. 2001). Biological invasions in northern forests threaten to alter ecosystem structure and function, especially when they change the habitat of other species, alter the availability or transformation rates of key resources, or compete with or replace native species In a nutshell: * Many northern temperate forests in the US have had no nat- ural earthworm populations since the last glacial period, due to slow northward expansion of native species * Exotic earthworm species from Europe and Asia are invading many of these forests, substantially altering forest soils * These invasions can alter nutrient storage and availability, and greatly affect populations and communities of other flora and fauna that inhabit forest soils * Invasions by earthworms are likely to increase in northern forests with increased human activity and changing climate; the consequences should be considered along with other important changes taking place in these ecosystems 'Archbold Biological Station, Lake Placid, FL (pbohlen@ archbold-station.org); 2Department of Biology, Technische Universitdt Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany; 3The Natural Resources Research Institute, University of Minnesota, Duluth, MN; 4Indiana State University, Terre Haute, IN; 5Department of Biology, University of Gottingen, Gottingen, Germany; 6Insttute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook NY; 7Department of Biology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada. (Vitousek 1990). Understandably, much of the focus on exotic species invasions in forests and other ecosystems has been on aboveground invaders, which are the most apparent. However, belowground invasions may be equally widespread and may become better known as more ecologists begin to recognize the importance of links between aboveground and belowground communities (Scheu 2001; Wardle 2002). Invasion of northern forests by exotic earthworms, for example, is receiving increasing attention. Earthworms are the best known of the large soil fauna, but many northern forests in North America lacked earthworm populations prior to European settlement, probably because of slow northward expansion of native earthworm populations following the last glacial period (James 1995). Foreign earthworm species, mainly of European and Asian origin, are currently invading these forests over a wide geographic area (eg Alban and Berry 1994; Scheu and Parkinson 1994; Bohlen et al. 2004a). The earthworm species involved belong to a group that have been termed the "peregrine" species, representing a small portion of overall earthworm diversity, and are characterized by their ability to colonize new habitats, spread rapidly, and tolerate a wide range of ecosystems and environmental conditions (James and Hendrix 2004). The introduction of these species into new habitats is facilitated by human activity, such as the construction of logging roads, direct releases of unused fishing bait by anglers, and the relocation of fill or horticultural materials (Hendrix and Bohlen 2002). Earthworm invasions of northern forests can lead to? C The Ecological Society of America

3 I rapid and dramatic changes in the soil environment (Langmaid 1964; Alban and Berry 1994) due to the important role of earthworms in modifying soil structure, redistributing organic matter, and altering the habitat of other organisms living in or on the soil (Neilson and Hole 1964). This key role of earthworms in forest humus formation has long been recognized and is captured in the historical mull, moder, and mor terminology used to describe forest soils (Parkinson et al. 2004). Several excellent recent reviews are available on the ecology of earthworms, their critical role in soil genesis, their effects on nutrient cycling and organic matter breakdown, and their interactions with soil microbial communities (Lavelle et al. 1999; Edwards 2004). The goal of this paper is not to review this extensive literature, but rather to point out that earthworm invasions in northern forests provide an opportunity to examine the generality of current concepts in earthworm ecology and to compare and contrast the importance of different functional groups of organisms in invasion biology. Because earthworms modify the surface soil, which is where the primary interactions between aboveground and belowground communities are mediated, these invasions have important consequences for the soil foodweb, nutrient cycling, and plant communities. The accompanying disturbances may be an important aspect of the current and future environmental change in these forests. * Earthworm invasions and nutrient cycling Much of the research on earthworm invasions has focused on the consequences for nutrient cycling and soil microbial processes (eg Scheu and Parkinson 1994; Bohlen et al. 2004b; Groffman et al. 2004). Earthworms shift the soil system from a slower cycling, fungal-dominated system to a faster cycling, bacterial-dominated system, or at least one that is less fungus dominated (Wardle 2002). This is PJ Bohien Bohlen et al. accomplished through the redistribution and transformation of soil organic matter as earthworms consume organic-rich forest floor material and incorporate it into underlying mineral soil (Figure 1). The degree of mixing of soil layers depends upon the life history traits of particular earthworm species, which are often broadly categorized as belonging to one of three main ecological groups: epigeic, endogeic, and anecic (Edwards and Bohlen 1996). Epigeic species reside mainly in the upper organic layer and may cause limited mixing of mineral and organic soil layers. Endogeic species reside in the mineral or mixed soil layers and often enhance mixing of organic and mineral soil layers. Anecic species (including Lumbricus terrestris, the common nightcrawler) form nearly vertical permanent burrows up to 1-2 m deep. These species incorporate litter into the soil and bring mineral soil from different depths to the surface, resulting in soil mixing that is very different from the mixing caused by epigeic or endogeic species (Figures 1 and 2). Not all species fall neatly into these standard categories, but classification is useful for differentiating major ecological groups and their effects. The physical transformation of the soil is the most obvious sign of earthworm invasion in northern forests. How these physical changes and the associated redistribution of organic matter influence ecosystem level processes such as total C storage, N transformation rates, and loss of nutrients via hydrologic and gaseous pathways, and how these change over time, is not well understood. A shift towards a faster cycling system implies that earthworm invasion could result in a net loss of C from the soil. Northern forests are important global C sinks, but environmental changes may turn them into C sources (McKane et al. 1997; Hobbie et al. 2002). Earthworm invasion could enhance increased C flux from northern forests due to global warming, especially as the ranges of different ecological groups of earthworms expand into more of these forests. In fact, most studies have docu- Figure 1. Effects of invasive earthworms on forest soils in northern Minnesota. (a) Understory vegetation and herb layer in areas without earthworms. Note the abundance of tree seedlings and native herbs and the undisturbed soil layer with cover of leaf litter. (b) Understory vegetation and soil surface at a site invaded by earthworms. Note the lack of herb layer, exposed soil surface with reduced litter layer and abundant earthworm casts, and exposed roots of canopy trees due to disappearance of forest floor. The Ecological Society of America? The Ecological Society of America

4 P1 PJ Bohlen et al. mented an increase in soil C loss following earthworm invasion. Carbon loss of around 600 kg per hectare per year for a period of 14 years was reported for mixed hardwood forests in Minnesota (Alban and Berry 1994), and of 28% of total surface soil C for sugar maple (Acer saccharum) forests in the northeastern US (Bohlen et al. 2004b). Such losses occur because recalcitrant C pools that accumulate at the soil surface in the absence of earthworms are exposed to greater mineralization rates after earthworms invade. The increased mineralization is partly a result of earthworm respiration, but is mostly due to the stimulation of microbial activity in earthworm guts and casts. Mineralization is also increased by the secretion of labile C compounds in mucus and subsequent alteration of soil structure (Edwards and Bohlen 1996). In the long term, however, earthworm activity may contribute to stabilization of soil C in earthworm casts and other stable aggregates formed by earthworm activity (Scheu and Wolters 1991; Tiunov and Scheu 2000). The effects of earthworm invasion on N cycling and retention are more complex and less conclusive than the effects on C transformations. Nitrogen is both a limiting nutrient and an atmospheric pollutant, so the effects of earthworms on N cycling potentially influence nutrient uptake and the fate of atmospheric N deposited in forest ecosystems. Earthworms have been shown to increase the N mineralization and leaching of N from forest soils in both lab and microcosm studies (Haimi and Huhta 1990; Scheu and Parkinson 1994; Burtelow et al. 1998), indicating that earthworm invasions have the potential to accelerate rates of N transformation. Earthworm activity has been shown to increase denitrification rates in some instances, though not in others, and the question of whether earthworm invasion influences overall gaseous N flux from forest soils remains unanswered (Burtelow et al. 1998; Bohlen et al. 2004b). It is also unclear whether earthworm invasion substantially alters N retention in those systems. They did not lead to large increases in N leaching from surface soil in undisturbed forest plots in New York (Bohlen et al. 2004b). Analysis of soil C and N content and stable isotope signatures of invaded forest sites in New York suggested that total soil N remained unchanged following invasion, despite the fact that soil C storage decreased substantially (Bohlen et al. 2004b). An increase in total microbial biomass, which may act as a strong immobilization sink for available N in C-rich soils (Groffman et al. 2004), is one possible mechanism for N retention following earthworm invasion. This is an interesting finding because some studies have reported a decrease in microbial biomass in response to earthworm activity (Blair et al. 1997; Hendrix et al. 1998; Wolters and Joergensen 1992). However, most previous studies that reported a decrease in microbial biomass with earthworms involved agricultural or mixed soils, not organic-rich forest soils where earthworms can stimulate microbial biomass by mixing soil layers together (Scheu and Parkinson 1994; Saetre 1998). In the New Figure 2. Earthworms representative of different ecological groups. (a) Epigeic species, such as Dendrodrilus rubidus, inhabit organic-rich surface layers and feed mainly on surface organic matter. (b) Endogeic species, such as Octolasion tyrtaeum, consume more mineral soil than epigeic species, and mix mineral and organic soil layers together. (c) Anecic species, such as Lumbricus terrestris, live in deep vertical burrows, feed mainly on surface litter, and incorporate litter into the soil as well as transporting mineral soil to the surface from deeper soil layers. (Note that only the anterior end of L terrestris is shown here; the posterior end remains in its burrow).? C The Ecological Society of America

5 I York study, the increase in microbial biomass was attributed to a more favorable environment that increased the "carrying capacity" of the mixed surface soil relative to undisturbed forest floor. Understanding or predicting the effects of earthworm invasion on N cycling in forest soils depends on the quantity and quality of soil organic matter, because of the tight coupling of soil C and N cycling. Earthworms may increase N flux more in systems fertilized with N, such as agricultural or pasture systems (Knight et al. 1992; Dominguez et al. in press); earthworm invasion might therefore be expected to increase N flux more in forests with high levels of N deposition than in more N-limited systems, though this remains to be investigated. Earthworm invasion also affects phosphorus (P) cycling in soil, which is strongly influenced by physical and chemical modifications. Trees in areas with an intact forest floor concentrate a large proportion of their fine roots in this layer, where up to 80% of their annual P requirement is met by the tight linking of organic P mineralization and uptake (Wood et al. 1984; Yanai 1992). By eliminating the forest floor and mixing it with the underlying soil, earthworms can greatly alter P cycling by increasing P fixation by soil minerals and by altering the mineralization of organic P. For example, a study of sugar maple stands in Quebec showed that all stands that had forest floors mixed with mineral soil had lower concentrations of available P than did stands with intact forest floors, undisturbed by earthworm activity (Pare and Bemier 1989 a, b). A comparison of plots with and without earthworms in New York suggested that invasive earthworms influenced soil P cycling, but that the effects depended on the species composition of the earthworm community, possibly because various earthworm species differentially affect the degree of mixing of soil layers and the redistribution of organic and mineral components within the soil profile (Suarez et al. 2004). The effect of earthworms on P cycling is largely dependent on regional soil mineralogy, the degree of mixing of soil layers, and the timeframe of the invasion. An initial increase in organic P mineralization in the early stages of invasion may be followed by a decrease in available P as soil minerals fix more P. * Alteration of the soil foodweb Soil microbial community responses Organic layers in the soil provide microhabitats and resources that support an abundant and diverse soil community. The profound changes in the soil organic layers resulting from earthworm invasion greatly alter microhabitats and resources for microorganisms and invertebrates (Figure 3). However, with the exception of studies in forests in Alberta, Canada, and in a maple forest in New York, data on the effects of earthworm invasions on soil microbial communities in forests are limited. Studies on the response of soil fungi to the invasion of PJ Bohien Bohlen et al. Dendrobaena octaedra into pine forest soil in Alberta suggest that in the long term, fungal community diversity and richness decreased and dominance among fungi increased, apparently due to the disruption of fungal hyphae, decreased resource availability, and reduced spatial heterogeneity as the organic layers became homogenized (McLean and Parkinson 2000a). Competition among fungi was reduced soon after invasion, possibly through the addition of nutrients or as a result of disturbances due to burrowing and deposition of casts into the organic layers (McLean and Parkinson 1998b). Given the differences between epigeic, endogeic, and anecic earthworms in terms of feeding behavior and effects on the soil profile, one might expect the response of soil fungi to earthworm invasion to vary in accordance with the ecological group of the invading species. In fact, results from a laboratory mesocosm experiment suggest that some species, including fast-growing species of Trichoderma, are favored by the presence of the epigeic D octaedra, but are inhibited by the presence of anecic and/or endogeic earthworms, indicating that epigeic earthworms favor fungal species that tolerate moderate disturbances. Other fungi, including Mortierella sp (Zygomycetes), uniformly decreased in the presence of epigeic, anecic, or endogeic earthworms, reflecting their inability to tolerate hyphal disruption; this is due to the lack of septa to prevent cell content leakage. With so little data available, conclusions about the effects of earthworms on microfungal communities must remain preliminary. It is probable that earthworm invasions not only affect saprophytic but also mycorrhizal fungi, but this has not been well studied. Results from a laboratory study on the impacts of earthworms on mycorrhizal fungi are congruent with observations on saprophytic microfungi. The presence of earthworms of different ecological groups decreased colonization rates and abundance of arbuscular mycorrhizae of sugar maple, most likely due to physical disruption of fungal mycelia (Lawrence et al. 2003). Changes in the abundance and functioning of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi probably contributed to alterations in forest herb communities. Soil invertebrate community responses Earthworm invasions can rapidly alter soil structure, humus forms, and plant communities, and some of these changes can occur in as short a period as 2 to 5 years (Langmaid 1964). However, the influence of these ecosystem engineers on other soil biota, eg microarthropods (mites, collembolans), enchytraeids (potworms), or nematodes is poorly understood, especially with repect to changes that occur following earthworm invasions in forest ecosystems. Soil-inhabiting vertebrates and their responses to invading earthworms as new food resources have only recently been examined in more detail (Maerz et al. in press), although the importance of earthworms as a food source for a wide variety of vertebrates is well The Ecological Society of America? The Ecological Society of America

6 PJ Bohlen et al. at. I Figure 3. The diversity of soil mixing effects of different ecological groups of earthworms in boxes containing reconstructed soil layers from an aspen forest in southwest Alberta, Canada. (a) Boxes with no earthworms; (b) boxes containing individuals of the epigeic earthworm species, D octaedra, which have mixed the organic layer into the mineral soil; and (c) boxes containing individuals of the endogeic species, 0 tyrtaeum, which have thoroughly mixed the mineral and organic layers together. For more detail see Scheu & Parkinson (1994). established (Edwards and Bohlen 1996). The rapidly spreading earthworm D octaedra mainly inhabits the forest floor, which is also the major habitat for soil-inhabiting microarthropods. Studies in a pine forest in Alberta confirmed the expected, positive influence of earthworm activity on soil invertebrates (Wickenbrock and Heisler 1997; Loranger et al. 1998), but only either in the short term or in unfavorable habitats. A high biomass of D octaedra resulted in increased oribatid mite diversity; in a laboratory experiment, intermediate levels of earthworm activity tended to increase microarthropod abundance after 3 months, probably due to an increase in microhabitats and microbial food resources (McLean and Parkinson 1998a). Similarly, the dry and unfavourable pine litter (L-layer) was modified by earthworm activity in a way that resulted in increased oribatid mite species richness and diversity (McLean and Parkinson 2000b). However, high earthworm biomass and activity in the longer term and in the lower organic layers, the main habitats of microarthropods in climates with hot and dry summers and cold winters, resulted in strong decreases in diversity and abundance. These declines can be attributed to the restructuring of the organic layer into earthworm casts and associated mechanical disturbance, as well as the competition for microbial food resources. More dramatic decreases in microarthropod diversity and abundance were observed in aspen forest soil in Alberta when L terrestris, an anecic species, and 0 tyrtaeum and Aporrectodea caliginosa, both endogeic species, invaded soils previously devoid of earthworms. These large earthworm species mix organic material and mineral soil in much greater quantities than D octaedra, and therefore compete vigorously with microarthropods for microbial and organic food. They alter habitat and food resources more strongly and create mechanical disturbances which, as demonstrated in a 1-year laboratory experiment, may result in lower microarthropod abundances than are found in agricultural soils under conventional tillage (Migge 2001). The same processes occur in the field; these will be slower in dry continental climates such as in the forests of southern Alberta, but are likely to be much faster in the milder climates of the eastern forests. To date, there are no comparable data available from other regions, and data on enchytreaids, nematodes, and macroarthropods are lacking. Soil inhabiting vertebrates Recent studies on the foraging behavior of salamanders (Plethodon sp) suggest that introduced earthworms may play an important role in salamander diets, especially in lowland forests and during rainy seasons (Maerz et al. in press). Earthworms apparently increase the fecundity of adult salamanders by providing a high protein food source, but decrease the survival rates of young salamanders, presumably by reducing populations of smaller? The Ecological Society of America

7 I invertebrate food sources, or by altering the habitat in other ways. Further investigations are needed to understand how this influences salamander population dynamics and what impacts the invading earthworms will have on other predators, such as birds or small mammals. The changes observed in decomposer and plant communities, as well as vertebrate foraging strategies, imply that belowground invasions can also dramatically alter the aboveground food web. * Plant community responses to earthworm invasions The abundance and diversity of native plant species and tree seedlings can decline steeply following earthworm invasion (Figure 1). Some hardwood forest stands in northern Minnesota that had lush and diverse understory plant communities only 40 years ago now have only one species of native herb and virtually no tree seedlings remaining after earthworm invasion, although other factors may also have contributed to these changes (Hale 2004). Concerns have therefore been raised about the potential for widespread loss of native forest plant species and the stability of their communities in hardwood forest ecosystems following earthworm invasion. Earthworm invasions in sugar maple-dominated forests in northern Minnesota were first noted 15 to 20 years ago (Mortensen and Mortensen 1998). Many stands contained discrete, visible leading edges of invasion where forest floor thickness decreased from 10 cm to zero in distances as short as 75 meters. Associated with the loss of the forest floor across the leading edges were rapid increases in earthworm biomass, the successive appearance of up to eight earthworm species, and substantial changes in soil physical and chemical properties (Hale et al. in press). When not associated with some underlying gradient in initial soil conditions, this leading edge of earthworm invasion provides an opportunity to assess the relationships of earthworm biomass and species assemblages to changes in the understory plant community, while controlling for site-specific factors that often thwart field-based comparative studies. In study plots in northern Minnesota, the abundance and diversity of the herbaceous plant species and tree seedlings across leading edges of earthworm invasion decreased with increasing total earthworm biomass, but the magnitude of change depended on the species assemblage of the earthworm community (Hale 2004). Herbaceous plant communities were more strongly affected when the epi-endogeic species Lumbricus rubellus was present. A diverse community of herbaceous plants, including species that are often used as indicators of rich sugar maple-dominated hardwood forests in the Great Lakes region (such as Caulophyllum thalictroides, Uvularia grandiflora, Trillium spp, Osmorhiza claytonii, Asarum canadensis, and Polygonatum pubescens; Kotar 2002), could be found in areas where L rubellus was not present. This PJ Bohien Bohlen et al. diverse community of herbs was present even in some areas that supported a high biomass of earthworm species other than L rubellus. However, where the L rubellus biomass reached its maximum, the herbaceous plant community was dominated by Carex pennsylvanica and Arisaema triphyllum, with rare occurrences of other native plant species. The disappearance of established populations of the rare goblin fern (Botrychium mormo) were also associated with the invasion of this earthworm (Gundale 2002). Earthworm invasion of hardwood forests can have both direct and indirect effects on the understory plant community. Direct mortality of herbaceous plants and small tree seedlings rooted in the forest floor occurs when earthworms eat the forest floor out from under them (James and Cunningham 1989; Hale 2004). Earthworms may reduce plant regeneration by ingesting and burying seeds and by reducing the shelter offered by the forest floor layer, thus exposing seeds and seedlings to desiccation and predation by insects, small mammals, and other organisms (Leck 1989; Kostel-Hughes 1995). After initial earthworm invasion, smaller understory plant populations become more vulnerable to the impacts of deer grazing, which can lead to local extirpation (Augustine et al. 1998). Changes in soil nutrient dynamics, including increases in N and P loss due to leaching and decreased availability, may also affect the growth and composition of herbaceous plant communities following earthworm invasion (Bohlen et al. 2004b; Hale 2004). Individual responses of plant species to earthworm invasion will be important in determining the trajectory of compositional changes in hardwood forests following earthworm invasion (Scheu 2003; Hale 2004). In a greenhouse experiment, the addition of earthworms increased plant mortality and altered root-to-shoot ratios, but the magnitude and direction of those changes depended on both the plant species and the particular species of introduced earthworm. In field studies, Arisaema triphyllum (Jack in the pulpit) and Allium tricoccum (wild leeks) were both positively associated with increasing earthworm biomass (Hale 2004). Changes in the soil fungal community following earthworm invasion (Johnson et al. 1992; McLean and Parkinson 2000a; Lawrence et al. 2003), may have consequences for native understory plants, the vast majority of which are strongly mycorrhizal in northern forests (Brundrett and Kendrick 1988; Baskin and Baskin 1998). The dominance of earthworm-invaded sites by non-mycorrhizal herbs such as C pennsylvanica in Minnesota and Allia petioloata (garlic mustard) throughout the eastern US suggests that earthworms may enhance the competitive success of non-mycorrhizal herb species at the expense of mycorrhizal ones (Francis and Read 1994; Brussaard 1999; Hale 2004). In addition to effects on understory herbs, earthworm invasion may influence overstory trees by influencing root distribution and function (Fisk et al. 2004). Invading earthworms can lower the soil surface by removing the forest floor, thus leaving tree roots exposed and changing The Ecological Society of America? The Ecological Society of America

8 a I PJ P1 Bohlen et al. their distribution in the soil (Figure lb). Forest sites in New York overrun by earthworms had fewer fine roots than sites without earthworms, while the higher N concentration in roots in invaded sites indicated that earthworms altered allocation and possibly also functioning of fine roots and the efficiency of N uptake. The long-term consequences of such changes for tree nutrition, seedling establishment, and seed survival are unknown. Dispersal Resource quantity * source population * plant prc oductivity * natural expansion * soil orga anic matter * human activity * streams, rivers `11 Resource quality Soil factors * vegetation type * moisture hydrology * litter C:N ratio * texture, sand/silt/clay * tannins, polyphenotics * acidity, base cations b` b Physical effects Biological effects burrowing and casting Geochemical effects? change in soil habitat? litter removal * mixing soil layers * faster nutrient cycling? soil aggregates * adsorption/desorption < - less fungally-dominated porosity * mineral weathering? fewer mycorrhizae hydrology * change in minerology change in rooting zone? erosion? altered seedbed * Conclusions Ecosystem properties Ecological communities Earthworm invasion of northern * C loss (short term) * plant invasions forests is influenced by many fac- * C stabilization (long term) <. * loss of native herbs * N retention? tors and has? soil invertebrate community shifts multiple ecological * P availability? * microbial community shifts effects mediated through the * Tree nutrition? physical, geochemical, and biological changes that occur follow- Figure 4. This conceptual model illustrates how the influence of earthworms on the ing invasion (Figure 4). The eco- biological, chemical, and physical characteristics of the soil ecosystem interact to determine logical consequences of these the net influence of earthworm invasion on ecosystem processes and ecological communities invasions depend upon which (C = carbon, N = nitrogen, and P = phosphorus). See text for explanation. (Modified from species or species complexes Bohlen et al. 2004a). invade and the characteristics of the site being invaded. Enough evidence exists to gener- sent an inadequate food source for earthworms with rapid alize about some of these consequences, such as carbon growth rates. The quality of soil organic matter or plant loss and gross changes in microbial communities. Yet, litter, including such properties as the C:N ratio, or tandespite the vast literature on earthworm ecology, too lit- nin (polyphenol) content, is known to influence earthtle evidence is available to make general predictions worm feeding, growth, and fecundity. Forests with large about their effects on nutrient availability or loss, soil amounts of soil organic matter but poor food quality may erosion, and native microbial, plant, or invertebrate com- prevent establishment or limit growth and expansion of munities. Examining the response of the soil ecosystem to earthworm populations (Edwards and Bohlen 1996). earthworm invasion may help clarify current concepts in Finally, soil factors, such as texture, acidity, richness of earthworm ecology. It may even lead to new concepts base cations, and moisture, influence the establishment that will supplant long-held views about the role of earth- and size of earthworm populations. These various factors worms in forest ecosystems. may affect different species in dissimilar ways, so that Most research on earthworm invasions has focused on conditions that prevent colonization by one species may the consequences of invasion at particular forest sites, not prevent the establishment of another. with much less emphasis on the mechanisms of invasion The potential widespread loss of native understory and the broader landscape- and regional-scale factors that plant species that could result from expanding earthworm contribute to, or limit, invasion. These factors include invasion of northern hardwood forests raises the question agents of dispersal, the quantity and quality of resources of whether strategies could be developed to prevent furat invaded sites, the nature of the overstory vegetation, ther invasions or provide for restoration following invaand soil characteristics (Figure 4). Human activity has sion (Proulx 2003). Although local control of invasions been implicated as an important cause of earthworm dis- may be possible in some situations, the magnitude and persal, including anglers dumping unused fishing bait, regional scale of invasion by non-native earthworms suglogging trucks carrying mud that contains earthworms or gest that in the next few decades many northern tempercocoons into newly logged areas, and the spreading of ate forests that currently lack earthworms will be invaded horticultural materials such as mulch or compost in gar- to some degree, rendering regional control strategies dens or along trails. Factors that affect either the quantity impractical. Reducing agents of dispersal by, for example, or quality of soil organic matter are important because educating fishermen about the effects of earthworm organic matter is the primary resource base for invading introductions, limiting the spread of horticultural materiearthworms. Low quantities of organic matter may repre- als containing earthworms, or limiting new road con- The Ecological Society of America

9 I struction into forest tracts, may help slow dispersal of exotic earthworm species. The decline in some understory plant species following invasion is due to the cooccurrence of other factors, such as high deer densities (Augustine et al. 1998). In this situation, control of earthworms, even if it were possible, may not be sufficient to enhance recolonization of understory herbs without efforts to control deer densities. Northern temperate forests are facing rapid environmental transformations that include climate change, species invasion, changes in land-use patterns, and continued atmospheric deposition. Earthworm invasion is an additional factor that may interact with, and contribute to, these changes. Positive or negative interactions may occur, such as an acceleration of C loss (climate warming and earthworm invasion), increased gaseous or hydrologic flux of N (atmospheric deposition and earthworm invasion), or nutrient stress (drought or pollution and earthworm invasion). The increasing length of growing seasons and enhanced productivity currently occurring at northern latitudes (Papadopol 2000; Zhou et al. 2001) are likely to contribute to a more rapid northward expansion of earthworm populations and introductions of exotic species formerly limited by colder temperatures. Earthworm invasions are likely to interact with other biological invasions occurring concurrently or predicted to occur in forest ecosystems (Hansen et al. 2001). These invasions will have important consequences, not only for biodiversity and conservation, but also for nutrient cycling and ecosystem processes in northern forest ecosystems. * Acknowledgements Some of the research reported here was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (DEB and DEB ). The ideas presented in this paper benefited from discussions at a workshop on earthworm invasions sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Institute of Ecology at the University of Georgia and organized by Paul Hendrix. We thank Tim Fahey, Melany Fisk, Lee Frelich, Derek Pelletier, Peter Reich, and Esteban Suarez for their contributions to the work presented here. * References Aber JD, Neilson RP, McNulty S, et al Forest processes and global environmental change; predicting the effects of individual and multiple stressors. Bioscience 51: Alban DH and Berry EC Effects of earthworm invasion on morphology, carbon and nitrogen of a forest soil. Appl Soil Ecol 1: Augustine DJ, Frelich LE, and Jordon PA Evidence for two alternate stable states in an ungulate grazing system. Ecol Appl 8: Baskin CC and Baskin JM Seeds: ecology, biogeography and evolution of dormancy and germination. San Diego, CA: Academic Press. Blair JM, Parmelee RW, Allen MF et al Changes in soil N PJ Bohien Bohlen et al. pools in response to earthworm population manipulations in agroecosystems with different N sources. Soil Biol Biochem 29: Bohlen PJ, Groffman PM, Fahey TJ, et al. 2004a. Ecosystem consequences of exotic earthworm invasion of north temperate forests. Ecosystems 7: Bohlen PJ, Groffman PM, Fahey TJ, et al. 2004b. Influence of earthworm invasion on redistribution and retention of soil carbon and nitrogen in northern temperate forests. Ecosystems 7: Brundrett MC and Kendrick B The mycorrhizal status, root anatomy and phenology of plants in a sugar maple forest. Can J Botany 66: Brussaard L On the mechanisms of interactions between earthworms and plants. Pedobiologia 43: Burtelow AE, Bohlen PJ, and Groffman PM Influence of exotic earthworm invasion on soil organic matter, microbial biomass and denitrification potential in forest soils of the northeastern United States. Appl Soil Ecol 9: Dominguez J, Bohlen PJ, and Parmelee RW. Effects of earthworms on movement of nitrogen into groundwater in agroecosystems. Ecosystems. In press. Edwards CA (Ed) Earthworm ecology, 2nd edn. Boca Raton: CRC Press. Edwards CA and Bohlen PJ Biology and ecology of earthworms, 3rd ed. London, UK: Chapman and Hall. Fisk MC, Fahey TJ, Groffman PM, et al Earthworm invasion, fine root distribution and soil respiration in hardwood forests. Ecosystems 7: Francis R and Read DJ The contributions of mycorrhizal fungi to the determination of plant community structure. Plant Soil 159: Groffman PM, Bohlen PJ, Fisk MC, et al Exotic earthworm invasion and microbial biomass in temperate forest soils. Ecosystems 7: Gundale MJ The influence of exotic earthworms on soil organic horizon and the rare fern Botrychium mormo. Conserv Biol 16: Haimi J and Huhta V Effects of earthworms on decomposition processes in raw humus forest soil: a microcosm study. Biol Fert Soils 10: Hale CM Ecological consequences of exotic invaders: interactions involving European earthworms and native plant communities in hardwood forests (PhD dissertation). St Paul, MN: University of Minnesota. Hale CM, Frelich LE, and Reich PB. Exotic European earthworm invasion dynamics in northern hardwood forests of Minnesota, USA. Ecol Appl. In press. Hansen AJ, Neilson RP, Dale VH, et al Global change in forests: responses of species, communities, and biomes. Bioscience 51: Hendrix PF and Bohlen PJ Exotic earthworm invasions in North America: ecological and policy implications. Bioscience 52: Hendrix PF, Peterson AC, Beare MH, and Coleman DC Long-term effects of earthworms on microbial biomass nitrogen in coarse and fine textured soils. Appl Soil Ecol 9: Hobbie SE, Nadelhoffer KJ, and Hogberg P A synthesis: the role of nutrients as constraints on carbon balances in boreal and arctic regions. Plant Soil 242: James SW Systematics, biogeography, and ecology of nearc- tic earthworms from eastern, central, southern and southwestern United States. In: Hendrix PF (Ed). Earthworm ecology and biogeography in North America. Boca Raton, FL: Lewis Publishers. James SW and Cunningham MR Feeding ecology of some earthworms in Kansas tallgrass prairie. Am Midl Nat 121: James SW and Hendrix PF Invasion of exotic earthworms Ecological Society of America? The Ecological Society of America

10 P1 PJ Bohlen Bohien et al. into North America and other regions. In: Edwards CA (Ed). Earthworm ecology, 2nd ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. Johnson NC, Tilman DG, and Wedin D Plant and soil controls on mycorrhizal fungal communities. Ecology 73: Knight D, Elliot PW, Anderson JM, and Scholefield D The role of earthworms in permanent managed pastures in Devon England. Soil Biol Biochem 24: Kostel-Hughes E The role of soil seed banks and leaf litter in the regeneration of native and exotic tree species in urban forests (PhD dissertation). Bronx, NY: Fordham University. Kotar J, Kovach JA, and Burger TL A guide to forest communities and habitat types of northern Wisconsin, 2nd edn. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Department of Forest Ecology and Management. Langmaid KK Some effects of earthworm invasion in virgin podsols. Can J Soil Sci 44: Lavelle P, Brussaard L, and Hendrix P (Eds.) Earthworm management in tropical agroecosystems. New York: CABI International. Lawrence B, Fisk MC, Fahey TJ, et al Influence of nonnative earthworms on mycorrhizal colonization of sugar maple (Acer saccharum). New Phytol 157: Leck M Ecology of soil seed banks. San Diego, CA: Academic Press. Loranger G, Ponge JF, Blanchart E, and Lavelle P Impact of earthworms on the diversity of microarthropods in a vertisol (Martinique). Biol Fert Soils 27: Maerz JC, Karuzas JM, Madison DM, and Blossey B. Introduced invertebrates are important prey for a generalist predator. Divers Distrib. In press. McKane RB, Rastetter EB, Shaver GR, et al Reconstruction and analysis of historical changes in carbon storage in arctic tundra. Ecology 78: McLean MA and Parkinson D. 1998a. Impacts of the epigeic earthworm Dendrobaena octaedra on oribatid mite community diversity and microarthropod abundances in pine forest floor: a mesocosm study. Appl Soil Ecol 7: McLean MA and Parkinson D. 1998b. Impacts of the epigeic earthworm Dendrobaena octaedra on microfungal community structure in pine forest floor - a mesocosm study. Appl Soil Ecol 8: McLean MA and Parkinson D. 2000a. Field evidence of the effects of the epigeic earthworm Dendrobaena octaedra on the microfungal community in pine forest floor. Soil Biol Biochem 32: McLean MA and Parkinson D. 2000b. Introduction of the epigeic earthworm Dendrobaena octaedra changes the oribatid community and microarthropod abundances in a pine forest. Soil Biol Biochem 32: Migge S The effect of earthworm invasion on nutrient turnover, microorganisms and microarthropods in Canadian aspen forest soil (PhD dissertation). Darmstadt, Germany: Technische Universitat Darmstadt. Mortensen S and Mortensen CE A new angle on earthworms. The Minnesota Conservation Volunteer, July-August: Neilson GE and Hole FE Earthworms and the development of coprogenous Al horizons in forest soils of Wisconsin. Soil Sci Soc Am Pro 28: Papadopol CS Impacts of climate warming on forests in Ontario: options for adaptation and mitigation. Forest Chron 76: Pare D and Berier B. 1989a. Origin of phosphorus deficiency observed in declining sugar maple stands in the Quebec Appalachians. Can] Forest Res 19: Pare D and Bemier B. 1989b. Changes in phosphorus nutrition of sugar maple along a topographic gradient in the Quebec Appalachians. Can J Forest Res 19: Parkinson D, McLean MA, and Scheu S Impacts of earthworms on other biota in forest soils, with some emphasis on cool temperate montane forests. In: Edwards CA (Ed). Earthworm ecology, 2nd edn. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. Proulx N Ecological risk assessment of non-indigenous earthworm species. St Paul, MN: US Fish and Wildlife Service, International Affairs, Division of Scientific Authority. Saetre P Decomposition, microbial community structure, and earthworm effects along a birch-spruce soil gradient. Ecology 79: Scheu S Plants and generalist predators as links between the below-ground and above-ground system. Basic Appl Ecol 2: Scheu S Effects of earthworms on plant growth: patterns and perspectives. Pedobiologia 47: Scheu S and Parkinson D Effects of earthworms on nutrient dynamics, carbon turnover and microorganisms in soils from cool temperate forests of the Canadian Rocky Mountains - laboratory studies. Appl Soil Ecol 1: Scheu S and Wolters V Influence of fragmentation and bioturbation on the decomposition of carbon-14-labelled beech leaf litter. Soil Biol Biochem 23: Suarez ER, Fahey TJ, Groffman PM, et al Effects of exotic earthworms on soil phosphorus cycling in two broadleaf temperate forests. Ecosystems 7: Tiunov AV and Scheu S Microbial biomass, biovolume and respiration in Lumbricus terrestris L. cast material of different age. Soil Biol Biochem 32: Vitousek PM Biological invasions and ecosystem processes: toward an integration of population biology and ecosystem studies. Oikos 57: Wardle D Communities and ecosystems: linking the aboveground and belowground components. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Wickenbrock L and Heisler C Influence of earthworm activity on the abundance of Collembola in soil. Soil Biol and Biochem 29: Wolters V and Joergensen RG Microbial carbon turnover in beech forest soils worked by Aporrectodea caliginosa (Savigny) (Oligochaeta: Lumbricidae). Soil Biol Biochem 24: Wood T, Bormann FH, and Voigt GK Phosphorus cycling in a northern hardwood forest: biological and chemical control. Science 23: Yanai RD Phosphorus budget of a 70-year-old norther hardwood forest. Biogeochemistry 17: Zhou L, Shabanov NV, Myneni RB, et al Variations in northern vegetation activity inferred from satellite data of vegetation index during 1981 to J Geophys Res - Atmos 106: I? The Ecological Society of America

Exotic Earthworms in Minnesota Hardwood Forests:

Exotic Earthworms in Minnesota Hardwood Forests: Conservation Biology Research Grants Program Division of Ecological Services Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Exotic Earthworms in Minnesota Hardwood Forests: An investigation of earthworm distribution,

More information

Leaf Litter Mass Relating to Earthworm Community Biomass and. Soil Characteristics in Hardwood Wisconsin Forests

Leaf Litter Mass Relating to Earthworm Community Biomass and. Soil Characteristics in Hardwood Wisconsin Forests Leaf Litter Mass Relating to Earthworm Community Biomass and Soil Characteristics in Hardwood Wisconsin Forests BIOS: 569: Practicum in Field Biology Luritta E. Whiting Advisor: David Costello 2007 Whiting

More information

Study of Dispersion Rates for Individuals of Aporrectodea spp., Lumbricus terrestris, and Lumbricus rubellus With and Without Presence of Leaf Litter

Study of Dispersion Rates for Individuals of Aporrectodea spp., Lumbricus terrestris, and Lumbricus rubellus With and Without Presence of Leaf Litter 1 Study of Dispersion Rates for Individuals of Aporrectodea spp., Lumbricus terrestris, and Lumbricus rubellus With and Without Presence of Leaf Litter Practicum in Field Biology James Welle Advisor: David

More information

Invasive Earthworms in Northeastern Sugarbushes

Invasive Earthworms in Northeastern Sugarbushes Invasive Earthworms in Northeastern Sugarbushes Cheryl Frank Sullivan, Bruce L. Parker, Margaret Skinner & Josef Gӧrres, Univ. of Vermont, Entomology Research Laboratory & Plant & Soil Science Dept. Chittenden

More information

The wave towards a new steady state: effects of earthworm invasion on soil microbial functions

The wave towards a new steady state: effects of earthworm invasion on soil microbial functions The wave towards a new steady state: effects of earthworm invasion on soil microbial functions Nico Eisenhauer, Ji#í Schlaghamerský, Peter B. Reich & Lee E. Frelich Biological Invasions ISSN 1387-3547

More information

Possible Interactions Between Deer Herbivory and Earthworm Invasion Impacts on. the Regeneration of Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum)

Possible Interactions Between Deer Herbivory and Earthworm Invasion Impacts on. the Regeneration of Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum) Possible Interactions Between Deer Herbivory and Earthworm Invasion Impacts on the Regeneration of Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum) in Northern Hardwood Forest. BIOS 35502: Practicum in Field Biology Shawn

More information

Migration Dynamics of Invasive Earthworms in Varied Soil Moisture Conditions at UNDERC

Migration Dynamics of Invasive Earthworms in Varied Soil Moisture Conditions at UNDERC Keuthen 1 Migration Dynamics of Invasive Earthworms in Varied Soil Moisture Conditions at UNDERC BIOS 35502 Allison Keuthen Advisor: Dave Costello University of Notre Dame 2008 Keuthen 2 Abstract As an

More information

A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY. Cynthia Marie Hale

A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY. Cynthia Marie Hale Ecological consequences of exotic invaders: interactions involving European earthworms and native plant communities in hardwood forests A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY

More information

CHANGES IN HARDWOOD FOREST UNDERSTORY PLANT COMMUNITIES IN RESPONSE TO EUROPEAN EARTHWORM INVASIONS

CHANGES IN HARDWOOD FOREST UNDERSTORY PLANT COMMUNITIES IN RESPONSE TO EUROPEAN EARTHWORM INVASIONS Ecology, 87(7), 2006, pp. 1637 1649 Ó 2006 by the Ecological Society of America CHANGES IN HARDWOOD FOREST UNDERSTORY PLANT COMMUNITIES IN RESPONSE TO EUROPEAN EARTHWORM INVASIONS CINDY M. HALE, 1 LEE

More information

Relationships between Native Woody and Herbaceous Understory Vegetation Species Diversity. and Invasive Earthworm Density and Biomass at UNDERC

Relationships between Native Woody and Herbaceous Understory Vegetation Species Diversity. and Invasive Earthworm Density and Biomass at UNDERC Relationships between Native Woody and Herbaceous Understory Vegetation Species Diversity and Invasive Earthworm Density and Biomass at UNDERC BIOS 35502-01: Practicum in Field Biology Catherine Graff

More information

The Effect of Invasive Earthworm Lumbricus terrestris on the Distribution of Nitrogen in Soil Profile

The Effect of Invasive Earthworm Lumbricus terrestris on the Distribution of Nitrogen in Soil Profile The Effect of Invasive Earthworm Lumbricus terrestris on the Distribution of Nitrogen in Soil Profile Sarah Adelson, Christine Doman, Gillian Golembiewski, Luke Middleton University of Michigan Biological

More information

Cover it up! Using plants to control buckthorn

Cover it up! Using plants to control buckthorn Cover it up! Using plants to control buckthorn Mike Schuster, Peter Wragg, Peter Reich, Lee Frelich Minnesota Invasive Terrestrial Plants and Pests Center University of Minnesota Alex Roth Paul Bockenstedt

More information

Assessing the impacts of European earthworm invasions in beech-maple hardwood and aspen-fir boreal forests of the western Great Lakes region

Assessing the impacts of European earthworm invasions in beech-maple hardwood and aspen-fir boreal forests of the western Great Lakes region Assessing the impacts of European earthworm invasions in beech-maple hardwood and aspen-fir boreal forests of the western Great Lakes region Cindy M. Hale and George E. Host The Natural Resources Research

More information

PAPERCRAFT SOIL HEALTH AND ORGANIC MATTER: ROLES OF THE BIOLOGICAL ENGINE OF THE EARTH

PAPERCRAFT SOIL HEALTH AND ORGANIC MATTER: ROLES OF THE BIOLOGICAL ENGINE OF THE EARTH PAPERCRAFT SOIL HEALTH AND ORGANIC MATTER: ROLES OF THE BIOLOGICAL ENGINE OF THE EARTH karl.ritz@nottingham.ac.uk Soils alive: the biological basis of soil health OUTLINE Introduction context What is soil?

More information

M.J. Kaurmann 2001

M.J. Kaurmann 2001 M.J. Kaurmann 2001 Soil Biodiversity: Exploring the World Beneath Your Feet Jeff Battigelli, Ph.D., P.Ag. Organic Alberta February 9-10, 2018. What is soil? Outline What soil properties influence

More information

PAPERCRAFT SOIL HEALTH AND ORGANIC MATTER: ROLES OF THE BIOLOGICAL ENGINE OF THE EARTH

PAPERCRAFT SOIL HEALTH AND ORGANIC MATTER: ROLES OF THE BIOLOGICAL ENGINE OF THE EARTH PAPERCRAFT SOIL HEALTH AND ORGANIC MATTER: ROLES OF THE BIOLOGICAL ENGINE OF THE EARTH karl.ritz@nottingham.ac.uk Soils alive: the biological basis of soil health OUTLINE Introduction context What is soil?

More information

BIOMES. Living World

BIOMES. Living World BIOMES Living World Biomes Biomes are large regions of the world with distinctive climate, wildlife and vegetation. They are divided by terrestrial (land) or aquatic biomes. Terrestrial Biomes Terrestrial

More information

BLY 303 Lecture Notes, 2011 (O Brien) Introduction to Ecology

BLY 303 Lecture Notes, 2011 (O Brien) Introduction to Ecology BLY 303 Lecture Notes, 2011 (O Brien) Introduction to Ecology I. Basic Concepts A. Ecology 1. Definition: study of the interactions that determine the distribution and abundance of organisms 2. Ecological

More information

Theme General projections Trend Category Data confidence Climatology Air temperature

Theme General projections Trend Category Data confidence Climatology Air temperature PHYSICAL EFFECTS ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY & POLLUTANTS Theme General projections Trend Category Data confidence Climatology Air temperature Precipitation Drought Wind Ice storms Water temperature Water

More information

Chapter 40a. Ch. 52 An Introduction to Ecology and the Biosphere

Chapter 40a. Ch. 52 An Introduction to Ecology and the Biosphere Chapter 40a Ch. 52 An Introduction to Ecology and the Biosphere Ecology: the scientific study of the interactions between organisms and the environment The ecological study of species involves biotic and

More information

Fire ecology of ponderosa pine

Fire ecology of ponderosa pine Fire ecology of ponderosa pine Historically, fires were frequent (every 2-25 yr) and predominantly nonlethal Droughts are common Biomass production exceeds decomposition Ignition is not limiting: lightning

More information

Lab today Finish Inventory work at Rest Area Site

Lab today Finish Inventory work at Rest Area Site Lubrecht Forest, Montana NREM 301 Forest Ecology & Soils Day 23 Nov 10, 2009 Nutrient Cycling (Chapters 16-18) Lab today Finish Inventory work at Rest Area Site Quiz on Thursday Also record trees & shrubs

More information

MANITOBA ENVIROTHON WATER AND AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS

MANITOBA ENVIROTHON WATER AND AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS MANITOBA ENVIROTHON WATER AND AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS Outcome Water and Aquatic Ecosystems as Resources Properties of Water, Water Bodies and Watersheds, and Aquatic Species Identification A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6

More information

Nonlinearity of effects of invasive ecosystem engineers on abiotic soil properties and soil biota

Nonlinearity of effects of invasive ecosystem engineers on abiotic soil properties and soil biota Oikos 000: 000000, 2009 doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2009.17405.x, # 2009 The Authors. Journal compilation # 2009 Oikos Subject Editor: Heikki Setälä, Accepted 7 January 2009 Nonlinearity of effects of invasive

More information

Ecology Review. Name: Date: Period:

Ecology Review. Name: Date: Period: Ecology Review Name: Date: Period: 1. Define the terms ecology and ecosystem. Ecology - The study of the interactions among organisms and their environment Ecosystem - collection of all the organisms that

More information

Red Pine Management Guide A handbook to red pine management in the North Central Region

Red Pine Management Guide A handbook to red pine management in the North Central Region Red Pine Management Guide A handbook to red pine management in the North Central Region This guide is also available online at: http://ncrs.fs.fed.us/fmg/nfgm/rp A cooperative project of: North Central

More information

Forest Biomes. Chapter 9

Forest Biomes. Chapter 9 Forest Biomes Chapter 9 9.1 Objectives ~Describe the characteristics of the coniferous forest. ~Explain adaptations that enable organisms to survive in coniferous forests. 9.1 Coniferous Forests Coniferous

More information

Impacts of Invasive Pests on Forest Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics in the Catskills

Impacts of Invasive Pests on Forest Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics in the Catskills Impacts of Invasive Pests on Forest Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics in the Catskills Gary Lovett and Katherine Crowley Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Thanks to colleagues: Mary Arthur, U. Kentucky Kathie

More information

Microbial biomass, ammonium, and nitrate levels in the soil across a northeastern hardwood/mixed conifer chronosequence Abstract Intro

Microbial biomass, ammonium, and nitrate levels in the soil across a northeastern hardwood/mixed conifer chronosequence Abstract Intro Molly Radosevich EEB 381 General Ecology Dr. Shannon Pelini Microbial biomass, ammonium, and nitrate levels in the soil across a northeastern hardwood/mixed conifer chronosequence Abstract Wildfire is

More information

Agroforestry in 12 principles

Agroforestry in 12 principles Agroforestry in 12 principles Agroforestry refers to all agricultural practices that integrate trees into cropping or livestock production systems and are inspired, in agronomic terms, by the numerous

More information

Buckthorn and Earthworm Mutualism in Southern Minnesota; Interactions between Non-Native Species

Buckthorn and Earthworm Mutualism in Southern Minnesota; Interactions between Non-Native Species Buckthorn and Earthworm Mutualism in Southern Minnesota; Interactions between Non-Native Species Jamie E. Mosel, Ecology, St. Olaf College, 1520 St. Olaf Ave., Northfield, MN 55057 Abstract Earthworms

More information

Ecosystems. 6.L.2.2 Explain how plants respond to external stimuli (including dormancy and forms of tropism) to enhance survival in an environment.

Ecosystems. 6.L.2.2 Explain how plants respond to external stimuli (including dormancy and forms of tropism) to enhance survival in an environment. Ecosystems Date: 6.L.2 Understand the flow of energy through ecosystems and the responses of populations to the biotic and abiotic factors in their environment. 6.L.2.1 Summarize how energy derived from

More information

Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology

Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology E Stuart Chapin III Pamela A. Matson Harold A. Mooney Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology Illustrated by Melissa C. Chapin With 199 Illustrations Teehnische Un.fversitSt Darmstadt FACHBEREIGH 10

More information

AP BIOLOGY SUMMER QUESTIONS

AP BIOLOGY SUMMER QUESTIONS AP BIOLOGY SUMMER ASSIGNMENT This assignment does NOT exempt you from other science summer reading. You must also complete other science summer reading, AP assignments, and English summer reading. AP BIOLOGY

More information

Rhizosphere Affects on Soil Quality. Slake Test Demonstration Infiltration Test

Rhizosphere Affects on Soil Quality. Slake Test Demonstration Infiltration Test Rhizosphere Affects on Soil Quality Slake Test Demonstration Infiltration Test George D. Derringer Resource Soil Scientist Southwest Ohio 937-836-5428 Ext. 107 This is the same soil- What happened? Both

More information

Forest Restoration and Management in a Changing Climate: Implications for North Shore Watersheds

Forest Restoration and Management in a Changing Climate: Implications for North Shore Watersheds Forest Restoration and Management in a Changing Climate: Implications for North Shore Watersheds Mark A. White, Meredith Cornett The Nature Conservancy Matthew Duveneck and Robert Scheller, Portland State

More information

Exotic Earthworm Communities Within Upland Deciduous Forests of National Wildlife Refuges in the Upper Midwest

Exotic Earthworm Communities Within Upland Deciduous Forests of National Wildlife Refuges in the Upper Midwest Surveys Exotic Earthworm Communities Within Upland Deciduous Forests of National Wildlife Refuges in the Upper Midwest Lindsey M. Shartell,* R. Gregory Corace III, Andrew J. Storer L.M. Shartell, A.J.

More information

The Influence of Tree Species on the Activity and Impacts of. Invasive Earthworms. Matt Maraynes. October 15, 2006

The Influence of Tree Species on the Activity and Impacts of. Invasive Earthworms. Matt Maraynes. October 15, 2006 The Influence of Tree Species on the Activity and Impacts of Invasive Earthworms Matt Maraynes Horace Greeley High School 70 Roaring Brook Road Chappaqua, NY 10514 October 15, 2006-1 - Introduction Most

More information

extinction rates. (d) water availability and solar radiation levels are highest in the tropics. (e) high temperature causes rapid speciation.

extinction rates. (d) water availability and solar radiation levels are highest in the tropics. (e) high temperature causes rapid speciation. NOTE: Questions #57 100 that follow may have been based in part on material supplied by a textbook publisher. For that reason, the answers to them are provided free (as they were to the students that semester.

More information

Biotic and abiotic controls on the germination of three common forest invaders

Biotic and abiotic controls on the germination of three common forest invaders Biotic and abiotic controls on the germination of three common forest invaders Alex Roth Department of Forest Resources University of Minnesota FR 8107 Fall 2012 Crowling Arboretum Crowling Arboretum Introduction

More information

Managing for a healthy sugarbush in a changing climate

Managing for a healthy sugarbush in a changing climate Managing for a healthy sugarbush in a changing climate Vermont Maple Conference, Peoples Academy, Morrisville, VT January 28, 2017 Jared Nunery & Nancy Patch County Foresters Vermont Dept. of Forests,

More information

Soil Quality: Soil Indicators. Dr. Paul Hargreaves SRUC Dairy Research and Innovation Centre

Soil Quality: Soil Indicators. Dr. Paul Hargreaves SRUC Dairy Research and Innovation Centre Soil Quality: Soil Indicators Dr. Paul Hargreaves SRUC Dairy Research and Innovation Centre 1 Soil air, water, minerals Soil functions Support hooves and wheels Reduce gas losses, N 2 O, N 2, NH 3 and

More information

Linking direct and indirect pathways mediating earthworms, deer, and understory composition in Great Lakes forests

Linking direct and indirect pathways mediating earthworms, deer, and understory composition in Great Lakes forests Biol Invasions (2013) 15:1057 1066 DOI 10.1007/s10530-012-0350-6 ORIGINAL PAPER Linking direct and indirect pathways mediating earthworms, deer, and understory composition in Great Lakes forests Nicholas

More information

OTBA. THEME: Forests - Friends for Life

OTBA. THEME: Forests - Friends for Life OTBA THEME: Forests - Friends for Life The forest is a complex ecosystem consisting mainly of trees that have formed a buffer for the earth to protect life forms. The trees which make up the main area

More information

Lesson 3.1. Canada's Biomes. As you go down the list, the terms include more and more biotic and abiotic factors. 3.1 Canada's Biomes.

Lesson 3.1. Canada's Biomes. As you go down the list, the terms include more and more biotic and abiotic factors. 3.1 Canada's Biomes. Lesson 3.1 Canada's Biomes Jun 4 7:26 PM As you go down the list, the terms include more and more biotic and abiotic factors. May 17 2:04 PM 1 Biome a large geographic area with a similar climate Biosphere

More information

WATER AND AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS

WATER AND AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS WATER AND AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS Water and Aquatic Ecosystems as Resources Properties of Water, Water Bodies and Watersheds A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 A8 A9 A10 A11 A12 A13 A14 A15 A16 A17 A18 Describe the ecological,

More information

SHAWN L. WORTHING Department of Forest Resources 1257 Sample Ave. Saint Paul, MN Office: Fax:

SHAWN L. WORTHING Department of Forest Resources 1257 Sample Ave. Saint Paul, MN Office: Fax: 1257 Sample Ave. Saint Paul, MN 55108 Office: 612-624-7777 Fax: 612-625-6666 Email: worth001@umn.edu EDUCATION Ph.D. Conservation Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota DISSERTATION: Ecological

More information

Growing conditions and tree productivity in boreal mixedwoods: hidden opportunities for forest managers

Growing conditions and tree productivity in boreal mixedwoods: hidden opportunities for forest managers Growing conditions and tree productivity in boreal mixedwoods: hidden opportunities for forest managers SFM Network Research Note Series No. 46 Highlights Tree-growing conditions are more favourable in

More information

Riparian Forest Ecology & Management. Derek Churchill, Nov 8, 2014

Riparian Forest Ecology & Management. Derek Churchill, Nov 8, 2014 Riparian Forest Ecology & Management Derek Churchill, Nov 8, 2014 Outline 1. Importance of Riparian Zones 2. Watersheds & Stream Type 3. Forest Stream Interactions 4. Riparian forest types & development

More information

Application of Waste to Soils

Application of Waste to Soils Application of Waste to Soils Definition of Waste "Wastes are materials that are not prime products (that is products produced for the market) for which the generator has no further use in terms of his/her

More information

Sustaining Terrestrial Biodiversity: Saving Ecosystems and Ecosystem Services

Sustaining Terrestrial Biodiversity: Saving Ecosystems and Ecosystem Services LIVING IN THE ENVIRONMENT, 18e G. TYLER MILLER SCOTT E. SPOOLMAN 10 Sustaining Terrestrial Biodiversity: Saving Ecosystems and Ecosystem Services Core Case Study: Costa Rica A Global Conservation Leader

More information

The Sustainability of Forest Residue for Bioenergy in Canada: What can biodiversity tell us? Venier, L.A., Aubin, I., Webster, K. Fleming, R.

The Sustainability of Forest Residue for Bioenergy in Canada: What can biodiversity tell us? Venier, L.A., Aubin, I., Webster, K. Fleming, R. 1 The Sustainability of Forest Residue for Bioenergy in Canada: What can biodiversity tell us? Venier, L.A., Aubin, I., Webster, K. Fleming, R., Hazlett, P., Titus, B. Forest Residue 2 Tree-length Harvest

More information

Synergies, feedbacks and tipping points: mountain pine beetle s rapid range expansion threatens invasion of North American boreal pine forests

Synergies, feedbacks and tipping points: mountain pine beetle s rapid range expansion threatens invasion of North American boreal pine forests Synergies, feedbacks and tipping points: mountain pine beetle s rapid range expansion threatens invasion of North American boreal pine forests Allan L. Carroll The University of British Columbia Department

More information

The Nutrient Cycle. Atmospheric pool. Organic material. 5 Soil solution storage

The Nutrient Cycle. Atmospheric pool. Organic material. 5 Soil solution storage The Nutrient Cycle Atmospheric pool Precipitation Canopy, wood, and root Litter fall SOIL 2 Soil and rock minerals cations 1 2 3 Groundwater level Organic material 5 Soil solution storage 4 4 Channel BEDROCK

More information

Unit A: Introduction to Forestry. Lesson 2:Understanding Forest Ecology

Unit A: Introduction to Forestry. Lesson 2:Understanding Forest Ecology Unit A: Introduction to Forestry Lesson 2:Understanding Forest Ecology 1 Terms Bole Ecology Ecosystem Forest ecology Hardening-off Hardiness Material cycle Mycorrhizae Overstory Photoperiod Stratification

More information

Effects of exotic earthworms on maple forests in northeastern states

Effects of exotic earthworms on maple forests in northeastern states Effects of exotic earthworms on maple forests in northeastern states NAMSC ISMI 2017 Annual Meeting & Maple Conference Oct. 25, 2017 Lévis Convention Centre; Quebec, Canada Josef Gorres, Bruce L. Parker,

More information

Understanding tropical deforestation

Understanding tropical deforestation Understanding tropical deforestation By NASA, adapted by Newsela staff on 03.13.17 Word Count 1,466 Level 1170L Two logging trucks on the Kalabakan-Sapulot-Road take heavy tropical timber logs to the log

More information

Understory plant diversity and composition in boreal mixedwood forests

Understory plant diversity and composition in boreal mixedwood forests Understory plant diversity and composition in boreal mixedwood forests SFM Network Research Note Series No. 72 Highlights Understory plant communities are critical components of boreal mixedwood forests

More information

Managing near Vernal Pools using Good Forestry in the Granite State

Managing near Vernal Pools using Good Forestry in the Granite State Managing near Vernal Pools using Good Forestry in the Granite State Matt Tarr Associate Extension Professor Wildlife Specialist University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension NESAF Conference March

More information

Changing Climate, Changing Forests The Impacts of Climate Change on Forests of the Northeastern United States and Eastern Canada

Changing Climate, Changing Forests The Impacts of Climate Change on Forests of the Northeastern United States and Eastern Canada Changing Climate, Changing Forests The Impacts of Climate Change on Forests of the Northeastern United States and Eastern Canada Lindsey Rustad, US Forest Service NE March 26, 2014 Lindsey Rustad, US Forest

More information

Assessing the impacts of intensive biomass removals and ash applications in the boreal forest

Assessing the impacts of intensive biomass removals and ash applications in the boreal forest Assessing the impacts of intensive biomass removals and ash applications in the boreal forest Paul Hazlett, Dave Morris, Rob Fleming Canadian Forest Service, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources Why a

More information

Integrity of Phosphorus Adsorption in Forested Buffer Strips and Hardwood Forests After Earthworm Invasion

Integrity of Phosphorus Adsorption in Forested Buffer Strips and Hardwood Forests After Earthworm Invasion University of Vermont ScholarWorks @ UVM UVM Honors College Senior Theses Undergraduate Theses 2017 Integrity of Phosphorus Adsorption in Forested Buffer Strips and Hardwood Forests After Earthworm Invasion

More information

Managing Soils for Improved Pasture

Managing Soils for Improved Pasture Managing Soils for Improved Pasture Jonathan Deenik, PhD Department of Tropical Plant and Soil Sciences University of Hawaii Rota Grazing and Livestock Management Workshop June 10-12, 12, 2010 1 Water

More information

Forensic Forestry Reading the Land

Forensic Forestry Reading the Land Principles of Forest Ecology and Management or Forensic Forestry Reading the Land Jonathan Kays University of Maryland Extension Where Do We Start? Think Like A Plant Act Like A Plant Thinking and Acting

More information

Succession Notes. Example of succession: 1) Primary Succession: What is ecological succession? Why does an ecosystem change?

Succession Notes. Example of succession: 1) Primary Succession: What is ecological succession? Why does an ecosystem change? Succession Notes 1 Topic: Succession What is ecological succession? The process where plants & animals of a particular area are replaced by different more complex species over time. The natural aging of

More information

Hana Santruckova Introduction in the topic of the IP Soil & Water :

Hana Santruckova Introduction in the topic of the IP Soil & Water : ERASMUS Soil & Water Protokoll Montag 17.09.2012 Hana Santruckova Introduction in the topic of the IP Soil & Water : Soil-Water-Interactions water retention capacity of soil: water doesn't evaporate in

More information

The Terrestrial Experience: Species Diversity and Ecosystem Functioning Diana H. Wall

The Terrestrial Experience: Species Diversity and Ecosystem Functioning Diana H. Wall The Terrestrial Experience: Species Diversity and Ecosystem Functioning Diana H. Wall Dept Biology & Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO Image by D. Bumbarger:

More information

Chapter 3 Communities, Biomes, and Ecosystems

Chapter 3 Communities, Biomes, and Ecosystems Communities, Biomes, and Ecosystems Section 1: Community Ecology Section 2: Terrestrial Biomes Section 3: Aquatic Ecosystems Click on a lesson name to select. 3.1 Community Ecology Communities A biological

More information

FOR 433. Carolyn Hull Sieg. US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station Flagstaff, AZ

FOR 433. Carolyn Hull Sieg. US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station Flagstaff, AZ Fire and Invasive Species Carolyn Hull Sieg US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station Flagstaff, AZ 1 Topics What is an invasive species? What are the stages of invasion and what characterizes

More information

Human perturbations to the global Nitrogen cycle

Human perturbations to the global Nitrogen cycle Human perturbations to the global Nitrogen cycle Lecture for Biogeochemistry and Global Change Edzo Veldkamp The pace of human caused global change has increased in modern history, but none so rapidly

More information

Major changes in forest carbon and nitrogen cycling caused by declining sulphur deposition

Major changes in forest carbon and nitrogen cycling caused by declining sulphur deposition Major changes in forest carbon and nitrogen cycling caused by declining sulphur deposition Filip Oulehle, Chris Evans, Henning Meesenburg, Jakub Hruska, Pavel Kram, Jiri Kopacek, Bridget Emmett, Jack Cosby,

More information

Coniferous Forest Plants And Animals

Coniferous Forest Plants And Animals Coniferous Forest Plants And Animals Free Download Ebook PDF CONIFEROUS FOREST PLANTS AND ANIMALS with premium access CONIFEROUS FOREST - REFERENCE - A-Z ANIMALS Tue, 26 Dec 2017 12:56:00 GMT coniferous

More information

Forest Sensitivity to Elevated Atmospheric CO 2 and its Relevance to Carbon Management

Forest Sensitivity to Elevated Atmospheric CO 2 and its Relevance to Carbon Management Forest Sensitivity to Elevated Atmospheric CO 2 and its Relevance to Carbon Management Richard J. Norby Oak Ridge National Laboratory Aspen Global Change Institute October 19, 2001 Trees that are planted

More information

An Important, Imperfect Tool. Photo: Chris Hoving, Michigan DNR

An Important, Imperfect Tool. Photo: Chris Hoving, Michigan DNR An Important, Imperfect Tool Photo: Chris Hoving, Michigan DNR An Important, Imperfect Tool Fire is necessary but insufficient. Building our fire culture Tallgrass Prairie and Oak Savanna Lake States Oak

More information

Peter H. Singleton John F. Lehmkuhl. USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station Wenatchee Forestry Sciences Lab

Peter H. Singleton John F. Lehmkuhl. USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station Wenatchee Forestry Sciences Lab Peter H. Singleton John F. Lehmkuhl USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station Wenatchee Forestry Sciences Lab Talk Overview: Wildlife community associated with MMC Considerations for wildlife

More information

Impacts of hyperabundant moose on forest regeneration in Terra Nova and Gros Morne National Park

Impacts of hyperabundant moose on forest regeneration in Terra Nova and Gros Morne National Park Impacts of hyperabundant moose on forest regeneration in Terra Nova and Gros Morne National Park John Gosse, Luise Hermanutz Brian McLaren, Peter Deering The ecological context: Boreal forest dominated

More information

Estimating the AM Fungal Resources of Wheat Fields Dai, M. 1, Sheng, M. 1, Bremer, E., 2, He, Y. 1, Wang, H. 1, Hamel, C. 1

Estimating the AM Fungal Resources of Wheat Fields Dai, M. 1, Sheng, M. 1, Bremer, E., 2, He, Y. 1, Wang, H. 1, Hamel, C. 1 Estimating the AM Fungal Resources of Wheat Fields Dai, M., Sheng, M., Bremer, E., 2, He, Y., Wang, H., Hamel, C. Semiarid Prairie Agricultural Research Centre, AAFC, Swift Current SK, S9H 3X2 2 Western

More information

Arctic ecosystems as key biomes in climate-carbon feedback. Hanna Lee Climate and Global Dynamics Division National Center for Atmospheric Research

Arctic ecosystems as key biomes in climate-carbon feedback. Hanna Lee Climate and Global Dynamics Division National Center for Atmospheric Research Arctic ecosystems as key biomes in climate-carbon feedback Hanna Lee Climate and Global Dynamics Division National Center for Atmospheric Research Outline Permafrost carbon Permafrost carbon-climate feedback

More information

2013 Cannon Envirothon Forestry Test 2 nd Draft - 9/12 55 questions 100 points

2013 Cannon Envirothon Forestry Test 2 nd Draft - 9/12 55 questions 100 points 2013 Cannon Envirothon Forestry Test 2 nd Draft - 9/12 55 questions 100 points 1. What is the name of a group of beneficial fungi that grows in association with tree roots aiding in nutrient uptake? Mycorrhizae,

More information

Carbon Flow from Roots to Microbes to Soil Humic Substances

Carbon Flow from Roots to Microbes to Soil Humic Substances 2001-2006 Mission Kearney Foundation of Soil Science: Soil Carbon and California's Terrestrial Ecosystems Final Report: 2001017, 1/1/2002-12/31/2003 Carbon Flow from Roots to Microbes to Soil Humic Substances

More information

Chapter 18 Conservation of Biodiversity. Tuesday, April 17, 18

Chapter 18 Conservation of Biodiversity. Tuesday, April 17, 18 Chapter 18 Conservation of Biodiversity Module 59 The Sixth Mass Extinction After reading this module you should be able to explain the global decline in the genetic diversity of wild species. discuss

More information

This presentation is on the value of reducing emissions and enhancing removals of greenhouse gases related to land use and land cover change in

This presentation is on the value of reducing emissions and enhancing removals of greenhouse gases related to land use and land cover change in This presentation is on the value of reducing emissions and enhancing removals of greenhouse gases related to land use and land cover change in tropical wetland forests. 1 The objective of this presentation

More information

Ecosystems on land are grouped into biomes primarily based on the plant communities within them.

Ecosystems on land are grouped into biomes primarily based on the plant communities within them. Section 2: Ecosystems on land are grouped into biomes primarily based on the plant communities within them. K What I Know W What I Want to Find Out L What I Learned Essential Questions How is latitude

More information

Distribution Limits. Kangaroo Distributions and Climate. Kangaroo Distributions and Climate

Distribution Limits. Kangaroo Distributions and Climate. Kangaroo Distributions and Climate Distribution Limits Physical environment limits geographic distribution of a species. Organisms can only compensate so much for environmental variation Kangaroo Distributions and Climate Caughley found

More information

Building Soil Organic Matter: What, Why, How?

Building Soil Organic Matter: What, Why, How? FarmSmart Conference, Guelph Ontario 20 January 2018 Building Soil Organic Matter: What, Why, How? Ray Weil Biosphere-2. A parable about soil organic matter and the carbon cycle. Biospherians in Biosphere2

More information

A perspective from Canada

A perspective from Canada Wildlife and Climate Change Adaptation: A perspective from Canada Trilateral Committee Plenary 12 May 2009 Canadian Wildlife Service Environment Canada Presented by: Dr. Kathryn Lindsay Climate Change

More information

Ecosystem science perspectives on boreal forests and climate change mitigation. Sean C. Thomas Faculty of Forestry, University of Toronto

Ecosystem science perspectives on boreal forests and climate change mitigation. Sean C. Thomas Faculty of Forestry, University of Toronto Ecosystem science perspectives on boreal forests and climate change mitigation Sean C. Thomas Faculty of Forestry, University of Toronto Differing visions of the role of forests on C sequestration and

More information

Soil health has three main components Sustained biological productivity Environmental quality Plant and animal health

Soil health has three main components Sustained biological productivity Environmental quality Plant and animal health Soil health has three main components Sustained biological productivity Environmental quality Plant and animal health Soil health is the integration of biological with chemical and physical measures of

More information

CLIMATE CHANGE IMPLICATIONS FOR ILLINOIS FOREST MANAGEMENT. September 29, 2017 Leslie Brandt Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science

CLIMATE CHANGE IMPLICATIONS FOR ILLINOIS FOREST MANAGEMENT. September 29, 2017 Leslie Brandt Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science CLIMATE CHANGE IMPLICATIONS FOR ILLINOIS FOREST MANAGEMENT September 29, 2017 Leslie Brandt Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science Climate Carbon Provides

More information

TROPICAL PEAT ACCUMULATION AND DECAY IN RELATION TO MANAGEMENT

TROPICAL PEAT ACCUMULATION AND DECAY IN RELATION TO MANAGEMENT TROPICAL PEAT ACCUMULATION AND DECAY IN RELATION TO MANAGEMENT Michael A. Brady Workshop on Integrated Management and Rehabilitation of Peatlands 6-7 February 2004, Kuala Lumpur Contents PROCESS MODELS

More information

What to do with a 60 + year old unmanaged red pine stand?

What to do with a 60 + year old unmanaged red pine stand? What to do with a 60 + year old unmanaged red pine stand? Background Red pine (Pinus resinosa) was extensively planted in the early parts of the 20 th century on abandoned agricultural land to control

More information

CAB Environmental Science Book Collection

CAB Environmental Science Book Collection A convenient and cost-effective package of nearly 100 titles in environmental science, ecology, and related scientific disciplines. CABI is one of the world's leading sources of full-text scholarly literature

More information

Invasive Earthworms A Threat to North American Forests

Invasive Earthworms A Threat to North American Forests Invasive Earthworms A Threat to North American Forests Plants & Gardens News Volume 19, Number 1 Spring 2004 by Niall Dunne Charles Darwin was an earthworm freak. He spent more than 40 years, on and off,

More information

FORESTS. PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon

FORESTS. PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon FORESTS PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon What are forests? Land covered with trees, plants, shrubs, & animals Before man s clearing of forests, 60% of Earth was forest. Today, only 30% remains forested. 5. Enjoyment

More information

There are certain Invasive Species so aggressive, they've actually changed the world as we know it!

There are certain Invasive Species so aggressive, they've actually changed the world as we know it! There are certain Invasive Species so aggressive, they've actually changed the world as we know it! Bernie Williams Forest Health Specialist Division of Forestry SO WHY ARE EARTHWORMS A PROBLEM? They can

More information

Denitrification - eutrophication

Denitrification - eutrophication Figure 58.7 Temp normally fluctuates Humans are forcing climate change The Nitrogen Cycle Most Nitrogen gas (N 2 ) (78 %) is in the atmosphere Can plants and animals use this directly? How then? Nitrogen

More information

Hillside Woods & Park

Hillside Woods & Park Hillside Woods & Park Forest Inventory & Management Plan Public Meeting Thursday, June 7th @ 7pm Public Library, Hastings-On-Hudson Presentation Outline Who We Are DEC Community Forestry Program What is

More information

Consequences of Nitrogen Deposition to Rocky Mountain National Park

Consequences of Nitrogen Deposition to Rocky Mountain National Park Consequences of Nitrogen Deposition to Rocky Mountain National Park Jill S. Baron, US Geological Survey M.Hartman, D.S.Ojima, K. Nydick, H.M. Rueth B.Moraska Lafrancois, A.P. Wolfe, J. Botte, W.D. Bowman

More information

Soil biology, organic matter, structure, functioning and crop yield Matthew Shepherd Soil Biodiversity Specialist Natural England

Soil biology, organic matter, structure, functioning and crop yield Matthew Shepherd Soil Biodiversity Specialist Natural England Soil biology, organic matter, structure, functioning and crop yield Matthew Shepherd Soil Biodiversity Specialist Natural England Overview What do we want from soil? Living soils Keeping soils alive Crop

More information

Natural Communities of Clay Soils in the Lake Champlain Basin

Natural Communities of Clay Soils in the Lake Champlain Basin Natural Communities of Clay Soils in the Lake Champlain Basin Marc Lapin, Forest Ecologist Middlebury College Program in Environmental Studies & Champlain Valley Clayplain Forest Project What Makes Clayplain

More information