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Dive into the research topics where Anthony S. Hartshorn is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony S. Hartshorn.


Geobiology | 2011

Twelve testable hypotheses on the geobiology of weathering

Susan L. Brantley; J. P. Megonigal; Frederick N. Scatena; Zsuzsanna Balogh-Brunstad; Rebecca T. Barnes; Mary Ann Bruns; P. Van Cappellen; Katerina Dontsova; Hilairy E. Hartnett; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Arjun M. Heimsath; Elizabeth M. Herndon; Lixin Jin; C. K. Keller; Jonathan R. Leake; William H. McDowell; F. C. Meinzer; T. J. Mozdzer; Steven T. Petsch; J. Pett-Ridge; Kurt S. Pregitzer; Peter A. Raymond; Clifford S. Riebe; K. Shumaker; A. Sutton-Grier; R. Walter; Kyungsoo Yoo

Critical Zone (CZ) research investigates the chemical, physical, and biological processes that modulate the Earths surface. Here, we advance 12 hypotheses that must be tested to improve our understanding of the CZ: (1) Solar-to-chemical conversion of energy by plants regulates flows of carbon, water, and nutrients through plant-microbe soil networks, thereby controlling the location and extent of biological weathering. (2) Biological stoichiometry drives changes in mineral stoichiometry and distribution through weathering. (3) On landscapes experiencing little erosion, biology drives weathering during initial succession, whereas weathering drives biology over the long term. (4) In eroding landscapes, weathering-front advance at depth is coupled to surface denudation via biotic processes. (5) Biology shapes the topography of the Critical Zone. (6) The impact of climate forcing on denudation rates in natural systems can be predicted from models incorporating biogeochemical reaction rates and geomorphological transport laws. (7) Rising global temperatures will increase carbon losses from the Critical Zone. (8) Rising atmospheric P(CO2) will increase rates and extents of mineral weathering in soils. (9) Riverine solute fluxes will respond to changes in climate primarily due to changes in water fluxes and secondarily through changes in biologically mediated weathering. (10) Land use change will impact Critical Zone processes and exports more than climate change. (11) In many severely altered settings, restoration of hydrological processes is possible in decades or less, whereas restoration of biodiversity and biogeochemical processes requires longer timescales. (12) Biogeochemical properties impart thresholds or tipping points beyond which rapid and irreversible losses of ecosystem health, function, and services can occur.


Nature Communications | 2010

Regional insight into savanna hydrogeomorphology from termite mounds

Shaun R. Levick; Gregory P. Asner; Oliver A. Chadwick; Lesego M. Khomo; Kevin H. Rogers; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Ty Kennedy-Bowdoin; David E. Knapp

Global vegetation models predict the spread of woody vegetation in African savannas and grasslands under future climate scenarios, but they operate too broadly to consider hillslope-scale variations in tree-grass distribution. Topographically linked hydrology-soil-vegetation sequences, or catenas, underpin a variety of ecological processes in savannas, including responses to climate change. In this study, we explore the three-dimensional structure of hillslopes and vegetation, using high-resolution airborne LiDAR (Light Detection And Ranging), to understand the long-term effects of mean annual precipitation (MAP) on catena pattern. Our results reveal that the presence and position of hillslope hydrological boundaries, or seeplines, vary as a function of MAP through its long-term influence on clay redistribution. We suggest that changes in climate will differentially alter the structure of savannas through hydrological changes to the seasonally saturated grasslands downslope of seeplines. The mechanisms underlying future woody encroachment are not simply physiological responses to elevated temperatures and CO(2) levels but also involve hydrogeomorphological processes at the hillslope scale.


Biogeochemistry | 2012

Lithologic controls on biogenic silica cycling in South African savanna ecosystems

Susan E. Melzer; Oliver A. Chadwick; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Lesego M. Khomo; Alan K. Knapp; Eugene F. Kelly

The efficacy of higher plants at mining Si from primary and secondary minerals in terrestrial ecosystems is now recognized as an important weathering mechanism. Grassland ecosystems are a particularly large reservoir of biogenic silica and are thus likely to be a key regulator of Si mobilization. Herein, we examine the effects of parent material (basaltic and granitic rocks) on the range and variability of biogenic silica pools in grass-dominated ecosystems along two precipitation gradients of Kruger National Park, South Africa. Four soil pedons and adjacent dominant plant species were characterized for biogenic silica content. Our results indicate that although soils derived from basalt had less total Si and dissolved Si than soils derived from granite, a greater proportion of the total Si was made up of biogenically derived silica. In general, plants and soils overlying basaltic versus granitic parent material stored greater quantities of biogenic silica and had longer turnover times of the biogenic silica pool in soils. Additionally, the relative abundance of biogenic silica was greater at the drier sites along the precipitation gradient regardless of parent material. These results suggest that the biogeochemical cycling of Si is strongly influenced by parent material and the hydrologic controls parent material imparts on soils. While soils derived from both basalt and granite are strongly regulated by biologic uptake, the former is a “tighter” system with less loss of Si than the latter which, although more dependent on biogenic silica dissolution, has greater losses of total Si. Lithologic discontinuities span beyond grasslands and are predicted to also influence biogenic silica cycling in other ecosystems.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Environment, agriculture, and settlement patterns in a marginal Polynesian landscape

Patrick V. Kirch; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Oliver A. Chadwick; Peter M. Vitousek; D. R. Sherrod; J. Coil; L. Holm; W. D. Sharp


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2012

Chemical weathering response to tectonic forcing: A soils perspective from the San Gabriel Mountains, California

Jean L. Dixon; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Arjun M. Heimsath; Roman A. DiBiase; Kelin X. Whipple


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2009

Opportunities and constraints for intensive agriculture in the Hawaiian archipelago prior to European contact

Thegn N. Ladefoged; Patrick V. Kirch; Samuel M. Gon; Oliver A. Chadwick; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Peter M. Vitousek


Soil Science Society of America Journal | 2011

Human-soil relations are changing rapidly: Proposals from SSSA's cross-divisional soil change working group

Daniel D. Richter; Allan R. Bacon; L. Mobley Megan; Curtis J. Richardson; Susan S. Andrews; L. T. West; Skye Wills; Sharon A. Billings; Cynthia A. Cambardella; Nancy Cavallaro; Julie E. DeMeester; Alan J. Franzluebbers; A. Stuart Grandy; Sabine Grunwald; Joel Gruver; Anthony S. Hartshorn; H. Henry Janzen; Marc G. Kramer; J. K. Ladha; Kate Lajtha; Garrett C. Liles; Daniel Markewitz; Patrick J. Megonigal; A. R. Mermut; Craig Rasmussen; David A. Robinson; Pete Smith; Cynthia A. Stiles; Robert L. Tate; Aaron Thompson


Catena | 2011

Impact of rainfall and topography on the distribution of clays and major cations in granitic catenas of southern Africa

Lesego Khomo; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Kevin H. Rogers; Oliver A. Chadwick


Chemical Geology | 2011

A mass-balance model to separate and quantify colloidal and solute redistributions in soil

Carleton R. Bern; Oliver A. Chadwick; Anthony S. Hartshorn; Lesego M. Khomo; Jon Chorover


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Prehistoric agricultural depletion of soil nutrients in Hawai'i

Anthony S. Hartshorn; Oliver A. Chadwick; Peter M. Vitousek; Patrick V. Kirch

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Lesego M. Khomo

University of the Witwatersrand

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Kevin H. Rogers

University of the Witwatersrand

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Jean L. Dixon

Montana State University

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Roman A. DiBiase

Pennsylvania State University

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