Chad S. Lane
University of North Carolina at Wilmington
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chad S. Lane.
The Holocene | 2013
Mitchell J. Power; Francis E. Mayle; Patrick J. Bartlein; Jennifer R. Marlon; Rs Anderson; Hermann Behling; Kj Brown; Christopher Carcaillet; Daniele Colombaroli; Daniel G. Gavin; Douglas J. Hallett; Sally P. Horn; Lisa M. Kennedy; Chad S. Lane; Colin J. Long; Patricio I. Moreno; C. Paitre; Guy S. Robinson; Z Taylor; Megan K. Walsh
The significance and cause of the decline in biomass burning across the Americas after ad 1500 is a topic of considerable debate. We synthesized charcoal records (a proxy for biomass burning) from the Americas and from the remainder of the globe over the past 2000 years, and compared these with paleoclimatic records and population reconstructions. A distinct post-ad 1500 decrease in biomass burning is evident, not only in the Americas, but also globally, and both are similar in duration and timing to ‘Little Ice Age’ climate change. There is temporal and spatial variability in the expression of the biomass-burning decline across the Americas but, at a regional–continental scale, ‘Little Ice Age’ climate change was likely more important than indigenous population collapse in driving this decline.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Jianwei Li; Susan E. Ziegler; Chad S. Lane; Sharon A. Billings
Accepted for publication in Journal of Geophysical Research. Copyright 2012 American Geophysical Union. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted.
Aquatic Sciences | 2013
Chad S. Lane; David R. Lyon; Susan E. Ziegler
Anthropogenic impacts can significantly alter stream nutrient and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) delivery and composition. Nutrient and DOC cycling in headwater streams, however, are linked via a variety of complex feedbacks that are, in part, influenced by DOC composition emphasizing the need to investigate coupled nutrient–DOC interactions. This study assessed differential incorporation and mineralization of 13C labeled glucose and vanillin by heterotrophic microbes within epilithic biofilm communities in four temperate headwater streams spanning a 100-fold range in total dissolved nitrogen and soluble reactive phosphorous concentrations. The substrates were traced via 13C analyses of DOC, dissolved inorganic carbon, bulk biofilm, and individual biofilm phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) to assess total incorporation of the substrates and the distribution of substrate use within the heterotrophic community. Results indicate greater nutrient uptake by high nutrient streams with glucose additions relative to vanillin additions and support the hypothesis that nutrient retention in high nutrient streams is hampered by a lack of labile C sources. Vanillin-derived C uptake was only detectable in PLFA from the highest nutrient stream and was dominated by eukaryotic organisms, likely including fungi. This suggests biofilms in high nutrient streams are better adapted to access relatively slow turnover substrates perhaps due to their composition and overall structure. PLFA-based glucose use efficiencies were greatest in the lowest nutrient stream supporting the hypothesis that labile DOC sources are used more efficiently by heterotrophs in less impacted streams, while biofilms of high nutrient streams are better adapted to utilizing a wider array of DOC sources. This adaption is likely a result of exposure to the lower quality DOC pools in high-nutrient streams resulting from high DOC uptake supported, in part, by fast turnover autochthonous sources of DOC. Nutrient retention in nutrient-rich streams, however, is still likely limited by readily bioavailable DOC leading to lower nutrient retention and downstream nutrient enrichment.
The Holocene | 2017
Jay Curt Stager; Brian F. Cumming; Kathleen R. Laird; Alex Garrigan-Piela; Neil Pederson; Brendan Wiltse; Chad S. Lane; Jessica Nester; Alexander Ruzmaikin
A high-resolution diatom record from Wolf Lake, a minimally disturbed ‘heritage’ lake, provides insights into the hydroclimatic history of the Adirondack Mountains of northern New York during the last c. 1600 years. Three pronounced dry periods occurred during c. AD 490–610, 780–870, and 1010–1080, and low precipitation generally prevailed during the warm Medieval Climate Anomaly (c. AD 950–1350), a finding that fills an important gap in knowledge of the spatial extent of droughts across North America during that period. During the cooler ‘Little Ice Age’ interval (c. AD 1350–1800), inferred water balance was generally more positive. Seven peaks in charcoal abundance represent fire events during both wet and dry periods. Unusually high charcoal and inorganic sediment deposition c. AD 1700 could reflect human activity in the watershed, as might an abrupt rise in the relative abundances of planktonic and tychoplanktonic diatoms in Wolf Lake during the AD 1860s. The diatom record displays periodicities of c. 256 and 512 years in addition to high-frequency fluctuations, suggesting that significant precipitation variability is likely to continue to disrupt climatic trends in this region.
Gcb Bioenergy | 2018
Jianwei Li; Siyang Jian; Jason P. de Koff; Chad S. Lane; Gangsheng Wang; Melanie A. Mayes; Dafeng Hui
The mechanistic understanding of warming and nitrogen (N) fertilization, alone or in combination, on microbially mediated decomposition is limited. In this study, soil samples were collected from previously harvested switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) plots that had been treated with high N fertilizer (HN: 67 kg N ha−1) and those that had received no N fertilizer (NN) over a 3‐year period. The samples were incubated for 180 days at 15 °C and 20 °C, during which heterotrophic respiration, δ13C of CO2, microbial biomass (MB), specific soil respiration rate (Rs: respiration per unit of microbial biomass), and exoenzyme activities were quantified at 10 different collections time. Employing switchgrass tissues (referred to as litter) with naturally abundant 13C allowed us to partition CO2 respiration derived from soil and amended litter. Cumulative soil respiration increased significantly by 16.4% and 4.2% under warming and N fertilization, respectively. Respiration derived from soil was elevated significantly with warming, while oxidase, the agent for recalcitrant soil substrate decomposition, was not significantly affected by warming. Warming, however, significantly enhanced MB and Rs indicating a decrease in microbial growth efficiency (MGE). On the contrary, respiration derived from amended litter was elevated with N fertilization, which was consistent with the significantly elevated hydrolase. N fertilization, however, had little effect on MB and Rs, suggesting little change in microbial physiology. Temperature and N fertilization showed minimal interactive effects likely due to little differences in soil N availability between NN and HN samples, which is partly attributable to switchgrass biomass N accumulation (equivalent to ~53% of fertilizer N). Overall, the differential individual effects of warming and N fertilization may be driven by physiological adaptation and stimulated exoenzyme kinetics, respectively. The study shed insights on distinct microbial acquisition of different substrates under global temperature increase and N enrichment.
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2014
Chad S. Lane; Sally P. Horn; Matthew T. Kerr
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2013
Chad S. Lane; Jeffrey J. Clark; Andrew Knudsen; Jamie McFarlin
Quaternary Research | 2015
Benjamin R. Tanner; Chad S. Lane; Elizabeth M. Martin; Robert S. Young; Beverly Collins
Estuaries and Coasts | 2016
Paula E. Reidhaar; Chad S. Lane; Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson; Douglas W. Gamble
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2018
Chad S. Lane; Audrey K. Taylor; Jessica Spencer; Kaylee B. Jones