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Featured researches published by Daniel Cadol.


Ecological Applications | 2015

Spatial patterns of plant litter in a tidal freshwater marsh and implications for marsh persistence

Andrew J. Elmore; Katharina A. M. Engelhardt; Daniel Cadol; Cindy M. Palinkas

The maintenance of marsh platform elevation under conditions of sea level rise is dependent on mineral sediment supply to marsh surfaces and conversion of above- and belowground plant biomass to soil organic material. These physical and biological processes interact within the tidal zone, resulting in elevation-dependent processes contributing to marsh accretion. Here, we explore spatial pattern in a variable related to aboveground biomass, plant litter, to reveal its role in the maintenance of marsh surfaces. Plant litter persisting through the dormant season represents the more recalcitrant portion of plant biomass, and as such has an extended period of influence on ecosystem processes. We conducted a field and remote sensing analysis of plant litter height, aboveground biomass, vertical cover, and stem density (collectively termed plant litter structure) at a tidal freshwater marsh located within the Potomac River estuary, USA. LiDAR and field observations show that plant litter structure becomes more prominent with increasing elevation. Spatial patterns in litter structure exhibit stability from year to year and correlate with patterns in soil organic matter content, revealed by measuring the loss on ignition of surface sediments. The amount of mineral material embedded within plant litter decreases with increasing elevation, representing an important tradeoff with litter structure. Therefore, at low elevations where litter structure is short and sparse, the role of plant litter is to capture sediment; at high elevations where litter structure is tall and dense, aboveground litter contributes organic matter to soil development. This organic matter contribution has the potential to eclipse that of belowground biomass as the root:shoot ratio of dominant species at high elevations is low compared to that of dominant species at low elevations. Because of these tradeoffs in mineral and organic matter incorporation into soil across elevation gradients, the rate of marsh surface elevation change is remarkably consistent across elevation. Because of the role of plant litter in marsh ecosystem processes, monitoring and assessment of these dynamic geomorphic marsh landscapes might be streamlined through the measurement of plant litter structure, either via LiDAR technologies or field observation.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Modeled Tradeoffs between Developed Land Protection and Tidal Habitat Maintenance during Rising Sea Levels

Daniel Cadol; Andrew J. Elmore; Steven M. Guinn; Katharina A. M. Engelhardt; Geoffrey Sanders

Tidal habitats host a diversity of species and provide hydrological services such as shoreline protection and nutrient attenuation. Accretion of sediment and biomass enables tidal marshes and swamps to grow vertically, providing a degree of resilience to rising sea levels. Even if accelerating sea level rise overcomes this vertical resilience, tidal habitats have the potential to migrate inland as they continue to occupy land that falls within the new tide range elevations. The existence of developed land inland of tidal habitats, however, may prevent this migration as efforts are often made to dyke and protect developments. To test the importance of inland migration to maintaining tidal habitat abundance under a range of potential rates of sea level rise, we developed a spatially explicit elevation tracking and habitat switching model, dubbed the Marsh Accretion and Inundation Model (MAIM), which incorporates elevation-dependent net land surface elevation gain functions. We applied the model to the metropolitan Washington, DC region, finding that the abundance of small National Park Service units and other public open space along the tidal Potomac River system provides a refuge to which tidal habitats may retreat to maintain total habitat area even under moderate sea level rise scenarios (0.7 m and 1.1 m rise by 2100). Under a severe sea level rise scenario associated with ice sheet collapse (1.7 m by 2100) habitat area is maintained only if no development is protected from rising water. If all existing development is protected, then 5%, 10%, and 40% of the total tidal habitat area is lost by 2100 for the three sea level rise scenarios tested.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2018

Geomorphic influences on the distribution and accumulation of pyrogenic carbon (PyC) following a low severity wildfire in northern New Mexico: Distribution and accumulation of pyrogenic black carbon

Amy Galanter; Daniel Cadol; Kathleen A. Lohse

The distribution, transport, and accumulation of wildfire-generated pyrogenic carbon (PyC) has important consequences for contaminant transport and carbon cycling, but a conceptual model for PyC accumulation and loss that includes geomorphic processes is lacking. In this study we quantified PyC concentration in soil samples collected from the Jemez Mountains of New Mexico before and after the 2013 Thompson Ridge (TR) fire, and developed a conceptual model describing PyC redistribution. Prefire samples were fortuitously collected 4 years before the TR burn and post-fire samples were collected at the same locations 15months following the TR fire. Samples were collected from the O and A horizon, with sites representing a range of slope angle, aspect, burn severity, and geomorphic setting. PyC was determined by a modified chemo-thermal oxidation method to compare PyC to total organic carbon (TOC). The mean PyC/TOC ratio was significantly higher post-fire than pre-fire (0.14 vs 0.12), indicating increased PyC sequestration. O horizon PyC concentrations were more variable and more responsive to fire than the A horizon. Soil horizon, watershed, and geomorphic setting proved to be the most influential factors in predicting PyC concentration changes. PyC concentrations increased most on hillslopes and in low-severity burn areas, suggesting higher rates of PyC production or post-fire accumulation. Burn patchiness appears to facilitate PyC accumulation, with lower severity patches trapping PyC mobilized from high severity patches. While PyC content had greater point scale variance following the fire, the fire also homogenized pre-fire PyC differences between soil horizons and among watersheds within the burn perimeter, differences that appear to develop over time between fires. The O horizon is a larger sink for PyC in the short term following fire, but based on pre-fire concentrations the A horizon appears to be a more stable sink for PyC. Copyright


Hydrological Processes | 2015

Deep drainage sensitivity to climate, edaphic factors, and woody encroachment, Oklahoma, USA

Michael L. Wine; Jan M. H. Hendrickx; Daniel Cadol; Chris B. Zou; Tyson E. Ochsner


Geomorphology | 2017

Geomorphology as a first order control on the connectivity of riparian ecohydrology

Daniel Cadol; Michael L. Wine


Environmental Research Letters | 2018

In ecoregions across western USA streamflow increases during post-wildfire recovery

Michael L. Wine; Daniel Cadol; Oleg Makhnin


Earth’s Future | 2018

Nonlinear Long‐Term Large Watershed Hydrologic Response to Wildfire and Climatic Dynamics Locally Increases Water Yields

Michael L. Wine; Oleg Makhnin; Daniel Cadol


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2018

Connectivity as an emergent property of geomorphic systems

Ellen Wohl; Gary Brierley; Daniel Cadol; Tom J. Coulthard; Tim Covino; Kirstie Fryirs; Gordon E. Grant; Robert G. Hilton; Stuart N. Lane; Francis J. Magilligan; Kimberly M. Meitzen; Paola Passalacqua; Ronald E. Poeppl; Leonard S. Sklar


Archive | 2010

Diel Discharge Cycles as Indicators of Evapotranspiration Rates, with Implications for Groundwater Dynamics

Daniel Cadol; Stephanie K. Kampf; Ellen Wohl


GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017

PARAMETRIZATION OF TOTAL AVAILABLE WATER FOR STATEWIDE WATER ASSESSMENT IN NEW MEXICO

Gabriel E.L. Parrish; Jan M. H. Hendrickx; Daniel Cadol; Juliet Ayertey

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Michael L. Wine

New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

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Andrew J. Elmore

University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

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Ellen Wohl

Colorado State University

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Jan M. H. Hendrickx

New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

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Katharina A. M. Engelhardt

University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

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Oleg Makhnin

New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

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Amy Galanter

New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

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Cindy M. Palinkas

University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

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