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Dive into the research topics where Frank Anderson is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank Anderson.


Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering-asce | 2010

Distribution and Trends in Reference Evapotranspiration in the North China Plain

Zhenwei Song; Hailin Zhang; Richard L. Snyder; Frank Anderson; F. Chen

The distribution and trends in reference evapotranspiration ( ETo ) are extremely important to water resources planning for agriculture, and it is widely believed that rates of ETo will increase with global warming. This is a big concern in China, where water deficits are common in the North China Plain (NCP). In this study, Penman-Monteith reference evapotranspiration at 26 meteorological stations during 1961–2006 in and around the NCP was calculated. The temporal variations and spatial distribution of ETo were analyzed and the causes for the variations were discussed. The results showed that: (1) the NCP was divided into two climatic regions based on aridity values: a semiarid region that accounts for 69% of the area and subhumid regions that made of the remaining area; (2) over the entire NCP, the highest annual ETo occurred in the central and western areas and the lowest total ETo was observed in the east. Comparing the mean monthly ETo and annual ETo distributions, the high ETo values from May throug...


Mbio | 2015

Patterns in Wetland Microbial Community Composition and Functional Gene Repertoire Associated with Methane Emissions

Shaomei He; Stephanie Malfatti; Jack W. McFarland; Frank Anderson; Amrita Pati; Marcel Huntemann; Julien Tremblay; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Mark P. Waldrop; Lisamarie Windham-Myers; Susannah G. Tringe

ABSTRACT Wetland restoration on peat islands previously drained for agriculture has potential to reverse land subsidence and sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide as peat accretes. However, the emission of methane could potentially offset the greenhouse gas benefits of captured carbon. As microbial communities play a key role in governing wetland greenhouse gas fluxes, we are interested in how microbial community composition and functions are associated with wetland hydrology, biogeochemistry, and methane emission, which is critical to modeling the microbial component in wetland methane fluxes and to managing restoration projects for maximal carbon sequestration. Here, we couple sequence-based methods with biogeochemical and greenhouse gas measurements to interrogate microbial communities from a pilot-scale restored wetland in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta of California, revealing considerable spatial heterogeneity even within this relatively small site. A number of microbial populations and functions showed strong correlations with electron acceptor availability and methane production; some also showed a preference for association with plant roots. Marker gene phylogenies revealed a diversity of major methane-producing and -consuming populations and suggested novel diversity within methanotrophs. Methanogenic archaea were observed in all samples, as were nitrate-, sulfate-, and metal-reducing bacteria, indicating that no single terminal electron acceptor was preferred despite differences in energetic favorability and suggesting spatial microheterogeneity and microniches. Notably, methanogens were negatively correlated with nitrate-, sulfate-, and metal-reducing bacteria and were most abundant at sampling sites with high peat accretion and low electron acceptor availability, where methane production was highest. IMPORTANCE Wetlands are the largest nonanthropogenic source of atmospheric methane but also a key global carbon reservoir. Characterizing belowground microbial communities that mediate carbon cycling in wetlands is critical to accurately predicting their responses to changes in land management and climate. Here, we studied a restored wetland and revealed substantial spatial heterogeneity in biogeochemistry, methane production, and microbial communities, largely associated with the wetland hydraulic design. We observed patterns in microbial community composition and functions correlated with biogeochemistry and methane production, including diverse microorganisms involved in methane production and consumption. We found that methanogenesis gene abundance is inversely correlated with genes from pathways exploiting other electron acceptors, yet the ubiquitous presence of genes from all these pathways suggests that diverse electron acceptors contribute to the energetic balance of the ecosystem. These investigations represent an important step toward effective management of wetlands to reduce methane flux to the atmosphere and enhance belowground carbon storage. Wetlands are the largest nonanthropogenic source of atmospheric methane but also a key global carbon reservoir. Characterizing belowground microbial communities that mediate carbon cycling in wetlands is critical to accurately predicting their responses to changes in land management and climate. Here, we studied a restored wetland and revealed substantial spatial heterogeneity in biogeochemistry, methane production, and microbial communities, largely associated with the wetland hydraulic design. We observed patterns in microbial community composition and functions correlated with biogeochemistry and methane production, including diverse microorganisms involved in methane production and consumption. We found that methanogenesis gene abundance is inversely correlated with genes from pathways exploiting other electron acceptors, yet the ubiquitous presence of genes from all these pathways suggests that diverse electron acceptors contribute to the energetic balance of the ecosystem. These investigations represent an important step toward effective management of wetlands to reduce methane flux to the atmosphere and enhance belowground carbon storage.


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Differentiating transpiration from evaporation in seasonal agricultural wetlands and the link to advective fluxes in the root zone

Philip A.M. Bachand; S. Bachand; Jacob A. Fleck; Frank Anderson; Lisamarie Windham-Myers

The current state of science and engineering related to analyzing wetlands overlooks the importance of transpiration and risks data misinterpretation. In response, we developed hydrologic and mass budgets for agricultural wetlands using electrical conductivity (EC) as a natural conservative tracer. We developed simple differential equations that quantify evaporation and transpiration rates using flow rates and tracer concentrations at wetland inflows and outflows. We used two ideal reactor model solutions, a continuous flow stirred tank reactor (CFSTR) and a plug flow reactor (PFR), to bracket real non-ideal systems. From those models, estimated transpiration ranged from 55% (CFSTR) to 74% (PFR) of total evapotranspiration (ET) rates, consistent with published values using standard methods and direct measurements. The PFR model more appropriately represents these non-ideal agricultural wetlands in which check ponds are in series. Using a flux model, we also developed an equation delineating the root zone depth at which diffusive dominated fluxes transition to advective dominated fluxes. This relationship is similar to the Peclet number that identifies the dominance of advective or diffusive fluxes in surface and groundwater transport. Using diffusion coefficients for inorganic mercury (Hg) and methylmercury (MeHg) we calculated that during high ET periods typical of summer, advective fluxes dominate root zone transport except in the top millimeters below the sediment-water interface. The transition depth has diel and seasonal trends, tracking those of ET. Neglecting this pathway has profound implications: misallocating loads along different hydrologic pathways; misinterpreting seasonal and diel water quality trends; confounding Ficks First Law calculations when determining diffusion fluxes using pore water concentration data; and misinterpreting biogeochemical mechanisms affecting dissolved constituent cycling in the root zone. In addition, our understanding of internal root zone cycling of Hg and other dissolved constituents, benthic fluxes, and biological irrigation may be greatly affected.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Variation of energy and carbon fluxes from a restored temperate freshwater wetland and implications for carbon market verification protocols

Frank Anderson; Brian A. Bergamaschi; Cove Sturtevant; Sara Helen Knox; Lauren Hastings; Lisamarie Windham-Myers; Matteo Detto; Erin L. Hestir; Judith Z. Drexler; Robin L. Miller; Jaclyn Hatala Matthes; Joseph Verfaillie; Dennis D. Baldocchi; Richard L. Snyder; Roger Fujii

Temperate freshwater wetlands are among the most productive terrestrial ecosystems, stimulating interest in using restored wetlands as biological carbon sequestration projects for greenhouse gas reduction programs. In this study, we used the eddy covariance technique to measure surface energy carbon fluxes from a constructed, impounded freshwater wetland during two annual periods that were 8 years apart: 2002–2003 and 2010–2011. During 2010–2011, we measured methane (CH4) fluxes to quantify the annual atmospheric carbon mass balance and its concomitant influence on global warming potential (GWP). Peak growing season fluxes of latent heat and carbon dioxide (CO2) were greater in 2002–2003 compared to 2010–2011. In 2002, the daily net ecosystem exchange reached as low as −10.6 g C m−2 d−1, which was greater than 3 times the magnitude observed in 2010 (−2.9 g C m−2 d−1). CH4 fluxes during 2010–2011 were positive throughout the year and followed a strong seasonal pattern, ranging from 38.1 mg C m−2 d−1 in the winter to 375.9 mg C m−2 d−1 during the summer. The results of this study suggest that the wetland had reduced gross ecosystem productivity in 2010–2011, likely due to the increase in dead plant biomass (standing litter) that inhibited the generation of new vegetation growth. In 2010–2011, there was a net positive GWP (675.3 g C m−2 yr−1), and when these values are evaluated as a sustained flux, the wetland will not reach radiative balance even after 500 years.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2003

A micrometeorological investigation of a restored California wetland ecosystem

Frank Anderson; Richard L. Snyder; Robin L. Miller; Judith Z. Drexler

Water flowing through the delta prevents saltwater intrusion into freshwater ecosystems. Continued subsidence, however, seriously threatens the levee system in the delta and levee breaks could result in saltwater intrusion and contamination of the freshwater supply used by 22 million southern Californians.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2011

Comparing laser-based open- and closed-path gas analyzers to measure methane fluxes using the eddy covariance method

Matteo Detto; Joseph Verfaillie; Frank Anderson; Liukang Xu; Dennis D. Baldocchi


Irrigation Science | 2015

Water balances and evapotranspiration in water- and dry-seeded rice systems

Bruce A. Linquist; Richard L. Snyder; Frank Anderson; Luis Espino; Guglielmo Inglese; Serena Marras; R. Moratiel; Randall Mutters; Placido Nicolosi; Honza Rejmánek; Alfonso Russo; Tom Shapland; Zhenwei Song; Atef Swelam; Gwen Tindula; James E. Hill


Biogeosciences | 2014

Carbon exchange between the atmosphere and subtropical forested cypress and pine wetlands

W. B. Shoemaker; Frank Anderson; J. G. Barr; S. L. Graham; D. B. Botkin


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Direct and Indirect Effects of Tides on Ecosystem‐Scale CO2 Exchange in a Brackish Tidal Marsh in Northern California

Sara Helen Knox; Lisamarie Windham-Myers; Frank Anderson; Cove Sturtevant; Brian A. Bergamaschi


Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering-asce | 2017

Crop Coefficient Curve for Paddy Rice from Residual Energy Balance Calculations

A. Montazar; H. Rejmanek; G. Tindula; C. Little; T. Shapland; Frank Anderson; G. Inglese; Randall Mutters; Bruce A. Linquist; Charles A. Greer; James E. Hill; R. L. Snyder

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Lisamarie Windham-Myers

United States Geological Survey

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Brian A. Bergamaschi

United States Geological Survey

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Matteo Detto

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

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Judith Z. Drexler

United States Geological Survey

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Robin L. Miller

United States Geological Survey

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Cove Sturtevant

National Ecological Observatory Network

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