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Dive into the research topics where Frida Keuper is active.

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Featured researches published by Frida Keuper.


Environmental Research Letters | 2016

Biomass offsets little or none of permafrost carbon release from soils, streams, and wildfire: an expert assessment

Benjamin W. Abbott; Jeremy B. Jones; Edward A. G. Schuur; F. Stuart Chapin; William B. Bowden; M. Syndonia Bret-Harte; Howard E. Epstein; Mike D. Flannigan; Tamara K. Harms; Teresa N. Hollingsworth; Michelle C. Mack; A. David McGuire; Susan M. Natali; Adrian V. Rocha; Suzanne E. Tank; Merritt R. Turetsky; Jorien E. Vonk; Kimberly P. Wickland; George R. Aiken; Heather D. Alexander; Rainer M. W. Amon; Brian W. Benscoter; Yves Bergeron; Kevin Bishop; Olivier Blarquez; Ben Bond-Lamberty; Amy L. Breen; Ishi Buffam; Yihua Cai; Christopher Carcaillet

As the permafrost region warms, its large organic carbon pool will be increasingly vulnerable to decomposition, combustion, and hydrologic export. Models predict that some portion of this release w ...


Microbial Ecology | 2013

Flourish or Flush: Effects of Simulated Extreme Rainfall Events on Sphagnum-dwelling Testate Amoebae in a Subarctic Bog (Abisko, Sweden)

Andrey N. Tsyganov; Frida Keuper; Rien Aerts; Louis Beyens

Extreme precipitation events are recognised as important drivers of ecosystem responses to climate change and can considerably affect high-latitude ombrotrophic bogs. Therefore, understanding the relationships between increased rainfall and the biotic components of these ecosystems is necessary for an estimation of climate change impacts. We studied overall effects of increased magnitude, intensity and frequency of rainfall on assemblages of Sphagnum-dwelling testate amoebae in a field climate manipulation experiment located in a relatively dry subarctic bog (Abisko, Sweden). The effects of the treatment were estimated using abundance, species diversity and structure of living and empty shell assemblages of testate amoebae in living and decaying layers of Sphagnum. Our results show that increased rainfall reduced the mean abundance and species richness of living testate amoebae. Besides, the treatment affected species structure of both living and empty shell assemblages, reducing proportions of hydrophilous species. The effects are counterintuitive as increased precipitation-related substrate moisture was expected to have opposite effects on testate amoeba assemblages in relatively dry biotopes. Therefore, we conclude that other rainfall-related factors such as increased infiltration rates and frequency of environmental disturbances can also affect testate amoeba assemblages in Sphagnum and that hydrophilous species are particularly sensitive to variation in these environmental variables.


Journal of Ecology | 2018

Winter warming effects on tundra shrub performance are species-specific and dependent on spring conditions

Eveline J. Krab; Jonas Roennefarth; Marina Becher; Gesche Blume-Werry; Frida Keuper; Jonatan Klaminder; Juergen Kreyling; Kobayashi Makoto; Ann Milbau; Ellen Dorrepaal

Climate change-driven increases in winter temperatures positively affect conditions for shrub growth in arctic tundra by decreasing plant frost damage and stimulation of nutrient availability. Howe ...


The ISME Journal | 2018

Long-term in situ permafrost thaw effects on bacterial communities and potential aerobic respiration.

Sylvain Monteux; James T. Weedon; Gesche Blume-Werry; Konstantin Gavazov; Vincent E. J. Jassey; Margareta Johansson; Frida Keuper; Carolina Olid; Ellen Dorrepaal

The decomposition of large stocks of soil organic carbon in thawing permafrost might depend on more than climate change-induced temperature increases: indirect effects of thawing via altered bacterial community structure (BCS) or rooting patterns are largely unexplored. We used a 10-year in situ permafrost thaw experiment and aerobic incubations to investigate alterations in BCS and potential respiration at different depths, and the extent to which they are related with each other and with root density. Active layer and permafrost BCS strongly differed, and the BCS in formerly frozen soils (below the natural thawfront) converged under induced deep thaw to strongly resemble the active layer BCS, possibly as a result of colonization by overlying microorganisms. Overall, respiration rates decreased with depth and soils showed lower potential respiration when subjected to deeper thaw, which we attributed to gradual labile carbon pool depletion. Despite deeper rooting under induced deep thaw, root density measurements did not improve soil chemistry-based models of potential respiration. However, BCS explained an additional unique portion of variation in respiration, particularly when accounting for differences in organic matter content. Our results suggest that by measuring bacterial community composition, we can improve both our understanding and the modeling of the permafrost carbon feedback.


Global Change Biology | 2012

A frozen feast: thawing permafrost increases plant-available nitrogen in subarctic peatlands

Frida Keuper; Peter M. van Bodegom; Ellen Dorrepaal; James T. Weedon; Jurgen van Hal; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Rien Aerts


Global Change Biology | 2011

A Race for Space? How Sphagnum fuscum stabilizes vegetation composition during long‐term climate manipulations

Frida Keuper; Ellen Dorrepaal; Peter M. van Bodegom; Rien Aerts; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Terry V. Callaghan; Johannes H. C. Cornelissen


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2011

Past and present permafrost temperatures in the Abisko area: redrilling of boreholes.

Margareta Johansson; Jonas Åkerman; Frida Keuper; Torben R. Christensen; Hugues Lantuit; Terry V. Callaghan


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2012

Tundra in the Rain: Differential Vegetation Responses to Three Years of Experimentally Doubled Summer Precipitation in Siberian Shrub and Swedish Bog Tundra

Frida Keuper; Frans-Jan Parmentier; Daan Blok; Peter M. van Bodegom; Ellen Dorrepaal; Jurgen van Hal; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Rien Aerts


Global Change Biology | 2017

Experimentally increased nutrient availability at the permafrost thaw front selectively enhances biomass production of deep-rooting subarctic peatland species

Frida Keuper; Ellen Dorrepaal; Peter M. van Bodegom; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Gemma Venhuizen; Jurgen van Hal; Rien Aerts


Applied Soil Ecology | 2014

Northern peatland Collembola communities unaffected by three summers of simulated extreme precipitation

Eveline J. Krab; Rien Aerts; Matty P. Berg; Jurgen van Hal; Frida Keuper

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Rien Aerts

VU University Amsterdam

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