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Featured researches published by J. L. Angstmann.


Tree Physiology | 2012

Size-mediated tree transpiration along soil drainage gradients in a boreal black spruce forest wildfire chronosequence

J. L. Angstmann; Brent E. Ewers; Hyojung Kwon

Boreal forests are crucial to climate change predictions because of their large land area and ability to sequester and store carbon, which is controlled by water availability. Heterogeneity of these forests is predicted to increase with climate change through more frequent wildfires, warmer, longer growing seasons and potential drainage of forested wetlands. This study aims at quantifying controls over tree transpiration with drainage condition, stand age and species in a central Canadian black spruce boreal forest. Heat dissipation sensors were installed in 2007 and data were collected through 2008 on 118 trees (69 Picea mariana (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb. (black spruce), 25 Populus tremuloides Michx. (trembling aspen), 19 Pinus banksiana Lamb. (jack pine), 3 Larix laricina (Du Roi) K. Koch (tamarack) and 2 Salix spp. (willow)) at four stand ages (18, 43, 77 and 157 years old) each containing a well- and poorly-drained stand. Transpiration estimates from sap flux were expressed per unit xylem area, J(S), per unit ground area, E(C) and per unit leaf area, E(L), using sapwood (A(S)) and leaf (A(L)) area calculated from stand- and species-specific allometry. Soil drainage differences in transpiration were variable; only the 43- and 157-year-old poorly-drained stands had ∼ 50% higher total stand E(C) than well-drained locations. Total stand E(C) tended to decrease with stand age after an initial increase between the 18- and 43-year-old stands. Soil drainage differences in transpiration were controlled primarily by short-term physiological drivers such as vapor pressure deficit and soil moisture whereas stand age differences were controlled by successional species shifts and changes in tree size (i.e., A(S)). Future predictions of boreal climate change must include stand age, species and soil drainage heterogeneity to avoid biased estimates of forest water loss and latent energy exchanges.


Ecohydrology | 2009

Evapotranspiration in intermediate-aged and mature fens and upland black spruce boreal forests

Corinne A. Barker; B. D. Amiro; Hyojung Kwon; Brent E. Ewers; J. L. Angstmann


Ecohydrology | 2012

Testing transpiration controls by quantifying spatial variability along a boreal black spruce forest drainage gradient

J. L. Angstmann; Brent E. Ewers; Jarrett J. Barber; Hyojung Kwon


Archive | 2010

The Rocky Mountain Epidemic of Bark Beetles and Blue Stain Fungi Cause Cascading Effects on Coupled Water, C and N cycles

Brent E. Ewers; E. G. Pendall; Urszula Norton; Danielle Elizabeth Reed; Jeremy R Franks; Timothy Llewellyn Aston; F. Whitehouse; H. R. Barnard; Paul D. Brooks; J. L. Angstmann; William J. Massman; Dawn Williams; Adrian A. Harpold; Joel A. Biederman; Steven L. Edburg; Arjan J. H. Meddens; David J. Gochis; Jeffrey A. Hicke


Archive | 2009

Drivers of variability in tree transpiration in a Boreal Black Spruce Forest Chronosequence

J. L. Angstmann; Brent E. Ewers; Hwanjoon Kwon


Archive | 2008

Spatial Variability of Tree Transpiration Along a Soil Drainage Gradient of Boreal Black Spruce Forest

J. L. Angstmann; Brent E. Ewers; Hwanjoon Kwon; Benjamin Bond-Lamberty; B. D. Amiro; Stith Tom Gower


Archive | 2008

The isotopic signature of transpiration in mixed conifer forest

Dawn Williams; Brent E. Ewers; J. L. Angstmann; N. Guemouria; A. Chehbouni


Archive | 2008

Is evapotranspiration and its components from boreal forests constant with stand age after fire and drainage conditions

Brent E. Ewers; Chris Barker; J. L. Angstmann; B. D. Amiro; Benjamin Bond-Lamberty; Hwanjoon Kwon; Stith Tom Gower


Archive | 2008

Bryophyte Evapotranspiration in a Boreal Forest Chronosequence

Benjamin Bond-Lamberty; Brent E. Ewers; J. L. Angstmann; Stith Tom Gower


Archive | 2007

Effects of Post-fire Succession and Edaphic Conditions on Tree Transpiration in a Boreal Black Spruce Forest

J. L. Angstmann; Brent E. Ewers; Hwanjoon Kwon; Benjamin Bond-Lamberty; B. D. Amiro; Stith Tom Gower

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Stith Tom Gower

North Carolina State University

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B. D. Amiro

University of Manitoba

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David J. Gochis

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Joel A. Biederman

Agricultural Research Service

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