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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey A. Bird is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey A. Bird.


Ecology Letters | 2012

The source of microbial C has little impact on soil organic matter stabilisation in forest ecosystems.

Heather M. Throckmorton; Jeffrey A. Bird; Laura Dane; Mary K. Firestone; William R. Horwath

The source of microbial C is thought to impact its stability in soil due to variations in cellular biochemistry. It has been hypothesised that a fungal-dominated community stabilises more C than a bacterial-dominated community, in part due to chemical recalcitrance of their non-living biomass, particularly cell wall components and pigments. We compared the turnover of (13)C-labelled (99.9 atom %) temperate and tropical microbial isolates [i.e. fungi, Gram-positive bacteria (including actinobacteria) and Gram-negative bacteria] in temperate (California) and tropical (Puerto Rico) forest soils. While significant differences in (13)C recovery and mean residence times occurred among some microbial additions, similar turnover rates were observed, and in general, results do not support the view that microbial biochemistry affects soil C maintenance. Different effects by microbial necromass additions in California and Puerto Rico suggest that ecosystem-specific effects may be as important to microbial C stabilisation as its macromolecular composition and recalcitrance.


Metabolomics | 2009

13C-Isotopomer-based metabolomics of microbial groups isolated from two forest soils

Teresa W.-M. Fan; Jeffrey A. Bird; Eoin L. Brodie; Andrew N. Lane

Soil microorganisms are the primary mediators of organic matter decomposition and humification processes in soil, which represent a critical C flux in the global C cycle. Little is known about how soil microbes regulate carbon cycling including the contribution of their own biomass to stable soil organic matter. A comprehensive understanding of microbial composition is a first step to unraveling microbial regulation of soil humification processes. For this purpose, we isolated 23 microbial strains representing four major groups (Gram (+) bacteria, Gram (−) bacteria, Actinobacteria, and Fungi) from a temperate and a tropical forest soil. The microbial isolates were cultured with uniformly 13C-labeled glucose as the C source such that all biochemical components synthesized from glucose were 13C labeled. This approach enabled field mesocosm experiments on tracking microbial decomposition, while facilitating solution- and solid-state NMR analysis of microbial composition. Polar and lipid extracts of labeled biomass of the four microbial groups from the two forest sites were profiled by 2D NMR methods, including high-resolution heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectroscopy and HCCH-total correlation spectroscopy. This 13C labeling approach also enabled the analysis of intact biomass by 2D solid-state 13C–13C correlation spectroscopy. Distinction between microbial groups and sites was observed in the polar and lipophilic metabolite profiles. Dominant differences could also be related to the capacity for lipid β-oxidation or adaptation to desiccation. Solid-state NMR further revealed differential synthetic capacity for glycolipids among groups. This technology coupled with 13C metabolite profiling should facilitate future functional annotation of indigenous microbial genomes.


Biogeochemistry | 2015

The soil matrix increases microbial C stabilization in temperate and tropical forest soils

Heather M. Throckmorton; Jeffrey A. Bird; Nick Monte; Tad Doane; Mary K. Firestone; William R. Horwath

Microbial biomass represents a substantial source of labile C contributing to soil organic matter (SOM) maintenance. Microbial residues may associate with the soil matrix through a variety of mechanisms, reducing its bioavailability and increasing its persistence in soil. Our objective was to examine soil matrix effects on the stability of non-living microbial C inputs in two contrasting forest ecosystems by following microbial residues (Fungi, Actinobacteria, Gram-positive bacteria (Gm +), Gram-negative bacteria (Gm −)) into SOM fractions in a temperate forest in California (CA) and a tropical forest in Puerto Rico (PR) for 3 and 2 years, respectively. We isolated 3 SOM fractions: (i) free light fraction (FLF), (ii) occluded light fraction (OLF), and (iii) dense fraction (DF). Additionally, we characterized SOM fraction chemistry to infer quality and source of native fraction SOM. Our results showed greater stabilization as mineral-associated microbial C (i.e., as DF and OLF), compared with loose detrital C (i.e., FLF). There was no microbial group effect (i.e., differences in fraction C recovery among different microbial cell types). Our findings suggest that mineral association is more important for stabilizing non-living microbial C in soil than the cellular structure of the initial source of microbial inputs, with site specific edaphic factors as the major controllers of the amount of microbial residues stabilized.


Organic Geochemistry | 2016

Weathering of pyrogenic organic matter induces fungal oxidative enzyme response in single culture inoculation experiments

Christy Gibson; Timothy D. Berry; Ruzhen Wang; Julie A. Spencer; Cliff T. Johnston; Yong Jiang; Jeffrey A. Bird; Timothy R. Filley

The addition of pyrogenic organic matter (PyOM), the aromatic carbon-rich product of the incomplete combustion of plant biomass or fossil fuels, to soil can influence the rate of microbial metabolism of native soil carbon. The interaction of soil heterotrophs with PyOM may be governed by the surficial chemical and physical properties of PyOM that evolve with environmental exposure. We present results of a 36-day laboratory incubation investigating the interaction of a common white-rot fungus, Trametes versicolor, with three forms of 13C-enriched (2.08 atom% 13C) PyOM derived from Pinus ponderosa (450 °C): one freshly produced, and two artificially weathered (254 nm, UV light-water treatment and water-leaching alone). Analysis (FTIR, XPS) of the UV-weathered PyOM showed increased aliphatic C-H content and oxidation of aromatic carbon relative to both the original and water-leached PyOM. The addition of both weathered forms of PyOM stimulated (positively primed) fungal respiration of the growth media, while the unaltered PyOM mildly inhibited (negatively primed) respiration. Artificial weathering resulted in higher oxidative (laccase and peroxidase) enzyme activity than unaltered PyOM, possibly the result of a diminished capacity to bind reactive substrates and extracellular enzymes after weathering. However, and contrary to expectations, simple water-leached weathering resulted in a relatively higher enzyme activity and respiration than that of UV-weathering. The 13C content of respired CO2 indicated negligible fungal oxidation of PyOM for all treatments, demonstrating the overall low microbial reactivity of this high temperature PyOM. The increased enzymatic and positive priming response of T. versicolor to weathered PyOM highlights the importance of weathering-induced chemistry in controlling PyOM-microbe-soil carbon interactions.


Science of The Total Environment | 2019

Decadal post-fire succession of soil invertebrate communities is dependent on the soil surface properties in a northern temperate forest.

Apolline Auclerc; James M. Le Moine; Pierre-Joseph Hatton; Jeffrey A. Bird; Knute J. Nadelhoffer

Although fires are common disturbances in North American forests, the extent to which soil invertebrate assemblages recover from burning remains unclear. Here, we examine long-term (14- to 101-yr) recoveries of soil invertebrate communities from common cut and burn treatments conducted at 6 to 26-yr intervals since 1911 in a deciduous forest in the upper Great Lakes region (USA). We characterize soil surface macro-invertebrate communities during both fall and spring across a long-term, experimental fire chronosequence to characterize invertebrate community recovery at decadal time-scales and community changes between seasons. We posited that changes in invertebrate community structure might, in turn, impact decomposition process. We sampled active organisms at the soil surface using pitfall traps. We described understory vegetation, measured soil properties, and conducted a 4-year litter bag study with big-toothed aspen leaves (Populus grandidentata). Invertebrate community responses followed a habitat accommodation model of succession showing that invertebrate succession is dependent on the soil surface properties. The fall and spring measures revealed that the densities of active invertebrates were highest 101 years after fire. For a given pair of stands, a pattern of sharing higher percentage of taxa was denoted when stands were of similar age. Some species such as the beetle Stelidota octomaculata appeared to be indicator of the chronosequence succession stage because it tracks the successional increase of Quercus and acorn production at the study site. We also found a significant positive correlation between leaf decomposition of soil macrofaunal accessible leaves and millipedes density across the chronosequence. We show that vegetation cover changes and related shifts in habitat structure occurring during post-fire succession are important in shaping communities assemblages. This finding highlights the importance of simultaneously considering abiotic-biotic factors together with above- and belowground measurements to better characterize controls on successional community dynamics after disturbance.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2011

Knowledge gaps in soil carbon and nitrogen interactions – From molecular to global scale

Annemieke I. Gärdenäs; Göran I. Ågren; Jeffrey A. Bird; Marianne Clarholm; Sara Hallin; Phil Ineson; Thomas Kätterer; Heike Knicker; S. Ingvar Nilsson; Torgny Näsholm; Stephen M. Ogle; Keith Paustian; Tryggve Persson; Johan Stendahl


Agronomy Journal | 2000

Rice yield and nitrogen utilization efficiency under alternative straw management practices.

Alison J. Eagle; Jeffrey A. Bird; William R. Horwath; Bruce A. Linquist; Sylvie M. Brouder; James E. Hill; Chris van Kessel


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2012

Biological degradation of pyrogenic organic matter in temperate forest soils.

Fernanda Santos; Margaret S. Torn; Jeffrey A. Bird


Organic Geochemistry | 2008

13C and 15N stabilization dynamics in soil organic matter fractions during needle and fine root decomposition

Jeffrey A. Bird; Markus Kleber; Margaret S. Torn


Organic Geochemistry | 2011

Relative contribution of foliar and fine root pine litter to the molecular composition of soil organic matter after in situ degradation

Stefania Mambelli; Jeffrey A. Bird; Gerd Gleixner; Todd E. Dawson; Margaret S. Torn

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Margaret S. Torn

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Ruth E. Stark

City University of New York

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