Kristen L. Manies
United States Geological Survey
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Environmental Research Letters | 2013
Kim Wickland; Kristen L. Manies; Qianlai Zhuang; Yuri Shur; Robert G. Striegl; Josh Koch
The diversity of ecosystems across boreal landscapes, successional changes after disturbance and complicated permafrost histories, present enormous challenges for assessing how vegetation, water and soil carbon may respond to climate change in boreal regions. To address this complexity, we used a chronosequence approach to assess changes in vegetation composition, water storage and soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks along successional gradients within four landscapes: (1) rocky uplands on ice-poor hillside colluvium, (2) silty uplands on extremely ice-rich loess, (3) gravelly‐sandy lowlands on ice-poor eolian sand and (4) peaty‐silty lowlands on thick ice-rich peat deposits over reworked lowland loess. In rocky uplands, after fire permafrost thawed rapidly due to low ice contents, soils became well drained and SOC stocks decreased slightly. In silty uplands, after fire permafrost persisted, soils remained saturated and SOC decreased slightly. In gravelly‐sandy lowlands where permafrost persisted in drier forest soils, loss of deeper permafrost around lakes has allowed recent widespread drainage of lakes that has exposed limnic material with high SOC to aerobic decomposition. In peaty‐silty lowlands, 2‐4 m of thaw settlement led to fragmented drainage patterns in isolated thermokarst bogs and flooding of soils, and surface soils accumulated new bog peat. We were not able to detect SOC changes in deeper soils, however, due to high variability. Complicated soil stratigraphy revealed that permafrost has repeatedly aggraded and degraded in all landscapes during the Holocene, although in silty uplands only the upper permafrost was affected. Overall, permafrost thaw has led to the reorganization of vegetation, water storage and flow paths, and patterns of SOC accumulation. However, changes have occurred over different timescales among landscapes: over decades in rocky uplands and gravelly‐sandy lowlands in response to fire and lake drainage, over decades to centuries in Content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009
Shuhua Yi; A. David McGuire; Jennifer W. Harden; Eric S. Kasischke; Kristen L. Manies; Larry D. Hinzman; Anna Liljedahl; James T. Randerson; Heping Liu; Vladimir E. Romanovsky; Sergey S. Marchenko; Yongwon Kim
Soil temperature and moisture are important factors that control many ecosystem processes. However, interactions between soil thermal and hydrological processes are not adequately understood in cold regions, where the frozen soil, fire disturbance, and soil drainage play important roles in controlling interactions among these processes. These interactions were investigated with a new ecosystem model framework, the dynamic organic soil version of the Terrestrial Ecosystem Model, that incorporates an efficient and stable numerical scheme for simulating soil thermal and hydrological dynamics within soil profiles that contain a live moss horizon, fibrous and amorphous organic horizons, and mineral soil horizons. The performance of the model was evaluated for a tundra burn site that had both preburn and postburn measurements, two black spruce fire chronosequences (representing space-for-time substitutions in well and intermediately drained conditions), and a poorly drained black spruce site. Although space-for-time substitutions present challenges in model-data comparison, the model demonstrates substantial ability in simulating the dynamics of evapotranspiration, soil temperature, active layer depth, soil moisture, and water table depth in response to both climate variability and fire disturbance. Several differences between model simulations and field measurements identified key challenges for evaluating/improving model performance that include (1) proper representation of discrepancies between air temperature and ground surface temperature; (2) minimization of precipitation biases in the driving data sets; (3) improvement of the measurement accuracy of soil moisture in surface organic horizons; and (4) proper specification of organic horizon depth/properties, and soil thermal conductivity.
Environmental Research Letters | 2014
Carmel E. Johnston; Stephanie A. Ewing; Jennifer W. Harden; Ruth K. Varner; Kimberly P. Wickland; Joshua C. Koch; Christopher C. Fuller; Kristen L. Manies; M. Torre Jorgenson
Permafrost soils store over half of global soil carbon (C), and northern frozen peatlands store about 10% of global permafrost C. With thaw, inundation of high latitude lowland peatlands typically increases the surface-atmosphere flux of methane (CH4), a potent greenhouse gas. To examine the effects of lowland permafrost thaw over millennial timescales, we measured carbon dioxide (CO2) and CH4 exchange along sites that constitute a ?1000 yr thaw chronosequence of thermokarst collapse bogs and adjacent fen locations at Innoko Flats Wildlife Refuge in western Alaska. Peak CH4 exchange in July (123???71 mg CH4?C m?2 d?1) was observed in features that have been thawed for 30 to 70 (<100) yr, where soils were warmer than at more recently thawed sites (14 to 21 yr; emitting 1.37???0.67 mg CH4?C m?2 d?1 in July) and had shallower water tables than at older sites (200 to 1400 yr; emitting 6.55???2.23 mg CH4?C m?2 d?1 in July). Carbon lost via CH4 efflux during the growing season at these intermediate age sites was 8% of uptake by net ecosystem exchange. Our results provide evidence that CH4 emissions following lowland permafrost thaw are enhanced over decadal time scales, but limited over millennia. Over larger spatial scales, adjacent fen systems may contribute sustained CH4 emission, CO2 uptake, and DOC export. We argue that over timescales of decades to centuries, thaw features in high-latitude lowland peatlands, particularly those developed on poorly drained mineral substrates, are a key locus of elevated CH4 emission to the atmosphere that must be considered for a complete understanding of high latitude CH4 dynamics.
Nature Geoscience | 2011
Merritt R. Turetsky; Evan S. Kane; Jennifer W. Harden; Roger D. Ottmar; Kristen L. Manies; Elizabeth E. Hoy; Eric S. Kasischke
Global Change Biology | 2011
Michael L. Goulden; Andrew M. S. McMillan; Greg Winston; Adrian V. Rocha; Kristen L. Manies; Jennifer W. Harden; Benjamin Bond-Lamberty
Ecosystems | 2008
Michelle C. Mack; Kathleen K. Treseder; Kristen L. Manies; Jennifer W. Harden; Edward A. G. Schuur; Jason G. Vogel; James T. Randerson; F. Stuart Chapin
Global Change Biology | 2006
Jennifer W. Harden; Kristen L. Manies; Merritt R. Turetsky; Jason C. Neff
Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2004
Jennifer W. Harden; J. C. Neff; D. V. Sandberg; Merritt R. Turetsky; Roger D. Ottmar; Gerd Gleixner; T. L. Fries; Kristen L. Manies
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2005
Kristen L. Manies; Jennifer W. Harden; Ben Bond-Lamberty; K. P. O'Neill
Ecosystems | 2009
Jonathan A. O'Donnell; Merritt R. Turetsky; Jennifer W. Harden; Kristen L. Manies; Lee E. Pruett; Gordon ShetlerG. Shetler; Jason C. Neff