Publications by authors named "Pamela Templer"

Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition is unequally distributed across space and time, with inputs to terrestrial ecosystems impacted by industry regulations and variations in human activity. Soil carbon (C) content normally controls the fraction of mineralized N that is nitrified (ƒ), affecting N bioavailability for plants and microbes. However, it is unknown whether N deposition has modified the relationships among soil C, net N mineralization, and net nitrification.

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  • Street trees enhance climate resilience by reducing urban heat and managing stormwater runoff, yet the sources of their water in mesic cities are not well understood.
  • This study in Boston analyzed the water sources for Acer platanoides trees using stable isotopes and found that during the summer of 2021, most of the water absorbed came from precipitation, particularly from heavy rainfall in July.
  • Despite the current reliance on precipitation, the increasing frequency of droughts due to climate change may pose challenges for water availability for these urban trees in the future.
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Temperate forests are threatened by urbanization and fragmentation, with over 20% (118,300 km) of U.S. forest land projected to be subsumed by urban land development.

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Global proliferation of forest edges through anthropogenic land-use change and forest fragmentation is well documented, and while forest fragmentation has clear consequences for soil carbon (C) cycling, underlying drivers of belowground activity at the forest edge remain poorly understood. Increasing soil C losses via respiration have been observed at rural forest edges, but this process was suppressed at urban forest edges. We offer a comprehensive, coupled investigation of abiotic soil conditions and biotic soil activity from forest edge to interior at eight sites along an urbanization gradient to elucidate how environmental stressors are linked to soil C cycling at the forest edge.

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Winter at high latitudes is characterized by low temperatures, dampened light levels and short photoperiods which shape ecological and evolutionary outcomes from cells to populations to ecosystems. Advances in our understanding of winter biological processes (spanning physiology, behaviour and ecology) highlight that biodiversity threats (e.g.

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  • Nitrogen availability for plants has been decreasing globally, a trend known as nitrogen oligotrophication, particularly in northeastern U.S. forests, which is worsened by climate change.
  • The study investigated how urbanization and forest fragmentation affect nitrogen cycling in oak-dominated forests from Boston to central Massachusetts, finding that urban forests had higher nitrogen availability compared to rural forests.
  • While urban areas showed increased nitrogen uptake by trees, this effect diminished at forest edges, suggesting that forest fragmentation negatively impacts nitrogen availability and tree demand.
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The productivity of ecosystems and their capacity to support life depends on access to reactive nitrogen (N). Over the past century, humans have more than doubled the global supply of reactive N through industrial and agricultural activities. However, long-term records demonstrate that N availability is declining in many regions of the world.

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As urbanization and forest fragmentation increase around the globe, it is critical to understand how rates of respiration and carbon losses from soil carbon pools are affected by these processes. This study characterizes soils in fragmented forests along an urban to rural gradient, evaluating the sensitivity of soil respiration to changes in soil temperature and moisture near the forest edge. While previous studies found elevated rates of soil respiration at temperate forest edges in rural areas compared to the forest interior, we find that soil respiration is suppressed at the forest edge in urban areas.

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Nitrogen (N) is an essential plant nutrient, and plants can take up N from several sources, including via mycorrhizal fungal associations. The N uptake patterns of understory plants may vary beneath different types of overstory trees, especially through the difference in their type of mycorrhizal association (arbuscular mycorrhizal, AM; or ectomycorrhizal, ECM), because soil mycorrhizal community and N availability differ beneath AM (non-ECM) and ECM overstory trees (e.g.

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  • Urban areas like Boston University are taking on climate change efforts as federal policy lags, with the study focusing on how different land cover types impact carbon (C) levels through sequestering and respiring processes.* -
  • Despite efforts, all three Boston University campuses were found to emit more biogenic carbon than they sequestered, with trees offsetting some emissions but not enough to create a net positive impact.* -
  • Landscaping strategies such as reducing mulch use and increasing tree cover could help minimize carbon emissions from urban campuses, although the study indicates these emissions are a minor part of overall emissions.*
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Climate models project higher growing-season temperatures and a decline in the depth and duration of winter snowpack throughout many north temperate ecosystems over the next century. A smaller snowpack is projected to induce more frequent soil freeze/thaw cycles in winter in northern hardwood forests of the northeastern United States. We measured the combined effects of warmer growing-season soil temperatures and increased winter freeze/thaw cycles on rates of leaf-level photosynthesis and transpiration (sap flow) of red maple (Acer rubrum) trees in a northern hardwood forest at the Climate Change Across Seasons Experiment at Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire.

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Winter air temperatures are rising faster than summer air temperatures in high-latitude forests, increasing the frequency of soil freeze/thaw events in winter. To determine how climate warming and soil freeze/thaw cycles affect soil microbial communities and the ecosystem processes they drive, we leveraged the Climate Change across Seasons Experiment (CCASE) at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in the northeastern United States, where replicate field plots receive one of three climate treatments: warming (+5°C above ambient in the growing season), warming in the growing season + winter freeze/thaw cycles (+5°C above ambient +4 freeze/thaw cycles during winter), and no treatment. Soil samples were taken from plots at six time points throughout the growing season and subjected to amplicon (rDNA) and metagenome sequencing.

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Direct quantification of terrestrial biosphere responses to global change is crucial for projections of future climate change in Earth system models. Here, we synthesized ecosystem carbon-cycling data from 1,119 experiments performed over the past four decades concerning changes in temperature, precipitation, CO and nitrogen across major terrestrial vegetation types of the world. Most experiments manipulated single rather than multiple global change drivers in temperate ecosystems of the USA, Europe and China.

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  • Winter is crucial yet often overlooked in the study of northeastern North American forest ecosystems, with ongoing research indicating its significance for both ecological and community health.
  • Over the past century, winter temperatures and snow cover have declined, which can negatively affect wildlife, water, and soil ecology, while also influencing tree health and the spread of pests.
  • The changes in winter conditions pose risks not only to the environment but also to economic activities like logging, tourism, and public health, reshaping the socioecological landscape of the northern forest region.
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Rising winter air temperature will reduce snow depth and duration over the next century in northern hardwood forests. Reductions in snow depth may affect soil bacteria and fungi directly, but also affect soil microbes indirectly through effects of snowpack loss on plant roots. We incubated root exclusion and root ingrowth cores across a winter climate-elevation gradient in a northern hardwood forest for 29 months to identify direct (i.

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Changes in growing season climate are often the foci of research exploring forest response to climate change. By contrast, little is known about tree growth response to projected declines in winter snowpack and increases in soil freezing in seasonally snow-covered forest ecosystems, despite extensive documentation of the importance of winter climate in mediating ecological processes. We conducted a 5-year snow-removal experiment whereby snow was removed for the first 4-5 weeks of winter in a northern hardwood forest at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire, USA.

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Human societies depend on an Earth system that operates within a constrained range of nutrient availability, yet the recent trajectory of terrestrial nitrogen (N) availability is uncertain. Examining patterns of foliar N concentrations and isotope ratios (δN) from more than 43,000 samples acquired over 37 years, here we show that foliar N concentration declined by 9% and foliar δN declined by 0.6-1.

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Excess nitrogen and phosphorus ("nutrients") loadings continue to affect ecosystem function and human health across the U.S. Our ability to connect atmospheric inputs of nutrients to aquatic end points remains limited due to uncoupled air and water quality monitoring.

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  • Atmospheric nitrogen deposition has increased in ecosystems beyond preindustrial levels, yet urban areas are often excluded from monitoring networks.
  • In a study in the greater Boston area, canopy throughfall nitrogen was measured at 15 sites, revealing that nitrogen input varied significantly and was linked to local vehicle emissions.
  • Despite the correlation between throughfall nitrogen and vehicle emissions, soil processes like mineralization and respiration were more closely related to soil properties than to nitrogen inputs, indicating a complex interaction in urban ecosystems.
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Climate models project an increase in mean annual air temperatures and a reduction in the depth and duration of winter snowpack for many mid and high latitude and high elevation seasonally snow-covered ecosystems over the next century. The combined effects of these changes in climate will lead to warmer soils in the growing season and increased frequency of soil freeze-thaw cycles (FTCs) in winter due to the loss of a continuous, insulating snowpack. Previous experiments have warmed soils or removed snow via shoveling or with shelters to mimic projected declines in the winter snowpack.

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Snow cover is projected to decline during the next century in many ecosystems that currently experience a seasonal snowpack. Because snow insulates soils from frigid winter air temperatures, soils are expected to become colder and experience more winter soil freeze-thaw cycles as snow cover continues to decline. Tree roots are adversely affected by snowpack reduction, but whether loss of snow will affect root-microbe interactions remains largely unknown.

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The respiratory release of carbon dioxide (CO) from soil is a major yet poorly understood flux in the global carbon cycle. Climatic warming is hypothesized to increase rates of soil respiration, potentially fueling further increases in global temperatures. However, despite considerable scientific attention in recent decades, the overall response of soil respiration to anticipated climatic warming remains unclear.

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Molecular hydrogen (H ) is an atmospheric trace gas with a large microbe-mediated soil sink, yet cycling of this compound throughout ecosystems is poorly understood. Measurements of the sources and sinks of H in various ecosystems are sparse, resulting in large uncertainties in the global H budget. Constraining the H cycle is critical to understanding its role in atmospheric chemistry and climate.

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