Studies of Regional and Global

Environmental Change

 

 
 
 
 

Research Focus Areas

Our laboratory focuses on a broad range of research topics and we work in a range of different ecosystems. The thread that runs through all our studies is a goal of understanding how the earth is changing and how humans interact with natural ecosystems. Sometimes, as with our studies of nutrient cycling, those studies focus on basic ecological processes. In other cases, particularly with our carbon cycle and dust research areas, the work is directed toward issues that have broad significance to society. We use a range of techniques and tools for our work including advanced analytical techniques and modeling approaches. You can find an annotated bibliography of work in some of the areas listed below as well as links to pdf files. A full list of lab publications is available here.

 

The carbon cycle

 

The carbon cycle lies at the heart of human-caused changes to climate, and the terrestrial components of the global carbon cycle are some of the most important but uncertain aspects of future projections of climate change. Within the terrestrial C cycle, soils are particularly important both because of the very large stocks of C in this reservoir and because the mechanisms that maintain the stability of C in soils remain uncertain. Each of the links below describes differents aspects of our work and links to laboratory publications or products.

The Structure and Lability of Soil Carbon

The organic geochemistry of soils

Soil carbon fluxes and turnover

Dissolved Organic Matter Dynamics

Soil Carbon Modeling

Climate Change and Boreal Soil Carbon Dynamics

Development of Highly Mechanistic Soil Models

Regional Changes to the Carbon Cycle

Fire and the carbon cycle

Boreal soil carbon vulnerability under a changing climate

 

 

Western US Land Use Change

 

 

The Western US has changed dramatically in the past 200 years and development continues today. These changes have wide-ranging implications for ecosystems including changes in soils, vegetation and even climate. Our work focuses on understanding the implications of land use changes in the West including wind erosion of soils and dust deposition. We also have focused on C cycle and nutirent cycle changes that accompany or follow land use change.

Dust in the Western US

The history and implications of changing dust deposition in the west.

Land Use Change and Soils

Changes in carbon and nutrient cycling following land use change on the Colorado Plateau

 

 

Ecosystem Nutrient Cycling

 

 

The essential and limiting nutrients such as N, P and the base cations control many aspects of how ecosystems function. Many of these cycles and particularly N (and perhaps P) have been drastically altered by human activity. Our work in nutriet cycling focuses on understanding how these element cycles influence biological systems and how they are controlled by environmental and physical factors.

The Role of Geology and Geochemistry in Nutrient Cycling

Interactions of plants and geology in Colorado and Utah

Biosphere/Atmosphere Exchange of Nutrients

Changes in the atmospheric cycling and deposition of nutrients

 

 

 

 

\