Desert Fertilization Experiment: ecosystem response to nutrient enrichment across an urban airshed in the Sonoran desert
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Launched in 2006 with support from the National Science Foundation
(NSF) and leveraged by the CAP LTER, the Carbon and Nitrogen
deposition (CNdep) project sought to answer the fundamental question
of whether elemental cycles in urban ecosystems are qualitatively
different from those in non-urban ecosystems. Ecosystem scientists,
atmospheric chemists, and biogeochemists tested the hypothesis that
distinct biogeochemical pathways result from elevated inorganic
nitrogen and organic carbon deposition from the atmosphere to the
land. To test the hypothesis, scientists examined the responsiveness
of Sonoran desert ecosystems to nutrient enrichment by capitalizing on
a gradient of atmospheric deposition in and around the greater Phoenix
metropolitan area. Fifteen desert study sites were established, with
five locations each west and east of the urban core, and in the urban
core in desert preserves. In addition to the gradient of atmospheric
deposition in and around the urban core, select study plots at each of
the fifteen desert locations receive amendments of nitrogen,
phosphorus, or nitrogen + phosphorus fertilizer. Measured variables
include soil properties, perennial and annual plant growth, and
atmospheric deposition of nitrogen. At the close of the initial grant
period, the CAP LTER assumed responsibility for the project, renamed
the Desert Fertilization Experiment, which provides a remarkable
platform to study the long-term effects of nutrient enrichment on
ecosystem properties. This data set features an amalgamation of data from the CAP LTER's
long-term Desert Fertilization Experiment. The data presented here
bring together many aspects of the project, and are featured in
several papers, notably Hall et al. 2009 and 2011, and Sponseller et
al. 2012. Investigators interested in other and more recent data from
the CAP LTER's long-term Desert Fertilization Experiment should search
the data repository for 'desert fertilization experiment'. Citations: Hall, S. J., B. Ahmed, P. Ortiz, R. Davies, R. A. Sponseller, and N.
B. Grimm. 2009. Urbanization alters soil microbial functioning in the
Sonoran Desert. Ecosystems 12:654.671.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10021-009-9249-1 Hall, S. J., R. A. Sponseller, N. B. Grimm, D. Huber, J. P. Kaye, C.
Clark, and S. L. Collins. 2011. Ecosystem response to nutrient
enrichment across an urban airshed in the Sonoran Desert. Ecological
Applications 21:640-660. doi:10.1890/10-0758.1 Sponseller, R. A., S. J. Hall, D. Huber, N. B. Grimm, J. P. Kaye, C.
Clark, and S. Collins. 2012. Variation in monsoon precipitation drives
spatial and temporal patterns of Larrea tridentata growth in the
Sonoran Desert. Functional Ecology, DOI
10.1111/j.1365-2435.2012.01979.x.
创建时间:
2018-06-07



