NSF LogoNSF Award Abstract - #0221835 AWSFL008-DS3

BE/CBC: Land-Water Interaction at the Catchment Scale: Linking Biogeochemistry
and Hydrology

NSF Org ATM
Latest Amendment Date December 17, 2003
Award Number 0221835
Award Instrument Standard Grant
Program Manager Lydia Gates
ATM DIVISION OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
GEO DIRECTORATE FOR GEOSCIENCES
Start Date September 1, 2002
Expires August 31, 2006 (Estimated)
Expected Total Amount $1411660 (Estimated)
Investigator Marc Stieglitz (Principal Investigator current)
John E. Hobbie (Co-Principal Investigator current)
George W. Kling (Co-Principal Investigator current)
Kevin L. Griffin (Co-Principal Investigator current)
Joshua P. Schimel (Co-Principal Investigator current)
Sponsor Columbia University
1210 Amsterdam Avenue; MC 2205
New York, NY 10027 212/854-6851
NSF Program 1692 BE: COUPLED BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYC
Field Application 0000099 Other Applications NEC
Program Reference Code 1527,1689,9169,EGCH,

Abstract

The project will involve an interdisciplinary study at the Arctic Long-Term Ecological Research site that will use existing, state-of-the-art models of hydrology and biogeochemistry, and improve them with field studies of critical processes of plant production, microbial decomposition, and production rates of dissolved substances in soil water. The models will be eventually linked to determine how soil moisture, spatial connectivity, and the timing of meteorological drivers impact carbon-nitrogen cycling and catchment export. Dr. Stieglitz, and co-PIs, Drs. Griffin (Columbia), Hobbie (Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole), Kling (Michigan), and Schimel (UCSB), will analyze C-N cycling at the catchment scale to answer questions related to element coupling, impact of strength and synchronicity of external forcing, and impacts of spatial heterogeneity of vegetation and hydrological connectivity. The PIs expect this research to advance understanding of land-use changes and eutrophication of coastlines, climate change and altered ecosystem function, and global processes such as sea-ice and deep water formation in the Arctic ocean.

This project is supported by the Biocomplexity in the Environment: Coupled Biogeochemical Cycles research program.


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