Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
return
return to main site

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections

Personal tools

You are here: Home / Expertise Search / Badash, Joseph
4374 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type

























New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
File PDF document Kennish et al 1980.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / KEF-LAR
File PDF document Kesler Bailey 1993.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / KEF-LAR
File PDF document Kesler et al 2001.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / KEF-LAR
File PDF document Kesler Manning 1996.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / KEF-LAR
File PDF document Ketchel 1984.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / KEF-LAR
Key Issues
File PDF document Key role of symbiotic dinitrogen fixation in tropical forest secondary succession
Forests contribute a significant portion of the land carbon sink, but their ability to sequester CO2 may be constrained by nitrogen 1–6, a major plant-limiting nutrient. Many tropical forests possess tree species capable of fixing atmospheric dinitrogen (N2)7, but it is unclear whether this functional group can supply the nitrogen needed as forests recover from disturbance or previous land use1, or expand in response to rising CO2 (refs 6, 8). Here we identify a powerful feedback mechanism in which N2 fixation can overcome ecosystem- scale deficiencies in nitrogen that emerge during periods of rapid biomass accumulation in tropical forests. Over a 300-year chronose- quence in Panama, N2-fixing tree species accumulated carbon up to nine times faster per individual than their non-fixing neighbours (greatest difference in youngest forests), and showed species-specific differences in the amount and timing of fixation. As a result of fast growth and high fixation, fixers provided a large fraction of the nitrogen needed to support net forest growth (50,000 kg carbon per hectare) in the first 12 years. A key element of ecosystem functional diversity was ensured by the presence of different N2-fixing tree species across the entire forest age sequence. These findings show that symbiotic N2 fixation can have a central role in nitrogen cycling during tropical forest stand development, with potentially important implications for the ability of tropical forests to sequester CO2.
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents
File PDF document Khym Layzer American Midland Naturalist.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / KEF-LAR
Person Killeffer, Terri
Located in Expertise Search
File PDF document King Burke 1999.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / KEF-LAR