Strontium isotope studies of atmospheric inputs to forested watersheds in New Mexico |
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Authors: | James R. Gosz Douglas I. Moore |
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Affiliation: | (1) Biology Department, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA |
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Abstract: | Stable isotopes of strontium provide a unique quantification of ecosystem processes because organisms do not differentiate between them. For landscapes with contrasting geologies, these isotopes can identify atmospheric source material from local weathered material. This study quantified the input of strontium, distribution within the ecosystem, canopy capture versus leaf leachate, canopy loss, and Sr increment in biomass from an atmospheric origin. Forest ecosystems were studied along an elevational gradient in New Mexico. Spruce forests had a much greater capacity for capturing atmospheric Sr than aspen forests; however, aspen contained more total atmospheric Sr in their tissues because of greater uptake rates and the ability to utilize atmospheric deposited Sr before the initiation of the aspen forest. This technique has excellent capabilities for estimating the relative importance of atmospheric and weathering inputs to certain ecosystems. |
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Keywords: | strontium isotopes atmospheric inputs flux forest |
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