Wednesday, 9 November 2005 - 10:50 AM
288-7

Long-Term Studies of Soils and Soil Biota in a Kansas Tallgrass Prairie: Stories That Only Time Can Tell.

Mac A. Callaham Jr., USDA Forest Service, Forestry Sciences Laboratory, 320 Green Street, Athens, GA 30602-2044, Timothy C. Todd, Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, John M. Blair, Division of Biology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, Charles W. Rice Jr., Department of Agronomy, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, Duane J. Kitchen, Department of Biology, Rockford College, Rockford, IL 61108, and Mark Williams, Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30606.

The Belowground Plot Experiment at Konza Prairie Biological Station (KPBS) in eastern Kansas was initiated in 1986, with the specific objective of understanding the relationships between above- and belowground processes, and the effects of fire, grazing and nutrient additions on these processes. In order to achieve this objective, researchers at KPBS have periodically sampled several components of the belowground ecosystem including root and rhizome biomass and nutrients, fine root production and turnover, litter decomposition, soil C and N pools (stable, mineralizable, and microbial biomass), soil and soil solution chemistry, mycorrhizal spore densities, macroinvertebrates, microinvertebrates, and nematodes. Here we present a synthesis and review of published data from the Belowground Plot Experiment, along with some recent previously unreported data.

Back to Symposium---New Horizons from Long-Term Soil Experiments: Interdisciplinary Opportunities to Examine Soil Change
Back to S07 Forest, Range & Wildland Soils

Back to The ASA-CSSA-SSSA International Annual Meetings (November 6-10, 2005)