Pm. Groffman et al., Colder soils in a warmer world: A snow manipulation study in a northern hardwood forest ecosystem, BIOGEOCHEMI, 56(2), 2001, pp. 135-150
In this special section of Biogeochemistry, we present results from a snow
manipulation experiment in the northern hardwood forest ecosystem at the Hu
bbard Brook Experimental Forest in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, U.
S.A. Snow is important as an insulator of forest soils. Later development o
f snowpacks, as may occur in a warmer climate, may result in increases in s
oil freezing (i.e. colder soils in a warmer world) and could cause changes
in fine root and microbial mortality, hydrologic and gaseous losses of nitr
ogen (N), and the acid-base status of drainage water. In our study, we kept
soils snow free by shoveling until early February during the mild winters
of 1997/1998 and 1998/1999. The treatment produced mild, but persistent soi
l freezing and induced surprisingly significant effects on root mortality,
soil nitrate (NO3-) levels and hydrologic fluxes of C, N and P. In this spe
cial section we present four papers addressing, (1) soil temperature and mo
isture response to our snow manipulation treatment (Hardy et al.), (2) the
response of fine root dynamics to treatment (Tierney et al.), (3) the respo
nse of soil inorganic N levels, in situ N mineralization and nitrification,
denitrification and microbial biomass to the treatment (Groffman et al.) a
nd (4) soil solution concentrations and fluxes of C, N and P (Fitzhugh et a
l.). In this introductory paper we: (1) review the literature on snow effec
ts on forest biogeochemistry, (2) introduce our manipulation experiment and
(3) summarize the results presented in the other papers in this issue.