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Microbial Function in Restored Wetlands with Amelia Fitch
Manage episode 374569898 series 2541695
“Partial recovery of microbial function in restored coastal marshes of Oregon, USA” with Amelia Fitch, PhD Candidate at Dartmouth College
Draining or restoring a wetland has a significant impact on the land’s ability to store carbon. A lot of that has to do with the microbial communities that live within these wetlands, but when a wetland is restored, how long does it really take for those communities to shift and what does that mean for the land’s carbon storage capacity? This episode, Amelia discusses her work studying wetland restoration and its effects on carbon sequestration and microbial communities.
Tune in to learn:
· The similarities between feeding birds and studying microbes
· The differences between restored freshwater and saltwater marshes
· How wetland restoration can be done
· How restoration impacts wetland microbial communities
If you would like more information about this topic, this episode’s paper is available here: https://doi.org/10.1002/saj2.20383
It will be freely available from 18 Aug to 31 Aug, 2023.
Contact us at [email protected] or on Twitter @FieldLabEarth if you have comments, questions, or suggestions for show topics, and if you want more content like this don’t forget to subscribe. If you’d like to see old episodes or sign up for our newsletter, you can do so here: https://fieldlabearth.libsyn.com/.
If you would like to reach out to Amelia, you can find her here: [email protected]
If you would like to reach out to Sk Musfiq Us Salehin from our Student Spotlight, you can find him here: [email protected] Twitter: https://twitter.com/Sk_Musfiq
Resources
CEU Quiz: https://web.sciencesocieties.org/Learning-Center/Courses/Course-Detail?productid=%7bC32DAF60-2C3D-EE11-BDF4-000D3A323F9B%7d
Transcripts: https://www.rev.com/transcript-editor/shared/f-kiHgYQ04y4HisAfweIOJQ-Ti1X4a_rvHWGgDz-hKrilFrfnmwdvfxzOkBJPLW7S5BJ8-dzLiyYhjbNeeW9RhvhwV0?loadFrom=SharedLink
Science paper about wetland restoration and clean water: https://www.science.org/content/article/targeting-us-wetland-restoration-could-make-cleaning-water-much-cheaper
Lower Columbia Estuary Partnership: https://www.estuarypartnership.org/
South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve: https://coast.noaa.gov/nerrs/reserves/south-slough.html
Sponsored by METER Group. METER sensors deliver real-time, plant, soil, and atmospheric data that fuels environmental research. Listen to METER Group’s new podcast We Measure the World to hear how innovative researchers leverage environmental data to make our world a better—and more sustainable—place at metergroup.com/fieldlabearth
Field, Lab, Earth is Copyrighted by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America.
129 episodes
Manage episode 374569898 series 2541695
“Partial recovery of microbial function in restored coastal marshes of Oregon, USA” with Amelia Fitch, PhD Candidate at Dartmouth College
Draining or restoring a wetland has a significant impact on the land’s ability to store carbon. A lot of that has to do with the microbial communities that live within these wetlands, but when a wetland is restored, how long does it really take for those communities to shift and what does that mean for the land’s carbon storage capacity? This episode, Amelia discusses her work studying wetland restoration and its effects on carbon sequestration and microbial communities.
Tune in to learn:
· The similarities between feeding birds and studying microbes
· The differences between restored freshwater and saltwater marshes
· How wetland restoration can be done
· How restoration impacts wetland microbial communities
If you would like more information about this topic, this episode’s paper is available here: https://doi.org/10.1002/saj2.20383
It will be freely available from 18 Aug to 31 Aug, 2023.
Contact us at [email protected] or on Twitter @FieldLabEarth if you have comments, questions, or suggestions for show topics, and if you want more content like this don’t forget to subscribe. If you’d like to see old episodes or sign up for our newsletter, you can do so here: https://fieldlabearth.libsyn.com/.
If you would like to reach out to Amelia, you can find her here: [email protected]
If you would like to reach out to Sk Musfiq Us Salehin from our Student Spotlight, you can find him here: [email protected] Twitter: https://twitter.com/Sk_Musfiq
Resources
CEU Quiz: https://web.sciencesocieties.org/Learning-Center/Courses/Course-Detail?productid=%7bC32DAF60-2C3D-EE11-BDF4-000D3A323F9B%7d
Transcripts: https://www.rev.com/transcript-editor/shared/f-kiHgYQ04y4HisAfweIOJQ-Ti1X4a_rvHWGgDz-hKrilFrfnmwdvfxzOkBJPLW7S5BJ8-dzLiyYhjbNeeW9RhvhwV0?loadFrom=SharedLink
Science paper about wetland restoration and clean water: https://www.science.org/content/article/targeting-us-wetland-restoration-could-make-cleaning-water-much-cheaper
Lower Columbia Estuary Partnership: https://www.estuarypartnership.org/
South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve: https://coast.noaa.gov/nerrs/reserves/south-slough.html
Sponsored by METER Group. METER sensors deliver real-time, plant, soil, and atmospheric data that fuels environmental research. Listen to METER Group’s new podcast We Measure the World to hear how innovative researchers leverage environmental data to make our world a better—and more sustainable—place at metergroup.com/fieldlabearth
Field, Lab, Earth is Copyrighted by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America.
129 episodes
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