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Breadcrumb

  1. Data & Samples
  2. Collection Methods
  3. Observational Sampling
  4. Observation Types
  5. Biogeochemistry

Biogeochemistry

Forest at TREE in the summer

Biogeochemistry is the study of how essential elements that support life鈥攕uch as carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P)鈥攎ove, or cycle, through different components of the ecosystem. Elements are continually cycling between soil, water, living organisms (including plants, animals, and microbes), and the atmosphere. Studying biogeochemical cycles provides insights into ecological processes and the way ecosystems respond to changes in climate, land use, or other human activities or disruptive natural events such as floods or forest fires.

Biogeochemical measurements quantify the storage and movement of carbon and nutrients through the biological, hydrological, and geological components of the ecosystem. Biogeochemical cycles play a central role in regulating Earth's climate and the health of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Carbon and nutrients naturally move through the ecosystem via the water cycle and activities of organisms (e.g., respiration, consumption, excretion, and decomposition).

Human activities also impact element fluxes. Energy production and industrial activities remove stored carbon from the Earth's surface and add it to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide (CO2). Modern agriculture relies on fertilizers that artificially add nitrogen, phosphorus, and other nutrients to the soil; these nutrients can migrate through the ecosystem and make their way into streams, lakes, and oceans through runoff. Observing continental-scale variation in biogeochemical cycles as well as the direct and indirect effects of human activities is a central goal of NEON.

Diagram of the carbon cycle at a NEON site

Diagram of the carbon cycle at a NEON site

Sampling Design and Methods

In order to understand the cycling of key elements and compounds, NEON measures major biogeochemical inputs, outputs, stocks, fluxes, and processes. Resulting data quantify the chemistry of precipitation, plants, soil, sediments, surface water, and groundwater.

The key categories of measurements made by NEON include:

  • Inputs: atmospheric deposition, chemical properties of groundwater, carbon uptake
  • Outputs: stream nutrient concentrations, evapotranspiration, and respiration, dissolved gasses in surface water
  • Stocks: carbon and nutrient pools in plant biomass and soils, chemical properties of aquatic sediment collected from depositional zones, chemical properties of algae and macrophytes
  • Fluxes: net ecosystem carbon exchange, soil respiration, evapotranspiration and plant litter (i.e., litterfall)
  • Processes: microbial activity, soil net N transformation rates, stream reaeration rates

Carbon and nutrient concentrations and fluxes within an ecosystem are crucial components of ecological science. Researchers can combine multiple NEON measurements and data streams to quantify these components and understand more complex ecological processes. For example, biomass and carbon exchange estimations for the continent require models that incorporate remotely sensed vegetation data, eddy covariance measurements, plant community observations, and plant nutrient analyses.

The NEON Observational Sampling system includes the collection of biogeochemical data from:

  • Soils and sediments
  • Terrestrial plants, aquatic plants, and microalgae
  • Surface and groundwater
  • Atmospheric deposition

The OS system is focused on discrete measurements of biogeochemical pools and fluxes, but the Instrument System (IS) also collects info on biogeochemistry via continuous sensor measurements (and link to relevant IS pages 鈥� eddy covariance, soil sensors, aquatic sensors).

Soils and Sediments

Field technician soil sampling in a forest floodplain at the DELA field site

Field technician soil sampling in a forest floodplain at the DELA field site in Alaska

Soils are the largest reservoir of terrestrial carbon and provide the nutrients needed to support plant and microbial growth. Sediments can be hotspots of carbon and nutrient cycling and are also considered to be one of the greatest sinks of environmental contamination. Soil and sediment biogeochemical measurements focus on carbon and nutrients, stable isotopes of C and N (饾泤13C and 饾泤15N), targeted measurements of net N transformation rates (soil), and concentrations of contaminants (sediments). Learn more about the spatial and temporal details surrounding biogeochemical measurements in soils and sediments.

Terrestrial Plants

Biogeochemical analysis of plant tissues鈥攊ncluding sunlit plant foliage, fine roots, and litterfall 鈥攑rovides valuable information about nutrient uptake and storage by plants in terrestrial ecosystems. Plants take in carbon from the atmosphere (as CO2) and nutrients from the soil, and both are used to build biomass. By looking at biomass stocks and carbon and nutrient contents in various plant reservoirs, researchers can see how carbon and nutrients are cycling between above- and below-ground stores.

Foliage sampling

Foliar sampling in Domain 16, the Pacific Northwest

For all vegetation types, NEON measures total carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotopes (饾泤13C and 饾泤15N). A proxy for lignin content is also measured in litter and sunlit foliage, as this parameter influences decomposition, herbivory, and litter quality. Other plant traits like leaf mass per area, leaf water content, chlorophyll, and major and micronutrients are measured on sunlit foliage, in conjunction with overflights of the NEON Airborne Observation Platform.

Plant biogeochemistry measurements occur once every five years per site. The timing is specific to the type of material 鈥� sunlit foliage is measured during peak greenness, roots are measured at the assumed peak of plant productivity, and litterfall is measured during peak senescence.

Aquatic plants, periphyton, and phytoplankton

Aquatic plants, periphyton, and phytoplankton store and cycle carbon and other nutrients in the aquatic ecosystem, taking in nutrients from water and sediments and cycling them back through the ecosystem as they are consumed or die and decompose. The NEON program conducts chemical analyses of aquatic plants and algae collected at wadeable streams, rivers, and lakes at the NEON aquatic field sites.

Surface and Groundwater

Monitoring carbon and nutrient content of surface water and groundwater allows researchers to assess the role of hydrological cycles in fluxes of nutrients between air, soil, water, and living organisms. Nutrients make their way into surface water through precipitation and runoff from surrounding land and through decomposition of aquatic organisms. Carbon and nutrients filter into groundwater through the soil or from surface water.

Aquatic plant sampling

Photos from left to right: McRae Creek field site; Identifying a bryophyte under the microscope; Field scientists conducting aquatic plant sampling.

Atmospheric Deposition

Nutrients and dust are constantly being deposited onto ecosystems via precipitation and wind. Monitoring major ions in wet deposition and dust mass fluxes can help to elucidate trends in new inputs to landscapes and how those may shape aquatic and terrestrial biogeochemical dynamics. NEON collects precipitation samples for wet deposition analyses at 37 of the 47 terrestrial sites and 7 of the 34 aquatic sites. Samples are collected from a single point using a controlled automated collector. Major ions measured include sulfate (SO4 2-), nitrate (NO3-), chloride (Cl-), and more. Dust mass samples are collected at six terrestrial sites located in the Rocky Mountain west using an automated assembly that pulls air through a quartz microfiber filter. Dust mass is reported and subsamples of the filters are available upon request to measure chemistry of inputs. These same six sites also have optical sensors that continuously measure atmospheric concentrations of particulates and aerosols.

Data Products

Soils and Sediments

Soil biogeochemical data products include:

  • (DP1.10096.001)
  • (DP1.10047.001)
  • (DP1.10086.001)

Sediment biogeochemical data products include:

  • (DP1.20194.001)

Terrestrial Plants

Plant biogeochemical data products include:

  • (DP1.10031.001)
  • (DP1.10101.001)
  • (DP1.10026.001)
  • (DP1.10053.001)
  •  (DP1.10102.001)
  • (DP1.10099.001)

Aquatic plants, periphyton, and phytoplankton

Biogeochemical analysis of aquatic plants and microalgae produces two data products:

  • (DP1.20063.001)
  • (DP1.20163.001)

Surface and Groundwater

Surface water and groundwater biogeochemistry data are collected via grab samples and continuously monitoring sensors. Data products include:

  • (DP1.20092.001)
  • (DP1.20276.001)
  • (DP1.20093.001)
  • (DP1.20097.001)
  • (DP1.20206.001)
  • (DP1.20033.001)
  • (DP1.20288.001)

Atmospheric Deposition

  • (DP1.00101.001)
  • (DP1.00013.001)

Archival Samples

All samples listed below are available from the NEON Biorepository.

Soils

Specimen collection of archive samples may occur annually or once every five years, in tandem with the coordinated measurements of carbon and nutrient cycling. Both organic and mineral horizons are archived, if present at the site location.

Types of Samples Storage Condition Storage Container Quantity Archived (Annually) 鈥� Expected Sampling Frequency Link to the Collection
Soil, air-dried dry 250 mL glass jars 350 to 450 samples only collected at sites performing coordinated bouts (NEON-SOIC-DP)
Soil, frozen -80掳颁 or -196掳C 2 oz. WhirlPak, 50 mL conical tubes, or 5 mL cryovials 19,000 to 21,000 annually at all terrestrial sites (NEON-SOMC-BS)
Genomic extracts, from soils -80掳颁 96-well plates鈥� 2,300 to 3,000 extracts annually at all terrestrial sites (NEON-SOMC-DNA)

Terrestrial Plants

Collection of archive plant tissues and specimens may occur annually or once every five years, in tandem with the coordinated measurements of carbon and nutrient cycling.

Types of Samples Storage Condition Storage Container Quantity Archived (Annually) 鈥� Expected Sampling Frequency Link to the Collection
Leaf litter, oven-dried dry 20 mL vials 100 to 200 samples only collected at sites performing coordinated bouts (NEON-TPLC-LF)
Plant belowground biomass/fine roots, oven dried dry 20 mL vials 450 to 650 samples annually at all terrestrial sites (NEON-TPLC-BBS)
Plant foliage, oven dried dry 20 mL vials 300 to 400 samples only collected at sites performing coordinated bouts (NEON-TPLC-CF)
Plant specimens, leaf tissue -80掳颁 or -196掳C Archival coin envelope w/ silica gel or 10mL LN safe vial 210 to 420 specimens 30 specimens per site; only collected at sites performing coordinated bouts (NEON-TPLC-LT)
Plant specimens, vouchers dry individual herbarium specimens 840 to 1040 specimens 20 specimens per year from all terrestrial sites (NEON-TPLC-HV)

Aquatic plants, periphyton, and phytoplankton

Types of Samples Storage Condition Storage Container Quantity Archived (Annually) 鈥� Link to the Collection
Aquatic macrophyte vouchers dry herbarium paper 70 to 370 specimens (NEON-APLC-HVSS)
Aquatic mosses, lichens, liverworts dry herbarium packet included above included above
Macroalgae Glutaraldehyde 60 mL jar 150 to 300 specimens (NEON-AMAC-CPPC)

Atmospheric Deposition

Types of Samples Storage Condition Storage Container Quantity Archived (Annually) 鈥� Expected Sampling Locations Link to the Collection
Wet deposition samples 4掳颁 up to 600 mL per sample 700 to 850 samples all terrestrial sites (NEON-WDC)
Dust particulate mass filters, PM10 ambient or 4掳颁 8.5"x11" filter sheets 80 to 180 samples 6 terrestrial sites in Utah and Colorado (NEON-PMFC)

鈥� Quantities are annual quantities expected from sampling conducted throughout the observatory during full Operations. Actual quantities may differ from these projections.

鈥� Quantities are number of samples (not number of well plates); up to 96 samples are contained on the same well plate.

Related Resources

An for working with dissolved gas data to determine concentrations in surface water can be found on the NEON GitHub repository. Another for working with soil inorganic nitrogen concentrations in order to calculate net N transformation rates is also available on .

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The National Ecological Observatory Network is a major facility fully funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. National Science Foundation.