Rose Abramoff [account moved!]

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If you can get to NYC mid-June, we are ending fossil financing with a sustained campaign of nonviolent direct action. Sign up here (summerofheat.org/get-involved), and/or reach out to me or any of our coordinators to join our science theme day: @SRTurtleIsland @ClimateHuman @luckytran @DoctorVive
#SummerofHeat
#CitiDropFossilFuels
🔥This summer, dozens of groups will be engaging in a joyful, relentless campaign of nonviolent direct action to end fossil fuel financing🔥
@SRTurtleIsland
đź”—Learn more and get involved at summerofheat.org

New paper out! Shifts in belowground processes along a temperate forest edge https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-024-01891-3

Short summary:
Urban forest edges in mid-latitudes often have higher aboveground productivity because of increased sunlight and changes in microclimate.

Less is known about what is happening belowground. In this study, we measured soil chemistry, root traits, soil respiration and partitioning, and found that a lot changes from meadow to edge to forest.

For one, the forest edge was drier than both meadow and forest (2nd image, left panels), and most notably, dead fine root biomass was highest at the edge (3rd image, bottom right panel), implying higher root mortality, slower root decomposition, or both.

Soil respiration is higher at the edge relative to the forest interior (4th image right panel, but also true for heterotrophic respiration in the middle panel).

Soil C content was not strongly different, suggesting an overall acceleration of the carbon cycle in these systems: increased inputs to soil from plant growth but also increased losses of carbon dioxide from soil.

This paper is published open-access, & all data used to do this work is available here: https://doi.org/10.25581/ornlsfa.024/1837084
Thanks to many co-authors!

Shifts in belowground processes along a temperate forest edge - Landscape Ecology

Context Forests are increasingly fragmented, and as a result most forests in the United States are within one km of an edge. Edges change environmental conditions of the forest—especially radiation, roughness, temperature, and moisture—that can have consequences for plant productivity and ecosystem functions. However, edge effects on aboveground characteristics of plants and the environment are better understood relative to plant roots and soil in the belowground environment. Objectives Our main objectives were to determine if soil C pools and fluxes are higher at the edge relative to other landscape positions, and to understand how specific belowground processes contribute to bulk differences in pools and fluxes. Methods We measured environmental conditions, live and dead fine root traits, soil chemistry, and soil respiration along a 75 m transect from interior forest to meadow in Gaithersburg, MD. Results We observed differences in the soil chemical, biological and hydrological environment between the forest interior, edge and adjacent meadow. In some cases, the forest edge represented a mid-point in environmental or belowground characteristics between the forest interior and meadow (e.g., pH, C-to-N ratio [C:N], live fine root biomass, heterotrophic respiration), likely reflecting the change in litter type and quality associated with the transition from grass to woody species. In other cases, neighboring landscape positions were different from the forest edge, which was drier and had higher dead fine root biomass. Although soil C contents were not significantly different across landscape positions, there was a tendency towards higher average soil C content at the edge relative to other landscape positions, suggesting that increased C loss related to root decay and greater soil respiration at the edge relative to the forest interior may have been offset by increased C gain from high plant productivity and subsequent inputs to soil. Conclusions This research provides insight into how forest edge environments may differ from the interior and how concurrent processes above- and belowground may contribute to those differences.

SpringerLink
👉🏼"In voting news, #Maine has become the latest state to join the National Popular Vote compact, which could transform the way presidents are elected in the United States. Sixteen states and Washington, D.C., have now pledged to award their combined 209 electoral votes to the presidential candidate who wins the nationwide popular vote. The compact will only go into effect once supporters of the compact control at least 270 votes." https://www.democracynow.org/2024/4/17/headlines/maine_joins_national_popular_vote_compact
Maine Joins National Popular Vote Compact

In voting news, Maine has become the latest state to join the National Popular Vote compact, which could transform the way presidents are elected in the United States. Sixteen states and Washington, D.C., have now pledged to award their combined 209 electoral votes to the presidential candidate who wins the nationwide popular vote. The compact will only go into effect once supporters of the compact control at least 270 votes. Support for the National Popular Vote compact has grown in recent years after both George W. Bush and Donald Trump were elected president despite losing the popular vote.

Democracy Now!

Support Scientist Rebellion Turtle Island's ability to keep excitedly planning for an action-packed summer!

Please make a one-time or recurring donation at http://bit.ly/supportsrti

Thank you for any help you can provide! 💚✊🏽🌍

Scientist Rebellion Turtle Island — ETINA

ETINA

Infuriated at how those in our financial system insist on investing in the exact opposite of what everyone on Earth—including them—needs to ensure stable planetary systems?

Join us next Monday when Prof. Steve Keen delves into his latest report with Carbon Tracker to share his astonishing findings of just how little economists understand accepted climate science—and how that endangers us all.

This presentation will followed by a Q&A.

🗓️ Mon, 25 March
đź•’ 3:00 PM UTC
đź”— bit.ly/stevekeen

I am so happy to learn from @Nature that global support for climate action is widespread, & we are only hampered by our incorrect perception that others are not supportive

Join the fight - you *statistically* want to

scientistrebellion.org/ways-to-join/
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-024-01925-3
@ScientistRebellion @SRTurtleIsland @ExtinctionR @[email protected]

Globally representative evidence on the actual and perceived support for climate action - Nature Climate Change

Global support and cooperation are necessary for successful climate action. Large-scale representative survey results show that most of the population around the world is willing to support climate action, while a perception gap exists regarding other citizens’ intention to act.

Nature
Today is my birthday! and if you have the instinct to do something for me, you can send a donation to @SRTurtleIsland
https://www.etina.org/srti
They support all of the activism that I do đź’š
https://linktr.ee/srturtleisland
Scientist Rebellion Turtle Island — ETINA

ETINA

I am having a regenerative time as a resident at the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology (sitkacenter.org)

If you’d like to hear from some of the current residents, please join our Tuesday Mar 5 Resident Talk at 4-5:30pm PST:
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/5317073272221/WN_NyxREDKNTyCrbQTbJT745w

Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Resident Talk. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.

Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Resident Talk. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.

Zoom
As the Enbridge Line 5 makes its way through the courts (https://www.wpr.org/news/federal-court-arguments-bad-river-enbridge-appeal-line-5-shutdown), I'm excited for this doc h/t @billmckibben
https://vimeo.com/892395848
Federal court hears arguments from Bad River, Enbridge in appeal of pipeline shutdown order

A federal appeals court will hear oral arguments Thursday in a case that has a Canadian energy firm and Lake Superior tribe fighting over the fate of an oil and gas pipeline running across northern Wisconsin.

WPR