PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

First rain on world's largest artificial watershed

Manmade hillsides inside the University of Arizona’s Biosphere 2 provide researchers with the first opportunity to study how water, microbes, soil and plants interact in a setting realistic enough to improve global climate models for years to come.

First rain on world's largest artificial watershed
2012-12-04
(Press-News.org) Rain in Southern Arizona is scarce and precious to begin with, but the afternoon shower that soaked the soil 25 miles north of Tucson on Nov. 29 was unusual in several ways.

Spouting from a network of pipes, thousands of gallons of water drizzled down onto the world's only and largest manmade experimental watershed, recently completed at the University of Arizona's Biosphere 2.

Six-hundred tons of ground-up volcanic rocks blanket a giant steel tub resting at an incline to form an artificial hillslope. Three identical such hillslopes, each measuring 100 feet long and 40 feet wide, were constructed side by side to form the Landscape Evolution Observatory, or LEO, with the first now fully functional.

Each slope is studded with a network of more than 1,800 sensors and samplers sensing and tracking the flow of water through the soil and drawing samples for analysis.

"It's the first time anyone has built an instrument like that," said Biosphere 2 Science Director Peter Troch, a professor in the UA's department of hydrology and water resources. "LEO provides the scientific community with a tool to learn about the landscape in ways we haven't been able to before. It will help us to really understand Earth's surface processes."

"The interactions of water and organisms living in and on the ground are what sustains life on Earth," Troch added, explaining that minerals in the soil release nutrients, which are then transported in water and changed by microbes until plants extract them and turn them into biomass.

"We don't know much about those processes," he said. "Geochemists study how minerals weather, ecologists study how plants use water, hydrologists study how water moves through a landscape, but nobody has brought all this together. That's what LEO does."

Housed inside Biosphere 2's greenhouse dome, LEO provides researchers with real evidence of how the changing climate will affect movement of water and how the atmosphere interacts with the soil, for example. Most importantly, the observatory allows scientists to tinker with various environmental conditions and study the outcomes in a reliable fashion, something that is impossible to do in the natural world. After all, it is not possible to turn off the rain in the Amazon basin for a month and see what happens to the rainforest in an increasingly drier climate. But the enclosed and controlled environments of Biosphere 2 make just these kinds of experiments possible.

"We can change the climate to drier or more extreme conditions and see how well the predictions based on our computer models hold up," Troch said. "For example, we may predict that the Sonoran Desert ecosystem may turn into shrub or grassland, but those are just predictions. LEO can help validate those predictions."

Observations made with LEO will reach far beyond the arid Southwest, Troch said. The results that will come out of the 10-year project will be used to improve global climate models and make the predictions made by simulations more realistic and reliable.

In parallel with building LEO, UA scientists have been developing a computer model combining hydrology, biogeochemistry, ecology and other fields.

"Nobody has ever taken the effort to put all that into one model," Troch said. "But in a landscape, everything is connected. Water flows through the landscape, bacteria metabolize the nutrients in the soil, the plants then take up those nutrients and feedback into the atmosphere. All those processes happen simultaneously."

Building the observatory was like assembling and rigging three ships in a bottle, said Stephen DeLong, an assistant research professor at Biosphere 2 with a joint appointment in the department of geosciences. Everything needed to build the three hillslopes had to come through a 10-by-10-foot opening.

"Almost every aspect of the project had to be figured out from scratch," DeLong said. "We worked very closely with the design and engineering firm and the steel contractors to find engineering solutions that would achieve our scientific goals, for example how to integrate the soil sensors and make sure they work reliably for years to come."

Troch said LEO was a great challenge from an engineering point of view because it had to be built as a balancing scale with a 10-degree slant.

The steel construction supporting each slope and the soil on top weigh about 650 tons, more than a fully loaded Jumbo Jet. Specially developed steel cylinders acting as structural support and balancing scales keep track of the weight changes brought about by water raining on and evaporating from the soil as the slope evolves into a living and breathing hillside.

Its size and sloping angle are key to LEO's capabilities, Troch explained.

"Landscapes are rarely completely flat," he said. "As soon as you have a slope, water infiltrates and hits the bedrock and moves downhill under gravity."

"Imagine a tree sitting on top of a hill slope. When it rains, the water runs down the slope, and for that tree, it is gone very quickly. That plant has to develop strategies to use that water efficiently, especially in a dry landscape. The trees further down receive water not just from rain, but also from what comes running down the slope. The further down you go, the more water becomes available. And with the water move the nutrients."

"Scientists are still figuring out how much water a tree actually uses," Troch said, "and if I only measure in one tree or one patch of soil, I have no idea how much the entire slope is transpiring because there is no comparison."

"LEO gives us this comparison at a scale that is relevant for landscapes," he said. "The data go into a database, where everybody can access them and use them to validate their own models."

The project scientists expect LEO to spark many collaborations among researchers from across the globe and bring together diverse disciplines that traditionally have not pooled their expertise to solve complex problems.

"This is important to the public because of the challenges we face on a global level," DeLong said. "What happens to landscapes after droughts occur and conditions become drier in general? How do increased dryness and heat affect fire danger and, down the road, people?"

Over the next 10 years, LEO will undergo constant evolution. While the instrumentation on the two other slopes is being completed, scientists have their hands full collecting data and calibrating sensors with the bare soil and the occasional downpour.

"We know there are microbes in the soil, and they will start taking gases from the atmosphere and turning them into compounds that they give off into the soil and help with chemical weathering," Troch said, "and we can study those processes right away."

DeLong expects the first plants to be added in a year or two.

"Slowly and surely we'll add vascular plants, like grasses, shrubs and mesquite trees, to see how the hydrology changes when you add vegetation," he said. "But we really want to understand the system as much as possible before plants make it more complicated."



INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
First rain on world's largest artificial watershed

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Gases from grasses

Gases from grasses
2012-12-04
In a well-known fairy tale, Rumpelstiltskin used magic to weave straw into gold. Today, scientists are reversing that formula — using gold to turn straw (and other forms of biomass) into today's global currency: energy. The magic involves a special nanocatalyst, in which minute particles of gold dot the surface of titanium-oxide. The forces that emerge from the combination of these two materials are strong enough to breaks the O-O bond of oxygen molecules and the C-O bond of acetic acid, a byproduct of biomass conversion that, when combined with hydrogen, forms ethanol, ...

Salk scientists develop faster, safer method for producing stem cells

Salk scientists develop faster, safer method for producing stem cells
2012-12-04
LA JOLLA, CA---- A new method for generating stem cells from mature cells promises to boost stem cell production in the laboratory, helping to remove a barrier to regenerative medicine therapies that would replace damaged or unhealthy body tissues. The technique, developed by researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, allows for the unlimited production of stem cells and their derivatives as well as reduces production time by more than half, from nearly two months to two weeks. "One of the barriers that needs to be overcome before stem cell therapies ...

Super-resolution microscope shows how human T-cells make life or death decisions

2012-12-04
Sydney, Australia - Using a super-resolution fluorescent microscope, Australian medical scientists are a step closer to understanding why and how human immune cells decide to activate or not, thus enabling or preventing disease taking hold in the body. Professor Katharina Gaus and her team at the Centre for Vascular Research based at UNSW's Lowy Cancer Research Centre used some of the most advanced super-resolution optical microscope technology available anywhere in the world to see changes in individual proteins in T-cells – the workhorse of our immune system. "Every ...

Genetic data shows that skin cancer risk includes more than UV exposure

2012-12-04
BETHESDA, MD – DECEMBER 4, 2012 -- It's common knowledge that excessive UV exposure from sunlight raises your chances for skin cancer, but predicting whether someone will actually develop skin cancer remains difficult. In a new research report, scientists from the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) and the University of Wisconsin–Madison show that the risk for skin cancer involves numerous genetic factors including family history, ethnicity, and genetic variations specific to each individual. Using these factors, the researchers developed a more precise model for ...

Genetics Society of America's Genetics journal highlights for December 2012

2012-12-04
Bethesda, MD—December 4, 2012 – Listed below are the selected highlights for the December 2012 issue of the Genetics Society of America's journal, Genetics. The December issue is available online at www.genetics.org/content/current. Please credit Genetics, Vol. 192, December 2012, Copyright © 2012. Please feel free to forward to colleagues who may be interested in these articles. ISSUE HIGHLIGHTS Genetic variation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: Circuit diversification in a signal transduction network, pp. 1523-1532 Brian L. Chin, Owen Ryan, Fran Lewitter, Charles ...

Could high insulin make you fat? Mouse study says yes

Could high insulin make you fat? Mouse study says yes
2012-12-04
When we eat too much, obesity may develop as a result of chronically high insulin levels, not the other way around. That's according to new evidence in mice reported in the December 4th Cell Metabolism, a Cell Press publication, which challenges the widespread view that rising insulin is a secondary consequence of obesity and insulin resistance. The new study helps to solve this chicken-or-the-egg dilemma by showing that animals with persistently lower insulin stay trim even as they indulge themselves on a high-fat, all-you-can-eat buffet. The findings come as some of ...

Web-based project prevents epilepsy-related depression

2012-12-04
Emory researchers announced results of a new study that has proven successful in the prevention of depression in people diagnosed with epilepsy. Depression is one of the most common psychiatric disorders in people with epilepsy. It affects between 32 and 48 percent of people with the disease. Depression is known to have more of an impact on quality of life than frequent seizures. A team of researchers at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University led a study that applied a revised version of a web- and phone-based method focused on preventing, rather ...

University of Tennessee researchers find fungus has cancer-fighting power

2012-12-04
Arthrobotrys oligospora doesn't live a charmed life; it survives on a diet of roundworm. But a discovery by a team led by Mingjun Zhang, an associate professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, could give the fungus's life more purpose—as a cancer fighter. Zhang and his team have discovered that nanoparticles produced by A. oligospora hold promise for stimulating the immune system and killing tumors. The findings are published in this month's edition of Advanced Functional Materials. Zhang commonly looks to nature for solutions ...

Delivered meals help seniors stay in their homes

2012-12-04
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — The more states spend on home-delivered meals under the Older Americans Act, the more likely they are to help people who don't need nursing home care to stay in their homes, according to a newly published Brown University statistical analysis of a decade of spending and nursing home resident data. "Despite efforts to rebalance long-term care, there are still many nursing home residents who have the functional capacity to live in a less restrictive environment," wrote gerontology researchers Kali Thomas and Vincent Mor in the article ...

Plastic packaging industry is moving towards completely bio-based products

2012-12-04
The new generation of bio-based plastic packaging is not only eco-friendly but also has several superior qualities compared to traditional plastic packaging. The plastic packaging industry is moving towards completely bio-based products. The volume of oil used every year in the production of plastics equates to approximately five per cent of the world's total oil consumption. Approximately 40 per cent of all plastics are used in packaging, which puts special pressure on the packaging industry to reduce dependence on oil. The use of renewable natural resources in industrial ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Wavelength-independent and photoinitiator-free laser 3D nanolithography

Duke-NUS alumnus and mentor develop new precision tool to better predict outcomes for patients with liver cancer

New breakthrough helps free up space for robots to ‘think’, say scientists

Environmental law reform needed to protect endangered marine species

UC Irvine-led team engineers new enzyme to produce synthetic genetic material

New study unveils unique combination of DNA techniques to authenticate ginseng supplements and combat adulteration

Argonne receives funding for artificial intelligence in scientific research

Significant worldwide disparities in availability and timeliness of new cancer drugs

4+ hour emergency care wait linked to heightened risks of death and longer hospital stay for hip fracture patients

Policy change may be helping to drive rise in treatment-resistant vaginal thrush

Heat stress may still affect babies once born, first evidence suggests

Stressed bees lack the buzz in life

UC Irvine researchers discover atomic-level mechanism in polycrystalline materials

USC’s Rong Lu and Caltech’s Michael B. Elowitz win the NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award for their new approach to study blood and immune cell production in bone marrow

Microwave-induced synthesis of bioactive nitrogen heterocycles

Research to use machine learning to ’reverse-engineer’ new composite materials

New research calls for transparency in Medicare Advantage operations

Applied Biological Laboratories, maker of Biovanta, to present at American Society of Microbiology’s Clinical Virology Symposium 2024

How academia drives sustainability: Discover the impact of science on the SDGs

NOAA awards grant to enhance decision-ready climate projections for diverse stakeholders

Why using a brand nickname in marketing is not a good idea

Asymmetric placebo effect in response to spicy food

Echoes in the brain: Why today’s workout could fuel next week’s bright idea

Salk Institute’s Nicola Allen receives 2024 NIH Director’s Pioneer Award

The secret strength of our cell guards

DataSeer and AAAS partner to boost reporting standards

Mizzou researchers awarded $8 million in grants to discover new bullying prevention strategies

Holographic 3D printing has the potential to revolutionize multiple industries, say Concordia researchers

Cerebral blood flow and arterial transit in older adults

How diabetes risk genes make cells less resilient to stress

[Press-News.org] First rain on world's largest artificial watershed
Manmade hillsides inside the University of Arizona’s Biosphere 2 provide researchers with the first opportunity to study how water, microbes, soil and plants interact in a setting realistic enough to improve global climate models for years to come.