Climatic and topographic controls on long-term
erosion rates
This project links cosmogenic nuclide techniques
and element depletion profiles to systematically explore how climate and
topography affect rates of weathering and erosion. Graduate student
Cliff Riebe is using cosmogenic nuclides in stream sediment to measure
long-term erosion rates at eight unglaciated Sierra Nevada sites, spanning
an eight-fold range in annual precipitation and a range of 10°C in
annual average temperature. Each site includes a series of small
subcatchments, with a five-fold range of average hillslope gradients.
With this experimental design, one can explore how weathering and erosion
rates vary with topography under diverse climatic conditions. Conversely,
one can also explore how climate affects weathering and erosion in a range
of topographic situations.
Results to date include the following:
Long-term (10,000-20,000 year) erosion rates at typical hillslope gradients (30-40 percent) differ by only a factor of 2.5, across the diverse climates of our study sites, and do not vary systematically with either temperature or precipitation.
Site-to-site climatic differences have much
smaller effects on long-term rates of mineral weathering than conventional
geochemical models would predict.
At catchments with proximate tectonic forcing
(from fault scarps and deeply incised river canyons), erosion rates increase
exponentially with hillslope gradient. At catchments that are isolated
from local tectonic forcing, long-term erosion rates do not increase systematically
with hillslope gradient, implying that the landscape is in dynamic equilibrium.
We hypothesize that rapidly eroding slopes become mantled with a lag deposit
of granitic boulders, which inhibits further erosion beyond the boulder
decomposition rate.
Collaborators: Cliff Riebe (Ph.D. candidate, University of California), Darryl Granger (Purdue University) and Robert Finkel (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory).
Related publications:
Granger, D.E., J.W. Kirchner, and R.C. Finkel,
Quaternary downcutting rate of the New River, Virginia, measured from 26Al
and 10Be in cave-deposited alluvium, Geology, 25, 107-110, 1997.
Granger, D.E., J.W. Kirchner, and R.C. Finkel,
Spatially averaged long-term erosion rates measured from in situ cosmogenic
nuclides in alluvial sediment, Journal of Geology, 104, 249-257, 1996.
Abstracts:
Riebe, C. S., J. W. Kirchner, D. E. Granger and
R. C. Finkel, Tectonic control of erosion rates in the Sierra Nevada, California
inferred from cosmogenic nuclide concentrations in alluvial sediment, Eos,
Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 80, 1999.
Granger, D.E., C.S. Riebe, J.W. Kirchner, and
R.C. Finkel, Erosional dynamic equilibrium in the Diamond Mountains, California,
maintained by boulder armoring of hillslopes, Eos, Transactions, American
Geophysical Union, 79, 1998.
Riebe, C.S. and J.W. Kirchner, Quantifying how
topography, soil depth and bedrock erodibility affect long-term erosion
rates, using cosmogenic nuclides in alluvial sediment, Eos, Transactions,
American Geophysical Union, 78, F288, 1997.
Granger, D. E., J. W. Kirchner and C. S. Riebe,
Inferring exhumation rates and processes from cosmogenic nuclides in sediments,
GSA Abstracts with Programs, 1997.
Kirchner, J.W., D.E. Granger and C.S. Riebe,
Cosmogenic isotope methods for measuring catchment erosion and weathering
rates, Journal of Conference Abstracts, 2, 217, 1997.
Riebe, C.S., D.E. Granger and J.W. Kirchner,
Quantifying effects of climate and topography on long-term erosion rates
using cosmogenic nuclide concentrations in alluvial sediment, Eos, Transactions,
American Geophysical Union, 77, F251, 1996.
Granger, D.E. and J.W. Kirchner, Downcutting
rate of the New River, Virginia, from 26Al/10Be in buried river gravels,
Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 76, F689, 1995.
Granger, D.E. and J.W. Kirchner, Erosional response
to tectonic forcing inferred from cosmogenic isotopes in alluvial sediment,
Eos Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union 75, 289, 1994.
Granger D.E., and Kirchner J.W. Estimating
catchment-wide denudation rates from cosmogenic isotope concentrations
in alluvial sediment: Fort Sage Mountains, California, in Abstracts of
the Eighth International Conference on Geochronology, Cosmochronology,
and Isotope Geology (M. A. Lanphere, G. B. Dalrymple and B. D. Turrin,
eds.), pp. 116. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1107, 1994.
Comparing short-term and long-term sediment
yields from forested terrain
By comparing cosmogenic nuclide measurements
of sediment yield (which are averaged over 10,000-20,000 years) with direct
measurements of sediment yield by sediment trapping or sediment gauging
methods (which typically cover 1-30 years), we can clarify and quantify
the mechanisms that control sediment yield over different timescales.
We sampled 30 catchments in the mountains of central Idaho, ranging from small experimental watersheds (0.2 km2) to the entire Salmon River (35,000 km2). Our analyses show that across all 30 sites, long-term sediment yields are 4 to 40 times greater than sediment yields measured over the last 4-84 years. Our results indicate that 70-97 percent of the sediment yield in this mountainous landscape comes from very large, episodic erosional events. These events are too infrequent (recurrence intervals of roughly 50-200 years) to be captured by typical monitoring programs. Our results imply that catastrophic events are a natural part of mountain erosion, subjecting aquatic ecosystems to episodic disturbance even in the absence of human interference.
Collaborators: Cliff Riebe (Ph.D. candidate, University of California), Darryl Granger (Purdue University), Robert Finkel (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Jim Clayton (U.S. Forest Service), Walt Megahan (National Council for Air and Stream Improvement).
Publications:
Kirchner, J. W., R. C. Finkel, C. S. Riebe, D.
E. Granger, J. L. Clayton and W. F. Megahan, Episodic mountain erosion
inferred from sediment yields over decades and millennia, Nature (in review).
Abstracts:
Kirchner, J.W., R.C. Finkel, C.S. Riebe, D.E.
Granger, J.L. Clayton, and W.F. Megahan, Episodic erosion of the Idaho
Batholith inferred from measurements over 10-year and 10,000-year timescales,
Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 79, 1998.
Comparing short-term and long-term rates
of chemical weathering
At intensively monitored watersheds in central
Idaho, we are comparing rates of chemical weathering over timescales of
decades and millennia. Our decade-scale estimates of chemical weathering
are derived from input-output watershed mass balances. Our millennial-scale
chemical weathering estimates are derived from cosmogenic nuclides (which
measure the long-term rate of erosion and thus, assuming erosional equilibrium,
the long-term rate that rock is converted to soil) and element depletion
profiles (which measure how much of each element is weathered as rock is
converted to soil). Preliminary results suggest our methods yield
well-constrained estimates of long-term chemical weathering rates, and
that these are broadly consistent with present-day weathering rates estimated
from watershed mass balances.
Collaborators: Cliff Riebe (Ph.D. candidate,
University of California), Laura Glaser (Undergraduate, University of California),
Jim Clayton (U.S. Forest Service).
Effects of engineered channel modifications
on flood stage and bank erosion of the Ganges River
Varanasi, the holiest Hindu city, receives pilgrims
from around the world who come to ritually bathe in the Ganges. Unfortunately,
Varanasi--a city of over 1.2 million inhabitants--lacks adequate sewage
treatment facilities, and consequently fecal coliform counts in the religious
bathing area are 10,000-1,000,000 times higher than acceptable levels.
The pollution of the river presents an obvious health hazard to bathers,
particularly to those who perform the complete bathing ritual, which includes
drinking the river water. Varanasi's sewage treatment facilities
may soon be improved, by building sewage oxidation ponds in a small high-flow
channel of the Ganges several kilometers downstream of the city.
These sewage treatment facilities would require closing off a 7m-deep,
400m-wide channel of the Ganges entirely.
Our study evaluates whether closing this channel will significantly alter flood heights and patterns of bank erosion on the Ganges. Using simple, robust 'back-of-the-envelope' calculations, we have found that these facilities will indeed alter flood stages and bank erosion rates, but not by much: flood stages will rise by a maximum of 9cm and bank erosion rates will increase by a maximum of 6 percent (Kirchner et al., 1997). Effects this small are likely to undetectable, given the wide range of natural variability.
Collaborators: Mallickarjun Joshi, D. K. Sundd, Veer Bhadra Mishra and S. K. Mishra (Sankat Mochan Foundation and Banaras Hindu University).
Technical report:
Kirchner, J.W., Expected effects of closing the
Sota channel on flood stage and bank erosion of the Ganges River, near
Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, U.S.-Asia Environmental Partnership Environmental
Exchange Program, 23 pp., 1997.
Effects of riparian vegetation on river
bank stability and erosion rates
It is widely believed that vegetation affects
river bank erosion rates, but this effect remains poorly quanitifed.
Long-term planning for riparian zones requires a better understanding of
how, and how much, vegetation contributes to bank stability. Graduate
student Lisa Micheli is pursuing this question through three lines of research
(Micheli and Kirchner, 1997):
1. Direct measurements of mechanical strength
of banks with similar soils but differing vegetation densities. Preliminary
results indicate that roots of herbaceous vegetation can account for up
to 80 percent of the mechanical strength of stream banks.
2. Indirect measurements of effective bank strength,
derived by measuring the geometry of stable and unstable banks and modeling
the stress distributions within the bank profile.
3. Comparisons of bank vegetation patterns and
long-term rates of bank erosion, as measured by comparing aerial photographs
from different periods. From surveys of channel geometry, the flow
patterns (and thus the bank stresses) during floods are reconstructed.
By comparing the observed rate of bank erosion and the stresses imposed
during floods, we assess how patterns of bank erosion are related to (a)
shear stresses imposed by flood flows, (b) bank material characteristics,
and (c) bank vegetation cover and rooting density. This provides
a large-scale field test of both whether vegetation significantly alters
bank erodibility under real-world conditions, and whether our mechanistic
models of bank erosion adequately predict this effect.
Collaborators: Lisa Micheli (Ph.D. candidate, University of California)
Abstracts:
Micheli, E. and J.W. Kirchner, Quantifying how
herbaceous vegetation stabilizes stream banks: Monache Meadow, South Fork
of the Kern River, Southern Sierra Nevada, Eos, Transactions, American
Geophysical Union, 78, F306, 1997.
Non-linear mechanisms of hillslope erosion
Understanding the mechanisms controlling hillslope
erosion is crucial for assessing the impact of timber harvesting, grazing,
and other land uses. Hillslope erosion is usually modeled as a 'linear
diffusion' process, in which soil creeps downhill at a rate that is proportional
to the topographic gradient. Over long periods of time, linear diffusion
creates parabolic hillslopes, in which convexity is roughly constant along
the hillslope profile. Most hillslopes, however, become straighter
as they become steeper, suggesting that hillslope erosion is a non-linear
diffusion process. Graduate student Josh Roering is exploring non-linear
diffusion as a model for hillslope erosion. Our theoretical analysis
of erosional energy dissipation suggests that downslope transport of sediment
should obey a particular non-linear diffusion law, in which downslope transport
rates rise toward infinity as slope angles approach a critical gradient.
Tests of this erosion model, using high-precision digital topographic data
derived from airborne laser altimetry, strongly support the non-linear
diffusion law (Roering, Kirchner and Dietrich, 1999). This non-linear
transport law will be important for estimating basin-scale sediment yields
and modeling the linkages between climate, land use, and landscape evolution.
Collaborators: Josh Roering (Ph.D. candidate) and Bill Dietrich (University of California).
Publications:
Roering, J. J., J. W. Kirchner, L. E. Sklar and
W. E. Dietrich, Nonlinear creep and landsliding on an experimental hillslope,
Nature (in review).
Roering, J.J., J.W. Kirchner and W.E. Dietrich,
Evidence for non-linear, diffusive sediment transport on hillslopes and
implications for landscape morphology, Water Resources Research, 35, 853-870,
1999.
Abstracts:
Roering, J.J., L. Sklar, J.W. Kirchner, and W.E.
Dietrich, A laboratory simulation of diffusive sediment transport on hillslopes:
non-linear transport and the evolution of convex hilltops, Eos, Transactions,
American Geophysical Union, 79, 1998.
Roering, J.J., J.W. Kirchner and W.E. Dietrich,
Evidence for a non-linear diffusive mass wasting transport law and implications
for hillslope evolution in the Oregon Coast Range, Eos, Transactions, American
Geophysical Union, 78, F286, 1997.
Transport and fate of mercury in mine tailings,
Marin County, California
The Gambonini mine is typical of many small mines
throughout the west. In the early 1970's it was mined for cinnabar
and then abandoned, leaving behind a 200,000 m3 tailings pile containing
over five tons of mercury. This tailings pile is eroding, carrying
mercury-rich tailings into a stream that drains into Tomales Bay, where
oysters are grown for human consumption. Graduate student Dyan Whyte
measured fluxes of mercury in the stream draining the mine site, and is
now assessing the ultimate fate of mine tailings in the stream and bay.
Our measurements showed that in only two months, this small mine site released
over 80 kilograms of mercury to downstream waters. Our measurements
triggered a multi-million-dollar EPA emergency Superfund intervention to
prevent further mercury losses from the site. We are currently designing
a monitoring program to evaluate the effectiveness of the Superfund remediation
efforts.
Collaborator: Dyan Whyte (M.S. candidate, University of California).
Publications:
Whyte, D. C. and J. W. Kirchner , Assessing water
quality impacts and cleanup effectiveness in streams dominated by episodic
mercury discharges, Science of the Total Environment (in review).
Abstracts:
Whyte, D.C. and J.W. Kirchner, Assessing water
quality impacts and cleanup effectiveness in streams dominated by episodic
mercury discharges (Fifth International Conference on Mercury as a Global
Pollutant, Rio de Janeiro, May 1999)
Whyte, D. and J.W. Kirchner, Fluvial transport
of mercury in a watershed impacted by mining (Third Annual Mercury Conference,
Coastal Advocates, Asilomar, California, February 1998)
Inferring watershed flowpaths and residence
times from chemical tracers in rainfall and streamflow
The residence time of water in watersheds controls
the retention of soluble contaminants, and thus the downstream consequences
of pollution episodes. We have recently used detailed time series
of chloride (a nonreactive tracer) to study the travel time of water through
watersheds. Across diverse sites in Wales, Norway, and the northeastern
United States, rainfall chloride concentrations have a white noise spectrum,
but streamflow chloride concentrations follow fractal 1/f scaling on timescales
from days to years (Kirchner, Feng, and Neal, in review and manuscript
in preparation). This indicates that watersheds do not have a characteristic
residence time in the conventional sense; instead, their travel times follow
an approximate power-law distribution with a long upper tail.
We plan to extend this work in two ways. First, we want to make detailed, long-term measurements of 18O or 2H in rainfall and streamflow, to unambiguously confirm the fractal scaling observed in our chloride time series, and to rule out the possibility that as-yet-unknown chemical reactions are inhibiting the mobility of chloride in our study watersheds. Second, we want to uncover the mechanistic reason why travel times in watersheds tend to follow a power-law distribution. Soil pores and bedrock fractures exhibit fractal scaling, which may be linked to the fractals we observed in stream tracer concentrations. But more prosaic factors must also be considered: the spatial distribution of rainfall, the length and tortuosity of the flowpaths connecting the stream to each point on the surface, dispersion along and between flowpaths, and diffusive exchange between mobile water in macropores and immobile water in the matrix between them. With mathematical models of these various mechanisms, we can test whether they could potentially give rise to the scaling behavior we observe in the field. We also hope to build a series of laboratory-scale physical models, both to confirm our theoretical analyses, and to directly test how subsurface flowpath configurations are reflected in streamflow tracer time series.
Collaborators: Xiahong Feng (Dartmouth College), Colin Neal (Institute of Hydrology, UK)
Publications:
Kirchner, J. W., X. Feng and C. Neal, Fractal
stream chemistry and its implications for contaminant transport in catchments,
Nature (in press).
Abstracts:
Kirchner, J. W., X. Feng and C. Neal, Fractal
stream chemistry and its implications for contaminant transport in catchments
(abstract), Eos,Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 80, 1999.
Kirchner, J.W., Simplicity and complexity, in
model watersheds and real ones (Gordon Conference on Hydrological, Biological,
and Geochemical Processes in Forested Catchments, July 1999)
Long-term base cation dynamics of forest
soils under declining acid deposition
For studying catchment base cation dynamics,
the Solling forest data set is unique worldwide. Long-term studies
ongoing since 1966 at Solling have included not only monitoring of deposition,
throughfall, and seepage water chemistry and fluxes, but also seven inventories
of exchangeable cations in forest soils. Measured changes in soil
chemistry over decade timescales can therefore be compared directly with
observed changes in seepage water chemistry. These comparisons are
important for testing models linking soil chemistry and runoff chemistry,
and only at Solling can such comparisons be made directly from measured
data. We are using the Solling data set to directly test Kirchner's
(1992) theory linking base cation depletion from catchment soils, and long-term
acidification of catchment runoff. There are no adjustable parameters,
making this a particularly strict test. Preliminary results from
the Solling data set agree with the theoretical predictions.
Collaborators: Karl-Joseph Meiwes and Henning Meesenburg (Lower Saxony Forest Experiment Station, Göttingen), and Michael Bredemeier (Forest Ecosystem Research Center, Göttingen University)
Related publications:
Kirchner, J. W., Acid rain revisited (Letter),
Science, 273, 293-294, 1996.
Kirchner, J.W., R.P. Hooper, C. Kendall, C. Neal,
and G. Leavesley, Testing and validating environmental models, Science
of the Total Environment , 183, 33-47, 1996.
Kirchner, J. W. and E. Lydersen, Base cation
depletion and potential long-term acidification of Norwegian catchments,
Environmental Science and Technology, 29, 1953-1960, 1995.
Kirchner, J. W., Heterogeneous geochemistry of
catchment acidification, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 56, 2311-2327,
1992.
Kirchner, J. W., P. J. Dillon and B. D. LaZerte,
Predicted response of stream chemistry to acid loading tested in Canadian
catchments, Nature, 358, 478-482, 1992.
Abstracts:
Kirchner, J.W., Long-term acidification of streams
and watersheds revealed by catchment monitoring data, Eos, Transactions,
American Geophysical Union, 78, F326, 1997.
Kirchner, J.W., Long-term acidification resulting
from catchment base cation depletion: geochemical theory and field observations,
Journal of Conference Abstracts, 1, 312, 1996
Kirchner, J.W., Geochemical methods for interpreting
runoff chemistry from manipulated catchments, in Experimental Manipulations
of Biota and Biogeochemical Cycling in Ecosystems
(L. Rasmussen, T. Brydges and P. Mathy, eds.),
pp. 128-130, Commission of the European Communities, 1993.
Sulfur isotope dynamics in highly polluted
Czech catchments
We are using 34S to constrain the mass balance
for sulfur at two highly polluted catchments (Jezeri and Nacetin) in the
'Black Triangle' region of the Czech Republic. Atmospheric deposition
of sulfur is now declining due to 'acid rain' emission controls, but in
many regions, outputs of sulfur in streamwater are higher than--and declining
more slowly than--inputs in precipitation and dry deposition. At
these two sites, our isotopic measurements show that over half of the sulfur
in runoff is coming from organic sulfur pools in the catchments' soils
(Novak et al, in press). The inventory of sulfur in the soils is
roughly 30 times the annual flux, so release of stored sulfur will significantly
delay catchment recovery as pollution controls are introduced.
Collaborators: Martin Novak and Hana Groscheova (Czech Geological Survey).
Publications:
Novak, M., J. W. Kirchner, H. Groscheova, M.
Havel, J. Cerny and R. Krejci, Sulphur isotope dynamics in two Central
European watersheds affected by high atmospheric deposition of SOx, Geochimica
et Cosmochimica Acta (in press).
Abstracts:
Novak, M., J.W. Kirchner and H. Groscheova, Sulphur
isotope dynamics in two mountaintop forest catchments in the Black Triangle,
Central Europe, Journal of Conference Abstracts, 2, 261, 1997.
Long-term base cation dynamics of forested
catchments at Hubbard Brook, New Hampshire
The biogeochemistry of the Hubbard Brook catchment
has been intensively monitored for over 30 years. At Hubbard Brook,
acid deposition is now declining, but because base cation concentrations
in streamwater have declined at roughly equal rates, overall water quality
has not improved. We are applying methods developed by Kirchner (1992)
and Kirchner and Lydersen (1995) to assess how water quality would have
evolved over time, if 'acid rain' emission controls had not been implemented.
We are also testing whether geochemical methods (Kirchner, 1992) can accurately
predict the mobilization of base cations, aluminum, and hydrogen ions in
response to nitrate pulses triggered by forest clearcutting.
Collaborator: Gene Likens (Institute of
Ecosystem Studies)
Trace element mobilization by clearcutting
and acid deposition in Welsh upland catchments
Hydrological and chemical monitoring by the Institute
of Hydrology has compiled an unprecedented data set for studying catchment
biogeochemistry: 14 years of weekly measurements of 35 major, minor, and
trace elements in rainfall and streamflow from six Welsh catchments.
We are using this data set to:
-evaluate different data analysis methods, with
the aim of assessing the hydrological and geochemical effects of clearcutting
(in some catchments) and forest aggradation (in other catchments),
-test whether these multiple chemical signals
can help to reveal the hydrological flowpaths within these catchments,
and,
-test whether acid anions (supplied either by
acid deposition or forest clearcutting) measurably mobilize trace elements
in these catchments. Initial results show that Kirchner's (1992)
heterogeneous equilibrium geochemical theory accurately predicts the mobilization
of a range of major, minor, and trace elements, whose concentrations span
over four orders of magnitude.
Collaborator: Colin Neal (Institute of Hydrology,
U.K.).
Macroevolutionary dynamics inferred from
the fossil record
Paleontologist Anne Weil and I are using time-series
and spectral methods to look for signatures of macroevolutionary processes
in the Phanerozoic marine fossil record. Using the cross-correlation
between rates of extinction and subsequent rates of origination, we have
shown recoveries from mass extinctions and "background" extinctions alike
require an average of roughly 10 million years. We have also shown
that origination rates are significantly more autocorrelated than extinction
rates, although neither exhibits significant autocorrelation beyond roughly
20 million years. The Fourier power spectra of fossil extinction
and origination do not unambiguously conform to any simple model, such
as white noise, fractals, or autoregressive time series.
Collaborator: Anne Weil (Duke University).
Publications:
Kirchner, J. W. and A. Weil, Delayed biological
recovery from extinctions throughout the fossil record, Nature (in review).
Kirchner, J. W. and A. Weil, Autocorrelations
through time in rates of fossil extinction and origination, Proceedings
of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences, (in review).
Kirchner, J.W. and A. Weil, No fractals in fossil
extinction statistics, Nature, 395, 337-338, 1998.
Abstracts:
Kirchner, J.W. and A. Weil, Time scales of recovery
from extinction, inferred from lags between extinctions and originations
through Phanerozoic time, GSA Abstracts with Programs, 31, 1999.
Kirchner, J.W. and A. Weil, The fossil record
does not support fractal extinctions or self-organized criticality of the
biosphere, GSA Abstracts with Programs, 30, 1998
Evolutionary ecology and genetics of host-pathogen
interactions
We are building simple models to explore how
host-pathogen interactions affect the co-evolutionary genetics of host
and pathogen traits. Pathogens need host organisms in order to survive
and reproduce, but pathogen infection usually decreases a host's ability
to reproduce itself. These interconnected mechanisms of natural selection
can create complicated--and often counterintuitive--evolutionary dynamics.
Work to date has yielded the following results:
-Host-pathogen interactions can affect the evolution of pathogen infectiousness and lethality, as well as host longevity and reproduction rate. The degree of host-pathogen genetic specificity--that is, the degree to which particular pathogen genotypes infect some host genotypes more readily than others--is a crucial factor controlling the rate, and even the direction, that host and pathogen traits evolve.
-Pathogens can affect the evolution of host traits in counterintutive ways. For example, selection by pathogens can give shorter-lived host organisms an evolutionary advantage over longer-lived hosts.
-Host organisms respond to the threat of disease either by inibiting infection (resistance) or by limiting the damage it causes (tolerance). Although tolerance and resistance may have equivalent short-term benefits to the host, their evolutionary dynamics are fundamentally different. No gene conferring complete resistance can become universal in a host population, but any tolerance gene conferring a net benefit will do so. The co-evolutionary dynamics are different as well; pathogens have an evolutionary incentive to evade a hosts' resistance defenses, but they have an incentive not to outwit a hosts' tolerance mechanisms. These observations suggest a new mechanism for the evolution of mutualism from parasitism, and strengthen the arguments for a tolerance-based approach to managing agricultural pathogens.
Collaborator: Barbara Roy (Geobotanical Institute, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich).
Publications:
Kirchner, J.W. and B.A. Roy, Evolutionary implications
of host-pathogen specificity 1. Fitness consequences of host life
history traits, Journal of Evolutionary Biology (in review).
Kirchner, J.W. and B.A. Roy, Evolutionary implications
of host-pathogen specificity 2. Fitness consequences of pathogen
virulence traits, Journal of Evolutionary Biology (in review).
Roy, B.A., J.W. Kirchner, C. Christian and L.
Rose, Disease incidence and disease tolerance in a Great Basin plant community,
Oecologia, (in review).
Roy, B.A. and J.W. Kirchner, Evolutionary dynamics
of pathogen resistance and tolerance, Evolution (in press).
Kirchner, J.W. and B.A. Roy, The evolutionary
advantages of dying young: epidemiological implications of longevity in
metapopulations, The American Naturalist , 154, 140-159, 1999.