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Due to the nature of animals, even domesticated pets, animal scavenging of human remains is an important taphonomic factor. This area of study has, however, been undercounted in the current literature. The purpose of this study was to begin the first step in creating a taphonomic profile for urban

Due to the nature of animals, even domesticated pets, animal scavenging of human remains is an important taphonomic factor. This area of study has, however, been undercounted in the current literature. The purpose of this study was to begin the first step in creating a taphonomic profile for urban / household animal scavenging as distinguishable from manmade tool marks. Using volunteered animals and regularly available tools, alterations were made on beef ribs in order to characterize the distinguishing profiles between the two groups. It was found that animal scavenging alterations, in the short term (20 minutes used in this study) have a distinctly different appearance than tool mark alterations. Animal scavenging has less visible alterations, consistent bite morphology across different species, and symmetrical cut marks along the midsection of the long bones. Ultimately, this study was a successful first step in furthering taphonomic alteration database research across various biomes and conditions.
ContributorsLittle, Cody Lee (Author) / Kobojek, Kimberly (Thesis director) / Falsetti, Anthony (Committee member) / Ball, Becky (Committee member) / School of Human Evolution and Social Change (Contributor) / School of Mathematical and Natural Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2018-05
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Arid and semiarid ecosystems (known as drylands) cover 45% of global land area and are predicted to expand to encompass half of the world’s land area by the end of the century. Litter decomposition plays a large role in nutrient and carbon cycling in dryland ecosystems, yet it remains poorly

Arid and semiarid ecosystems (known as drylands) cover 45% of global land area and are predicted to expand to encompass half of the world’s land area by the end of the century. Litter decomposition plays a large role in nutrient and carbon cycling in dryland ecosystems, yet it remains poorly understood. Models that accurately predict decomposition in mesic ecosystems fail to accurately describe decomposition in drylands due to differing drivers of decomposition but also because litter in drylands accumulates around litter retention elements (LREs). LREs can be any object or surface that inhibits the movement vectors (e.g., wind) that push litter across drylands, creating a “pool” of litter around the LRE. Litter pooling increases the amount of mixing between litter and soil, creating a microclimate more conducive to microbial decomposition. Due to the increase in microbial decomposition, the decomposition rate for litter around LREs can be markedly different than that of litter not in LREs. To further understand how much litter accumulates in LREs, I studied the differences in litter accumulation between LREs and open areas in five drylands across the Southwestern United States. To do this, I visually analyzed photos of 424 litterbags to determine the cover percentages of four different types of organic litter (grass, broadleaf, reproductive, woody) and rock litter. Visual analysis of litterbags consisted of manually delineating the percent coverage of each of these litter categories. Litterbags had been placed in both open intercanopy areas as well as woody sub-canopy areas in which the plant canopy acted as the LRE. Additionally, 45 of these litterbags were randomly selected for analysis in the computer program FIJI (FIJI is Just ImageJ) to assess the litter area find the percent difference between visual and digital analysis. Areas underneath woody sub-canopies accumulated far more organic matter litter over time than open areas between canopies did but displayed a similar amount of rock litterbag cover. Shrub microsites also displayed far more varied litterbag cover percentages than open microsites. Data also suggested that litter does not always accumulate underneath shrubs or open intercanopy areas and may dissipate as time progresses. These results support the idea that litter accumulation varies throughout drylands, and that soil and litter mix frequently in LREs such as under woody plant canopies. The percent difference between FIJI analysis and visual analysis was generally negative, reflecting that visual estimation of litterbag cover was typically smaller than digital estimates. Cumulatively, litter was shown to accumulate much more around LREs and even move from them – supporting the idea that litter decomposition models need to account for litter movement in drylands to be accurate.
ContributorsNelson, Benjamin (Author) / Throop, Heather (Thesis director) / Ball, Becky (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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Aboveground-belowground relationships between vegetation and its associated soil biotic community play an important role in every terrestrial ecosystem for nutrient cycling and soil health maintenance. Deserts are especially sensitive to change and little is known about Sonoran Desert soil microbiota, while exotic herbaceous species are increasingly invading into the ecosystem

Aboveground-belowground relationships between vegetation and its associated soil biotic community play an important role in every terrestrial ecosystem for nutrient cycling and soil health maintenance. Deserts are especially sensitive to change and little is known about Sonoran Desert soil microbiota, while exotic herbaceous species are increasingly invading into the ecosystem with other harmful effects. In many other environments, soil communities have been associated with both plant species and plant functional type. The soil community food web depends on the sustenance brought by vegetation, and different soil community members are adapted to different diets. In this paper, we hypothesized that invasive plants would cause belowground soil communities to have greater abundance and lesser diversity than those under native, more locally established plants. To test this hypothesis, we selected four desert understory plant taxa: one native grass, one native forb, one invasive grass, and one invasive forb. We predicted that the invasive plants would be associated with a greater count of microarthropods per unit mass of soil but lesser microarthropod species diversity. The invasive plants were not statistically associated with a greater count of microarthropods per kilogram of soil nor lesser microarthropod species diversity. There was not a significant difference in abundance in the microarthropod categories between native and invasive plants, so the hypothesis was rejected. However, the invasive Erodium cicutarium was found to harbor high soil mite abundance, which warrants further study, and it is yet to be seen whether soil moisture and proximity to trees played a role in the data. The results of this study should help in generating more informed hypotheses regarding desert aboveground-belowground relationships.

ContributorsStern, Argon (Author) / Ball, Becky (Thesis director) / Sanin, Maria (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Mathematical and Natural Sciences (Contributor)
Created2022-05