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Landscape 2018: Book of Abstracts PDF

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Landscape 2018 Frontiers of agricultural landscape research Book of Abstracts Landscape 2018 Frontiers of agricultural landscape research 12–16 March 2018 Berlin, Germany, Adlershof con.vent sponsored by: endorsed by: Imprint Book of Abstracts: Landscape 2018 12–16 March 2018, Berlin, Germany, Adlershof con.vent Publisher Scientific Committee: Cécile Albert, IMBE Erling Andersen, Københavns Universitet Martha Bakker, WUR Leon Braat, WUR Brendan Fisher, University of Vermont Adrienne Grêt-Regamey, ETH Zuerich Axel Kleidon, MPI, Jena Eva Lieberherr, ETH Zueric Jørgen Olesen, University of Aarhus Andreas Richter, University of Vienna Pete Smith, University of Aberdeen Harry Vereecken, FZ Juelich, University of Bonn Editors: Sonoko Bellingrath-Kimura, ZALF, Humbold Universität zu Berlin Frank Ewert, ZALF, Universität Bonn Katharina Helming, ZALF Steffen Kolb, ZALF Gunnar Lischeid, ZALF, Universität Potsdam Bettina Matzdorf, ZALF, Universität Hannover Laurent Philippot, INRA Mark Rounsevell, , IMK-IFU, Garmisch Peter Verburg, VU Amsterdam Layout concept: Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF), Müncheberg Photo credits: Front page: fotoVoyager (iStock), Page 2: Petair (Fotolia) These Book of Abstracts are available in PDF format and can be ordered at [email protected]. Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Eberswalder Straße 84 | 15374 Müncheberg Germany www.leibniz-zalf.de T +49 (0)33432 | 82 200 F +49 (0)33432 | 82 223 E [email protected] © 2018 ZALF e.V., Germany Sponsoring Programme Structure Monday, March 12, 2018 08:00 Registration 09:00 – 12:00 Satellite Workshops 1, 2 and 3 12:00 – 13:00 Lunch break 13:00 – 16:00 Satellite Workshops 1, 2 and 3 Tuesday, March 13, 2018 08:00 Registration 09:00 – 09:15 Welcome 09:15 – 10:00 Plenary Keynote and Discussion 10:00 – 10:30 Coffee break 10:30 – 12:30 II. Analysing and assessing land use change I I. Food Production III. Management and land use change 12:30 – 13:45 Lunch break 13:45 – 15:15 II. Analysing and assessing land use change II I. C and N cycle of the Landscape I III. Integrated models 15:15 – 15:45 Coffee break 15:45 – 17:15 II. Analysing and assessing land use change III I. C and N cycle of the Landscape II III. Understanding landscape structure Wednesday, March 14, 2018 09:00 – 09:15 Welcome 09:15 – 10:00 Plenary Keynote and Discussion 10:00 – 10:30 Coffee break 10:30 – 12:00 II. Design and effects of governance models I I. Water Dynamics III. Research strategies I 12:00 – 13:00 Lunch break Programme Structure Wednesday, March 14, 2018 13:00 – 14:30 II. Elevator Pitch and Poster Session I. Poster Session III. Poster Session 14:30 Bus shuttle to Müncheberg (ZALF) Meeting point: in front of the conference venue 16:00 – 17:30 ZALF Activities Tour 17:30 Bus shuttle to Wulkow Castle 18:00 – 21:00 Conference Dinner at Wulkow Castle 21:00 Bus shuttle to Berlin Adlershof Thursday, March 15, 2018 09:00 – 09:15 Welcome 09:15 – 10:00 Plenary Keynote and Discussion 10:00 – 10:30 Coffee break 10:30 – 12:30 II. Design and effects of governance models II I. Microbes in the Landscape III. Research strategies II 12:30 – 13:45 Lunch break 13:45 – 15:15 II. Design and effects of governance models III I. Structured discussion III. Final discussion 15:15 – 15:45 Coffee break 15:45 – 16:45 Final Plenary and Discussion Friday, March 16, 2018 08:30 – 18:45 AgroScapeLab Quillow – A Landscape Lab 08:45 – 17:15 Nature conservation 2.0: Innovative ideas in governance and land use management in protection areas 09:00 – 15:45 Excursion to the A.D. Thaer Exhibition in Möglin 09:00 – 16:00 Satellite Workshop 6 Welcome Agricultural landscapes are a construct at the interface between natural processes and human activities. Land management introduces changes to natural processes on the one side and evokes feedbacks on human activities on the other side. This leads to societal challenges and trade-offs regarding societal demands, such as expressed in the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN Agenda 2030. Relevant examples of such challenges include the sustainable intensification of agricultural production, food security, adaptation and mitigation of climate change, opportunities and risks related to emerging technologies in agricultural production, supply-demand interactions of ecosystem services in the rural-urban continuum. Knowledge about the underlying processes of landscape dynamics at all relevant spatial and temporal scales is the prerequisite for sustainable landscape management and respective governance instruments. The aim of the conference is to present recent advances in agricultural landscape research to enhance the development of sustainable agricultural land use and landscape strategies. The particular objective is to present and discuss key findings from relevant disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches as well as from basic and application-oriented research. Thematic areas:  The functioning of landscapes, with a focus on element cycles and microbiomes including approaches to scale up from individual processes to the landscape scale.  Sustainable land use practices and appropriate governance systems, which secure the provision of food and fibre as well as other ecosystem services and biodiversity.  Advances in science toward the development of an integrated landscape theory. The topic of the conference, Frontiers of Agricultural Landscape Research, fills a thematic niche that is cross-cutting to numerous international scientific organizations but is not represented as a core topic in any of these. The conference brings together researchers from all over the world working in the field of agricultural landscape research. It illustrates the state of research in this field, its relation to other research fields and the challenges associated to scientific questions as well as to providing the evidence base for decisions on sustainable landscape management in policy, administration and practice. We intend to jointly use the momentum generated by the conference as a seed for follow up activities and to establish an international network of agricultural landscape research. We are looking forward to your scientific insights, ideas, critical thoughts and to lively discussions about the scientific contribution to sustainable landscape management. Frank Ewert Mark Rounsevell Katharina helming Conference Chair Conference Chair Conference Host ZALF Müncheberg KIT Garmisch ZALF Müncheberg Table of Contents Imprint ................................................................................................................................................................ 3 Sponsoring ........................................................................................................................................................ 4 Programme Structure ..................................................................................................................................... 5 Welcome ............................................................................................................................................................ 7 Plenary Keynotes Idea- vs Data-Driven Microbial Modeling for Soil Carbon Dynamics Yiqi Luo .............................................................................................................................................................................. 22 Landscape, biodiversity and agroecological services Sandrine Petit .................................................................................................................................................................. 23 Landscape science: the role of models, data and theory Marcel van Oijen ............................................................................................................................................................ 24 I. Landscape Functioning Food Production Keynote: Sustainable management of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus cycles at landscape scales Jørgen Olesen .................................................................................................................................................................. 26 Terrestrial carbon dioxide removal potential of pyrolytic treated biomass produced by sustainable carbon farming Hans-Peter Schmidt – Constanze Werner – Dieter Gerten – Wolfgang Lucht – Claudia Kammann .......................................................................................................................................................... 27 Considering management-induced temporal changes of soil hydraulic properties in hydrological systems Parvathy Chandrasekhar – Janis Kreiselmeier – Andreas Schwen – Thomas Weninger – Stefan Julich – Karl-Heinz Feger – Kai Schwärzel .............................................................................................. 29 SCREESOM – screening methods for a cost effective detection of supply with SOM in arable and grassland soils Malte Ortner – Michael Seidel – Michael Vohland – Sören Thiele-Bruhn ............................................... 31 Influence of food production and consumption on river water quality in the Ishikari River watershed in Hokkaido, Japan Ryusuke Hatano – Mako Abe – Kanta Kuramochi ............................................................................................ 33 Table of Contents C and N cycle of the Landscape I Impact of soil erosion status on C fluxes and C storage of heterogeneous croplands Jürgen Augustin – Mathias Hoffmann – Gernot Verch – Michael Sommer ............................................ 35 Dissolved organic nitrogen and carbon in small agricultural streams Marlen Heinz – Daniel Graeber – Dominik Zak – Elke Zwirnmann – Jörg Gelbrecht – Martin T. Pusch ............................................................................................................................................................... 37 Land use change implications on the soil C sequestration potential of peri-urban environments Lona van Delden – Daniel I Warner – Thilo Streck ............................................................................................ 39 C and N cycle of the Landscape II Links between plant rhizodeposition and N cycling in grassland systems Eva Kaštovská – Petr Kotas – Keith Edwards – Hana Šantrůčková .............................................................. 41 Landscape-scale BVOC emission from energy crops – A modelling approach Tommaso Stella – Michael Berg – Felix Wiẞ – Rüdiger Grote – Claas Nendel ...................................... 43 Coupling crop model with different water balance and root water uptake approaches: an analysis of the predictive capacity in simulating spatially variable CO2 and H2O fluxes and crop growth process Thuy Huu Nguyen – Matthias Langensiepen – Hubert Hueging – Cho Miltin Mboh – Frank Ewert ....................................................................................................................................................................... 45 Modeling ecosystem services in transition zones of forest to agricultural land in Europe Martin Schmidt – Felix Linde – Gunnar Lischeid – Ralf Wieland – Bodo Bookhagen – Claas Nendel .................................................................................................................................................................... 47 Water Dynamics Soil structure effects on flow and transport indicating the link to soil and crop management Horst H. Gerke – Ruth H. Ellerbrock – Martin Leue .......................................................................................... 49 Long-term modelling of hourly evapotranspiration and soil water contents Martin Wegehenkel – Udo Rummel – Frank Beyrich ....................................................................................... 50 Small area, big impact – small lentic waterbodies in the agricultural landscape Marlene Pätzig – Gabriela Onandia – Florian Reverey – Thomas Kalettka – Sebastian Maaßen – Dagmar Balla – Gunnar Lischeid .................................................................................... 52 Table of Contents Preferential flow through biopores from plot to catchment scale Anne-Kathrin Schneider – Tobias L. Hohenbrink – Loes van Schaik – Anne Zangerlé – Boris Schröder ................................................................................................................................................................. 54 Microbes in the Landscape Soil microbial influence of natural landscape elements and landscape structure on agricultural fields Karin Pirhofer Walzl – Larissa Schaub – Jasmin Joshi – Matthias Rillig – The BASIL project ............ 56 Soil organic carbon drives microbial diversity under different land use types – Lessons from a European cross-continental study Márton Szoboszlay – Anja B. Dohrmann – Christopher Poeplau – Axel Don – Christoph C. Tebbe ........................................................................................................................................................ 57 Does crop rotational diversity increase soil microbial resistance and resilience to drought and flooding? Jörg Schnecker – A. Stuart Grandy – Francisco Calderon – Michel Cavigelli – Michael Lehman – Lisa Tiemann .............................................................................................................................. 58 Peaks of in situ N2O emissions are influenced by N2O producing and reducing microbial communities across arable soils Luiz A. Domeignoz-Horta – Laurent Philippot – Céline Peyrard – David Bru – Marie-Christine Breuil – Florian Bizouard – Eric Justes – Bruno Mary – Joël Léonard – Aymé Spor ........................................................................................................................................................................ 60 Role of methanol utilizing bacteria in carbon dynamics from landscape scale perspective: the microbial influence on net methanol fluxes Saranya Kanukollu – Rainer Remus ......................................................................................................................... 62 I. Poster Session Assessing viability of apple production under replant constraints at field level Ulrike Cavael – Katharina Diehl – Peter Lentzsch .............................................................................................. 65 Effects of soil fauna plant microbe interactions primary succession Jan Frouz – Ondřej Mudrák – Jana Rydlová ........................................................................................................ 66 Variability of stable isotope signatures of organic matter in differently tilled sandy soil Shaieste Gholami – Ehsan Sayad – Bert Steinberg – Axel Don – Gerd Gleixner – Michael Schirrmann – Dietmar Barkusky – Monika Joschko ........................................................................ 67

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systems with high inputs of irrigation water, chemical fertilization and pesticides (Boysen et al.,. 2016). Boysen et al Beside the spectroscopic measurement soil color (Konica Minolta .. Schmidt and Peter Rakowski for excellent operational and technical maintenance during the study period as.
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