Andres Tangarife-Escobar
PostDoc
Main Focus
Currently working in the project WETSCAPES 2.0. Process-based modeling of greenhouse gases and peat accumulation in rewetted fens.
Besides CO2 production, I will also model the production and consumption of the CH4 and N2O, taking into account the availability of oxygen and other terminal electron acceptors at different peat depths. This will be achieved by model-data comparison and integration with data from the mesocosm experiments.
Curriculum Vitae
During my PhD I researched on the timescales of the carbon cycle in different ecosystems and how environmental change affects the allocation and cycling rates of such carbon within soils, vegetation and atmosphere. For this purpose, I perform field campaigns and laboratory experiments, along with modelling studies to understand the interactions and feedbacks in the earth system and provide information for implementing better measures to counteract the effects of climate change.
I have approached the next questions:
- Peatlands and grasslands from the Tibetan Plateau, within the TransTiP Project “Geoecosystems in transition on the Tibetan Plateau”.
How temperature and soil moisture variation affect the carbon dioxide fluxes and the age and transit time distributions of carbon in peatland and grassland soils of the Tibetan Plateau?
How can radiocarbon (14C) data in bulk soil and heterotrophic respired CO2 be interpreted to understand the effect of changes in decomposition rates on ages and transit times?
- Boreal forests in Northern Sweden (Svarberget research site)
What is the variation in the isotopic disequilibrium of Δ¹⁴C among different carbon pools of a boreal forest, and how does this variation provide insights into the dynamics of carbon allocation and timescales of cycling?
- Artic tundra permafrost soils from Alaska
What level of complexity do models need to describe soil organic carbon (SOC) decomposition dynamics in an Arctic tundra permafrost soil from the Toolik Field Station, Alaska?
What is the effect of snow depth on the mean age and mean transit time of carbon in permafrost soils from the Toolik Field Station, Alaska?
My previous experience was related to the understanding of the water cycle in tropical ecosystems through hydrogeochemical and isotopic proxies (clay mineralogy, hydrochemistry and stable isotopes) and the impacts caused by natural and anthropogenic processes.