Wil Chapple with the distillation system at UW |
“We’re trying to
understand plant-water relationships and determine if the water that trees are
consuming is also the water that contributes to stream flow,” says Wil Chapple,
one of the first undergraduate researchers for WyCEHG.
Wil started at the University of Wyoming as a history major,
but today he is studying the history of glacial events in order to better
understand the water system in the Snowy Range Mountains. There were three
glacial events which shaped the types of soil in the Snowies. Wil believes that
these different types of soil are part of the key to understanding the water
system. His motive for studying the water system comes from a discrepancy
between traditional thought and recent discoveries.
“There’s a traditional thought that current precipitation
mixes with old precipitation and that trees consume this and that it is part of
the stream flow,” says Wil.
Recent research from another university indicates that this
may not be the reality. This research shows that plants may consume water
stored in soil pores from past precipitation while new precipitation goes to
stream flow.
“So, some of the water that comes in as precipitation might
fill up that small pores in the dry soil earlier in the season and sit there,
and later snow melt events might just rush right past the trees,” says Dr. Dave Williams, Wil’s mentor for the project. “During the summer, when the plants are
taking up water, they might be slowly drawing on that water from soil pores and
not from the snow melt.”
In order to study this phenomenon in the Snowies, Wil is
collecting samples of snow to analyze the isotope signature of the
precipitation.
One of Wil's research sites |
Isotopes are useful tracers because the origin, type and
temperature of precipitation determines the isotope composition, thus
precipitation events have different isotope configurations. The configuration
of isotopes follow some patterns in that heavy water molecules characterize
summer and fall precipitation compared to that of the winter and spring. The
isotope composition of a compartment of water is determined by the ratio of
heavy to normal atoms, which Wil will be analyzing to determine isotope
signatures.
Wil will determine the isotope ratios using the Laser
Spectroscopy Isotope Analyzer in the Stable Isotope Facility at UW. This
equipment vaporizes water samples and measures the absorption of different wave
lengths of light. Different isotopes absorb different light frequencies. By
going back and forth between frequencies, it is possible to determine the ratio
of heavy to normal isotopes in the water. Wil is preparing to analyze snow
samples from the last few months, which have been collected every morning there
is new snowfall.
As his research continues, Wil is also busy working on the
proposal for this next stage of his project. This summer he aims to collect and
analyze samples of soil, water from streams and lodgepole pine. With the
deadline for the summer fellowship one week away, Wil is focused on showing
what he has learned and where he wants to take his work.
“It’s been a good experience so far,” says Wil. “I feel like
I’ve only kind of dipped my toes in and hopefully this summer I will really get
a taste of this research and field work.”
This project has given Wil a glimpse into the life of a
water scientist and helped him get a feel for what graduate school might be
like, but it has also allowed him to go beyond the theoretical knowledge of the
classroom and into the application of science.
A second research site |
“It feels good to apply my knowledge,” says Wil. “Last
semester I felt like I really came out with a lot of tangible knowledge and it
was refreshing.”
Part of this knowledge came from Dr. Larry Munn, who, as Wil
says, is the soil guru of UW. Dr. Munn has spent most of his life studying and
developing the knowledge about the distribution of soils from the different
glacial events in the Snowies. His research has been instrumental in Wil’s
understanding of the Snowies.
“We’re quite fortunate that Wil has been able to work with
Larry,” Dr. Williams says.
As is the goal of all WyCEHG research, Wil’s project is a
collaborative process. It brings together knowledge from various fields and
experts, looks at the complexities of the natural water system and aims to shed
light on how historical events shape the present.
“I think this project is really cool because it brings forth
this long history of glacial events and how that’s shaping how water moves in
the landscape,” says Dr. Williams.
Wil’s research will shed light on the water movement and add
to the body of research challenging traditional assumptions about water
systems.
No comments:
Post a Comment