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Overview

Marion Schrumpf is a researcher affiliated with the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry in Germany. Their work is primarily situated within the fields of Environmental Science and Agricultural and Biological Sciences, with a strong focus on Soil Science, Ecology, Global and Planetary Change, Environmental Chemistry, and Nature and Landscape Conservation.

The main topics of Marion Schrumpf's scientific contributions include Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, Peatlands and Wetlands Ecology, Soil and Water Nutrient Dynamics, Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies, Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology, Land Use and Ecosystem Services, and Atmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics.

Schrumpf has published several recent papers, covering a range of ecological and biogeochemical themes:

  • Land-use intensity alters networks between biodiversity, ecosystem functions, and services (2020, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
  • Contrasting responses of above- and belowground diversity to multiple components of land-use intensity (2021, Nature Communications)
  • The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales (2022, Nature Ecology & Evolution)
  • COSORE: A community database for continuous soil respiration and other soil-atmosphere greenhouse gas flux data (2020, Global Change Biology)
  • Divergent drivers of the microbial methane sink in temperate forest and grassland soils (2020, Global Change Biology)

Frequent coauthors collaborating with Schrumpf include:

  • Ingo Schöning
  • Ellen Kandeler
  • Valentin H. Klaus
  • Till Kleinebecker
  • Markus Fischer

The preferred publishing venues for Schrumpf include:

  • Soil Biology and Biochemistry
  • Biogeosciences
  • Global Change Biology
  • Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)
  • Nature Communications

Marion Schrumpf's research addresses complex interactions among soil processes, biodiversity, and ecosystem services, often integrating multi-scale ecological analyses and biogeochemical data. Their work contributes to understanding how land use affects ecosystem dynamics, soil carbon and nutrient flows, and greenhouse gas fluxes within environmental systems.

Best Publications

  • Land use intensification alters ecosystem multifunctionality via loss of biodiversity and changes to functional composition

    Eric Allan;Pete Manning;Fabian Alt;Julia Binkenstein

  • Biodiversity at multiple trophic levels is needed for ecosystem multifunctionality

    Santiago Soliveres;Fons van der Plas;Peter Manning;Daniel Prati

  • Pyrosequencing-based assessment of bacterial community structure along different management types in German forest and grassland soils.

    Heiko Nacke;Andrea Thürmer;Antje Wollherr;Christiane Will

  • Dissolved carbon leaching from soil is a crucial component of the net ecosystem carbon balance

    Reimo Kindler;Reimo Kindler;Jan Siemens;Jan Siemens;Klaus Kaiser;David Christopher Walmsley

  • How accurately can soil organic carbon stocks and stock changes be quantified by soil inventories

    M. Schrumpf;E. D. Schulze;K. Kaiser;J. Schumacher

  • Horizon-Specific Bacterial Community Composition of German Grassland Soils, as Revealed by Pyrosequencing-Based Analysis of 16S rRNA Genes

    Christiane Will;Andrea Thürmer;Antje Wollherr;Heiko Nacke

  • Driving forces of soil bacterial community structure, diversity, and function in temperate grasslands and forests

    Kristin Kaiser;Bernd Wemheuer;Vera Korolkow;Franziska Wemheuer

  • Storage and stability of organic carbon in soils as related to depth, occlusion within aggregates, and attachment to minerals

    Marion Schrumpf;K. Kaiser;G. Guggenberger;T. Persson

  • Land-use intensity alters networks between biodiversity, ecosystem functions, and services.

    María R. Felipe-Lucia;Santiago Soliveres;Caterina Penone;Markus Fischer

  • Multiple forest attributes underpin the supply of multiple ecosystem services

    María R. Felipe-Lucia;Santiago Soliveres;Santiago Soliveres;Caterina Penone;Peter Manning

  • Drivers of the composition of active rhizosphere bacterial communities in temperate grasslands

    Selma Vieira;Johannes Sikorski;Sophie Dietz;Katharina Herz

  • Factors controlling decomposition rates of fine root litter in temperate forests and grasslands

    Emily F. Solly;Ingo Schöning;Steffen Boch;Ellen Kandeler

  • The net biome production of full crop rotations in Europe

    W. L. Kutsch;M. Aubinet;N. Buchmann;P. Smith

  • The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales

    Unknown

  • The European carbon balance. Part 4: integration of carbon and other trace-gas fluxes

    E. D. Schulze;P. Ciais;S. Luyssaert;M. Schrumpf

  • General Relationships between Abiotic Soil Properties and Soil Biota across Spatial Scales and Different Land- Use Types

    Klaus Birkhofer;Ingo Schöning;Fabian Alt;Nadine Herold

  • Locally rare species influence grassland ecosystem multifunctionality

    Santiago Soliveres;Peter Manning;Daniel Prati;Martin M. Gossner

  • Contribution of sorption, DOC transport and microbial interactions to the 14C age of a soil organic carbon profile: Insights from a calibrated process model

    Bernhard Ahrens;Maarten C. Braakhekke;Georg Guggenberger;Marion Schrumpf

  • Contrasting responses of above- and belowground diversity to multiple components of land-use intensity

    Gaëtane Le Provost;Jan Thiele;Catrin Westphal;Caterina Penone

  • Carbon, nitrogen and Greenhouse gases budgets over a four years crop rotation in northern France

    Benjamin Loubet;Patricia Laville;Simon Lehuger;Eric Larmanou

  • Specialisation and diversity of multiple trophic groups are promoted by different forest features

    Caterina Penone;Eric Allan;Santiago Soliveres;María R Felipe‐Lucia

  • Tropical montane rain forest soils. Development and nutrient status along an altitudinal gradient in the South Ecuadorian Andes

    Marion Schrumpf;Georg Guggenberger;Carlos Valarezo;Wolfgang Zech

Frequent Co-Authors

Ingo Schöning
Ingo Schöning Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
Markus Reichstein
Markus Reichstein Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
Susan E. Trumbore
Susan E. Trumbore Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
Mirco Migliavacca
Mirco Migliavacca Joint Research Centre
Valentin H. Klaus
Valentin H. Klaus Ruhr University Bochum
Markus Fischer
Markus Fischer University of Bern
Till Kleinebecker
Till Kleinebecker University of Münster
François Buscot
François Buscot Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
Daniel Prati
Daniel Prati University of Bern
Ernst-Detlef Schulze
Ernst-Detlef Schulze Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry

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