
Kyungsoo Yoo
· ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of Minnesota · Soil, Water and Climate
Active 2003–2026
About
Kyungsoo Yoo was born and raised in South Korea. He studied physics at Yonsei University before pursuing doctoral research in Ecosystem Science at U.C. Berkeley. After completing his doctorate, he taught at the University of Delaware for 4.5 years. In 2010, he moved to Minnesota and is currently a professor of soil science at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. His academic journey reflects a transition from physics to ecosystem science and soil science, highlighting a multidisciplinary approach to understanding environmental and soil processes.
Research topics
- Geography
- Ecology
- Geology
- Biology
- Environmental science
- Chemistry
- Paleontology
- Soil science
- Archaeology
- Oceanography
Selected publications
Data Repository for the University of Minnesota · 2026-01-01
datasetOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThis dataset accompanies a study on the invasion of Asian jumping worms (Amynthas spp.) into hardwood forests previously infested with European earthworms (Lumbricus spp.) at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum. The manuscript is current in revision (Baumann, T.T., Frelich, L., Buchholz, E., Wang, S., and Yoo, K. Jumping worm invasion in a European earthworm-infested hardwood forest in Minnesota: population surveys and soil changes. Ecosphere. In Revision.) The dataset includes: (1) earthworm population surveys identifying species composition and biomass across three sugar maple forests, with sampling points classified as Amynthas-dominated (A-sites), Lumbricus-dominated (L-sites), or transitional (T-sites); (2) soil physical and chemical properties including bulk density, soil organic matter, and pH measured at three depth intervals (0-5, 5-10, 10-15 cm); (3) seasonal leaf litter dry mass measurements; (4) continuous soil temperature records from iButton sensors at multiple depths; and (5) GPS coordinates for all sampling locations. Data were collected during 2020-2022.
Frontiers in Forests and Global Change · 2026-05-18
articleOpen accessSenior authorOver the last decade, researchers have demonstrated that invasive earthworms significantly re-engineer surface soil conditions. Following the invasion of European earthworms, the recent expansion of Asian jumping worms has alarmed land managers and gardeners, as they are known to create loose granular aggregates, alter seasonal soil coverage of the forest floor by litter, and affect soil temperature. Because their primary introduction agents are mulch and container-grown ornamental plants, it is not surprising that much of the jumping worm invasion research has been conducted in botanical gardens and arboreta, and the forests adjacent to horticultural activities. However, predicting the future expansion of jumping worms into native forests and their ecosystem-level impacts is challenging. We argue, based on published and unpublished data, that the intense public interest in jumping worms provides a unique opportunity to expand the current sentinel plant network to include soils. Adoption of a soil-plant continuum as a sentinel system, we argue, will allow for improvements in the early detection and monitoring of plant health against pests and climate change. To support this position, we will build on published research on jumping worm impacts on soil-plant relationships. Current reporting and monitoring systems for invasive plants, insect pests, and pathogens already exist within botanic gardens and arboreta networks, and while focused on plant symptoms, they can be modified to include soil data.
HortTechnology · 2025-09-09
articleOpen accessJumping worm species belonging to the genus Amynthas (Kinberg) threaten biodiversity and soil health significantly across temperate ecosystems. One inadvertent method of invasive jumping worm spread is through container-grown nursery stock. In nursery production, jumping worms modify substrate characteristics such as water holding capacity and nutrient availability by consuming and redepositing organic matter, resulting in negative effects to plant quality and appearance. There are currently no products listed for controlling jumping worms in the United States, leading to challenges in managing their spread. With increasing regulation on the transport of jumping worms by state agencies, plant producers may face unrealistic or labor-intensive management options. We hypothesized that control methods not yet listed for jumping worms in the United States have the potential to suppress jumping worm populations effectively in container-grown crops. Therefore, we studied chemical and biological controls touted as potential options for controlling jumping worms in nursery containers by measuring their effects on jumping worm mortality. In addition to an untreated control, we evaluated BotaniGard Ⓡ 22WP, T-Bird Ⓡ 4.5L (thiophanate-methyl fungicide), Root Cleaner Ⓡ (sodium lauryl sulfate and soybean oil), Cedarcide Ⓡ (cedarwood oil), Conserve Ⓡ SC (spinosad), Castaway Ⓡ 3-0-1 Tea Seed Meal Fertilizer, Slug Magic TM (iron phosphate), and Sevin Ⓡ (zeta-cypermethrin). The results of our work suggest differential efficacy among treatments and highlight viable options with the potential for application in horticultural production. Specifically, T-Bird Ⓡ 4.5L (thiophanate-methyl fungicide) and Sevin Ⓡ (zeta-cypermethrin) demonstrated at least 80% mortality in two trials, whereas all remaining products yielded no effect or less than 12% mortality. Identifying effective control methods benefits the scientific community and the horticultural industry by providing a foundation for future research activities centered on jumping worm management and by supporting the goal of limiting their spread through horticultural products.
Neglecting vertical transport leads to underestimated soil carbon dynamics
Nature Geoscience · 2025-12-01 · 3 citations
articleThe radiocarbon age of soil carbon is a function of vertical transport rates
Research Square · 2024-09-22
preprintOpen accessAnthropogenic transport mechanisms of invasive European earthworms: a review
Biological Invasions · 2024-08-14 · 7 citations
reviewSenior authorCorrespondingEarth Surface Dynamics · 2023-01-31 · 3 citations
articleOpen accessCorrespondingAbstract. Mineral specific surface area (SSA) increases as primary minerals weather and restructure into secondary phyllosilicate, oxide, and oxyhydroxide minerals. SSA is a measurable property that captures cumulative effects of many physical and chemical weathering processes in a single measurement and has meaningful implications for many soil processes, including water-holding capacity and nutrient availability. Here we report our measurements of SSA and mineralogy of two 21 m deep SSA profiles at two landscape positions, in which the emergence of a very small mass percent (<0.1 %) of secondary oxide generated 36 %–81 % of the total SSA in both drill cores. The SSA transition occurred near 3 m at both locations and did not coincide with the boundary of soil to weathered rock. The 3 m boundary in each weathering profile coincides with the depth extent of secondary iron oxide minerals and secondary phyllosilicates. Although elemental depletions in both profiles extend to 7 and 10 m depth, the mineralogical changes did not result in SSA increase until 3 m depth. The emergence of secondary oxide minerals at 3 m suggests that this boundary may be the depth extent of oxidation weathering reactions. Our results suggest that oxidation weathering reactions may be the primary limitation in the coevolution of both secondary silicate and secondary oxide minerals. We value element depletion profiles to understand weathering, but our finding of nested weathering fronts driven by different chemical processes (e.g., oxidation to 3 m and acid dissolution to 10 m) warrants the recognition that element depletion profiles are not able to identify the full set of processes that occur in weathering profiles.
University Press of Colorado eBooks · 2023-03-16
book-chapterSenior authorThe concept of the Anthropocene is based on the premise that humans have had a profound and increasing impact on our environments.Yet many environmental conditions (earthquakes, storms, tsunamis, fire, disease, and other dramatic natural phenomena) can easily overpower human capacities and result in significant change.Incremental processes such as soil creep, vegetation growth, oxidation, and material fatigue similarly act against human intentionality by causing deterioration and decay whose denouement is unpredictable in timing and magnitude.The sentient world of animals, in which behavioral patterns have evolved for viability in a diverse world of predators and reproduction strategies, similarly presents challenges when managed under the assumption that humans are the primary determinant of comportment.In this volume, we consider the agentive effects of natural phenomena to which the direct human response is primarily reactive.The objective is twofold: to highlight that even within the "Anthropocene, " not all natural phenomena can be anticipated, much less controlled, by humans; and second, to critically evaluate the variety of past human responses to natural and biological entities as seen through the archaeological record.The archaeological study of human-environmental dynamics has been heavily weighted on the "human" side of the equation.In recent years, that focus has been augmented by an increasingly pointed indictment of the way human activities can
Quantifying erosion rates and weathering pathways that maximize soil organic carbon storage
Biogeochemistry · 2023-06-01 · 9 citations
articleEXPLORING WHETHER WORMS WEATHER SILICATES IN SOILS
Abstracts with programs - Geological Society of America · 2023-01-01
article
Recent grants
CAREER: Erosion and Weathering Control of Soil Carbon: Tectonics and Plows
NSF · $400k · 2013–2018
NSF · $333k · 2008–2011
NSF · $210k · 2010–2013
Frequent coauthors
- 27 shared
Jonatan Klaminder
Umeå University
- 26 shared
Simon M. Mudd
University of Edinburgh
- 25 shared
Adrian A. Wackett
Planetary Science Institute
- 21 shared
A. K. Aufdenkampe
- 15 shared
Martin D. Hurst
- 14 shared
Ronald Amundson
- 14 shared
Arjun M. Heimsath
Arizona State University
- 12 shared
Beth Weinman
Labs
Education
- 2003
Ph.D., Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
U.C. Berkeley
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