ESA is always a great opportunity to present LTER research, demonstrate the power of our network, and make powerful connections across sites, institutions, and other networks. In 2022, ESA returns to an in-person format, and LTER sessions span from oral sessions, inspire talks, posters, and more. See the full list, organized by date, below.
If we missed your session, please fill out this form and we will add it to the list. And remember, including LTER or Long-Term Ecological Research in conference abstracts will help us your talk!
Exhibits
- LTER & EDI – Booth 917
Talks and Sessions Organized by LTER or EDI Investigators
Monday, August 15
Special Sessions:
Tuesday, August 16
Inspire Sessions:
- INS 3-2 – Green thumbs up for microbial culture collections, comparative genomics, and adaptive traits
Contributed Talks:
- COS 76-2 – The interactive impacts of early snowmelt and topography on plant-pollinator interactions in an alpine ecosystems
- COS 110-4 – Simulating responses of low marsh vegetation to fluctuating salinity in Earth system models
- COS 76-1 – Daily activity timing and physiological tolerances jointly predict native bee abundance trends under climate change
- COS 106-6 – Long-term ecological research on ecosystem response to climate change
- COS 108-4 – Living in the shadow of shrub expansion
- COS 61-3 – Characterizing soil microbial diversity under the three dominate state changes in dryland systems
- COS 50-2 – Using aerial imagery and a novel landscape competition index to quantify shrub-shrub competition in the Jornada Basin
Organized Oral Sessions:
- OOS 20-1 – Strategic engagement planning and DEI at the Kellogg Biological Station Long Term Ecological Research site
- OOS 20-2 – Scientists’ engagement beliefs and behaviors: Insights from a social scientist about paths forward for improving public engagement with science
- OOS 12-1 – Modeling the effects of variable disturbance regimes on kelp forest community dynamics
Wednesday, August 17
Contributed Talks
- COS 189-5 – Shifts in adult-seedling conspecific feedbacks along a stress gradient
- COS 125-2 – Nitrogen plant uptake in a semiarid ecosystem is modulated by water and plant type
- COS 186-6 – Plant community drivers of ecosystem response to extreme summer drought in successional old-fields
Organized Oral Sessions
- OOS 25 – The importance of understanding the historical context of long-term data sets in ecology: Learning from site history and local knowledge
- OOS 25-2 – Ecological sensitivities to pulse dynamics and antecedent climate: insights from across US LTER sites
- OOS 25-5 – Reimagining our relation to land and knowledge through meaningful collaborations with local Indigenous communities
Thursday, August 18
Contributed Talks
- COS 207-5 – Soil carbon availability decouples net nitrogen mineralization and net nitrification across US Long Term Ecological Research sites
- COS 245-2 – Using the Community Land Model to simulate alpine tundra vegetation communities along an environmental gradient
- COS 283-4 – Assessment of soil food webs across time and place: How do nematode communities infer shifts in soil function over 30 years under systems of varying management intensity?
- COS 275-1 – Grass dominance in North American tallgrass prairies is influenced by interacting effects of fire interval, fire season, and grazing.
Inspire Sessions
Friday, August 19
Short Courses
- SC 8 – Explore and work with harmonized continental-scale biodiversity data from NEON and the US LTER
Posters
Tuesday, August 16
- PS 26-72 – Warming and drought effects on volatile emissions of Solidago canadensis
- PS 26-76 – From seed to seedling: understanding plant reproduction in a changing climate
- PS 31-119 – Soil microbial community response to prairie strips in rowcrop agroecosystems
- PS 35-171 – Evolution of microbial genomic traits associated with adaptation to long-term soil warming
- PS 25-50 – Response to precipitation variation suggests resilience declines under climate change in early successional grassland communities
- PS 33-143 – Ground beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) communities within KBS LTER prairie strips and surrounding row crop
Wednesday, August 17
- PS 45-105 – Linking the soil microbiome with plant phenology responses to climate change in an early successional plant community
- PS 49-159 – Characterizing the response of fungal taxa to global change drivers
- LB 10-123 – Coastal sand dynamics structure the spatial synchrony of kelp forest communities
- PS 51-187 – Response of freshwater shrimps to natural and anthropogenic disturbances
Thursday, August 18
- LB 7-70 – A metatranscriptomic analysis of the long-term effects of warming on the Harvard Forest soil microbiome
- LB 10-108 – Tracing patterns of glacial refugia with Scottnema lindsayae nematode in McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica.
- LB 11-143 – Long-term ecological research through a camera trap network in an urbanized protected area
- LB 9-96 – Exploring change over time in aboveground net primary production, its drivers, and their relationship, on the US Great Plains