The events that reshape ecosystems can be infrequent and often unpredictable.

Major droughts, hurricanes, the arrival of a new species, or a shift in ocean currents can dramatically affect the way an ecosystem looks and functions. Legacies from past events can cause two sites that look superficially similar to behave in very different ways.

Yet most ecological studies are funded just a few years at a time.

In 1980, the National Science Foundation funded the first Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) sites to provide a longer view.

Today, research programs at 27 LTER sites support ecological discovery on the influence of long-term and large-scale phenomenon.

LTER sites also serve the wider ecological community by:


Making almost 40 years of sustained observations publicly available

Developing and maintaining large-scale experiments, which provide starting conditions for process-level studies, help to parameterize and test model, and spur cross-site synthesis

Providing long-term context and deep knowledge of place for researchers working on shorter-term projects

Training hundreds of graduate students in interdisciplinary and collaborative team science

LTER sites are the core of the network


Each LTER site involves dozens of researchers, typically including microbial, community, and landscape ecologists, but also hydrologists, geochemists, social scientists, economists and even the occasional artist, historian, or philosopher.

The shared knowledge of place offers unusual common ground for exploring disciplinary intersections.

two students sampling grasses
square plots of diverse herbs and shrubs

Education and outreach helps LTER science make an impact


The longer tenure of LTER sites also makes them particularly well-suited to developing the relationships needed to engage with stakeholders, educators, and the public.

All LTER sites have an education and outreach component, although the exact nature of the program varies by site. Remote forested sites may deal mainly with foresters and landowners, while urban sites may more closely engage community residents.

Data, especially data management, play a crucial role


The value of LTER’s long-term data resource is immense and LTER data managers have been leaders in the movement to ensure that ecological data is accessible and usable.

Dedicated information managers document and archive LTER data in public repositories so that they can be re-used by the broader scientific community.

The Environmental Data Initiative (EDI) is LTER’s primary data repository and has a strong record of serving FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reproducible) data. Occasionally, LTER datasets reside in disciplinary- or geographically-focused repositories and EDI maintains metadata referencing the full dataset.

Network Vision, Mission, & Goals


Vision


LTER envisions a society in which exemplary science contributes to the advancement of the health, productivity, and welfare of the global environment that, in turn, advances the health, prosperity, welfare, and security of our nation.

Thus, LTER’s mission is to provide the scientific community, policy makers, and society with the knowledge and predictive understanding necessary to conserve, protect, and manage the nation’s ecosystems, their biodiversity, and the services they provide.

Mission


The LTER Network was founded in 1980 by the National Science Foundation with the recognition that long-term research could help unravel the principles and processes of ecological science, which frequently involves long-lived species, legacy influences, and rare events. As policymakers and resource managers strive to incorporate reliable science in their decision making, the LTER Network works to generate and share useful and usable information.

Goals


Understanding

To understand a diverse array of ecosystems at multiple spatial and temporal scales.

Synthesis

To create general knowledge through long-term, interdisciplinary research, synthesis of information, and development of theory.

Outreach

To reach out to the broader scientific community, natural resource managers, policymakers, and the general public by providing decision support, information, recommendations, and the knowledge and capability to address complex environmental challenges.

Education

To promote training, teaching, and learning about long-term ecological research and the Earth’s ecosystems, and to educate a new generation of scientists.

Information

To inform the LTER and broader scientific community by creating well-designed and well-documented databases.

Legacies

To create a legacy of well-designed and documented long-term observations, experiments, and archives of samples and specimens for future generations.

Core Themes


Five core research themes have been central to LTER Network science from the conception of the Network. Research in these core areas requires the involvement of many scientific disciplines, over long time spans and broad geographic scales. Data on the core areas are collected to establish and understand the existing conditions in an ecosystem before any experimental manipulation is begun.

The common focus on core areas facilitates comparison among and across sites in the Network.

Primary Production – Plant growth in most ecosystems forms the base or “primary” component of the food web. The amount and type of plant growth in an ecosystem helps to determine the amount and kind of animals (or “secondary” productivity) that can survive there. Read LTER research stories related to primary production.

Population Studies – Populations of plants, animals, and microbes change in space and time, moving resources and restructuring ecological systems. Read LTER research stories related to population studies.

Movement of Organic Matter – An entire ecosystem relies on the recycling of organic matter (and the nutrients it contains), including dead plants, animals, and other organisms. Decomposition of organic matter and its movement through the ecosystem is an important component of the food web. Read LTER research stories related to organic matter movement.

Movement of Inorganic Matter – Nitrogen, phosphorus, and other mineral nutrients are cycled through the ecosystem by way of decay and disturbances such as fire and flood. In excessive quantities nitrogen and other nutrients can have far-reaching and harmful effects on the environment. Read LTER research stories related to mineral cycling.

Disturbance Patterns – Disturbances often shape ecosystems by periodically reorganizing structure, allowing for significant changes in plant and animal populations and communities. Read LTER research stories related to disturbance patterns.

Two additional themes emerged with the addition of urban LTER sites, but it has become clear that they are also relevant for the rest of the Network:

Land Use and Land Cover Change: examine the human impact on land use and land-cover change in urban systems and relate these effects to ecosystem dynamics. Read LTER research stories related to land use and land cover change.

Human-Environment Interactions: monitor the effects of human-environmental interactions in urban systems, develop appropriate tools (such as GIS) for data collection and analysis of socio-economic and ecosystem data, and develop integrated approaches to linking human and natural systems in an urban ecosystem environment. Read LTER research stories related to human-environment interactions.

Well into its fourth decade, the LTER’s long-term experiments continue to reveal cutting edge ecological processes only gleaned through long-term study.

We can’t wait to see what the next forty years bring.


Recent Stories

  • When science meets policy: a grad student’s experience on the Hill

    From the KBS LTER – Every year the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and the Soil Science Society of America (ASA-CSSA-SSSA) hold a Congressional Visits Day (CVD) in Washington, D.C. during appropriations season. The goal is to have a strong presence of faculty, students, and crop advisors advocating for agricultural and……

    Read More >>

  • NSF Discovery article on LTER: How much fertilizer is too much for Earth’s climate?

    Helping farmers around the globe to apply more precise amounts of fertilizer nitrogen can combat climate change, according to a study published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Part 15 of the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Discovery Series focuses on the study, “Global metaanalysis of the nonlinear response of……

    Read More >>

  • CCE’s Ohman and colleague explain the El Nino effect in NSF Discovery article

    To celebrate World Oceans Day on June 8, the National Science Foundation (NSF) interviewed biological oceanographer Mark Ohman and physical oceanographer Dan Rudnick of California’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography about the El Niño effect. But is El Niño really on the horizon? Ohman is PI of the California Current Ecosystem (CCE) Long Term Ecological Research……

    Read More >>

  • NSF Discovery article on LTER work peers into the future

    As we celebrate Earth Day 2014, a new article in a series on the National Science Foundation’s Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network highlights LTER research that seeks to understand what our world will look like in the foreseeable future. “Earth Day in the Future: What Will It Be Like? is part thirteen in the Discovery……

    Read More >>

  • Farming for improved ecosystem services seen as economically feasible

    Benefits to water and soil quality plus climate stabilization achieved with good crop yields By changing row-crop management practices in economically and environmentally stable ways, US farms could contribute to improved water quality, biological diversity, pest suppression, and soil fertility while helping to stabilize the climate, according to an article in the May issue of……

    Read More >>