hbr-met-d18

Rain gauge used to measure precipitation at Hubbard Brook.

zukswert-grayjay-hbr

Gray jay on Mt. Field in the White Mountain National Forest.

zuckswert-weir-hbr

Weir 2 at Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest.

zukswert-trees-hbr

Trees turning yellow at the Hubbard Brook LTER.

zukswert-bridge-hbr

Bridge to Gorge Brook Trail, Mt. Moosilauke, White Mountain National Forest

songbird pops

Hubbard Brook researchers have been studying bird populations for over 50 years. This graph shows the number of birds breeding on a 10-hectare forest plot from 1969-2013. Neotropical migrants show a marked decline early in the record, followed by a stabilization of population more recently. Populations of hort-distance migrants and permanent residents have been stable throughout this period. Holmes, R.T. and Likens, G.E. 2016

Patterns

The streams at Hubbard Brook are closely interconnected with the forests around them. Ecological theory led us to expect that in the period that we have been measuring the stream chemistry (1963-present), stream nitrate concentrations should have increased because of the continuing deposition of air pollutant nitrogen on the ecosystem, and because the forests have matured and are no longer accumulating nitrogen. In contrast to those expectations, stream nitrate concentrations have declined in the last several decades, leading us to delve deeper into the nitrogen cycle of the forest to explain this surprising finding. Clare Nemes