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1995 NSF/DOE/NASA/USDA Joint Program Awards Terrestrial Ecology and Global Change

Dynamics of Bilogically Available C and N Across the Tundra Landscape; Forest Change in a Boreal Transition Region: Productivity, Nutrient Cycling and Biodiversity at Multiple Scales; Homeostatic Adjustment of Loblolly Pine to CO2 Enrichment in a Forest Ecosystem; Plant Nitrogen Budgets Under Elevated Carbon Dioxide Levels: Regulation by Nitrogen Absorption and Assimiliation; Predicting Decomposition Dynamics of Woody Detritus of Forest Ecosystems; Predicting the response of terrestrial ecosystems to elevated CO2 and climate change: a modeling and experimental collaboration; Shortgrass steppe

Comparison of Carbon Dynamics of Two Conifer Forest Regions: Northwestern Russia & the Pacific North

Comparison of Carbon Dynamics of Two Conifer Forest Regions: Northwestern Russia & the Pacific Northwest, USA Proceedings of an International Workshop Compiled and Edited by Olga N. Krankina & Mark E. Harmon Sponsored by the National Science Foundation (DEB 9416281, BSR 9011663, International Programs) NASA Terrestrial Ecology Program USFS Pacific Northwest Research Station Hosted by the Department of Forest Science Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon April 9-23, 1995

Network News Issue 17 Spring 1995

LTER NETWORK NEWS – newsletter of the Long Term Ecological Research Network, Issue 17 Spring/Summer 1995

Winter 1995 Executive Committee Meeting Minutes

LTER Executive Committee Notes-January 13, 1995-Washington D.C. A proposal is on the table to modify the LMER program into LTER. This will be initiated by a workshop lead by Hobbie and Hayden, to formulate a working plan.

17. International Networking in Long-Term Ecological Research: Proc

LTER Network Office Publication #17: International Networking in Long-Term Ecological Research: Proceedings of an International Summit This book, published in 1994, represents the nascent effort to solidify an International LTER network. Hosted by the NSF and the LTER Network Office, representatives from 16 countries presented their long-term research and their interests in forming an International LTER Network

18. El Nino & Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Sites

Greenland, David. (ed). 1994. El Nino and Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Sites. Publication No. 18. LTER Network Office: University of New Mexico, Albuquerque USA. 57 pp. Six papers, or shorter contributions, describe studies of analysis of climatic, or proxy climatic, data at or near the following five LTER sites: Sevilleta (NM), Niwot Ridge (CO), Andrews (OR), Konza Prairie (KS), and North Temperate Lakes (WI). LTER areas and regions for the most part display El Nino signals consistent to those already found in continental scale studies.