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Hubbard Brook LTER

Home » Sites » Hubbard Brook LTER

Site Contacts

Lead Principal Investigator: Peter Groffman
Co-Lead Principal Investigator: Pamela Templer
Administrative Contact: Hazel Westney
Information Manager: Mary Martin
Education Contact: Amey Bailey
Broadening Participation Contact: Dayna De La Cruz
Site Grad Rep A: John Morgan
View all people at this site

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Site Details

Research Topics:
Vegetation structure and production; dynamics of detritus in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems; atmosphere-terrestrial-aquatic ecosystem linkages; heterotroph population dynamics; effects of human activities on ecosystems. Read More

Calcium Watershed Addition; Animal Population and Community Studies; Ice Storm Effects on Forest and Aquatic Ecosystems; Hubbard Brook Sandbox Studies; Snow Depth, Soil Frost and Nutrient Loss; Stream Ecosystem Research; Watershed 5 - Whole Tree Harvest; Transport and Fate of Trifluoroacetate; Regional Sugar Maple Study; Spatial patterns of tree species abundance; A Spatial Model of Soil Parent Material; Accumulation and Depletion of Base Cations in Forest Floors; Forest Floor Organic Matter following Logging in Northern Hardwoods; Is there missing S at the HBEF?; Increasing Atmospheric CO2 and Forest Water Use; The bedrock geology of the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest: Results of new 1:10,000 mapping; Characterizing fractured rock hydrology in the Mirror Lake Watershed

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Description:
The Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (HBEF) is a 3,160 hectare reserve located in the White Mountain National Forest, near Woodstock, New Hampshire. The on-site research program is dedicated to the long-term study of forest and associated aquatic ecosystems.
History:
The HBEF was established by the USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Research Station in 1955 as a major center for hydrologic research in New England. In the early 1960's, Dr. F. Herbert Bormann and others proposed the use of small watersheds to study element cycling. In 1963, the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study (HBES) was initiated by Bormann and Drs. Gene E. Likens and Noye M. Johnson, then on the faculty of Dartmouth College, and Dr. Robert S. Pierce of the USDA Forest Service. They proposed to use the small watershed approach at Hubbard Brook to study linkages between hydrologic and nutrient flux and cycling in response to natural and human disturbances, such as air pollution, forest cutting, land-use changes, increases in insect populations and climatic factors. Read More

The HBEF was established by the USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Research Station in 1955 as a major center for hydrologic research in New England. In the early 1960's, Dr. F. Herbert Bormann and others proposed the use of small watersheds to study element cycling. In 1963, the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study (HBES) was initiated by Bormann and Drs. Gene E. Likens and Noye M. Johnson, then on the faculty of Dartmouth College, and Dr. Robert S. Pierce of the USDA Forest Service. They proposed to use the small watershed approach at Hubbard Brook to study linkages between hydrologic and nutrient flux and cycling in response to natural and human disturbances, such as air pollution, forest cutting, land-use changes, increases in insect populations and climatic factors.

The first grant was awarded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to Bormann and Likens in 1963 to support the research of the HBES. Since that time there has been continuous support from the NSF and the USDA Forest Service. In 1988 the HBEF was designated as a Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site by the NSF. On-going cooperative efforts among diverse educational institutions, private institutions, government agencies, foundations and corporations have resulted in one of the most extensive and longest continuous data bases on the hydrology, biology, geology and chemistry of natural ecosystems.

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Location

Latitude: 43.94
Longitude: -71.751
Elevation: 590
Biome: Deciduous Forest
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Grant History:

    LTER-07: DEB–2224545
    LTER: Long Term Ecological Research at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest
    Start Date: March 1, 2023

    LTER-06B: DEB–1637685
    LTER: Long Term Ecological Research at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest
    Start Date: March 1, 2017

    LTER-06: DEB–1633026
    Long-Term Ecological Research at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest
    Start Date: February 1, 2016

    LTER-05: DEB–1114804
    Long-Term Ecological Research at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest
    Start Date: February 1, 2011

    LTER-04: DEB–0423259
    Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) at Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (HBR-LTER)
    Start Date: January 15, 2005

    LTER-03: DEB–9810221
    LTER: Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest
    Start Date: December 1, 1998

    LTER-02: DEB–9211768
    Long-term Ecological Research (LTER) at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest
    Start Date: September 1, 1992

Updated June 12, 2025

Key Research Findings

Unexpected Patterns of Streamwater Nitrogen Loss From Watersheds
Previously Declining Songbird Populations Show Signs of Stabilizing
Calcium is Critical to Forests Exposed to Acid Rain
Climate Change Affects Forest Productivity

View all key research findings
for this site

Hubbard Brook LTER News

REU at the Hubbard Brook LTER
Why Salamanders? A SSALTER Blog Post
Postdoctoral Research in Forest Nitrogen Cycling at Cornell and Hubbard Brook
Welcome to the Woods: New Beginnings in New Hampshire
Remaining Relevant: The Hubbard Brook Online Book
2024 Recruiting Interns, Hubbard Brook and Bartlett Experimental Forests
REU at the Hubbard Brook LTER
HBR's Young Voices of Science program now accepting applications for 2023
A researcher in an orange vest stands atop a brown and green forest floor with white sampling equipment in front of her and a round puck of soil below her feet.
Across fourteen LTERs, soil carbon is a “gatekeeper” on the nitrogen cycle
Looking down a bridge towards a green forest.
Cosmic Questions with Tremendous Practical Value: Exploring the Potential for Co-Production of Knowledge with Hubbard Brook in the White Mountain National Forest
REU opportunities at the Hubbard Brook LTER
Ready-to-teach R Environmental Datasets: the lterdatasampler R package
A shallow stream runs through red rocks amid a
Stream Dissolved Nitrogen Cycling Responds to Human Activity across the Landscape
Public engagement at LTER sites: Social scientists highlight role of communication specialists
Calling Activity of Birds in the White Mountain National Forest: Audio Recordings (2016 and 2018)
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Except where otherwise noted, material may be re-used under a Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 license.

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant # 1545288, 10/1/2015-9/30/19 and # 1929393, 09/01/2019-08/31/2024, and # 2419138, 08/01/2024-present . Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in the material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

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