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Kellogg Biological Station LTER

Home » Sites » Kellogg Biological Station LTER

Site Contacts

Lead Principal Investigator: Nick Haddad
Co-Lead Principal Investigator: Sarah Evans
Administrative Contact: Heather Cayton
Research/Site Coordinator: Nameer Baker
Information Manager: Sven Bohm
Education Contact: Elizabeth Schultheis
REU Coordinator: Elizabeth Schultheis
Broadening Participation Contact: Nameer Baker
Site Grad Rep A: Thomas Zambiasi
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Site Details

Research Topics:
Ecological interactions underlying the productivity and environmental impact of production-level cropping systems; patterns, causes, and consequences of microbial, plant, and insect diversity in agricultural landscapes; gene transfer, community dynamics Read More

Most KBS LTER research is carried out in a series of 11 types of plant communities, ranging from annual corn-soybean-wheat rotations to late-successional deciduous forest. All communities are replicated within the landscape. Our experimental design provides four annual cropping systems managed with a range of chemical-input intensities (from full to zero chemical inputs); two perennial cropping systems (one herbaceous [alfalfa] and the other woody [Populus sp.]); and two successional communities (one historically tilled and one never tilled). In 1993 we added three additional communities to the design, for a total of 5 unmanaged communities that now include three later successional oldfields abandoned from cropping 40-60 years ago, three planted conifer stands, and three older-growth hardwood stands.

The design thus provides a wide range of replicated communities with the same pedogenic history that differ in key ecological characteristics (e.g. plant species diversity, productivity, litter quality, microclimate). This allows us to test specific hypotheses from which we can better infer the ecological mechanisms that confer productivity in row-crop ecosystems ? mechanisms that can then be tested with specific manipulative experiments. Baseline measurements are taken from all 11 community types, but not all communities are used to test every project hypothesis.

Read Less
Description:
The Kellogg Biological Station (KBS) is located in southwest Michigan in the eastern portion of the U.S. cornbelt, 50 km east of Lake Michigan in the SW corner of the state (42° 24' N, 85° 24' W, elevation 288 m). Annual rainfall at KBS averages 890 mm y-1 with about half falling as snow; potential evapotranspiration (PET) exceeds precipitation for about 4 months of the year. Mean annual temperature is 9.7° C. Read More

KBS is 1600 ha of cropping systems, successional communities, and small lakes. Surrounding KBS is a diverse, rural-to-semirural landscape typical of the U.S. Great Lakes and upper Midwest regions. The diversity of land use, soil and vegetation types, and aquatic habitats within a 50-km radius of the Station is high. Most of southwest Michigan is on the pitted outwash plain of the morainic system left by the last retreat of the Wisconsin glaciation, circa 12,000 years ago. Soils in the area developed on glacial till, and include well- and poorly-drained alfisols, mollisols, and entisols. Most regional soils are sandy loam and silty clay loam of moderate fertility, principal Station soils are Typic Hapludalfs.

Land use around KBS ranges from urban (Kalamazoo, with a metropolitan population of 160,000 is 20 km south of the Station) to rural; vegetation ranges from cultivated and early successional old fields to older growth oak-hickory and beech-maple forests; and aquatic habitats include more than 200 bodies of water of different morphometries, alkalinities, and degrees of eutrophication within 50 km. Cropping systems in the area are typical of the U.S. cornbelt -- mainly corn/soybean rotations with wheat of varying importance, and alfalfa an important forage crop. KBS yields are typical of yields elsewhere in the North Central Region. Most KBS LTER research is carried out in a series of 11 types of plant communities, ranging from annual corn-soybean-wheat rotations to late-successional deciduous forest. All communities are replicated within the landscape.

Our experimental design provides four annual cropping systems managed with a range of chemical-input intensities (from full to zero chemical inputs); two perennial cropping systems (one herbaceous [alfalfa] and the other woody [Populus sp.]); and two successional communities (one historically tilled and one never tilled). In 1993 we added three additional communities to the design, for a total of 5 unmanaged communities that now include three later successional oldfields abandoned from cropping 40-60 years ago, three planted conifer stands, and three older-growth hardwood stands. The design thus provides a wide range of replicated communities with the same pedogenic history that differ in key ecological characteristics (e.g. plant species diversity, productivity, litter quality, microclimate). This allows us to test specific hypotheses from which we can better infer the ecological mechanisms that confer productivity in row-crop ecosystems ? mechanisms that can then be tested with specific manipulative experiments. Baseline measurements are taken from all 11 community types, but not all communities are used to test every project hypothesis.

Read Less
History:
Land use around KBS ranges from urban (Kalamazoo, with a metropolitan population of 160,000 is 20 km south of the Station) to rural; vegetation ranges from cultivated and early successional old fields to older growth oak-hickory and beech-maple forests; and aquatic habitats include more than 200 bodies of water of different morphometries, alkalinities, and degrees of eutrophication within 50 km. Cropping systems in the area are typical of the U.S. cornbelt -- mainly corn/soybean rotations with wheat of varying importance, and alfalfa an important forage crop. KBS yields are typical of yields elsewhere in the North Central Region.

Location

Latitude: 42.4
Longitude: -85.4
Elevation: 288
Biome: Row Crop Agriculture
View Map

Grant History:

    LTER-07: DEB–2224712
    LTER: KBS – Ecological and Social Mechanisms of Resilience in Agroecosystems
    Start Date: December 1, 2022

    LTER-06B: DEB–1832042
    LTER: KBS – Mechanisms of Resilience in Agricultural Landscapes
    Start Date: December 1, 2018

    LTER-06: DEB–1637653
    LTER: The Ecology of Row Crop Ecosystems and Landscapes at the KBS LTER Site
    Start Date: December 1, 2016

    LTER-05: DEB–1027253
    The KBS LTER Project: Long-term Ecological Research in Row-crop Agriculture
    Start Date: February 1, 2011

    LTER-04: DEB–0423627
    The KBS LTER Project: Long-Term Ecological Research in Row-Crop Agriculture
    Start Date: December 1, 2004

    LTER-03: DEB–9810220
    LTER: Long-Term Ecological Research in Field Crop Ecosystems
    Start Date: December 15, 1998

    LTER-02: DEB–9211771
    LTER: Organisms in the Agricultural Landscape
    Start Date: September 1, 1992

Updated June 12, 2025

Key Research Findings

Consumer Willingness to Pay for Agriculture Ecosystem Services
Environmental Management can Mitigate Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Evolutionary Responses of Soil Microbes
A prairie strip growing in wheat at the KBS LTER Main Cropping Systems Experiment.
Landscape Diversity Enhances Pest Suppression

View all key research findings
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Kellogg Biological Station LTER News

REU at the Kellogg Biological Station LTER
Ten years later: an LTER synthesis working group leads to discovery and accelerates four careers
Planted prairie strips are safe for native pollinators
Helping students hear the stories that data tell
Postdoc in Agroecology | UMN
REU at the Kellogg Biological Station
Tiny But Mighty: How Flies Shape Agroecosystems
National Science Foundation logo
Research suggests natural selection can slow evolution, maintain similarities across generations
Research suggests natural selection can slow evolution, maintain similarities across generations
Partnerships make the Kellogg Biological Station go 'round
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
Similar invasive insects coexist through slight differences in environmental responses
REU Opportunities at the KBS LTER
National Science Foundation logo
Capturing carbon with crops, trees and bioenergy
Hannah Distinguished Professor of Ecology and/or Evolutionary Biology | Kellogg Biological Station
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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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