The LTER Network makes data available online with as few restrictions as possible. LTER data is reviewed for errors and inconsistencies and thoroughly documented so that it can be incorporated into broader comparative and synthetic studies. LTER Information Managers, stationed at each LTER site, work to ensure that LTER data is reviewed for errors and inconsistencies and thoroughly documented so that it can be incorporated into broader comparative and synthetic studies.

LTER data form the backbone of long-term ecological inquiry. Freely available data are used and reused many times over, often to answer unexpected questions years after their collection. And, data form the backbone of cross-site synthesis, both within the LTER network and beyond.

How to access LTER data

Environmental Data Initiative

The Environmental Data Initiative (EDI) is the main repository for LTER data. EDI is an environmental data repository that curates and maintains data from many environmental science research programs — especially those funded through NSF’s Division of Environmental Biology. It grew out of the information management systems and practices of the LTER Network and was established as an independent program in 2016.

Regional Repositories

LTER data are also available through disciplinary or regional repositories such as the Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO), the Arctic Data Center, the Dryad Digital Repository, and others. The most comprehensive search of public data at this time is available via the DataONE Federation, LTER member node.

Local Site Catalogues

Many LTER sites also have a local data catalog that includes LTER and non-LTER data, presented in a way that is most usable for site-based researchers. It may also include data that are not yet publicly available because it hasn’t been cleaned and documented or because manuscripts using the data haven’t yet been submitted to journals.

Credit: Jornada Basin LTER (right) & Moorea Coral Reef LTER (left), CC BY-SA 4.0.

Using LTER Data: Best Practices

We love it when LTER data can contribute to scientific discovery and environmental management in unexpected ways and we encourage researchers to cite LTER data using the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) associated with each data package.

When using data collected by another investigator, it is both courteous and wise to make direct contact with the investigator before incorporating the data into your analyses. Contact information and funding sources are available in the metadata associated with each data package.

The LTER Data Access Policy was last updated at the 2017 LTER Science Council Meeting. Guidelines for LTER information management systems were updated in Fall, 2017.

LTER Data Community

LTER Information Managers have a strong cross-site community, with weekly watercooler meetings to share all sorts of data management ideas plus formal meetings across the network. They also publish the DataBits Newsletter approximately twice a year, with updates on information activities at sites and deep dives into topics of interest to LTER and other Environmental Information Managers. All current and past issues are available in the LTER DataBits archive.

Recent DataBits Stories

  • DataBits Newsletter, Fall 2001

    Reports from information management workshops across the globe, a review of tools for importing structured text files into relational databases, and a comprehensive report on efforts to create a metadata standard for models and data sets from ecological simulation modeling efforts at Luquillo Experimental Forest. DataBits continues as a semi-annual electronic publication of the Long……

    Read More >>

  • DataBits Newsletter, Spring 2001

    A Custom data management system, International LTER Information Management Workshop, The NASA Scientific Data Purchase Program, and Web-based data entry for dummies. DataBits continues as a semi-annual electronic publication of the Long Term Ecological Research Network. It is designed to provide a timely, online resource for research information managers and to incorporate rotating co-editorship. Availability……

    Read More >>

  • DataBits Newsletter, Fall 2000

    According to most of the plenary addresses of the 2000 All Scientists Meeting in Snowbird, Utah, ecologicalresearchers must “think outside the box”. Sociologists, modelers, climatologists, paleoecologists, remotesensing specialists, and science administrators all emphasized the need of ecological scientists to becomecomfortable with multiple disciplines and define questions that are significant in each of these fieldssimultaneously. Only……

    Read More >>

  • DataBits Newsletter, Spring 2000

    Featured in this issue: Data management tools & resources, 2000 All-Scientists Meeting DataBits continues as a semi-annual electronic publication of the Long Term Ecological Research Network. It is designed to provide a timely, online resource for research information managers and to incorporate rotating co-editorship. Availability is through web browsing as well as hardcopy output. LTER……

    Read More >>

  • DataBits Newsletter, Fall 1999

    Featured in this issue: an overview of the recently funded NSF/KDI Biodiversity partnership plans in addition to a variety of approaches to metadata, conferencing, visualization and training. DataBits continues as a semi-annual electronic publication of the Long Term Ecological Research Network. It is designed to provide a timely, online resource for research information managers and……

    Read More >>

LTER Site Information Managers

Site NameData Manager
Andrews Forest LTERSuzanne Remillard
Arctic LTERJames Laundre
Baltimore Ecosystem StudyMary Martin
Beaufort Lagoon Ecosystems LTERTim Whiteaker
Bonanza Creek LTERJason Downing
California Current Ecosystem LTERMarina Frants
Cedar Creek LTERDan Bahauddin
Central Arizona - Phoenix LTERStevan Earl
Coweeta LTER
Florida Coastal Everglades LTERGabriel Kamener
Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTERAdam Sapp
Harvard Forest LTEREmery Boose
Hubbard Brook LTERMary Martin
Jornada Basin LTERGreg Maurer
Kellogg Biological Station LTERSven Bohm
Konza Prairie LTERYang Xia
LTER Network Office (UCSB)Nick Lyon
Luquillo LTERMiguel Leon
McMurdo Dry Valleys LTERRenée F. Brown
Minneapolis-St. Paul LTERMary Marek-Spartz
Moorea Coral Reef LTERHillary Krumbholz
Niwot Ridge LTERSarah Elmendorf
North Temperate Lakes LTERMark Gahler
Northeast U.S. Shelf LTERKate Morkeski
Northern Gulf of Alaska LTERChris Turner
Palmer Antarctica LTERSage Lichtenwalner
Plum Island Ecosystems LTERRisa McNellis
Santa Barbara Coastal LTERLi Kui
Sevilleta LTERAra Winter
Shortgrass Steppe LTER
Virginia Coast Reserve LTERJohn Porter
[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]