Mention “diversity” to most ecologists, and they start talking about species richness. Indeed, LTER leads the way investigating how biodiversity enhances ecosystem productivity, efficiency, and stability. The LTER Network has an opportunity to likewise take a prominent leadership role fostering a diverse scientific community and supporting the full inclusion and participation of all its members. This human diversity will help position LTER on the cutting edge of a constantly-evolving discipline and ensure that our science remains both relevant and robust for the next hundred years. Our thinking about the human diversity of our scientific community tends to focus on recruitment efforts, outreach to targeted communities, and programs to engage kids in ecology from a young age. When people join an LTER site, however, they need to find a scientific community that goes beyond “tolerance” and “acceptance” to actively support the full inclusion of scientists who differ in many ways from our current, unspoken, norms. It can be uncomfortable to take a look at our own practices and cultures within LTER sites and our home institutions, but it is critical that we ask what we are doing to support all people within an increasingly diverse LTER community.
Top Stories

Leveraging Generative AI: Applications for the LTER Network

Three new SPARC Synthesis Groups demonstrate the value of long-term data collected across ecosystems

Listening First: How KBS is Expanding the Reach of Conservation Research

Ecology: The Science of Resiliency

Boxes and boxes of bees—a Sevilleta LTER dataset highlight

Site Exchange Fellows Announced

LTER Graduate Students and Postdocs Summer Mentoring Community of Practice

Collaboration with Shellfishers: an APEAL Seed Project

Letting art do the work that science cannot: Bonanza Creek’s In a Time of Change program

Request for Synthesis Proposals 2025