01996nas a2200325 4500008004100000245006100041210005900102300001300161490000700174520104500181653003601226653002401262653002801286653003201314653002801346100002001374700002401394700001701418700001501435700001801450700001801468700001401486700001901500700001801519700001601537700001801553700001601571700001901587856006401606 2012 eng d00aLong-term ecological research in a human-dominated world0 aLongterm ecological research in a humandominated world a342 -3530 v623 a
The US Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network enters its fourth decade with a distinguished record of achievement in ecological science. The value of long-term observations and experiments has never been more important for testing ecological theory and for addressing today's most difficult environmental challenges. The network's potential for tackling emergent continent-scale questions such as cryosphere loss and landscape change is becoming increasingly apparent on the basis of a capacity to combine long-term observations and experimental results with new observatory-based measurements, to study socioecological systems, to advance the use of environmental cyberinfrastructure, to promote environmental science literacy, and to engage with decisionmakers in framing major directions for research. The long-term context of network science, from understanding the past to forecasting the future, provides a valuable perspective for helping to solve many of the crucial environmental problems facing society today.
10acoupled natural–human systems10acyberinfrastructure10aenvironmental education10aenvironmental observatories10asocioecological systems1 aRobertson, G.P.1 aCollins, Scott., L.1 aFoster, D.R.1 aBrokaw, N.1 aDucklow, H.W.1 aGragson, T.L.1 aGries, C.1 aHamilton, S.K.1 aMcGuire, A.D.1 aMoore, J.C.1 aStanley, E.H.1 aWaide, R.B.1 aWilliams, M.W. uhttps://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/62/4/342/243601