TERRA - PNW Projects
TERRA-PNW projects range from site-level experiments
on plant and soil processes to whole ecosystem studies of carbon
dioxide and water vapor exchange with the atmosphere to regional
studies that use data from satellites and field observations in
biogeochemistry models to map the carbon balance of the Pacific
Northwest.
TERRA-PNW projects include leading the AmeriFlux network of about
120 research sites, where the goal is to understand how forests,
grasslands, shrublands and croplands influence and are influenced
by global climate change, and how climate and disturbance from human
activities affect the carbon balance of the land. AmeriFlux has
a pivitol role in the North American Carbon Program, which is part
of the US Carbon Cycle Science Program. Bev Law is the Science Chair
of AmeriFlux, where she is responsible for leading the science direction
of the network and synthesis of results across the network. Part
of this responsibility is to ensure that high quality data are collected
and produced for the AmeriFlux data archive for use in such synthesis
activities.
The TERRA-PNW lab projects include the Metolius
Flux sites (intermediate, young, and burn sites). The current
flux projects are funded by the Department of Energy. ORCA,
a study aimed at understanding disturbance and climate effects on
the carbon balance of Oregon and Northern California, is also funded
by DOE.
NASA has funded a variety of projects both in the
past and present. Current NASA projects include:
The EPA-STAR program funded the Regional Analysis
of Net Ecosystem Productivity
of Pacific Northwest Forests .
Finally, NOAA funded a recently completed project,
the Influence of Climate Variability
on the Productivity and Distribution of Ponderosa Pine Ecosystems
in the Pacific Northwest..
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