Andrew is co-PI on a funded grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, “Ecological and Social Science Training and Education at the Intersection of Forests, Fires and Floods in a Changing Climate (ESSTE),” on which close collaborator George Koch is lead PI. The project will help prepare NAU students to address climate change in western forest ecosystems. For more information, see the NAU News article.
Natasha attends workshop in Namibia
Natasha had the opportunity to participate in a workshop focused on phenological monitoring in the dry tropics, which was held at the Ongava Research Centre in Namibia. The workshop was organized as part of the PhenoChange project, coordinated by Kyle Dexter of the University of Edinburgh. Natasha met colleagues from around the world, presented the lab’s own work with the PhenoCam Network and applications to modeling ecosystem processes, assisted with field work, and even went on a few Safari drives!
Thermal imaging of canopy temperature
Sophie Fauset, from the University of Plymouth, and her student William Brown, visited the lab for a week in early November. Sophie is PI of the netCTF, or Network for Monitoring Canopy Temperature of Forests, a project funded by the U.K.’s Natural Environment Research Council in 2020. Sophie and William presented their work at the BiFOR (Birmingham Institute of Forest Research) FACE (Free Air CO2 Enrichment) facility in the UK and at the Forestry Research Institute of Ghana in a mini-symposium on canopy temperature that was organized by Jen. Jen, Mostafa, Sophie, and William also worked together on camera calibration and image processing protocols, including head-to-head field testing of thermal cameras manufactured by FLUKE and FLIR.
New RMBL paper in ERL
Mariah’s paper, “Interannual precipitation controls on soil CO2 fluxes in high elevation conifer and aspen forests,” has been published in Environmental Research Letters. This work is the result of a dozen years of field measurements (with some help from Andrew) at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory in Gothic, Colorado. The analysis shows that soil CO2 fluxes are sensitive to rainfall in the current growing season, as well as snowfall in the previous winter. Our newly-funded DOE project, leveraging the Snodgrass mountain transect, will build on these results.
New PhenoCam Review in AFM
Andrew’s review paper, “PhenoCam: An evolving, open-source tool to study the temporal and spatial variability of ecosystem-scale phenology,” which was solicited for the 60th anniversary Special Issue of Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, has now been published online. The review describes (1) the changing phenological research landscape, as represented by phenology-themed papers in AFM, over the last 60 y; (2) the contributions of phenocams and the PhenoCam Network, as reported in the pages of AFM, to the study of phenology; and (3) the lessons we learned from developing this grassroots effort. It also tells the story of the development and evolution of PhenoCam Network, and the fortuitious discoveries that led to PhenoCam. Thanks to AFM editors, Claudia Wagner-Riddle and Timothy Griffis, for the invitation to write this review!
2023 AmeriFlux Annual Meeting
Yujie and Mostafa attended the AmeriFlux meeting in central Massachusetts, which included a visit to Harvard Forest. Lab work presented at the meeting centered around the AmeriFlux Year of Remote Sensing theme. Yujie talked about her work on filling long gaps using boosted regression tree methods and including PhenoCam Gcc as a covariate, while Mostafa talked about canopy temperature measurements using thermal imaging. Andrew gave a virtual overview of PhenoCam (link to video), which was followed by former postdoc Adam Young’s presentation on integrating PhenoCam and tower flux measurements.
The usual group photo is below—who do you recognize?
Jenn Rudgers visits from UNM
In early October, Jenn Rudgers, Regents’ and Distinguished Professor of Biology at the University of New Mexico and Director, Sevilleta Long-Term Ecological Research Program, visited NAU and presented in the Ecoinformatics Seminar. Her seminar title was “Environmental variability at dryland ecotones: Research from the Sevilleta LTER.” Jenn’s presentation focused on the potential impacts of changing climate variance, rather than just changes in the mean climate. She talked about some of the underlying theory, gave several examples of recent studies from Sevilleta that help understand the ecological impacts of changing climate variance, and described the new Sevilleta Mean x Variance Experiment, which is being conducted in five different ecosystem types at the LTER. Thanks for your visit, Jenn!
Darby participates in Story Collider
Darby joined a group of Ecoss graduate students and faculty who participated in the Story Collider event at Kitt Recital Hall. The evening was organized as part of the Flagstaff Festival of Science, and was sponsored by NPRs Story Collider podcast and the Writing Class Radio podcast. The presenters, who had spent months developing and polishing their work, bravely shared stories that merged personal lives with science lives, in ways that were emotionally charged, deeply personal, and frequently humorous. After the event, Prof. Jane Marks wrote, “the audience laughed, they gasped, and I think a few shed some tears. It was a beautiful, moving show.” Congratulations, Darby!
Visit from Johanna Kranz, TU Dresden
For two weeks in September, we had a visit from Johanna Kranz, a PhD student from TU Dresden. Johanna (3rd from left in the back row, below) is working on the PhenoFeedbacks project under the guidance of J. Prof. Dr. Matthias Forkel. Johanna gave a presentation in the Ecoinformatics seminar, and interacted with faculty and students across campus. She also explored many of our local scenic wonders, including Walnut Canyon, the Grand Canyon, Red Mountain, and Sunset Crater. Before leaving town, Jacob and Jen took Johanna to the Lava River Cave northwest of Flagstaff for a below-ground (non-technical) spelunking adventure. Afterwards, Johanna wrote “Visiting Andrew’s lab was a great experience meeting other PhD students and postdocs and learning more about their different areas of research. I look forward to staying in touch and collaborating in the future!” Thank you for your visit, and your kind words, Johanna!
In the News: Our 10 y old computer at Bartlett Experimental Forest!
The Logic Supply 2013 AU140 computer (pictured below) that had been the brains of our Bartlett data collection system for over 10 y was recently the subject of a blog post. Check it out!