2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.12.001
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Genesis, goals and achievements of Long-Term Ecological Research at the global scale: A critical review of ILTER and future directions

Abstract: Since its founding in 1993 the International Long-term Ecological Research Network (ILTER) has gone through pronounced development phases. The current network comprises 44 active member LTER networks representing 700 LTER Sites and ~80 LTSER Platforms across all continents, active in the fields of ecosystem, critical zone and socio-ecological research. The critical challenges and most important achievements of the initial phase have now become state-of-the-art in networking for excellent science. At the same t… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
137
0
2

Year Published

2018
2018
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
8
1
1

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 209 publications
(146 citation statements)
references
References 61 publications
1
137
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Ecologists in many nations saw the opportunity and need for international collaboration among longterm ecological research sites to better quantify ecological change across spatial scales. Today in 40 nations, the independent ILTER Association includes about 800 place-based LTERs and an impressive array of facilities, scientific expertise, and enormous data legacies with time series that span over a century with increasingly standardized metadata (Mirtl et al, 2018). The LTERs are located from the Arctic to Antarctica and study forests, prairies, tundra, deserts, cities, agricultural fields, and a variety of estuarine, nearshore coastal, and coastal ocean sites.…”
Section: Iltersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ecologists in many nations saw the opportunity and need for international collaboration among longterm ecological research sites to better quantify ecological change across spatial scales. Today in 40 nations, the independent ILTER Association includes about 800 place-based LTERs and an impressive array of facilities, scientific expertise, and enormous data legacies with time series that span over a century with increasingly standardized metadata (Mirtl et al, 2018). The LTERs are located from the Arctic to Antarctica and study forests, prairies, tundra, deserts, cities, agricultural fields, and a variety of estuarine, nearshore coastal, and coastal ocean sites.…”
Section: Iltersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We compared the efficiency by comparing proportion of recovered macroinvertebrate reads from eDNA samples as well as number of OTUs for three different primer pairs. To this end, we collected eDNA at multiple stations of a German Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) (Mirtl et al 2018) site, the river Kinzig catchment. For this LTER site biodiversity data, especially benthic macroinvertebrate occurrences, have been compiled for over two decades allowing the validation of eDNA results.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It will allow the release of data, metadata and instruments to the marine scientific community and to the environmental managers This activity is fully in line with the data management plan of the LTER networks, at the national, European and global level, since one of the LTER mandates is actually to foster open sharing of LTER data, in order to advance socio-ecological research and education (Mirtl 2010, Mirtl et al 2018. The ultimate impact of EcoNAOS on the LTER and on the wider community of marine ecologists will be related to a process of gradual change in the perspective of the opening research process.…”
Section: Expected Impactmentioning
confidence: 99%