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Carbon
At Harvard Forest, carbon--a crucial building block of life--is studied in the atmosphere, in the soil, and in trees, decaying wood, and freshwater streams. It is a subject of interest to virtually every scientist at the Forest.
Climate change is closely linked to a global increase in carbon dioxide from human sources. Many of the Forest's long-term experiments seek to understand how forests, plants, and animals respond to--and may help mitigate--these changes.
Carbon studies include:
- the world's longest continuous record of carbon exchange between a forest and the atmosphere
- research in soils, where 2/3 of the world's global carbon is stored
- watershed biogeochemistry
- regional work related to public policy