You are here
Press Resources: Harvard Forest Carbon Synthesis - August 4, 2020
Press Release: In a Warming World, New England's Trees Are Storing More Carbon
Scientific paper in Ecological Monographs: Carbon budget of the Harvard Forest Long-Term Ecological Research site: pattern, process, and response to global change (direct link to article on journal website here)
Media Contact: Audrey Barker Plotkin, Harvard Forest Senior Ecologist (co-lead author of study), aabarker@fas.harvard.edu, 978-756-6168
Photographs
(click image to download high-res)
An eddy-flux tower measures atmospheric carbon dioxide entering and leaving a declining hemlock stand at Harvard Forest. Photo by David Foster.
The world's longest-running eddy-flux tower, the Harvard Forest Environmental Measurements Station, measures atmospheric carbon dioxide entering and leaving an oak-maple forest. Photo by David Foster.
An automated soil respiration chamber measures carbon dioxide emitted by the soil as plant roots and microscopic organisms use energy. Photo by Marc-Andre Giasson.
Student researcher Kalaina Thorne measures the growth of maple tree seedlings in a long-term study plot at Harvard Forest. Photo by Jill Fusco.
Senior ecologist Audrey Barker Plotkin works with student researchers Collette Yee and Kate Eisen to measure trees in a long-term study plot. Photo by Moshe Roberts.
Post-doctoral fellow David Basler launches a research drone above the canopy. Photo by David Foster.
Post-doctoral fellow Tim Rademacher and student researcher Kyle Wyche measure the respiration of an oak tree at Harvard Forest. Photo by Sara Plisinski.