Patty Sprott
psprott@lternet.edu
The Long-term Ecological Research (LTER) Network's 2003
All Scientists Meeting will be held in Seattle from September 18-21
in association with the annual meeting of the Estuarine Research Federation.
There will be a joint session with ERF on the afternoon of Thursday,
September 18; the LTER meeting officially begins on September 19. There
will be a joint mixer for the two groups on Thursday evening, and the
LTER meeting will continue through Sunday. ERF members are invited to
stay for the LTER meeting. Details on the agenda will be available on
the LTER web site (http://www.lternet.edu/).
The choice for an LTER/ERF joint session was an easy one says LTER Network
Office Executive Director Bob Waide. "There are five coastal LTER
sites, and they will all be attending the ERF meeting. Locating the
LTER meeting in Seattle and planning a joint session makes it very interesting
for everyone." The LTER coastal sites include Santa Barbara Channel
(Dan Reed), Florida Coastal Everglades (Dan Childers), Georgia Coastal
(Tim Hollibaugh and Steve Pennings), Virginia Coast Reserve (Bruce Hayden,
Karen McGlathery, and John Porter, PIs), and Plum Island Estuary (Chuck
Hopkinson).
Dan Childers is chairing the program committee for the joint session,
which will consist of an afternoon session and an evening social cohosted
by ERF and LTER. "The special joint session will be called 'Long-term
and large-scale patterns in coastal and freshwater aquatic ecosystems,'"
Childers says. Childers adds: "The goal of this session is to bring
coastal and estuarine scientists together with scientists from noncoastal
aquatic LTER sites, to address the common theme of large-scale comparisons....Our
hope is that this atypical mixing of these different scientific groups
will incubate new ideas and generate innovative collaborations for both
ERF and LTER scientists."
Overlapping Research Presentations
A mix of invited and contributed 15-minute oral presentations will follow
a 30-minute invited plenary talk. The list of invited speakers may include
three non-coastal aquatic LTER scientists, five coastal LTER scientists,
and two ERF scientists.
"While not necessarily part of the LTER network, LTER-types of
research are ongoing at many coastal and estuarine locations across
North America," says Rob Daoust, a graduate student who is also
on the joint-session program committee. "For example, NOAA funds
National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) sites in almost every single
coastal state. Scientists working at these sites will undoubtedly gain
insight from the lessons learnt and ecological approach taken by LTER
scientists.
Tiffany Troxler Gann, co-chair of the LTER Graduate Student Committee,
is also on the joint-session program committee. "Non-LTER folks
will have the opportunity to gain a greater understanding of what the
LTER Network seeks to accomplish, and to see how the ERF work fits into
that context." This opportunity to interact with ERF scientists
will benefit LTER scientists, Gann says. "The estuarine and coastal
systems are the downstream ecosystems of many LTER research sites, and
this meeting will accentuate how LTER work can be integrated with more
coastal ecosystems."
Group Connections
Gann notes that similar questions are addressed in both groups, "particularly
connectivity-an exceedingly important concept in both LTER and ERF research.
This joint session affords the opportunity for convergence and a stronger
understanding of ecosystem science."
The growing connection in LTER to urban ecosystem study sites may be
of further interest to ERF scientists. "Incorporating the urban
landscape into ecosystem studies has long been an important objective
of estuarine science," Gann says, "and both ERF and [LTER]
would benefit from the opportunity to share ideas and present research."
Gann and Daoust share the task of making sure student's interests are
well represented in the joint session. While still in nascent stages
of planning, topics discussed so far for student-led workshops include:
ecosystem services, cross-site studies, and organic matter cycling.
For the ERF participants who stay for the LTER meeting will benefit
from says Bob Waide, the benefits include the opportunity to network
with the many international scientists who will be in attendance.