Technological innovations have dramatically altered the tools and techniques available to researchers to study microscopic organisms. Microbes, such as bacteria, are very important to ecosystem processes, and researchers at the Ecosystems Center have studied microbes since the Center was founded. One of the earliest microbiology experiments at the Ecosystems Center was to test to what extent microbes contributed to decomposition of dead matter in an ecosystem. Funded by a series of National Science Foundation grants that started in 1979, researchers at the Ecosystems Center estimated microbes present in decaying marsh grass to help illuminate what organisms consumed the grass. The technique for counting microbes was developed by Ecosystems Center senior scientist John Hobbie and his colleagues in 1977.
Researchers at the Ecosystems Center tend to focus on the overall processes of microorganisms rather than cataloguing individual organisms. Until recently, it was impossible to classify every microorganism in an ecosystem because many microbes would not survive outside of that environment. So researchers focused on the overall microbial metabolism, such as the inputs and outputs of a microbe-rich ecosystem, and the rates at which microbes metabolize nutrients. Starting in the mid-1990s, Ecosystems Center researchers began using molecular biology techniques to estimate the microbial diversity of ecosystems. In 1996 Ecosystems Center scientists began to use genetic sequencing to identify microbes present at the Toolik Lake, Alaska, experimental site. Scientists use genetic sequencing to determine the DNA code of organisms. Once the code for an organism is determined, scientists compare it to other codes uploaded to an online database. Researchers use these data to identify the bacterial species in an ecosystem.
Recently, researchers from all disciplines at the Ecosystems Center have teamed up with a younger generation of microbiologists to study microbial ecology. Researchers can sequence the DNA of microbes in an ecosystem to estimate the diversity of microorganisms, and use RNA-based techniques to identify specific genes activated in a certain environment. These techniques have brought new insights to existing experiments at the Ecosystems Centers’ three Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) sites. For example, researchers at the Harvard Forest LTER have studied how soil-warming experiments have caused a change in the soil bacteria community. At the Plum Island Ecosystem LTER, Joseph Vallino has used mathematical models to describe the behavior of microorganisms to more accurately predict the effect of disturbances on an ecosystem. Researchers can then test these models through experiments in microcosm (a small ecosystem within a boundary such as a net or a jar) in the lab or in the field.
Stable Isotope Research
- Peterson et al. 1985
- Peterson and Frye, 1987
- http://www.uwyo.edu/sif/stable-isotopes/index.html
Computers and the Internet
- LTER Report: Internet and LTERs 1990
- LTER Report: Tech development LTERs 1991
- NSF Report http://www.nsfnet-legacy.org/about.php
Microbiology and Molecular Biology
- Hobbie et al. 1977
Historical Contet of Climate Change Research
- Canadell et al. 1999
Global Carbon Cycle Project
- Houton et al. 1983
- Moore et al. 1981
- Rastetter and Shaver 1992
Processed-based Models TEM and GEM
- Melillo et al. 1993
- Raich et al. 1991
- Rastetter et al. 1991
Long-term Ecological Research at the EC Historical Context
- Hagan 1992, An Entangled Bank
- Hobbie et al., 2006
Arctic Long Term Ecological Research: Toolik Lake, Alaska
- Chris Neill. https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embed...
- Hobbie and Kling, Eds, 2014, Alaska's Changing Arctic: Ecological Consequences for Tundra, Streams, and Lakes
- 1987 LTER NSF proposal
- 1998 LTER NSF proposal
- 2010 LTER NSF prososal
- http://arc-lter.ecosystems.mbl.edu/
Forest Long Term Ecological Research: Harvard Forest, Massachusetts
- http://science.energy.gov/ber/highlights/2013/ber-...
- Frey et al. 2013
- LTER 1 grant, 1988 http://harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu/sites/harvard...
- Melillo et al. 2002
Coastal Long Term Ecological Research: Plum Island Sound, Massachusetts
- Hayden et al. 1996 http://atlantic.evsc.virginia.edu/~bph/LTER_LMER/w...
- NSF LTER proposal 1998
- NSF LTER proposal 2002
- Valiela, 1995. Marine Ecological Processes.
- VIMS, Nutrient cycling: http://web.vims.edu/bio/shallowwater/ecosystem_pro...
Ocean Flux Program
- MBL. ND. "Ocean Flux Program." Ecosystems Center a the MBL. http://www.mbl.edu/ecosystems/conte/ofp/
- Chapin III, Stuart F., Pamela A. Matson, Peter M. Vitousek. 2012. Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology. Springer: New York.
- Conte, Maureen. 2014. "Particle Flux in the Deep Sargasso Sea The 35-Year Oceanic Flux Program Time Series." The Official Magazine of the Oceanography Society Oceanorgraphy. 27(1). http://tos.org/oceanography/assets/docs/27-1_conte...
Semester in Environmental Science Program
- The Ecosystems Center Report 2015-2016
- MBL. ND. "Student Projects." Ecosystems Center a the MBL. http://www.mbl.edu/ses/courses/projects/
- MBL. ND. "Semester in Enviromental Science." Ecosystems Center a the MBL. http://www.mbl.edu/ses/