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Notes from the Forest

Tag: Carbon

Harper's Features HF Research in Warming Soil

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Large Experiments & Permanent Plot Studies
  • Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics

NYT Op-Ed Poses Wood Building & Forest Conservation as Climate Solutions

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Conservation and Management

Registration Open for Schoolyard Ecology Teacher Workshop

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Invasive Plants
  • Pests and Pathogens

New Grant: Gypsy Moth, Carbon Storage, and Tree Mortality

  • Invasive Plants
  • Pests and Pathogens
  • Physiological Ecology, Population Dynamics, and Species Interactions

Study: Decades of Tree Rings Extend Today's High-Tech Climate Stories

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Regional Studies

Registration Open: Schoolyard Ecology Workshop for Teachers

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Conservation and Management
  • Invasive Plants

Study: In Warmer Future, More Fire, Fewer Trees in Klamath

  • Biodiversity Studies
  • Conservation and Management
  • Ecological Informatics and Modelling

2018 Ecology Symposium Highlights 30 Years of Long-Term Research

  • Biodiversity Studies
  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Conservation and Management

News from Capitol Hill: SPE Leader Presents Co-Benefits of Power Plant Standards

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Ecological Informatics and Modelling
  • Regional Studies

Study: Warmer Forest Soils Release More Carbon, Accelerating Future Warming

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Large Experiments & Permanent Plot Studies
  • Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics

New Study: Carbon Standards to Bring Annual Health Benefits to Most U.S. Counties

  • Ecological Informatics and Modelling
  • Regional Studies

Study: Snowfall Linked to Tree Growth and Function

  • Climate and Carbon Exchange
  • Large Experiments & Permanent Plot Studies
  • Physiological Ecology, Population Dynamics, and Species Interactions
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AmeriFlux site since 1996
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ForestGEO site since 2014

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The Harvard Forest is a department of Harvard University‘s Faculty of Arts & Sciences and a member of the U.S. LTER Network supported by the National Science Foundation. Learn more about our funders.

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Harvard Forest is committed to establishing and maintaining a diverse and inclusive community that collectively supports and implements our mission: the investigation, understanding, and communication of the ways in which physical, biological, and human systems interact to change our Earth.  All should feel that they are critical members of the Harvard Forest community—whatever their identities—while working, studying, visiting, or living here.  We will welcome, recruit, develop, and advance talented staff, students, and visitors from diverse backgrounds, and strive to ensure that all are included in our mission.


We are working in community with the Nipmuc tribe to set a foundation to build a relationship that makes an authentic land acknowledgement possible.