Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Leveraging LTER Sites for Sustainable Management: A Stakeholder Perspective

View through CrossRef
The KKL-JNF (Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael – Jewish National Fund) Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) network was established approximately 30 years ago, beginning with its first research site, Park Shaked. The network's goal was to develop methods for managing dryland ecosystems and to study management interventions in arid regions under changing climate conditions. Over the years, the network has expanded, adding additional long-term research sites across diverse ecosystems managed by KKL, including forests and various types of open lands. Furthermore, long-term monitoring plots have been incorporated. Today, the KKL-JNF LTER network includes five long-term research sites and approximately 80 long-term monitoring plots. These plots measure parameters such as rainfall amounts, rainfall infiltration depth, soil moisture content, plant species composition, and material and energy fluxes (e.g., carbon fixation and biomass production). The purpose of the KKL-JNF LTER network is to enhance understanding of ecological processes (e.g., desertification) and their impacts on ecosystem structure (such as landscape changes and species composition shifts), as well as to monitor ecosystem functioning and stability in the face of climate change. The knowledge gained from these studies helps explain how the system operate and reconstruct processes occurring within it, such as surface runoff in desert ecosystems. The data collected also aids in assessing the health and vitality of forests, quantifying ecosystem services, and managing forests and open lands sustainably. The link between long-term research findings, monitoring, and land management is a key element of KKL's land management practices. The uniqueness of the KKL-JNF LTER network lies in its measurement of uniform parameters across diverse ecosystems, including extreme arid, semi-arid, and Mediterranean environments. This diversity has enabled the implementation of two network-wide studies, involving over 15 researchers: The implementation of uniform research protocols; A study of the relationship between climate change and ecological systems, focusing on rainfall patterns, temperature changes, heatwaves, and primary production processes. The implementation of uniform research protocols; A study of the relationship between climate change and ecological systems, focusing on rainfall patterns, temperature changes, heatwaves, and primary production processes. We will present an overview of the network, highlight the uniqueness of the sites, and discuss the process of developing a successful network study. The long-term ecological research network provides a comprehensive database to support Israel's response to climate change and its ability to address key challenges related to this issue. The findings serve as a foundation for implementing management strategies aimed at mitigating the impacts of droughts and floods.
Title: Leveraging LTER Sites for Sustainable Management: A Stakeholder Perspective
Description:
The KKL-JNF (Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael – Jewish National Fund) Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) network was established approximately 30 years ago, beginning with its first research site, Park Shaked.
The network's goal was to develop methods for managing dryland ecosystems and to study management interventions in arid regions under changing climate conditions.
Over the years, the network has expanded, adding additional long-term research sites across diverse ecosystems managed by KKL, including forests and various types of open lands.
Furthermore, long-term monitoring plots have been incorporated.
Today, the KKL-JNF LTER network includes five long-term research sites and approximately 80 long-term monitoring plots.
These plots measure parameters such as rainfall amounts, rainfall infiltration depth, soil moisture content, plant species composition, and material and energy fluxes (e.
g.
, carbon fixation and biomass production).
The purpose of the KKL-JNF LTER network is to enhance understanding of ecological processes (e.
g.
, desertification) and their impacts on ecosystem structure (such as landscape changes and species composition shifts), as well as to monitor ecosystem functioning and stability in the face of climate change.
The knowledge gained from these studies helps explain how the system operate and reconstruct processes occurring within it, such as surface runoff in desert ecosystems.
The data collected also aids in assessing the health and vitality of forests, quantifying ecosystem services, and managing forests and open lands sustainably.
The link between long-term research findings, monitoring, and land management is a key element of KKL's land management practices.
The uniqueness of the KKL-JNF LTER network lies in its measurement of uniform parameters across diverse ecosystems, including extreme arid, semi-arid, and Mediterranean environments.
This diversity has enabled the implementation of two network-wide studies, involving over 15 researchers: The implementation of uniform research protocols; A study of the relationship between climate change and ecological systems, focusing on rainfall patterns, temperature changes, heatwaves, and primary production processes.
The implementation of uniform research protocols; A study of the relationship between climate change and ecological systems, focusing on rainfall patterns, temperature changes, heatwaves, and primary production processes.
We will present an overview of the network, highlight the uniqueness of the sites, and discuss the process of developing a successful network study.
The long-term ecological research network provides a comprehensive database to support Israel's response to climate change and its ability to address key challenges related to this issue.
The findings serve as a foundation for implementing management strategies aimed at mitigating the impacts of droughts and floods.

Related Results

Long-Term Ecological Research Over the Long Term: A Historian’s Perspective
Long-Term Ecological Research Over the Long Term: A Historian’s Perspective
There are many precedents for long-term research in the history of science. Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program’s current identity reflects significant change—intended and...
Beyond Conventional Science Communication: reflections and experiences after a decade of “Cammini LTER” in the LTER-Italy network
Beyond Conventional Science Communication: reflections and experiences after a decade of “Cammini LTER” in the LTER-Italy network
Since 2015 LTER-Italy researchers have planned and realized, the informal science-communication initiative known as  Cammini (Trails in Italian) LTER. Its primary aims were raising...
Long-Term Ecological Research and Lessons from Networked Lives
Long-Term Ecological Research and Lessons from Networked Lives
The Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program has affected how I conduct and evaluate ecological research. Working with the LTER program has given me a greater appreciation for ...
Trade-offs of Participation in the Long-Term Ecological Research Program: Immediate and Long-Term Consequences
Trade-offs of Participation in the Long-Term Ecological Research Program: Immediate and Long-Term Consequences
For those who may have skipped to this chapter and not read the 3 introductory chapters, the 36 essays, or the 4 evaluative chapters of this book, the answer to the burning questio...
An LTER Network Overview and Introduction to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Climatic Signal and Response
An LTER Network Overview and Introduction to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Climatic Signal and Response
Part II of this book deals with the quasi-quintennial timescale that is dominated by the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon. During the last 50 years, ENSO has operated...
Taking the Long View: Growing Up in the Long-Term Ecological Research Program
Taking the Long View: Growing Up in the Long-Term Ecological Research Program
The Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program has shaped me as a scientist by providing a collaborative environment and the opportunity to take a long-term, large-scale perspect...
An Anthropologist Joins the Long-Term Ecological Research Network
An Anthropologist Joins the Long-Term Ecological Research Network
Environmental science has no room for theoretical or methodological hegemony, and questions cannot be asked in the absence of purposeful design. Education must simultaneously engag...
My Evolution as a Long- Term Ecological Research Scientist
My Evolution as a Long- Term Ecological Research Scientist
My college education as a fish and fishery ecologist provided a solid base for my evolution to a scientist absorbed by the long-term ecology of lakes in the landscape. Graduate stu...

Back to Top