By studying the impacts of a changing climate on forests, ecosystems and forest-dependent communities, we can create climate adaptation and mitigation strategies for resilient landscapes. Learn more about this research by exploring the focus areas below.
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Researchers address problems in forest management and policy by using quantitative methods to reveal the science needed to manage forests and other natural resources.
Faculty Research Programs
Aerial Information Systems LaboratoryThe Aerial Information Systems laboratory is investigating a wide range of lightweight sensors for UAV application on both fixed wing and helicopters to support forest management, forest engineering, forest protection, wildlife habitat and search and rescue operations.
Website: http://ais.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Center for Intensive Planted-forest SilvicultureThe mission of this research is to understand and quantify the interactive effects of silvicultural activities and site conditions on maintaining and improving the productivity, health,and sustainability of intensively managed, planted forests in the Pacific Northwest.
Website: http://cips.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Forest Measurements and BiometricsThis research focuses on three major areas and seeks to develop or extend: imputation methods that support dynamic forest inventory, silvicultural planning, and habitat analysis; sampling and statistical methods to characterize and quantify status and change of selected attributes including biomass and carbon and applications of lidar to forest measurements and assessments.
Website: http://fmbl.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Management, Algorithms, and Remote SensingThis research is interested in active sustainable management of forest, by using various remote sensing techniques to acquire relevant information for the decision making process. Once raw data is collected, we develop, improve or test existing algorithms to supply the needed data for developing management plans or forecast forest dynamics. Our focus is in modeling forest understood in a broad sense using modern techniques, such as computer vision, fractals, or abstract algebra. The main instruments used for data acquisition are unmanned aerial systems equipped with lidar, RGB, and multispectral sensors.
Website: http://mars.forestry.oregonstate.edu/ -
This research focuses on understanding watershed conditions and processes in forested ecosystems and the effects of management activities and evaluating and improving soil and water quality and related practices and policies for forest operations. Projects include studying forest management effects on hydrology and water quality and assessment of forest road design and water quality effects.
Faculty Research Programs
Forest Echohydrology and Watershed Science LabThis laboratory conducts field, lab and modeling research on the impact of natural disturbance and land use on forest hydrology, water quality and aquatic ecosystem health and the hillslope stream reach and small catchment scale.
Website: http://fews.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Forest Soils LabWebsite: mailto:jeff.hatten@oregonstate.eduThe mission of the Forest Soils Lab is to understand the interaction of humans with forest ecosystems in the interest of sustainable management of forest, soil and water resources. This laboratory utilizes a balanced approach of basic and applied research to examine the links between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems at multiple scales through the study of soil, water, sediment, nutrients and carbon. Students are educated and encouraged to manage land responsibly in the face of climate change, population growth and other pressures on natural resources.
Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) LabOur goal is to create sustainable and resilient natural systems in which people engage with the Earth with reciprocity. Indigenous peoples have stewarded natural resources for millennia through their knowledge and traditional practices. The TEK Lab explores, facilitates, and honors the synergies between TEK, Western science, and other ways of knowing.
Website: https://tek.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Watershed Processes LaboratoryWebsite: http://people.forestry.oregonstate.edu/catalina-segura/This multidisciplinary research is centered around questions that deal with the interactions among fluvial geomorphology, hydrology and ecology at multiple scales.
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Uses a range of research tools and models to understand how species act, react and interact at many spatial and temporal scales. These dynamics take place in an environment that can change gradually or quite rapidly, which can directly or indirectly affect species and their inter-relationships.
Members of FES examine how species and systems interact, using tools such as simulation modeling, remote sensing, spatial statistics, and animated visualizations. Current work explores how carbon dynamics vary from the stand to the landscape, as well as how forest management affects carbon sequestration rates. Other research is examining the role of predators in structuring ecological communities, emphasizing the role of keystone species in community regulation. Still others in the department study bird and insect response to different forest management practices.
- Chris Adlam
- Loren Albert
- John Bailey
- Matthew Betts
- Renee Brooks
- Jacob Bukoski
- Lisa Ganio
- Andrew Gray
- Joan Hagar
- Mark Harmon
- Becky Kerns
- Meg Krawchuk
- Barb Lachenbruch
- Beverly Law
- Daniel Luoma
- Brenda McComb
- Steven Perakis
- Klaus Puettmann
- William Ripple
- Jim Rivers
- David Shaw
- Tom Spies
- Chris Still
- German Vargas Gutierrez
- Dana Warren
- Steven Wondzell
- David Woodruff
Researchers
Faculty Research Programs
Betts Forest Landscape Ecology LabProfessor Matthew Betts and his team studies the ways that landscape composition and pattern influence animal behavior, species distributions and ecosystem function. As humans are one of the primary drivers of landscape characteristics globally, much of their work is applied and focused on management and conservation. However, understanding mechanisms is key to generalization, so a central part of the research program is basic in nature and links landscape ecology to behavioral ecology, physiology, and molecular ecology.
Website: http://www.fsl.orst.edu/flel/index.htmForest Animal Ecology LabThe Forest Animal Ecology Lab is headed by Assistant Professor Jim Rivers. The research questions he pursues are grounded in both basic and applied principles, and nearly all are investigated through empirical field studies of wild populations in forested ecosystems. Some of the lab's current projects include studies that are examining bee community response to biofuel harvest, testing the demographic response of early seral birds to herbicides, and evaluating the impacts of supplemental feeding on the behavior and physiology of songbirds.
Website: https://fael.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Global Trophic Cascades ProgramThe Global Trophic Cascades Program is a research and educational program with the purpose of investigating the role of predators in structuring ecological communities. This program puts special emphasis on the role of potential keystone species in top-down community regulation, with linkages to biodiversity via trophic cascades. OSU Distiguished Professor Bill Ripple is the director of the program.
Website: http://trophiccascades.forestry.oregonstate.edu/H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest and Long-Term Ecological Research SiteThe mission of the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest is to support research on forests, streams, and watersheds, and to foster strong collaboration among ecosystem science, education, natural resource management, and the humanities. Located in the western Cascade mountains of Oregon, the 16,000-acre site is administered cooperatively by Oregon State University, the USDA Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station, and the Willamette National Forest.
Website: http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/
The Andrews Forest has been a US Forest Service Experimental Forest since 1948, and a National Science Foundation Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site since 1980. Facilities, including labs, offices, and housing, are available for research and workshop use. Researchers and graduate students interested in conducting work at the Andrews Forest are welcomed and encouraged—participants benefit from a rich data history and from collaborations across disciplines. See the Andrews Forest webpage, http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu, for ways to connect. Andrews Forest Facebook. Andrews Forest Newsletter. Andrews Forest webcam.Hardwood Silviculture CooperativeThe Hardwood Silviculture Cooperative (HSC) conducts high priority silvicultural research on hardwood species and mixed hardwood/softwood stands in the Pacific Northwest, with the goal of providing information that will improve the management of these stands.
Website: http://hsc.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Landscape Fire and Conservation Science Research GroupThe Landscape Fire and Conservation Science Research Group focuses on landscape ecology, biogeography, pyrogeography, and conservation science. We work at scales from local to global, addressing the causes and effects of ecological disturbances, with a particular interest in landscape fire.
Website: http://people.forestry.oregonstate.edu/meg-krawchuk/Pacific Northwest Permanent Study Plot ProgramThe aim of the Pacific Northwest Permanent Study Plot Program (PNW-PSP) is to study and quantify the long-term dynamics of forest vegetation. We manage more than 140 plot installations across a diversity of forest types in Oregon and Washington. These include coastal forests of spruce and hemlock, Douglas-fir-dominated forests of the western Cascades, higher-elevation forests of mountain hemlock and silver fir, and ponderosa pine forests in Central Oregon.
Website: http://pnwpsp.forestry.oregonstate.edu/TERRA - PNWThe mission of the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research and Regional Analysis group (TERRA-PNW) is to quantify and understand the response of terrestrial ecosystems to natural and human-induced changes such as climate, wildfire and land management practices. Our lab has diverse interests that share a common focus: understanding the dynamics of land-based ecological communities. Our insights into climate and disturbance effects on ecological processes and global change are generated primarily by research on forest, woodland and shrubland ecosystems.
Website: http://terraweb.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) LabOur goal is to create sustainable and resilient natural systems in which people engage with the Earth with reciprocity. Indigenous peoples have stewarded natural resources for millennia through their knowledge and traditional practices. The TEK Lab explores, facilitates, and honors the synergies between TEK, Western science, and other ways of knowing.
Website: https://tek.forestry.oregonstate.edu/ -
Explores the issues created by the intersection of natural systems and our society's rapidly evolving needs and brings biophysical and social sciences together to explore complex natural resource issues.
Our researchers study how human values and behaviors drive and respond to changes in natural ecosystems. This includes understanding effective governance and stakeholder engagement processes for making decisions about resource management. Some FES researchers study how to improve communication process among scientists, land managers, and the public. Other researchers analyze forest management policies for their impacts on public lands, private forests, and human communities. These efforts extend from studies of barriers to small urban communities applying green infrastructure to landscape-scale interactions between climate, fire, and forests.
- Loren Albert
- Matthew Betts
- Jacob Bukoski
- Ashley D'Antonio
- Emily Jane Davis
- Lisa Ganio
- Claudio A. Guevara
- Reem Hajjar
- Glenn Howe
- K. N. Johnson
- Eric T. Jones
- Suhyun Jung
- Beverly Law
- Kreg Lindberg
- Brenda McComb
- Ian Munanura
- Mark Needham
- Michael Paul Nelson
- Florencia Pech-Cardenas
- Emily Rabung
- Paul Ries
- Randall Rosenberger
- Bo Shelby
- Elizabeth Swanson
- Maria Taggart
Researchers
Faculty Research Programs
Betts Forest Landscape Ecology LabProfessor Matthew Betts and his team studies the ways that landscape composition and pattern influence animal behavior, species distributions and ecosystem function. As humans are one of the primary drivers of landscape characteristics globally, much of their work is applied and focused on management and conservation. However, understanding mechanisms is key to generalization, so a central part of the research program is basic in nature and links landscape ecology to behavioral ecology, physiology, and molecular ecology.
Website: http://www.fsl.orst.edu/flel/index.htmForests, Livelihoods, Institutions, and Governance (FoLIAGe) Research GroupThe FoLIAGe Research Group studies the relationship between forests and livelihoods, and how various governance mechanisms and institutions, including policies, laws, norms, and markets, shape that relationship. Working around the world, we take a multi-level governance approach in our research, from the local scale with community and collaborative forestry, all the way up to the international scale with mechanisms like REDD+ and FLEGT, and how these different scales interact to impact people and forests.
Website: http://foliage.forestry.oregonstate.edu/H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest and Long-Term Ecological Research SiteThe mission of the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest is to support research on forests, streams, and watersheds, and to foster strong collaboration among ecosystem science, education, natural resource management, and the humanities. Located in the western Cascade mountains of Oregon, the 16,000-acre site is administered cooperatively by Oregon State University, the USDA Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station, and the Willamette National Forest.
Website: http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/
The Andrews Forest has been a US Forest Service Experimental Forest since 1948, and a National Science Foundation Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site since 1980. Facilities, including labs, offices, and housing, are available for research and workshop use. Researchers and graduate students interested in conducting work at the Andrews Forest are welcomed and encouraged—participants benefit from a rich data history and from collaborations across disciplines. See the Andrews Forest webpage, http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu, for ways to connect. Andrews Forest Facebook. Andrews Forest Newsletter. Andrews Forest webcam.Natural Resources, Tourism, and Recreation (NATURE) Studies LabThe NATURE Studies Lab conducts a program of research and planning focusing on recreation, tourism, marine and terrestrial parks and protected areas, wildlife, forestry, and other natural resources. The goal of this lab’s work is to examine human elements such as use and impacts, and inform management of natural resources and policy development.
Website: http://nature.forestry.oregonstate.edu/TERRA - PNWThe mission of the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research and Regional Analysis group (TERRA-PNW) is to quantify and understand the response of terrestrial ecosystems to natural and human-induced changes such as climate, wildfire and land management practices. Our lab has diverse interests that share a common focus: understanding the dynamics of land-based ecological communities. Our insights into climate and disturbance effects on ecological processes and global change are generated primarily by research on forest, woodland and shrubland ecosystems.
Website: http://terraweb.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) LabOur goal is to create sustainable and resilient natural systems in which people engage with the Earth with reciprocity. Indigenous peoples have stewarded natural resources for millennia through their knowledge and traditional practices. The TEK Lab explores, facilitates, and honors the synergies between TEK, Western science, and other ways of knowing.
Website: https://tek.forestry.oregonstate.edu/ -
Forests have long been influenced by anthropogenic and natural disturbances. To sustain the variety of ecosystem services generated by healthy forests requires understanding these processes and evaluating different management practices that can restore and sustain multiple values.
Members of FES examine the impact of disturbances such as fire on the age class structure and habitat suitability of forests, with an eye toward understanding how management can be used to restore desired forest conditions. Others are exploring silvicultural practices that maintain ecosystem resilience and adaptability, while providing services such as timber, habitat, and clean water. Another line of research focuses on the biological control of introduced insect pests. Still other research uses spatial statistics for stream networks to understand the factors that affect the spatial distribution of fish in headwater streams.
- Chris Adlam
- Loren Albert
- Badege Bishaw
- Jacob Bukoski
- Thomas H. DeLuca
- Jeremy Fried
- Lisa Ganio
- Andrew Gray
- Claudio A. Guevara
- Becky Kerns
- Meg Krawchuk
- Barb Lachenbruch
- Beverly Law
- Leon Liegel
- Daniel Luoma
- Florencia Pech-Cardenas
- Steven Perakis
- Klaus Puettmann
- David Shaw
- Elizabeth Swanson
- Dana Warren
Researchers
Faculty Research Programs
Global Trophic Cascades ProgramThe Global Trophic Cascades Program is a research and educational program with the purpose of investigating the role of predators in structuring ecological communities. This program puts special emphasis on the role of potential keystone species in top-down community regulation, with linkages to biodiversity via trophic cascades. OSU Distiguished Professor Bill Ripple is the director of the program.
Website: http://trophiccascades.forestry.oregonstate.edu/H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest and Long-Term Ecological Research SiteThe mission of the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest is to support research on forests, streams, and watersheds, and to foster strong collaboration among ecosystem science, education, natural resource management, and the humanities. Located in the western Cascade mountains of Oregon, the 16,000-acre site is administered cooperatively by Oregon State University, the USDA Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station, and the Willamette National Forest.
Website: http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/
The Andrews Forest has been a US Forest Service Experimental Forest since 1948, and a National Science Foundation Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site since 1980. Facilities, including labs, offices, and housing, are available for research and workshop use. Researchers and graduate students interested in conducting work at the Andrews Forest are welcomed and encouraged—participants benefit from a rich data history and from collaborations across disciplines. See the Andrews Forest webpage, http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu, for ways to connect. Andrews Forest Facebook. Andrews Forest Newsletter. Andrews Forest webcam.Landscape Fire and Conservation Science Research GroupThe Landscape Fire and Conservation Science Research Group focuses on landscape ecology, biogeography, pyrogeography, and conservation science. We work at scales from local to global, addressing the causes and effects of ecological disturbances, with a particular interest in landscape fire.
Website: http://people.forestry.oregonstate.edu/meg-krawchuk/Pacific Northwest Permanent Study Plot ProgramThe aim of the Pacific Northwest Permanent Study Plot Program (PNW-PSP) is to study and quantify the long-term dynamics of forest vegetation. We manage more than 140 plot installations across a diversity of forest types in Oregon and Washington. These include coastal forests of spruce and hemlock, Douglas-fir-dominated forests of the western Cascades, higher-elevation forests of mountain hemlock and silver fir, and ponderosa pine forests in Central Oregon.
Website: http://pnwpsp.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) LabOur goal is to create sustainable and resilient natural systems in which people engage with the Earth with reciprocity. Indigenous peoples have stewarded natural resources for millennia through their knowledge and traditional practices. The TEK Lab explores, facilitates, and honors the synergies between TEK, Western science, and other ways of knowing.
Website: https://tek.forestry.oregonstate.edu/ -
This research focuses on manipulating vegetation to achieve management objectives including restoration, intensive timber production, fire ecology and fire management and forest ecosystem health. Projects include the effects of stand structure on fire behavior, interaction of fires and forest pests, forest certification, regeneration of mixed conifer and ponderosa pine stands in central and eastern Oregon, N-fixing, stream responses to riparian cover management and forest nursery management.
- Esther Andrade Meirelles
- John Bailey
- Kellee Boyer
- Lily Bright
- Benjamin David
- Christopher Dunn
- Jordan Ellison
- Stephen Fitzgerald
- Jeremy Fried
- Carlos Gonzalez-Benecke
- Lauren Gramberg
- Claudio A. Guevara
- Violet Harris
- Katie Hill
- Rachel Howard
- Jack Kelly
- Mark Kerstens
- Jim Kiser
- Helena Kroleski
- Daniel Leavell
- Jared LeBoldus
- Maggie Magee
- Doug Maguire
- Doug Mainwaring
- Naia Marten
- Ashley Mertens
- Amy Metz
- Carli Morgan
- Deny Nopri
- Matthew Powers
- Jacob Putney
- Priya Rajarapu
- John Riggins
- Jim Rivers
- Joseph Schmitz
- David Shaw
- Lorelle Sherman
- Dana Skelly
- Paige Sterling
- Mark Swanson
- Emily Von Blon
- Todd West
- Julia Wine
Researchers
Faculty Research Programs
Center for Intensive Planted-forest SilvicultureThe mission of this research is to understand and quantify the interactive effects of silvicultural activities and site conditions on maintaining and improving the productivity, health,and sustainability of intensively managed, planted forests in the Pacific Northwest.
Website: http://cips.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Forest Animal Ecology LabThe Forest Animal Ecology Lab is headed by Assistant Professor Jim Rivers. The research questions he pursues are grounded in both basic and applied principles, and nearly all are investigated through empirical field studies of wild populations in forested ecosystems. Some of the lab's current projects include studies that are examining bee community response to biofuel harvest, testing the demographic response of early seral birds to herbicides, and evaluating the impacts of supplemental feeding on the behavior and physiology of songbirds.
Website: https://fael.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Silviculture and Wildland Fire LabThis research is lead by John Bailey, the Maybelle Clarke MacDonald Professor of Teaching Excellence in Silviculture and Fire Management. His research focuses on using traditional and experimental silviculture practices to achieve a spectrum of objectives in a landscape, including commodity production, habitat creation, fire risk reduction and ecosystem restoration.
Website: Swiss Needle Cast CooperativeThis research focuses on Swiss needle cast, a foliage disease specific to the Douglas fir caused by a fungal pathogen. Symptoms include chlorotic needles and decreased needle retention, resulting in sparse crowns and reduced diameter and height growth. The mission of the SNCC is to conduct research to enhance Douglas-fir productivity and forest health in the presence of Swiss needle cast and other diseases in coastal forests of Oregon and Washington.
Website: http://sncc.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) LabOur goal is to create sustainable and resilient natural systems in which people engage with the Earth with reciprocity. Indigenous peoples have stewarded natural resources for millennia through their knowledge and traditional practices. The TEK Lab explores, facilitates, and honors the synergies between TEK, Western science, and other ways of knowing.
Website: https://tek.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Vegetation Management Research CooperativeThe Vegetation Management Research Cooperative consists of private companies, public land management agencies, and scientists from Oregon State University that are working together to conduct applied forest regeneration research. The goal of this research is to design management systems that integrate the best available science with the practical needs of our cooperators in order to successfully establish Pacific Northwest forests.
Website: http://vmrc.forestry.oregonstate.edu/ -
Examines the complex interactions between our communities, cultures, governments, and the natural resources that support our continued life and development. Explores methods for engaging scientists, managers, and the public in addressing environmental problems.
Our researchers study different forms of governance and stakeholder engagement to identify effective approaches for decision making. This includes understanding communication among scientists, land managers, and the public. Other department members use systematic evidence-based reviews to inform educational programs for forest owners, while some researchers test the effectiveness of different educational programs and materials.
Faculty Research Programs
Forests, Livelihoods, Institutions, and Governance (FoLIAGe) Research GroupThe FoLIAGe Research Group studies the relationship between forests and livelihoods, and how various governance mechanisms and institutions, including policies, laws, norms, and markets, shape that relationship. Working around the world, we take a multi-level governance approach in our research, from the local scale with community and collaborative forestry, all the way up to the international scale with mechanisms like REDD+ and FLEGT, and how these different scales interact to impact people and forests.
Website: http://foliage.forestry.oregonstate.edu/H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest and Long-Term Ecological Research SiteThe mission of the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest is to support research on forests, streams, and watersheds, and to foster strong collaboration among ecosystem science, education, natural resource management, and the humanities. Located in the western Cascade mountains of Oregon, the 16,000-acre site is administered cooperatively by Oregon State University, the USDA Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station, and the Willamette National Forest.
Website: http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/
The Andrews Forest has been a US Forest Service Experimental Forest since 1948, and a National Science Foundation Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site since 1980. Facilities, including labs, offices, and housing, are available for research and workshop use. Researchers and graduate students interested in conducting work at the Andrews Forest are welcomed and encouraged—participants benefit from a rich data history and from collaborations across disciplines. See the Andrews Forest webpage, http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu, for ways to connect. Andrews Forest Facebook. Andrews Forest Newsletter. Andrews Forest webcam.Natural Resources, Tourism, and Recreation (NATURE) Studies LabThe NATURE Studies Lab conducts a program of research and planning focusing on recreation, tourism, marine and terrestrial parks and protected areas, wildlife, forestry, and other natural resources. The goal of this lab’s work is to examine human elements such as use and impacts, and inform management of natural resources and policy development.
Website: http://nature.forestry.oregonstate.edu/Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) LabOur goal is to create sustainable and resilient natural systems in which people engage with the Earth with reciprocity. Indigenous peoples have stewarded natural resources for millennia through their knowledge and traditional practices. The TEK Lab explores, facilitates, and honors the synergies between TEK, Western science, and other ways of knowing.
Website: https://tek.forestry.oregonstate.edu/ -
The movement of energy and matter within and among ecosystems controls how these systems function and the services they provide. This area of concentration investigates the mechanisms controlling ecosystem behavior from a micro to a macro scale, including the impacts of anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases.
Members of FES are studying the complexities of terrestrial ecosystems and the interactions between ecosystems and the atmosphere. One challenge is to quantify changes in biogeochemical cycles and forest characteristics, diagnose the causes of change, and develop predictions of how human activities may affect the global environment in the future. This involves understanding biogeochemical cycles from the scale of decomposing logs to the role of clouds in the ecological structure and function of forests.
Faculty Research Programs
H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest and Long-Term Ecological Research SiteThe mission of the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest is to support research on forests, streams, and watersheds, and to foster strong collaboration among ecosystem science, education, natural resource management, and the humanities. Located in the western Cascade mountains of Oregon, the 16,000-acre site is administered cooperatively by Oregon State University, the USDA Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station, and the Willamette National Forest.
Website: http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/
The Andrews Forest has been a US Forest Service Experimental Forest since 1948, and a National Science Foundation Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site since 1980. Facilities, including labs, offices, and housing, are available for research and workshop use. Researchers and graduate students interested in conducting work at the Andrews Forest are welcomed and encouraged—participants benefit from a rich data history and from collaborations across disciplines. See the Andrews Forest webpage, http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu, for ways to connect. Andrews Forest Facebook. Andrews Forest Newsletter. Andrews Forest webcam.TERRA - PNWThe mission of the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research and Regional Analysis group (TERRA-PNW) is to quantify and understand the response of terrestrial ecosystems to natural and human-induced changes such as climate, wildfire and land management practices. Our lab has diverse interests that share a common focus: understanding the dynamics of land-based ecological communities. Our insights into climate and disturbance effects on ecological processes and global change are generated primarily by research on forest, woodland and shrubland ecosystems.
Website: http://terraweb.forestry.oregonstate.edu/