OOS 4-1
Current State of NEON: Where are we and what challenges and opportunities lie ahead?

Monday, August 11, 2014: 1:30 PM
304/305, Sacramento Convention Center
Scott Ollinger, Earth Systems Research Center, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH
Background/Question/Methods ,

NEON is an NSF-funded geographically distributed observatory that represents the agency’s first major facilities investment in biology.  NEON arose initially from the ecological community as a means of answering some of the most exciting and challenging questions in continental-scale ecology.  Designed with a 30-year time horizon and an open-access data policy, NEON’s mission is to enable understanding and forecasting of the impacts of climate change, land-use change and invasive species at regional to continental-scales. To fulfill that mission, NEON will provide data and information to scientists, educators, decision makers and the general public on biological processes and their responses to multiple stressors, and to make infrastructure assets available to support research, education and environmental management. NEON is now in its third year of construction, and initial deployment of instrumentation is proceeding at numerous sites across the US. Site characterization measurements have been underway since the summer of 2013 and initial operation of the observatory is expected to begin in 2014, yielding provisional data from several sites. Airborne Observation Platform flights will have taken place over multiple sites including one campaign coincident with the NASA AVIRIS platform in southern California and another to document impacts of the100 square mile High Park fire that occurred in Colorado during 2012. 

Results/Conclusions

With planned completion in 2017, the time is quickly approaching when the capabilities of NEON will be available to ecologists world-wide.  As that time approaches, continued engagement with its community of users will be essential for the full potential of the observatory to be realized.   Here, we provide an update on the present status of NEON and discuss approaches through which the resources provided by NEON can be integrated with the intellectual resources of NEON’s diverse science community.  Our intent is to encourage critical thinking on how to make the best use of NEON data, create opportunities for the community to publish scholarly papers, promote use of NEON data in education, and keep NEON at the forefront of thinking across the scientific community.