Field stations and marine labs join forces to tackle national environmental 
challenges

March 18, 2013 - A world threatened by extreme weather, biodiversity loss, 
emerging disease and increasing uncertainty needs the scientific capacity to 
face those challenges. Natural laboratories around the country, which have been 
placing researchers on the front lines of understanding and managing 
environmental change for a century, form the building blocks of that capacity. 
Today the Organization of Biological Field Stations and National Association of 
Marine Laboratories release a report showing how scientists in communities 
across the continent respond to emerging questions in flexible and nimble ways, 
and are poised to work together to contribute to global solutions. You can 
download the report here:
http://www.obfs.org/assets/docs/fsml_final_report.pdf  (5.1 MB)

Field stations and marine labs (FSMLs) are the primary places scientists go to 
study environmental processes in their natural context, and as such they harbor 
the knowledge of the past that we need to predict the future. They host 
thousands of individual researchers at hundreds of locations, and are the 
birthplace of many of the innovations and discoveries that drive environmental 
science today. Recent large-scale initiatives, such as the National Ecological 
Observatory Network (NEON) and the Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI), as 
well as the longer-running Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) network, depend 
on existing FSML infrastructure-and the novel insights these new observatories 
generate will stimulate complementary research at many more field stations and 
marine labs. 

However, only a small fraction of FSMLs participates in these broader-scale 
scientific initiatives. NEON and LTER represent 10% of the available long-term, 
place-based, multiple-investigator environmental research sites. The report, 
based on a national workshop and survey and on input from the broader 
scientific community, recommends creating a Network Center to catalyze 
broader-scale science and to facilitate participation in coordinated 
environmental efforts. For example, a stronger network of FSMLs could 
contribute to evolving national and international programs such as the 
sustained National Climate Assessment or the Group on Earth Observations 
Biodiversity Observation Network. 

Field stations and marine labs have the flexibility and the logistical and 
intellectual capacity to support novel experimental approaches across 
tremendous ecological diversity. Collectively, they represent billions of 
dollars of investment in research infrastructure including sites (forests, 
fields and waterfronts) and tools (sensors, ships and cyberinfrastructure), and 
have trained generations of environmental scientists. This report is a first 
step in making sure the nation's investment in field stations and marine labs 
continues to meet the dynamic and changing needs of scientists, students, and 
the public they serve. 

URL: http://www.obfs.org/fsml-future
 
CONTACT: Ian Billick, 970-349-6669, [email protected]

The National Association of Marine Laboratories (NAML), organized in the late 
1980's, is a nonprofit organization of over 120 members employing more than 
10,000 scientists, engineers, and professionals and representing marine and 
Great Lakes laboratories stretching from Guam to Bermuda and Alaska to Puerto 
Rico. The member institutions of the National Association of Marine Labs work 
together to improve the quality and effectiveness of ocean, coastal and Great 
Lakes research, education and outreach. Through these unique national and 
regional networks, NAML encourages ecosystem-based management, wise local land 
management and the understanding and protection of natural resources. 

The Organization of Biological Field Stations (OBFS) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit 
that represents field stations throughout the world. The mission of OBFS is to 
help member stations increase their effectiveness in supporting critical 
research, education, and outreach programs. OBFS pursues this goal in a manner 
that maximizes diversity, inclusiveness, sustainability, and transparency.

Reply via email to