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Interdisciplinary Geo-ecological Research across Time Scales in the Northeast German Lowland Observatory (TERENO-NE)

Authors :
Heinrich, Ingo
Balanzategui, Daniel
Bens, Oliver
Blasch, Gerald
Blume, Theresa
Böttcher, Falk
Borg, Erik
Brademann, Brian
Brauer, Achim
Conrad, Christopher
Dietze, Elisabeth
Dräger, Nadine
Fiener, Peter
Gerke, Horst H.
Güntner, Andreas
Heine, Iris
Helle, Gerhard
Herbrich, Marcus
Harfenmeister, Katharina
Heußner, Karl-Uwe
Hohmann, Christian
Itzerott, Sibylle
Jurasinski, Gerald
Kaiser, Knut
Kappler, Christoph
Koebsch, Franziska
Liebner, Susanne
Lischeid, Gunnar
Merz, Bruno
Missling, Klaus Dieter
Morgner, Markus
Pinkerneil, Sylvia
Plessen, Birgit
Raab, Thomas
Ruhtz, Thomas
Sachs, Torsten
Sommer, Michael
Spengler, Daniel
Stender, Vivien
Stüve, Peter
Wilken, Florian
Source :
Vadose Zone Journal, Vol 17, Iss 1 (2018), Vadose Zone Journal
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

The Northeast German Lowland Observatory (TERENO-NE) was established to investigate the regional impact of climate and land use change. TERENO-NE focuses on the Northeast German lowlands, for which a high vulnerability has been determined due to increasing temperatures and decreasing amounts of precipitation projected for the coming decades. To facilitate in-depth evaluations of the effects of climate and land use changes and to separate the effects of natural and anthropogenic drivers in the region, six sites were chosen for comprehensive monitoring. In addition, at selected sites, geoarchives were used to substantially extend the instrumental records back in time. It is this combination of diverse disciplines working across different time scales that makes the observatory TERENO-NE a unique observation platform. We provide information about the general characteristics of the observatory and its six monitoring sites and present examples of interdisciplinary research activities at some of these sites. We also illustrate how monitoring improves process understanding, how remote sensing techniques are fine-tuned by the most comprehensive ground-truthing site DEMMIN, how soil erosion dynamics have evolved, how greenhouse gas monitoring of rewetted peatlands can reveal unexpected mechanisms, and how proxy data provides a long-term perspective of current ongoing changes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15391663
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vadose Zone Journal
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..fbe080aee972aaf7e03ccdb1162fa330