Welcome to the Nutrient Network!

Two of the most pervasive human impacts on ecosystems are
alteration of global nutrient budgets and changes in the abundance and
identity of consumers. Fossil fuel combustion and agricultural
fertilization have doubled and quintupled, respectively, global pools
of nitrogen and phosphorus relative to pre-industrial levels.
Concurrently, habitat loss and degradation and selective hunting and
fishing disproportionately remove consumers from food webs. At the same
time, humans are adding consumers to food webs for endpoints such as
conservation, recreation, and agriculture, as well as accidental
introductions of invasive consumer species. In spite of the global
impacts of these human activities, there have been no globally
coordinated experiments to quantify the general impacts on ecological
systems. The Nutrient Network (NutNet) is a grassroots
research effort to address these questions within a coordinated
research network comprised of more than 40 grassland sites worldwide.
NutNet focal research
questions:
- How general is our current understanding of
productivity-diversity relationships?
- To what extent are plant production and diversity co-limited
by multiple nutrients in herbaceous-dominated communities?
- Under what conditions do grazers or fertilization control
plant biomass, diversity, and composition?
NutNet goals:
- To collect data
from a broad range of sites in a consistent manner to allow direct
comparisons of environment-productivity-diversity relationships among
systems around the world. This is currently occurring at each
site in
the network and, when these data are compiled, will allow us to provide
new insights into several important, unanswered questions in
ecology.
- To implement a cross-site experiment requiring only nominal
investment of time and resources by each investigator, but quantifying
community and ecosystem responses in a wide range of
herbaceous-dominated ecosystems (i.e., desert grasslands to arctic
tundra).
NutNet membership:
NutNet membership is open to
ecologists who are committed to either intiating a new NutNet node,
collaborating with researchers at an exitisting network site, or
furthering the network goals in other substantive ways. There are two
primary rules of membership:
- You must play well with other members of the team, and
- You must carefully follow the research protocol for the core
sampling.