Dr. Marion F. BAUMGARDNER
Purdue University
Department of Agronomy
1150 Lilly Hall of Life Sciences
West Lafayette, IN 47907-1150,
USA
Mr. Max BERAN
TIGER Programme Office
Institute of Hydrology
Crowmarsh Gifford
Wallingford OX10 8BB, UK
Mr. Claudio CAPONI
Dir Gen Sect de Investigación de
Agua, Suelo et Vegetación
Ministerio del Ambiente y de los
Recursos Naturales Renovables
Esquina y Edif, Camejo
Mezzanina Este - CSB
Caracas, Venezuela
Dr. Francisco DALLMEIER
Director Smithsonian/MAB
Biodiversity Program
1100 Jefferson Drive, SW,
Suite 3123
Washington, DC 20560 USA
Dr. Erik FRAMSTAD
Head of Research Division
NINA PO Box 736 Sentrum,
N-0105 Oslo, Norway
Prof. O. W. HEAL
Institute of Terrestrial Ecology
Bush Estate, Penicuik
Midlothian EH26 0QB Scotland,
U.K.
Prof. Kazutake KYUMA
Prefecture.
The University of Shiga
School of Environmental Science
2,500 Hassakacho, Hikone 522 Japan
Dr. J. C. MENAUT
Ecole Normale Supérieure
Laboratoire dEcologie
46 rue dUlm
F-75230 PARIS CEDEX 05 France
Dr. Hamid NARJISSE
Institut Agronomique et Vétérinaire
Hassan II
Rabats-Instituts
BP 6202 - Rabat, Morocco
Prof. Henry A. NIX
Director
The Australian National University
Centre for Resource and
Environmental Studies
GPO Box 4 Canberra, ACT 0200,
Australia
Dr. David NORSE
Chairman GTOS Planning Group
University College of London
Department of Geography
26 Bedford Way
London WC1H OAP UK
Prof. L. A. OGALLO
University of Nairobi
Department of Meteorology
PO Box 306023
Nairobi, Kenya
L. Roel OLDEMAN
International Soil Reference and Information Centre
PO Box 353 6700 AJ Wageningen
The Netherlands
Prof. Lekan OYEBANDE
Department of Geography and Planning
University of Lagos
Faculty of Environmental Sciences
Box 160, Unilag Post Office
Akoka, Lagos 698, Nigeria
Dr. Setijati SASTRAPRADJA
Senior Scientist
National Centre for Research in
Biotechnology
Jalan Raya Cibinong Km 46
PO Box 422 BOGOR, Indonesia
Dr. Bob SCHOLES
CSIR
Division of Forest Science and Technology
PO Box 395
Pretoria 0001, South Africa
Dr. Allen M. SOLOMON
Senior Global Research Ecologist
US EPA
Environment Research Laboratory
200 SW 35th Street
Corvallis, OR 97333 , USA
Prof. C. J. STIGTER
President CAgM (WMO)
W A U Dept Meteorology
Duivendaal 2
NL-6701 AP Wageningen
The Netherlands
Prof. John R. G. TOWNSHEND
University of Maryland at College
Park
Department of Geography
Room 1113 Lefrak Hall
College Park, MD 20742-8225,
USA
Dr. Brian Walker
CSIRO
Division of Wildlife and Ecology
P.O. Box 84
Lyneham ACT 2602,
Australia
Prof. G. Bruce WIERSMA
Dean
University of Maine
College of Natural Resources,
Forestry and Agriculture
Room 105, 5782 Winslow Hall
Orono, ME 04469-5782,
USA
Maite Aguinaco
CIHEAM
Instituto Agronomico Mediterraneo
de Zaragoza
Zaragoza, Spain
Peter Ashton
Havard University
Institute for International Development
Cambridge, USA
Inga Bucher-Wallin
Swiss Federal Institute for Forest,
Snow and Landscape Research
Birmensdorf, Switzerland
Marion Cheatle
UNEP/DEIA
Nairobi, Kenya
Josef Cihlar
Canada Centre for Remote Sensing
Ottawa, Canada
Josef Cohen
Nature Reserves Authority
Division of Science and
Management
Jerusalem, Israel
Ian K. Crain
The Orbis Institute
Ottawa, Canada
U. Dämmgen
Forschungsanstalt Landwirtschaft
Müncheberg, Germany
Arthur Dahl
UNEP
Earthwatch Secretariat
Geneva, Switzerland
M. Edwards
Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for
Ocean Sciences (SAHFOS)
Plymouth, UK
Martin Forsius
UN/ECE ICP on Integrated
Montoring
Environment Data Centre
National Board of Waters and the
Environment
Helsinki, Finland
Sujata Gupta
Tata Energy Research Institute
New Delhi, India
Robert M Hamwey
International Academy of the
Environment (IAE)
Conches, Switzerland
Gisela Helbig
Bundesministerium für Forschung
und Technologie
Bonn, Germany
Leonard Hirsch
Smithsonian Office of International
Relations
Washington, USA
John Innes
Swiss Federal Institute for Forest,
Snow and Landscape Research
Birmensdorf, Switzerland
H. Franz Kerner
TEAM 18
Freising, Germany
Hartmut Keune
UNEP-HEM
Munich, Germany
Hal Kibby
Global Climate Observing System
Geneva, Switzerland
Sirpa Kleemola
National Board of Waters and the
Environment
Environmental Data Centre (EDC)
Helsinki, Finland
Gerd Henning Klein
Projektträger
Umweltsystemforschung
Bonn, Germany
D. P. Kohnke
Bundesamt für Schifffahrt und
Hydrographie (BSH)
Hamburg, Germany
Z. Kundzewicz
World Meteorological Organization
Dept of Hydrology
Geneva, Switzerland
A. Mandy Lane
Institute of Terrestrial Ecology
Merlewood Research Station
Grange-over-Sands UK
Pierre Lasserre
UNESCO
Division Ecological Sciences
Paris, France
Rik Leemans
Global Change Department
National Institute for Public Health
and Environmental Protection
RIVM
Bilthoven, The Netherlands
Roman Lenz
CEC - Joint Research Centre
Environment Institute
Ispra, Italy
Thomas R Loveland
Science and Applications Branch
US Geological Survey
EROS Data Center
Sioux Falls, USA
Patricia Mandry
UNEP-HEM
Munich, Germany
Samuel Mbele-Mbong
Research and Environment
Programme Department
World Meteorological Organization
Geneva, Switzerland
J. McKenna
UNEP-HEM
Munich, Germany
John Miller
World Meteorological Organization
Department of Hydrology
Geneva, Switzerland
A. Beatrice Murray
UNEP-HEM
Munich, Germany
Jürgen Nauber
MAB Geschäftsstelle
Bundesamt für Naturschutz
Bonn, Germany
Jesse Theuri Njoka
EAWLS
Nairobi, Kenya
Kathrin Peter
Schweizerische Kommission für
Umweltbeobachtung
Bern, Switzerland
Yuri A. Pykh
Russian Academy of Sciences
INENCO St Petersburg, Russia
Walter Radermacher
Statistisches Bundesamt
Wiesbaden, Germany
A. Rango
USDA/ARS/BARC-West
Hydrology Laboratory
Beltsville, USA
P. C. Reid
Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for
Ocean Sciences (SAHFOS)
Plymouth, United Kingdom
Lars-OttoReiersen
AMAP
Oslo, Norway
Wolf-Fritz Riekert
Forschungsinstitut
fanwendungsorientierte
Wissensverarbeitung
Universität Ulm
Ulm, Germany
E. Fred Roots
Department of the Environment
Ottawa, Canada
Wolfgang Scherer
Intergovernmental Oceanographic
Commission
UNESCO Paris, France
Winfried Schröder
Projektzentrum
Ökosystemforschung Bornhöveder
Seenkette
Christian-Albrechts-Universität
Kiel, Germany
Robert Shepanek
EMAP, EPA
Washington DC , USA
Ashbindu Singh
UNEP/GRID-Sioux Falls
EROS Data Center
Sioux Falls, USA
Christina Skarpe
Norwegian Institute for Nature
Research (NINA)
Trondheim, Norway
Thomas Spence
Joint Planning Office
Global Climate Observing System
Geneva, Switzerland
Ms Leena SRIVASTAVA
Dean
Tata Energy Research Institute
Policy Analysis Division
Darbari Seth Block, India Habitat
Centre
Lodi Road
New Delhi - 110003,
India
Li-Hsin Tsai-Koester
UNEP-HEM
Munich, Germany
John Vande Castle
Long-Term Ecological Research
(LTER) - Network Office
University of Washington
Seattle, USA
Dr. C. C. Wallen
UNEP
Geneva, Switzerland
Gregory Withee
National Environmental Satellite,
Data and Information Services
NOAA
Washington DC, USA
Bernardo Zentilli
Interim Secretariat
Convention on Desertification
Chatelaine, Switzerland
Alan S. Belward
CEC - Joint Research Centre
Environment Institute
Ispra, Italy
John R. Busby
World Conservation Monitoring
Centre
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Josef Cohen
Nature Reserves Authority
Div. of Science and Management
Jerusalem, Israel
Ian K. Crain
The Orbis Institute
Ottawa, Canada
Arthur Dahl
UNEP
Earthwatch Secretariat
Châtelaine, Switzerland
Martin Forsius
UN/ECE ICP on Integrated
Montoring
Environment Data Centre
National Board of Waters and the
Environment
Helsinki, Finland
Louise O. Fresco
Agriculture University
Department of Agronomy
Wageningen, The Netherlands
Andy N. Gillison
Centre for International Forestry
Research (CIFOR)
Jakarta, Indonesia
James R. Gosz
US LTER Network
Biology Department
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, New Mexico USA
Robert M. Hamwey
International Academy of the
Environment (IAE)
Conche, Switzerland
Raymond Harris
Department of Geography
University College London
London, United Kingdom
Gerd Henning Klein
Projektträger
Umweltsystemforschung
Bonn, Germany
Rik Leemans
Gobal Change Department
National Institute for Public Health
and Environmental Protection
RIVM
Bilthoven, The Netherlands
Roman Lenz
CEC - Joint Research Centre
Environment Institute
Ispra, Italy
H. Gyde Lund
USDA Forest Service
FIERR
Washington DC, USA
Bob Luxmore
Environmental Sciences Division
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA
Bengt Nihlgard
Department of Plant Ecology
University of Lund
Lund, Sweden
Lennart Olsson
Remote Sensing Laboratory
University of Lund
Lund, Sweden
Kathrin Peter
Puls, Umweltberatung
Bern, Switzerland
Yuri A. Pykh
Russian Academy of Sciences
INENCO St Petersburg, Russia
Wolf-Fritz Riekert
Forschungsinstitut f
anwendungsorientierte
Wissensverarbeitung
Universität Ulm
Ulm, Germany
E. Fred Roots
Department of the Environment
Ottawa, Canada
Winfried Schröder
Projektzentrum
Ökosystemforschung Bornhöveder
Seenkette
Christian-Albrechts-Universität
Kiel, Germany
Serguei Semenov
Inst. of Global Climate and Ecology,
Terrestrial Ecology and
Bioclimatology Division
Moscow, Russia
Ed Shaw
Canada Centre for Remote Sensing
Ottawa, Canada
Ashbindu Singh
UNEP/GRID-Sioux Falls
EROS Data Center
Sioux Falls, USA
Thomas Spence
Joint Planning Office
Global Climate Observing System
Geneva, Switzerland
Anna Spiteri
Integrated Resources Management
(IRM)Co Ltd
Senglea, Malta
Dr. John Vande Castle
Long-Term Ecological Research
(LTER) - Network Office
University of Washington
Seattle, USA
Gregory Withee
National Environmental Satellite,
Data and Information Services
NOAA
Washington DC,
USA
The terms of reference of the Planning Group are:
To review the work already done by previous meetings and bodies to plan a global terrestrial observing system, as a basis for completing a plan for agreement among the co-sponsors;
To advise the co-sponsors on the advisable scope for GTOS, based on the agreed user requirements, objectives and guiding principles, and taking into account the availability of resources and the need for cost-effectiveness;
To develop phased plans for the development of a scientifically sound operational observing programme for GTOS which will meet the requirements of the organizations involved and be based as far as possible on on-going monitoring activities. The plan for the observing programme should address:
- the information needs of the users
- the prioritized set of questions and hypotheses that GTOS is expected to resolve
- the core set of parameters to be observed and the measurements required
- participation of existing programmes, elements and networks
- the system of sites and criteria for their selection
- interface and collaboration with GCOS and GOOS
- gaps to be filled to achieve global coverage
- incorporation of remotely-sensed data
- requirements for a data policy including access and distribution; and
- quality assurance, data management and archiving
To determine if special sub-groups or working groups are needed to prepare certain detailed elements of GTOS, and to organize such working groups to the extent that outside funding or other support can be obtained for the purpose;
To prepare budget estimates for the international costs of coordinating and implementing GTOS, as well as indications of the requirements and costs for national participation in GTOS.
The Planning Group should submit its final report within two years of its establishment.
Membership
The Planning Group will consist of about 15 members selected by the co-sponsors on the basis of their personal experience, with a balance of institutional, scientific and technical expertise covering as much as possible the following major subject areas:
Components
- freshwater/hydrology
- soils
- microbes
- flora
- fauna
- managed ecosystems
Issues
- biodiversity
- pollution
- health/urbanization/human population dynamics
- land cover changes
- nutrient/energy flows
Processes
- ecosystem/atmosphere interactions
- hydrological, pedological and other earth surface processes
- land degradation/rehabilitation
- ecosystem dynamics
- population dynamics
- socio-economics of rural land use
- sustainability of land use
Data collection and handling
- sampling network/ecosystem representation
- data collection methods
- data management
- ecosystem modelling
- remote sensing.
Membership should represent the scientific and technical aspects as well as the applications of the data to be generated by the system, with no more than one third drawn from any one major existing scientific and technical programme. Geographic breadth of coverage and gender balance should also be considered.
Membership on the Planning Group will be determined by the co-sponsors by consensus, in consultation with the Chairman, drawn from a pool of candidates proposed by all the co-sponsors.
Representatives of the co-sponsoring bodies may participate in meetings.
Officers
The officers of the Planning Group shall consist of a Chairman and Vice-Chairmen selected jointly by the co-sponsoring organizations.
The duties of the Chairman shall be:
To preside over the sessions of the Planning Group;
To act on behalf of the Planning Group between meetings;
To conduct, either directly or through appropriate co-sponsoring organizations, correspondence on matters related to the planning of GTOS;
To carry out specific duties as entrusted to him/her by the Planning Group in agreement with the co-sponsoring organizations;
To ensure that the activities and recommendations of the Planning Group are in accordance with the objectives of GTOS as recorded in this Memorandum of Understanding;
To arrange for the views of the Planning Group to be presented to the co-sponsoring organizations;
To guide any supporting services or secretariat should these become available;
To prepare and submit the final report of the Planning Group to the co-sponsoring organizations for their consideration.
The duties of the Vice-Chairmen are to assist the Chairman in his or her tasks.
Sessions
The Planning Group shall meet at a maximum twice a year, the venue and dates to be decided by the Chairman of the Group in consultation with the co-sponsoring organizations. Sessions shall normally be scheduled so as to avoid conflicts with major meetings of the co-sponsoring organizations.
Working Groups
The Planning Group, upon consultation with the co-sponsoring organizations, is authorized to establish and convene working groups, panels of scientific and technical experts, special study groups, etc within its field of responsibility and within the funding agreed by the co-sponsoring organizations, taking account of relevant scientific or technical groups established by the co-sponsoring organizations and their constituent bodies.
Table 5. Site characterisation variables* sampled once only
Variable |
Tier |
Comment |
||||
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
||
Latitude, longitude (0) |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
|
Altitude (m) |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
to 20 m |
Slope, aspect (0) |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
|
Area/volume relationship |
x |
x |
x |
|
|
Lakes and estuaries |
Channel profile |
x |
x |
x |
|
|
Rivers |
Site history |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
|
Biome or land use type |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
|
Soil type and profile |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
|
Water retention curve |
|
x |
x |
|
c |
Soils; at least 5 points |
Near-surface geology/parent material |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
|
*underlined variables are calculated from other variables
Table 6. Proposed biophysical observations to be repeated at the frequency indicated in each tier. The variables have been selected on the basis of results presented in published literature, from previous planning studies and from the experience of workshop participants. Relevant references are cited in the footnote at the end of the Table**
Variable |
Tier |
Comment |
||||
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
||
Climatic |
||||||
Precipitation (mm) |
s |
s |
d |
m |
|
Mist and fog where appropriate |
Snow cover area and water equivalent (mm) |
s |
s |
d |
m |
|
Where appropriate |
Air temperature (°C) |
s |
h |
d/2 |
m |
|
Screened, 1.5 m Min and max |
Soil or water temp (°C) |
m |
h |
d |
|
|
15 cm |
Atmospheric humidity (g m-3) |
s |
h |
d |
m |
|
Aspirated |
Wind velocity (m s-1) |
s |
h |
d |
m |
|
2 m above canopy |
Incoming shortwave radiation (Wm-2) |
s |
h |
d |
|
|
Above canopy |
Total outgoing radiation (Wm-2) |
s |
h |
|
m |
|
For net radiation |
Direct and diffuse total incoming radiation |
h |
h |
|
m |
|
For atmospheric transmissivity |
UV-B |
h |
h |
h |
|
|
Above canopy |
Photosynthetically active radiation (mmol m-2 s-1) |
|
h |
d |
m |
|
300-700 nm |
Land use, cover and vegetation (or aquatic equivalent) |
||||||
Land cover (%) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
y |
Standard classes |
Cultivation, inputs and yields |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
Tier 4 cultivation only |
Herbivores |
m |
m |
m |
|
|
Species, density, yield |
Pest outbreak |
m |
m |
m |
5 |
|
Species, density, area |
Above ground biomass (gm-2) |
y |
y |
5 |
5 |
|
By Plant Functional Type (PFT) eg grasses, conifer/deciduous trees |
Below ground biomass (g m-2) |
5 |
5 |
5 |
|
|
|
Leaf area (m2 m-2) |
w |
w |
m |
|
w |
|
Necromass (g m-2) |
y |
y |
5 |
5 |
|
Standing dead, above and below ground litter |
Phenology |
d |
d |
|
|
|
Main stages |
Vegetation structure (%) |
5 |
y |
y |
5 |
|
Crown cover by PFT and height class |
Soil |
(0-30cm tier 4; to 95% rooting depth by 30cm increments tiers 1-3) |
|||||
Soil moisture (m3 m-3) |
d |
d |
d |
|
|
|
Bulk density (mg m-3) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
|
Organic carbon (g kg-1) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
By CN analyser |
Total nitrogen (mg kg-1) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
By CN analyser |
Extractable nitrate and ammonia (mg kg-1) |
m |
m |
y |
5 |
|
Any accepted extractant |
Total, organic and extractable phosphorus (mg kg-1) |
y |
5 |
5 |
5 |
|
Any accepted method |
Particle size distribution (%) |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
|
Grave, sand, silt, clay |
Soil surface state (%) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
Standard classes (sealing, compaction, erosion etc) |
95% rooting depth (m) |
5 |
5 |
5 |
x |
|
Estimated or to rooting |
pH |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
In H20 and 1M KCl |
Extractable bases (cmol kg-1) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
Ca, Mg, K, Na; any accepted extractant |
Extractable acidity (cmol kg-1) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
1M KCl |
CEC @ pH 7.0 or 8.3 (cmol kg-1) |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
|
|
Hydrology |
||||||
Evapotranspiration (mm) |
h |
h |
|
|
|
Transpiration + evaporation from soil + interception |
Water table depth (mm) |
d |
d |
m |
|
|
Or lake level |
Runoff (1s-1) |
h |
h |
d |
|
|
For catchment |
Ground water storage flux |
d? |
d? |
d? |
|
|
Including bedload |
Sediment load (mg m-2 d-1) |
|
h |
d |
|
|
|
Water chemistry (for runoff, rivers, lakes) |
||||||
Electroconductivity (mS m1) |
h |
h |
w |
|
|
|
pH |
h |
h |
w |
|
|
|
Light penetration (cm) |
d |
d |
m |
|
|
Secchi disc, lake only |
Turbidity |
? |
? |
? |
|
|
|
Oxygen concentration (mg l-1) |
? |
? |
? |
|
|
|
Chlorophyll concentration (ug/l) |
? |
? |
? |
|
|
|
Biological oxygen demand |
? |
? |
? |
|
|
Rivers only |
Dissolved and particulate organic carbon (mg 1-1) |
d |
d |
m |
|
|
|
Major cations eg Ca, Mg, K, Na (mg1-1) |
d |
d |
m |
|
|
|
Nitrogen species (mg 1-1) |
d |
d |
m |
|
|
Nitrate in groundwater |
Phosphorous species (mg1-1) |
d |
d |
m |
|
|
|
Cryosphere |
||||||
Sea ice extent (km2) |
|
|
|
|
d |
|
Sea ice motion (km d-1) |
|
|
|
|
d/2 |
|
Snow cover area and water equivalent |
d |
d |
d |
5 |
d |
|
Ice sheet extent and topography |
|
|
D |
D |
|
|
Glaciers and ice caps extent |
|
|
D |
D |
|
|
Lake freeze and thaw dates |
|
|
y |
y |
|
Dates |
Permafrost active layer (cm) |
d |
d |
m |
|
|
|
Permafrost thermal store (W m-2) |
? |
? |
? |
5 |
|
|
Biodiversity (including aquatic equivalent) |
||||||
Plant species composition |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
|
In abundance classes |
Demography |
y |
y |
|
|
|
Key species only |
Rare and endangered species |
|
y |
y |
5 |
|
Population size |
Key microflora |
y |
y |
|
|
|
E.g. N fixers, mucorrhizas, methanogens, nitrifyers |
Indicator species |
|
m |
m |
5 |
|
Selected taxa |
Pollutants |
||||||
Wet and dry N and S deposition |
m |
d |
d |
|
|
Teflon buckets |
Transition metals |
|
y |
D |
|
|
Concentration in key ecosystem markers eg sediments, top predators |
Radionuclides |
|
y |
D |
|
|
|
Toxic synthetic organic substances |
|
y |
D |
|
|
|
Ecosystem processes |
||||||
Net primary production (g m-2 d-1) |
m |
m |
y |
|
|
|
Soil respiration (g m-2 s-1) |
m |
m |
m |
|
|
|
Net ecosystem production (g m-2 d-1) |
h |
h |
|
|
|
|
Decomposition rate (mg g-1 y-1) |
y |
y |
|
|
|
Standard and local substrate |
Nitrogen mineralisation rate (mg g-1 d-1) |
m |
m |
y |
|
|
|
Secondary production (g m-2 d-1) |
|
m |
y |
|
|
Where appropriate (fisheries, grazing systems) |
Trace gas exchanges |
||||||
Carbon dioxide (mmol m-2 s-1) |
h |
h |
|
|
|
|
Methane (mmol m-2 s-1) |
|
h |
|
|
|
|
NOx, NMVOC(mmol m-2 s-1 N or C atoms) |
|
h |
|
|
|
|
Disturbance (dates and durations, intensity) |
||||||
Fire |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
m |
|
Windthrow |
y |
y |
y |
5 |
m |
Severe storms |
* Symbols (frequency of recording)
s - every second
h - hourly
d - daily
w - weekly
m - monthly
x - measured once only
y - yearly
5 - every five years
D - decade(Ref: Anderson and Ingram 1993; Bolle et al 1993; Dyer, di Castri and Hansen 1987; Heal, Menaut and Steffen 1993; Keskitalo and Salonen 1994; Klemola and Soederman 1993; Leigh and Johnston 1994; Munn 1988; Piekarz 1990; Reid and Edwards 1995; Risser 1991; ROSELT 1994; Santolucito 1991; UNEP/GEMS 1993.)
In general these data are reported annually by national authorities. In some cases they are reported less frequently (every five or ten years). Some of them are required in terms of international treaties (the Framework Convention onClimate Change (FCC), Biodiversity Convention, Montreal Protocol, Basel Convention). In most cases networks exist for their routine collation.
Table 7. National, Regional and Global data
Variable |
Comments |
Exchange rate |
Time series, against USD, GBP, DM or Yen |
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (national currency) |
by sector (agriculture, mining industry, service etc) |
Rate of growth of GDP (%per annum) |
by sector |
Income per capita (local currency) |
|
Energy use (PJ) |
by fuel type and sector, eg coal, oil, natural gas. Required by IPCC |
Freshwater use (m3) |
by sector |
Groundwater use (m3) |
by source (rivers, groundwater) and by sector |
Pesticide (including herbicide) use (tons) |
by broad compound category |
Fertilizer use (tons) |
by element |
Agricultural production (local currency) |
by product |
Agricultural production (tons) |
by product |
Livestock numbers |
by species |
Timber harvest (m3) |
by category: saw timber, pulp wood, fuel wood |
Agricultural land area (km2) |
by crop type |
Agricultural productivity (tons ha-1) |
per crop |
Fish stocks (tons) |
by species, freshwater only for GTOS, marine for GOOS |
Fish catches (tons) |
|
Road length (km) |
by type (multi-lane, two lane surfaced, unsurfaced) |
Road vehicle numbers |
by type (passenger, light truck, heavy truck) |
Passenger traffic (person km) |
by mode (rail, road, air, water) |
Freight traffic (ton km) |
by mode (rail, road, air, water) |
Population |
by domicile (rural, urban) |
Age structure (%) |
by sex |
Literacy (%) |
by sex |
Mortality (%) |
by sex |
Morbidity (%) |
by sex |
Life expectancy at birth (years) |
by sex |
Calorific intake (kJ) |
|
Religion |
broad category |
Armed conflicts |
number of casualties |
Administrative boundaries |
vector file or map |
Rare, endangered and recently extinct species |
within the national boundaries |
Trade in rare and endangered species |
required by CITES |
Protected areas |
map or vector files, by IUCNlevel of protection (eg national parks, resource areas, private reserves) |
Emissions to the atmosphere (Tg) |
CO2, N2O, CH4, CO NMVOC, aerosols, NOx (required by IPCC), SO2 |
Emissions to water (Tg) |
Sewerage, salts, toxic metals, synthetic organic compounds |
Waste production for disposal or storage on land (Tg) |
mine waste rock and slimes, ash, toxic chemicals, medical waste, nuclear waste |
Trade in toxic waste |
by category, required by Basel Convention |
Investment in environmental protection (local currency) |
by type (protected area management, monitoring, eduction, pollution law enforcement, research) |
Several sites in Tables 8 and 9 belong to more than one programme. (References: Jouventin 1994; Kristiansen; Notrott et al 1994; Reid and Edwards 1995; TEMS 1995)
Table 8. Long-term environmental monitoring networks covering terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems
Name |
No. of sites |
|
|
Acid Rain National Early Warning System (ARNEWS), Canada |
150 |
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) |
|
Benchmark Sites for Agricultural Land, Canada |
23 |
Canadian Forest Service: Health of Sugar Maple in Northeastern N. America |
62 |
Chinese Ecological Research Network (CERN) |
22 |
CIFOR: Forest Ecosystem Management Project |
12 |
ICP for Assessment and Monitoring of Acidification of Rivers and Lakes |
> 200 |
ICP for Assessment and Monitoring of Air Pollution Effects on Forests/Level II |
ca. 480 |
ICP for Res. on Evaluating Eff. of Air Poll. and other Stresses on Agr. Crops |
33 |
ICP for Integrated Monitoring |
58 |
IGBP: Land-Ocean Interactions in the Coastal Zone (LOICZ) |
|
IGBP Megatransects |
12 transects |
International Network on Soil Fertility and Sustainable Rice Farming (INSURF) |
|
International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) |
|
International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) |
23 |
International Union of Forestry Research (IUFRO) |
|
IRFs Eastern Caribbean Biodiversity Initiative |
10 |
Long-Term Ecosystem Productivity Integrated Research Network (LTEP IRS), USA |
4 |
Long-Term Soil Productivity Network, USA |
8 |
LTER Finland: Eff. of climate change on fishes, fish stocks, fisheries and aquacult. |
> 25 |
MAB: Biosphere Reserve Integrated Monitoring (BRIM) |
324 |
NASA Landsat Pathfinder Global Land Cover Test Sites Project |
> 120 |
Rèseau National de suivi à long terme des ècosystemes forestiers (RENECOFOR) |
100 |
Sahara and Sahel Observatory: ROSELT |
67 |
SCOPE: Biogeochemistry of major world rivers, lakes and estuaries* |
101 |
Smithsonian Institute: Center for Tropical Forest Science (CTFS) |
17 |
Taiwan Ecological Research Network (TERN) |
2 |
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network, Germany (TERN) |
|
The British Countryside Survey |
500 |
Tropical Soil Biology and Fertility Programme (TBSF) |
> 23 |
UK Environmental Change Network, Freshwater Sites |
37 |
UK Environmental Change Network, Terrestrial sites |
11 |
US Long-Term Ecological Research Network (LTER) |
18 |
US National Park Service Global Change Program |
78 |
US National Water Quality Assessment (NAWQA) |
18 |
West and Central African Network: HydroNiger |
67 |
*evaluated in Reid and Edwards 1995
Table 9. Long-Term Environmental Research (LTER) Programmes with sites, which might be relevant to GTOS
Name |
No of sites |
A field study of the eff. of elevated ambient CO2 on ecos. proc. in Chesapeake Bay wetlands |
|
ABRACOS: Anglo-Brazilian Climate Observational Study |
4 |
Baie Du Mont St. Michele Wetlands |
|
Batu Apoi Forest Reserve, Brunei, Borneo: Vertebrate population and tropical ecology |
1 |
BOREAS: Boreal Ecosystems Atmospheric Study |
2 |
Cairngorms , Scotland |
|
Canada: Various projects on acidification of lakes, soil and forests |
3 |
Canadian Forest Service: Turkey Lakes Watershed, Central Ontario |
|
CIFOR: Forest Ecosystem Management Project (Jambi, Sumatra) |
|
Classification of Landsat Thematic Mapper data, Virunga National Park, Zaïre |
|
Craigieburn Research Area, NZ |
plot network |
Darum Research Station and Program, Sabah (Sabah Foundation) |
|
ECHIVAL: An European Field Experiment in Desertification-threatened Areas (EFEDA) |
5 |
EPAs National Estuary Program |
6 |
Evolution of a Mediterranean Forest (Quercus ilex) |
|
Fargo Station, North Dakota |
12 |
General Governmental System of Ecological Monitoring in Russia (EGSM) |
|
Glendhu Catchment Study, NZ |
2 |
HAPEX-SAHEL |
3 |
INPA: Long-term river continuum studies: Taruma |
|
INPA: Reserva Ducke |
|
Long-Term Swedish Field Liming Experiment |
4 |
Lower Mekong Basin: Water Quality Monitoring Network |
|
LTER Argentina: Several Programmes on 5 Sites |
5 |
LTER Brazil: Brazilian Coastal Atlantic Forest: extensive studies |
|
LTER Brazil: Floodplain ecology: Ilha da Marchantaria |
|
LTER Brazil: Long-term river continuum studies: Jau |
|
LTER Brazil: Pantanal Region (several studies) |
|
LTER Chile: Terrestrial and aquatic interdisciplinary programmes |
3 |
LTER Finland: Physiological and genetical adaptation of forest trees to climate changes |
1 |
LTER Finland: The Effect of Climate on the Phenology of Perennial Plants |
395 |
LTER France: Hydrological Monitoring of Rivers |
> 2 |
LTER France: Research on Soil Quality |
10 |
LTER France: Terrestrial and marine LTER in the Austral and Indian Oceans |
4 |
LTER Hungary: Balaton Lake Project |
|
LTER Hungary: Biological Monitoring in the Szigetkoz Danube Barrage System |
|
LTER Hungary: Sikfokut Project |
|
LTER Latvia: Pollution of fresh waters |
5 |
LTER Mexico: Several programmes |
6 |
LTER Mongolia: Mongolian Acad. Sci. (MAS): Inst. of Botany and 9 Research Stations |
10 |
LTER Norway: Eff. of climate change on growth and dev. on northern landscape plants |
8 |
LTER Russia: Freshwater Ecosystems |
14 |
Mackenzie Basin Impact Study |
|
Mount Cameroon Project |
|
Ontario Long-Term Ecological Research Program |
3 |
Organic matter turnover in a Western European climate transect in coniferous forests transect |
|
Orongorongo Field Station, NZ |
|
ORSTOM: African lakes and rivers |
> 4 |
ORSTOM: Lower Guinea Area Coastal Basins |
|
Predictive modelling of Backbarrier Salt Marsh response to accelerated sea-level rise, UK |
5 |
Purukohukohu Experimental Basin, NN |
3 |
SALT: Savannas A Long Term |
8 |
The Carbon in the Amazon River Experiment |
|
UNEP: Environment Change and the Productivity of Tropical Grasslands |
5 |
USDA Forest Service: Air Pollution in the Wind River Mountain Wilderness |
|
Vegetation change from global warming in Korea |
3 |
Vegetation monitoring in Lowveld and arid Lowveld of Natal |
|
Table 10 Sites, which submitted metadata to GTOS (TEMS 1995, Ecoregion classification: Bailey 1989)
TIER 2 |
||||||||
Ecoregion |
Site name |
DEG |
MIN |
LAT |
DEG |
MIN |
LON |
No of sites |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Icecap Division |
McMurdo Dry Valleys |
77 |
|
S |
162 |
|
E |
|
Tundra Division |
Arctic Tundra/Toolik Lake |
68 |
38 |
N |
149 |
34 |
W |
|
|
Palmer Station |
64 |
40 |
S |
64 |
3 |
W |
|
Subarctic Division |
Bonanza Creek Experimental Forest |
64 |
45 |
N |
148 |
0 |
W |
|
Warm Continental Division |
Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station |
35 |
|
N |
85 |
|
W |
8 |
|
Cedar Creek Natural History Area |
45 |
24 |
N |
93 |
12 |
W |
|
|
Harvard Forest LTER Site |
42 |
32 |
N |
72 |
10 |
W |
|
|
Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest |
43 |
56 |
N |
71 |
45 |
W |
|
|
North Temperate Lakes LTER (Trout Lake Station) |
46 |
0 |
N |
89 |
40 |
W |
|
Hot Continental Division |
W K Kellogg Biological Station |
42 |
24 |
N |
85 |
24 |
W |
|
Subtropical Division |
Coweeta Hydrological Laboratory |
35 |
0 |
N |
83 |
30 |
W |
|
|
Jiangxi Dagangshang Ecological Experimental Station |
27 |
40 |
N |
114 |
38 |
E |
|
|
Smithsonian Environmental Research Centre |
39 |
|
N |
77 |
|
W |
|
|
Virginia Coast Reserve, LTER |
37 |
27 |
N |
75 |
40 |
W |
|
Marine Division |
Askov Experimental Station |
55 |
28 |
N |
9 |
7 |
E |
|
|
Bornhöved Lakes District |
54 |
|
N |
10 |
|
E |
|
|
Centro Austral de Investigaciones Cientificas (CADIC) |
54 |
49 |
S |
68 |
18 |
W |
|
|
H J Andrews Experimental Forest |
44 |
14 |
N |
122 |
11 |
W |
|
|
Lake Gardsjon |
58 |
4 |
N |
12 |
1 |
E |
|
|
Projektzentrum Oekosystemforschung |
54 |
6 |
N |
10 |
15 |
E |
|
|
Rothamsted Experimental Station |
51 |
48 |
N |
0 |
20 |
W |
|
|
Solling-B1 |
51 |
45 |
N |
9 |
34 |
E |
|
|
Solling-F1 |
51 |
45 |
N |
9 |
34 |
E |
|
Prairie Division |
EEA Balcarce. Subprogramme |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PAPA |
37 |
45 |
S |
58 |
18 |
W |
|
|
Konza Praire Research Natural Area |
39 |
5 |
N |
96 |
35 |
W |
|
|
Sanborn Field |
38 |
57 |
N |
93 |
20 |
W |
|
Mediterranean Division |
Priest River Experimental Forest - LTSP |
48 |
21 |
N |
116 |
50 |
W |
|
|
Waite Permanent Rotation |
34 |
55 |
S |
138 |
35 |
E |
|
Tropical/Subtropical Desert Division |
Indian Agricultural Research Institute |
28 |
35 |
N |
77 |
12 |
E |
|
|
Jornada LTER |
32 |
30 |
N |
106 |
45 |
W |
|
|
Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge |
34 |
21 |
N |
106 |
54 |
W |
|
Temperate Steppe Division |
Central Plains Experimental Range |
40 |
49 |
N |
104 |
46 |
W |
|
|
Niwot Ridge LTER Site |
40 |
3 |
N |
105 |
37 |
W |
|
Rainforest Division |
Barro Colorado Island Nature Monument |
9 |
9 |
N |
79 |
51 |
W |
|
|
La Selva Biological Station |
10 |
26 |
N |
83 |
59 |
W |
|
|
Luquillo Experimental Forest |
18 |
18 |
N |
65 |
52 |
W |
|
|
Pasoh Forest Reserve |
3 |
0 |
N |
102 |
20 |
E |
|
TOTAL |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
45 |
TIER 3 |
||||||||
Icecap Division |
Ny-Alesund |
79 |
0 |
N |
12 |
20 |
E |
|
Subarctic Division |
Atikokan Coldwater Lakes Research Site |
49 |
|
N |
94 |
|
W |
|
|
Bear Brooks Watershed in Maine (BBWM) |
44 |
52 |
N |
68 |
6 |
W |
|
|
Caribou/ Poker Creeks Research Watershed |
65 |
15 |
N |
147 |
30 |
W |
|
|
Hietajärvi, ICP Integrated Monitoring Sites FI03 |
63 |
9 |
N |
30 |
40 |
E |
|
|
Howland Integrated Forest Study (HIFS) |
45 |
10 |
N |
68 |
40 |
W |
|
|
Pesosjärvi, ICP Integrated Monitoring Sites FI04 |
66 |
17 |
N |
29 |
26 |
E |
|
|
Reivo |
65 |
47 |
N |
19 |
6 |
E |
|
|
Valkea-Kotinen, ICP Integrated Monitoring Sites FI01 |
61 |
14 |
N |
25 |
3 |
E |
|
|
Velikiy, No 16 |
66 |
40 |
N |
33 |
0 |
E |
|
|
Vuoskojärvi, ICP Integrated Monitoring Sites FI05 |
69 |
44 |
N |
26 |
56 |
E |
|
Warm Continental Division |
Aukstaitija Integrated Monitoring Station |
55 |
26 |
N |
26 |
4 |
E |
|
|
Dzukija Integrated Monitoring Station |
54 |
3 |
N |
25 |
16 |
E |
|
|
Hubbard Brook, NH |
43 |
57 |
N |
71 |
42 |
W |
|
|
Long term triple cereal cropping |
28 |
3 |
N |
121 |
25 |
E |
|
|
Observatory Kosetice |
49 |
35 |
N |
15 |
5 |
E |
|
|
Puszcza Borecka (Diabla Gora) |
54 |
9 |
N |
22 |
4 |
E |
|
|
Rucava Area |
56 |
12 |
N |
21 |
7 |
E |
|
|
Réseau de suivi des écosystèmes forestiers HET L1 |
49 |
59 |
N |
6 |
2 |
E |
|
|
Réseau de suivi des écosystèmes forestiers HET L2 |
49 |
39 |
N |
6 |
11 |
E |
|
|
Sanjiang Plain Mire and Wetland Ecosystem Experimental Station |
47 |
35 |
N |
133 |
3 |
E |
|
|
Taurene Area |
57 |
10 |
N |
25 |
41 |
E |
|
|
Ussuri Reserve |
43 |
42 |
N |
132 |
29 |
E |
|
|
Valdai, No 15 |
57 |
51 |
N |
32 |
21 |
E |
|
|
Vilsandi |
58 |
20 |
N |
22 |
0 |
E |
|
|
Zemaitija Integrated Monitoring Station |
56 |
0 |
N |
21 |
52 |
E |
|
Hot Continental Division |
Fernow Experimental Forest |
39 |
5 |
N |
79 |
41 |
W |
|
|
Hailun Agro-Ecological Experimental Station, CAS |
47 |
26 |
N |
126 |
58 |
E |
|
|
Naiman Desertification Research Station |
42 |
55 |
N |
120 |
42 |
E |
|
|
Pennsylvania State University |
40 |
44 |
N |
77 |
57 |
W |
|
ACC |
Administrative Committee on Coordination |
AMAP |
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme |
AVHRR |
Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer |
BATERISTA |
Biosphere Atmosphere Transfer and Ecological Research in situ Studies in Amazonia |
BAHC |
Biospheric Aspects of the Hydrological Cycle |
CAB |
Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International |
CCU |
Central Coordinating Committee |
CDIAC |
Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Centre |
CEO |
Centre for Earth Observation |
CEOS |
Committee on Earth Observation Satellites |
CERN |
Chinese Ecosystem Research Network |
CGIAR |
Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research |
CICERO |
Centre for International Climate and Energy Research, Oslo |
CIESIN |
Consortium for International Earth Science Information Network |
CIFOR |
Centre for International Forestry Research |
CITES |
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species |
CORINE |
Coordination of Information on the Environment |
CSD |
Commission on Sustainable Development |
DDT |
Dichloro diphenyl tricholoroethane |
DGVM |
Dynamic Global Vegetation Model |
DIVERSITAS |
DIVERSITAS Programme |
EC |
European Community |
ECN |
Environmental Change Network |
EEA |
European Environment Agency |
EEOS |
European Earth Observing System |
EMAP |
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Programme |
EOS |
Earth Observing System |
EOSDIS |
Earth Observing System Data and Information System |
EROS |
US Geological Survey Earth Resources Observation Systems |
ESA |
European Space Agency |
EU |
European Union |
EUROSTAT |
European Statistical Office |
FAO |
Food and Agricultural Organization |
FCCC |
Framework Convention on Climate Change |
GAW |
Global Atmospheric Watch |
GCM |
General Circulation Model |
GCOS |
Global Climate Observing System |
GCOS/GTOS TOP |
GCOS/GTOS Terrestrial Observation Panel |
GCTE |
Global Change and Terrestrial Ecosystems (IGBP) |
GDP |
Gross Domestic Product |
GEF |
Global Environment Facility |
GEMS |
Global Environment Monitoring System |
GHG |
Greenhouse gases |
GIS |
Geographic Information System |
GOOS |
Global Ocean Observing System |
GRDC |
Global Run off Data Centre |
GRID |
Global Resource Information Database |
GTOS |
Global Terrestrial Observing System |
HDP |
Human Dimensions of Global Environmental Change Programme |
IAI |
Inter American Institute for Global Change Research |
IBPGR |
International Board for Plant Genetic Resources |
ICPs |
International Cooperative Programmes |
ICSU |
International Council of Scientific Unions |
IGBP |
International Geosphere Biosphere Programme |
IGBP DIS |
Data and Information System for the IGBP |
IHP |
International Hydrological Programme |
ILTER |
International Long Term Ecological Research |
INENCO |
Centre for International Environmental Cooperation |
INSURF |
International Network on Soil Fertility and Sustainable Rice Farming |
IPCC |
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change |
IRRI |
International Rice Research Institute, Philippines |
IRS |
Information Retrieval Service (ESA) |
ISLSCP |
International Satellite Land Surface Climatology Project |
ISRIC |
Soil Reference and Information Centre |
ITE |
Institute for Terrestrial Ecology |
IUCN |
World Conservation Union |
IUFRO |
International Union of Forestry Research |
JSTC |
Joint Scientifical and Technical Committee for GCOS |
LAMBADA |
Large Scale Atmospheric Moisture Balance of Amazonia using Data Assimilation |
LME |
Large Marine Ecosystem |
LOICZ |
Land - Ocean Interaction in the Coastal Zone |
LTER |
Long Term Ecological Research |
LUCC |
Land-Use and Land-Cover Change project of IGBP and HDP |
MAB |
Man and the Biosphere Programme |
MARS |
Monitoring Agriculture with Remote Sensing |
MERIS |
Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer |
MODIS |
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer |
NASA |
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (USA) |
NASDA |
National Space Development Agency (Japan) |
NAWQA |
National Water Quality Assessment |
NEP |
Net Ecosystem Production |
NGO |
Non Governmental Organization |
NOAA |
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration |
NPP |
Net Primary Production |
PAH |
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons |
PCB |
Polychlorinated Bi phenyls |
PG |
Planning Group |
PHARE |
Technical assistance to Eastern European States |
RAMSAR |
Ramsar Convention Programme |
ROSELT |
Réseau dObservatoires de Surveillance Ecologique à Long Terme |
RS |
Remote sensing |
SADC |
Southern Africa Development |
SAR |
Synthetic Aperture Radar |
SC |
Steering Committee |
SCOPE |
Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (ICSU) |
SOTER |
Soil and Terrain data |
SPOT |
Systeme Probatoire dObservation de la Terre |
START |
Global Change System for Analysis, Research and Training (IGBP) |
TAG |
Technical Advisory Group |
TEMS |
Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring Sites database |
TOP |
Terrestrial Observation Panel of GCOS/GTOS |
TREES |
Tropical Ecosystem Environment Observations by Satellite (EC) |
UN |
United Nations |
UNDP |
United Nations Development Programme |
UNEP |
United Nations Environment Programme |
UNEP HEM |
UNEP Harmonization of Environmental Measurement |
UNESCO |
United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization |
UNITAR |
United Nations Institute for Training and Research |
US LTER |
US Long Term Ecological Research network |
WCMC |
World Conservation Monitoring Centre |
WCRP |
World Climate Research Programme |
WDC |
World Data Centre (ICSU) |
WG |
Work Group |
WHYCOS |
World Hydrological Cycle Observing System |
WMO |
World Meteorological Organization |
WRI |
World Resources Institute |
WWW |
World Weather Watch |