PIE LTER Data Workshop
We will run a Data Workshop on March 25, 11 am via Zoom to go over the LTER data publications requirements, PIE’s data submission process, and a tutorial for the ezEML metadata tool. We encourage everyone who works with data to attend, including PIs, postdocs, RAs, graduate students, and undergraduates! Register here
Read MoreMarsh Madness!
Thank you to everyone who participated in our Marsh Madness photo competition! Congratulations to the winners of the four categories: Adelma Argueta Roman, Emelie Foster, Lucia Ramirez-Joseph, and Jane Tucker. And congratulations to the top photo, “Fieldwork Doesn’t Stop at Sunset” by Lucia Ramirez-Joseph. Check out all of the amazing entries below.
Read MorePIE LTER Newsletter | February 2026
Read the February 2026 Newsletter
Read MorePIE LTER Newsletter | November 2025
Read the November 2025 Newsletter
Read MorePIE LTER Newsletter | August 2025
Read the August 2025 Newsletter
Read MorePIE LTER Newsletter | May 2025
Read the May 2025 Newsletter
Read MorePIE LTER Data Workshop
The PIE LTER is excited to offer a Data Workshop on March 19, 11am via Zoom to go over the LTER data publications requirements, PIE’s data submission process, and a tutorial for the ezEML metadata tool. We encourage everyone who works with data to attend, including PIs, postdocs, RAs, graduate students, and undergraduates!
Read MorePIE graduate student Aiyin Zhang wins first place in the Remote Sensing Specialty Group’s Illustrated Paper Competition at AGG 2024
PIE graduate student Aiyin Zhang attended the recent American Association of Geographers (AAG) 2024 Annual Meeting in Honolulu, Hawaii, where she won first place in the Remote Sensing Specialty Group’s Illustrated Paper Competition with her poster presentation titled “Data quality assessment of loss and gain of a land category during a time series”. Aiyin’s research focused on…
Read MoreImproving Tools to Track Carbon Emissions
New research focusing on adapting carbon dioxide sensors for streams and rivers.
Read MoreHow a thumb-sized climate migrant with a giant crab claw is disrupting the Northeast’s Great Marsh ecosystem
Fiddler crabs have moved far beyond their historical range.
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