AG真人百家乐官方网站

Skip to main content
NSF NEON, Operated by Battelle

Main navigation

  • AG真人百家乐官方网站 Us
    • Overview
      • Spatial and Temporal Design
      • History
    • Vision and Management
    • Advisory Groups
      • Science, Technology & Education Advisory Committee
      • Technical Working Groups (TWGs)
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
      • Contact NEON Biorepository
      • Field Offices
    • User Accounts
    • Staff
    • Code of Conduct

    AG真人百家乐官方网站 Us

  • Data & Samples
    • Data Portal
      • Spatial Data & Maps
    • Data Themes
      • Biogeochemistry
      • Ecohydrology
      • Land Cover and Processes
      • Organisms, Populations, and Communities
    • Samples & Specimens
      • Discover and Use NEON Samples
        • Sample Types
        • Sample Repositories
        • Megapit and Distributed Initial Characterization Soil Archives
      • Sample Processing
      • Sample Quality
    • Collection Methods
      • Protocols & Standardized Methods
      • Airborne Remote Sensing
        • Flight Box Design
        • Flight Schedules and Coverage
        • Daily Flight Reports
          • AOP Flight Report Sign Up
        • Camera
        • Imaging Spectrometer
        • Lidar
      • Automated Instruments
        • Site Level Sampling Design
        • Sensor Collection Frequency
        • Instrumented Collection Types
          • Meteorology
          • Phenocams
          • Soil Sensors
          • Ground Water
          • Surface Water
      • Observational Sampling
        • Site Level Sampling Design
        • Sampling Schedules
        • Observation Types
          • Aquatic Organisms
            • Aquatic Microbes
            • Fish
            • Macroinvertebrates & Zooplankton
            • Periphyton, Phytoplankton, and Aquatic Plants
          • Terrestrial Organisms
            • Birds
            • Ground Beetles
            • Mosquitoes
            • Small Mammals
            • Soil Microbes
            • Terrestrial Plants
            • Ticks
          • Hydrology & Geomorphology
            • Discharge
            • Geomorphology
          • Biogeochemistry
          • DNA Sequences
          • Pathogens
          • Sediments
          • Soils
            • Soil Descriptions
        • Optimizing the Observational Sampling Designs
    • Data Notifications
    • Data Guidelines and Policies
      • Acknowledging and Citing NEON
      • Publishing Research Outputs
      • Usage Policies
    • Data Management
      • Data Availability
      • Data Formats and Conventions
      • Data Processing
      • Data Quality
      • Data Product Bundles
      • Data Product Revisions and Releases
        • Release 2021
        • Release 2022
        • Release 2023
        • Release 2024
        • Release-2025
      • NEON and Google
      • Externally Hosted Data

    Data & Samples

  • Field Sites
    • AG真人百家乐官方网站 Field Sites and Domains
    • Explore Field Sites

    Field Sites

  • Impact
    • Observatory Blog
    • Case Studies
    • Papers & Publications
    • Newsroom
      • NEON in the News
      • Newsletter Archive
      • Newsletter Sign Up

    Impact

  • Resources
    • Getting Started with NEON Data & Resources
    • Documents and Communication Resources
      • Papers & Publications
      • Outreach Materials
    • Code Hub
      • Code Resources Guidelines
      • Code Resources Submission
    • Learning Hub
      • Science Videos
      • Tutorials
      • Workshops & Courses
      • Teaching Modules
    • Research Support Services
      • Field Site Coordination
      • Letters of Support
      • Mobile Deployment Platforms
      • Permits and Permissions
      • AOP Flight Campaigns
      • Research Support FAQs
      • Research Support Projects
    • Funding Opportunities

    Resources

  • Get Involved
    • Advisory Groups
      • Science, Technology & Education Advisory Committee
      • Technical Working Groups
    • Upcoming Events
    • NEON Ambassador Program
      • Exploring NEON-Derived Data Products Workshop Series
    • Research and Collaborations
      • Environmental Data Science Innovation and Inclusion Lab
      • Collaboration with DOE BER User Facilities and Programs
      • EFI-NEON Ecological Forecasting Challenge
      • NEON Great Lakes User Group
      • NEON Science Summit
      • NCAR-NEON-Community Collaborations
        • NCAR-NEON Community Steering Committee
    • Community Engagement
      • How Community Feedback Impacts NEON Operations
    • Science Seminars and Data Skills Webinars
      • Past Years
    • Work Opportunities
      • Careers
      • Seasonal Fieldwork
      • Internships
        • Intern Alumni
    • Partners

    Get Involved

  • My Account
  • Search

Search

Impact

  • Observatory Blog
  • Case Studies
  • Papers & Publications
  • Newsroom

Breadcrumb

  1. Impact
  2. Observatory Blog
  3. Coming updates to NEON microbial data

Data Notification

Coming updates to NEON microbial data

January 29, 2024

Over the last two years there have been a lot of changes in NEON's microbial data products, and data released in the coming year will include many updates and new, improved DNA sequence data. Improvements in sequencing technology and laboratory protocols are producing data of overall better quality and greatly expanded size. See below for details of the current status of individual data products; another update will be provided in May.

The metagenomics data products will have the biggest improvements, encompassing all sample types: soil (), benthic (), and surface water (). For the 2022 collections, DNA sequencing will move to the much larger capacity Illumina NovaSeq sequencing platform. As a result of this, the average number of sequence reads for each sample will increase about ten-fold. For the 2023 and 2024 collections, NEON will embark on a collaboration with the (JGI) and the (NMDC), through which all metagenomic samples will be sequenced by JGI and then analyzed through the NMDC data analysis pipeline. This is supported in part by a Community Science Proposal grant awarded to NEON this year. The JGI sequencing will result in an approximately 50-fold increase in sequence output over current NEON averages. Another exciting aspect of this collaboration is that all NEON metagenomic samples, past and present, will be incorporated into the NMDC database and run through their data analysis pipeline.

The sequencing of the 2022 samples will begin in February, 2024. These sequencing runs will also include the last samples remaining from the 2020 and 2021 field collections. The first sets of data will begin to be released in March, 2024, and all metagenome sequences from 2020 鈥� 2022 should be available as provisional data by the end of April, 2024.

The sequencing of the 2023 metagenome samples will also begin in February. Due to the intensive data analysis that will accompany the sequencing there will be a longer lag time between sequencing and release. The first set of samples should be released in May, with the subsequent two batches to be released each month thereafter. Discussions are underway between NEON and NMDC as to how these data will be presented. NEON will continue to provide links to the raw data, as well as links to the metagenome annotations on NMDC.  

The marker gene data products (soil: , benthic: , surface water: ) have also gone through major changes. Over the past year and a half, the Rush University Genomics and Microbiome Core Facility (GCMF), a laboratory that specializes in environmental DNA, optimized the PCR and sequencing protocols for both ITS and 16S amplicon sequencing. These changes have resulted in greatly improved quality of the sequencing results, especially for the fungal ITS products. As well, the GMCF has upgraded to the Illumina NovaSeq to sequence the marker gene products, substantially increasing the number of sequences per sample.

Last year the Rush GMCF laboratory completed the fungal ITS sequencing of the 2019 samples. This wrapped up the 2019 marker gene sequencing (the bacterial 16S had already been done). All the 2019 marker gene data are part of the 2024 official release. The GMCF is currently sequencing the 2020 and 2021 samples, and they will be released as provisional data as they become available. The first sets of samples will be available online in February, with all samples from these two years expected to be completed by April. After completing the 2020 and 2021 samples, the GMCF will begin to sequence the 2022 and 2023 samples, with these data expected to be available by October.

Lastly, the microbe community composition data products (soil: , benthic: , and surface water: ), are undergoing major modifications, primarily to the data analysis pipeline. These changes are being done to 1) make it easier to compare all samples across years and sites, 2) improve accessibility to the data by, for example, making it easier to import the sample data into popular metabarcoding programs such as and for downstream ecological analysis, and 3) provide a modular pipeline system that is flexible and that can be adapted to new programs and analytic methods.

The revised community composition products will begin to be available on the data portal in the spring of 2024. The 2019 samples are targeted for release in April. As the 2020/2021 marker gene sequences become available, they will be run through the community composition pipeline, with the results published as provisional data by end of May. Likewise, for the 2022/2023 samples, the community composition analysis will be run as those sequences become available and are expected by October. 

Share

Related Posts:

Resolved: NEON Terrestrial Observation System (OS) Base plot subplot renaming

August 9, 2024

Discontinuing SF6 releases as part of Reaeration (DP1.20190.001) at all NEON sites

April 15, 2025

Update: Survey Results and Pilot Study - Planned changes to mosquito pathogen status data product (DP1.10041.001)

March 26, 2025

NSF NEON, Operated by Battelle

Follow Us:

Join Our Newsletter

Get updates on events, opportunities, and how NEON is being used today.

Subscribe Now

Footer

  • AG真人百家乐官方网站 Us
  • Newsroom
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Careers
  • Code of Conduct

Copyright © Battelle, 2025

The National Ecological Observatory Network is a major facility fully funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. National Science Foundation.