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. Getting to Know the NEON Domains: Southeast

Getting to Know the NEON Domains: Southeast

September 30, 2020

!

This blog series explores each of the 20 NEON ecoclimate Domains and the field sites within them. Watch for news from our other Domains coming soon!

If you like it hot and steamy, NEON鈥檚 Southeast Domain (D03) is for you. This diverse subtropical Domain is home to an estimated 5 million alligators, more than 40 million people, and, of course, the world's most famous mouse.

With field sites at the Disney Wilderness Preserve, The Jones Center at Ichauway, and the Ordway-Swisher Biological Station, NEON's Southeast Domain provides a model for collaboration between industry, academia, and large-scale research infrastructures to further ecological and conservation research.

Defining the Southeast Domain

The Southeast Domain encompasses most of Florida; the Gulf Coast regions of Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi; and portions of Georgia and South Carolina. This is the Coastal Plains region of the southeastern U.S., with a mix of lowland, wetland and coastal ecosystems bordering the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic.

 

Map of Domain 03 - Southeast. Click to explore the Story Map.

 

The climate of D03 is humid subtropical, with steamy summers and mild winters. Late summer and fall bring tropical storms and often hurricanes, sometimes catastrophic. This balmy environment supports high levels of biodiversity, with more than 1,800 endemic plant species and iconic animal species like the American Alligator and Nine-Banded Armadillo.

Currently, much of this biodiversity is under threat due to climate change and the pressures of agriculture and urbanization. The longleaf pine forests that once covered much of the region now comprise less than 5% of the land, severely shrinking habitats for many endemic mammal and bird species. Marine and coastal habitats are at risk from rising seawaters, pollution, and the impact of increasingly frequent and severe tropical storms. Over the last two hundred years, many wetland areas have been drained for cattle grazing, crop growing, and human settlement, with wide-ranging consequences for the region as a whole. Changes in climate and land use patterns have also opened the door to invasive plant and animal species that are changing the character of the landscape and pushing out vulnerable native species.

 

The Flint River aquatic site (FLNT) in Georgia, 2017.

Over the next 30 years, the NEON program will be working closely with the site hosts at our field sites to monitor these changes and provide data to support conservation efforts.

  • Disney Wilderness Preserve (DSNY) terrestrial site is hosted by The Nature Conservatory on land originally donated by the Walt Disney Company for conversation and research.
  • Jones Ecological Research Center (JERC) terrestrial site and Flint River (FLNT) aquatic site are hosted by The Jones Center at Ichauway with support from the Robert W. Woodruff Foundation.
  • Ordway-Swisher Biological Station (OSBS) terrestrial site, Barco Lake (BARC) aquatic site, and Suggs Lake (SUGG) aquatic site are hosted by the University of Florida's Institute of Food & Agricultural Sciences (UF-IFAS).

The partnerships in the Southeast Domain represent a unique blend of academic, industry, and large-scale research organizations. In the coming years, NEON will continue support the individual missions of our hosts and partners and create opportunities to share knowledge and resources on a regional level.

Science at the House of Mouse with The Nature Conservancy

The Disney Wilderness Preserve, managed by The Nature Conservancy (TNC), sits on 11,600 acres of land near Kissimmee, Florida and Walt Disney World. Once a pine forest and wetland area at the head of the Greater Everglades Watershed, it was logged, drained, and used for cattle ranching throughout most of the 1900s. In 1992, the Walt Disney Company purchased 8,400 acres of the property and transferred it to TNC for wetland restoration. Another 3,200 acres was purchased by the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority and other entities to meet mitigation requirements and turned over to TNC for management.

 

Disney Wilderness preserve NEON field site through the mist. January 2018. Photo by Melissa Benedict.

Since then, the preserve has been recognized as one of the premier wetland conservation areas in the state. TNC has overseen wetland restoration and a prescribed fire protocol in forested areas to restore native habitats. The preserve now features a roughly equal mix of pine uplands and wetlands. It is home to a thriving Wood Stork population, North America's only native stork, and supports a small population of the endangered Red-Cockaded Woodpecker.

Beatriz Pace-Aldana, the Research Coordinator for the Florida Chapter of TNC, says 鈥淲e are very conservation-driven. We are interested in native species diversity and in natural systems and processes and how to maintain them. The data sets that NEON generates help us get more information about our preserve.鈥� She is especially excited about the hyperspectral and lidar data from the NEON Airborne Observation Platform (AOP), which they plan to use to understand the structure of the pine stands that the Red Cockaded Woodpecker and other species depend on.

Scientists at TNC are also interested in seeing how changes they are seeing at the Disney Wilderness Preserve compare to ecosystem changes across the region and continent. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great benefit to have data that is comparable on a continental scale and across timescales,鈥� says Pace-Aldana, 鈥渟o we can look at species and landscapes over time. We are looking forward to seeing how data collected here compares to data from other NEON field sites to see if the changes we are seeing here are unique to us or if they reflect broader patterns across the country.鈥�

In addition to the direct data that NEON provides, NEON鈥檚 DSNY site has been a magnet for other researchers. Pace-Aldana says, 鈥淣EON has raised the profile of the preserve and has been a lure for researchers interested in studying the ecosystem here.鈥�

An Ongoing Partnership with UF at the Ordway-Swisher Biological Station

The NEON program鈥檚 relationship with the University of Florida鈥檚 Institute of Food & Agricultural Sciences (UF-IFAS) has flourished into a thriving partnership at UF's Ordway-Swisher Biological Station (OSBS). The 9300-acre biological station, located near Gainesville in north central Florida, sits on land that was maintained for nature conservation and hunting throughout most of the 1900s. It is now managed by the university for the long-term study and conservation of unique ecosystems through management, research, and education. NEON maintains three field sites here, including a terrestrial site and two aquatic lake sites.

 

Lily pads at Suggs Lake (SUGG) aquatic site.

John Davis, the station Director and Associate Dean of Research at UF-IFAS, says that the data collected by NEON are an invaluable resource for faculty and students from UF and other regional universities who conduct research at Ordway-Swisher. 鈥淲ith NEON, you have a set of ready-made data that is organized, archived and of very high scientific quality, so [researchers] are not starting from scratch. There is so much more here than they would be able to collect on their own. They can see what is already available and focus their efforts on exploring specific questions that the data may suggest.鈥� UF-IFAS has also taken advantage of the NEON Assignable Assets program for several projects, including data collection to support studies of carbon capture by terrestrial ecosystems, phosphate transport in water, and large-scale forest dynamics.

 

Ground beetles from one trap at Ordway-Swisher Biological Station (OSBS), FL.

The collaboration between UF-IFAS and the NEON program has set the bar for partnership in ecological research through a series of ongoing activities that share information and research practices and promote collaboration between researchers in academia and industry. These activities include regular meetings between UF-IFAS and NEON staff to discuss research priorities, tours of the NEON infrastructure at OSBS for UF faculty and staff, and opportunities to shadow NEON field researchers. In turn, NEON field staff appreciate the facilities and resources that the staff at Ordway-Swisher have made available to them, including a new on-site field lab that the station built to provide a staging area for collected samples. The field lab has become a natural 鈥渃ollision space鈥� that promotes collaboration and informal discussion between the NEON and Ordway-Swisher teams. 

Research, Conservation, and Education at The Jones Center at Ichauway

The Jones Center at Ichauway is a 29,000-acre preserve in rural southwestern Georgia. Originally established as a quail hunting reserve by long-term Coca-Cola Chairman Robert Woodruff, it was set aside for research and conservation in the 1990s. It is notable for its extensive tracts of mature longleaf pine and wiregrass habitat鈥攁mong the few remaining across the Southeast. The NEON program has two field sites here, a terrestrial site and an aquatic site at Flint River.

The facility now supports a range of research and conservation efforts, including a prescribed fire regimen to manage the longleaf pine habitats and wildlife management programs for the bobwhite quail. The Jones Center research programs include water resources, forestry, and wildlife. The Center also partners with regional universities to enable ecological research with co-sponsored grad students.

 

Soil sampling 5 months after Hurricane Michael at the Jones Ecological Research Center (JERC) site.

Scott Taylor, a Senior Research Associate at The Jones Center, says that the data collected by NEON complement existing research programs at the Center. 鈥淣EON has filled a void in an area of the facility that hasn鈥檛 been sampled much. It is a good data set that we can compare to data we are collecting in other parts of the property.鈥� He sees the greatest benefit in the AOP data. 鈥淲e could never afford to collect this kind of remote sensing data on our own. It鈥檚 great to have this high-quality data from the flyovers of our site.鈥� He is especially interested in seeing data from areas that were disturbed by Hurricane Michael in 2018.

Taylor also appreciates the strong relationships that have developed between The Jones Center, NEON staff, and the other Southeast region hosts. 鈥淥ur relationship so far has been really good. This is a fairly isolated place, so a lot of people stay on site in our dorms here. The NEON team has become part of the Ichauway family.鈥�

Share

Related Posts:

NEON Data Release 2025 is available

January 29, 2025

2024 in Photos: A Look Back Across the Observatory

December 30, 2024

Flux tower in snow

Domain Digest No. 11: How NEON Beat the Summer Heat

October 14, 2024

Maria Beltrocco troubleshoots comms at Lajas Experimental Station (LAJA) in Puerto Rico.
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.