Search columns
Search news bureau
Search UGA
Sections
Campus News
Around Academe
Worth Repeating
Go Figure
Digest
UGA Guide
Weekly Reader
Cybersights
Bulletin Board
Back Issues


since 12/15/98
Columns::January 13, 2003

$1 million gift will establish endowed chair in public policy
Adam Cureton is UGA’s newest Rhodes Scholar
Woodruff, Honors Program student, named one of 40 Marshall Scholars
Marine talk
State, nation econmic forecast: Still raining
IRP considers changes in operational procedures
Full of beans
Campus Closeup
Update: Private Giving
Newsmakers
A personal philosophy of teaching

Campus News


$6.7 million NSF grant funds study of land-use change in southern Applachian Mountains

UGA has received a National Science Foundation grant of $6.7 million to study, with cooperating federal agencies and other universities, the ecological consequences of land-use change in the southern Appalachian Mountains.
The grant extends for another six years the Coweeta Long-Term Ecological Research program centered at the U.S. Forest Service’s Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory in Otto, N.C.
“In this new study, we plan to pull together information from 1850 to the present on the interaction of people and the environment in the region--something that has never been done for southern Appalachia,” says Ted Gragson, an associate professor of anthropology at UGA and co-principal investigator for the project. “We will use the information to make forecasts that could influence everything from ecological to public policy recommendations.”
The other co-principal investigators are James Vose of the Forest Service and Brian Kloeppel of UGA’s Institute of Ecology, both at Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, and some 25 researchers from seven universities: UGA, Virginia Tech, the University of Minnesota, Duke University, Mars Hill University, the University of North Carolina at Asheville and the University of Wisconsin. More than a dozen UGA faculty members in several colleges and departments are involved in research projects under the umbrella of the grant.
The Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory is located in the southern Appalachian Mountains and contains stands of eastern deciduous forests of varying ages, white pine plantations and numerous streams. The site is administered by the USDA Forest Service. The Forest Service operates as a subcontractor to UGA on the project.
The Coweeta Long-Term Ecological Research Program has evolved since 1980 from a site-based to a site- and region-based project that examines the effects of disturbance and environmental gradients on biogeochemical cycling. The focus of the 1996-2002 Coweeta LTER research was to investigate the complex interactions of natural disturbances and human land use across a range of scales.
There are 25 LTER projects nationally. Projects are funded for six years, and so the newly funded research at Coweeta--while technically a renewal--had to be won competitively, and it will take the studies there in new directions through the grant’s new end period in 2008.
“Our guiding hypothesis,” says Gragson, “is that the frequency, intensity and extent of land use represent human decision making that cascades through ecosystems. During the next six years, we will build on 21 years of Coweeta LTER research to advance scientific understanding of the southern Appalachian Mountains.”
The project will study 60 counties in four states. Counties in Georgia include Dawson, Fannin, Gilmer, Habersham, Murray, Lumpkin, Pickens, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union and White.
In the previous six-year research cycle, more than 200 research publications were generated from the Coweeta LTER, as well as some 12 dissertations and theses.




UGA Today supports QuickTime, Flash, RealPlayer and Acrobat Reader (PDF files).
Download information about these plug-ins.
Affiliate icons for UGA Today

COLUMNS ] UGA Today ] Subscribe ] News Bureau ]
Office of Public Affairs Directory ] Photo Services ]
Broadcast, Video & Photography ] Master Calendar]
Columns ] Georgia Magazine ]Visitors Center ]
UGA Home ] Alumni ] Admissions ] UGA Directories ]
Sports ] Weather ] Search UGA sites ]

Columns is produced by the UGA News Service, a unit of UGA Public Affairs.
Beth Roberts: Columns editor, Juliett Dinkins: Columns managing editor,
Janet Beckley: Columns art director. Peter Frey: Columns photo editor

Questions or comments should be directed to columns@uga.edu


Copyright 2003 University of Georgia. All rights reserved