Colorado mountains
 

Land Ocean Interaction in the Santa Barbara Coastal LTER

Poster Number: 
263
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Dan Reed
Co-Authors: 
Mark Brzezinski
Co-Authors: 
Scott Cooper
Co-Authors: 
Jenifer Dugan
Co-Authors: 
Anita Guerrini
Co-Authors: 
Sallly Holbrook
Co-Authors: 
Hunter Lenihan
Co-Authors: 
John Melack
Co-Authors: 
Margaret O'Brien
Co-Authors: 
Robert Miller
Co-Authors: 
H. Mark Page
Co-Authors: 
David Siegel
Co-Authors: 
Russell Schmitt
Co-Authors: 
Libe Washburn

The Santa Barbara Coastal LTER (SBC) is an interdisciplinary research and education program established in April, 2000 to investigate the role of land and ocean processes in structuring ecosystems at the land-sea margin. The focal ecosystem of our research is giant kelp forests, a diverse and highly productive marine ecosystem that occurs on shallow rocky reefs at the interface of the land-sea margin in temperate regions throughout the world. Our principal study domain is the Santa Barbara Channel and the steep coastal watersheds, small estuaries and sandy beaches that bound it. The major emphasis of our research is on developing a predictive understanding of the structural and functional responses of giant kelp forest ecosystems to environmental forcing from the land and the sea. The amount of nutrients and organic matter delivered to the kelp forest from land and the surrounding ocean varies in response to changes in climate, ocean conditions, and land use. Variation in the supply of these commodities interacts with natural and anthropogenic forms of disturbance to influence the abundance and species composition of kelp forest inhabitants and the ecological services that they provide.

 
 
Background Photo by: Nicole Hansen - Jornada (JRN) LTER