What a High-Tech Forest Can Teach us About Global Warming

By rigging the Harvard Forest with cameras, sensors, and even hotter air, scientists can study the future.

There are no secrets in the Harvard Forest. Cameras strapped to study towers hover above the canopy of this in central Massachusetts, taking snapshots of the foliage to record the exact moment when buds begin to form or leaves start to turn. Sensors measure the invisible exchange of carbon and water between the trees and the atmosphere. Breezes, birdsong, even human footsteps鈥攏othing slips through unnoticed.聽

Forests are among Earth鈥檚 most efficient carbon sinks鈥2.5 acres of trees can hold than a similarly sized plot of grass or crops. So researchers like Andrew Richardson, an evolutionary biology professor at Harvard University, are conducting arboreal surveillance, working to document how carbon cycles fluctuate on a changing planet. Decoding how trees are responding to climate change now could give scientists insight into what lies ahead. 鈥淗arvard Forest has unbelievably rich, long-term data,鈥 says Meghan Blumstein, a Ph.D. student in , 鈥渨hich is really essential for understanding long-term change.鈥 For example, working with scientists from the Woods Hole Research Center and other institutions, Richardson鈥檚 team discovered that the forest uses less water and conducts more photosynthesis than it has in the past, which suggests that as the climate changes, trees might adapt to store even more CO2.

While Richardson鈥檚 crew is recording the forest鈥檚 responses to climate change in real time, elsewhere in the Harvard Forest, scientists are pressing the fast-forward button. A group of biologists from North Carolina State University led a project that involved building to see how ants reacted to rising air and soil temperatures (they down in North Carolina, in Duke University鈥檚 own research forest). Other projects have involved knocking down trees to simulate the effects of climate-aggravated disasters, like hurricanes and invasive species.聽

This kind of work takes patience, but the data captured through this web of research tease out the shifting rhythms of a forest in flux. The constant photographing of the foliage, for example, has revealed that climate change is causing spring to hit the forest more than two weeks earlier than it did about 150 years ago, Blumstein explains. 鈥淵ear to year you can look at photos,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd actually see the difference.鈥 聽