Fifteen Years of Integrated Terrestrial Environmental Observatories (TERENO) in Germany: Functions, Services, and Lessons Learned

Steffen Zacharias, Henry W. Loescher, Heye Bogena, Ralf Kiese, Martin Schrön, Sabine Attinger, Theresa Blume, Dietrich Borchardt, Erik Borg, Jan Bumberger, Christian Chwala, Peter Dietrich, Benjamin Fersch, Mark Frenzel, Jérôme Gaillardet, Jannis Groh, Irena Hajnsek, Sibylle Itzerott, Ralf Kunkel, Harald KunstmannMatthias Kunz, Susanne Liebner, Michael Mirtl, Carsten Montzka, Andreas Musolff, Thomas Pütz, Corinna Rebmann, Karsten Rinke, Michael Rode, Torsten Sachs, Luis Samaniego, Hans Peter Schmid, Hans Jörg Vogel, Ute Weber, Ute Wollschläger, Harry Vereecken

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

The need to develop and provide integrated observation systems to better understand and manage global and regional environmental change is one of the major challenges facing Earth system science today. In 2008, the German Helmholtz Association took up this challenge and launched the German research infrastructure TERrestrial ENvironmental Observatories (TERENO). The aim of TERENO is the establishment and maintenance of a network of observatories as a basis for an interdisciplinary and long-term research program to investigate the effects of global environmental change on terrestrial ecosystems and their socio-economic consequences. State-of-the-art methods from the field of environmental monitoring, geophysics, remote sensing, and modeling are used to record and analyze states and fluxes in different environmental disciplines from groundwater through the vadose zone, surface water, and biosphere, up to the lower atmosphere. Over the past 15 years we have collectively gained experience in operating a long-term observing network, thereby overcoming unexpected operational and institutional challenges, exceeding expectations, and facilitating new research. Today, the TERENO network is a key pillar for environmental modeling and forecasting in Germany, an information hub for practitioners and policy stakeholders in agriculture, forestry, and water management at regional to national levels, a nucleus for international collaboration, academic training and scientific outreach, an important anchor for large-scale experiments, and a trigger for methodological innovation and technological progress. This article describes TERENO's key services and functions, presents the main lessons learned from this 15-year effort, and emphasizes the need to continue long-term integrated environmental monitoring programmes in the future.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2024EF004510
JournalEarth's Future
Volume12
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • environmental observation
  • international collaboration
  • long-term integrated observatories
  • modeling and monitoring
  • observation network
  • research infrastructure

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