Blog

Due to COVID-19, the entire AmeriFlux Management Project (AMP) has been working from home since March 16 following shelter-in-place orders from public health authorities in the San Francisco Bay Area. Read about how we are adapting.

To capture the spring release of greenhouse gasses from bog lakes, a team of intrepid UW-Madison researchers installed eddy covariance buoys on two frozen bog lakes in northern Wisconsin in March. These buoys provided under the loaner instrument program (LI-7700) by the AmeriFlux Management Project for the AmeriFlux Year of Methane are continually measuring carbon dioxide and methane fluxes and will continue doing so as ice melts and as the buoys settle into their summer home on the open water.

Sessions Proposals DEADLINE EXTENDED until APRIL 23, 2020 !  We are now accepting proposals for Fall Meeting 2020, including Innovative Sessions, a new format inspired by programming at 2019’s Centennial… More

UPDATE: (9th April 2020) Abstract submission to ICOS Science Conference extended due to COVID-19 pandemic-virtual event a possibility  Due to the current situation, the deadline to submit abstracts has been… More

AmeriFlux scientists will join the greater Earth science community next week for the American Geophysical Union 2019 Fall meeting in San Francisco. This years meeting is historic as it marks… More