Skip to content

KBS LTER

Kellogg Biological Station | Long-Term Ecological Research

  • Follow us on instagram
  • Follow us on bluesky
  • Open the Aglog
  • view current local weather
  • Home
  • ABOUT
    • KBS LTER PROGRAM
    • PROJECT HISTORY
    • LEADERSHIP
    • PEOPLE
    • LTER NETWORK
    • IN THE NEWS
  • RESEARCH
    • RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS
      • LANDSCAPE DIVERSITY
      • SOIL MICROBES
      • CLIMATE CHANGE
      • AGRONOMY
      • PLANT DYNAMICS
      • INSECT DYNAMICS
      • ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
    • LONG-TERM EXPERIMENTS
    • SITE DESCRIPTION AND MAPS
      • LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
      • SITE DESCRIPTION
      • SITE HISTORY
      • SOIL DESCRIPTION
      • PLOT LAYOUTS
      • THEMATIC MAPS
    • PUBLICATIONS
      • ALL PUBLICATIONS
      • PUBLICATIONS BY EXPERIMENT
      • DISSERTATIONS only
      • SYNTHESIS BOOK only
      • SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS
      • PUBLICATION DATASETS
      • LTER MEETING ABSTRACTS
  • DATA
    • DATA CATALOG
    • RESEARCH PROTOCOLS
    • AIRPHOTOS
    • SATELLITE IMAGERY
    • GIS DATA
    • TERMS OF USE
    • DATA SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
  • WORK WITH US
    • CONDUCTING RESEARCH
      • RESEARCH FACILITIES
      • SITE USE POLICY/FORMS
      • ASSOCIATED PROJECTS
    • COLLABORATE
    • GRAD OPPORTUNITIES & FUNDING
    • NEW RESEARCHERS AND STUDENTS
    • ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    • JOB OPENINGS
  • PUBLIC PROGRAMS
    • K-12 PARTNERSHIP
    • DATA NUGGETS
    • MiSTRIPS
    • ARTISTS-IN-RESIDENCE
    • FIELD TRIPS AND TOURS
    • RESOURCES
  • PHOTOS
  • BLOG
  • CONTACT US

Article featuring KBS research wins outstanding paper award

1.30.23

A paper that examines best practices for improving soil health over time has been recognized as outstanding by the American Society of Agronomy, or ASA. The paper, spearheaded by W.K. Kellogg Biological Station resident faculty and MSU assistant professor Christine Sprunger, detailed research that was conducted at the KBS Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center site. Tvisha Martin and Meredith Mann also contributed to the paper, titled “Systems with greater perenniality and crop diversity enhance soil biological health,” which was originally published in 2020 in the journal Agricultural a

Continue reading Article featuring KBS research wins outstanding paper award

Paradigm shifts: Re-envisioning agricultural landscapes to optimize ecosystem services

3.19.15

Doug Landis (right), MSU professor of entomology, has found that perennial grasslands provide a superior set of ecosystem services including increased greenhouse gas consumption, pest suppression, pollination and the conservation of grassland birds. Landis discusses pollinators with MSU graduate student Mitchell Lettow. Photo: Kurt Stepnitz, MSU CABS

In 2013, the United Nations released a report projecting that the global population will reach 9.6 billion by the year 2050. This increase of 2.4 billion people between now and then is already beginning to challenge the world’s agricultural communities to provide adequate food, fuel and fiber while employing sustainable practices that conserve natural resources. The feat becomes more complex when coupled with the increasing demand to grow more bioenergy crops, combat biodiversity declines and regenerate the habitat of agriculturally important insects. Doug Landis, Michigan State University (

Continue reading Paradigm shifts: Re-envisioning agricultural landscapes to optimize ecosystem services

Recent News and Events

  • Humanizing the Science: LTER Artist-in-Residence program marks its fifth year
  • LTER researchers collaborate with local educators to promote outdoor STEM education
  • KBS grad student earn awards for national energy research for harnessing soil microbes
  • Thirty years of data reveal major declines in lady beetles and their pest-fighting power in Midwestern farmland
  • KBS LTER graduate student receives prestigious MSU science award

Blog Categories

  • Education and Outreach News
  • Events
  • Research News

Copyright © 2026 Michigan State University Board of Trustees | East Lansing, MI | 48824

  • LEGAL
  • MSU HOME
  • SITEMAP
  • RSS
  • EMAIL