Cary Institute's research is collaborative and multidisciplinary. Its scientists lead two of the National Science Foundation's
Long Term Ecological Research Network sites: the Baltimore Ecosystem Study (Baltimore, MD; focus: urban ecology) and the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study (Woodstock, NH; focus: forest and freshwater health). They also play a leadership role in the
Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network, an international effort that shares and interprets high resolution sensor data to understand, predict, and communicate the role and response of lakes in a changing global environment. While working at
Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in the 1960s, Cary Institute founder
Gene E. Likens co-discovered acid rain in North America. His longterm studies on precipitation and stream water chemistry were instrumental in shaping the 1990 Clean Air Act amendments. Today, Cary Institute continues to steward the longest continuous data set on acid rain and deposition through its direction of the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study. Cary Institute's grounds have been home to long-term studies on the ecology of
tick-borne disease for more than 20 years. Findings underpin The Tick Project, a 5-year study testing interventions with the potential to reduce
Lyme disease and protect public health. A three-decade research program on the
Hudson River informs sustainable shoreline management, and a synthesis of imported forest pests and pathogens is the basis for Tree-SMART Trade, a national policy initiative aimed at closing the door on imported forest pests. Cary Institute scientists advise decision makers, from providing Congressional testimony to serving as members of the
National Climate Assessment, the
United States Environmental Protection Agency’s Scientific Advisory Board, the White House
National Science and Technology Council’s Epidemic Prediction Working Group, and the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Staff includes a total of about 120 employees, including 20 Ph.D. scientists, as well as adjuncts and affiliates working around the world in places like Argentina, Brazil, China, Chile, Germany, Kenya, Singapore, and South Africa. Institute scientists have peer recognition including three Members of the
National Academy of Sciences, four Members of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, nine Fellows of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, and six Fellows of the
Ecological Society of America. While Cary Institute is not itself a degree-granting institution, numerous graduate students are trained under the mentorship of the scientific staff, who have adjunct appointments at colleges and universities throughout the world, including Yale, Cornell, Princeton, Columbia, and Bard. Cary Institute is home to the longest-running
Research Experiences for Undergraduates program, and has been hosting students since 1987. Organized as a
501(c)(3) corporation, Cary Institute receives financial support from multiple sources that include research and education grants from federal and state sources (e.g., the
National Science Foundation,
United States Environmental Protection Agency, and the
National Institutes of Health), private foundations, and private donors. ==See also==