The site is operated as a field research station by the Kansas State University's Division of Biology. It is one of 26 sites within the
Long Term Ecological Research Network. The site was established to provide a natural laboratory for the study of ecological patterns and processes in native tallgrass prairie ecosystems. Key natural processes that regulate and sustain the tallgrass prairie are periodic fire, ungulate grazing, and a variable continental climate. Thus, these processes are the focus of much of the long-term research. Other research by the
Kansas State University includes
physiological ecology, population and
community ecology of plants, insects, birds and mammals,
aquatic ecology, ecosystem and landscape ecology, and grasslands
restoration ecology. Research has shown that
reintroducing bison has long-term benefits as their presence makes the land more biodiverse and resilient to drought. The biological station provides educational opportunities for students from elementary school to post-graduate level. File:Konza-winter.jpg|The Konza in winter. File:Konza Prairie Trail Fall 1.jpg|A Konza walking trail in the fall. File:Konza trail fall bridge 2.jpg|This bridge crosses Kings Creek. ==See also==