NPP Temperate Forest: OTTER Project Sites, Oregon, USA, 1989-1991, R1

This data set provides net primary productivity (NPP) estimates and associated field measurements for six sites located along the 250-km, west-east transect of the Oregon Transect Ecosystem Research Project (OTTER) in the Pacific Northwest. Leaf area indices, biomass, and NPP vary about 10-fold across the OTTER transect. Leaf area index (LAI) ranges from 0.4 m2/m2 at the Juniper/Sisters site to 8.6 m2/m2 at the Scio western Cascade site. Total NPP follows a similar trend with the Juniper/Sisters site having the lowest NPP value (300 g/m2/yr) and the Scio site having the highest (2,250-2,570 g/m2/yr). Total tree biomass across the transect ranges from to 1,080 g/m2 at Juniper/Sisters to 71,080 g/m2 at Cascade Head. Vegetation intercepts 22% to 99.5% of incident photosynthetically active radiation along the transect. There is one data file (.csv format) with this data set. Revision Notes: Only the documentation for this data set has been modified. The data files have been checked for accuracy and are identical to those originally published in 1999.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Maintainer Earthdata Forum
Last Updated May 18, 2026, 20:45 (UTC)
Created April 1, 2025, 18:09 (UTC)
accessLevel public
bureauCode {026:00}
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
harvest_object_id d6ec132f-c50b-4089-ab4c-d83cfd507b52
harvest_source_id b99e41c6-fe79-4c19-bbc3-9b6c8111bfac
harvest_source_title Science Discovery Engine
identifier 10.3334/ORNLDAAC/472
license https://www.usa.gov/government-works
modified 2026-05-14T22:12:40Z
programCode {026:000}
publisher ORNL_DAAC
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash fbb985e6980abafd3e7da8e30c5ad0b680fdce33a77fafd46b5f7a9e12053d95
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial [[{"WestBoundingCoordinate":-124.02,"NorthBoundingCoordinate":44.95,"EastBoundingCoordinate":-121.17,"SouthBoundingCoordinate":44.27}],"CARTESIAN"]
temporal 1989-01-01/1991-12-31
theme {"Earth Science"}