AG真人百家乐官方网站

Skip to main content
NSF NEON, Operated by Battelle

Main navigation

  • AG真人百家乐官方网站 Us
    • Overview
      • Spatial and Temporal Design
      • History
    • Vision and Management
    • Advisory Groups
      • Science, Technology & Education Advisory Committee
      • Technical Working Groups (TWGs)
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
      • Contact NEON Biorepository
      • Field Offices
    • User Accounts
    • Staff
    • Code of Conduct

    AG真人百家乐官方网站 Us

  • Data & Samples
    • Data Portal
      • Spatial Data & Maps
    • Data Themes
      • Biogeochemistry
      • Ecohydrology
      • Land Cover and Processes
      • Organisms, Populations, and Communities
    • Samples & Specimens
      • Discover and Use NEON Samples
        • Sample Types
        • Sample Repositories
        • Megapit and Distributed Initial Characterization Soil Archives
      • Sample Processing
      • Sample Quality
    • Collection Methods
      • Protocols & Standardized Methods
      • Airborne Remote Sensing
        • Flight Box Design
        • Flight Schedules and Coverage
        • Daily Flight Reports
          • AOP Flight Report Sign Up
        • Camera
        • Imaging Spectrometer
        • Lidar
      • Automated Instruments
        • Site Level Sampling Design
        • Sensor Collection Frequency
        • Instrumented Collection Types
          • Meteorology
          • Phenocams
          • Soil Sensors
          • Ground Water
          • Surface Water
      • Observational Sampling
        • Site Level Sampling Design
        • Sampling Schedules
        • Observation Types
          • Aquatic Organisms
            • Aquatic Microbes
            • Fish
            • Macroinvertebrates & Zooplankton
            • Periphyton, Phytoplankton, and Aquatic Plants
          • Terrestrial Organisms
            • Birds
            • Ground Beetles
            • Mosquitoes
            • Small Mammals
            • Soil Microbes
            • Terrestrial Plants
            • Ticks
          • Hydrology & Geomorphology
            • Discharge
            • Geomorphology
          • Biogeochemistry
          • DNA Sequences
          • Pathogens
          • Sediments
          • Soils
            • Soil Descriptions
        • Optimizing the Observational Sampling Designs
    • Data Notifications
    • Data Guidelines and Policies
      • Acknowledging and Citing NEON
      • Publishing Research Outputs
      • Usage Policies
    • Data Management
      • Data Availability
      • Data Formats and Conventions
      • Data Processing
      • Data Quality
      • Data Product Bundles
      • Data Product Revisions and Releases
        • Release 2021
        • Release 2022
        • Release 2023
        • Release 2024
        • Release-2025
      • NEON and Google
      • Externally Hosted Data

    Data & Samples

  • Field Sites
    • AG真人百家乐官方网站 Field Sites and Domains
    • Explore Field Sites

    Field Sites

  • Impact
    • Observatory Blog
    • Case Studies
    • Papers & Publications
    • Newsroom
      • NEON in the News
      • Newsletter Archive
      • Newsletter Sign Up

    Impact

  • Resources
    • Getting Started with NEON Data & Resources
    • Documents and Communication Resources
      • Papers & Publications
      • Outreach Materials
    • Code Hub
      • Code Resources Guidelines
      • Code Resources Submission
    • Learning Hub
      • Science Videos
      • Tutorials
      • Workshops & Courses
      • Teaching Modules
    • Research Support Services
      • Field Site Coordination
      • Letters of Support
      • Mobile Deployment Platforms
      • Permits and Permissions
      • AOP Flight Campaigns
      • Research Support FAQs
      • Research Support Projects
    • Funding Opportunities

    Resources

  • Get Involved
    • Advisory Groups
      • Science, Technology & Education Advisory Committee
      • Technical Working Groups
    • Upcoming Events
    • NEON Ambassador Program
      • Exploring NEON-Derived Data Products Workshop Series
    • Research and Collaborations
      • Environmental Data Science Innovation and Inclusion Lab
      • Collaboration with DOE BER User Facilities and Programs
      • EFI-NEON Ecological Forecasting Challenge
      • NEON Great Lakes User Group
      • NEON Science Summit
      • NCAR-NEON-Community Collaborations
        • NCAR-NEON Community Steering Committee
    • Community Engagement
      • How Community Feedback Impacts NEON Operations
    • Science Seminars and Data Skills Webinars
      • Past Years
    • Work Opportunities
      • Careers
      • Seasonal Fieldwork
      • Internships
        • Intern Alumni
    • Partners

    Get Involved

  • My Account
  • Search

Search

Impact

  • Observatory Blog
  • Case Studies
  • Papers & Publications
  • Newsroom

Breadcrumb

  1. Impact
  2. Observatory Blog
  3. NEON Program Welcomes Postdoctoral Fellows

Spotlight

NEON Program Welcomes Postdoctoral Fellows

December 9, 2020

Kelly Aho in the field

The NEON program is excited to welcome our first cohort of Postdoctoral Fellows! Starting in January 2021, these three early-career scientists will be working in collaboration with NEON staff and the wider user community to leverage NEON data for scientific discovery.

Each fellow submitted a research proposal earlier this year describing how they would use data from the NEON program. Fellowships were awarded based on how the proposals leveraged the unique characteristics of NEON data, including:

  • Synthesis of continental-scale or decadal-scale datasets
  • Synthesis of data to enable ecological forecasting
  • Temporal or spatial scaling of approaches
  • Integration of disparate data streams across the Observatory (for example, integrating remote sensing data with terrestrial or aquatic observation systems)
  • Increasing diversity and inclusion in NEON user communities

Fellows receive funding for two years and will work with mentors from the NEON staff and from collaborating research institutions. Their work will contribute to the mission of the NEON program by generating scientific discoveries and peer-reviewed papers using NEON data and engaging the scientific community with NEON's unique datasets. The fellows may also contribute to generation of new tools to facilitate the use of NEON data.

Meet the 2021 postdocs!

Kelly Aho: Studying the Biogeochemistry of Streams and Rivers

Kelly Aho headshot

Photo courtesy of Kelly Aho.

Kelly Aho grew up on an island in southeast Alaska where she fell in love with the wilderness and the environment. Her work focuses on biogeochemical fluxes in streams and rivers and the ways these aquatic environments interact with terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere. "Streams and rivers are so dynamic鈥攖hey are hot spots in the ecosystem, with the potential to both move material and drive biogeochemical processes. There are so many interesting questions to answer about them," she says.

Kelly earned her B.A. in Biology from Dartmouth. After spending two years in the Peace Corps working on sustainable development projects in Panama, she returned to Yale for her masters and Ph.D. in Environmental Science. Her dissertation examined how hydrology controls dissolved greenhouse gases in streams and rivers at various temporal scales ranging from annual to episodic.

She is excited to continue exploring the biogeochemistry of streams and rivers on a larger spatial scale with the NEON program. "It's so exciting to have access to this amazing continental-scale dataset," she says. "What the NEON program provides is so much more than any one person or lab can do. And they have so many ancillary measurements beyond just the dissolved gas data." She would like to use the data to explore complex interactions between streams and rivers and terrestrial landscapes and answer critical questions about how ecosystems function. This work will build on her dissertation research by examining how controls vary across wider spatial scales, such as how landscapes and terrestrial processes impact the flux of .

Alesia Hallmark: Scaling Up Phenological Observations

Alesia Hallmark headshot

Photo courtesy of Alesia Hallmark.

Alesia Hallmark says, "I'm one of those people who has wanted to do the same thing for my entire life. I grew up watching nature documentaries and walking around my neighborhood with a notebook taking notes on plants and animals and where they lived. When I grew up and realized this could be a job, it was perfect!"

Since then, she's channeled those lifelong interests into a career in ecology. She holds a dual B.S. in Botany and Zoology from the Oklahoma State University and earned her masters and Ph.D. in Biology from the University of New Mexico. Her research at UNM, conducted at the Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site in New Mexico, focuses on how desert plant communities are changing in response to drought and rising temperatures and how these changes impact the ability of the landscape to sequester carbon.

Alesia's primary interest in ecology is phenology, or the timing of biological events. Her proposed project for the NEON program will utilize the phenocams mounted on NEON flux towers to compare phenological events captured on camera with observations in the field. She hopes this work will help to scale and connect datasets, so that camera observations could be used to provide accurate phenological data across larger spatial scales. "I want to provide datasets that are informative for animal researchers, such as dataset that quantify the abundance and timing of food resources," she explains. Ultimately, she would like to focus on data analysis for large, distributed ecology networks like LTER and the NEON program.

Kelly Hondula: Linking Remote Sensing and Aquatic Datasets

Kelly Hondula headshot

Photo courtesy of Kelly Hondula.

Kelly Hondula wants to resolve one of the biggest uncertainties in the global methane budget: the link between the hydrology of aquatic ecosystems and their methane emissions. "It's a weird mapping problem," she explains. "We don't yet have maps of wetland areas at a high enough temporal and spatial resolution to understand how they are changing in ways that affect where methane emissions are produced."

Kelly began her career as an undergraduate at the University of Virginia, with a dual major in Environmental Sciences and Environmental Thought and Practice, an interdisciplinary program linking environmental science to disciplines such as literature, business, and economics. After finishing her Masters in Environmental Science at UVA, she completed an internship at the Ecological Society of America and worked at the NSF-funded National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (). She is finishing her Ph.D. in Marine, Estuarine, and Environmental Sciences in January 2021 at the University of Maryland. For her dissertation, she studied and modeled methane emissions in forested wetlands on Maryland's eastern shore.

At the NEON program, she plans to continue her focus on the intersection between hydrological processes and the biogeochemistry of aquatic environments. She will be working to link remote sensing data from the NEON Airborne Observation Platform (AOP) with data from the aquatic observation systems. "We're trying to understand how we can use data from the AOPs to understand and scale up process-level measurements from sensors and lab samples at aquatic sites," she says. In addition to working with a NEON mentor, she will be working with Dr. Erin Hotchkiss of Virginia Tech and Dr. Mirela Tulbure of the Geospatial Analysis for Environmental Change lab at North Carolina State University.

Share

Related Posts:

Read the Updated NEON 5-Year Strategic Plan

February 12, 2025

Wind River Tower in D16

Updates to Continuous Discharge (DP4.00130.001)

February 4, 2025

A Chance for Fire Research and Recovery at a NEON Desert Site

January 24, 2025

Burned cactus
NSF NEON, Operated by Battelle

Follow Us:

Join Our Newsletter

Get updates on events, opportunities, and how NEON is being used today.

Subscribe Now

Footer

  • AG真人百家乐官方网站 Us
  • Newsroom
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Careers
  • Code of Conduct

Copyright © Battelle, 2025

The National Ecological Observatory Network is a major facility fully funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. National Science Foundation.