The National Institute for Climatic Change Research (NICCR, pronounced "nicer") is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER), which is part of the DOE's Office of Science. The goal of NICCR is to mobilize university researchers, from all regions of the country, in support of the climatic change research objectives of DOE/BER.
The NICCR is managed and coordinated through five Regional Centers, hosted by Pennsylvania State University, Duke University, Michigan Technological University, Northern Arizona University, and Tulane University.
2009 Call For Proposals 
NICCR is soliciting a fifth call for proposals. Pre-proposals are REQUIRED. Full proposals will only be accepted from applicants who: (1) submit a compliant pre-proposal on time and (2) are informed by NICCR that their pre-proposal was selected to be developed into a full proposal.
Pre-proposals are due 5:00 PM Pacific Time, May 15, 2009.
Proposals are due 5:00 PM Pacific Time, August 14, 2009.
Research project start dates of about April 1, 2010, are expected.
Only proposals addressing one of the five focus areas will be considered for support in response to this Notice. The first four foci are associated with inland terrestrial ecosystems and will be administered by the four Regional Centers. The fifth focus is associated with coastal ecosystems and will be administered by the Coastal Center. Research addressing all foci should be directed at climatic changes possible during the next 50-100 years in the United States, and all research will be conducted within the United States. For more detailed information see the 2009/2010 RFP on the national NICCR site.
Five Focus Areas
The four areas of inland terrestrial ecosystems research include:
- Focus 1 projects will address potential effects of climatic change on terrestrial ecosystems. Projects should determine the theoretical and/or empirical basis of whether, and how, changes in temperature and/or changes in precipitation might affect the structure and functioning of important U.S. terrestrial ecosystems.
- Focus 2 projects will improve the scientific basis for detecting or projecting changes in the geographic boundaries of U.S. terrestrial ecosystems (or biomes), and the populations of their dominant organisms, in response to potential climatic changes. Climatic changes of interest are the annual mean and seasonal and diel cycles of temperature and the annual amount, frequency, and temporal distribution of precipitation.
- Focus 3 projects will address the measurement and analysis of contemporary exchanges of mass and energy between the atmosphere and regionally important terrestrial ecosystems or landscapes, and the use of those measurements and analyses to evaluate mechanisms that might be included in climate and carbon cycle models.
- Focus 4 projects will carry out synthesis activities related to effects of climatic variability and change on U.S. terrestrial ecosystems, or feedbacks from terrestrial ecosystems to climatic change, principally with a regional focus. Projects should advance mechanistic understanding of how future climatic variability and change might influence terrestrial ecosystem structure and functioning.
The fifth focus is associated with
coastal ecosystems and is administered by the
Coastal Center.
- Focus 5 projects will reduce scientific uncertainty about potential effects of climatic change on coastal ecosystems in the United States. The environmental changes of interest are sea-level rise, coastal subsidence, and the possibility of increased intensity and/or frequency of storms, including hurricanes.
Preproposal submission guidelines can be found on the National NICCR website
Press release for Southeastern regional center.