Principles and Governance

Principles and Governance

The goal of the Coastal Carbon Network (CCN) is to accelerate the pace of discovery in coastal wetland carbon science by providing our community with access to data, analysis tools, and synthesis opportunities. Our activities include bringing data libraries online, creating open source analysis and modeling tools, providing training and outreach opportunities, holding town halls, responding to community feedback, and hosting data synthesis workshops targeted at strategically reducing uncertainty in coastal carbon science issues. Our first focal activity is building a public online data library of soil carbon data.

The Coastal Carbon Network (herein Network) builds on work by the Blue Carbon Initiative, the NASA Blue Carbon Monitoring System, and the US Carbon Cycle Science Program. Our data management principles incorporate experience from these efforts, and best practices developed in collaboration with data management specialists across the Smithsonian and our partner institutions.

Core Principles

  1. We are responsive to a global community of scientists and practitioners.
  2. We focus on quantifiable improvements to the state of the science.
  3. We adopt protocols, policies, and communication platforms that facilitate transparency, ease of adoption, program sustainability, and data stability.

Defined Roles and Responsibilities within the CCN

Steering Committee Membership

The three Principal Investigators are permanent members of the Steering Committee. Five additional members will be chosen to assist the Network with existing or emerging needs as identified by the Steering Committee. In principle, the members should represent a range of stakeholder interests and technical expertise. Members serve for one year, but can be reappointed for one year at the discretion of the Director. Candidates for the steering committee can nominate themselves or be nominated by their colleagues. The steering committee will vote on replacements, and members stepping down will help to choose their own replacement. Rotations are staggered so that no more than half of the rotating members on the Steering Committee are replaced in a given year.

Working Groups

Data synthesis products assembled and maintained by the Network will be developed in topical working groups organized and led by Network personnel and collaborators. Working group topics and their participants are designated by the Steering Committee. These groups emphasize the sharing of data and expertise, and leverage this collaboration to create products which advance coastal wetland carbon science.

Coauthorship Policy

Those accepted to participate in any of the five synthesis workshops hosted by the Network will be expected to contribute before, during, and following the workshop, and will be granted co-authorship on publications resulting from the effort. We will follow the American Geophysical Union’s 2017 Scientific and Professional Ethics: Guideline B. Ethical Obligations of Authors/Contributors for determining co-authorship. Submitting data to the network alone will not merit co-authorship in data syntheses. If done according to the protocols established herein, it will result in citation.

Co-authorship policies in data sharing exercises often benefit established researchers from western industrialized nations at the expense of those from groups with less institutional power 1. We commit to adopting policies and technologies that facilitate engagement of students, people with indigenous knowledge, and researchers from low and middle income countries as attendees and co-authors in synthesis activities.

Data Use Policy

We refer to users as anyone using either data we curate, or synthesis products we create. Data that is curated, but not created, by the Network, should not be attributed to the Network. Users should cite all dataset DOIs and credit the datasets’ original authors. All synthesis products created by the Network and associated collaborators will be listed under a Creative Commons With Attribution license. The Network should be acknowledged and cited appropriately if users utilize any of the data structures, tools, or scripts developed by Network and associated collaborators. We will develop additional tools to assist users in generating lists of citations, but users will be ultimately responsible for correctly citing all data used.


  1. Serwadda D, Ndebele P, Grabowski MK, Bajunirwe F, Wanyenze RK (2018). Open data sharing and the Global South: Who benefits?. Science, 359(6376), 642-643.https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aap8395↩︎