Automated soil respiration measurements: new information, opportunities, and challenges Automated Soil Respiration Workshop – a Terrestrial Ecosystem Response to Atmospheric and Climate Change (TERACC) sponsored workshop, Durham, New Hampshire, USA, September 2007 Soils are the largest carbon pool in terrestrial ecosystems, and soil respiration is the major pathway of carbon transfer from the soils to the atmosphere. Measuring and predicting soil respiration has been challenging because the CO 2 efflux from soil integrates numerous complexities belowground (Zhou & Luo, 2006). Current models of soil respiration lack a theoretical underpinning with which to predict how fluxes reflect different plant and microbial CO 2 sources and mechanisms. Recent technological advances in automated soil respiration systems are generating unprecedented numbers of high temporal-resolution observations (Savage and Davidson, 2003). Automated soil respiration (ASR) provide valuable information often missed with less frequent manual measurements, and they present the opportunity to move beyond empirical (gap filling) models towards a predictive understanding of the key mechanisms that determine soil respiration fluxes. However, these continuous measurements present new challenges in that they require the additional management of complex equipment and large datasets as well as novel analytical approaches. In September 2007, researchers met in Durham, New Hampshire, USA for a workshop on Automated Soil Respiration Measurements (http://www.umaine.edu/teracc). The overall goal of the workshop was to initiate communication within the automated soil respiration measurement