BN44C:
Land-Sea Connections in the Global Carbon Cycle II Posters
Session ID#: 37655
Session Description:
Understanding biogeochemical transformations, linked microbial processes, and ecosystem productivity across the land-ocean interface is essential for closing gaps in global carbon flux estimates and evaluating how ecosystem functions, such as changes in community composition and phenology, will be affected by future change. In this session, we seek to bring together research that improves our understanding of biogeochemical and microbial processes to better constrain the magnitude and sensitivity of global carbon budgets under past, present, and future climate scenarios. We invite contributions exploring observed and modeled changes from all areas of carbon biogeochemistry that cut across ecosystem boundaries, covering studies from a wide range of latitudinal settings and spatiotemporal scales. Contributions that examine the mechanisms underlying observed patterns in distribution or rates of particulate and dissolved organic matter transformation, their linkage to CO2 outgassing/uptake, and nutrient cycling across the aquatic continuum are particularly encouraged.
Primary Chair: Michael Seidel, University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany
Co-chairs: Kimberly Hyde, NOAA Fisheries Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Narragansett, RI, United States, Nicholas D Ward, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Marine Sciences Laboratory, Richland, WA, United States and Sairah Malkin, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Horn Point Laboratory, Cambridge, MD, United States
Moderators: Kimberly Hyde, NOAA Fisheries Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Narragansett, RI, United States, Sairah Malkin, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Horn Point Laboratory, Cambridge, MD, United States, Michael Seidel, University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany and Nicholas D Ward, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Marine Sciences Laboratory, Richland, WA, United States
Student Paper Review Liaison: Michael Seidel, University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany
Cross-Topics:
Abstracts Submitted to this Session:
Justin A Saarinen, University of South Florida Tampa, College of Marine Science, St. Petersburg, FL, United States
Yuyuan Xie, Jixin Chen and Bangqin Huang, Xiamen University, State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Sciences, Xiamen, China
Filippa Fransner1,2, Erik Gustafsson3, Letizia Tedesco4, Marcello Vichi5, Robinson Hordoir1, Fabien Roquet1, Kristian Spilling4, Ivan Kuznetsov6, Kari Eilola7, Carl-Magnus Mörth1, Christoph Humborg8 and Jonas Nycander1, (1)Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Stockholm, Sweden, (2)Department of Meteorology, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden, (3)Stockholm University, Baltic Sea Centre, Stockholm, Sweden, (4)Finnish Environment Institute, Marine Research Centre, Helsinki, Finland, (5)University of Cape Town, Department of Oceanography and Marine Research Institute, Cape Town, South Africa, (6)Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht, Geesthacht, Germany, (7)Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute, Norrköping, Sweden, (8)Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Baltic Sea Centre, Stockholm, Sweden
Tarkeshwar Singh and Punyasloke Bhadury, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Kolkata, Biological Sciences, Kolkata, India
Pierre St-Laurent, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, VA, United States and Marjorie A. M. Friedrichs, Virginia Inst Marine Science, Gloucester Point, VA, United States
Jesse M Vance1, Keli J Goodman2 and Brandon Jensen1, (1)National Ecological Observatory Network, Aquatic, Boulder, CO, United States, (2)National Ecological Observatory Network, Boulder, CO, United States
Ryan P Moyer1, Joseph M Smoak2, Joshua L Breithaupt2, Amanda R Chappel3, Nicole Khan4 and Kara Radabaugh3, (1)Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, St. Petersburg, FL, United States, (2)Univ of South Florida, St Petersburg, FL, United States, (3)FL Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, St. Petersburg, FL, United States, (4)United States Geologic Survey, Saint Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center, Saint Petersburg, FL, United States
Fabrice Lacroix, Hamburg, Germany and Tatiana Ilyina, Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany
Mary Kathleen Frame, University of South Carolina, School of the Earth, Ocean and Environment, Columbia, SC, United States; NOAA Ernest F Hollings Undergraduate Scholarship Program, Charleston, OR, United States, Bree K Yednock, South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, Charleston, OR, United States and J Boone Kauffman, Oregon State University, Fisheries and Wildlife, Corvallis, OR, United States
Frances Wilkerson, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, United States, Richard C Dugdale, San Francisco State Univ, Belvedere Tiburon, CA, United States, Sarah Blaser, San Francisco State University, CA, United States, Curtiss O Davis, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States and Nicholas Tufillaro, COAS, CORVALLIS, OR, United States
Shannon Davis1, Shlomo Honig1 and Robert F Chen2, (1)University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA, United States, (2)University of Massachusetts Boston, School for the Environment, Boston, MA, United States
Abigail Thomas, Columbia University of New York City, Portland, OR, United States
Enrique Montes, University of South Florida St. Petersburg, St Petersburg, FL, United States, Maria T Kavanaugh, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States, Daniel Brooks Otis, University of South Florida St. Petersburg, IMaRS, St Petersburg, FL, United States, Anni Djurhuus, University of South Florida, College of Marine Science, St Petersburg, FL, United States, Lindsey Visser, NOAA/AOML, Miami, FL, United States and Frank E Muller-Karger, University of South Florida, College of Marine Science, St. Petersburg, FL, United States