Date

Multiple Session Announcements and Calls for Abstracts
American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
12-16 December 2016
San Francisco, California

Abstract submission deadline: 11:59 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time
Wednesday, 3 August 2016.

For further information or to submit an abstract, please go to:
http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2016/abstract-submissions/.


The American Geophysical Union (AGU) is currently accepting abstract
submissions for the 2016 Fall Meeting. The meeting will be held 12-16
December 2016 in San Francisco, California.

Abstract submission deadline for all sessions is 11:59 p.m. Eastern
Daylight Time on Wednesday, 3 August 2016. Specific criteria and
instructions for submitting abstracts are available online, at:
http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2016/abstract-submissions/.

Conveners of the following five sessions invite presentations from the
Arctic community:

  1. Session 13282: The Resilience and Vulnerability of Arctic and Boreal
    Ecosystems to Climate Change
    Conveners: Michelle Mack, Scott Goetz, Joshua Fisher, and Peter Griffith
    Climate change is unfolding faster in the high northern latitudes than
    anywhere else on Earth. These changes are impacting ecological
    processes directly, through warmer temperatures and changing
    precipitation, and indirectly, though increasing frequency of
    climate-driven disturbances such as wildfire, outbreaks of pests and
    pathogens, and abrupt thaw of permafrost ground. Although some
    ecosystems are resistant or resilient to these impacts, many are
    shifting to new states, altering the function of the Arctic-boreal
    region in the Earth system. This session invites contributions in
    terrestrial ecology and carbon cycle science that provide conceptual,
    regional, or global insights into the resilience and vulnerability of
    the Arctic-boreal region to changing climate. Contributions may address
    any geographic area of this region. We welcome studies that use or
    integrate in situ experiments and observations with remote sensing and
    modeling to conceptualize, detect, predict or forecast the changing
    function of this region in the earth system.

For further session information, go to:
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm16/preliminaryview.cgi/Session13282.html.

  1. Session 13163: Permafrost Degradation and its Interrelations with
    Physical, Ecological, and Social-economic Processes
    Conveners: Jens Strauss, Daniel Fortier, Gerald Frost, and Mathais
    Ulrich
    Permafrost dynamics have become a focal point of arctic research due to
    their wide-ranging impacts and feedback mechanisms within the Earth
    system. In addition to global climate regulation, ecosystem services
    performed by permafrost landscapes support subsistence practices
    (including human land-use), transportation corridors, and infrastructure
    that are of fundamental importance to northern communities. Thus, there
    is an urgent need to enhance the understanding of permafrost resilience
    and degradation processes, and combine physical, ecological, and social
    sciences in permafrost research. This session highlights the impacts of
    permafrost dynamics and landscape change on northern environments and
    peoples. We invite studies about the implications of degrading
    permafrost for northern communities, infrastructure, wildlife, and the
    storage, vulnerability and release of carbon and nitrogen in permafrost.
    The organizers welcome research based on field-process studies,
    monitoring programs, remote sensing and modeling approaches, as well as
    interdisciplinary efforts including traditional knowledge and local
    observations on this topic.

For further session information, go to:
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm16/preliminaryview.cgi/Session13163.

  1. Session 12713: Integrating Observations and Models to Better
    Understand a Changing Arctic Sea Ice Cover
    Conveners: Donald Perovich and Marika Holland
    The Arctic sea ice cover is in decline, with a reduction in summer ice
    extent and a transformation from primarily perennial ice to seasonal
    ice. There is a significant need to understand the ongoing changes in
    the Arctic sea ice cover and to predict future changes. Models play a
    fundamental role in these tasks by synthesizing the elements of the
    Arctic sea ice system. However, progress in model development suffers
    from a disconnect with the discoveries being made within the
    observational community. Observational activities could make better use
    of model guidance regarding the relative importance of various
    processes, and spatial and temporal sampling strategies. This session
    welcomes presentations that integrate in situ observations and remote
    sensing data with sea ice modeling studies. Examples of this integration
    range from improving the treatment of individual processes to advances
    in coupled earth system models to using models to inform observational
    network design.

For further session information, go to:
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm16/preliminaryview.cgi/Session12713.

  1. Session 13715: Natural Wetlands and Open Waters in the Global Methane
    Cycle: Modeling, Observations, Syntheses and Challenges
    Conveners: Elaine Matthews, Ruth Varner, and Carmody McCalley
    Natural wetlands and open waters (lakes, rivers, reservoirs) are major,
    climate-sensitive methane (CH4) sources. Uncertainties in CH4 dynamics
    in these landscapes derive from heterogeneity in vegetation,
    microtopography, permafrost, hydrology, and CH4 production, oxidation,
    and emission. The sign and magnitude of responses of wetland and
    open-water distributions and emissions under warming climate are
    uncertain. Understanding and modeling the distribution and CH4 dynamics
    of these heterogeneous ecosystems is crucial to predicting
    biogeochemical dynamics under past, present and future climates. We
    invite studies of global-to-regional modeling of CH4 dynamics in
    wetlands and open waters; satellite assessment of CH4 emissions; role of
    wetlands and open waters in the global CH4 cycle under past/future
    climates; synthesis studies of CH4 fluxes and controlling variables;
    remote sensing of hydrologic dynamics and vegetation in wetlands and
    open waters; process studies including multiple sampling approaches
    (i.e. isotopes, metagenomics, modeling) of CH4 production, oxidation and
    emission; modeling of wetland distributions.

For further session information, go to:
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm16/preliminaryview.cgi/Session13715.

  1. Session 14111: Arctic Environmental Change: Local, Regional, Global
    Drivers and Impacts
    Conveners: John Walsh, Hiroyasu Hasumi, Teppei Yasunari, and Ann Francis
    The Arctic shattered records in the winter of 2016 with extreme heat and
    exceptionally low sea ice. Uncertainty persists about the roles of local
    and remote causes of Arctic warming, and how those factors may be
    influenced by natural and anthropogenic climate change. The interplay
    between Arctic warming and lower latitudes is increasingly recognized as
    the science community challenges long-held paradigms of Arctic climate
    drivers and responses. For example, the recent dramatic reductions in
    sea ice have prompted novel investigations into the distant controls on
    ice variability, such as the influence of tropical and mid-latitude
    variability on poleward heat transport. This session welcomes
    presentations of cutting-edge interdisciplinary research on drivers,
    feedbacks, and possible mechanisms linking the Arctic and global climate
    and ecology, which carries significant societal implications for natural
    resource management and climate adaptation. Presentations of ongoing
    international Arctic projects are also welcome.

For further session information, go to:
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm16/preliminaryview.cgi/Session14111.


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