Date

REMINDER: Call for ARCUS Arctic Research Seminar Series Registration

REMINDER: Call for Registration
ARCUS Arctic Research Seminar Series
Arctic Research Consortium of the U.S. (ARCUS)

Date: Wednesday, 26 October 2016 at 12:00-1:00 p.m. EDT

Presentation Title: "Forty Years of Change: A Seabird Responds to a
Melting Arctic"

Speaker: George Divoky, Friends of Cooper Island

To register for this event, go to:
https://www.arcus.org/research-seminar-series.


The Arctic Research Consortium of the U.S. (ARCUS) announces the Arctic
Research Seminar Series event: "Forty Years of Change: A Seabird
Responds to a Melting Arctic." The event will be held in the ARCUS D.C.
office at 1201 New York Avenue, NW Washington D.C. on Wednesday, 26
October 2016 at 12:00-1:00 p.m. EDT. It is available online as a
live-stream event to those unable to attend in person. Registration is
required for this event.

The ARCUS Arctic Research Seminar Series brings some of the leading
Arctic researchers to Washington, D.C. to share the latest findings and
what they mean for decision-making. These seminars will be of interest
to Federal agency officials, Congressional staff, NGOs, associations,
and the public.

This seminar will be presented by Dr. George Divoky of Friends of Cooper
Island.

Dr. Divoky has studied seabirds in Arctic Alaska since 1970 and has
participated in studies and assessments related to oil and gas
development and regional climate change. Since 1975 he has maintained an
ongoing study of Black Guillemots on Cooper Island, Alaska, in the
western Beaufort Sea. This study spans four decades and is one of the
few long-term seabird studies in the Arctic. Its findings on the
consequences of recent snow and sea ice reductions provided some of the
first examples of the biological consequences of climate change. Dr.
Divoky is currently the Director of the nonprofit organization Friends
of Cooper Island, where he is working to ensure the continuation of
research of Cooper Island seabirds in coming decades, when they will
have to deal with the complete disappearance of summer ice, offshore
drilling, increased shipping, and commercial fishing.

This event is a brown-bag lunch that will be held in the ARCUS D.C.
office (1201 New York Avenue, NW Washington D.C. Fourth Floor). Cookies
and beverages will be provided. A live webinar is also available to
those unable to attend in person. Instructions for accessing the webinar
will be sent to 'Webinar Only' registrants prior to the event.

For more information and to register for the event, go to:
https://www.arcus.org/research-seminar-series.

For questions, contact:
Brit Myers
Email: brit [at] arcus.org


ArcticInfo is administered by the Arctic Research Consortium of the
United States (ARCUS). Please visit us on the World Wide Web at:
http://www.arcus.org/

Follow ARCUS on twitter: @ArcticResearch

At any time you may:

Subscribe or unsubscribe by using the web form located at:
http://www.arcus.org/arcticinfo/subscription.html

To be removed from the list at any time send an email to:
arcticinfo-unsub [at] arcus.org

To resubscribe send an email to:
arcticinfo-sub [at] arcus.org

Subscribers to ArcticInfo will automatically receive the newsletter,
Witness the Arctic.If you would prefer not to receive Witness the Arctic,
specify on the web form.

Subscribe and unsubscribe actions are automatic. Barring mail system
failure you should receive responses from our system as confirmation to
your requests.

If you have information you would like to post to the mailing list visit :
http://www.arcus.org/arctic-info/submission

You can search back issues of ArcticInfo by content or date at:
http://www.arcus.org/arctic-info/search

If you have any questions please contact the list administrator at:
list [at] arcus.org

ARCUS
3535 College Road, Suite 101
Fairbanks, AK 99709-3710
907-474-1600
907-474-1604 (fax)

ArcticInfo is funded by the National Science Foundation as a service to
the research community through Cooperative Agreement PLR-1304316 with
ARCUS. Any information, opinions, findings, and conclusions or
recommendations expressed in this material are those of the information
sources and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science
Foundation or ARCUS.