Conferences and Workshops
2019-05-14 - 2019-05-16
University of Maine, in Orono, Maine

The workshop goal is to bring together a diverse group of researchers and graduate students that are using or would like to use ice core data available from the Arctic Data Center to produce the future generation of paleoclimate data sets. The goal is to learn about common research workflows that the community is using and to test the applicability of selected Arctic data sets and software tools to build the next generation of digital paleoclimate data products and reconstructions.

Background Information:

In the past decade, the volume and complexity of data available in ice core science has grown rapidly. This increase has several major drivers: First, an increase in sampling frequency and quality has resulted in rapid generation of data. Second, advances in the Web and computer system integration of related technologies have simplified data exchange. Finally, the scientific community and funding agencies are supporting major efforts to increase research transparency by requiring researchers to publicly share project data collected during research in long term data repositories. All of these converging elements hold the potential to significantly boost scientific discovery due to the benefits of sharing data with other disciplines, but new computing approaches are needed.

The 2019 Arctic Data Workshop will focus on evaluation and testing tools that simplify the use of publicly available Arctic data in a meaningful way. The goal is to increase the ease and transparency of working back from scientific results, for example a table within a publication, to the original datasets from which the summarized data were derived.

By actively soliciting community wide input and experience, the workshop will incorporate and share back with the community related best practices from code development, digital curation, and software engineering.

Webinars and Virtual Events
2019-05-14
Online: 11:00am AKDT, 3:00pm EDT

Vegetation change has been observed across Arctic and boreal regions. Studies have often documented large-scale greening trends (i.e. increased plant productivity or measured “greenness”) but they have also identified areas of browning (decreased productivity) or shifts between greening and browning over varying spatial extents and time periods. At the same time, there are large portions of these ecosystems that have not exhibited measurable trends in greening or browning. These findings have fueled many questions about observed trends and identified drivers, implications of vegetation change, and methods and tools for evaluating changes and their uncertainties.

The Polar Research Board, in collaboration with the Board on Life Sciences of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, convened a workshop in December 2018 to address these questions and discuss opportunities to advance understanding of greening and browning at northern latitudes. This publication summarizes the presentations and discussions from the workshop.

A public webinar summarizing the workshop proceedings will be held on May 14 at 3:00 pm EDT. Please register to participate below.

Webinars and Virtual Events
2019-05-14
Online: 10:00am AKDT, 2:00 pm EDT

The Study of Environmental Arctic Change (SEARCH) invites participation in the virtual discussion, Intersection of Arctic Science and Policy. This web presentation will be held via Zoom Video Conferencing.

Dr. Brendan Kelly, SEARCH Executive Director, will present a short history of Arctic research policy—from the Arctic Research and Policy Act of 1984 to the Department of Defense Arctic Strategy of 2017—followed by observations on the future science needed to support policy. Input from others on the call is encouraged.

This webinar is open to anyone interested in Arctic research and policies. The discussion is part of the lead up to the Arctic Futures 2050 conference that will take place 4-6 September 2019 at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C. Registration for the conference is now open.

Webinars and Virtual Events
Presenter: Dr. Libby Larson, NACP Coordinator and Senior Support Scientist, NASA Carbon Cycle & Ecosystems Office, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
2019-05-14
Online: 8:00-9:00am AKDT, 12:00-1:00pm EDT

Seminar 12 in the Series: From Science to Solutions: The State of the Carbon Cycle, the 2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR2). We plan to host this series series on Tuesdays, 2/26-6/4.

Abstract:

Scientific community engagement can help funding program managers and researchers alike in managing resources, facilitating collaboration, and fostering innovation and insight. NASA's Carbon Cycle and Ecosystems Office at Goddard Space Flight Center has been serving this role for NASA programs such as Terrestrial Ecology and Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning, as well as supporting the broader community through the North American Carbon Program (NACP). This work has enabled much of the research that contributed to the success of the Second State of the Carbon Cycle (SOCCR2).

About the Speaker:

Dr. Libby Larson started working for NASA as a AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow in 2012. After her fellowship ended, she was hired by the NASA Carbon Cycle and Ecosystems Office to continue her work in coordinating the North American Carbon Program, supporting the Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) field campaign, and representing NASA in the US Global Change Research Program. In addition to serving on the Carbon Cycle Interagency Working Group, she also co-chairs the Social Sciences Steering Committee. Dr. Larson is an urban ecologist by training and was a contributing author to the Built Environment, Urban Systems, and Cities chapter of the 2018 National Climate Assessment.

Webinar Access:

We will use Adobe Connect. To join the session, go to https://noaabroadcast.adobeconnect.com/nosscienceseminars, enter as "Guest", and please enter your first and last name. Users should use either IE or Edge on Windows or Safari if using a Mac. Audio will be available thru the computer only; no phone. Questions will be addressed in the chat window. This Webcast will be recorded, archived and made accessible in the near future.

Conferences and Workshops
2019-05-15 - 2019-05-16
Woods Hole, Massachusetts

Organizers invite registration for the Synoptic Arctic Survey (SAS) International Planning and Coordination Workshop.

The goals of the workshop include planning coordinated field sampling; international data sharing; education, including graduate student participation, post field-season data synthesis, public outreach, and involvement of Indigenous communities; and identifying additional measurements (e.g., atmospheric measurements) or approaches (e.g., modeling) that would contribute to accomplishing the goals of the SAS. The SAS is a ground-up effort and wide participation, including all professional levels of scientists, graduate students, and science managers across multiple disciplines, and Indigenous community members, in the planning is welcome.

The participation of early career scientists is particularly encouraged. Limited support is available for early career scientists, both from within the U.S. and abroad. For this workshop, early career scientists are defined as post-doctoral investigators and untenured, tenure-track equivalent individuals within five years of their initial appointment. To apply for support, individuals should send a curriculum vitae and a statement of how their research interests align with the SAS scientific questions to cashjian [at] whoi.edu by 15 April 2019.

To register, all interested participants should send the following information via email to sasworkshop2019 [at] gmail.com:

  • Name
  • Affiliation
  • Address
  • Country
  • Email address
  • Phone number
  • Position
  • Whether or not the attendee is an early career scientist, even if not applying for support

Additional logistic details will be disseminated to registered participants.

Registration deadline: 30 April 2019.

Early career travel support deadline (extended): 30 April 2019.

For questions, contact:
Carin Ashjian
Email: cashjian [at] whoi.edu

Webinars and Virtual Events
Presenter: Phyllis Stabeno, Physical Oceanographer, PMEL
2019-05-15
NOAA Central Library, 2nd Floor, SSMC#3, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD and also Online: 8:00-9:00am AKDT, 12:00-1:00pm EDT

Seminar 12 in the Series: From Science to Solutions: The State of the Carbon Cycle, the 2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR2). We plan to host this series series on Tuesdays, 2/26-6/4.

Abstract:

The winter of 2018 had record breaking low sea ice extent. Sea ice arrived late due to warm southerly winds in November. More typical northerly winds in December and January advanced the ice, but strong, warm southerlies in February and March forced the ice to retreat once again. The cold pool (shelf region with bottom water < 2°C) was the smallest on record. Ice extent in winter of 2019 was very similar to that of 2018. Thus, there have been two consecutive, record-breaking low ice years in the Bering Sea. The lack of ice impacted the ecosystem from the timing of the spring phytoplankton/ice-algal blooms to fish and marine mammal distributions.

About the Speaker:

Dr. Phyllis Stabeno is a physical oceanographer at the NOAA, Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory in Seattle, Washington. Together with Dr. Janet Duffy-Anderson, she is co-leader of NOAA's Ecosystems and Fisheries Oceanography Coordinated Investigations. EcoFOCI is one of NOAA's only cross-line office programs and the second oldest fisheries-oceanography program in the agency. For the past 30 years, Dr. Stabeno has worked on physical oceanographic, climate and ecosystem projects focused on Alaska's marine ecosystem including the Gulf of Alaska, Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands and most recently, the Chukchi Sea. She is the lead investigator in maintaining a biophysical mooring array in the Bering Sea, including the M2 mooring, "Peggy" now deployed for the 25 year. She recently completed as a Principle Investigator for the North Pacific Research Board sponsored Bering Sea Integrated Ecosystem Research Plan (BSIERP) project and NSF Bering Ecosystem Study (BEST), which won a 2015 NOAA Gold Medal Award. And as of this week, she is a 2019 NOAA Distinguished Career Award recipient, nominated by OAR for key scientific achievements and superior leadership in conducting and communicating the EcoFOCI research, supporting US marine resources in Alaska.

Webinar Access:

Remote access: If you are located outside of Silver Spring, please register for the webinar: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/4141784834249009666 After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. Participants can use their telephone OR computer mic & speakers (VoIP).

Webinars and Virtual Events
2019-05-17
Washington, D.C. and Online: 11:00am - 12:30pm EDT

The United States Arctic's extreme operating environment poses unique challenges to land and coastal-based infrastructure development, with receding sea ice, coastal erosion, and thawing permafrost, among other effects of climate change, complicating efforts. This panel will discuss these challenges and how they affect projections of future maritime traffic, existing development activities, and the emerging vision of the Alaska of tomorrow.

Please join the Polar Institute and the U.S. Committee on the Marine Transportation System (CMTS) for a conversation on "Infrastructure in the Arctic: Building for Tomorrow" in support on National Infrastructure Week 2019.

Where:
Wilson Center, Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center
One Woodrow Wilson Plaza
1300 Pennsylvania, Ave., NW
Washington, D.C. 20004

Speakers:

The Honorable Richard Beneville
Mayor, Nome, Alaska

Sherri Goodman
Senior Fellow, Polar Institute, Wilson Center; and, former US Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Environmental Security)

Sarah Harrison
Arctic Marine Transportation Specialist, U.S. Committee on the Marine Transportation System

Jeff San Juan
Senior Infrastructure Development Finance Officer, Alaska Industrial Development & Export Authority

Welcome:

Ambassador David Balton
Senior Fellow, Polar Institute, Wilson Center

Moderator:

Helen Brohl
Executive Director, U.S. Committee on the Marine Transportation System

Field Training and Schools
Global Ocean State & Parameter Estimation: From Methods to Applications in Oceanographic Research
2019-05-19 - 2019-05-31
University of Washington, Friday Harbor, Washington

The Consortium for "Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean" (ECCO) will host a summer school for graduate students and early career scientists on global ocean state estimation in support of climate research. The school introduces the tools and mathematics of ocean state and parameter estimation and their application to ocean science through a mix of foundational lectures, hands-on tutorials, and projects. In doing so, the school aims to help nurture the next generation of oceanographers and climate scientists in the subject matter so that they may utilize the ECCO products and underlying modeling/estimation tools most effectively to further advance the state-of-the-art in ocean state estimation and ocean science.

Topics covered:

Data assimilation (global & regional); state & parameter estimation; adjoint method; sensitivity analysis; algorithmic differentiation; ocean modeling; ocean dynamics and variability; ocean’s role in climate; global ocean observing system (satellite and in-situ); physics of sea level; ocean mixing; sea ice physics; ice sheet-ocean interactions; ice shelf dynamics; ocean tides; cyberinfrastructure & data analytics.

Target audience:

Graduate students and early-career scientists.

Application Deadline: December 17, 2018.

Conferences and Workshops
2019-05-19 - 2019-05-23
Boulder, Colorado

The 15th Conference on Polar Meteorology and Oceanography, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society and organized by the AMS Polar Meteorology and Oceanography Committee, will be held at the Williams Village Dining Center and Community Commons on the University of Colorado-Boulder Campus. The conference will kick-off with an evening icebreaker on Sunday 19th May and will be followed by four days of scientific sessions.

Papers are solicited on all aspects of polar meteorology and oceanography, including but not limited to the following:

  • Climate variability and change in the polar regions
  • Rapid environmental change in the polar regions
  • Interactions among polar atmosphere-ocean-land-ice components
  • High latitude atmospheric and oceanic dynamics
  • Boundary layer processes, polar clouds, precipitation, and aerosols
  • Weather and climate modelling in the polar regions
  • Connections of the polar regions with the tropics and midlatitudes
  • Sea ice variability, modeling, and change
  • The state of the cryosphere
  • Reducing sea ice projection uncertainty through increased process-understanding
  • The evolution, formation, and impacts of Arctic cyclones
  • Polar amplification effects on large scale midlatitude weather systems

Abstract Deadline: 18 January, 2019.

Webinars and Virtual Events
Breaking Barriers: Promoting Interdisciplinarity in Polar Science
2019-05-20
Online

The Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS) is proud to announce the much awaited 5th annual APECS International Online Conference to go live on 20 May 2019 (new date!). This year’s theme, “Breaking Barriers: Promoting Interdisciplinarity in Polar Science” aims to encourage collaboration between early career scientists from varied disciplines, working in the polar and alpine regions.

Science is about understanding the nature and mechanism of the world. But, understanding the mechanisms related to the “three poles” requires an integrated approach. Interdisciplinarity was one of the main discussion topics during the 2nd APECS World Summit, and it was clear that to achieve big results several tools from different disciplines must be incorporated. One example is climate change; to truly understand climate change and its impacts, we need to bring together the relevant disciplines of climate, environment, social sciences, and others under a multidisciplinary ceiling and assess various ways to understand its complex and interrelated causes and effects. No single approach will work for all. Climate change is not the only topic that can benefit from the integration of cross-disciplinary expertise; understanding how polar oceans function, how continents and alpine regions form, contamination pathways, and many other questions related to the three poles calls for interdisciplinarity. With that intent, APECS calls for ECRs to come forward with their interdisciplinary take on an otherwise contemporary science, by presenting their approach to developing research goals, methods, and outcomes as a short presentation in our one-day Online Conference.

Abstracts must be submitted prior to 5 April 2019 at 23:59 GMT. We will notify you with regards to the success of your abstract by 15 April 2019.

Please follow the link above for more information.

Deadlines
Science and Policy for a Changing Arctic
2019-05-20
National Academy of Sciences - 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC

The Study for Environmental Arctic Change (SEARCH) announces the conference ARCTIC FUTURES 2050: Science for Policy in a Changing Arctic that will take place 4–6 September 2019 in Washington, D.C.

Why:

The rapid changes taking place in the Arctic call for immediate policy responses well informed by science and Indigenous knowledge. Today’s policy decisions concerning the Arctic will have substantial long term and global consequences.

How:

Strong and iterative collaborations—in which Arctic scientists, Indigenous knowledge holders, and decision makers inform one another—will help ensure that research adequately anticipates policy and management needs.

Who:

Understanding and responding to the changing Arctic requires the combined efforts of scientists from many disciplines, Indigenous knowledge holders, resource managers, and others operating in the Arctic. These diverse actors need to convey their understanding clearly, succinctly, and at appropriate times to decision makers including policy makers at all levels of government, natural resource managers, as well as military, industrial, and other operators in the Arctic. Diverse perspectives, ranging from local to international will also be key.

What:

A novel international conference of Arctic scientists, Indigenous people, and decision makers jointly exploring the science needed to inform decisions concerning the Arctic in the coming decades. The collaborative exploration will ask:

  • What we currently know/don’t know about the changing Arctic and why it matters?
  • What challenges confront decision makers in the rapidly changing Arctic?
  • What basic research is needed to inform responses to Arctic change?
  • What applied research is needed to inform responses to change?
  • What tools can facilitate informing decisions with science?
  • What partnerships are needed among decision makers, scientists, and Indigenous people?

Important dates:

20 May: Poster Abstracts Due
20 May: Travel Award Applications Due
17 June: Poster Decisions and Travel Award Winners Announced
10 July: Early-bird Registration Rates End

Conferences and Workshops
2019-05-21 - 2019-05-22
Columbia, Maryland

We are happy to announce the fourth Ocean Worlds meeting that will take place at Universities Space Research Association Headquarters at 7178 Columbia Gateway Dr., Columbia, Maryland.

Purpose and Scope:

Many of the icy moons and dwarf planets in the outer solar system are known or hypothesized to host subterranean liquid-water oceans. These worlds may also have liquid trapped within their icy lithospheres. In the larger bodies, fluids are also suspected within and between lithospheric layers of high-pressure ice. The geodynamics of these ice lithospheres may be influenced by the freezing and melting of water and associated impurities (e.g., salts and organic compounds), and interactions at ocean-ice interfaces may influence circulation in the oceans on local or global scales.

In this, the fourth meeting in the Ocean Worlds series, we focus on the ice-water interactions occurring within ocean worlds beyond Earth, from a multi-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary perspective. Considering them in detail should lead to new hypotheses testable by future spacecraft missions. As with past Ocean Worlds meetings, a primary motivation is to engender a cross-fertilization of ideas and expertise by soliciting contributions from both the Ocean Sciences and Planetary Sciences communities. Consequently, contributions are invited that address any aspects of this broad ice-water interaction theme, across the Planetary and Ocean Science fields, including geophysics, hydrogeology, geochemistry, and microbiology.

Abstract deadline: February 15, 2019.
Early registration deadline: April 22, 2019.
Standard registration deadline: May 10, 2019.

Webinars and Virtual Events
Presenters: Daniel J. Hayes, University of Maine, and Rodrigo Vargas, University of Delaware
2019-05-21
Online: 8:00-9:00am AKDT, 12:00-1:00pm EDT

Title: Where does all the carbon go? Piecing together the North American carbon puzzle from a synthesis of top-down and bottom-up estimates. Seminar 13 in the Series: From Science to Solutions: The State of the Carbon Cycle, the 2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR2). We plan to host this series series on Tuesdays, 2/26-5/28.

Abstract:

Scientific information quantifying and characterizing regional-to-global scale carbon cycling is necessary for developing national and international policy on climate change impacts, mitigation and adaptation. In this presentation, we show how we can piece together the various components of the North American carbon budget from multiple constraints on continental-scale estimates of the major stocks and flows. Our analysis synthesizes bottom-up estimates of stock change over the past decade among carbon pools of the major land sectors (forests and wood products, agricultural soils, grasslands, wetlands, and arctic-boreal ecosystems) and lateral transfers along the terrestrial-aquatic system (inland waters, tidal wetlands, estuaries and the coastal ocean). Using a simple but comprehensive and consistent budget accounting framework, we reconcile the various bottom-up assessments into an overall estimate of net land-atmosphere exchange of carbon from North America's land and coastal ocean to the atmosphere, and compare this estimate with top-down estimates for the continent over the last decade.

About the Speakers:

Daniel Hayes is Assistant Professor in the School of Forest Resources and serves as Director of the Wheatland Geospatial Analysis Laboratory at the University of Maine. He teaches, does research and performs outreach in the use of remote sensing in forest inventory and ecosystem applications. Dan studies the role of climate change and disturbance in the dynamics of terrestrial ecosystems, with a particular focus on Arctic and Boreal regions. He has contributed to various regional, continental and global carbon budget modeling and synthesis efforts and publishes on the methods and results of multi-disciplinary, ecosystem-scale scientific investigations. Prior to his appointment at the University of Maine, Dan was a post-doctoral fellow in the Institute of Arctic Biology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and a research scientist in the Climate Change Science Institute at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. He is currently involved in various collaborative efforts including the interagency North American Carbon Program (NACP), NASA's Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE), DOE's Next Generation Ecosystem Experiment (NGEE-Arctic) and the NSF Permafrost Carbon Network.

Rodrigo Vargas is an Associate Professor at the Department of Plant and Soil Sciences at the University of Delaware. He completed his PhD at the University of California-Riverside and a postdoc at the University of California-Berkeley. His research interests focus on how biophysical factors regulate greenhouse gas dynamics in terrestrial and coastal ecosystems. He studies soil-plant-atmosphere interactions to understand and quantify the response of ecosystems to management, extreme events, and global environmental change. His research spans from data mining and digital soil mapping, to remote sensing and micrometeorological measurements of greenhouse gas fluxes at multiple spatio-temporal scales and vegetation types. Dr. Vargas has published over 100 peer-reviewed publications and has received funding from NSF, NASA, USDA, DOD and several state and international organizations. He serves as an Associate Editor for Journal of Geophysical Research-Biogeosciences published by the American Geophysical Union. He is part of the science steering groups of the North American Carbon Program, North American Forestry Commission, Mexican Carbon Program, and AmeriFlux. He is a member of the committee on Science and the Arts in the Earth and Environmental Science cluster of the Franklin Institute, and a member of the U.S. National Committee for Soil Science of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.

Webinar Access:

We will use Adobe Connect. To join the session, go to https://noaabroadcast.adobeconnect.com/nosscienceseminars, enter as "Guest", and please enter your first and last name. Users should use either IE or Edge on Windows or Safari if using a Mac. Audio will be available thru the computer only; no phone. Questions will be addressed in the chat window. This Webcast will be recorded, archived and made accessible in the near future.

Conferences and Workshops
Climate Change and Security of the Arctic Population
2019-05-22 - 2019-05-30
Arkhangelsk, Russia

The Arctic Science Summit Week 2019 will take place in Northern (Arctic) Federal University and Northern State Medical University, Russia, Arkhangelsk. Under the auspices of International Arctic Science Committee, participants from more than 23 countries and regions will be involved.

The summit will include discussions and roundtables, presentations, reports, and scientific sessions. Speakers will include members of the Russian Academy of Sciences representing various fields of science, well-known foreign researchers from the leading scientific centers of the Arctic and non-Arctic states, heads of the largest national companies of Russia pursuing industrial and infrastructure development in the region, and representatives of the Arctic territories.

The summit will also include the ceremony of the International Arctic Science Committee (IASC) medal. The award is presented by the president of the IASC and accompanied by a lecture by the laureate.

Call for science symposium session is accessible now, you can submit your proposals by following this link.

Abstracts can be submitted until 28 February, 2019.

The deadline of applications submission for the participants of the summit is 31 March, 2019.

If you are late or have any questions about registration, contact us please at info [at] assw2019.science

Webinars and Virtual Events
Presenters: Ellie Flaherty, University of Michigan; Kate Kirkpatrick, University of Michigan; Trey Snow, University of Michigan; and Julia Wondoleck, University of Michigan
2019-05-23
Online: 11:00am-12:00pm AKDT, 3:00-4:00pm EDT

Full title: Human and Environmental Well-being in Alaska's Kachemak Bay Watershed: An Ecosystem Services Assessment

Abstract:

The Kachemak Bay watershed, located on the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska, encompasses several terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems that provide a range of benefits and services that are not easily quantified. This webinar highlights methods and findings from a Master's project - advised by Dr. Julia Wondolleck - that provides insights about current ecosystem services valued in Kachemak Bay using a socio-cultural, place-based, ecosystem services framework.

In addition to hearing from the students, their partners at Kachemak Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve will share how they hope to apply their findings, and offer ideas for others interested in working with a student team in the future. Master's projects are interdisciplinary capstone experiences that enable University of Michigan School for Environment and Sustainability master's students to develop solutions to pressing problems faced by real-world clients. To learn more, read the team's recent report and review the process for proposing an idea for a future project.

About the Speakers:

Ellie Flaherty holds a Master of Science from the University of Michigan, School for Environment and Sustainability, with concentrations in Environmental Policy and Conservation Ecology. Ellie has experience in environmental compliance support, as well as policy and program analysis, and currently works as a Research Associate for the NEERS Science Collaborative (NSC) program at the University of Michigan's Water Center. Ellie's particular interests lie in marine and coastal management and collaborative resource management processes.

Kathryn Kirkpatrick holds a Master of Science in Conservation Ecology and Environmental Policy within the School for Environment and Sustainability (SEAS) at the University of Michigan. She holds a particular interest in wetland restoration, fostered by various work experiences in ecological consulting, wetland banking, and independent research. Her master's project in evaluating human and environmental well-being in Alaskan watersheds helped develop an interest in environmental policy, leading to her current position as a student assistant in the Water Resources Division at the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE), formerly the MDEQ.

Trey Snow is a 2019 graduate from the School for Environment and Sustainability at University of Michigan where he received a Master's of Science in Environmental Policy and Planning. While at the University of Michigan, Trey was a teaching assistant for environmental policy and geospatial analysis courses. Following his bachelors in economics from Bucknell University in 2016, Trey spent time across the US from the Montana backcountry with the US Forest Service to an organic farm in New England. His work on this ecosystem service master's project highlights his interest in building connections between ecological monitoring and public policies and outreach.

Webinar Access:

Please register through GoToWebinar:
https//attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/4561833459928484098

Webinars and Virtual Events
Speaking: Rick Thoman, Alaska Center for Climate Assessment & Policy (ACCAP)
2019-05-24
University of Alaska Fairbanks, or online: 12:00pm AKDT, 4:00pm EDT

The tools and techniques for making monthly and season scale climate forecasts are rapidly changing, with the potential to provide useful forecasts at the month and longer range. We will review recent climate conditions around Alaska, review some forecast tools and finish up the Climate Prediction Center's forecast for June 2019 and the summer season. Feel free to bring your lunch and join the gathering in person or online to learn more about Alaska climate and weather.

Available online or in-person at: Room 407 in the Akasofu Building on the UAF Campus in Fairbanks.

We strongly encourage pre-registration for webinars. The audio portion of the call is through a toll-free phone line and the slide presentation is streamed via computer. Follow the link above to register.

Field Training and Schools
2019-05-25 - 2019-06-08
Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada

Organizers invite applications for their 2019 field school, a part of the International Partnerships for Excellence in Education and Research (INTPART) project, Arctic Field Summer Schools: Norway-Canada-USA Collaboration.

This opportunity is open to U.S.-based graduate students enrolled at U.S. universities. The international partners will advertise separately.

Through a series of summer schools, this project engages graduate students in exploring science questions related to understanding the cryosphere, cryosphere change, and impacts of change on people and ecosystems. Students are exposed to the use of data derived from remote sensing platforms, as well as airborne and ground-based sensors and methods.

Specific objectives of the summer schools include introduction to and application of cutting-edge approaches and methods in interdisciplinary remote sensing and field-based research. In previous years, the field schools have focused on sea ice, lake ice, and snow in the Svalbard area and from NW Alaska. This year the field school will occur at the Kluane Lake Research Station in southwest Yukon, Canada. Efforts will be directed toward field methods and analysis of data on glaciers and permafrost, and a synthesis of information from prior schools to produce a state of knowledge assessment on the impacts of climate change on the cryosphere, ecosystems, and the people in these areas. The field school will advance the current state of knowledge and identify emerging issues in cryosphere research, with a focus on user needs for cryospheric data and information.

Round-trip international travel costs will be covered by the project, as well as travel between Whitehorse and Kluane Lake. Accommodations and meals are provided for participants at the research station.

Applications should include:

  • One-page motivation letter that outlines how this course fits into the applicant’s graduate study and career plans
  • Curriculum vitae
  • A recommendation letter from the applicant’s supervisor

Application materials should be sent via email to Vladimir Alexeev at valexeev [at] alaska.edu

Application deadline: April 10, 2019.

Webinars and Virtual Events
Presenters: Deborah Nicole Huntzinger, School of Earth & Sustainability, Northern Arizona University, Abhishek Chatterjee, Universities Space Research Association, and NASA Global Modeling and Assimilation Office
2019-05-28
Online: 8:00-9:00am AKDT, 12:00-1:00pm EDT

Abstract:

Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations, primarily due to fossil fuel emissions and land-use change, are expected to continue to drive changes in both climate and the terrestrial and ocean carbon cycles. Over the past two-to-three decades, there has been considerable effort to quantify terrestrial and oceanic system responses to environmental change, and project how these systems will interact with, and influence, future atmospheric CO2 concentrations and climate. In this presentation, we will summarize key findings related to projected changes to the North American carbon cycle, and the potential drivers and associated consequences of these changes, as reported in Chapter 19 of the Second State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR-2). The findings not only capture projections of emissions from fossil fuel and changes in land cover and land use, but also highlight the decline in future carbon uptake capacity of North American carbon reservoirs and soil carbon losses from the Northern high-latitudes. Such a discussion of future carbon cycle changes is new in SOCCR-2. It underlines the progress made since the release of the First State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR-1) in 2007 in identifying the vulnerability of key carbon pools and their co-evolution with changing climatic conditions. We will also discuss key knowledge gaps and outline a set of future research priorities, including both monitoring and modeling activities, that are necessary to improve projections of future changes to the North American carbon cycle and associated adaptation and resource-management decisions.

Webinar Access:

We will use Adobe Connect. To join the session, go to https://noaabroadcast.adobeconnect.com/nosscienceseminars, enter as "Guest", and please enter your first and last name. Users should use either IE or Edge on Windows or Safari if using a Mac. Audio will be available thru the computer only; no phone. Questions will be addressed in the chat window. This Webcast will be recorded, archived and made accessible in the near future.

Webinars and Virtual Events
2019-05-29
1pm AKDT, 5pm EDT

Join us for the Alaska Marine Policy Forum conference call, sponsored by Alaska Sea Grant and Alaska Ocean Observing System.

Agenda:

  • Updates from Alaska's Congressional Delegation
  • Updates from the Legislature
  • Other updates

Come hear the latest about marine funding, legislation and policy issues (state and federal) of interest to Alaskans. Be prepared to share information that’s important to Alaskans and others interested in marine topics in our state. Questions? Please contact Molly McCammon, mccammon [at] aoos.org.

Call 1-866-832-7806
PIN 2671471

Other
The Arctic as a Laboratory for Sustainable Art and Cultural Policy
2019-06-03 - 2019-06-05
Rovaniemi, Finland

The Arctic region is changing rapidly. On the one hand, ecological, cultural, social and economical changes pose challenges for well-being and sustainable development and on the other hand, some of the changes also create new possibilities. In the Arctic Arts Summit 2019 the challenges and circumstances in the Arctic are seen as 'laboratory' in which sustainable art and cultural policy is developed in collaboration with all of the Arctic counties. Artists and representatives of art and cultural policy will discuss the theme and promote circumpolar collaboration. The event will be the second Arctic Art Summit: the first one was arranged in Harstad, Norway, in 2017.

Artists and other actors of art and cultural sector and policy will attend from all of the countries that are members of the Arctic Council: Canada, the Kingdom of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, the Russian Federation, Sweden and the United States. In addition, participants from countries that show interest towards the Arctic matters are invited: representatives of China, Japan and Scotland. International journalists are also invited.

The key aim of the Arctic Arts Summit 2019 is to support art and cultural sectors in the circumpolar collaboration. We need to recognize, develop and promote sustainable and responsible models of action, long term planning, infrastructure in the creative field and cooperation in education. The indigenous art and cultural policy as well as interdisciplinary research on the impact of the art and culture are essential themes of the summit.

When planning your travel to Summit please notice the possibilities for visiting other academic and cultural events too. The Cumulus conference “Around the Campfire - Resilience and Intelligence" on 27 May - 1 June 2019 invites you to discuss the themes of resilience and intelligence. Just after the Summit, The Silence Festival gathers the most interesting performances and artists from the fields of contemporary circus and music to Kaukonen village (6 June - 9 June). The Midnight Sun Film Festival is an annual five-day film festival in Sodankylä (12 June -16 June).