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Dates
Webinars and Virtual Events
Speakers: Rick Thoman (ACCAP Climate Specialist) and JJ Frost (ABR, Inc. Plant Biologist)
2022-11-15
Online: 11:00 am - 12:00 pm AKST, 3:00-4:00 pm EST

The 2022 fire season in Alaska was unprecedented. Southwest Alaska experienced record-breaking fires that impacted local communities and challenged management resources. This webinar will review the weather, climate, and ecological factors that contributed to the severe wildfire season, with an in-depth look at the Southwest region. Additionally, this webinar will cover vegetation types and potential changes in the context of intensifying fire in Southwestern Alaska.

Please register to attend.

Webinars and Virtual Events
2022-11-10
Online: 11:00 am - 12:00 pm AKST, 3:00-4:00 pm EST

The US Permafrost Association was started to help bring together and grow the diverse community of science and engineering professionals serving society in Arctic regions. This webinar will provide historical background on the 20-year history of the U.S. Permafrost Association and its future.

Agenda:

  • Why did we start USPA: Larry Hinzman
  • Our Organization: Michael Lilly
  • Conferences: Joining Science and Engineering - John Thornley
  • Student Support and Next Generations: Anna Wagner
  • Contributions to the Communities: Kristina Levine
  • Students and the Future: Kaytan Kulkarni
Webinars and Virtual Events
2022-11-10
Online: 4:00 am AKST, 8:00 am EST, 1:00 pm GMT

Get to know the Lake Ice Service tool for your pocket, listen to the current status of its development as well as the future steps towards the expanded service. The Lake Ice Service collects lake ice information from multiple sources and visualizes the information in an easily accessible and understandable format website map tool. These information are generated by satellite data, governmental in situ networks as well as Community-Based Monitoring. Among other things, lake ice information is important for our understanding of ice-related changes and climate change. Lake ice is sensitive to intra-annual temperature fluctuations and long-term temperature trends. Beside the climate change aspect, lake ice data are important for transport, arctic livelihood, and safety issues. The information will be useful for citizens and local communities as well as for scientific purposes. The development of the Lake Ice Service is part of the Arctic PASSION project and will be further extended and co-designed in cooperation with users.

Please register in advance to attend.

Speakers

  • Kirsikka Heinilä (Senior research scientist at the Finnish Environment Institute/Arctic PASSION)
  • Timo Pyhälahti (Senior expert at the Finnish Environment Institute/Arctic PASSION)
  • Moderation: Lisa Grosfeld (Project Manager at the Alfred Wegener Institute/Arctic PASSION)
Webinars and Virtual Events
Speaking: Ingmar Nitze, Alfred Wegener Institute
2022-11-10
Online: 9:00 am AKST, 1:00 pm EST

The Permafrost Discovery Gateway hosts a monthly webinar series on the second Thursday of each month at 9:00 am Alaska time, raising topics of interest to the permafrost community. The webinar aims to 1) connect the international science community interested in big data remote sensing of permafrost landscapes, and 2) provide the Permafrost Discovery Gateway development team with end-user stories (by the presenter and webinar participants), such as exploring tools the community needs to create and explore big data.

Abstract

In this session of the Permafrost Discovery Gateway (PDG) seminar series, we will provide an insight into ongoing work towards the goal to quantify and monitor permafrost region disturbances, such as lake dynamics or retrogressive thaw slumps. With increasingly available processing capacities, and remote sensing data we are now able to extract information at unprecedented spatial and temporal scales. For mapping lake changes, we are expanding the processing of Nitze et al (2018), who used Landsat trends to map lake changes across 2.3M km² between 1999 and 2014 across four large transects in the arctic and subarctic permafrost region, to the entire arctic permafrost region and the period 2000-2020. For this processing we are leveraging Google EarthEngine and NCSA’s clowder processing pipeline. Furthermore, we are working towards an inventory of retrogressive thaw slumps (RTS) across the arctic, based on 3 meter PlanetScope imagery. Here, we leverage the latest advances in deep-learning object segmentation techniques. First analysis revealed the potential, but also limitations of this method and a limited set of training data. In a community approach (IPA Action Group “RTSInTrain”), we are formalizing training label creation and are constantly collecting training labels to overcome these limitations. The iteratively trained models with more and more new training labels show a constant improvement, giving us a good confidence for a good quality output. The first version will include a large area across the arctic covering ~ 500 km² of RTS rich terrain.

Webinars and Virtual Events
2022-11-10
Online: 9:00-10:00 am AKST, 1:00-2:00 pm EST

Are you a polar scientist wanting to learn more about where you can find and access polar data to use in your research or teaching? Learn about where you can find and how you can access Antarctic and Arctic data in this Polar Data Accessibility Webinar, which will feature short overviews of data resources from:

  • Polar Geospatial Center (PGC)
  • National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
  • Arctic Data Center
  • United States Antarctic Program Data Center (USAP-DC)
  • Exchange for Local Observations and Knowledge of the Arctic (ELOKA)
  • QGreenland

At the end of the call there may be an opportunity for attendees to ask questions of the folks representing these different data resources.

Webinars and Virtual Events
Speaker: Sarah Laske, USGS Alaska Science Center
Arctic Research Seminar Series with Donald Anderson
2022-11-10
Online: 9:00-10:00 am AKST, 1:00-2:00 pm EST

ARCUS invites registration for the next Arctic Research Seminar featuring Sarah Laske, USGS Alaska Science Center, titled "Circumpolar Patterns of Arctic Freshwater Fish Diversity: A baseline for monitoring". The seminar will be held via Zoom.

Registration is required for this event. Instructions for accessing the webinar will be sent to registrants prior to the event.

Seminar Abstract

Climate change, biological invasions, and anthropogenic disturbance pose significant threats to Arctic freshwater biodiversity. Information gaps and insufficient knowledge about current biodiversity limit our ability to determine patterns or trends over space and time. Recently, a group of international scientists collaborated to compile and analyze data from streams and lakes in the circumpolar Arctic – producing the first assessment of the state of Arctic freshwater biodiversity. Fish species presence/absence data were used to evaluate patterns of diversity at local, regional, and circumpolar scales. Within North America, fish diversity patterns were evaluated for congruence with environmental factors. Circumpolar patterns of fish species diversity varied with latitude, hydrologic isolation, and ecoregion characteristics. Only one species, Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus, occurred above 71 degrees N latitude, but local scale Arctic diversity peaked at 70 degrees N, which was evident across the circumpolar north and in North America. High latitude diversity appears to be supported by the presence of anadromy in coastal systems and areas unaffected by the last glaciation (180k BP). Reduced richness above 71 degrees N resulted primarily from physical isolation of freshwater habitats and allowing colonization only by migratory anadromous species. At lower latitudes, coarse ecoregion characteristics, like elevation, contributed to overall diversity patterns, with fewer species in mountainous regions compared to adjacent lowland areas. These large-scale assessments are the first steps in determining circumpolar freshwater diversity patterns; however, this study also highlights the significant gaps in data coverage and our current limited ability to detect change. Inclusion of archived and new data – on fishes and their environment – will allow for studies to test change in observed patterns of biodiversity.

Speaker Bio

Sarah Laske is a fish biologist at the U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Science Center in Anchorage. She was hired in 2017 after completing her Ph.D. at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, where she studied drivers of fish community structure and trophic relationships in Arctic Coastal Plain lakes. Her work focuses largely on fish community ecology and food webs of Arctic species and landscapes. Currently, she is taking on investigations exploring mercury biomagnification in lake food webs. Outside of work, Sarah is at the whim of her spoiled bird dogs, but she does enjoy baking loaves of sourdough and other treats.

Conferences and Workshops
2022-11-09 - 2022-11-13
Seattle, Washington and Online

The 2022 American Anthropological Association Meeting (AAA) Annual Meeting will be a hybrid meeting.

The General Call for Participation is open! All General Call for Participation submissions should be started no later than Wednesday, March 30, and submitted by Wednesday, April 6.

Webinars and Virtual Events
What, why, who and how to improve
2022-11-09
Online: 7:00 am AKST, 11:00 am EST, 4:00 pm GMT

Have you ever wondered what Arctic observing systems actually are? What do they observe and why do we need them? What does the data tell us for our daily lives and how might this be important for your own research? And which role does climate monitoring play in the use of Arctic observing systems? This online seminar which is part of the ongoing Arctic PASSION Online Seminar and Dialogue Series answers these questions - and many more - and gives you an introduction to Arctic observing systems.

In its first part, there will be an overview of the general structure of Arctic observing systems and the relevant projects and networks currently working with them. A special focus will be laid on their current status and possible future improvements. The second part will introduce some of the problems researchers encounter when working with Arctic observing systems: The data they produce are scarce, intermittent and rarely cover all necessary variables. It then goes on to present some of the possible solutions that projects like Arctic PASSION offer. The third part will focus on the importance and the role of Indigenous and Local Knowledge. Since Arctic observing systems impact policy- and decision-making, they also have a direct impact on Arctic Indigenous Peoples. They therefore have an invested interest in ensuring the observing systems are sufficient and effective. Through Indigenous Knowledge Systems and living in the Arctic, Indigenous Peoples are first to be aware of changes and have a holistic understanding of how changes will have ecosystem-wide impacts. This part will thereby demonstrate why equity is fundamental to the process of SAON ROADS in supporting Indigenous self-determination with decision-making power, as well as to supporting Indigenous Knowledges to be ethically part of the Arctic observing systems.

Please register in advance to attend.

Speakers

  • Michael Karcher (Arctic PASSION coordinator at Alfred Wegener Institute)
  • Arild Sundfjord (Oceanographer at Norwegian Polar Institute/Arctic PASSION)
  • Margaret Rudolf (Graduate Research Assistant at the International Arctic Research Center/SAON ROADS)
  • Moderator: Lisa Grosfeld (Project Manager at the Alfred Wegener Institute/Arctic PASSION)
Conferences and Workshops
2022-11-09 - 2022-11-11
The University of Adelaide, Australia

Registration for the AMSI–AustMS Workshop on Mathematics of Sea Ice and Ice Sheets are now open and close on 7 October, 2022. The workshop will be primarily in-person with additional online presentation and viewing options. The workshop will consist of invited speakers and contributed talks.

Invited Speakers

  • Prof. Cecilia Bitz
  • Prof. Kenneth Golden
  • A/Prof. Agnieszka Hermann
  • Prof. Ian Eisenman

Registration deadline has been extended until the 14 October 2022.

Webinars and Virtual Events
Opportunities and Challenges for in Situ Ocean Observing in the Arctic
2022-11-09 - 2022-11-10
Online

EuroGOOS' Arctic ROOS will hold an online workshop on 'Opportunities and challenges for in situ ocean observing in the Arctic'.

The workshop will focus on the current state of in situ ocean observing in the Arctic, with sessions covering ocean and sea ice observing as well as new technologies and data management. Through speakers’ presentations and group discussions, challenges and opportunities for in situ ocean observing in the Arctic will be explored, including better sharing and coordination of observations, potential for collaboration with industry/tourism partners and other stakeholders, and the improvement of real-time delivery of in situ observations from the Arctic. The workshop will formulate recommendations and outline a potential roadmap for improved in situ ocean observing in the Arctic.