Marine Ecology
Ocean Acidification (OA) Data Management
Working Group Reports Final reports: LTER Ocean Acidification Data Management working group report Participant list: list_of_participants.xls Ocean acidification (OA), the decline of seawater pH due to absorption of anthropogenic CO2, is a fast developing field of research. Session: Working Group Session 7 - Thursday Room Assignment: Longs Peak - Chasm Lake (60)
Physical forcing of a Western Antarctic Peninsula ecosystem: observations from a coastal ocean observing network at Palmer Station.
Poster Number: 122 Presenter/Primary Author: Travis Miles Local polar marine food webs are undergoing large shifts in composition and structure along the Western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP).
Assessing the importance of seagrass habitat restoration to “blue carbon” sequestration in the shallow coastal zone
Poster Number: 82 Presenter/Primary Author: Jill Greiner Seagrass meadows are highly productive habitats and provide many important ecosystem services to the coastal zone, including carbon and nutrient sequestration. Organic carbon accumulates in s
Sea Ice and Plankton Ecology at Palmer Station
Poster Number: 67 Presenter/Primary Author: Hugh Ducklow One of the tenets of polar oceanography is the dependence of phytoplankton blooms on sea ice retreat and subsequent water column stratification.
Responses of Reef Fish Communities to Large-Scale Habitat Perturbations
Poster Number: 59 Presenter/Primary Author: Andrew Brooks Our ability to predict how communities of coral reef fishes will change in response to habitat alteration depends strongly on understanding the functional relationships of component species with li