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1 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

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1CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

2 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICACHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

PUBLISHED BY THE CHILEAN ANTARCTIC INSTITUTETRANSLATED BY ROBERT RUNYARD

DESIGNED BY JENIFFER MUÑOZ PALMA / HUGO AGUILAR CÁRDENASMICHELANGELO - ADAM / ANTARCTIC PENINSULA IMAGE: MARCELO LEPPE CARTES

PRINTED BY LA PRENSA AUSTRAL PRINTERS MAY 2008

CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA 3CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

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More than 30 countries are making a coordinated research effort for the performance of projects in Antarctica which have global significance. Half of these countries use Punta Arenas, Chile, as a departure point to the White Continent. Probably no other location in Chile enjoys such a concentration of international scientific expertise.

The Chilean Antarctic Scientific and Technological Research Program brings together the projects that are financed, organized, coordinated, and executed by the Chilean Antarctic Institute (Instituto Antártico Chileno - INACH), whether directly or

through support of universities and centers for scientific research. The projects request financing from various sources through open and transparent

competition that is subject to peer review.

Consequently, the final objective of this program is to produce high-quality Chilean Antarctic science, worthy of international

recognition and in keeping with Chilean national interests through the delivery of selected studies relating to our cultural, economic and social development. Chile is the country that is closest to Antarctica, and this has resulted in a national imperative to understand, measure, and bring the White Continent closer to all Chileans.

INACH promotes four main areas of research:

1. Links between South America and Antarctica2. Global warming and climate change

3. Abundance and diversity of Antarctic organisms4. Antarctic environment and its bioresources

Chilean research in Antarctica shows particular strengths in the study and understanding of the Antarctic environment, its physical and biological character in both past and present, and in modelling of future scenarios.

Along with this, we are supporting implementation of a logistical platform to serve our program and also other national programs that visit Punta Arenas on their way to Antarctica (www.chain.cl).

We hope that you enjoy as we do the marvel that is Antarctica, through which we

gain insight into our planet’s past, the manner in which global warming is bringing changes, and the yet-undiscovered secrets that will be part of the future.

Dr. José Retamales Director, Chilean Antarctic Institute - Instituto Antártico Chileno - INACH

4 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICACHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

1. R

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How was the current biota conditioned by the continental separation of South America and Antarctica?

During most of its natural history, Antarctica was a green continent,

with a biodiversity similar to that of New Zealand, Chile or Argentina. Antarctica began to be isolated only about 28 million years ago, at a time that coincides with the beginning of its cooling and finally freezing. But it was not until a couple of million years ago that trees abandoned the continent altogether.

The definitive separation of South America and Antarctica – 23 million

years ago - was a dramatic event that transformed global climate, and permanently affected life, the atmosphere, and the landscape of Chile. Our country is a clear example of the biological and climatic dependence on Antarctica. For example, strong evidence exists to believe that the extreme aridity of the Atacama desert, the driest on earth, was caused by enormous distortion of the marine currents that resulted in the opening of Drake’s Passage. Similar effects are caused by the frigid Humboldt Current, which rises in the masses of water that surround Antarctica and maintain its cold temperatures.

It is of great importance to understand how this influence

evolved in the past, to gain knowledge that would allow us to understand the present and to predict the future. Seven projects attempt to answer this question from separate angles:

GEOLOGICAL CONNECTION BETWEEN WEST ANTARCTICA

AND PATAGONIA SINCE THE LATE PALEOZOIC: TECTONISM, PALEOGEOGRAPHY, BIOGEOGRAPHY AND PALEOCLIMATE

Principal investigator: Teresa TORRES, Universidad de Chile, in

collaboration with several other institutions.

MOLECULAR DIVERGENCE AND CONNECTIVITY IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN: A MODEL OF ANTARCTIC AND SUBANTARCTIC RINGS

Principal investigator: Elie POULIN, Universidad de

Chile, in collaboration with French researchers.

CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA 5CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

PHYLOGEOGRAPHY AND GENETICS OF POPULATIONS OF GIGARTINA SKOTTSBERGII SEPARATED BY THE CIRCUMPOLAR CURRENT

Principal investigator: Sylvain FAUGERON, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile.

ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF ANTARCTIC BENTHIC MARINE FAUNA: GENETIC AND MOLECULAR DIVERSITY AMONG CONGENERIC ANTARCTIC AND SOUTH AMERICAN SPECIES OF ECHINOIDEA

Principal investigator: Elie POULIN, Universidad de Chile.

WATER MASSES AND FRONTS IN THE VICINITY OF THE SOUTH SHETLAND ISLANDS

Principal investigator: Nelson SILVA, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso.

RECONSTRUCTION OF THE EVOLUTIONARY AND DEMOGRAPHIC HISTORY OF GENUS NACELLA,

THROUGHOUT THEIR DISTRIBUTION IN THE ANTARCTIC AND SUBANTARCTIC REGIONS

Principal investigator: Claudio GONZÁLEZ, Universidad de Chile.

ICTHYOSAURS OF THE LATE JURASSIC AND EARLY CRETACEOUS IN THE TORRES DEL PAINE NATIONAL PARK IN SOUTHERN CHILE

Principal investigators: Wolfgang STINNESBECK, Geologisches Institut der Universität Heidelberg, Germany, and Marcelo LEPPE, INACH.

PHOTOCOLLAGE INACH

6 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICACHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

2. G

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CLIM

ATE

CHAN

GE What will be the impact

of global warming?

The Antarctic Peninsula is one of the few places where atmospheric temperatures have increased to levels up to six times greater than global averages, resulting in the collapse of several ice platforms. Since the Antarctic climate provides in great measure a model of the global climate, particularly in ways that can impact our economy and society, the subject of global warming is on the agenda of nearly all the nations of the world and, in particular, in Chile. The problem of climate change, and the impact of global warming in Antarctica, taken together form the objective of six projects included in this line of research.

S TA B I L I T Y A N D R E C E N T BEHAVIOUR OF GLACIERS IN THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA - THE INTERACTIONS WITH ICE SHELVES

Principal investigator: Anja WENDT, Centro de Estudios Científicos (CECS), in collaboration with US and UK researchers.

CHARACTERIZATION OF FINE A N TA R C T I C T R O P O S P H E R I C AEROSOLS OF THE NORTH END OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA AND LINKAGE WITH THEIR SOURCES

Principal investigator: Margarita PRÉNDEZ, Universidad de Chile, in collaboration with US researchers.

ECO-PHYSIOLOGICAL OUTCOMES FOR ANTARCTIC FLORA UNDER A GLOBAL WARMING SCENARIO

Principal investigator: María Angélica CASANOVA, Universidad de Concepción.

RECONSTRUCTION OF THE PALEOENVIRONMENT OF THE CHILEAN PATAGONIAN CENTRAL LATITUDES AND SOUTHERN (MAGALLANES) REGIONS UNDER THE EFFECTS OF GLACIAL DYNAMICS

Principal investigator: Mauricio RONDANELLI, Universidad de Concepción, in collaboration with US researchers.

ANTARCTIC AND SOUTH AMERICAN CLIMATE: JOINT EXTRACT OF BRAZILIAN-CHILE-USA ICE CORE SAMPLING IN THE DETROIT PLATEAU OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA

Principal investigator: Ricardo JAÑA, INACH, in collaboration with US and Brazilian researchers.

CHEMICAL FINGERPRINT OF TEPHRA FROM HOLOCENE/QUATERNARY VOLCANOES AROUND THE NORTHERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA: A KEY TO REGIONAL VOLCANIC HISTORY AND CLIMATE RECONSTRUCTION

Principal investigator: Stefan KRAUS, INACH, in collaboration with

US researchers.

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CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA 7CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

3. ABUNDANCE AND DIVERSITY IN ANTARCTIC ORGANISMS

Antarctic ecosystems are changing. The recent destruction of the Larsen B dome has revealed that Antarctic marine biodiversity is greater than previously believed. Today we are seeing a much more complex ecological plot than what was predicted in models twenty years ago. The roles played by each of the species within the delicate ecosystems of the Frozen Continent pose a crucial question relative to understanding the profusion, availability, and behavior of the living resources of the Antarctic.

This line of research brings together

the studies of abundance and diversity of Antarctic organisms, while seeking an understanding of the biodiversity of the Antarctic, along with its dynamics and relationships with the surrounding continents, and in particular South America:

ECOLOGICAL STUDIES OF THE ANTARCTIC FUR SEAL, ARCTOCEPHALUS GAZELLA

Principal investigator: Daniel TORRES

CETACEAN ECOLOGY IN THE WATERS

OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN AND RELATED ECOSYSTEMS

Principal investigator: Anelio AGUAYO, INACH.

LOCAL PATTERNS OF SHALLOW

ANTARCTIC ECHINODERMS WITH CONTRASTING DEVELOPMENTAL MODES: THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF PREDATION, FOOD AVAILABILITY AND ICE-RELATED DISTURBANCES

Principal investigator: Álvaro PALMA, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile.

GENETIC POPULATION STRUCTURE

OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA AND SOUTHERN SOUTH AMERICA HUMPBACK WHALE FEEDING AREAS USING MITOCHONDRIAL AND NUCLEAR DNA MARKERS

Principal investigator: Carlos OLAVARRÍA, Fundación Centro de Estudios Cientificos del Cuaternario de Fuego-Patagonia y Antártica (CEQUA).

How abundant and diverse are the living resources of the

Antarctica?

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8 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICACHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

One of the biggest treasure troves in Antarctica is the genetic material and biodiversity of its organisms. Chilean Antarctic scientific investigation has included as one of its objectives the addition of biotechnology as a new field of work.

The organisms that live in Antarctica have adopted

unique evolutionary paths. The extreme climate has led to the evolution of new biochemical adaptations in the face of extremely low temperatures, high levels of ultraviolet radiation, high levels of dehydration stress, and changes in salinity, among others. The reduction of populations during glacial events restricted and continues to interfere with genetic transfer. This has brought about unique genetic material which has received very little attention and study.

This line of research attempts to uncover the

secrets that evolution has brought about in the DNA of Antarctic organisms, with the incorporation of a biotechnological component which deals with the study of biochemicals and biocompounds which are present among the organisms that live in Antarctica and could have potential biotechnological applications.

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What are the characteristics of Antarctic organisms that make them tolerant of extreme environments? Will these characteristics ever have utility for humankind?

J. M

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J. M

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CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA 9CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

This line covers eight scientific projects:

ANTAR CTIC A: SOUR CE OF

BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES FOR NATIONAL BIOTECHNOLOGY

Principal investigator: Jenny BLAMEY, Fundación Biociencia.

D I V E R S I T Y S T U D I E S O F

PSYCHROPHILIC PROKARYOTES FROM THE INSULAR ANTARCTIC TERRITORY: SEVEN ISOLATES FROM DIFFERENT PROTECTED SITES

Principal investigator: Jenny BLAMEY, Fundación Biociencia.

BACTERIAL MICROBIOTA OF THE

FILDES PENINSULA, KING GEORGE ISLAND: BEHAVIOR RELATIVE TO ANTIBACTERIAL AGENTS AND PRODUCTION OF COMPOUNDS WITH ANTIBACTERIAL CHARACTERISTICS

Principal investigator: Mariana DOMÍNGUEZ, Universidad de Concepción.

PRODUCTION OF DESCHAMPSIA ANTARCTICA CELLS IN BIOREACTORS. U S E S F O R T H E C O S M E T I C D E R M AT O L O G Y I N D U S T R Y INCLUDING CRYOPRESERVATION AND PHOTOPROTECTIVE AGENTS

Principal investigator: Manuel GIDEKEL, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez.

EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE INCREASES IN THE IMMUNE RESPONSE OF THE ANTARCTIC EQUINODERM STERECHINUS NEUMAYERI

Principal investigator: Marcelo GONZÁLEZ, INACH.

PHOTOPROTECTIVE MECHANISMS

IN COLOBANTHUS QUITENSIS UNDER COLD-INDUCED PHOTOINHIBITION CONDITIONS

Principal investigator: Luisa B A S C U Ñ Á N , U n i ve r s i d a d d e Concepción.

DESCHAMPSIA ANTAR CTICA:

HYDROLYTIC AND METABOLIC ENZYMES FOR USE IN BIOTECHNOLOGY

Principal investigator: Claudia RABERT, Universidad de La Frontera.

EFFECTS OF SALINE STRESS IN

THE COMPOSITION OF PHENOLIC COMPOUNDS AND IN GENETIC R E G U L AT I O N T H R O U G H T H E PHENYLPROPANOID PATHWAY IN DESCHAMPSIA ANTARCTICA

Principal investigator: Pablo ZAMORA, Universidad de Santiago de Chile.

M. G

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10 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICACHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

In addition to the projects in the four previous lines of research, there are four projects that consider other areas of polar investigation which are supported by INACH.

HISTORICAL ARCHEOLOGY OF THE EXTREME SOUTHWEST OF

THE SOUTH SHETLAND ISLANDSPrincipal investigator: Rubén STEHBERG, Museo Nacional de

Historia Natural, in collaboration with Australian colleagues. NEUTRON MONITOR MN-64 FOR THE CHILEAN ANTARCTIC

TERRITORY Principal investigator: Enrique CORDARO, Universidad de Chile,

in collaboration with Italian researchers. BIODIESEL: A GREEN ALTERNATIVE TO FOSSIL FUEL CONSUMPTION

IN ANTARCTIC BASES Principal investigator: Pedro CID-AGÜERO, Dirección de

Programas Antárticos, Universidad de Magallanes.

ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN CHILEAN ANTARCTIC BASES

Principal investigator: Claudio CASICCIA, Universidad de Magallanes.

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CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA 11CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

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12 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICACHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

INACH is a technical research organization under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs with competence on all Antarctic scientific, technological and outreach matters. One of its strategies for providing greater resources for Chilean Antarctic Science has been to collaborate with other organizations dedicated to science and technology in Chile and abroad.

In this way, during 2005, the Bicentennial

Science and Technology Program, together with INACH, announced for the first time a competition relating to the “Rings of Antarctic Research” bringing together groups in academic institutions and strengthening the formation of human capital in polar research. The Ring projects are proposed at a high level, within the framework of the International Polar Year with peer evaluation by recognized international reviewers.

In addition, thanks to an agreement between INACH and the Chilean National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (FONDECYT) signed in March of 2007, investigators seeking funding for scientific research in Chile will be able to conduct projects in Antarctica with the logistical support of INACH, provided that the objectives of their projects are acceptable.

As of 2004, INACH has proposed increases

in the quality and the number of projects that Chile conducts in Antarctica, either by means of the aforementioned agreements, or through two competitive methods: one of them addresses research proposals involving activities in the Antarctic Continent (field studies) and the other finances analysis of material or data previously collected (theoretical or laboratory research projects, also known as “cabinet projects.”)

Finally, for the purpose of increasing Chilean national “critical mass” in the Antarctic, in 2006 INACH initiated a program of Doctoral Thesis Support Scholarships for Antarctic subject matters. Postgraduate students will receive stipends for two years to develop their theses in several of the areas covered by the International Polar Year. As of now, research support grants have been provided to four doctoral candidates in Biogeography, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry and Physiology of Antarctic Organisms.

FINANCING

New opportunities for Chilean Antarctic science

CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA 13CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

PRIN

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14 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICACHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

Financing for Chilean Antarctic Science (2004-2011). The evolution of financing of Chilean Antarctic science since 2004, with projections through the year 2011, indicates 2008 as the year of comparatively greater investment. However, the projections show a decrease in financing after the International Polar Year.

Productivity in Chilean Antarctic science (1980-2005). Chilean Antarctic scientific productivity, measured in terms of the number of ISI (Institute for Scientific Information) publications, shows a noteworthy increase in recent years. Maintaining this trend will require a policy that favors competition for scientific research projects, along with peer review in the selection process.

Evolution of INACH projects (2000-2008). An increase in the sources and amounts of financing for Antarctic scientific research, a consequence of the International Polar Year, has resulted in an increase in the number of scientific projects.

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CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA 15CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA

AGUAYO Lobo, AnelioDepartamento Científico, Instituto Antártico Chileno.Plaza Muñoz Gamero 1055, Punta Arenas.(56-61) [email protected] BASCUÑÁN Godoy, LuisaDepartamento de Botánica,Facultad de Ciencias Naturales yOceanográficas, Universidad deConcepción.Barrio Universitario s/n, Casilla160-C, correo 3, Concepción.(56-41) [email protected] BLAMEY Alegría, JennyFundación Científica y CulturalBiociencia (Fundación Biociencia).José Domingo Cañas 2280,Ñuñoa, Santiago.(56-02) 343 25 [email protected]

CASANOVA Katny, María AngélicaDepartamento de Botánica,Facultad de Ciencias Naturales yOceanográficas, Universidad deConcepción.Barrio Universitario s/n,Concepción.(56-09) [email protected]

CID-AGÜERO, PedroDirección de ProgramasAntárticos, Universidad deMagallanes.Av. Bulnes 01855, Punta Arenas.(56-61) [email protected]

CORDARO Cárdenas, EnriqueDpto. Física, Lab. Rad. Cósmica,Fac. Cs. F. y M., U. de Chile.Av. Blanco Encalada 2008, 3erpiso. Casilla 5487, Santiago.(56-09) [email protected]

DOMÍNGUEZ Yévenes, MarianaDepto. Microbiología, Fac.Ciencias Biológicas, Universidadde Concepción.Barrio Universitario s/n, Casilla160-C, correo 3, Concepción.(56-41) [email protected]

FAUGERON, SylvainLaboratorio Internacional Asociado“Dispersal and Adaptation inMarine Species” (LIA-DIAMS),Dpto. Ecología, Facultad CienciasBiológicas, Pontificia UniversidadCatólica de Chile.Alameda 340, Santiago.(56-02) [email protected]

GIDEKEL Blufstein, ManuelDpto. Agroindustrias, Fac. Cs.Agropecuarias y Forestales,Universidad de La Frontera.Av. Francisco Salazar 01145,Temuco.(56-45) [email protected]

GONZÁLEZ Wevar, ClaudioInstituto de Ecología yBiodiversidad (IEB), Laboratorio deEcología Molecular, Departamentode Ciencias Ecológicas, Facultadde Ciencias, Universidad de Chile.Avenida Las Palmeras 3425,Ñuñoa, Santiago.(56-09) [email protected]

GONZÁLEZ Aravena, MarceloDepartamento Científico,Instituto Antártico Chileno.Plaza Muñoz Gamero 1055,Punta Arenas.(56-61) [email protected] JAÑA Obregón, RicardoDepartamento Científico, Instituto Antártico Chileno.Plaza Muñoz Gamero 1055,Punta Arenas.(56-61) [email protected]

KRAUS, StefanDepartamento Científico, Instituto Antártico Chileno.Plaza Muñoz Gamero 1055,Punta Arenas.(56-61) [email protected] LEPPE Cartes, MarceloDepartamento Científico, Instituto Antártico Chileno.Plaza Muñoz Gamero 1055,Punta Arenas.(56-61) [email protected]

OLAVARRÍA Barrera, CarlosFundación Centro de Estudios delCuaternario de Fuego-Patagonia yAntártica - INACH.Plaza Muñoz Gamero 1055, PuntaArenas.(56-61) [email protected]

PALMA Behnke, ÁlvaroDepartamento de Ecología,Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, P. Universidad Católica de Chile.Alameda 340, Santiago.(56-02) [email protected] POULIN Charmolue, ElieDepartamento de Ecología,Facultad de Ciencias, Universidadde Chile.Av. Las Palmeras 3425, Casilla 653,Ñuñoa, Santiago.(56-09) [email protected] PRÉNDEZ Bolívar, MargaritaFacultad de Ciencias Químicas yFarmacéuticas, Universidad deChile.Olivos 1007, Independencia,Santiago.(56-2) 978 [email protected]

RABERT Pinilla, ClaudiaFacultad de CienciasAgropecuarias, Agroindustrias,Universidad de La Frontera.Av. Francisco Salazar 01145,Temuco.(56-45) [email protected]

RONDANELLI Reyes, MauricioDepartamento Forestal, CampusLos Ángeles, Universidad deConcepción.Barrio Universitario s/n,Concepción.(56-43) 405261 [email protected] SILVA Sandoval, NelsonEscuela Ciencias Del Mar,Pontificia Universidad Católica deValparaísoAvenida Altamirano 1480,Valparaíso.(56-32) [email protected]

STEHBERG, RubénMuseo Nacional de HistoriaNaturalQuinta Normal s/n, Santiago.Casilla 787, Santiago.(56-2) [email protected]

STINNESBECK, WolfgangGeologisches Institut der Universität HeidelbergIm Neuenheimer Feld 234D-69120 Heidelberg, [email protected]

TORRES Navarro, DanielProfesor de Biologí[email protected]

TORRES González, TeresaDpto. Prod. Agrícola, Facultad deCiencias Agronómicas,Universidad de Chile.Santa Rosa 11315, CampusANTUMAPU, Casilla 1004, LaPintana, Santiago.(56-09) [email protected]

WENDT, AnjaCentro de Estudios Científicos,CECS.Arturo Prat 514, Valdivia.(56-63) [email protected] ZAMORA Cantillana, PabloDepartamento de Biología,Facultad de Química y Biología,Universidad de Santiago de Chile.Alameda 3363, Estación Central,Santiago.(56-2) 6811100 anexo [email protected]

DIRECTORY OF PRINCIPAL SCIENTIFIC PROJECT RESEARCH PERSONNEL

16 CHILEAN PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ANTARCTICA