meeting program - aslo · limnología y oceanografía en un mundo en cambio limnology and...
TRANSCRIPT
MeetinG Program
www.aslo.org/sanjuan2011
SponSored by
This program is produced for assistance on site at the meeting. Additional information about hotels and general travel information can be found on the conference Web site.
2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting is on Facebook and Twitter. Stay connected before and during the meeting for important updates.
ASLOMeeting Program
1
Workshop: Engaging Our Students Using Real-Time Data: From Platforms to Homemade Sensors ......................................................................... 14Town Hall Meeting: Microbial Biogeography and Biogeochemistry ...................... 14
Field Trips ................................................................................................................. 14Jobos Bay Field Trip Information ..................................................................................... 14San Juan Bay Estuary Field Trips ...................................................................................... 15
Additional Participant and Attendee Information ........................................ 15ASLO Membership ............................................................................................................. 15Registration Information ................................................................................................... 15Guest/Spouse Fee ................................................................................................................ 15Receipts .................................................................................................................................. 15Letters of Participation ....................................................................................................... 15Child Care Information ................................................................................................... 15
Transportation ....................................................................................................... 16Special Car Rental Rates ................................................................................................... 16Taxicabs ................................................................................................................................ 16Airport Shuttle Service ...................................................................................................... 16Parking ................................................................................................................................. 16Attendee Shuttle ................................................................................................................. 16Local Public Transportation ............................................................................................. 17
Instructions for Poster Presenters ...................................................................... 17Poster Set-up ......................................................................................................................... 17Poster Teardown .................................................................................................................. 17Printing Your Poster ............................................................................................................ 17
Instructions for Oral Presenters.......................................................................... 17Preparing Your Electronic Presentation ....................................................................... 17Advance Submission ........................................................................................................... 17Microsoft PowerPoint Tips ............................................................................................... 17Apple Macintosh Users ...................................................................................................... 18Bring a Backup ..................................................................................................................... 18During Your Presentation .................................................................................................. 18Computer Equipment ......................................................................................................... 18Laptops ................................................................................................................................... 18Rental of Additional Audio-Visual Equipment ............................................................ 18Presentation Room .............................................................................................................. 18Security .................................................................................................................................. 18Speaker Ready Room .......................................................................................................... 18
Puerto Rico Convention Center Maps .............................................................. 19
Monday At A Glance ............................................................................................. 20
Tuesday At A Glance ............................................................................................. 22
Wednesday At A Glance ....................................................................................... 24
Thursday At A Glance ........................................................................................... 26
Friday At A Glance ................................................................................................. 28
Monday, 14 February 2011 Orals ........................................................................ 30
Tuesday, 15 February 2011 Orals ........................................................................ 41
Tuesday, 15 February 2011 Posters ..................................................................... 49
Wednesday, 16 February 2011 Orals .................................................................. 59
Thursday, 17 February 2011 Orals ...................................................................... 71
Thursday, 17 February 2011 Posters ................................................................... 79
Friday, 18 February 2011 Orals ............................................................................ 90
Author Index .........................................................................................................101
Welcome to the 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting ................................. 2
Meeting Organizers ................................................................................................. 2
ASLO Board of Directors and Staff ...................................................................... 3
ASK ME! ..................................................................................................................... 3
Plenary Lectures and Presentations ..................................................................... 3
Roundtable Discussion and Special Presentation ........................................... 5
Society Award Presentations ................................................................................. 5
About Puerto Rico .................................................................................................... 5
About the Conference Meeting Site .................................................................... 6
Meeting Schedule ..................................................................................................... 6
Poster Receptions ..................................................................................................... 7
Final Talk Raffle ......................................................................................................... 8
At the meeting ........................................................................................................... 8Conference Registration and Check-In ............................................................................ 8Message Boards ...................................................................................................................... 8Special Needs ......................................................................................................................... 8Coffee Breaks .......................................................................................................................... 8Concessions ............................................................................................................................ 8Lunch Time During the Meeting ....................................................................................... 8Local Evening Dining ............................................................................................................ 8Old San Juan Trolleys ........................................................................................................... 8Email/Internet Access........................................................................................................... 8
Exhibitors and Sponsors ......................................................................................... 8
Information for Students and Early Career Participants .............................. 10Outstanding Student Presentation Awards ................................................................... 10Career Center ....................................................................................................................... 10Student Career Development Workshops ..................................................................... 10Student Social Mixer ........................................................................................................... 10Early Career Meet and Mix ............................................................................................... 11Early Career Workshop – Beyond Imagination: Creating Research Opportunities, Leadership, and Thinking BIG .......................... 11ASLO 2011 Multicultural Program ................................................................................. 11
Emerging Issues Seminars .................................................................................... 11Emerging Issues Seminar I: Role of Aquatic Networks in the Boreal Carbon Cycle ............................................................................................... 11Emerging Issues Seminar II: Microbial Carbon Pump in the Ocean ...................... 12Emerging Issues Seminar III: Integrating Terrestrial and Aquatic P Science ........ 12Emerging Issues Seminar IV: Implications of Increased Carbon Supply and Artificial Habitat for the Global Expansion of Jellyfish Blooms ......... 12
Conference Events .................................................................................................. 12Opening Welcome Mixer Reception .............................................................................. 12ASLO Membership Business Meeting ........................................................................... 13Mixer, Salsa Dancing and Buffet ...................................................................................... 13
Workshops, Town Hall Meetings, and Auxiliary Meetings ....................... 13Workshop: Understanding and Using Network Science for Better Collaboration ..................................................................................................... 13ASLO Aquatic Sciences Film Festival Featuring Randy Olson ................................. 13Public Policy Workshop: Getting Lawmakers to Hear Your Message .................... 13Science Journalism Workshop: From Ship to Shore to the News ............................ 13Town Hall Meeting: ASLO and the Current State of Aquaculture Research ....... 13Workshop: Boost Your Research in Aquatic Sciences with the NSF National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network (NNIN) ........................... 14Town Hall Meeting: NOAA in the Caribbean .............................................................. 14
Contents
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
2
Welcome to the 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences MeetingLimnología y Oceanografía en un Mundo en Cambio Limnology and Oceanography in a Changing World
13 – 18 February 2011 · San Juan, Puerto Rico
We are so glad that you can be a part of this ASLO meeting. Scientists from around the world will converge on the beautiful island of Puerto Rico to discuss emerging science on Limnología y Oceanograf ía en un Mundo en Cambio, Limnology and Oceanog-raphy in a Changing World. The goal of this conference is to bring together an international group of freshwater and marine scientists to meet the challenge of global change, exploring diversity and con-nections across the range of aquatic systems impacted by humans. The Aquatic Sciences Meeting is a widely recognized venue for scientific exchange across all aquatic disciplines. Abstracts of papers presented during the meeting will be published on the conference Web site as well in a PDF file format for downloading.
About the Conference SponsorsThe 2011 Aquatic Sciences Meeting is sponsored by ASLO, Ad-vancing the Science of Limnology and Oceanography. ASLO is the leading professional organization for researchers and educators in the field of aquatic sciences, fostering a diverse, international scientific community that creates, integrates and communicates knowledge across the full spectrum of aquatic science.
ASLO would like to thank the following organizations for their support:
Sponsors:• University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez
Supporters:• Jobos Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve • San Juan Bay Estuary Program • University of Puerto Rico Sea Grant Program• Caribbean Integrated Coastal Ocean Observing System• UPRM - Department of Marine Sciences• Center for Hemispheric Cooperation in Research and
Education in Engineering and Applied Sciences - CoHemis
Meeting OrganizersConference Co-ChairsClaudia Benitez-NelsonUniversity of South [email protected]
Jorge CorredorUniversity of Puerto Rico – Mayagü[email protected]
María GonzálezMiami [email protected]
Scientific CommitteeYrene Astor Estación de Investigaciones Marinas de [email protected]
Juan Posada Universidad Simón Bolí[email protected]
Pere Masqué Universitat Autonoma de [email protected]
Julio Morell University of Puerto Rico - Mayagü[email protected]
Jose Luiz Attayde Federal University of Rio Grande do [email protected]
Sonya Dyhrman Woods Hole Oceanographic [email protected]
Alan Covich University of [email protected]
Patricia Soranno Michigan State [email protected]
Carmen Aguilar University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee [email protected]
Dennis Hansell University of [email protected]
Bill Johns University of [email protected]
David John University of South [email protected]
Local CommitteeJorge BauzáSan Juan Bay Estuary Program [email protected]
Ruperto ChaparroUniversity of Puerto Rico Sea [email protected]
Yasmín Detrés CardonaUniversity of Puerto Rico - Mayagü[email protected]
Angel DieppaJobos Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve [email protected]
ASLOMeeting Program
3
Jorge Ortiz-ZayasUniversity of Puerto Rico - Río [email protected]
Fernando Gilbes University of Puerto Rico – Mayagü[email protected]
Warner Ithier-GuzmánUniversity of South [email protected]
Student RepresentativeLuana PinhoFederal University of Rio de [email protected]
ASLO Board of Directors and StaffOfficers/Executive CommitteeDeborah Bronk, President Carlos Duarte, Past-President John Downing, President-Elect Lisa Campbell, Secretary Patricia Matrai, Treasurer
Members-at-LargeJim Cotner Michelle Wood Lihini Aluwihare Thomas Bianchi Deidre Gibson Lars Tranvik Roxane Maranger Uta Passow
Student Board MembersKimberley Keats Luana Pinho
StaffJoe Ackerman, Editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Fluids and Environments M. Robin Anderson, Editor, Web-Based Books Jennifer Cherrier, Editor, Limnology and Oceanography e-Lectures John Dolan, Co-editor, Limnology and Oceanography: BulletinLucille Doucette, Journals ManagerEverett Fee, Editor, Limnology and OceanographySusana Feng, Managing Editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods Paul Kemp, Web Editor and Editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods Helen Schneider Lemay, ASLO Business Manager
Adrienne Sponberg, Co-editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Bulletin
ASK ME!Have a question about ASLO or the meeting? Members of the organizing committee along with the ASLO board members will be wearing ribbons that read, “ASK ME!”
Plenary Lectures and PresentationsMonday, 14 February 201110:30 to 12:00, Ballroom A - PRCC
Dr. Deborah A. BronkASLO President, Department of Physical Science, Virginia Institute of Marine Sciences, The College of William and Mary
Presentation: ASLO’s Future - Opportunities and Challenges
ASLO President Debbie Bronk will provide opening remarks for the conference.
Biographical Information: Deborah Bronk is a professor in the Department of Physical Sciences at the College of William & Mary’s Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS). She received her un-dergraduate degree in biology and marine science at the University of Miami and her doctorate at the University of Maryland. Prior to her move to VIMS she was a post-doctoral scholar at the University of California, Santa Cruz and an associate professor at the Univer-sity of Georgia. Her research program is all about nitrogen! Her research group has addressed a broad range of basic questions of nitrogen uptake and regeneration and applied questions including coastal eutrophication and wastewater issues. She has participated in or led over fifty research cruises to environments spanning the salinity spectrum. Debbie currently serves as the treasurer of the Council of Scientific Society Presidents and is a member of the U.S. National Committee for the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, the U. S. Carbon Cycle Science Plan Working Group, and the Ocean Time-Series Advisory Committee. She is the recipi-ent of the Lindeman Award and the Dean’s Prize for the Advance-ment of Women in Science.
Tuesday, 15 February 201110:30 to 12:00, Ballroom A - PRCC
Dr. Carla E. CáceresUniversity of Illinois, Department of Animal Biology, Urbana, IL
Presentation: The Lake as a Microcosm for the Study of Disease
More than 120 years ago, Stephen A. Forbes recognized the utility of lakes for studying the complexity of interactions that are the hallmark of modern community ecology. Although parasites have not always been a central focus of community ecologists, recent research has revealed the roles they play in community dynamics. It has also become clear that the spread of disease through a host population often depends on other members of the food web be-
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
4
sides the host and parasite species in question. Furthermore, some physical aspects of the environment seem to enhance the spread of disease whereas others inhibit it. We have been using freshwater zooplankton as a case study to understand the connection between habitat, community structure and disease spread. We see a pro-nounced relationship between the basin shapes of lakes and fungal (Metschnikowia bicuspidata) disease in the zooplankton grazer Daphnia dentifera. Multiple mechanisms can explain why Daph-nia in some lakes are sicker, but we can eliminate some hypotheses and find support for others involving food-web players. Further-more, we identify physical mechanisms that enhance the transport of fungal spores and increase the likelihood of epidemics in lakes with particular basin shapes. These results, coupled with examples from other systems demonstrate that habitat structure, through its effects on food-web composition and physical processes, can shape wildlife disease.
Biographical Information: Dr. Carla E. Cáceres is the director of the Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology Program at the University of Illinois Urbana. She also is an associate professor in the Department of Animal Biology. She received her BS in biology from the University of Michigan and earned her PhD in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from Cornell University. Carla received ASLO’s R. L. Lindeman Award for the outstanding paper written by a young aquatic scientist in 1999. Other honors and recognitions include the National Academies Education Fellow in the Life Sci-ences (2009-2010), Campus award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching (2009), Lynn M. Martin Award for Distinguished Women Teachers (2009), Helen Corley Petit Scholar (2006-2007), Presi-dential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) (2003), and the James A. Hagan Teaching Fellow, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Illinois (2002-2003).
Wednesday, 15 February 201110:30 to 12:00, Ballroom A – PRCC
Dr. Nancy N. RabalaisLouisiana Universities Marine Consortium, Chauvin, LA
Presentation: Oilmageddon, Dead Zones and Vanishing Land
The BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill was an engineering, economic and socio-ecological failure that brought the attention of the world to the northern Gulf of Mexico. The immediate response was as-tonishment, followed by horror, anger, denial, action, perseverance and recovery. The oil gusher (not a leak, not a spill, not an incident) was an immediate environmental insult, and as yet unknown short- and long-term impact. Attention was focused on how the oil spill was affecting oceanic ecosystems, coastal habitats, coastal communities, and the health and resilience of plankton, blue fin tuna, and spill workers, not to forget the local and global economy. Attention was also drawn to the fragile and already-damaged condi-tion of the northern Gulf of Mexico. The image of dots on a map of oilfield drilling and production platforms, including many in deep water, and the pipelines that connect them to shore is a spider-web denser off Louisiana than elsewhere. The inshore maze of pipeline canals, access canals, and navigation channels dices up the fragile deltaic landscape. The engineered Mississippi River is no longer the winding, sediment-laden “Big Muddy” that formed the deltaic plain and current bird-foot delta over the last seven thousand years.
The Mississippi and its tributaries, floodplains and watersheds are no longer efficient at handling the magnitude of nutrients loaded onto it by human beings and their activities, and a world-class “dead zone” forms in the Gulf every spring and summer. Yet, we are now challenged with a Presidential Executive Order that calls for an integration of Federal efforts with those of local stakeholders to initiate and pursue complex, large-scale restoration projects. We face many opportunities and many challenges.
Biographical Information: Nancy Rabalais is the executive direc-tor and a professor at the Louisiana Universities Marine Consor-tium (LUMCON). Her research interests include the dynamics of hypoxic environments, interactions of large rivers with the coastal ocean, estuarine and coastal eutrophication, benthic ecology, and science policy. She currently serves on a National Research Council committee, the Council for the University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System, the Board of Trustees for the Consortium on Ocean Leadership, the National Sea Grant Advisory Board, and Board of Directors for the Gulf of Mexico Coastal Ocean Observing System. Nancy is an American Association for the Advancement of Science Fellow, an Aldo Leopold Leadership Program Fellow, and a National Associate of the National Academies of Science, in ad-dition to earning several research awards. She earned her Ph.D. in zoology from The University of Texas at Austin in 1983.
Thursday, 16 February 201110:30 to 12:00, Ballroom A – PRCC
Dr. Christopher L. SabineNOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, WA
Presentation: Ocean Uptake of Atmospheric CO2 and its Impact on Marine Ecosystems
Currently the average concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) is approaching 390 parts per million (ppm); a 39% increase over preindustrial levels. Half of that increase has occurred in the last 30 years. By mid-century, the average atmospheric CO2 concentration could easily reach double the preindustrial concen-tration of 280 ppm. The ocean currently absorbs between one-third and one-fourth of the CO2 emitted to the atmosphere from human activities, but the fraction of anthropogenic emissions taken up by the ocean appears to be decreasing with time. As this CO2 dissolves in seawater it forms carbonic acid resulting in what is commonly referred to as ocean acidification. A range of field and laboratory studies suggest that impacts of acidification on some major marine calcifiers may already be detectable and will likely increase in the future. Increasing acidity and related changes in seawater chemistry can also affect reproduction, behaviour, and general physiological functions of some marine organisms such as oysters, sea urchins, squid and some fish. Both the changing ocean CO2 uptake effi-ciency and potential changes in marine ecosystems suggest that the oceans are undergoing significant changes due to rising CO2. As the world begins to address the issue of global climate change we need to recognize that temperature and sea level rise are not the only concerns, but that the rising CO2 is having a direct impact on the environment and its ecosystem services.
Biographical Information: Christopher L. Sabine received his PhD in chemical oceanography from the University of Hawaii in 1992.
ASLOMeeting Program
5
He is currently a supervisory oceanographer at NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory in Seattle, WA. He also holds an affiliate faculty position in the University of Washington School of Oceanography and is a senior fellow at the UW/NOAA Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Oceans (JISAO). Chris’ research focuses on understanding the global carbon cycle and the role of the ocean in absorbing CO2 released from human activity. In particular he studies air-sea exchange of CO2 basin-scale distributions of both natural and anthropogenic carbon, multiple tracer relationships, carbonate and organic matter within the open ocean and in coastal environments and ocean acidification. He is a scientific advisor for national ocean carbon programs within the U.S. and internationally within the United Nations. He has won several awards including the U.S. Department of Commerce Gold Medal Award for pioneering research leading to the discovery of increased acidification in the world’s oceans and NOAA Research Employee of the Year.
Friday, 17 February 201110:30 to 12:00, Ballroom A – PRCC
Dr. Marcia McNuttDirector, U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA
Presentation: How Science Made a Difference in Ending the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
Biographical Information: Dr. Marcia McNutt is responsible for leading the nation’s largest water, earth, biological science and civilian mapping agency in its mission to provide the scientific data that enable decision makers to create sound policies for a chang-ing world. She previously served as president and chief executive officer of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), in Moss Landing, California. Marcia has participated in 15 major oceanographic expeditions and served as chief scientist on more than half of those voyages. She has published 90 peer-reviewed scientific articles. Her research has ranged from studies of ocean island volcanism in French Polynesia to continental break-up in the Western United States to uplift of the Tibet Plateau. Marcia is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philo-sophical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She was awarded the American Geophysical Union’s Macelwane Medal in 1988 for research accomplishments by a young scientist and the Maurice Ewing Medal in 2007 for her significant contribu-tions to deep-sea exploration. Marcia received a bachelor’s degree in physics from Colorado College and a doctorate in earth sciences from Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
Roundtable Discussion and Special Presentation Dr. James W. Porter, Meigs Professor of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, and winner of the 2005 Eugene P. Odum Award for Excellence in Ecology Education, will lead a roundtable discussion on water quality issues in Puerto Rico and the neigh-boring U. S. Virgin Islands on Monday, 14 February, from 12:00 to 13:30 in Ballroom B. He also will lead a special presentation in Ballroom B during lunch on Tuesday, entitled, “The Ecology of War: Vieques, Human Rights, and the Concept of a Just War.” This talk
will focus on marine ecological contamination on Vieques. It will embed this information in the larger issue of warfare ecology and the international debate over environmental protection clauses within the Geneva Convention on War.
Society Award Presentations2011 ASLO society awards will be presented during the plenary sessions Monday through Friday.
Biographical information and award citations will be included in an upcoming issue of the L&O: Bulletin.
Monday:Tommy and Yvette Edmondson Distinguished Service Award—The Schneider Group, Inc., ASLO Business Office, Waco, Texas
Ruth Patrick Award—Dr. John Downing, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa
Tuesday: Citation for Scientific Excellence—Dr. Peter Verity (Presented posthumously. Dr. Verity’s widow, Melanie Mirande, will ac-cept the award on Dr. Verity’s behalf.)
Ramón Margalef Award for Excellence in Education—Dr. Juan Gonzalez, University of Puerto Rico, Arecibo, Puerto Rico
Wednesday: John Martin Award—Bergh, Ø., Børsheim, K.Y., Bratbak, G., Heldal, M.-1989. High abundance of viruses found in aquatic environments. Nature, 340: 467-468.
G. Evelyn Hutchinson Award—Cindy Lee, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York
Thursday:Raymond L. Lindeman Award—William “Mack” Durham, Mas-sachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts
A.C. Redfield Award—Fred Grassle, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey
Friday:ASLO Student Presentation Award winners will be recognized.
About Puerto RicoPuerto Rico, “the island of enchantment,” affords visitors all of the pleasures of a tropical island. The smallest of the Greater Antilles, the island is large enough to host important freshwater ecosystems, notably the intricate subterranean river system embedded in the northwestern karst terrain. Extensive mangroves, seagrass beds and coral reefs surround the island. For more information about the island of Puerto Rico, please go to: http://www.topuertorico.org/
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
6
About the Conference Meeting SitePuerto Rico Convention Center100 Convention DriveSan Juan, Puerto Rico 00907
The Puerto Rico Convention Center (PRCC) was built in 2005 and will be the focal point for the 2011 meeting. It is located across from the new Sheraton Hotel, the only hotel located within walking distance. The PRCC is doing its part to further the green movement by maintaining a clean environment, researching new methods to achieve sustainability, and promoting environmen-tally friendly practices. The facility has implemented an extensive recycling program, energy, and water conservation, and several other green initiatives that benefit its clients, employees, visitors, suppliers, community, and the world.
Some key “green” elements you will notice at the Puerto Rico Con-vention Center include:
• Automated control systems for air conditioning and lighting of the facility, as well as the incorporation of natural lighting to reduce overall energy consumption.
• Preferential parking spaces around the facility for hybrid cars.• Lighting materials that consume less energy.• Landscaping with native plants and other flora that require
less maintenance and require less water, as well as an auto-mated watering system to conserve the use of water.
• Eco-friendly policies and green standards, including the use of green products such as recycled paper products and eco-friendly cleaning supplies in the use and maintenance of the facility, as well as requiring contractors to apply and adhere to green standards and practices in their work with the facility and District.
• Established waste reduction and recycling programs.
Meeting ScheduleSaturday, 12 February 2011 08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Role of Aquatic Net-
works in the Boreal Carbon Cycle - Room 204 08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Implications of In-
creased Carbon Supply and Artificial Habitat for the Global Expansion of Jellyfish Blooms - Room 208C
Sunday, 13 February 201107:15 Field Trip to Jobos Bay08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Role of Aquatic Net-
works in the Boreal Carbon Cycle - Room 20408:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Implications of In-
creased Carbon Supply and Artificial Habitat for the Global Expansion of Jellyfish Blooms - Room 208C
10:30 – 14:30 Workshop: Using Network Science for Better Collaboration - Room 203
15:00 – 20:00 Registration - PRCC Lobby, Main Level15:00 – 18:00 Film Festival featuring Randy Olson - Room 208A18:30 – 20:30 Opening/Mixer Reception - PRCC 3rd Floor Ter-
race and Lobby Area
Monday, 14 February 201107:00 – 17:30 Registration - PRCC Lobby, Main Level08:00 – 18:00 Day Care Room Open (Pre-registration is recom-
mended.) - Room 20608:00 – 10:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms 10:00 – 10:30 Break - Ballroom A Foyer10:30 – 12:00 Plenary Session - Ballroom A Plenary Speaker: Deborah Bronk,
ASLO President Distinguished Service Award and Ruth Patrick
Award Presentations12:00 – 13:30 Lunch12:00 – 13:30 Olson Film Festival Discussion - Room 103B12:00 – 13:30 Publications Committee Meeting - Room 21112:00 – 13:30 Roundtable Discussion Featuring Jim Porter:
Pressing Coastal Water Quality Issues in Puerto Rico - Ballroom B
12:00 – 13:30 REU Student Lunch - Room 20312:00 – 13:30 Network Science for Better Collaboration/ASLO
MP Student Lunch - Room 208A12:00 – 17:00 Poster Set-up - Exhibit Hall B12:00 – 18:00 Exhibits Open - Exhibit Hall B13:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms15:30 – 16:00 Break - Exhibit Hall B 16:00 – 18:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms18:00 – 19:00 Membership Meeting - Ballroom B19:00 – 21:00 Early Career Mixer - PRCC 2nd Level Prefunction
Area19:00 – 21:00 Student Mixer - PRCC 3rd Floor Terrace and
Lobby Area
Tuesday, 15 February 201107:00 – 17:30 Registration - PRCC Lobby, Main Level 08:00 – 18:00 Day Care Room Open (Pre-registration is recom-
mended.) - Room 20608:00 – 18:00 Exhibits and Posters Open - Exhibit Hall B08:00 – 10:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms10:00 – 10:30 Break - Exhibit Hall B10:30 – 12:00 Plenary Session - Ballroom A Plenary Speaker: Carla Cáceres Scientific Excellence Award and Margalef Award
Presentations12:00 – 13:30 Lunch
ASLOMeeting Program
7
12:00 – 13:30 Jim Porter Presentation: The Ecology of War: Vieques, Human Rights, and the Concept of a Just War - Ballroom B
12:00 – 13:30 Workshop: Getting Lawmakers to Hear Your Message - Room 208A
12:00 – 13:30 Workshop: Science Journalism - Room 208B12:00 – 13:30 E-Lectures Committee Meeting - Room 21112:00 – 13:30 Student Forums - Room 102 and Room 10413:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms15:30 – 16:00 Break - Exhibit Hall B16:00 – 18:00 Poster Session and Reception - Exhibit Hall B18:00 – 19:00 Town Hall Meeting: ASLO & the Current State of
Aquaculture Research - Room 208A
Wednesday, 16 February 201107:30 – 17:30 Registration - PRCC Lobby, Main Level08:00 – 18:00 Day Care Room Open (Pre-registration is recom-
mended.) - Room 20608:00 – 18:00 Exhibits and Posters Open - Exhibit Hall B08:00 – 10:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms10:00 – 10:30 Break - Exhibit Hall B10:30 – 12:00 Plenary Session - Ballroom A Plenary Speaker: Nancy Rabalais Martin Award and Hutchinson Award Presenta-
tions12:00 – 13:30 Lunch12:00 – 13:30 Early Career Workshop - Room 10112:00 – 13:30 Workshop: Boost your Research in Aquatic Sci-
ences - Room 208A12:00 – 13:30 Town Hall Meeting: NOAA in the Caribbean -
Room 208C13:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms15:30 – 16:00 Break - Exhibit Hall B16:00 – 18:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms 18:00 – 20:00 Workshop: Engaging Students Using Real-Time
Data - Room 208A 18:30 – 19:30 Town Hall Meeting: Microbial Biogeography and
Biochemistry - Room 208B
Thursday, 17 February 2011:07:30 – 17:30 Registration - PRCC Lobby, Main Level08:00 – 18:00 Day Care Room Open (Pre-registration is recom-
mended.) - Room 20608:00 – 18:00 Exhibits and Posters Open - Exhibit Hall B 08:00 – 10:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms 10:00 – 10:30 Break - Exhibit Hall B10:30 – 12:00 Plenary Session - Ballroom A Plenary Speaker: Chris Sabine Lindeman Award and Redfield Lifetime Achieve-
ment Award Presentations
12:00 – 13:30 Lunch12:00 – 13:30 Student Forums - Room 102 and Room 10413:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms15:30 – 16:00 Break - Exhibit Hall B16:00 – 18:00 Poster Session and Reception - Exhibit Hall B18:00 – 21:30 Poster Teardown - Exhibit Hall B20:00 – 23:00 Mixer, Salsa Dance and Buffet (Ticket required.) -
PRCC 3rd Floor Terrace and Lobby Area
Friday, 18 February 2011:07:30 – 17:30 Registration - PRCC Lobby, Main Level08:00 – 18:00 Day Care Room Open (Pre-registration is recom-
mended.) - Room 20608:00 – 12:00 Exhibit Teardown - Exhibit Hall B08:00 – 10:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms10:00 – 10:30 Break - Ballroom A Foyer10:30 – 12:00 Plenary Session - Ballroom A Plenary Speaker (Marcia McNutt) Announcement of ASLO Student Presentation
Award Winners12:00 – 13:30 Lunch 13:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms15:30 – 16:00 Break - Ballroom A Foyer16:00 – 18:00 Concurrent Sessions - Various Rooms17:00 Student Appreciation Dinner - Off-site18:00 Final Talk Raffle - TBD
Saturday, 19 February 2011:08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Microbial Carbon
Pump in the Ocean - Room 102B08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Integrating Terrestrial
& Aquatic P Science - Room102C
Sunday, 20 February 2011:08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Microbial Carbon
Pump in the Ocean - Room 102B
Poster ReceptionsTuesday, 15 February 2011 and Thursday, 17 February 2011, 16:00 to 18:00 - PRCC, Exhibit Hall
Though posters will be on display and available for viewing throughout the day at the PRCC, poster presentations will take place during late afternoon sessions. Those who are presenting their research will do so during the receptions on these evenings. Light reception foods will be served.
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
8
Final Talk RaffleFriday, 18 February, 18:00
Make plans to stay at the meeting through the conclusion of the oral sessions on Friday. ASLO 2011 Aquatic Science Meeting orga-nizers will be giving away raffle prizes to celebrate the society’s first meeting in the Caribbean. You must be present to win.
At the meetingConference Registration and Check-InThe conference registration desk is located in the Lobby of the Puerto Rico Convention Center. Meeting materials and name badges can be picked up on Sunday from 15:00 to 20:00, Monday and Tuesday from 07:00 to 17:30, and Wednesday through Friday from 07:30 to 17:30. Please note that your name badge should be worn at all times throughout the meeting.
Message BoardsThere will be a message board located near the conference registra-tion desk in the PRCC lobby area where you may post or check for messages throughout the conference.
Special Needs If you have a disability or limitation that may require special consid-eration in order to fully participate, please contact ASLO to see how we can accommodate your needs. The conference management staff will work with the meeting vendors to provide reasonable sup-port. Call 800-929-3756 (USA, Canada & Caribbean) or 254-399-9635 (All other countries) or contact via e-mail at [email protected]. Should a need arise during the meeting, please contact one of those on staff at the conference registration desk.
Coffee BreaksCoffee breaks are planned immediately prior to the plenary and award presentation sessions from 10:00 to 10:30 and in the afternoon from 15:30 to 16:00. Complimentary coffee and tea will be served. Bottled water will not be served. Water will be pro-vided in coolers and attendees are encouraged to bring their own water bottles. Breaks will be set outside Ballroom A and on the Terrace Monday morning, Friday morning and Friday afternoon. Breaks will be set in Exhibit Hall B on Monday afternoon, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday mornings and afternoons.
ConcessionsCafes and concession areas at the Puerto Rico Convention Center offer a wide variety of entrees, snacks and beverages for any time of day and for any type of appetite and will be open for breakfast and lunch. From fresh bakery goods in the morning to fresh made deli sandwiches, classic hot sandwiches and specialty items to as-sorted sweets, you will find something to your liking. Café Caribe is located on the first floor near the main entrance. The café serves continental breakfast, juice and coffee. A pasta station is open dur-ing lunch. Also, across from the PRCC, within walking distance and right next to the fountain, is the Ficus Café, an outdoor café and restaurant with a tapas bar.
Lunch Time During the MeetingMonday through Friday, 12:00 to 13:30
We encourage you to stay at The Puerto Rico Convention Center dur-ing the 1 ½ hour lunch break each day. The conference is planned to include several informative workshops that you will enjoy. The PRCC offers a number places to purchase a quick lunch along with many other dining options. You will also find comfortable places to relax, take in the beautiful scenery, and visit with fellow attendees and col-leagues. Local musicians will play in the lobby during lunch most days.
Local Evening DiningCity restaurants serve excellent Spanish, French, American, Italian, Chinese, Mexican, and Asian cuisines. It has been said that San Juan’s fine dining scene is the most varied and developed in the Ca-ribbean. In fact, there has been a restaurant explosion in San Juan in the past few years, first in Old San Juan, and now more recently in Miramar, Condado, and surrounding areas. Isla Verde and Hato Rey also have a large number of restaurants. You will also find many traditional restaurants that have been established for more than 30 years. Most of these specialize in Spanish or Continental cuisine, with a Puerto Rican flair.
A list of restaurants will be available at your hotel. We also will have a list of favorites prepared by the local committee at the conference registration desk.
For a Spanish-language list of local restaurants, you may go to the following Web site: URL: http://www.sal.pr/ (Mobile: sal.pr/wap, Iphone: iphone.sal.pr)
Old San Juan TrolleysTrolleys that make trips to Old San Juan are available Monday through Friday from 07:00 to 19:00 and on Saturday and Sunday from 09:00 to 19:00. The trolley is free and stops are marked with a trolley sign. The following Web site includes more information on the trolley and schedules: http://www.puertoricodaytrips.com/free-trolley-old-san-juan/
Email/Internet AccessMost hotels have Internet access available to guests. Check with your hotel to see what charges may apply.
Complimentary wireless Internet access is available in Exhibit Hall B of the Puerto Rico Convention Center, the area where the posters and exhibits will be located throughout the meeting. It is an open and unsecure wireless network. Take the following steps to access:
1. Open Internet Explorer.2. Click on “Wireless Internet.”3. Enter the following password (all lower case letters): aslo
Exhibitors and SponsorsExhibits will be open in the Exhibit Hall of the Puerto Rico Conven-tion Center. Attendees will enjoy being able to visit with vendors during conference hours Monday through Thursday. Attendees will have access to the exhibit hall during the exhibit hall hours listed below. Morning and afternoon coffee breaks and poster sessions
ASLOMeeting Program
9
will be set in the exhibit area, as well. Exhibits will be open during the breaks and any time that the exhibit hall is open.
Monday ......................................................................................12:00 to 18:00Tuesday ...................................................................................... 8:00 to 18:00Wednesday .................................................................................8:00 to 18:00Thursday .................................................................................... 8:00 to 18:00
Aanderaa Data Instruments, Inc. Booth #: 28182 East Street, Suite BAttleboro, MA 02703Contact: Ivan VictoriaPhone: 508-226-9300Fax: 508-226-9306Email:[email protected]
ASLO Booths #: 1/305400 Bosque Blvd., Ste.680Waco, TX 76710Contact: Helen Schneider LemayPhone: 254-776-3550Fax: 254-776-3767Email: [email protected]
ASLO Students Booths #: 2/35400 Bosque Blvd., Ste.680Waco, TX 76710Phone: 254-776-3550 Fax: 254-776-3767
Astoria-Pacific, Inc.Booth #: 21125 Cocoa AvenueIndialantic, FL 32903Contact: Thomas SwensonPhone: 321-409-1195Fax: 321-821-1986Email: [email protected]
Consortium for Ocean LeadershipBooths #: 26 & 271201 New York Ave NW, 4th FloorWashington, DC 20005Contact: Kristin Mellon Phone: 202-787-1644Fax: 202-332-8887Email: [email protected]
Duke University PressBooth #: 29Journals Marketing DepartmentBox 90660
Durham, NC 27708-0660Contact: Emma BoyerPhone: 919-687-3636Fax: 919-680-6078Email: [email protected]
ElsevierBooth #: 22/23Exhibits Department7 High St., Apt. 10Clinton, MA 01510Contact: Katherine A. Boulter Phone: 978-368-3293Email: [email protected]
Fluid Imaging Technologies, Inc.Booth #: 2565 Forest Falls DriveYarmouth, ME 04096Contact: Faith BakerPhone: 207-846-6100Fax: 207-846-6110Email: [email protected]
HydropticBooth #: 208 aveneue du Commandant TailleferL’ISLE en DODON 31230FranceContact: Jerome CoindatPhone: +33 9 63 24 82 20Fax: +33 5 61 89 37 88Email: [email protected]
NNIN – University of MichiganBooth #: 8National Nanofabrication Infrastructure Network3312 EECS Building1301 Beal Ave.Ann Arbor, MI 48109Contact: Helene CraiggPhone: 734-615-9668Fax: 734-647-1781Email: [email protected]
Onset Computer CorporationBooth #: 10470 MacArthur BlvdBourne, MA 02532Contact: Ellen M. McGowanPhone: 508-743-3209Fax: 508-759-9100Email: [email protected]
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
10
Oxford University PressBooth#: 42001 Evans RoadCary, NC 27513Contact: Erin NorrisPhone: 919-677-0977Fax: 919-677-1714Email: [email protected]
Quebec – OceanBooth#: 7Université Laval1045 rue de la Médecine, #2078Quebec, Quebec Canada G1V 0A6 Contact: Brigitte RobineauPhone: 418-656-2562Fax: 418-656-2339Email: [email protected]
Satlantic, Inc.Booth#: 6Richmond Terminal, Prier 93481 North Marginal Rd.Halifax, NS Province Canada B3K 5X8Contact: Zara Pahlevani Phone: 902-492-4780Fax: 902-492-4781Email: [email protected]
Sequoia Scientific, Inc.Booth #: 52700 Richards Road, Suite 107Bellevue, WA 980054Contact: Dr. Ole MikkelsenPhone: 425-641-1094Fax: 425-643-0595Email: [email protected]
Thermo ScientificBooth #: 249612 West Terrace LaneSun City, AZ 85373Contact: Sandy ElliottPhone: 612-747-3293Email: [email protected]
Turner Designs, Inc.Booth #: 11845 W. Maude AvenueSunnyvale, CA 94085Contact: Jennifer SlugaPhone: 408-749-0994Fax: 408-749-0998Email: [email protected]
Information for Students and Early Career Participants Outstanding Student Presentation AwardsRecognition and monetary awards will be provided to the most outstanding posters and talks presented by students at the 2011 Aquatic Sciences Meeting. Presentations will be judged on the basis of innovation/scientific insight, quality of experimental design/methods, and clarity/effectiveness of presentation. There is no need to apply; all ASLO student presentations will be judged and eligible presentations will be evaluated in consideration for the awards. Award winners will be announced during the week and will be recognized as a group during Friday’s plenary session and speaker, Marcia McNutt, Director, U.S. Geological Survey.
Career CenterThere will be a Career Center set up in the exhibit area, where students and early career professionals can meet each other and the ASLO Board members in a fun, relaxed setting. This center will host the Career Bulletin Board, where prospective employers are invited to post job announcements and students and early career professionals are invited to post a one-page CV. Students should also stop by for information and to learn more about the Career Development Workshops and student social events. The Career Center will also feature a raffle – items and raffle boxes will be dis-played all week and the drawing will be held on Thursday evening.
Student Events
Student Career Development WorkshopsTuesday, 15 February 2011, and Thursday, 17 February 2011, 12:00 to 13:30 - PRCC, Room 102 and Room 104
Student Career Development Workshops will be held over lunch on Tuesday and Thursday during the meeting. These are informal workshops led by senior scientists on a variety of topics relating to careers in the aquatic sciences. A range of topics will be covered to address different career paths in the aquatic sciences, skills or expertise important for these careers, and strategies for successfully competing for jobs, grants, or fellowships. A limited number of lunches will be provided. Please stop by the Student Career Center at the meeting for more information. A flyer also will be available at the registration desk.
Student Social MixerMonday, 14 February 2011, 19:00 to 21:00 - PRCC, Terrace
An informal student social mixer will be held on Monday evening following the scientific sessions. Senior scientists will be invited to attend and meet with students on an informal basis. Beverages and snacks will be available.
ASLOMeeting Program
11
Early Career Events
Early Career Meet and MixMonday, 14 February 2011, 19:00 to 21:00 - PRCC, 2nd Floor Lobby and Pre-function Area
A “meet and mix” reception is planned and organized by members of the ASLO early career committee to give early career members an opportunity to provide feedback on various topics relevant to them, including any concerns or expectations as an early career member. This is a social gathering for early career members to get to know each other and to network. Refreshments will be served.
Early Career Workshop – Beyond Imagination: Creating Research Opportunities, Leadership, and Thinking BIGWednesday, 16 February 2011, 12:00 to 13:30 - PRCC, Room 101
Ever wonder how some scientists do it? How they create research projects with global impact? Manage to get major financing to cre-ate mega-projects, build cutting-edge research facilities, influence policy or travel and conduct research in exotic places? Come hear about the journey and be inspired by scientists who have shown tremendous leadership and resourcefulness throughout their careers and who have created visionary opportunities. Please join us for lunch on Wednesday at noon in Room 101 to hear the stories of ASLO members whose imagination, creativity and foresight have allowed them to push the frontiers of aquatic science.
ASLO 2011 Multicultural ProgramASLO will hold its 22nd annual program devoted to increasing the diversity of the pool of students choosing careers in the aquatic sciences. Some 700 underrepresented minority students have par-ticipated since the program began in 1990. Many of these students have gone on to earn advanced degrees and are now professionals in the field. The 2011 program will include an opening dinner on Saturday, 12 February, with a keynote address by Dr. Yasmin Detres Cardona (UPR), a field trip to a Mangrove ecosystem on Sunday, 13 February, and night-time kayak exploration of a bioluminescent bay system on Wednesday, 16 February. All of the 70 students will be presenting papers or posters. There also will be a special workshop on Monday during lunch entitled, “Understanding and Using Net-work Science for Better Collaboration.” (This is the same workshop that is scheduled on Sunday. This session, however, is specifically for ASLO MP participants.)
The ASLO MP Student Symposium will take place on Monday in 208B. The Student Symposium is open to all ASLO participants, and we encourage your attendance. The program is supported by a grant from NSF. Anyone interested in volunteering to serve as a meeting-mentor, please contact Dr. Ben Cuker ([email protected]), 757-727-5884, Department of Marine Science, Hampton University, Hampton, VA 23668. The URL for the pro-gram website is: http://www.hamptonu.edu/science/ASLO.htm.
Emerging Issues SeminarsBeginning with the summer meeting in 2010, the ASLO board of directors initiated funding for Emerging Issues Seminars that will further encourage dialog among scientists who wish to develop emerging, cutting-edge, controversial issues and/or topics that integrate knowledge across communities. In accordance with this, ASLO is sponsoring up to four (4) two-day meetings that are connected to a special session being held during the 2011 Aquatic Sciences Meeting in San Juan. These Emerging Issues Seminars will take place either before or after the Aquatic Sciences Meeting. Following each seminar, organizers will submit a review paper to an ASLO journal. Additionally, within one month of the meeting, they will submit a report with a summary of the outcome to the L&O Bulletin along with a table of contents of the written products stem-ming from the seminar.
Following are the four Emerging Issue Seminars that will take place in conjunction with the ASLO 2011 Aquatic Sciences Meeting:
Emerging Issues Seminar I: Role of Aquatic Networks in the Boreal Carbon CycleAssociated Session: S46: The Role of Inland Waters in the Carbon Cycle of the Boreal Forest Biome
Seminar Description: There is increasing awareness and recogni-tion of the global importance of inland waters as integrators of landscape and climate features, processors of carbon (C) in the landscape, sinks and sources of atmospheric C, and in the delivery of C to oceans. These roles are especially profound in boreal regions characterized by high aquatic surface coverage, complex intercon-nected hydrological networks, and local areas of organic permafrost susceptible to thaw. This workshop will be linked with the special session S46: The Role of Inland Waters in the Carbon Cycle of the Boreal Forest Biome, which seeks to explore current research on boreal aquatic biogeochemistry and place it in the context of the regional C balances. Assessing the importance of aquatic biogeo-chemistry in the boreal C cycle involves interpreting information from a multitude of diverse inland waters, scaling this in space and time, and quantifying its regional importance. All of these steps represent major challenges. Recent evidence also suggests that bo-real aquatic networks may exhibit overall patterns in C processing that cannot be derived from any of their individual components. A second major topic of the workshop will address the biogeochemi-cal properties of aquatic networks that emerge at different scales of integration, and which cannot be derived from its individual components.
Organizers: Robert Striegl, U.S. Geological Survey, [email protected]; Paul del Giorgio, University of Quebec at Montreal, [email protected]; Janne Karlsson, Umea University, [email protected]; Lars Tranvik, Uppsala University, [email protected]; Yves Prairie, University of Quebec at Montreal, [email protected]
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
12
Emerging Issues Seminar II: Microbial Carbon Pump in the OceanAssociated Session: S55: Microbial Carbon Pump: A Multidisci-plinary Focus on Origins, Cycling and Storage of DOM in the Ocean
Seminar Description: Marine dissolved organic carbon (DOC), be-ing equivalent in quantity to the total inventory of atmospheric car-bon dioxide, is an important compartment in global carbon cycling and climate changes. The majority of DOC in the ocean is recalci-trant, with an average age of ~5000 years, constituting a sequestra-tion of carbon in the ocean. However, the mechanisms controlling the generation and removal of the recalcitrant DOC (RDOC) are largely unknown. In order to address this issue, joint efforts from several disciplines are needed. Toward this goal, a SCOR working group (WG134) has been set up recently. The WG134 members, from 12 countries, have been working and interacting over the past 18 months, and a conceptual framework termed the “microbial carbon pump (MCP)” has been established. A Perspective paper on the MCP was published in Nature Reviews (NRM, 2010:8:593-599) as a featured article. The MCP is also reported by Science as a News Focus article (Science (328):1476-1477, 2010) where the MCP is described as the “invisible hand behind a vast carbon reservoir”. At this juncture, multi-disciplinary scientists need to exchange ideas on the proposed and unknown mechanisms related to RDOC pro-duction and consumption, particularly in terms of the recalcitrancy of the RDOC in the presence of microbes under diverse biotic and abiotic conditions. This ASLO emerging issue seminar provides a great opportunity for this purpose. Based on the presentations dur-ing S55, and in-depth discussion at the seminar, organizers will seek to identify the key parameters involved in RDOC dynamics, and to design feasible experiments to put the ideas into practice. The MCP emerging issues seminar is sponsored by ASLO, SCOR, and XMU.
Organizers: Nianzhi Jiao, Xiamen University, China, [email protected]; Gerhard Kattner, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany, [email protected]; Farooq Azam, University of California San Diego, USA, [email protected]; Steven Wilhelm, University of Tennessee, USA, [email protected]
Emerging Issues Seminar III: Integrating Terrestrial and Aquatic P ScienceAssociated Session: S06: From Green Pastures to Green Waters: Integrating Soil and Aquatic Approaches to Phosphorus Biogeo-chemistry Science
Seminar Description: Managing nonpoint source phosphorus (P) is still a difficult challenge for decision-makers. One source of difficulty is that soil and aquatic scientists studying P loadings and cycling use disparate terminology, and their research programs often have dissimilar objectives. Furthermore, terrestrial and aquatic scientists rarely attend the same meetings to discuss their research; thus a cohesive message for decision-makers has never been developed. Nonpoint source P enrichment is most common in developed countries experiencing animal agriculture intensification, and there is an increasing sentiment that agriculture bears the cost of implement-ing expensive control measures. However, regulatory decisions are usually based on water quality measurements, and the link between soil P management and downstream in-situ water quality criteria
is difficult to quantify. Improvements in P-related water quality will only be achieved when scientists studying both terrestrial and aquatic P movement and cycling integrate their research efforts.
Organizers: Barbara Cade-Menun, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, [email protected]; Thad Scott, University of Arkansas; [email protected]; George Bullerjahn, Bowling Green State University, [email protected]
Emerging Issues Seminar IV: Implications of Increased Carbon Supply and Artificial Habitat for the Global Expansion of Jellyfish Blooms Associated Session: S44: The Relevance of Jellyfish Blooms in the Changing Global Oceans
Seminar Description: Jellyfish blooms occur in many coastal regions and are thought to be increasing in magnitude and extent worldwide. The causes for these blooms are unclear, but likely include eutrophication, over-harvesting of fish, climate change, and translocations. Recently, scientists have hypothesized that jellyfish blooms may be caused by coastal development increasing prefer-able artificial habitat for benthic polyps. However, in order for there to be an increase in jellyfish in areas where competitive pressures have not diminished, there must also be an increase in carbon bio-availability to fuel the additional jellyfish biomass. There are many ways in which C-supply can increase (e.g. shifting baselines, in-creased primary production and weaker pelagic-benthic coupling), but no study has explored the relationship between increased substrate availability and food supply as a collective cause behind possible increases in jellyfish. Recently, the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) was formed to examine the current paradigm and assess impacts of a global expansion of jellyfish, and establish new paradigms by building on concepts/hypotheses formulated by the wider scientific community. Organiz-ers propose to test the effects of coastal and harbor development and shifts in food webs as a means of examining local and regional expansions in jellyfish.
Organizers: Andrew Sweetman, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), Norway, [email protected]; Kylie Pitt; Griffith Uni-versity, Australia, [email protected]; Robert Condon, Dauphin Island Sea Laboratory, USA, [email protected]
Conference EventsOpening Welcome Mixer ReceptionSunday, 13 February 2011, 18:30 to 20:30 - PRCC Terrace and Lobby, 3rd Floor
An opening welcome mixer reception will be held on Sunday at the Puerto Rico Convention Center. Special thanks to Rums of Puerto Rico for their sponsorship of the rum cocktails. Plan to join in on the “rum and salsa,” meet with colleagues, and enjoy the beauty of San Juan from the terrace.
Conference registration also will be open at the convention center Sunday afternoon and during the mixer to allow you to pick up your conference materials.
ASLOMeeting Program
13
ASLO Membership Business MeetingMonday, 14 February 2011, 18:00 to 19:00 - PRCC, Ballroom B
The annual ASLO membership business meeting will take place fol-lowing the conclusion of the oral sessions on Monday evening. Come hear all about ASLO’s activities, future projects, and meeting plans. Join us for light refreshments and drinks. This meeting is open to all members and non-members. Students are encouraged to attend.
Mixer, Salsa Dancing and BuffetThursday, 17 February 2011, 20:00 to 23:00 - PRCC, Terrace and Lobby, 3rd Floor
The ASLO 2011 Local Committee has organized this social event at the Puerto Rico Convention Center on Thursday evening. An evening carefully planned to enhance the venue of San Juan, salsa dance to the sounds of Cali Rivera’s Sextet and enjoy a buffet dinner with lots of local flair. An optional fee is required for this event. Space is limited. If you have not done so previously, you may purchase tickets to the event for $55 USD for non-students and $35 USD for students while supplies last. If you would like to purchase a ticket on-site, you must do so before 12:00 on Monday, February 14, at the conference registration desk.
Workshops, Town Hall Meetings, and Auxiliary Meetings Workshop: Understanding and Using Network Science for Better CollaborationSunday, 13 February 2011, 10:30 to 14:30 - PRCC, Room 203
Conveners: Bob Chen ([email protected]), Adrienne Sponberg ([email protected]), and Liesl Hotaling ([email protected])
Ocean science has become a highly collaborative enterprise. Advances in the science of networks, both theoretical and applied, now allow a greater understanding and visualization of networks. Networks help support the collaboration that is required to achieve complex goals in ocean research and education — goals that are dif-ficult to achieve by more conventional approaches. This workshop is intended to introduce network science and its current and po-tential applications in empirical and scientific endeavors. Dr. Karen Stephenson, President of Netform International and a featured thought leader by Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point, will present the story of network science and a few of its provoca-tive applications to academic and business settings. Participants will have the opportunity to work in small groups to discuss how this new knowledge may impact their proposals, research projects, or career trajectories. Lunch will be provided to all participants.
ASLO Aquatic Sciences Film Festival Featuring Randy OlsonSunday, 13 February 2011, 15:00 to 18:00 - PRCC, Room 208 A
Ever had trouble connecting with the general public? If you are inter-ested in learning how to better communicate science to the public,
you are encouraged to attend this event. The ASLO Aquatic Sciences Film Festival is a communication workshop featuring the expertise of scientist-turned-filmmaker Dr. Randy Olson. Host of two previous video workshops (2008 and 2010 Ocean Sciences Meetings), Randy is writer-director of the featured films, “Flock of Dodos: The Evolution-Intelligent Design Circus” and “Sizzle: A Global Warming Comedy.” He is also very well-known as the author of the book, Don’t Be Such a Scientist: Talking Substance in an Age of Style. Videos submitted by ASLO meeting participants will provide the core of this exercise as Randy and members of the audience provide constructive, positive critiques. Objectives are to inspire the participants to make even better videos and to help everyone in the aquatic science commu-nity learn from each other how to become better communicators of science through the use of video. A follow-up discussion session is planned for Monday during lunch in Room 103B.
Public Policy Workshop: Getting Lawmakers to Hear Your MessageTuesday, 15 February 2011, 12:00 to 13:30 - PRCC, Room 208 A
Convener: Adrienne Sponberg, ASLO Public Policy Director, [email protected]
Frustrated by lawmakers inattention to scientific findings? Attend this workshop to learn more about how policy is formulated and the many venues scientists can use to better inform the process. While examples will be from the US, the content is applicable to other legislative bodies.
Science Journalism Workshop: From Ship to Shore to the NewsTuesday, 15 February 2011, 12:00 to 13:30 - PRCC, Room 208 B
Convener: Cheryl Lyn Dybas, National Science Foundation, [email protected]
Participants in this workshop will learn how to present science in an interesting way while retaining factual accuracy – the key to good science communication and science journalism. Science journalism aims to transmute scientific concepts and results from jargon-based language often understandable only by scientists, to news relevant to the lives of the general reader (listener/viewer). The workshop explores writing for a non-scientific audience. Participants will review examples of good science writing from news outlets like The New York Times and New Scientist; “dis-sect” the structure of science news and feature articles; discuss how popular coverage of science has changed in recent years; and learn the basics of science journalism. It will provide the opportunity to write a general audience science article about research presented at the conference, and individual critiques will be offered to those interested. The workshop is complimentary, but please pre-register with the organizer, Cheryl Lyn Dybas, [email protected].
Town Hall Meeting: ASLO and the Current State of Aquaculture ResearchTuesday, 15 February 2011, 18:00 to 19:00 - PRCC, Room 208 A
Convener: Dror Angel, University of Haifa, [email protected]
This town hall meeting is planned to introduce ASLO members to some of the ASLO-relevant issues that coastal and offshore
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
14
aquaculture currently face, including environmental carrying capacity, multiple uses of marine resources, environmental impacts, monitoring, etc.
Workshop: Boost Your Research in Aquatic Sciences with the NSF National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network (NNIN)Wednesday, 16 February 2011, 12:00 to 13:30 - PRCC, Room 208 A
Convener: Helene Craig, National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network, [email protected] From simple technologies to complex micro/nano-enabled sensors, the NSF National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network (NNIN) offers a wide range of capabilities and expertise to the limnol-ogy and oceanic sciences community. Sensors typically detect, monitor and respond to physico-chemical parameters of inter-est to DoD, DARPA, Homeland Security and the NIH. Although the same technologies hold enormous potential for studying any aquatic system at the local, national and global scales, they have not fully transitioned to this field, chiefly because geoscientists and nanotechnologists are unaware of each others’ needs and capabili-ties. Participants to this workshop will learn what capabilities are available within the micro/nanotechnology community and what they could bring to their research projects. The ultimate goal of this workshop is to bring the two communities of aquatic sciences and micro/nanotechnology together to create further collaborations. NNIN has a booth at the meeting (Booth #8).
Town Hall Meeting: NOAA in the CaribbeanWednesday, 16 February 2011, 12:00 to 13:30 - PRCC, Room 208 C
Convener: Lisamarie Carrubba, NOAA Fisheries Caribbean Field Office, [email protected]
A priority for NOAA’s Southeast and Caribbean Regional Team (SECART) is to enhance NOAA’s presence and activities both in the U.S. Caribbean and in the wider Caribbean. For this reason, SECART initiated the NOAA in the Caribbean effort modeled after the NOAA in the Carolinas (http://www.carolinas.noaa.gov/) effort. NOAA will hold a special noontime session during the ASLO meeting with NOAA personnel and potential collabora-tors who work in the Caribbean Region to announce the NOAA in the Caribbean initiative and begin formulating partnerships to move the NOAA in the Caribbean initiative forward. We invite ASLO meeting attendees who work in the Caribbean Region do-ing research, management, training, or other capacity building or partnering to attend this session. Attendees should be prepared to provide feedback regarding the NOAA in the Caribbean initiative, provide information regarding their work in the Caribbean, and provide their input on how to move the NOAA in the Caribbean initiative forward. Interested persons should contact Dr. Lisama-rie Carrubba ([email protected] or 787-851-3700) to confirm their participation in the session. Please provide complete contact information with your confirmation, including telephone, e-mail, and mailing addresses for future correspondence and ses-sion follow up reports.
Workshop: Engaging Our Students Using Real-Time Data: From Platforms to Homemade SensorsWednesday, 16 February 2011, 18:00 to 20:00 - PRCC, Room 208 A
Conveners: George Matsumoto, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, [email protected] and Lisa Adams, Kennesaw State University, [email protected] How can we engage our students and develop ecologically literate citizens using real-time data? This is an interactive session where ideas, techniques, devices, and resources for innovative educa-tion and outreach about aquatic ecosystems will be shared and discussed. We will begin with a discussion of activities, effective interactions, and perspectives for science communication and teaching as well as Web resources and potential funding opportuni-ties. During the second hour, session participants will share favorite strategies and examples. Key examples, information and links to resources will be compiled and posted on the MBARI website for access by members and the public afterwards. Refreshments will be provided but you must indicate your interest in participating to one of the session chairs (Lisa Adams, [email protected] or George Matsumoto, [email protected]) to assure that there are enough seats and food/drink.
Town Hall Meeting: Microbial Biogeography and BiogeochemistryWednesday, 16 February 2011, 18:30 to 19:30 - PRCC, Room 208 B
Conveners: Eric Webb, University of Southern California, [email protected] and Ben Van Mooy, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, [email protected]
An OCB Scoping Workshop entitled “The Molecular Biology of Biogeochemistry: Using molecular methods to link ocean chem-istry with biological activity” was held in November 2010. An outcome of that workshop was a plan for a field program linking microbial biogeography with biogeochemical processes in a global survey to compliment existing programs like GEOTRACES and CLIVAR, beginning as early as 2013. Eric Webb (USC) and Ben van Mooy (WHOI) will discuss the workshop and future plans.
Field TripsJobos Bay Field Trip - SOLD OUT!Sunday, 13 February 2011, 07:15 - Departure from PRCC, Main Lobby
The Jobos Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve JOBANERR (supported jointly by NOAA and the Puerto Rico Department of Natural Resources and the Environment) is hosting this field trip to the Jobos Bay NERR facilities and Reserve. JOBANERR personnel will offer a short talk at the Visitors Center where participants can take a look at the exhibits before they depart to the dock and meet the boat operators. A one-hour boat trip will follow to the Mar Negro area, an enclosed bay system surrounded by red mangroves where the tannins tint the water to a deep tea color. There is always
ASLOMeeting Program
15
the possibility to see the endangered Antillean manatee and marine birds as well. Participants will then navigate to Cayos Caribe and stop for a trail hike on a coral reef island where they can see the four different mangrove species and xerophytic vegetation. Along the trail they will stop at an observation tower where they will enjoy an excellent view of the Caribbean Sea, the back reef, the Boca del Infierno passage, and the Cayos Barca islands.
The cost includes transportation. Please note that lunch is not included. Box lunches will be available for purchase, and attendees may purchase one or they may bring their own. This field trip is limited to a maximum of 30 participants per day. Reservations are no longer being accepted.
San Juan Bay Estuary Field TripSMonday through Friday, 14–18 February 2011, 9:00–11:00 and 14:00–16:00
Cost: This field trip is free, but advance reservations are necessary. Attendees who wish to participate must sign up at the registration desk.
Two trips will be offered daily departing at the times indicated.
The San Juan Bay Estuary (SJBE) system is an irreplaceable natural, recreational, and commercial resource for Puerto Rico residents and visitors. This tropical estuary is composed of eight water bodies interconnected through channels of which San Juan Bay proper is the most recognizable component of the entire system. A wide variety of living resources find food and shelter in estuary waters and associated wetlands, including marine mammals, birds, fish, shellfish, reptiles and plants. The extensive mangroves environments offer especially important breed-ing, nursery, and sheltering habitats for tropical fish, shellfish, and other marine biota. Due to its ecological and recreational importance, the SJBE was designated by the US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) as a resource of national importance in 1992. As a result, the SJBE Program was created to identify ac-tions needed to improve and maintain the integrity of the estuary. This effort has been summarized in a Comprehensive Conserva-tion and Management Plan (CCMP).
The Board of Directors of the San Juan Bay Estuary Program invites ASLO participants to a field boat trip to visit this “urban estuary” of Puerto Rico. Participants will have the unique oppor-tunity to observe native species of flora and fauna through a guid-ed tour and to offer input and recommendations to staff members of the SJBE Program. There will be two trips per day, one in the morning (9:00 AM) and another in the afternoon (2:00 PM) dur-ing the five days of the meeting. A maximum of 20 people per trip can be hosted. This field trip will include ground transporta-tion to and from the pier and the Convention Center. Field trips will last approximately two hours including ground transportation travel time. Sign up will be at the conference registration desk and will be conducted on a first-come, first-served basis.
For more information about the San Juan Bay Estuary, please visit the web page www.estuario.org or email Dr. Jorge Bauzá at [email protected].
Additional Participant and Attendee Information ASLO MembershipMembership in ASLO is strongly encouraged. We welcome the non-ASLO members in attendance, and we hope you will join the society while you are at the conference. If you are an ASLO member already, you may renew your membership at the registration desk.
Registration InformationThe full registration fee includes admission to all sessions, exhibits, town hall meetings and workshops (unless otherwise specified), Sunday welcome reception, poster session receptions, coffee breaks, and the program book. Optional activities such as the Thursday evening event are not included.
Guest/Spouse FeeThe spouse and guest fees ($75.00 USD on site at the meeting) cover only the conference social events such as the Sunday wel-come reception, coffee services, and the poster receptions. Optional activities such as the Thursday evening event are not included.
ReceiptsYour registration confirmation that was emailed to you when you registered for the meeting will serve as your receipt. In keeping with our conservation efforts, we will not provide printed receipts to attendees on site at the meeting. If you have misplaced your original receipt and need another copy, you may print your own receipt by going to: https://www.sgmeet.com/aslo/sanjuan2011/userlogon.asp.
Your username is your email address, and your password is your regis-tration ID number which is printed on your conference name badge.
Letters of ParticipationLetters of participation only will be provided upon request and to those who are registered for the meeting. If you need a letter of participation, please go to the conference registration desk any time during the meeting and provide your name, affiliation, and email address. A letter will be prepared for you and sent as a PDF file to the email address you provide.
Child Care Information On-site childcare will be available in Room 206 of the PRCC from 08:00 – 18:00 Monday through Friday. Arrangements need to be made on an individual basis and in advance through ACCENT on Arrangements, Inc. by completing the registration form online at http://www.accentregister.com/register/campaslo11. You also can call ACCENT on Children’s Arrangements at 504-524-0188 or email: [email protected]
The deadline for advance registration is January 28, 2011. Rates for registration after 28 January 2011 are subject to increase. Although every effort will be made to accommodate registrations after that date and on-site, there is no guarantee that ACCENT can accept children unless they are pre-registered. ACCENT will accommo-date your child or children based on availability, as long as staffing
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
16
ratios are maintained. If ACCENT has already received the maxi-mum number of reservations for a certain day/time, their ability to accept “drop-ins” would be limited. For this reason, early registra-tion is strongly encouraged.
Program costs include morning and afternoon snacks and juice, entertainment, and craft materials. Lunch is not included. However, a lunch can be purchased when registering, or parents can send or bring a lunch to their child.
While parents will need to pay a fee (either half or full day) for each child, ASLO has made a commitment to support those parents with young children and will subsidize a large portion of the care.
ASLO assumes no responsibility or liability for services rendered.
Transportation Special Car Rental Rates Avis has been designated the official car rental company for the ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting 2011 in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Special meeting rates and discounts are available on a wide selec-tion of GM and other cars at the San Juan, Puerto Rico Interna-tional Airport. To receive these special rates, be sure to mention your Avis Worldwide Discount (AWD) Number is D130903, when you call. To receive the best car rental rates available, call Avis direct at 1-800-331-1600 or go to the Avis Web page at: https://www.avis.com/AvisWeb/reservation/ReservationsInitializer?&AWD_NUMBER=D130903
The discount will be effective 6 February through 25 February 2011.
Taxicabs Taxis will be very accessible from the hotels and any other tour-ist area. Most of the hotels will have taxis on standby waiting for clients. In the case there are no taxis present at a specific time, personnel at the concierge desk at the hotel or the information desk at the PRCC will be able to assist in calling one.
A list of local taxi service telephone numbers:
Carolina Taxi ............................................................................787-762-6066Major Taxi.................................................................................787-723-2460Norte Taxi .................................................................................787-725-2870Prefer Taxis de Carolina ........................................................787-963-0722
Please access the following link for the tourist rates and zones. http://www.prconvention.com/eng/puertorico/transportation_taxis.asp
The following is a guide for approximate taxicab fares from the hotels in the conference block to the PRCC:
Meeting Approximate Fare Hotel One-way from Hotel to PRCCCaribe Hilton $9-$11 Sheraton None Intercontinental $15-$20 Condado Plaza $9-$11 La Concha $12 Marriott Courtyard $15-$20Verdanza $15-$20
Airport Shuttle Service Shuttle service is available on a 24-hour basis for groups of one to four at a cost of $50 one-way or for groups of five or more at $10 per person, one-way. Call or email: Mr. Control at 787-549-6058 or 787-447-8763 or [email protected]. For more information, please go to their web site at: www.shuttlevanpr.com. A minimum of one week’s notice is required for reservations.
Parking There are approximately 1800 parking spaces at the PRCC. Self-parking lots are conveniently located adjacent to the Convention Center. Cost for parking at the PRCC is $5 per day. Parking is also available at most of the conference hotels.
Attendee Shuttle In order to provide for the maximum convenience and safety of attendees, bus transportation will be available between the “Block Hotels” and the PRCC Monday through Friday during the early morning and late afternoon heavy traffic hours. (Your hotel room key will serve as your bus pass.) If you are staying in the Condado area, the trip by bus will take 20 to 25 minutes during heavy traffic times. The Isla Verde area is approximately four (4) miles from the PRCC and will take 35 to 40 minutes during heavy traffic by bus.
Shuttle Routes and Schedule Information:Shuttle buses will pick up and drop off at the front of each hotel listed. Route #1: Caribe Hilton (Condado area) Route #2: LaConcha Renaissance (Condado area) Condado Plaza (Condado area)Route #3: Marriott Courtyard (Isla Verde area) Intercontinental (Isla Verde area) Verdanza (Isla Verde area)
Sunday, 13 February 2011Buses will begin making runs from the hotels to the convention center at 14:45 prior to the start of registration at 15:00. Runs will continue between the hotels and the convention center until the conclusion of the opening reception that evening.
Morning (Monday through Friday)Routes #1 and #2 will begin at each day at 06:15. Route #3 will begin at 06:00. Departures will take place every 15 minutes until the last drop off at the PRCC at 08:00.
Afternoon (Monday through Friday)Buses will begin return trips to the hotels following the conclusion of the last session at 18:00.
Additional TimesA minibus will run Monday through Friday from 09:00 to 16:00 between the convention center and the block hotels. In addition to the times above, shuttles will run on Monday evening following the mixers and on Thursday evening following the dance.
ASLOMeeting Program
17
For attendees who prefer not to use the attendee shuttle, taxicabs are available.
Local Public TransportationThe Metropolitan Bus Authority (or AMA, its Spanish acronym) operates in the San Juan Metropolitan area. Stops are marked by magenta, orange and white signs which read Parada. Buses run be-tween certain hours, usually until 9:00 p.m. For schedule informa-tion, call (787) 767-7979.
Instructions for Poster PresentersPosters will be placed on 4’x8’ poster boards. There will be two posters per side so posters must be no larger than 4’x4’ (48 inches high by 48 inches wide). Posters will adhere to the boards using push pins that will be provided.
Poster numbers are included in this program. Poster presenters have been notified of their poster session’s time and day well in advance of the meeting. You will be expected to be available to present your poster during your designated poster session. Poster presenters are asked to adhere to the designated set-up and tear-down instructions and times.
Poster Set-upMonday, 14 February, 12:00 to 17:00 - PRCC, Exhibit Hall B
Poster TeardownThursday, 17 February, 18:00 to 21:30 - PRCC, Exhibit Hall B Important note regarding poster presentations: The convention decorator may discard posters if the presenting author does not dismantle them according to tear-down instructions and times.
Printing Your PosterFor your convenience, posters can be printed at the business center located within the Puerto Rico Convention Center:
• File must be a PDF or Jpg format and sent with the highest resolution possible.
• They can print posters up to 42 inches wide, so the size will be 42” (w) by 48” (h).
• Posters will be printed on either Kodak Premium Photograph-ic Glossy Paper 260g or Kodak Photographic Lustre Paper 260g (satin finish).
• Prints are $30.00 USD each.• Artwork is required at least 24 hours before. • They work with the prints in the order they are received.
Note: We suggest you contact the business center ahead of time and allow plenty of time for printing your poster. Please contact the business center after you send your file to make sure the file was received and is in the proper format. Additionally, please check with them to see when your poster will be ready for pick up. If you are interested in this service, please contact the business center for more information: Ileana Vivas, Business Center Manager, at [email protected] or call 787.641.7722, Ext. 2051
Instructions for Oral PresentersTalks will be scheduled in 15-minute time slots. We strongly en-courage a presentation of no more than 12 minutes to allow three minutes for discussion and to entertain questions from those in the audience. The time limit will be strictly enforced to facilitate move-ment between sessions.
No recording is available in any of the session rooms during the meeting.
Preparing Your Electronic Presentation The audio visual company for the 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting is PSAV Audio Visual. Please contact PSAV if you have questions about preparing your presentation for the meeting and/or submitting your presentation electronically prior to the meeting:
Email: [email protected]: 214-210-8006
Advance SubmissionSpeakers will receive an email with login credentials and instruc-tions to submit online. Please make sure to upload all media files re-quired for your presentation. Any necessary video or audio files not included in your online upload folder along with your PowerPoint, will cause your presentation to fail in the meeting room. Please see the list of preferred media formats in the “Additional Information” section below. Speakers who submit in advance will have a faster check in at the Presentation Room.
Although online submission may not be required, it is strongly encouraged.
The following presentation file types are acceptable for ONLINE submission:
• Microsoft Office PowerPoint (.ppt), (.pptx)• Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)
Microsoft PowerPoint TipsPowerPoint embeds image files directly into the file when you save them, while video files are not embedded. Only a link is made to the video file. Copy the video clips you want to insert into the same folder as the PowerPoint file. This will eliminate the problem of PowerPoint losing the link to the file. Be certain to bring the video files and the PowerPoint files to the meeting.
Please try to keep the video files size to less than 20MB if possible. Use short video segments when needed
List of Preferred Media (Video/Audio) Formats: (.wmv) (.mpg) (.avi) (.swf) (.wav) (.mov)
Compatible Codecs:
• Microsoft - RLE, Video1, Windows Media Series 8 and 9• Divx 3/4/5• Intel Indeo Video <= v.5.11• TechSmith Screen Capture Codec• Huffyuv Lossless Codec
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
18
• Asus Video Codec, On2VP3, ATI VCR and YV12 Codecs• Cinepak, MJPEG
Fonts: Arial and Helvetica are recommended for clarity and com-patibility. Confirm a font size of AT LEAST 24 points for body text and 36 – 40 points for headings. Light colored text on a dark background is advised. Avoid using red or green. Confirm that the maximum number of lines in text slides is no more than 6 or 7.
Images: The size of the screen will be 1024 x 768 pixels, meaning that any image with more pixels in the X or Y coordinate that is more than that will not be displayed. The image will be altered by Power-Point to fit. Large images (i.e. 2000 x 1500 pixels) which are created with digital cameras and scanners will make the resulting PowerPoint file very large. This may cause the presentation to load slowly. This can be avoided by inserting images with the following properties:
• Format = JPEG (.jpg)• Recommended Size = 800x600 pixels• Compression Setting = 8 (High quality)
Use the “Insert” feature of PowerPoint to add images to your pre-sentations. Do not copy/paste them into the slide or click and drag.
Apple Macintosh UsersApple Macintosh users can also upload PowerPoint presenta-tions to the website. Speakers creating presentations using Apple Keynote (.key) will need to bring their files directly to the Presenta-tion Room to have them loaded to the network. PSAV will have a Macintosh computer in each breakout room.
Bring a BackupBe sure to bring a backup copy of your presentation with you to the meeting. If you plan to upload files on-site, bring two copies. USB/Flash drives are preferred.
During Your PresentationEach meeting room will be staffed with a PSAV technician who will assist with starting each presentation. Once the presentation is launched, the speaker will control the program from the podium us-ing a computer mouse or the up/down/right/left keys on a keyboard.
Computer EquipmentThe Presentation Room and all meeting rooms will be equipped with both a Windows 7 based PCs with Microsoft PowerPoint 2007 and an Apple Macintosh with Keynote ‘09. Verification of proper performance in the Presentation Room is essential, particularly if video and animation is included in the presentation. Please note that Internet access will not be available during your presentation.
LaptopsPersonal laptops cannot be used in the meeting rooms. You must upload your files in the Presentation Room at all times regardless of arrival time. PSAV support staff will be available to transfer from your laptop if needed. Please make sure you bring laptop video port adapters and power cables with you. Always bring a backup of the presentation on flash drive/memory stick or disc to the Presentation Room.
Rental of Additional Audio-Visual Equipment Rental of a VCR, monitor, slide projector, audio systems, provision of extra power outlets, extra tables, stands, etc. can be handled for an additional cost. Costs for additional equipment will be billed to the presenting author. Please contact the conference management office for other presentation requests.
Presentation RoomLocation: PRCC, Room 207
Sunday ........................................................................................15:00 to 21:00Monday ...................................................................................... 7:00 to 19:00Tuesday ...................................................................................... 7:00 to 19:00Wednesday ............................................................................... 7:00 to 19:00Thursday .................................................................................... 7:00 to 19:00Friday .......................................................................................... 7:00 to 17:00
All speakers must check in at the Presentation Room preferably the day before your session to preview your presentation. If you are checking in on the day of your session, please come by at least 4 hours prior to the start of your session. PSAV technicians will assist with the upload of your files and provide the opportunity to pre-view and/or edit the presentation as necessary. If you are unavoid-ably delayed, you must still go directly to the Presentation Room.
Do not bring a laptop or other media device to the session room.
When reviewing your presentation in the Presentation Room, make sure all fonts, images, and animations appear as expected and that all audio or video clips are working properly. The computers in the meeting rooms are the same as the computers in the Presentation Room, therefore:
IF THE PRESENTATION DOES NOT PLAY PROPERLY IN THE PRESENTATION ROOM, IT WILL NOT PLAY PROPERLY IN THE MEETING ROOM.
SecuritySpeakers are required to provide identification in order to submit their presentation as well as to access it in the Presentation Room. Recording devices such as cameras are not permitted in the Pre-sentation Room. All presentation files are deleted at the end of the conference, unless permission has been granted to the conference association to retain the presentation files.
Speaker Ready RoomA speaker ready room will be set up in Room 210 at the Puerto Rico Convention Center so that you can review or practice your presen-tation. This room will be open as follows:
Sunday .........................................................................................15:00 – 21:00Monday through Friday .........................................................07:00 – 19:00
ASLOMeeting Program
19
Puerto Rico Convention Center MapS
Level 1
Level 3
Level 2
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
20
Monday At A Glance
ROOM Ballroom A Ballroom B 101 102 103A 103B
08:00 - 10:00
S38-Eutrophication across aquatic
systems: causes, consequences, and
controls
S66-The Ecology of Infectious Diseases
in Marine and Freshwater Systems
S07-Tropical small mountainous river biogeochemistry: terrestrial losses,
internal processing and coastal inputs
S40-A new hydrology: inflow
effects on ecosystem form and functioning
S65-Urbanization and its impacts
on tropical aquatic ecosystems
S41 - Ecological Forecasting:
Progress, Challenges and Prospects
10:00 - 10:30 Break
10:30 - 12:00 Plenary Speaker Debbie Bronk, ASLO President, and ASLO Award Presentations:
Tommy and Yvette Edmondson Distinguished Service Award and Ruth Patrick Award
12:00 - 13:30 LUNCH
13:30 - 15:30
S38-Eutrophication across aquatic
systems: causes, consequences, and
controls
S66-The Ecology of Infectious Diseases
in Marine and Freshwater Systems
S23-Nutrient Limitation in River-Influenced Coastal
Systems
S40-A new hydrology: inflow
effects on ecosystem form and functioning
S93-Urban Watershed State of
Science
S41 - Ecological Forecasting:
Progress, Challenges and Prospects
15:30 - 16:00 Break
16:00-18:00
S38-Eutrophication across aquatic
systems: causes, consequences, and
controls
S66-The Ecology of Infectious Diseases
in Marine and Freshwater Systems
S42-Coastal and inland hypersaline environments and their differences to
normal salinity waters and freshwater lakes
S40-A new hydrology: inflow
effects on ecosystem form and functioning
S93-Urban Watershed State of
Science
S41 - Ecological Forecasting:
Progress, Challenges and Prospects
See program for information on
ASLOMeeting Program
21
104 201 202 208A 208B 209 ROOM
GS09 - Community Ecology
S73 - Biochemicals in action in trophic
interactions: their role in information transfer and nutritional quality
S22-Diatoms & Coccolithophores:
from evolution to global
biogeochemical cycles
S27-Interactions Between Aquatic
Microbial Eukaryotes: Intracellular to Community Processes
S01-ASLO MP Students
S67-Deep-sea corals and other
communities associated with
hydrocarbon seeps and polymetallic sulfide deposits
08:00 - 10:00
Ballroom A Foyer 10:00 - 10:30
Ballroom A 10:30 - 12:00
(See program for meetings and workshops scheduled during lunch.) 12:00 - 13:30
GS09 - Community Ecology
S73 - Biochemicals in action in trophic
interactions: their role in information transfer and nutritional quality
S78-Genetics of Aquatic Microbial
Populations
S45 - Protists in Extreme
Environments: Beyond Diversity
S01-ASLO MP Students
S16-Acidification in Coral Reef Ecosystems
13:30 - 15:30
Exhibit Hall 15:30 - 16:00
GS10-Environmental Impacts of the BP Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico Oil
Spill
S92-Exploring the foundations of interactions
among the major biogeochemical
cycles
S78-Genetics of Aquatic Microbial
Populations
S56-Continental Margin
Sedimentation: Geological and Geochemical
Signatures of Human Activity
S01-ASLO MP Students
S16-Acidification in Coral Reef Ecosystems
16:00-18:00
meetings and activities on Monday evening.
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
22
Tuesday At A Glance
ROOM Ballroom A Ballroom B 101 102 103A 103B
08:00 - 10:00
S38-Eutrophication across aquatic
systems: causes, consequences, and
controls
S94-Impact of Hypoxia on
Biogeochemical Cycles
GS07-Multiple stressor problems
in aquatic systems - Session 1
GS08A - Plankton Ecology - Session 1
S75-Coastal and Marine Spatial
Planning: Current Needs and Future
Challenges
S41-Ecological Forecasting:
Progress, Challenges and Prospects
10:00 - 10:30 Break
10:30 - 12:00 Plenary Speaker Carla E. Cáceres, University of Illinois and ASLO Award Presentations:
Citation For Scientific Excellence and Ramón Margalef Award for Excellence
12:00 - 13:30 LUNCH
13:30 - 15:30 S53-Urban aquatic systems
S94-Impact of Hypoxia on
Biogeochemical Cycles
GS07-Multiple stressor problems
in aquatic systems - Session 2
GS08B -Plankton Ecology - Session 2
S75-Coastal and Marine Spatial
Planning: Current Needs and Future
Challenges
S20-Multi-tracer approaches to understanding
plankton community composition controls on POC export flux from the surface
ocean
15:30 - 16:00 Break
16:00 - 18:00 Poster Session and Reception
ASLOMeeting Program
23
104 201 202 208A 208B 209 ROOM
S62-Microbial Adaptation to Environmental Changes and
Advances in Marine Microbial Diversity and Dynamics in Latin America and
the Caribbean
S37-Evolutionary rules in the brave
new ocean – Climate Change and Life History Strategies
S60-Biogeochemistry of resuspended
sediments in aquatic and coastal marine
environments
S26-Improved Broader Impacts = Enhanced Scientific
Impacts
S71-Beachfront real estate: Microbial
ecology and activity along changing
coasts
S36-Interactive and repeat
exposure effects of environmental
perturbations upon corals and coral reef
processes
08:00 - 10:00
Exhibit Hall 10:00 - 10:30
Ballroom A 10:30 - 12:00
(See program for meetings and workshops scheduled during lunch.) 12:00 - 13:30
S62-Microbial Adaptation to Environmental Changes and
Advances in Marine Microbial Diversity and Dynamics in Latin America and
the Caribbean
S37-Evolutionary rules in the brave
new ocean – Climate Change and Life History Strategies
S58-Emerging Patterns of Nitrogen
Fixation and its Controls in the
Oceans
S26-Improved Broader Impacts = Enhanced Scientific
Impacts
S12-In situ measurement of
concentration, liability & bioavailability of chemical species in water, soils & sediments using
diffusional techniques
S36-Interactive and repeat
exposure effects of environmental
perturbations upon corals and coral reef
processes
13:30 - 15:30
Exhibit Hall 15:30 - 16:00
Exhibit Hall 16:00 - 18:00
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
24
Wednesday At A Glance
ROOM Ballroom A Ballroom B 101 102 103A 103B
08:00 - 10:00
S28-Biogeochemical, ecological and
physical dynamics of eastern boundary upwelling systems
S09-Benthic biogeochemical
processes: From microscale
patchiness to ecosystem function
S87-Trace Metals and their Nutritional
Importance to Marine Phytoplankton and
Bacteria
GS08C-Plankton Ecology - Session 3
S05-Ocean Color Radiometry of
Coastal and Inland Waters
S21-Isotopic and Molecular
Approaches to Study Microbe-Metazoan Trophic Dynamics
10:00 - 10:30 Break
10:30 - 12:00 Plenary Speaker Nancy Rabalais, Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium and
ASLO Award Presentations: John Martin Award and G. Evelyn Hutchinson Award
12:00 - 13:30 LUNCH
13:30 - 15:30
S28-Biogeochemical, ecological and
physical dynamics of eastern boundary upwelling systems
S09-Benthic biogeochemical
processes: From microscale
patchiness to ecosystem function
S87-Trace Metals and their Nutritional
Importance to Marine Phytoplankton and
Bacteria
GS08D-Plankton Ecology - Session 4
S05-Ocean Color Radiometry of
Coastal and Inland Waters
S51-Who’s in the water? Recent advances in the detection and
quantification of phytoplankton
community composition in
aquatic ecosystems
15:30 - 16:00 Break
16:00 - 18:00 S91-Oxygen
Dynamics in Coastal Hypoxic Zones
S09-Benthic biogeochemical
processes: From microscale
patchiness to ecosystem function
GS02-Chemical Oceanography/GEOTRACES
GS05A-Food web interactions and trophic linkages -
Session 1
S79-Dynamics of tropical aquatic systems: rivers, estuaries, and coastal waters
S51-Who’s in the water? Recent advances in the detection and
quantification of phytoplankton
community composition in
aquatic ecosystems
See program for information on
ASLOMeeting Program
25
104 201 202 208A 208B 209 ROOM
S77-Mesophotic Coral Ecosystems: Structure, Patterns,
Processes and Refugia
S35-Advances in coastal hypoxia modeling: from physics to fish
S39-Regional Ecosystem
Research Informing Management
Decisions
S26-Improved Broader Impacts = Enhanced Scientific
Impacts
GS01-Physical Oceanography and General Circulation
S46-The role of inland waters in the carbon cycle of the boreal forest biome
08:00 - 10:00
Exhibit Hall 10:00 - 10:30
Ballroom A 10:30 - 12:00
(See program for meetings and workshops scheduled during lunch.) 12:00 - 13:30
S77-Mesophotic Coral Ecosystems: Structure, Patterns,
Processes and Refugia
S83- Impacts of Climate Change and Secular Variability on the Caribbean and Tropical Americas
S39-Regional Ecosystem
Research Informing Management
Decisions
S76-Increasing Diversity in the Ocean Science
Workforce: Effective Recruitment and
Mentoring
S34-Bioluminescent Bays of Puerto Rico: Science, Education, Management and
Conservation
S46-The role of inland waters in the carbon cycle of the boreal forest biome
13:30 - 15:30
Exhibit Hall 15:30 - 16:00
S77-Mesophotic Coral Ecosystems: Structure, Patterns,
Processes and Refugia
S10-Biological Invasions as a Driver of Change in Aquatic
Systems
GS06-Restoration ecology in aquatic
system
S54-Student Engagement in
Education and Public Outreach
S90-Biological Contamination of Puerto Rican
Streams and Coastal Water
S46-The role of inland waters in the carbon cycle of the boreal forest biome
16:00 - 18:00
meetings and activities on Wednesday evening.
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
26
Thursday At A Glance
ROOM Ballroom A Ballroom B 101 102 103A 103B
08:00 - 10:00 S68-Cyanobacteria in a changing world
S09-Benthic biogeochemical
processes: From microscale
patchiness to ecosystem function
S82-Microbe-DOM Interactions
in Aquatic Environments
GS05B-Food web interactions and trophic linkages -
Session 2
S59-Advancing the Science and Ethics of Plankton Ecology: The Legacy of Peter
Verity
S24-Climate and fishing effects on life history traits of
exploited stocks and the consequences
of population sustainability
10:00 - 10:30 Break
10:30 - 12:00 Plenary Speaker Chris Sabine, NOAA/PMEL, and ASLO Award Presentations: Raymond L. Lindeman Award and A.C. Redfield Lifetime Achievement Award
12:00 - 13:30 LUNCH
13:30 - 15:30 S68-Cyanobacteria in a changing world
S33-Effects of Global Change on Carbon Transport and Processing in Tropical Freshwater
Ecosystems
S82-Microbe-DOM Interactions
in Aquatic Environments
GS05C-Food web interactions and trophic linkages -
Session 3
S59-Advancing the Science and Ethics of Plankton Ecology: The Legacy of Peter
Verity
S24-Climate and fishing effects on life history traits of
exploited stocks and the consequences
of population sustainability
15:30 - 16:00 Break
16:00 - 18:00 Poster Session and Reception
ASLOMeeting Program
27
104 201 202 208A 208B 209 ROOM
S80-Frontiers in ocean acidification
research: Responses of marine carbon
cycling and ecosystems to
ocean acidification
S50-Advancing ocean color science from space into the
21st century
S15-Land Based Sources of Pollution in Tropical Marine
Ecosystems
S48-How will a continued ice
retreat affect Arctic productivity and food
webs?
S44- The relevance of jellyfish in the changing global
oceans
S17- Phosphorus cycling in
marine systems: biogeochemical, genomics and
08:00 - 10:00
Exhibit Hall 10:00 - 10:30
Ballroom A 10:30 - 12:00
(See program for meetings and workshops scheduled during lunch.) 12:00 - 13:30
S80-Frontiers in ocean acidification
research: Responses of marine carbon
cycling and ecosystems to
ocean acidification
S50-Advancing ocean color science from space into the
21st century
S15-Land Based Sources of Pollution in Tropical Marine
Ecosystems
S48-How will a continued ice
retreat affect Arctic productivity and food
webs?
S44- The relevance of jellyfish in the changing global
oceans
S17- Phosphorus cycling in
marine systems: biogeochemical, genomics and
13:30 - 15:30
Exhibit Hall 15:30 - 16:00
Exhibit Hall 16:00 - 18:00
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
28
Friday At A Glance
ROOM Ballroom A Ballroom B 101 102 103A 103B
08:00 - 10:00
S80-Frontiers in ocean acidification
research: Responses of marine carbon
cycling and ecosystems to
ocean acidification
S55-Microbial Carbon Pump: A multidisciplinary focus on origins,
cycling and storage of DOM in the ocean
S03-Heterotrophic Activity in Aquatic
Ecosystems Revisited
S57-Spatial connectivity in
aquatic landscapes
S06-From Green Pastures to Green Water: Integrating Soil and Aquatic
Approaches to Phosphorus
Biogeochemistry Science
S13-Biodiversity in a Changing
World: Insights from Paleoecological Data
10:00 - 10:30 Break
10:30 - 12:00 Plenary Speaker Marcia McNutt, Director, U.S. Geological Survey, and ASLO
Award Presentations: Student Presentation Award Winners Recognized
12:00 - 13:30 LUNCH
13:30 - 15:30 S31-Coral Reefs in a Crystal Ball: What Will Be Their Future?
S55-Microbial Carbon Pump: A multidisciplinary focus on origins,
cycling and storage of DOM in the ocean
S03-Heterotrophic Activity in Aquatic
Ecosystems Revisited
S57-Spatial connectivity in
aquatic landscapes
S06-From Green Pastures to Green Water: Integrating Soil and Aquatic
Approaches to Phosphorus
Biogeochemistry Science
S30-Mechanistic descriptions of
diverse plankton communities: from
observations to models
15:30 - 16:00 Break
16:00-18:00 S31-Coral Reefs in a Crystal Ball: What Will Be Their Future?
S55-Microbial Carbon Pump: A multidisciplinary focus on origins,
cycling and storage of DOM in the ocean
S86-Linking the physiology of
photoautotrophs to the generation of
reactive trace gases
S57-Spatial connectivity in
aquatic landscapes
S69-The biogeochemistry
of coral – microbe interactions
S30-Mechanistic descriptions of
diverse plankton communities: from
observations to models
ASLOMeeting Program
29
104 201 202 208A 208B 209 ROOM
S14-Consequences of Hypoxia for Living
Resources and Biogeochemical
Cycles
S49-Atmospheric control of nutrient
cycling and production in the surface ocean
S32-Variability in Freshwater Inputs and its Impacts
on Coastal Marine Systems
S18-Connectivity of ecosystem processes in the upper and
mesopelagic oceans
S64-Instrumentation, Software, and Protocols for
Semi-automated Identification,
Enumeration, and measurement of
Plankton
S02-Ocean Biogeochemistry Time-Series and
Climate
08:00 - 10:00
Ballroom A Foyer 10:00 - 10:30
Ballroom A 10:30 - 12:00
(See program for meetings and workshops scheduled during lunch.) 12:00 - 13:30
S14-Consequences of Hypoxia for Living
Resources and Biogeochemical
Cycles
S49-Atmospheric control of nutrient
cycling and production in the surface ocean
S32-Variability in Freshwater Inputs and its Impacts
on Coastal Marine Systems
S08-Intraspecific variation: role in the ecology of harmful
phytoplankton
S64-Instrumentation, Software, and Protocols for
Semi-automated Identification,
Enumeration, and measurement of
Plankton
S02-Ocean Biogeochemistry Time-Series and
Climate
13:30 - 15:30
Ballroom A Foyer 15:30 - 16:00
S14-Consequences of Hypoxia for Living
Resources and Biogeochemical
Cycles
S52-Ocean-Atmosphere
Interactions in coastal regions: Observations and Modeling Approaches
S63: Broadening the Discussion: The Consequences of
the Presence of Algal Toxins in Food Webs
S04-Biological and biogeochemical
science enabled by the Aquarius and SMOS missions
S02- Ocean biogeochemistry: time series and
climate
16:00-18:00
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
30
MO
nD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
Monday, 14 February 2011 OralsS01 ASLOMP Student Symposium Chair(s): Benjamin Cuker, [email protected] Deidre Gibson, [email protected]: 208B08:00 Allison, J.: USING PIXE TO DETECT TRACE
ELEMENTS FOUND IN WATER AND SEDIMENT SAMPLES TAKEN FROM THE EMORY RIVER
08:15 Ryan, K. A.; Phillips, P.: SEASONAL WATER QUALITY IN A TROPICAL BIOLOGICAL CORRIDOR
08:30 Burgos, S.; Ramirez, A.; Recart, W.: EXPLORING THE MICROBIAL WORLD: ASSESSING BENTHIC BIOFILMS COMPOSITION TO THE RESPONSE OF DIFFERENT NUTRIENT CONDITIONS
08:45 Macduff, S. D.; Wolanski, E.; Richmond, R. H.: SEDIMENT DYNAMICS FOLLOWING LARGE SCALE ALGAL REMOVAL IN MAUNALUA BAY, HAWAII.
09:00 Vélez, F. J.; Scott, K. R.; Canals, M. F.: NEARSHORE HYDRODYNAMICS OF RINCNN, PUERTO RICO: IMPLICATIONS FOR SEDIMENT TRANSPORT AND COASTAL EROSION
09:15 Holden, D.; Goldinger, D.; Llauger, L.; Lopez, O.; Nilakantan, S.; Sogor, A.: VALIDATION OF AN ULTRA HIGH FREQUENCY RADAR FOR CURRENT MAPPING AND VESSEL TRACKING IN THE URBANIZED HUDSON RIVER ESTUARY.
09:30 Gilbert, W.; Fisher, T.: DETERMINING DENITRIFICATION THROUGH THE MEASUREMENT OF EXCESS N2 IN UPWELLING GROUNDWATER IN CHOPTANK RIVER STREAMS
09:45 Tran, K. N.; Jiang, S.; Sison-Mangus, M. P.: BACTERIAL DIVERSITY ASSOCIATED WITH TOXIC AND NON-TOXIC PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SPECIES
13:30 Klein, A. M.; Wilson, W. H.; Martinez Martinez, J.; Gilg, I.: MARINE VIRUSES: A STUDY ON HOST-VIRUS RESPONSE TO ELEVATED LEVELS OF CO2
13:45 Portier, E. F.; Goni, M. A.; Moore, E.; Kurtz, A.: SOURCES AND DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANIC MATTER SEQUESTERED IN FLOODPLAIN SEDIMENTS FROM THE FLY RIVER, PAPUA NEW GUINEA
14:00 Aragon, S. J.; Doherty, M.; Crump, B. C.: MICROBIAL COMMUNITY DYNAMICS IN SEASONALLY ANOXIC WATERS OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY.
14:15 Brown, A. S.; Fredrickson, K.; Strom, S.: EXAMINING HYDROGEN PEROXIDE AS THE AGENT OF TOXICITY OF HETEROSIGMA AKASHIWO IN THE PRESENCE OF CATALASE
14:30 Sharpe, S. C.; Koester, J. A.; Loebl, M.; Cockshutt, A. M.; Finkel, Z. V.: TESTING THE RULE OF METABOLIC SCALING WITHIN AND ACROSS TWO POPULATIONS OF THE DIATOM DITYLUM BRIGHTWELLII
14:45 Hinson, K. I.; Walsh , E. J.: GENETIC VARIATION IN THE ROTIFER BRACHIONUS PLICATILIS: NATURAL VERSUS IMPACTED POPULATIONS
15:00 Ramos, J. C.; Hamdan, L. K.; Walsh, E. J.: GENETIC VARIATION WITHIN AND AMONG CHIHUAHUAN DESERT POPULATIONS OF THE BDELLOID ROTIFER PHILODINA MEGALOTROCHA
15:15 Burgess, A. K.: VECTORING ALGAL TOXIN IN MARINE PLANKTONIC FOOD WEBS: SORTING OUT NUTRITIONAL DEFICIENCY FROM TOXICITY EFFECTS
16:00 Hayes-Pontius, E. M.; McCabe, D. J.: EFFECT OF LAND USE ON BENTHIC MACROINVERTEBRATE COMMUNITY METRICS IN VERMONT STREAMS
16:15 Jackson, K. J.; Chapman, J. W.; Dumbauld, B. R.: SIZE DEPENDANT BURROWING COMPETENCE OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BLUE MUD SHRIMP, UPOGEBIA PUGETTENSIS
16:30 Segui, L. M.; Brodeur, R. D.; Suryan, R. M.; Gladics, A. J.: SPECIES COMPOSITION AND ENERGY DENSITY OF BLACK ROCKFISH ( SEBASTES MELANOPS) DIETS OFF NEWPORT, OREGON
16:45 Clardy, T. R.: TERRESTRIAL AND AQUATIC LOCOMOTION IN THE ROCK PRICKLEBACK, XIPHISTER MUCOSUS (COTTIFORMES: ZOARCOIDEI: STICHAEIDAE)
17:00 Crawley Crawford, K. E.; Horodysky, A. Z.; Brill, R. W.; Caddle, J.; Johnson, A. K.: ONTOGENY OF VISUAL ECOPHYSIOLOGY IN BLACK SEA BASS (SERRANIDAE: CENTROPRISTIS STRIATA)
17:15 Rude, J. E.: THE PHYLOGENETIC STRUCTURE OF STINGRAY NEOTRYGON KUHLII IN INDONESIA
17:30 Flores, L. M.; Hoagland, P.; Jin, D.; Ralston, E.: THE POTENTIAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS AND TOURISM ON CAPE COD
17:45 Murphy, M. E.; Hoskins, D.; Hall, J. M.: UNLOCKING THE HISTORY OF AFRICAN AMERICANS IN GEORGIA COASTAL FISHERIES
S07 Tropical small mountainous river biogeochemistry: terrestrial losses, internal processing and coastal inputsChair(s): Ryan P. Moyer, [email protected] James E. Bauer, [email protected]: 10108:00 Bauer, J. E.; Moyer, R. P.; Raymond, P. A.; Grottoli, A. G.:
DIVERGENCE IN GLOBAL RIVERINE DOC AND POC AGES: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE CARBON CYCLE
08:15 Sotomayor, D. R.; Martinez, G.; Perez-Alegria, L. R.; Santos, C.: NUMERIC NUTRIENT CRITERIA FOR RIVERS OF PUERTO RICO
08:30 Perez-Alegria, L. R.; Sotomayor, D.; Martinez, G.; Villalta, C.; Suarez, G.: MODELING NUTRIENT AND SEDIMENT EXPORT FROM A TROPICAL WATERSHED TO MARINE ECOSYSTEMS IN THE CARIBBEAN
08:45 Larson, R. A.; Brooks, G. R.; Devine, B.; Reichart, G. J.; Jilbert, T.; Schwing, P. T.: HIGH-RESOLUTION STRATIGRAPHY OF SEDIMENTATION EVENTS RECORDED IN MM-SCALE LAMINATED
ASLOMeeting Program
31
MO
nD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
SEDIMENTS FROM COASTAL SALT PONDS: ST. JOHN USVI.
09:00 McDowell, W. H.; Scatena, F. N.; Lugo, A. E.: IMPACTS OF HURRICANES ON ELEMENTAL CYCLES: SEPARATING SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM EFFECTS ON STREAM CHEMISTRY
09:15 Stubbins, A.; Spencer, R. G.; Chen, H.; Hatcher, P. G.; Mopper, K.; Six, J.; Mwamba, V.; Mangangu, A.; Wabakanghanzi, J.; Hernes, P. J.: MOLECULAR SIGNATURES OF RIVER WATER ORGANIC MATTER PHOTODEGRADATION*
09:30 Mackenzie, F. T.; DeCarlo, E. H.: LAND-SEA BIOGEOCHEMICAL INTERACTIONS GLOBALLY AND IN TROPICAL SMALL MOUNTAINOUS ECOSYSTEMS
S16 Acidification in Coral Reef EcosystemsChair(s): Jorge E. Corredor, [email protected] Chris Langdon, [email protected] Dwight Gledhill, [email protected]: 20913:30 Bates, N. R.; Amat, A.; Andersson, A. J.: THE
CARBONATE CHEMISTRY CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEM FEEDBACK (CREF) HYPOTHESIS
14:00 McCulloch, M.; Trotter, J.; Maontagna, P.; Falter, J.: SENSITIVITY OF CORAL CALCIFICATION TO INCREASING ATMOSPHERIC CARBON DIOXIDE
14:15 Shaw, E. C.; McNeil, B. I.; Tilbrook, B.: NATURAL VARIABILITY IN CARBONATE CHEMISTRY HASTENS THE ONSET OF CORROSIVE CONDITIONS IN A CORAL REEF FLAT
14:30 De Carlo, E. H.; Drupp, P. S.; Mackenzie, F. T.; Shamberger, K.; Maenner-Jones, S.; Muscielewics, S.; Sabine, C. L.; Feely, R. A.: OCEAN-ATMOSPHERE EXCHANGE OF CO2 ON CORAL REEFS OF OAHU, HAWAII
14:45 Falter, J. L.; Lowe, R. J.; Atkinson, M. J.; Cuet, P.: SEASONAL DIFFERENCES IN PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL FORCING OF CALCIFICATION RATES ON NINGALOO REEF, WESTERN AUSTRALIA
15:00 Cumbo, V. R.; Fan, T. Y.; Edmunds, P. J.: EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND CO2 ON THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE EARLY LIFE STAGE OF POCILLOPORA DAMICORNIS
15:15 Andersson, A. J.; de Putron, S.; Bates, N. R.; Collins, A.; Garley, R.; Noyes, T.; Dexter, E.: BERMUDA OCEAN ACIDFICATION AND CORAL REEF INVESTIGATION: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATIONS IN SEAWATER CARBONATE CHEMISTRY AND CALCIFICATION
16:00 Cullison, S. E.; DeGrandpre, M. D.; Langdon, C.; Corredor, J. E.: SHORT-TERM AND SEASONAL PH, PCO2 AND SATURATION STATE VARIABILITY IN A CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEM
16:15 Langdon, C.; Corredor, J.; Brocco, B.; Antoun, H.; Capella, J.; Yates, K. K.; Gledhill, D.: A YEAR-LONG TIME SERIES OF CALCIFICATION RATES FOR ENRIQUE REEF, PUERTO RICO BASED ON THE EULERIAN METHOD
16:30 Shamberger, K. E.; Feely, R. A.; Sabine, C. L.; Atkinson, M. J.; DeCarlo, E. H.; Mackenzie, F. T.; Drupp, P. S.; Butterfield, D. A.: CALCIFICATION, PRODUCTION, AND CO2 ON A HAWAIIAN CORAL REEF
16:45 Venti, A. M.; Kadko, D. C.; Andersson, A. J.; Langdon, C.; Bates, N. R.: A MULTI TRACER MODEL APPROACH TO ESTIMATE REEF WATER RESIDENCE TIMES
17:00 Lunden, J. J.; Cordes, E. E.: LOW ARAGONITE SATURATION STATES SURROUNDING DEEPWATER CORAL COMMUNITIES IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO
17:15 Moyer, R. P.; Helmle, K. P.; Hönisch, B.: A 114-YEAR RECORD OF CORAL GEOCHEMISTRY AND GROWTH IN PUERTO RICO AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO ANTHROPOGENIC OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
17:30 Johnson, M. D.; Carpenter, R. C.: THE COMBINED EFFECTS OF ELEVATED PCO2 AND TEMPERATURE ON GROWTH AND CALCIFICATION RATES OF THE CRUSTOSE CORALLINE ALGA HYDROLITHON ONKODES.
17:45 Martinez, J. A.; Richmond, R. H.: THE EFFECTS OF ALIEN INVASIVE ALGAL CANOPIES ON CORAL REEF HABITAT BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
S22 Diatoms and Coccolithophores: from evolution to global biogeochemical cycles Chair(s): Thomas Mock, [email protected] Debora Iglesias-Rodriguez, debora.iglesias-rodriguez@
noc.soton.ac.ukLocation: 20208:00 Rocap, G.; Jacobs, M. J.; McKay, J. F.; Cattolico, R. A.:
EVOLUTION OF THE HETEROKONT ALGAE AS SEEN FROM ORGANELLAR GENOMES
08:15 GIBSON, R. E.; Toseland, A.; Durkin, C.; Truong, T.; Moulton, V.; Armbrust, E. V.; Mock, T.: A CONSERVED NUCLEAR PROTEIN REGULATES BLOOM FORMATION IN MARINE CENTRIC DIATOMS *
08:30 Dupont, C. L.; Araujo, W. L.; Nunes-Nesi, A.; Fernie, A.; Allen, A. E.: A BIFURCATED NITROGEN ASSIMILATION SYSTEM IN MARINE DIATOMS
08:45 Strauss, J.; Martinez-Perez, C.; Mock, T.: THE ROLE OF BACTERIA-LIKE RHODOPSINS IN MARINE EUKARYOTIC PHYTOPLANKTON
09:00 Karp-Boss, L.; Gueta, R.; Young, A. M.; Jumars, P. A.; Rousso, I.: JUDGING DIATOMS BY THEIR COVERS: FRUSTULE MECHANICS
09:15 Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D.; Jones, B. M.; Lebrato, M.; Blanco-Ameijeiras, S.: THE EFFECT OF UPWELLING AND IN-SITU OCEAN ACIDIFICATION MANIPULATIONS ON COCCOLITHOPHORE PHYSIOLOGY
09:30 Lefebvre, S. C.; Benner, I.; Drake, M. K.; Rossignol, P. E.; Okimura, K. M.; Komada, T.; Stillman, J. H.; Carpenter, E. J.: NITROGEN SOURCE AND PCO2 SYNERGISTICALLY AFFECT CARBON
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
32
MO
nD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
ALLOCATION, GROWTH AND MORPHOLOGY OF THE COCCOLITHOPHORE EMILIANIA HUXLEYI*
09:45 Bidle, K. D.; Kwityn, C. J.; Liao, W.: A ROLE FOR CASPASE ACTIVITY AND METACASPASE EXPRESSION AS SUBCELLULAR DETERMINANTS OF VIRAL SUSCEPTIBILITY IN THE COCCOLITHOPHORE, EMILIANIA HUXLEYI
S23 nutrient Limitation in River-Influenced Coastal SystemsChair(s): Nancy N. Rabalais , [email protected] R. Eugene Turner, [email protected]: 10113:30 Glibert, P. M.: EUTROPHICATION, ECOLOGICAL
STOICHIOMETRY AND THE LOWER FOOD WEB OF THE SACRAMENTO-SAN JOAQUIN ESTUARY, CALIFORNIA*
13:45 Gilbert, M. L.; Needoba, J. A.; Koch, C.; Barnard, A.; Baptista, A.: HIGH RESOLUTION IN SITU STUDY OF NUTRIENT LOADING AND ESTUARINE RESPONSE IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER
14:00 Barnes, M. K.; Tilstone, G. H.; Smyth, T. J.; Suggett, D. J.; Martinez-Vincente, V.; Widdicombe, C.: THE IMPORTANCE OF KARENIA MIKIMOTOI BLOOMS AT A COASTAL SITE IN THE WESTERN ENGLISH CHANNEL
14:15 Rabalais, N. N.; Ren, L.; Turner, R. E.; Morrison, W. M.: HOW DOES MISSISSIPPI RIVER WATER AFFECT PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH IN THE ADJACENT UPPER BARATARIA BASIN?
14:30 Turner, R. E.; Rabalais, N. N.: POTENTIAL NUTRIENT LIMITATIONS ON PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH WITHIN AND NEAR THE LOUISIANA COASTAL CURRENT
14:45 Heil, C. A.; Glibert, P. M.; Richardson, R. W.; Murasko, S.; Alexander, J.; Garrett, M.: MULTI FACTOR LIMITATION OF THE 2005 KARENIA BREVIS BLOOM IN CENTRAL WEST FLORIDA
15:00 Quigg, A. S.; Booe, T. L.; Steichen, J. L.; Windham, R.; Dorado, S.; McInnes, A. S.; Jiang, Y.: INFLUENCE OF NUTRIENT LOAD ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN GALVESTON BAY
15:15 Gao, Y.; O’Neil, J. M.; Stoecker, D. K.; Cornwell, J. C.: NITROGEN FIXATION AND PH DURINGN CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS IN AN OLIGOHALINE/TIDAL-FRESH ESTUARY
S27 Interactions Between Aquatic Micro-bial Eukaryotes: Intracellular to Commu-nity Processes Chair(s): Matthew D. Johnson, [email protected] Fabrice Not, [email protected]: 208A08:00 Schoener, D. M.; McManus, G. B.; Tomaras, J.;
York, J.: INORGANIC NITROGEN UPTAKE IN MIXOTROPHIC AND HETEROTROPHIS CILIATES.
08:15 Moorthi, S. D.; Hillebrand, H. L.: COMPETITION AND NUTRIENT DYNAMICS AMONG MIXOTROPHIC AND HETEROTROPHIC CILIATES
08:30 Paul, C.; Pohnert, G.: MoNAGE A TROIS: INTERACTION OF MARINE ALGICIDAL BACTERIA WITH RESISTANT AND SUSCEPTIBLE DIATOMS
08:45 Thamatrakoln, K.; Kustka, A. B.; Gorbunov, M. Y.; Bidle, K. D.: OVER-EXPRESSION OF A DEATH-SPECIFIC PROTEIN HOMOLOG IN THE CENTRIC DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA ALLEVIATES IRON STRESS
09:00 Strom, S. L.: NEITHER THE GARDEN OF EDEN NOR THE KILLING FIELDS: A GOVERNING ROLE FOR SUBLETHAL INTERACTIONS AMONG AQUATIC MICROBIAL EUKARYOTES*
09:30 John, U.; Tillmann, U.; Cembella, A.; Alpermann, T. J.: THE ECOLOGICAL AND EVOLUTIONARY CONCEPT BEHIND ALLELOCHEMICAL INTERACTIONS FOR ALEXANDRIUM POPULATIONS
09:45 Poulson-Ellestad, K. L.; Sieg , R. D.; Kubanek, J.: ALLELOPATHY OF A RED TIDE DINOFLAGELLATE HAS CONTEXT-DEPENDENT IMPACTS ON PHYTOPLANKTON
S38 Eutrophication across aquatic sys-tems: causes, consequences, and controlsChair(s): Alan Wilson, [email protected] Joseph Montoya, [email protected]: Ballroom A08:00 Bunting, L.; Leavitt, P. R.; Schindler, D. E.; Hampton, S.
E.: REGULATION OF LAKE EUTROPHICATION AND RECOVERY BY PHOSPHORUS FLUX ALONE: INSIGHTS FROM LAKES WASHINGTON AND SAMMAMISH, USA.
08:15 Voss/Maren, M.; Carstensen/Jacob, J.; Frey/Claudia, C.; Conley/Daniel, D.; Dippner/Joachim, J. W.; Hietanen/Susanna, S.; Jilbert/Tom, J.; Korth/Frederike, F.; Slomp/Caroline, C.: ON THE ROLE OF LAND DERIVED N AND P INPUT FOR EUTROPHICATION IN THE BALTIC SEA
08:30 Scott, J. T.; Grantz, E.: CONSTRAINTS ON MULTIYEAR FIXED NITROGEN ACCUMULATION IN A EUTROPHIC RESERVOIR
08:45 Fisher, T. R.; Fox, R. J.; Jordan, T.; Fogel, M.; Altabet, M.; Gustafson, A. B.; Bullock, A.; Miklas, J.; Goff, N.: THE SEARCH FOR THE MISSING ANTHROPOGENIC N
09:00 Sanderson, M. P.; Bronk, D. A.; Funkey, C. P.; Ho, G. E.; Poteat, M. D.; Roberts, Q. N.: POSSIBLE CONTRIBUTION OF EFFLUENT ORGANIC NITROGEN TO EUTROPHICATION VIA PHOTOCHEMICAL PROCESSES AND SALINITY GRADIENTS
09:15 Korth, F.; Liskow, I.; Voss, M.: UPTAKE OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN BY HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA AND PHYTOPLANKTON ALONG A SALINITY GRADIENT FROM THE NORTH SEA TO THE BALTIC SEA
ASLOMeeting Program
33
MO
nD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
09:30 Leavitt, P. R.; Bogard, M.; Donald, D. B.; Finlay, K.; Phillips, V. J.: NEW INSIGHTS ON UREA BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND ITS ROLE IN EUTROPHICATION
09:45 Paerl, H. W.; Peierls, B. L.; Scott, J. T.: CONTROLLING EUTROPHICATION ALONG THE FRESHWATER-MARINE CONTINUUM: WHY IS IT ESSENTIAL TO REDUCE BOTH NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS INPUTS?*
13:30 schindler, d. w.: NUTRIENT CONTROL STRATEGIES TO REDUCE EUTROPHICATON OF LAKES~
14:00 Bengt Liljebladh, B. L.; Anders Stigebrandt, A.; Lars Rahm, L.; Per Hall, P.: OXYGENATION OF LARGE NATURAL BASINS FOR NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT - THE BOX PROJECT
14:15 Graneli, W.: CAN ECOTECHNOLOGICAL MEASURES SAVE THE BALTIC SEA?
14:30 Hamilton, S. K.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL TIME LAGS THAT MAY DELAY RESPONSES OF STREAMS TO ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION
14:45 Hayes, N. M.; Vanni, M. J.; Brownson, E. A.: PRECIPITATION MEDIATES THE IMPORTANCE OF LAND USE ON NUTRIENT LIMITATION AND CYANOTOXIN PRODUCTION
15:00 Orihel, D. M.; Vinebrooke, R. D.; Wilson, L.; Schindler, D. W.: DOES IRON AVAILABILITY DETERMINE THE TROPHIC STATE OF FRESHWATER LAKES?
15:15 Wilson, A. E.; Bradley, P. J.; Peck, K. E.; Chislock, M. F.: THE DIAZOTROPH, CYLINDROSPERMOPSIS RACIBORSKII, DOMINATES UNDER VERY LOW AND VERY HIGH NITROGEN-TO-PHOSPHORUS RATIOS: IMPLICATIONS FOR ITS CONTROL
16:00 Kashian, D. R.; Oates, R. H.; Johengen, T. H.: THE ROLE OF HYPOXIA AND DREISSENA MUSSELS ON INTERNAL PHOSPHORUS LOADING IN A GREAT LAKES COASTAL SYSTEM
16:15 Filstrup, C. T.; Downing, J. A.: THE INFLUENCE OF EUTROPHICATION ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION: IS THERE A MONOTONIC INCREASE IN CYANOBACTERIA?
16:30 Killberg-Thoreson, L. M.; Sipler, R. E.; Bronk, D. A.: ANTHROPOGENIC NITROGEN SOURCES STIMULATE GROWTH OF HARMFUL ALGAE IN THE YORK RIVER, VIRGINIA, USA
16:45 Bootsma, H. A.; Olson, W.; Schafer, J. S.; Fillingham, J. H.: INFLUENCE OF EXTERNAL P LOADING AND INTERNAL P RECYCLING ON NET CARBON FLUX IN A LARGE LAKE
17:00 Downing, J. A.; Heathcote, A. J.; Balmer, M. B.; Filstrup, C. T.: EUTROPHICATION IS INVERTING THE CARBON-ROLE OF LAKES IN THE BIOSPHERE
17:15 Heathcote, A. J.; Kendall, D. L.; Filstrup, C. T.; Downing, J. A.: EXAMINING THE ROLE OF PHYTOPLANKTON SIZE AND COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN DETERMINING CRUSTACEAN ZOOPLANKTON BIOMASS IN EUTROPHIC LAKES
17:30 Gallegos, C. L.; Pedersen, T. M.; Nielsen, S. L.: EUTROPHICATION, SEDIMENTS, AND TURBIDITY IN COASTAL SYSTEMS
17:45 Pedersen, T. M.; Nielsen, S. L.; Sand-Jensen, K.; Markager , S. S.: HISTORICAL CHANGES IN OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF ROSKILDE FJORD, DURING A PERIOD OF DECREASING NUTRIENT LOAD
S40 A new hydrology: inflow effects on ecosystem form and functioningChair(s): Daniel Roelke, [email protected] Sofie Spatharis, [email protected] Simon Mitrovic, [email protected]: 10208:00 Largier, J. L.: IT’S NOT JUST HOW MUCH, IT’S WHEN
YOU GET IT: CHANGING HYDROGRAPHS IMPACT ESTUARY ECOSYSTEMS *
08:30 Piehler, M. F.; Schwartz, R.; Thompson, S. P.; Brush, M. J.: LAND USE AFFECTS COASTAL STREAM DISCHARGE AND LOADING OF NUTRIENTS AND SUSPENDED SOLIDS
08:45 Santos, R. O.; Lirman, D.: HABITAT SUITABILITY MODELS FOR SUBMERGED AQUATIC VEGETATION (SAV) IN BISCAYNE BAY, FLORIDA, USA
09:00 Dzwonkowski, B.; Carassou, L.; Park, K.; Hernandez, F. J.; Graham, W. M.; Powers, S. P.: IMPACT OF FRESH WATER VARIABILITY ON PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE MARINE SYSTEM ON THE NORTHEASTERN GULF OF MEXICO
09:15 Liefer, J. D.; MacIntyre, H. L.; Burnett, W. C.; Viso, R.; Peterson, R.; McCoy, C.: THE INFLUENCE OF GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE AND BENTHIC COUPLING ON THE POTENTIALLY-TOXIC DIATOM PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SPP. AND OVERALL PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
09:30 Saeck, E. A.; Burford, M. A.; O’Brien, K.: COASTAL PHYTOPLANKTON RESPONSE TO FLOOD EVENTS AFFECTED BY REMOVAL OF SEWAGE-DERIVED NUTRIENT INPUTS
09:45 Hitchcock, J. N.; Mitrovic, S. M.: RESPONSES OF ESTUARINE BACTERIOPLANKTON AND PHYTOPLANKTON TO DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON AND INORGANIC NUTRIENT ADDITIONS
13:30 Kritzberg, E. S.; Ekström, S.: INCREASING CONCENTRATIONS OF IRON IN SWEDISH INLAND AND COASTAL WATERS – RELATION TO CHANGES IN WATER FLOW
13:45 SPYROPOULOU, A.; SPATHARIS , S.; TSIRTSIS, G.: POTENTIAL RESPONSE OF A SEMI-ARID COASTAL ECOSYSTEM TO CLIMATE CHANGE
14:00 Colón-Rivera, R. J.; Feagin, R. A.: EFFECTS OF SEA LEVEL RISE ON A PTEROCARPUS FORESTED WETLAND IN PUERTO RICO
14:15 Roelke, D. L.; Brooks, B. W.; Grover, J. P.: A DECADE OF FISH-KILLING PRYMNESIUM PARVUM BLOOMS IN TEXAS: ROLES OF INFLOW AND SALINITY
14:30 Hayden, N. J.; Roelke, D. L.; Brooks, B.; Grover, J.; Neisch, M.; Valenti , T.; Prosser, K.; Gable, G.; Umphres, G.; Hewitt, N.: THE EFFECT OF FLUSHING WITH
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
34
MO
nD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
DEEP LAKE WATER ON A PRYMNESIUM PARVUM BLOOM: RESULTS FROM IN-SITU MESOCOSM EXPERIMENTS
14:45 Bein, A. M.; McIntyre, P. B.; Vadeboncoeur, Y.; de Mazancourt, C. S.; Loreau, M.: OPTIMAL PRODUCTIVITY IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS: THEORETICAL INSIGHTS AND OBSERVATIONS FROM THE LITTORAL ZONE OF LAKE TANGANYIKA
15:00 Waters, M. N.; Piehler, M. F.; Smoak, J. M.; Bianchi, T. S.: HISTORIC ALGAL COMMUNITY RESPONSES TO DYSTROPHICATION OF A SHALLOW LAKE
15:15 Spatharis, S.: A TRICHODESMIUM BLOOM IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA: A RESULT OF CLIMATE CHANGE?
16:00 Li, B.; DiMarco, S. F.; Guinasso, N. L.: IN-SITU TOWED OBSERVATIONS OF THE HYPOXIA ON THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA SHELF DURING THE YEAR 2010
16:15 Stanish, L.; McKnight, D. M.; Nemergut, D.: HYDROLOGIC PROCESSES CONTROL THE PATTERNS OF DIATOM COMMUNITIES IN DRY VALLEY STREAMS
16:30 Evans-White, M. A.; Bumpers, P. M.; Kanopsic, J.; Eldridge, Z.: LANDUSE EFFECTS ON BENTHIC ALGAE AND METABOLISM RECOVERY AFTER FLOOD EVENTS IN OZARK STREAMS
16:45 Westhorpe, D. P.; Mitrovic, S. M.: USING ENVIRONMENTAL FLOWS TO INCREASE DELIVERY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON TO A FLOW MODIFIED RIVER AND POTENTIAL CHANGES IN HETEROTROPHIC DOMINANCE
17:00 Mitrovic, S. M.; Westhorpe, D. P.; Kobayashi, T.: POTENTIAL FOOD WEB CHANGES WITH TERRESTRIAL DOC DELIVERY TO A RIVER WITH HIGHLY MODIFIED FLOWS
17:15 Scott, S. E.; Hanson, P. C.; Vanni, M. J.: EFFECTS OF SEDIMENT INPUTS FROM STORMS ON ECOSYSTEM METABOLISM
17:30 Lisi, P. J.; Schindler, D. E.: SPAWNING IN THE RAIN: GEOMORPHIC CONTROLS AND BIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO WATER SOURCE IN ALASKA SALMON BEARING STREAMS
17:45 Packman, A. I.; Aubeneau, A. F.; Schumer, R.; Drummond, J. D.: CONCEPTUALIZING AND SIMULATING THE TRANSPORT OF CONSERVATIVE AND REACTIVE SOLUTES IN RIVERS
S41 Ecological Forecasting: Progress, Challenges and ProspectsChair(s): Raleigh R. Hood, [email protected] Christopher W. Brown, [email protected] David Green, [email protected]: 103B08:00 Wiggert, J. D.; Long, W.; Xu, J.; Hood, R. R.; Mathukumalli,
B. K.; Lanerolle, L. W.; Brown, C. W.: ASSESSMENT OF A COUPLED PHYSICAL-BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODEL DEVELOPED FOR WATER QUALITY AND ECOLOGICAL FORECAST USE IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
08:15 Jones, E. M.; Parslow, J.; Lawrence, M.; Margvelshvili, N.; Cressie, N.: EXPLORING THE LIMITS OF PREDICTABILITY IN MARINE BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS.
08:30 Raghukumar, K.; Goebel, N.; Veneziani, M.; Edwards, C.; Broquet, G.; Moore, A.; Zehr, J. P.: EFFECT OF ASSIMILATING PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHIC INFORMATION ON A COMPLEX ECOSYSTEM MODEL IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM
08:45 Wild-Allen, K.; Andrewartha, J.; Rizwi, F.; Skerratt, J.; Jones, E.; Thompson, P.; Parslow, J.; Herzfeld, M.; Margvelashvili, N.: VALIDATION OF OPERATIONAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS FOR RESOURCE MANAGEMENT OF COASTAL WATERS
09:00 Baptista, A. M.; Spitz, Y. H.; Needoba, J. A.; Peterson, T. D.; Zuber, P.; Herfort, L. M.; Seaton, C. M.; Cho, K. H.; Welle, P.; Lopez, J. E.; Roegner, C. G.: COLLABORATORY-ENABLED ECOLOGICAL FORECASTS*
09:30 Evans, M. A.; Scavia, D.: FORECASTING HYPOXIA IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY AND GULF OF MEXICO: MODEL ACCURACY, PRECISION, AND SENSITIVITY TO ECOSYSTEM CHANGE
09:45 Smith, S. L.: TOWARDS A CONSISTENT MODEL OF THE COMBINED EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND CONCENTRATION ON NUTRIENT UPTAKE RATES IN THE OCEAN
13:30 Zhang, Z.; Lowe, R. J.; Falter, J. L.; Ivey, G. N.: A NEW PROCESS-BASED NUMERICAL MODEL FOR SIMULATING BIOGEOCHEMICAL TRANSFORMATIONS IN CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEMS
13:45 Lanerolle, L. W.; Patchen, R. C.; Stumpf, R. P.; Aikman, F.; Wynne, T. T.; Tomlinson, M. C.; Xu, J.: A HIERARCHY OF PHYSICAL MODELS FOR ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
14:00 Wright, L. D.; Friedrichs, C.; Harding, J.; Howlett, E.; Levin, D.; Luettich, R.; Smith, E. A.: A SUPER-REGIONAL TESTBED TO IMPROVE MODELS OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESSES FOR THE U.S. ATLANTIC AND GULF OF MEXICO COASTS
14:15 Anderson, D. M.; McGillicuddy, Jr., D. J.; Keafer, B. A.; He, R.; Townsend, D. W.: BLOOM DYNAMICS OF THE RED TIDE DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE IN THE GULF OF MAINE: A SYNTHESIS AND PROGRESS TOWARDS A FORECASTING CAPABILITY*
14:45 Fisher, K. M.; Allen, A. L.; Stumpf, R. P.: OPERATIONAL ECOLOGICAL FORECASTING: A HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM SUCCESS STORY PROVIDES REALISTIC PROSPECTS FOR THE FUTURE OF ECOFORECASTING
15:00 Brown, C. W.; Hood, R. R.; Long, W.; Ramers, D. L.; Waziak, C.; Wiggert, J.; Murtugudde, R.; Decker, M. B.; Wilson, D.: DEVELOPMENT OF A CHESAPEAKE BAY ECOLOGICAL PREDICTION SYSTEM
15:15 Chen, F.; Hetland, R.; Campbell, L.; Tomlinson, M.: DETERMINATION OF KARENIA BREVIS BLOOM SOURCE AREA ALONG THE TEXAS COAST
ASLOMeeting Program
35
MO
nD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
16:00 Martino, E. J.; Wood, R. J.; Zhang, X.; Pierson, J.; Houde, E. D.; Roman, M.: MODELING ANNUAL-SCALE HYDROCLIMATE EFFECTS ON CHESAPEAKE BAY STRIPED BASS NURSERY HABITAT
16:15 Zhang, X.; Wood, R. J.; Bahner, L.; Martino, E. J.; Ludsin, S. A.; Murtugudde, R.; Prasad, M.; Long, W.: FORECASTING CHESAPEAKE BAY STRIPED BASS HABITAT QUALITY AND QUANTITY: FROM PHYSICS TO FISH
16:30 Wethey, D. S.; Woodin, S. A.; Hilbish, T. J.; Lima, F. P.; Jones, S. J.: EXTREME EVENTS AS TESTS OF ECOLOGICAL FORECASTS: THE WINTER OF 2009-2010 IN EUROPE
16:45 Forsyth, M. K.; Harris, L. A.: AN EXPLORATION OF RESTORATION STRATEGIES USING A HYBRID ECOSYSTEM-INDIVIDUAL-BASED OYSTER MODEL
17:15 Huebert, K. B.; Serafy, J. E.; Walter, J. F.; Bohnsack, J. A.: LINKING SMALL FISH TO BIG FISH: POPULATION DYNAMICS OF GRAY SNAPPER IN BISCAYNE NATIONAL PARK
17:30 Augustine, S.; Gagnaire, B.; Adam-Guillermin, C.; Kooijman, S. A.: MECHANISTIC MODELLING OF ZEBRAFISH METABOLISM IN RELATIONSHIP TO FOOD LEVEL AND THE PRESENCE OF A TOXICANT: URANIUM
17:45 Sugeno, M.; Munch, S. B.: ASSESSING THE PREVALENCE OF ALLEE EFFECTS IN FISH POPULATIONS: A NONPARAMETRIC APPROACH
S42 Coastal and inland hypersaline envi-ronments and their differences to nor-mal salinity waters and freshwater lakesChair(s): Janet Reimer, [email protected] Miguel Huerta-Diad, [email protected]: 10116:00 Visscher, P. T.; Dupraz, C.; Casillas-Martinez, L.; Rios-
Velazquez, C.; Marvasi, M.; Gallagher, K. L.; Stork, N.; Fowler, A.; Braissant, O.; Glunk, C.: HYPERSALINE ENVIRONMENTS ON EARTH AND BEYOND: NORMAL OR NOT?~
16:30 Rodríguez, J.: THE HYDROLOGY OF PUNTA CABULLON: A HYPERSALINE WETLAND SYSTEM IN PONCE, SOUTHERN PUERTO RICO
16:45 Tazaz, A. M.; Chanton, J. P.; Kelley, C. A.; Poole, J.; Bebout, B. M.: ISOTOPIC METHANE DATA FROM HYPERSALINE PONDS EXTENDS THE TRADITIONAL BIOGENIC METHANE BOUNDARIES.
17:00 Huerta-Diaz, M. A.; Delgadillo-Hinojosa, F.; Otero, X. L.: IRON AND TRACE METALS IN MICROBIAL MATS AND UNDERLYING SEDIMENTS: RESULTS FROM THE GUERRERO NEGRO SALTERN, BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR, MEXICO
17:15 Reimer, J. J.; Huerta-Diaz, M. A.: THE USE OF IRON, C:S, AND C:P RATIOS AS REDOX PROXIES: EXAMPLE FROM THE HYPERSALINE SEDIMENTS OF GUERRERO NEGRO, BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR, MEXICO
17:30 Gallagher, K. L.; Kading, T.; Braissant, O.; Przekop, K. M.; Visscher, P. T.: INFLUENCE OF SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIAL METABOLISM ON MINERAL PRECIPITATION IN MODERN MICROBIALITES: LABORATORY AND IN SILICO MODELING OF ALKALINITY AND PH
17:45 Medova, H.; Hrouzek, P.; Koblizek, M.: HIGH ABUNDANCES OF AEROBIC ANOXYGENIC PHOTOTROPHS IN SALINE LAKES
S45 Protists in Extreme Environments: Beyond DiversityChair(s): Virginia Edgcomb, [email protected] Slava Epstein, [email protected] William Orsi, [email protected]: 208A13:30 Fenchel, T.: PROTIST EXTREMOPHILES~
14:00 Orsi, W.; Edgcomb, V.; Jeon, S. O.; Bunge, J.; Leslin, C.; Taylor, G. T.; Vdacny, P.; Varela, R.; Suarez, P.; Epstein, S.: PROTISTAN MICROBIAL OBSERVATORY IN THE CARIACO BASIN, VENEZUELA.
14:15 Anderson, R.; Weber, F.; Wylezich, C.; Foissner, W.; Mylnikov, A. P.; Jürgens, K.: PROTIST DIVERSITY, DISTRIBUTION AND BACTERIVORY IN BALTIC SEA PELAGIC REDOXCLINES
14:30 Hirst, M. B.; Reeder, W. H.; Wolfe, G. V.; Dawson, S. C.: THE GENOME OF THE FIRST ACIDOPHILIC AND THERMOPHILIC HETEROLOBOSEAN, TETRAMITUS THERMACIDOPHILUS STRAIN BSL
14:45 Weisse, T.: EXTREMELY ACIDIC MINING LAKES: AN ENVIRONMENT DOMINATED BY PROTISTS
15:00 Morgan-Smith, D.; Garrison, C.; Bochdansky, A. B.: HIGH-PRESSURE, LOW-TEMPERATURE INCUBATIONS OF THE FLAGELLATE CAFETERIA ROENBERGENSIS (CHROMISTA, BICOSOECALES)
15:15 Coyne, K. J.; Countway, P. D.; Pilditch, C. A.; Caron, D. A.; Lee, C. K.; Cary, S. C.: CILIATES ASSOCIATED WITH MICROBIAL MATS AT GUAYMAS HYDROTHERMAL VENT SITE
S56 Continental Margin Sedimentation: Geological and Geochemical Signatures of Human ActivityChair(s): Steven A. Kuehl, [email protected] Mead A. Allison, [email protected]: 208A16:15 Bianchi, T. S.: ANTHROPOGENIC AND NATURAL
DRIVERS OF CARBON CYCLING IN SEDIMENTS OF LARGE-RIVER DELTA-DRONT ESTUARIES
16:30 Renagi, O.; Ridd, P. V.; Stieglitz, T. C.: QUANTIFYING THE SUSPENDED SEDIMENT DISCHARGE TO THE OCEAN FROM THE MARKHAM RIVER, PAPUA NEW GUINEA
16:45 Sorokina, V. V.; Berdnikov, S. V.: RECENT CHANGES IN SEDIMENTATION AND ORGANIC CARBON FLUXES AND POOLS IN THE AZOV SEA, SOUTH RUSSIA
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
36
MO
nD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
17:00 Kuehl, S. A.; Rose, L.; Alexander, C. R.; Orpin, A.: HOLOCENE AND RECENT EVOLUTION OF THE WAIPAOA MARGIN, NZ – DRAMATIC CHANGES IN SHELF-SLOPE SEDIMENT DISPERSAL PATTERNS FOLLOWING DEFORESTATION
S65 Urbanization and its impacts on tropical aquatic ecosystems Chair(s): Alonso Ramirez, [email protected] Tim Moulton, [email protected] Rebeca De Jesus, [email protected]: 103A08:00 Burgos, S.; Ramirez, L. A.: DO NUTRIENT-RICH
URBAN STREAMS HAVE A HIGHER DIVERSITY OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN BENTHIC BIOFILMS?
08:15 Moulton, T. P.; Magalhães-Fraga, S. A.; Brito, E. F.; Silva-Junior, E. F.: A CASE FOR USING LEAF PROCESSING AND ASSOCIATED FAUNA FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT IN URBAN STREAMS OF RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL
08:30 Rosas, K. G.; Ramirez, A.: BENTHIC INSECT ASSEMBLAGE COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE OF A TROPICAL ISLAND URBAN STREAM
08:45 Kwak, T. J.; Cooney, P. B.; Buttermore, E. N.; Cope, W. G.; Lazaro, P. R.; Shea, D.; Lilyestrom, C. G.: URBANIZATION IMPACTS IN TROPICAL STREAM ECOSYSTEMS: FISH, HABITAT, AND CONTAMINANTS IN PUERTO RICO
09:00 Engman, A. C.; Ramírez, L. A.; n/a, .: THE EFFECTS OF INSTREAM HABITAT AND CHANNELIZATION ON FISH ASSEMBLAGE STRUCTURE IN A TROPICAL URBAN WATERSHED
09:15 Martinó-Cardona, D. M.; Ramírez, A.: NITROGEN-ENRICHED FOOD WEBS IN TROPICAL URBAN STREAMS, PUERTO RICO
09:30 Figueroa-Nieves, D.; McDowell, W. H.; Potter, J. D.: RATES OF NUTRIENT UPTAKE IN STREAMS RECEIVING TREATED SEWAGE EFFLUENT IN PUERTO RICO
09:45 Hatje, V.; de Souza, M. M.: INORGANIC CONTAMINATION AND HUMAN HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT DUE TO CONSUMPTION OF SHELLFISH IN TODOS OS SANTOS BAY, BAHIA, BRAZIL
S66 The Ecology of Infectious Diseases in Marine and Freshwater Systems Chair(s): James W. Porter, [email protected] Rachel T. Nobel, [email protected]: Ballroom B08:00 Butler, M. J.; Behringer, D. C.; Shields, J. D.; Paris, C. B.;
Moss, J. A.; Dolan, T. W.; Cowen, R. K.: BEHAVIOR INFLUENCES VIRAL DISEASE DYNAMICS IN CARIBBEAN SPINY LOBSTER~
08:30 Harvell, C. D.; Ruiz-Moreno, D.; Willis, B.; Paige, C.; Weil, E.; Croquer, A.; Angel, B.; Jordan, G.; Dahlgren-Jordan, E.; Raymundo, L.: GLOBAL PATTERNS OF CORAL DISEASE AND POTENTIAL CLIMATE DRIVERS*
08:45 Porter, J. W.; Meyers, M. K.; Lipp, E. K.; Joyner, J.; Park, A.; Wares, J.; Sutherland, K. P.; Ruzicka, R.; Semon, K.: THE 2009 WHITE POX OUTBREAK AND RECOVERY AMONG ELKHORN CORALS IN THE FLORIDA KEYS
09:00 Burge, C. A.; Douglas, N. L.; Conti-Jerpe, I.; Weil, E.; Mydlarz, L. D.; Harvell, C. D.: SMALL PURPLE SPOTS MAY REVEAL NEW PATHOGEN: CHARACTERIZATION AND HOST RESPONSE TO A LABYRINTHULOMYCOTA ISOLATED FROM GORGONIA VENTALINA
09:15 Brandt, M. E.; Smith, T. B.: THE ECOLOGY OF EPIDEMIC WHITE PLAGUE DISEASE IN THE FACE OF MULTIPLE DISTURBANCES
09:30 Sutherland, K. P.; Porter, J. W.; Lipp, E. K.: ACROPORID SERRATIOSIS OF THREATENED ELKHORN CORAL LINKED TO HUMAN WASTEWATER SOURCE
09:45 Hofmann, E. E.; Bushek, D.; Ford, S. E.; Guo, X.; Powell, E. N.; Haidvogel, D. B.; Wilkin, J.; Klinck, J. M.: UNDERSTANDING HOW DISEASE AND ENVIRONMENT COMBINE TO STRUCTURE RESISTANCE IN ESTUARINE POPULATIONS
13:30 Noble, R. T.; Blackwood, A. D.; Conn, K. E.; Characklis, G. W.; Helmy, T.; Luettich, R. A.; Neve, R.; Paerl, H. W.; Whipple, A. C.: THE ECOLOGY OF AUTOCHTHONOUS AND ALLOCHTHONOUS PATHOGENS DURING EXTREME EVENTS
13:45 Bowen, J. D.; Noble, R. T.; Luettich, R. A.: TESTING SIMPLE MECHANISTIC MODELS OF BACTERIAL FATE AND TRANSPORT FOR THE NEUSE RIVER ESTUARY, NORTH CAROLINA
14:00 Steward, G. F.; Powell, B. S.; McManus, M. A.; Nigro, O. D.; Wood-Charlson, E. M.: PREDICTING THE ABUNDANCE OF PATHOGENIC VIBRIOS: A CASE FOR TIME-RESOLVED, MECHANISTIC MODELS
14:15 Dorfmeier, E. M.; White, S. J.; Roberts, S. B.; Friedman, C. S.: INFLUENCE OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON VIBRIO TUBIASHII GROWTH AND PATHOGENICITY TO PACIFIC OYSTER LARVAE.
14:30 Morris, P. J.; Kimes, N. E.; Johnson, W. R.; Vizcaino, M. I.; Williams, K.: VIBRIO CORALLIILYTICUS AND TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENT VIRULENCE
14:45 Griffith, J. F.: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MULTIPLE INDICATORS OF FECAL CONTAMINATION AND SOURCE SPECIFIC MARKERS AT MARINE BEACHES IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
15:00 Vega-Thurber, R. L.: VIRUSES OF REEF-BUILDING SCLERACTINIAN CORALS
15:15 Joyner, J. L.; Okereke, J.; Lipp, E. K.: KNOWN SERRATIA MARCESCENS VIRULENCE GENES AS INSIGHTS INTO THE UNKNOWN MECHANISMS OF WHITE POX DISEASE
16:00 Landis Susanne, H.; Thorsten Reusch, B. H.; Roth Olivia, .: WHO WILL WIN THE HOT WATER RACE? HOST – PARASITE INTERACTIONS AND COEVOLUTION UNDER GLOBAL WARMING.
16:15 Shields, J. D.; Li, C.; Reece, K. S.; Wang, H.; Dolan, T. W.; Butler, M. J.: THE IMPACT OF A PARASITIC DINOFLAGELLATE, HEMATODINIUM SP., ON THE AMERICAN BLUE CRAB, CALLINECTES SAPIDUS.
ASLOMeeting Program
37
MO
nD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
16:30 Lyons, M. M.; Dobbs, F. C.; Ward, J. E.: MICROSCOPIC ISLANDS: THE ROLE OF ORGANIC AGGREGATES IN THE ECOLOGY OF BACTERIA IN RECREATIONAL WATERS
16:45 Wegner, K. M.; Wendling, C.; Volkenborn, N.: WHEN SYMBIOSIS TURNS BAD - OPPORTUNISTIC BACTERIAL PATHOGENS IN COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS
17:00 Hewson, I.; Barbosa, J. G.; Breitbart, M. A.; Brown, J. M.; Couch, C. S.; Dunlap, D.; Hairston, Jr., N. G.; Harvell, C. D.; Kearns, C. M.; LaBarre, B. A.; Mouchka, M. E.; Ng, T. F.: METAVIROMIC-ENABLED ECOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF AQUATIC INVERTEBRATE DISEASE
17:15 Hershberger, P. K.; Winton, J. R.: AN EMPIRICAL APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING THE ECOLOGY OF A VIRAL DISEASE AFFECTING PACIFIC HERRING
17:30 Rellstab, C.; Louhi, K. R.; Karvonen, A.; Jokela, J.: PARASITE INFECTIONS IN THE EYE LENSES OF FRESHWATER FISH – ANALYZING COMMUNITY STRUCTURE BY PYROSEQUENCING OF NATURALLY POOLED SAMPLES
17:45 Crosson, L. M.; VanBlaricom, G.; Roberts, S. B.; Friedman, C. S.: INFLUENCE OF RICKETTSIAL PATHOGENS ON THE ENDANGERED BLACK ABALONE HALIOTIS CRACHERODII: DIFFERENTIAL SUSCEPTIBILITY AND HOST RESPONSE
S67 Deep-sea corals and other communi-ties associated with hydrocarbon seeps and polymetallic sulfide deposits: life in the crosshairs of human impactChair(s): Erik Cordes, [email protected] Chuck Fisher, [email protected] Amanda Demopoulos, [email protected] Cheryl Morrison, [email protected]: 20908:00 Joye, S. B.; Crespo-Medina, M.; Hunter, K. S.; Vossmeyer,
A.; Beer, L.; Bowles, M. W.; Asper, V.; Diercks, A.; Teske, A. P.; Benitez-Nelson, C.; Brandes, J.; Montoya, J.; Passow, U.; Moore, W. S.; Subramaniam, A.; Wade, T.; Arnosti, C.; Ziervogel, K.; Burgess, E.; Highsmith, R.: THE MICROBIAL SLIME HIGHWAY: OIL TRANSPORT TO THE BENTHOS AND CONSEQUENCES ON MICROBIAL DYNAMICS IN DEEP GULF OF MEXICO ENVIRONMENTS.*
08:15 German, C. R.; Manganini, S. J.; Nelson, R. K.; Reddy, C. M.; Shank, T. M.; Cordes, E. E.; Fisher, C. R.: TIME SERIES FLUXES TO SEDIMENT TRAPS AT NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO DEEP-WATER CORAL AND COLD SEEP SITES, SEPTEMBER 2009-DECEMBER 2010.
08:30 Fisher, C. R.; Hsing, P. Y.; Podowski, E. L.; Becker, E. L.; Lessard-Pilon, S.; Cordes, E. E.; Enderlein, T.; Shank, T.; Brooks, J. M.: MONITORING OF DEEP CORAL AND SEEP COMMUNITIES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO
08:45 Morrison, C. L.: GENETIC CONNECTIVITY AMONG LOPHELIA PERTUSA REEFS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO WITH ESTIMATES OF SENSITIVITY TO DISTURBANCE
09:00 Quattrini, A. M.; Doughty, C.; Etnoyer, P.; Cordes, E.: COMMUNITY PHYLOGENETICS OF OCTOCORALS IN THE DEEP GULF OF MEXICO
09:15 Cho, W. W.; Shank, T. M.: ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL ON INVERTEBRATES ASSOCIATED WITH DEEP-WATER CORAL COMMUNITIES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO
09:30 Camilli, R.; Yoerger, D. R.; German, C. R.; Boetius, A.; Kinsey, J.; de Beer, D.: THE HAAKON MOSBY MUD VOLCANO, A CARBON DIOXIDE POINT SOURCE
09:45 Van Dover, C. L.; Godet, L.; Dunn, D.; Halpin, P.; Zelnio, K.: HYDROTHERMAL VENTS: UNDERSTANDING WHAT’S AT RISK AND TOOLS FOR EFFECTIVE MANAGEMENT
S73 Biochemicals in action in trophic interactions: their role in information transfer and nutritional qualityChair(s): Patrick Fink, [email protected] Alexander Wacker, [email protected]: 20108:00 Hay, M. E.: MARINE CHEMICAL ECOLOGY:
CHEMICAL SIGNALS AND CUES STRUCTURE MARINE POPULATIONS, COMMUNITIES, AND ECOSYSTEMS~
08:30 Fink, P.; Mölzner, J.: VOLATILE FORAGING KAIROMONES IN THE LITTORAL ZONE: GASTROPOD GRAZERS PERCEIVE RESOURCE QUANTITY AND QUALITY VIA ALGAL OXYLIPINS
08:45 Bronmark, C.; Lakowitz, T.: DO CHEMICAL CUES FROM FISH AFFECT GROWTH OF FRESHWATER MACROPHYTES?
09:00 Selander, E.; Jakobsen, H. H.; Lombard, F.; Kiørboe, T.: COPEPOD CUES INDUCE STEALTH MODE IN MARINE DINOFLAGELLATE
09:15 Kubanek, J.; Selander, E.; Cervin, G.; Pavia, H.: DINOFLAGELLATE TOXIN PRODUCTION IS INDUCED BY SPECIES-SPECIFIC COPEPOD CUES
09:30 Pavia, H.; Enge, S.; Nylund, G. M.; Svensson, J. R.; Cervin, G.; Toth, G. B.: NOVEL CHEMISTRY RELEASES AN INVASIVE SEAWEED FROM NATIVE ENEMIES
09:45 Paul, V. J.; Ritson-Williams, R.; Ross, C.: CHEMICALLY MEDIATED MACROALGAE-HERBIVORE INTERACTIONS ON CORAL REEFS: CONSEQUENCES FOR REEF COMMUNITIES
13:30 Wacker, A.; Martin-Creuzburg, D.; Sperfeld, E.: MULTIPLE RESOURCE LIMITATION OF DAPHNIA: THE LINK BETWEEN SUBSTITUTABLE AND ESSENTIAL RESOURCES
13:45 Von Elert, E.; Schwarzenberger, A.: PROTEASE INHIBITORS IN CYANOBACTERIA: IDENTIFYING THEIR TARGETS IN DAPHNIA
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
38
MO
nD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
14:00 Piepho, M.; Martin-Creuzburg, D.; Wacker, A.: SIMULTANEOUS EFFECTS OF LIGHT INTENSITY AND PHOSPHORUS SUPPLY ON THE STEROL CONTENT OF PHYTOPLANKTON
14:15 Martin-Creuzburg, D.; Wacker, A.: ESSENTIAL LIPIDS AND DAPHNIA GROWTH AT DIFFERENT TEMPERATURES
14:30 Schlotz, N.; Martin-Creuzburg, D.: BIOCHEMICAL FOOD QUALITY MODULATES THE OUTCOME OF PARASITIC INFECTIONS IN DAPHNIA
14:45 CHEN, M.; LIU, H.: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DIETARY ESSENTIAL FATTY ACIDS AND REPRODUCTION RATE OF CALANOID COPEPOD ACARTIA ERYTHRAEA
15:00 Acheampong, E.; St. John , M. A.: DOES CARBON OR NITROGEN LIMIT THE PRODUCTION OF MARINE ZOOPLANKTON?
15:15 Lukas, M.; Wacker, A.: STOICHIOMETRIC REGULATION OF D. MAGNA UNDER CHANGING FOOD QUANTITY AND QUALITY.
S78 Genetics of Aquatic Microbial PopulationsChair(s): Deana Erdner, [email protected] Lisa Campbell, [email protected]: 20213:30 Erdner, D. L.; Richlen, M. L.; Kulis, D.; McCauley, L.
A.; Anderson, D. M.: DIVERSITY AND DYNAMICS OF A BLOOM OF THE TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE
13:45 Richlen, M. L.; Erdner, D. L.; McCauley, L. A.; Libera, K.; Anderson, D. M.: EXTENSIVE GENETIC DIVERSITY AND RAPID POPULATION SUCCESSION DURING BLOOMS OF ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE (DINOPHYCEAE) IN AN ISOLATED SALT POND ON CAPE COD, MA, USA.
14:00 Campbell, L.; Henrichs, D. W.; Renshaw, M. A.; Gold, J. R.: GENETIC DIVERSITY AND POPULATION STRUCTURE OF KARENIA BREVIS BLOOMS IN THE GULF OF MEXICO SUGGEST A COMMON SOURCE POPULATION
14:15 Rynearson, T. A.; Piecuch, C.: HOW MUCH DOES MIXING IN THE SURFACE OCEAN INFLUENCE GENETIC CONNECTIVITY IN THE PLANKTON? COMBINING LAGRANGIAN SURFACE DRIFTERS WITH MICROSATELLITE MARKERS.
14:30 Whittaker, K. A.; Rignanese, D. R.; Olson, R. J.; Rynearson, T. A.: GLOBAL-SCALE GENETIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL VARIATION IN THE DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA ROTULA
14:45 McManus, G. B.; Katz, L. A.; Tamura, M.; Grant, J.: DIVERSITY OF PLANKTONIC CILIATES IN COASTAL WATERS: COMPARISON OF CLONE LIBRARY AND PYROSEQUENCING APPROACHES
15:00 Toseland, A. E.; Moxon, S.; Parker, M.; Marchetti, A.; Armbrust, E. V.; Uhlig, C.; Valentin, K.; Moulton, V.; Mock, T.: EUKARYOTIC METATRANSCRIPTOMICS:
FROM WHOLE ENVIRONMENT TO SPECIES-SPECIFIC ANALYSIS
15:15 Tripp, H. J.; Hewson, I.; Boyarsky, S.; Stuart, J.; Zehr, J.: GLOBAL OCEAN SURVEY OF MARINE METATRANSCRIPTOMES REVEALS DOMINANCE OF REDUCED NITROGEN COMPOUNDS IN BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING OF NITROGEN
16:00 Palenik, B.; Brahamsha, B.; Daniels, E. F.: WHEN IS A UNICELLULAR CYANOBACTERIUM NOT UNICELLULAR?
16:15 Liu, H.; Jing, H.; Wong, T.: THE DIVERSITY AND IMPORTANCE OF PC-CONTAINING SYNECHOCOCCUS IN SUBTROPICAL ESTUARINE WATERS
16:30 Dill, B. D.; Li, Z.; Leuze, M. R.; Shah, M.; Hauser, L. J.; VerBerkmoes, N. C.; Wilhelm, S. W.: CHARACTERIZING MICROCYSTIS BLOOM METAPROTEOME SIGNATURES VERSUS DIFFERENTIAL NITROGEN CULTURES TO DISCOVER PHYSIOLOGICAL INDUCTION CUES
16:45 Paerl, R. W.; Tozzi, S.; Kolber, Z.; Zehr, J. P.: CHANGES IN NARB GENE EXPRESSION RELATIVE TO NITRATE ASSIMILATION, LIGHT AND NUTRIENTS IN EXPERIMENTS WITH COASTAL SYNECHOCOCCUS ISOLATE CC9311.
17:00 Avrani, S.; Wurtzel, O.; Sharon, I.; Sorek, R.; Lindell, D.: GENOMIC ISLAND VARIABILITY FACILITATES COEXISTENCE BETWEEN MARINE VIRUSES AND THEIR PROCHLOROCOCCUS HOSTS
17:15 Wommack, K. E.; Sakowski, E.; Polson, S. W.; Hyatt, M.; Kress, W.; Schmidt, H.; Wray, J.; Marine, R.; Williamson, S. J.: VIRAL METAGENOMICS AS AN EDUCATIONAL PLATFORM: STUDYING VIRIOPLANKTON DIVERSITY THROUGH GENES ENCODING CHAPERONINS AND NUCLEOTIDE METABOLISM PROTEINS
17:30 Fortunato, C. S.; Herfort, L.; Zuber, P.; Baptista, A. M.; Crump, B. C.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF BACTERIOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES ACROSS A RIVER TO OCEAN GRADIENT ASSESSED WITH TAG PYROSEQUENCING
17:45 Pérez-Rodríguez, I. M.; Ricci, J.; Bini, E.; Starovoytov, V.; Vetriani, C.: AI-2 MEDIATED QUORUM SENSING IN ANAEROBIC CHEMOSYNTHETIC EPSILONPROTEOBACTERIA FROM DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENTS
S92 Exploring the foundations of interactions among the major biogeochemical cycles: thermodynamics, kinetics and stoichiometryChair(s): Philip G. Taylor, [email protected] Brian Lutz, [email protected]: 20116:00 Falkowski, P. G.: COUPLINGS AND FEEDBACKS IN
BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES*16:15 Hillebrand, H.; Lehmpfuhl, V.; Gamfeldt, L.:
STOICHIOMETRY CONTROLS THE BIODIVERSITY- PRODUCTIVITY RELATIONSHIP IN PELAGIC METACOMMUNITIES
ASLOMeeting Program
39
MO
nD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
16:30 Godwin, C. M.; Cotner, J. B.: PHOSPHORUS STOICHIOMETRY OF BACTERIAL ASSEMBLAGES: DO SPECIES SHIFTS INFLUENCE HOMEOSTASIS?
16:45 Knoll, L. B.; Vanni, M. J.; Renwick, W. H.; Kollie, S.: LOCAL BURIAL OF CARBON, NITROGEN, AND PHOSPHORUS IN SMALL ARTIFICIAL IMPOUNDMENTS
17:00 Harris, L. A.: APPLYING THE METABOLIC THEORY OF ECOLOGY TO ESTUARINE ANAEROBIC MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES
17:15 Sundareshwar, P. V.; Richardson, C. J.; Neubauer, S. C.; Abessa, M.; Gautam, S.; Morris, J. T.; Koepfler, E. T.: DIFFERENTIAL NUTRIENT LIMITATION: DEVELOPING A THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK FOR AN EMERGING ECOLOGICAL PARADIGM
17:30 Chen, X.; Baines, S. B.; Fisher, N. S.: A VICIOUS CYCLE: A NON-HOMEOSTATIC REGULATION OF IRON BY A MARINE COPEPOD
17:45 Hessen, D. O.; Andersen, T.; Larsen, S.: BOREAL CATCHMENT EXPORT OF CARBON AND NUTRIENTS UNDER A CHANGING CLIMATE; A STOICHIOMETRIC PERSPECTIVE*
S93 Urban Watersheds and Aquatic Ecosystems: State of the Science and Future DirectionsChair(s): Robert W. Sterner, [email protected] Lawrence A. Baker, [email protected]: 103A13:30 Sudduth, E. B.; Hassett, B. A.; Bernhardt, E. S.: EFFECTS
OF URBANIZATION ON STREAM ECOSYSTEM METABOLISM
13:45 O’Reilly, C. M.; Cunningham, M. A.; Menking, K. I.; Gillikin, D. P.; Belli, S. L.: THE SUBURBAN STREAM SYNDROME: THE EFFECTS OF LOW-DENSITY URBAN EXPANSION ON STREAM WATER CHEMISTRY
14:00 O’Mullan, G. D.; Mellendorf, M.; Juhl, A.; Young, S.: CHARACTERIZATION OF PARTICLE-ASSOCIATED MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN URBAN ESTUARIES OF NEW YORK
14:15 Young, S. M.; O’Mullan, G. D.; Juhl, A.: ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS ON THE DISTRIBUTION AND DIVERSITY OF ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANT MICROBES IN THE HUDSON RIVER ESTUARY
14:30 Sharp, J. H.: UNDERSTANDING URBAN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS: IMPORTANCE OF AGENCY MONITORING DATA
14:45 McCabe, D. J.; Canepa, A.; Myers, I.; Letovsky, E.: DIFFERENCES BETWEEN KICK SAMPLING TECHNIQUES AND SHORT-TERM HESTER-DENDY SAMPLING FOR STREAM MACROINVERTEBRATES
15:00 Henderson, N. D.; Hannigan, R. E.; Christian, A. D.: SEASONAL LAND-USE EFFECTS ON PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PARAMETERS OF THE NEPONSET RIVER WATERSHED
15:15 Groleau, A.; Bensoussan, N.; Ferec, F.; Escoffier, N.; Paolini, G.; Calzas, M.; Drezen, C.; Tassin, B.; Humbert, J. F.; Jezequel, D.: CARBON DYNAMIC IN CONTINENTAL AQUATIC SYSTEMS USING HIGH RESOLUTION BIOGEOCHEMISTRY.
16:00 Sterner, R. W.; Haustein, M. D.; Krogman, A. M.: LANDSCAPE-LEVEL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CONTROLS ON URBAN LAKES AND PONDS: DOC AND PHOSPHORUS
16:15 Lamond, M. E.; Xenopoulos, M. A.; Buttle, J. M.; Pick, F. R.; Mérette, M. R.: ASSESSING THE TRANSPORTATION OF NUTRIENTS THROUGH URBAN STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PONDS DURING BASEFLOW CONDITIONS AND HIGH FLOW EVENTS
16:30 McDonald, A. J.; Frost, P. C.: THE NUTRIENT STOICHIOMETRY OF SEDIMENTS AND THEIR RETENTION IN URBAN STORMWATER PONDS
16:45 Williams, C. J.; Frost, P. C.; Xenopoulos, M. A.: ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATORS ON PICO- AND NANOPLANKTON ABUNDANCE AND EXTRACELLULAR ENZYME ACTIVITY IN URBAN STORMWATER PONDS
17:00 Childers, D. L.; Turnbull, L.; Earl, S.; Grimm, N. B.: I. MULTI-SCALAR EFFECTS OF URBAN STORMWATER INFRASTRUCTURE IN A SEMI-ARID URBAN CATCHMENT: HYDROLOGIC RESPONSES
17:15 Turnbull, L.; Childers, D. L.; Grimm, N. B.; Earl, S.; Hale, R.; Elrod, A. K.; Weller, N.: II. MULTI-SCALAR EFFECTS OF URBAN STORMWATER INFRASTRUCTURE IN A SEMI-ARID URBAN CATCHMENT: NUTRIENT RETENTION AND TRANSPORT
17:30 Funkey, C. P.; Latour, R. J.; Bronk, D. A.: ABIOTIC RELEASE OF LABILE NITROGEN FROM EFFLUENT ORGANIC NITROGEN
17:45 Baker, L. A.; Hobbie, S.; Nidzgorski, D.; fissore, C.; King, J.: MOVEMENT OF P THROUGH URBAN ECOSYSTEMS
GS09 Community EcologyChair(s): Alan Covich, [email protected] Russell Schmitt, [email protected] Charlotte Fuller, [email protected] Concepcion Rodriguez, [email protected]: 10408:00 McMahon, G.; Garcia, A. M.; Diaz, P. L.; Coles,
J.: UNDERSTANDING THE EFFECTS OF URBANIZATION IN 9 METROPOLITAN AREAS OF THE CONTIGUOUS UNITED STATES: ISSUES IN TRANSFERABILITY TO TROPICAL REGIONS
08:15 Prater, C.; Evans-White, M. A.; Norman, E. J.: IMPACTS OF EUTROPHICATION OF SHREDDING INSECT COMMUNITIES IN OZARK STREAMS
08:30 Covich, A. P.; Crowl, T. A.: THE ROLES OF DOMINANT DECAPODS IN TROPICAL HEADWATER STREAMS THAT SUSTAIN FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEM SERVICES IN THE LUQUILLO MOUNTAINS, PUERTO RICO
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
40
MO
nD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
08:45 Saluta, G. G.; Lipcius, R. N.: ASSESSING CHANGES IN SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF THE RECOVERING BLUE CRAB POPULATION IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY
09:00 Zayas-Santiago, C. C.; Armstrong, A.: LANDSCAPE STRUCTURE AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SEA URCHIN LYTECHINUS VARIEGATUS
09:15 Donadi, S.; van der Heide , T.; van der Zee , E.; Eklöf, J.; van de Koppel , J.; Eriksson , B. K.: SCALE-DEPENDENT EFFECTS OF AN ECOSYSTEM ENGINEER DETERMINE THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF BIVALVES IN AN INTERTIDAL ECOSYSTEM
09:30 de Boer, M. K.; Moor, H.; Matthiessen, B.; Eriksson, B. K.: CONSEQUENCES OF SPECIES LOSS FOR THE ABILITY OF COMMUNITIES TO RECOVER FROM A SIMULATED HEAT WAVE
09:45 Schmitt, R. J.; Holbrook, S. J.; Brooks, A. J.; Johnson, M. K.: THE ESSENTIAL ROLE OF FARMERFISH IN THE PERSISTENCE AND RECOVERY OF PACIFIC STAGHORN CORAL THICKETS
13:30 Etnoyer, P. J.; Shirley, T. C.; Stanley, K. A.: EXPLORING DEEP CORAL ECOLOGY WITH A TOURIST SUBMERSIBLE IN ROATAN, HONDURAS
13:45 Shirley, T. C.; Etnoyer, P. J.; Lavelle, K. A.: EPIFAUNA OF DEEP-WATER CORALS IN ROATAN, HONDURAS
14:00 Reuscher, M. G.; Shirley, T. C.: BIODIVERSITY OF FAUNAL ASSEMBLAGES IN PROXIMITY TO DEEP-WATER CORALS OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
14:15 Srsen, P.; Smith, C. R.; Altamira, I.: BENTHIC MACROFAUNAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND DIVERSITY ALONG A LATITUDINAL SEA ICE GRADIENT IN WEST ANTARCTIC PENINSULA AND ITS SENSIBILITY TO CLIMATE WARMING
14:30 Sánchez Riascos, N. E.; De Paiva, P. C.; Echeverría, C. A.: BENTHIC ORGANISM TO USE AS BIOTIC INDEX IN THE ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESMENT OF GUANABARA BAY, RIO DE JANEIRO – BRAZIL.
14:45 Barros, F.; Costa, Y.; Carvalho, L. R.; Hatje, V.; Magalhães, W. F.: UNFOLDING PATTERNS IN EXTREMELY VARIABLE ENVIRONMENTS: THE CASE OF MACROFAUNAL ASSEMBLAGES IN TROPICAL ESTUARINE SYSTEMS
15:00 Rooker, K.; Harris, L. A.: THE MODELING AND EVALUATION OF WILD RICE ZIZANIA AQUATICA PARTICLE CAPTURE AT JUG BAY, MARYLAND
15:15 Rodriguez, C.: THE POPULATION OF THE COMMON LAND CRAB CARDISOMA GUANHUMI IN HACIENDA LA ESPERANZA, MANATI PUERTO RICO
GS10 Environmental Impacts of the BP Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico Oil SpillChair(s): Tracy Villareal, [email protected]: 10416:00 Henry, K. M.; Fulweiler, R. W.; Morgan, E. J.; Twilley, R.
R.: THE IMPACT OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL ON BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF COASTAL LOUISIANA SEDIMENTS
16:15 Newell, S. E.; Ward, B. B.; McCarthy, M. J.; Gardner, W. S.: SEDIMENT DENITRIFIER AND NITRIFIER BACTERIAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN THE GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIC ZONE
16:30 Gardner, W. S.; Lin, X.; McCarthy, M. J.; Souza, A.; Liu, J.; Liu, Z.: OXYGEN PROFILES AND AMMONIUM DYNAMICS IN MAY AND AUGUST 2010 AT TWO GULF OF MEXICO SITES CONTAMINATED BY THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL OF APRIL 2010
16:45 Koch, C. R.; Needoba, J.; Slasor, L.; Barnard, A.; Pegau, S.; Coble, P.: IN-SITU TRACKING OF OIL FROM THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL USING SPECTRAL FLUORESCENCE
17:00 Liu, Z.; Liu, J.; Gardner , W. S.; Ostrom, N. E.: THE IMPACT OF DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL ON ORGANIC COMPOSITION OF THE SEA SURFACE IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO
17:15 Gallegos, S. C.; Teng, J.; Iturriaga, R.; Arnone, R. A.: CHLOROPHYLL INCREASES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO DURING THE DEEP WATER HORIZON OIL SPILL
17:30 Montoya, J. P.; Subramaniam, A.; Asper, V.; Diercks, A.; Passow, U.; Crespo-Medina, M.; Joye, S. B.; Bracco, A.; Villareal, T. A.: SUBSURFACE TURBID LAYERS IN THE GULF OF MEXICO: GHOSTS OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL?
17:45 Crespo-Medina, M.; Hunter, K. S.; Slaughter, J.; Vossmeyer, A.; Montoya, J. P.; Diercks, A.; Asper, V.; Subramaniam, A.; Villareal, T. A.; Joye, S. B.: PATTERNS OF WATER COLUMN AEROBIC METHANE OXIDATION RATES IN RESPONSE TO THE DEEPWATER HORIZON HYDROCARBON
ASLOMeeting Program
41
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
Tuesday, 15 February 2011 OralsS12 In situ measurement of concentration, lability and bioavailability of chemical species in water, soils and sediments using diffusional techniques: DGT and DETChair(s): Aria Amirbahman, [email protected] Laurie S. Balistrieri, [email protected] Karen A. Merritt, [email protected]: 208B13:30 Zhang, H.; Sochaczewski, L.; Stockdale, A.; Davison,
W.*: UNDERSTANDING HIGHLY LOCALIZED MOBILIZATION OF METALS AND SULFIDE IN SEDIMENTS
13:45 Mortimer, R. J.; Palmer-Felgate, E. J.; Jarvie, H. P.; Clerici, S. J.; Krom, M. D.: UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE OF BED SEDIMENTS IN PHOSPHOROUS AND NITROGEN CYCLING IN RIVERS AND FRESHWATER WETLANDS: NEW INSIGHTS FROM DET.
14:00 Gregusova, M.; Docekal, B.: DETERMINATION OF URANIUM IN SEDIMENTS BY MODIFIED DIFFUSIVE GRADIENT IN THIN FILMS TECHNIQUE
14:15 Price, H. L.; Jolley , D. F.; Zhang , H.: A HIGH RESOLUTION STUDY OF ARSENIC, SELENIUM AND PHOSPHATE FLUXES FROM SPIKED MARINE SEDIMENT BY SIMULTANEOUS DEPLOYMENT OF DGT AND DET PROBES.
14:30 GAO, Y.; Bowie, A.; Buesseler, K.; Zhang, H.; Baeyens, W.: INSIGHTS INTO METAL BIOAVAILABILITY AND MOBILISATION IN MARINE ENVIRONMENTS
14:45 Gueguen, C.; Clarisse, O.; Perroud, A.: ASSESSING THE CONCENTRATION, SPECIATION AND BIOAVAILABILITY OF DISSOLVED METALS IN RIVER WATERS AFFECTED BY ALBERTA’S OIL SAND
15:00 JEZEQUEL, D.; THOMAZO, F.: A NEW DGT FOR BORON ENVIONMENTAL STUDIES IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS
15:15 Levy, J. L.; Zhang, H.; Davison, W.: USING DGT TO PROVIDE KINETIC SIGNATURES FOR METAL COMPLEXES: IN SITU CASE STUDIES
S20 Multi-tracer approaches to understanding plankton community composition controls on POC export flux from the surface oceanChair(s): Gillian Stewart, [email protected] S. Bradley Moran, [email protected] Michael Lomas, [email protected]: 103B13:30 MIQUEL, J. C.; FOWLER, S. W.~: TRACERS OF
PARTICLE AND PLANKTON DYNAMICS IN THE MEDITERRANEAN: AN OVERVIEW OF STUDIES AROUND THE DYFAMED OBSERVATORY SITE
14:00 Villa, M.; Le Moigne, F. A.; Sanders, R. J.; Garcia-Tenorio, R.; Masque, P.: JOINT MEASUREMENTS OF 234TH -
210PO DERIVED POC AND BIOMINERAL EXPORT AT THE PORCUPINE ABYSSAL PLAIN
14:15 Neuer, S.; Hansen, A. M.; Freibott, A.; Lomas, M. W.: PROTIST AND CYANOBACTERIAL COMMUNITY RESPONSE TO THE INTENSE WINTER STORMS IN THE SARGASSO SEA IN 2010
14:30 Moran, S. B.; Lomas, M. W.: AGGREGATION AND EXPORT OF CYANOBACTERIA AND NANO-EUKARYOTES FROM THE SARGASSO SEA EUPHOTIC ZONE
14:45 Riley, J. S.; Sanders, R.; Leakey, R.; Achterberg, E. P.; Tyrrell, T.: COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND FAECAL PELLET EXPORT UNDERNEATH ARCTIC SEA ICE
15:00 Amacher, J. A.; Neuer, S.; Baysinger, C. W.; Lomas, M. W.: MOLECULAR TIME-SERIES OF PHYTOPLANKTON EXPORT FROM THE UPPER WATER COLUMN AT THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY (BATS)
15:15 Fawcett, S. E.; Lomas, M. W.; Ward, B. B.; Casey, J. R.; Sigman, D. M.: SMALL EUKARYOTIC PHYTOPLANKTON DRIVE THE SARGASSO SEA’S BIOLOGICAL PUMP
S26 Improved Broader Impacts = Enhanced Scientific ImpactsChair(s): Liesl Hotaling, [email protected] Linda Duguay, [email protected]: 208A08:00 Wyatt, L. H.: ENHANCING BROADER IMPACTS
WITH NSF FUNDING08:15 Mydlarz, L. D.: THE USE OF SERVICE-LEARNING
PEDAGOGY TO FACILITATE K-12 OUTREACH AND TO FOSTER SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY IN UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
08:30 McCabe, D. J.; Hayes-Pontius , E. M.: FACILITATION OF BENTHIC MACROINVERTEBRATE IDENTIFICATION USING SITE-SPECIFIC WEB SITES: AN AID TO CITIZEN SCIENCE
08:45 Hotaling, L. A.; Stolkin, R. A.; Kirkey, W.; Bonner, J. S.; Lowes, S.; Lin, P.; Ojo, T.: SENSE IT: STUDENT ENABLED NETWORK OF SENSORS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT USING INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY
09:00 Chen, R. F.: BROADER IMPACTS OF CARBON CYCLE RESEARCH: TEACHING LARGE UNDERGRADUATE COURSES AND PROVIDING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR TEACHERS
09:15 Fauville, G.; Dupont, S.; Epel, D.; Hodin, J.; Lantz-Andersson, A.; Miller, P.; Petersson, E.; Säljö, R.; Thorndyke, M.: INQUIRY-TO-INSIGHT: DIGITAL EDUCATION PROJECT CONVEYING SCIENTIFIC OCEAN ACIDIFICATION DATA TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
09:30 Carlos Javier Sanchez, C. J.; Katherine Binford Turner , K. B.; Robert Morris , R. M.: STUDENT STORIES: DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MULTIMEDIA CONTENT
09:45 Turner, K. B.; Sanchez, C. J.; Morris, R. M.: HEAD SHRINKERS: A SHORT FILM TO TARGET A BROAD AUDIENCE
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
42
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
13:30 Mullins, R. L.; DiMarco, S. F.: LAND-LOCKED? NO PROBLEM! EFFECTIVE EXAMPLES OF BRINGING OCEANS INTO THE LOCAL COMMUNITY
13:45 Aguilar, C.; Cuhel, R. L.: SCIENTIST-TEACHERS AND TEACHER-SCIENTISTS: TRANSMITTING THE THRILL OF DISCOVERY THROUGH HANDS-ON HYPOTHESIS-TESTING EXPERIENTIAL RESEARCH: A COSEE SUPPLEMENT
14:00 Cotner, S. H.; Cotner, J. B.: STUDENT PARTICIPATION IN RESEARCH EXPERIENCES FOR UNDERGRADUATES
14:15 Manno, C.; Pecchiar, I.: ITALIAN HIGH SCHOOL FOLLOWING IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE ARCTIC
14:30 Curran, M. C.; Aultman, T. V.; Hoover, K. M.; Gerido, L.; Sukkestad, K. E.: DEVELOPING K-12 ACTIVITIES AS PART OF BROADER IMPACTS: HOW TO USE UNIVERSITY RESEARCH TO ADDRESS OCEAN LITERACY
14:45 Keener, P.: NOAA AND INDONESIAN EXPLORERS: ENHANCING PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF OCEAN EXPLORATION TOGETHER ACROSS INTERNATIONAL BORDERS
15:00 Murray, L.; Gibson, D.; Carruthers, T.; Gurgisz, C.; Woerner, J.: DEVELOPING ONLINE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES THROUGH SCIENCE-EDUCATOR PARTNERSHIPS
15:15 Klug, J. L.: THE LAKE LILLINONAH PARTNERSHIP: A CASE STUDY OF A COLLABORATION BETWEEN A LIMNOLOGIST AND A LOCAL NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION
S36 Interactive and repeat exposure effects of environmental perturbations upon corals and coral reef processesChair(s): David J Suggett, [email protected] Andrea G Grottoli, [email protected] Mark E Warner, [email protected]: 20908:00 Medina, M.~: GENOMIC APPROACHES TO
STUDY BIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL PERTURBATIONS IN CARIBBEAN REEFS
08:30 Wiedenmann, J.; Gittins, J.; D’Angelo, C.: GENOMIC BASIS DEFINING THE CUMULATIVE RESPONSE OF FLUORESCENT PROTEINS TO MULTIPLE STRESS FACTORS
08:45 Kneeland, J. M.; Cervino, J. M.; Van Mooy, B.; Furby, K.; Ossolinski, J. E.; Hughen, K. A.: LIPID BIOMARKERS AND MECHANISMS OF CELLULAR STRESS IN THERMAL AND DISEASE-STRESSED CORALS AND ZOOXANTHELLAE
09:00 Levas, S. J.; Schoepf, V.; Warner, M. E.; Grottoli, A. G.: ENERGY RESERVES AND CALCIFICATION OF BLEACHED MONTASTRAEA FAVEOLATA, PORITES ASTREOIDES, AND PORITES DIVARICATA.
09:15 Schoepf, V.; Levas, S. J.; Warner, M. E.; Grottoli, A. G.: THE EFFECTS OF REPEAT BLEACHING ON ENERGY RESERVES OF THREE CARIBBEAN CORAL SPECIES
09:30 Grottoli, A. G.; Warner, M. E.; Levas, S. J.; Aschaffenberg, M. D.; Schoepf, V.; McGinley, M.: THE EFFECT OF REPEAT BLEACHING ON CORAL SPECIES - ALGAL SYMBIONT TYPE COMBINATIONS AND RESILIENCE
09:45 McGinley, M. P.; Aschaffenburg, M. D.; Grottoli, A. G.; Levas, S. J.; Schoepf, V.; Warner, M. E.: TEMPORAL DYNAMICS OF SYMBIODINIUM POPULATIONS IN CARIBBEAN CORALS FOLLOWING A REPETITIVE BLEACHING EXPERIMENT
13:30 Mydlarz, L. D.: TEMPERATURE STRESS AND PATHOGEN PRESSURE SYNERGISTICALLY AFFECT CORAL AND ZOOXANTHELLAE HEALTH
13:45 Bernstein, W. N.; Murty, S.; Ossolinski, J.; Kneeland, J.; Davis, R.; Hughen, K. A.: A 240-YEAR RECORD OF THE PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF A RED SEA CORAL TO SEASONAL TEMPERATURE EXTREMES
14:00 Aschaffenburg, M. D.; Smith, R.; McGinley, M.; Lajuenesse, T. C.; Warner, M. E.: PHOTOBIOLOGY AND GROWTH OF POCILLOPORID CORALS IN THE GULF OF CALIFORNIA: REASONS FOR THE PERSISTENCE OF THERMALLY SENSITIVE SYMBIODINIUM
14:15 Adam, T. C.; Bernardi, G.; Brooks, A. J.; Carpenter, R. C.; Edmunds, P. J.; Holbrook, S. J.; Schmitt, R. J.: DISTURBANCE AND RECOVERY OF CORAL REEFS IN MOOREA, FRENCH POLYNESIA
14:30 Suggett, D. J.; Campbell, S. J.; Wilson, J.; Mangubhai, S.; Smith, D. J.: INTRINSIC ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY DETERMINES CORALS’ SUSCEPTIBILITY TO STRESS ACROSS THE INDONESIA ARCHIPELAGO
14:45 Puotinen, M. L.; Carrigan, A. D.: A GLOBAL TROPICAL CYCLONE DAMAGE HISTORY FOR THE WORLD’S CORAL REEFS: 1985-2008
15:00 Long, M. H.; Berg, P.; Rheuban, J. E.; Zieman, J. C.: WHOLE REEF SYSTEM METABOLISM MEASURED IN SITU BY EDDY CORRELATION
15:15 Beijbom, O.; Treibitz, T.; Neal, B. P.; Kriegman, D.; Belongie, S.; Edmunds, P. J.; Kline, D. I.; Moriarty, V.; Mitchell, B. G.: AUTOMATED CORAL REEF ANALYSIS USING COMPUTER VISION
S37 Evolutionary rules in the brave new ocean – Climate Change and Life History StrategiesChair(s): Sam Dupont, [email protected] Mike Thorndyke, [email protected] Frank Melzner, [email protected]: 20108:00 Gooding, R. A.; Harley, C. D.; Ingram, T. H.: MULTIPLE
CLIMATE VARIABLES INDIRECTLY AFFECT MUSSEL ABUNDANCE AND SIZE VIA INCREASED GROWTH AND FEEDING OF A KEYSTONE ECHINODERM
08:30 Sunday, J. M.; Crim, R.; Harley, C. D.; Hart, M. W.: ADAPTATION POTENTIAL TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION: DIFFERENCES IN GENETIC VARIATION AND DEMOGRAPHY ARE KEY
ASLOMeeting Program
43
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
08:45 Thorndyke, M.; Stumpp, M.; Dorey, N.; Melzner, F.; Dupont, S.: WINNERS AND LOSERS IN LIFE-HISTORY STRATEGIES IN ECHINODERMS
09:00 Pimentel, M.; Repolho, T.; Narciso, L.; Rosa, R.: PHENOTYPIC THERMAL ACCLIMATIZATION AND SEA URCHIN REPRODUCTION IN AN OCEAN WARMING CONTEXT
09:15 Munday, P. L.; Donelson, J. M.; McCormick, M. I.; Gardiner, N.; Nilsson, G.: PROSPECTS FOR ADAPTATION OF REEF FISHES TO RAPID CLIMATE CHANGE
09:30 Brown, E. E.; Baumann, H.; Conover, D. O.: TESTING FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE IN AN OCEANIC SPECIES, THE CALIFORNIA GRUNION (LEURESTHES TENUIS)
09:45 Tanner, C. A.; Levin, L. A.: PRESENT-DAY ENVIRONMENTAL PH WINDOWS EXPERIENCED BY MARINE LARVAE
13:30 Kroeker, K. J.; Kordas, R. L.; Crim, R. N.; Singh, G. G.: QUANTIFYING THE VARIATION IN BIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
14:00 Talmage, S. C.; Gobler, C. J.: EFFECTS OF PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE CO2 CONCENTRATIONS ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND SURVIVAL OF M. MERCENARIA, A. IRRADIANS, AND C.VIRGINICA LARVAE
14:15 Bechmann, R. K.; Arnberg, M.; Tandberg, A. H.; Nilsen, M.; Taban, I. C.; Westerlund, S.: COMBINED EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND INCREASED OCEAN TEMPERATURE ON THE NORTHERN SHRIMP, PANDALUS BOREALIS
14:30 Suarez-Bosche, N. E.; Lebrato, M.; Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D.: NATURAL ADAPTATION TO A CHANGING OCEAN: A CASE STUDY OF SEA URCHIN LARVAE
14:45 Byrne, M.: IMPACT OF OCEAN WARMING AND OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON MARINE INVERTEBRATE LIFE HISTORY STAGES: VULNERABILITIES AND POTENTIAL FOR PERSISTENCE IN A CHANGING OCEAN
15:00 Dupont, S. T.; Stumpp, M.; Dorey, N.; Melzner, F.; Thorndyke, M. S.: THE COST OF CLIMATE CHANGE – ENERGY BUDGET IN ECHINODERM LARVAE
15:15 Amundsen, T.; Dupont, S.; Jutfelt, F.; Forsgren, E.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION INCREASES ACTIVITY IN FISH LARVAE
S38 Eutrophication across aquatic systems: causes, consequences, and controlsChair(s): Alan Wilson, [email protected] Joseph Montoya, [email protected]: Ballroom A08:00 Perga, M. E.; Jacob, J.; Jenny, J. P.; Pignol, C.; Reyss, J. L.;
Arnaud, F.: CHANGES IN THE ORIGINS OF CARBON SUSTAINING THE PELAGIC FOOD CHAIN DURING A CENTURY OF HUMAN PERTURBATIONS ON TWO DEEP SUB-ALPINE LAKES.
08:15 Norman, E. J.; Prater, C.; Evans-White, M. A.: EFFECTS OF NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT ON DETRITAL QUALITY AND QUANTITY IN OZARK STREAMS
08:30 Phillips, V. J.; Ziegler, J.; Leavitt, P. R.: TRANSPORT AND DEGREDATION OF UREA THROUGH A LOTIC SYSTEM IN THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS: IMPLICATIONS FOR DOWNSTREAM WATER QUALITY
08:45 Turner, A. M.; Chislock, M. F.: ELEVATED PH ASSOCIATED WITH EUTROPHICATION DISRUPTS CHEMOSENSORY PERCEPTION OF PREDATORS BY FRESHWATER SNAILS
09:00 Wilkerson, F. P.; Dugdale, R. C.; Parker, A. E.; Marchi, A.; Blaser, S.: ANTHROPOGENIC NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT IN SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY/DELTA: WATER QUALITY IMPACTS ON PELAGIC FOOD WEBS AND PRODUCTIVITY
09:15 Bigham, D. L.: DO FLORIDA LAKES SHOW DECADAL-SCALE TRENDS IN WATER QUALITY?
09:30 Greene, S.; McElarney, Y.; Taylor, D.; Foy, R. H.: AN EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF PHOSPHORUS MITIGATION USING LOAD APPORTIONMENT IN THE LOUGH SHEELIN CATCHMENT, IRELAND.
09:45 Smith, V. H.; Boyer, J. N.; Briceno, H. O.: THE VOLLENWEIDER EUTROPHICATION MODEL SUCCESSFULLY PREDICTS WATER QUALITY IN FOUR PHOSPHORUS-LIMITED FLORIDA ESTUARIES
S41 Ecological Forecasting: Progress, Challenges and ProspectsChair(s): Raleigh R. Hood, [email protected] Christopher W. Brown, [email protected] David Green, [email protected]: 103B08:00 Baumann, H.; Conover, D. O.: ADAPTATION TO
CLIMATE CHANGE: CONTRASTING PATTERNS OF THERMAL-REACTION-NORM EVOLUTION IN PACIFIC VS. ATLANTIC SILVERSIDES
08:15 Kearney, K. A.; Stock, C. A.; Sarmiento, J. L.: INVESTIGATING DECADAL VARIABILITY IN THE EASTERN SUBARCTIC PACIFIC USING AN END-TO-END ECOSYSTEM MODEL
08:30 Stock, C. A.; Alexander, M. A.; Bond, N. A.; Brander, K. M.; Cheung, W. L.; Curchitser, E. N.; Delworth, T. L.; Dunne, J. P.; Griffies, S. M.; Haltuch, M. A.; Hare, J. A.; Hollowed, A. B.; Lehodey, P.; Levin, S. A.; Link, J. S.; Rose, K. A.; Rykaczewski, R. R.; Sarmiento, J. L.; Stouffer, R. J.; Schwing, F. B.; Vecchi, G. A.; Werner, F. E.: ON THE USE OF IPCC-CLASS MODELS TO ASSESS THE IMPACT OF CLIMATE ON LIVING MARINE RESOURCES
08:45 Hood, R. R.; Brown, C. W.; Wiggert, J. D.; Long, W.; Xu, J.; Wood, R.; Jacobs, J.; Prasad, M. B.; Lanerolle, L. W.: CBEPS: THE CHESAPEAKE BAY ECOLOGICAL PREDICTION SYSTEM
09:00 Jacobs, J. M.; Brown, C.; Colwell, R.; Green, D.; Hood, R.; Long, W.; Constantin de Magny, G.; Krishna Prasad Mathukumalli, B.; Murtugudde, R.; Rhodes, M.; Wood, M.: THE CHESAPEAKE BAY VIBRIO SPP. FORECAST SYSTEM
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
44
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
09:15 deRada, S.; Ladner, S.; Casey, B.; Arnone, R. A.; Jolliff, J. K.: USING NUMERICAL OCEAN MODELS TO TEST AND VALIDATE EMPIRICAL FORECASTING SYSTEMS
09:30 Casey, B. J.; deRada, S.; Ko, D. S.; Ladner, S. D.; Arnone, R. A.: USING A BIO-OPTICAL MODEL AS A PROXY FOR SURFACE SATELLITE OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS IN AN EULERIAN ADVECTION FORECAST MODEL
09:45 Ladner, S. D.; deRada, S.; Casey, B.; Arnone, R. A.; Jolliff, J.: ASSESSING THE SPATIAL UNCERTAINTY OF AN EMPERICAL BIO-OPTICAL SYSTEM USING A 3-DIMENSIONAL NUMERICAL MODEL
S53 Urban Aquatic Systems in a Changing Climate Chair(s): Linda Duguay, [email protected] James Moffett, [email protected] Douglas Capone, [email protected]: Ballroom A13:30 Gardner, B.; Chen, R. F.; Huang, W.; Peri, F.: CHROMOPHORIC
DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) DYNAMICS IN URBAN ESTUARIES: IMPLICATIONS FOR SOURCES AND TRANSPORT PROCESSES RELATING TO MULTIPLE CONSTITUENTS
13:45 Rose, J. M.; Barrett, J.; Clemetson, A. O.; Deonarine, S.; Pagach, J.; Parker, M.; Tedesco, M. A.: THE DEVELOPMENT OF A CLIMATE CHANGE MONITORING PROGRAM FOR AN URBAN ESTUARY
14:00 Rice, E. J.; Stewart, G. M.: SHIFTS IN LONG ISLAND SOUND ZOOPLANKTON SIZE AND DIVERSITY REFLECT CLIMATE CHANGE
14:15 Hoskins, D. L.; Bounds, J.: THE CHATHAM COUNTY RESOURCE PROTECTION COMMISSION: A MODEL OF INNOVATION IN LAND CONSERVATION
14:30 Masura, J. E.; Schatz, M.; Greengrove, C.; Postel, J. R.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF ALEXANDRIUM CATENELLA CYSTS IN QUARTERMASTER HARBOR, PUGET SOUND WA
14:45 Solo-Gabriele, H. M.; Perez, A. I.: STATUS OF WASTEWATER AND POTABLE WATER SYSTEMS IN HAVANA, CUBA
15:00 Sullivan, M. S.; Kautza, A.; Tagwireyi, P.; Alberts, J. M.: RIVERINE FOOD WEB DYNAMICS ALONG AN URBAN TO RURAL GRADIENT
15:15 Vogt, R. J.; Leavitt, P. R.: LIMITED ECOYSTEM RESPONSE TO A WHOLE LAKE DEEPENING: AN EXPERIMENTAL TEST OF ALTERNATIVE STABLE STATE THEORY
S58 Emerging Patterns of nitrogen Fixation and its Controls in the OceansChair(s): Douglas G. Capone, [email protected] Joseph P. Montoya, [email protected]: 20213:30 Church, M. J.; Bottjer, D.; Karl, D. M.; Letelier, R. M.;
Viviani, D. A.; Zehr, J. P.*: NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE
13:45 Moore, J. K.*: CONTROLS ON NITROGEN FIXATION IN A GLOBAL OCEAN MODEL
14:00 Mohr, W.; Großkopf, T.; Wallace, D.; LaRoche, J.: METHODOLOGICAL UNDERESTIMATION OF OCEANIC NITROGEN FIXATION RATES
14:15 Gradoville, M. R.; Watkins-Brandt, K. S.; White, A. E.; Church, M. J.; Letelier, R. M.: COMPARISON OF N2 FIXATION RESPONSE BY TRICHODESMIUM TO PCO2 PERTURBATIONS USING GAS BUBBLING AND ACID/BASE APPROACHES.
14:30 Knapp, A. N.; Dekaezemacker, J.; Bonnet, S.; Sohm, J. A.; Capone, D. G.: SENSITIVITY OF TRICHODESMIUM AND CROCOSPHAERA SPP. GROWTH AND N2 FIXATION RATES TO MACRO NUTRIENT VARIATION IN BATCH CULTURES
14:45 Dorado, S.; Quigg, A.; Rooker, J. R.; Simms, J.: LINKING FISH PRODUCTION TO THE GLOBALLY IMPORTANT DIAZOTROPH, TRICHODESMIUM SP., IN THE GULF OF MEXICO
15:00 Mulholland, M. R.; Bernhardt, P. W.; Blanco, J.; Zehr, J. P.; Moisander, P. H.; Turk, K.; Hyde, K.; Mannino, A.: PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY AND DINITROGEN FIXATION ON THE NORTH ATLANTIC CONTINENTAL SHELF
15:15 Dekas, A. E.; Lee, R. W.; Bowles, M.; Joye, S.; Orphan, V. J.: BENTHIC NITROGEN FIXATION DETECTED AT DIVERSE DEEP-SEA SITES
S60 Biogeochemistry of resuspended sediments in aquatic and coastal marine environmentsChair(s): Ralph N. Mead, [email protected] Stephen A. Skrabal, [email protected] G. Brooks Avery, Jr., [email protected]: 20208:00 Statham, P. J.; Couceiro, F.; Fones, G. R.; Thompson, C.;
Parker, E. R.; Sivyer, D. S.; Greenwood, N.*: IMPACTS OF RESUSPENSION ON NUTRIENT FLUXES ACROSS THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE IN THE NORTH SEA, UK
08:15 Ubertini, M.; Orvain, F.; Gangnery, A.; Lefebvre, S.: SPATIAL DYNAMIC OF MICROPHYTOBENTHOS RESUSPENSION IN A LOW-NORMANDY ESTUARY ECOSYSTEM
08:30 Mayo, M.; Smoak, J. M.; Smith, C. G.; Fanning, K. A.: DETERMINATION OF THE URANIUM BUDGET IN THE SHARK RIVER ESTUARY SYSTEM, EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK
08:45 Estapa, M. L.; Mayer, L. M.; Boss, E. S.*: PHOTOCHEMICAL GENERATION OF DOC FROM SUSPENDED SEDIMENTS IN COASTAL LOUISIANA
09:00 Shank, G. C.; Obelcz, J. B.: SUNLIGHT-INDUCED PRODUCTION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER FROM RESUSPENDED SALT MARSH SEDIMENTS
09:15 Kieber, R. J.; Southwell, M.; Skrabal, S. A.; Avery, G. B.; Mead, R. N.: PHOTOCHEMICAL PRODUCTION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC AND INORGANIC NUTRIENTS FROM RESUSPENDED SEDIMENTS
ASLOMeeting Program
45
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
09:30 Skrabal, S. A.; Larson, L. A.; Thompson, L. E.; Avery, G. B.; Kieber, R. J.; Mead, R. N.: PHOTOCHEMICAL RELEASE OF DISSOLVED COPPER FROM RESUSPENDED SEDIMENTS
09:45 Avery, G. B.; Thompson, L.; Mead, R. N.; Southwell, M.; Kieber, R. J.; Skrabal, S. A.: INFLUENCE OF SEA LEVEL RISE ON THE PHOTOLYTIC RELEASE OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON FROM ESTUARINE SEDIMENTS
S62 Microbial Adaptation to Environ-mental Changes and Advances in Marine Microbial Diversity and Dynamics in Latin America and the Caribbean Chair(s): Lauren McDaniel, [email protected] John H. Paul, [email protected] Ernesto Otero, [email protected] Luis Felipe Artigas, [email protected]: 10408:00 Aller, J. Y.; Chistoserdov, A. Y.; Kemp, P. F.~: HIGH
BACTERIAL PHYLOGENETIC DIVERSITY AND FUNCTIONAL REDUNDANCY ALLOW FLUIDIZED MUDS TO OPERATE AS EFFICIENT BIOGEOCHEMICAL REACTORS
08:15 Luria, C. M.; Franklin, R. B.; Ozaki, L. S.; Bukaveckas, P. A.: SHIFTS IN BACTERIOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND ACTIVITY STATE IN RESPONSE TO CHANGING ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS IN THE TIDAL-FRESHWATER JAMES RIVER
08:30 Bowen, J. L.; Holcomb, M.; Ward, B. B.: ACIDIFICATION REDUCES DIVERSITY AND ALTERS SPECIES COMPOSITION OF NITRIFYING MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES
08:45 Paul, J. H.; McDaniel, L. D.; Hollander, D.; Coble, P. G.; Murasko, S.: MICROBIAL TOXICITY AND MUTAGENICITY OF WATERS NEAR THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL
09:00 McDaniel, L. D.; Young, E.; Paul, J. H.; Ritchie, K. B.; Miller, A.: ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF GENE TRANSFER AGENTS OF MARINE ALPHA-PROTEOBACTERIA
09:15 Sunagawa, S.; Bayer, T.; Ali, S.; Aranda, M.; Daniel, L. D.; Young, E. C.; Paul, J. H.; Medina, M.; Ritchie, K. B.; Voolstra, C. R.: THE GENOME SEQUENCE OF REUGERIA MOBILIS, AN ALPHA-PROTEOBACTERIUM THAT EXHIBITS HIGH FREQUENCY OF HORIZONTAL GENE TRANSFER IN THE OCEANS
09:30 Tucker, J. M.; Rivkin, R. B.; Li, W. K.; Mouland, R.: MICROBIAL PROCESSES IN THE BEAUFORT SEA
09:45 Eveillard, D.; Bouskill, N. J.; Bourdon, J.; Ward, B. B.: MODELING THE MICROBIAL CYCLE: FROM A PROBABILISTIC BACKBONE TO BIOLOGICAL INSIGHTS
13:30 Koester, J. A.; Armbrust, E. V.: DARWINIAN SELECTION IS MOST EVIDENT IN CLOSELY RELATED DIATOM SPECIES
13:45 Thomas, M. K.; Kremer, C. T.; Klausmeier, C. A.; Litchman, E.: PHYTOPLANKTON ADAPTATION TO TEMPERATURE ACROSS THE WORLD OCEANS
14:00 Hernández-Becerril, D. U.*: RECENT STUDIES OF THE BIODIVERSITY OF THE MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON IN MEXICO
14:15 Alonso, C.; Piccini, C.: MICROBIAL ECOLOGY OF COASTAL TRANSITIONAL ENVIRONMENTS IN URUGUAY
14:30 Artigas, L. F.; Alonso, C.; Costagliola, M.; Dionisi, H. M.; Hozbor, C.; Otero, E.; Paranhos, R.; Peressutti, S.; Piccini, C.; Thompson, F. L.: PROKARYOTIC DIVERSITY (EUBACTERIA AND ARCHAEA) IN COASTAL SYSTEMS ALONG A LATITUDINAL GRADIENT FROM SW ATLANTIC TO THE CARIBBEAN
14:45 Elisabeth, N. H.; Sylvestre, M. N.; GUSTAVE DIT DUFLO, S.; Jean-Louis, P.; Césaire, T.; Caro, A.; Mansot , J. L.; Got, P.; Gros, O.: MONITORING OF SULFUR-OXIDIZING ENDOSYMBIOTIC BACTERIAL POPULATION INHABITING THE TROPICAL LUCINID CODAKIA ORBICULATA DURING STARVATION AND BACTERIAL R
15:15 Norf, H.; Wey, J. K.; Marcus, H.; Erken, M.; Weitere, M.: ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL OF CILIATE BIOFILM DEVELOPMENT: EMPIRICAL ANALYSES USING RIVER BYPASS SYSTEMS
S71 Beachfront real estate: Microbial ecol-ogy and activity along changing coastsChair(s): Alyson E. Santoro, [email protected] J. Michael Beman, [email protected]: 208B08:00 Jenkins, B. D.; Brown, S. M.; Fulweiler, R. W.; Nixon, S. W.:
COMBINED MOLECULAR AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL METHODS TO DECIPHER THE CONTROLS ON NITROGEN CYCLING CONSORTIA IN ESTUARINE SEDIMENTS
08:15 Schutte, C. A.; Joye, S. B.: HIGH RATES OF NITROGEN CYCLING PROCESSES IN COASTAL AQUIFERS
08:30 Ortmann, A. C.; Metzger, R. C.; Liefer, J.: DIFFERENT MEMBERS OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES EXPERIENCE DIFFERENT RELATIVE RATES OF GRAZING AND VIRAL LYSIS ALONG A SHALLOW ESTUARY
08:45 Mills, H. J.; Reese, B. K.; Morse, J. W.: MOLECULAR AND GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF SULFUR AND IRON REDUCING POPULATIONS WITHIN AN ESTUARY SALINITY GRADIENT
09:00 Ottesen, E. A.; Marin III, R.; Preston, C. M.; Scholin, C. A.; DeLong, E. F.: METATRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSIS OF AUTONOMOUSLY COLLECTED AND PRESERVED MARINE BACTERIOPLANKTON SAMPLES: FIELD TESTS IN MONTEREY BAY
09:15 Beman, J. M.: MICROBIAL DIVERSITY IN THE OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE OF THE EASTERN TROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN AS REVEALED BY PYROSEQUENCING
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
46
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
09:30 Cumbaa, N. O.; Gundersen, K.; Ortmann, A. C.: ARCHAEAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN TWO DISTINCT SEASONALLY HYPOXIC ZONES IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO REGION
09:45 Anderson, M. R.; Rivkin, R. B.: POTENTIAL IMPACTS OF WIDESPREAD HYDROCARBON CONTAMINATION ON THE BACTERIAL COMMUNITY OF A LARGE COASTAL BAY
S75 Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning: Current needs and Future ChallengesChair(s): Nasseer Idrisi, [email protected] Simon Pittman, [email protected] Zdenka Willis, [email protected]: 103A08:00 D’Iorio, M.; Wahle, C.; Hayden, N.: MAPPING HUMAN
USES OF THE OCEAN INFORMING COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING THROUGH PARTICIPATORY GIS
08:15 Cluck, R. E.; Rasser, M. K.; Dhanju, A.: THE ROLE OF THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR IN COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING
08:30 Morrison, J. R.; Napoli, N.; Shyka, T.; Martin, D.; Greene, J.; Howlett, E.: A REGIONAL OCEAN DATA PORTAL SUPPORTING COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING FOR THE NORTHEAST UNITED STATES
08:45 McCammon, M. E.; Bochenek, R.; Dugan, D.: CMSP IN THE ARCTIC: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
09:00 Idrisi, N.; Wright, V.; Corredor, J.: COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING FOR THE US CARIBBEAN REGION: FIRST STEPS
09:15 Anselmi-Molina, C. M.; Aponte-Bermúdez, L. D.; González-López, J. O.; Canals-Silander, M. F.; Capella, J. E.; Morell, J.; Corredor, J.; Mercado-Irizarry, A.: CARICOOS COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING FRAMEWORK
09:30 Gould, W. W.; Ortiz-Rosa, S.; Herrera-Montes, M. I.; Solórzano, M.; Rincón-Díaz , M. P.; Potts, G.; Crain, B.; Quiñones, M.: THE PUERTO RICO AND US VIRGIN ISLANDS TERRESTRIAL-AQUATIC GAP ANALYSIS PROJECT
09:45 Rasser, M. K.; Cluck, R. E.; Dhanju, A.: MEETING SCIENCE AND DATA NEEDS FOR COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING ON THE UNITED STATES OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF
13:30 Menza, C.; Caldow, C.: BIOGEOGRAPHIC ASSESSMENTS TO MEET REGIONAL MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING NEEDS
13:45 Kinlan, B. P.; Menza, C.; Kendall, M. S.; Caldow, C.: INTEGRATING UNCERTAINTY, DYNAMICS, AND VARIABILITY INTO COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING
14:00 Newton, J.; Mayorga, E.; Allan, J.; Rumrill, S.; Lanier, A.; Bernthal, C.; Galasso, G.; Bowlby, E.; Hennessey, J.: IOOS’ ROLE IN CONTRIBUTING TO NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CAPABILITY FOR COASTAL MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING: A VIEW FROM THE NANOOS REGIONAL ASSOCIATION
14:15 Glenn, S. M.; Thoroughgood, C.; Boicourt, W.; Brown, W.; Atkinson, L.: IOOS CONTRIBUTIONS TO COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING IN THE MID ATLANTIC
14:30 blumberg, a. f.; Georgas, n.; Herrington, t. o.; bruno, m.: AN URBAN OCEAN OBSERVING AND PREDICTION SYSTEM - IS ANYONE PAYING ATTENTION TO IT?
14:45 Ivey, J. E.; Jochens, A. E.; Heil, C. A.; Musasko, S.; Yunker, A.; Brame, J.; Granholm, A.: A COMPREHENSIVE COASTAL OCEAN/ESTUARINE MONITORING NETWORK IN SOUTHWEST FLORIDA
15:00 Alexandririds, K.; DeFreitas, D.: PERCEPTIONS AND FALLACIES IN SPATIAL PLANNING & DECISION-MAKING: INTEGRATING ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC REALITIES TO MARINE ECOSYSTEM-BASED MANAGEMENT
15:15 Madsen, K.; Zimmer, B.; Deis, D.; Lindsey, J.; Gelber, A.; Hearne, L.; Fritze, B.; Sloger, W.; Sinclair, J.; Rasser, M.; Metzger, K.; Phillips, N.: DEVELOPMENT OF THE ECOSPATIAL INFORMATION DATABASE (ESID) FOR THE BUREAU OF ENERGY MANAGEMENT, REGULATION AND ENFORCEMENT ATLANTIC PLANNING AREAS
S94 Impact of Hypoxia on Biogeochemical CyclesChair(s): Daniel Conley, [email protected] Felix Janssen, [email protected] Don Boesch, [email protected] Nancy Rabalais, [email protected]: Ballroom B08:00 Kemp, W. M.; Testa, J. M.: OXYGEN EFFECTS ON
NUTRIENT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY: FEEDBACK EFFECTS ON EUTROPHICATION
08:30 Conley, D. J.; Dalsgaard, T.; Gustafsson, B.; Hietanen, S.; Jilbert, T.; Reed, D.; Slomp, C.; Voss, M.; Frey, C.; Zillen, L.: EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON NUTRIENT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN THE BALTIC SEA
08:45 Sommer, S.; Schorp, T.; McGinnis, D. F.; Bertics, V.; Dale, A. W.; Pfannkuche, O.: IN SITU FLUXES OF MAJOR NITROGEN SPECIES, PHOSPHORUS, OXYGEN AND SILICATE ACROSS THE BENTHIC BOUNDARY LAYER OF THE OXIC TO ANOXIC GOTLAND BASIN (BALTIC SEA)
09:00 Bertics, V. J.; Sommer, S.; Dale, A.; Teupe, M.; Treude, T.: BENTHIC NITROGEN AND SULFUR DYNAMICS OF A SEASONALLY HYPOXIC REGION OF THE BALTIC SEA, ECKERNFRRDE BAY
09:15 Noffke, A.; Hensen, C.; Sommer, S.; Croot, P.; Scholz, F.; Wallmann, K.: THE BENTHIC PHOSPHORUS AND IRON SOURCE ACROSS THE PERUVIAN OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE
09:30 Pakhomova, S.; Yakushev, E.: IRON AND MANGANESE SPECIES DISTRIBUTIONS AS INDICATORS OF WATER COLUMN REDOX-INTERFACE STABILITY: COMPARATIVE STUDY IN THE BLACK, BALTIC SEAS AND OSLO FJORD
ASLOMeeting Program
47
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
09:45 Smith, E. M.; Buck, T. L.; Koepfler, E. T.: RESOURCE REGULATION OF PELAGIC HETEROTROPHIC METABOLISM IN THE FORMATION OF HYPOXIA IN LONG BAY, SOUTH CAROLINA, USA
13:30 Fuessel, J.; Lam, P.; Lavik, G.; Jensen, M. M.; Kuypers, M. M.: HIGH NITRITE OXIDATION RATES IN THE NAMIBIAN OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE
13:45 Bristow, L. A.; Altabet, M. A.; Larkum, J. A.; Chan, F.; Letelier, R. M.: USING NITRATE ISOTOPES TO UNDERSTAND SEASONAL HYPOXIA ON THE OREGON SHELF
14:00 McCarthy, M. J.; Carini, S. A.; Newell, S. E.; Gardner, W. S.: DENITRIFICATION, ANAMMOX, AND DNRA IN THE GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIA ZONE: RESULTS FROM CONTINUOUS-FLOW, INTACT SEDIMENT CORE INCUBATIONS
14:15 Bohlen, L.; Sommer, S.; Dale, A. W.; Hensen, C.; Wallmann, K.: SEDIMENTS UNDERLYING THE PERUVIAN OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE – SOURCE OR SINK FOR REACTIVE NITROGEN SPECIES?
14:30 Piil, K.; Carlsen, D. H.; Niggemann, J.; Lomstein, B. A.: FATE OF AMINO ACIDS AND AMINO SUGARS IN BLACK SEA SEDIMENTS
14:45 Holtappels, M.; Lichtschlag, A.; Ihsan, Y. N.; Struck, U.; Boetius, A.; Çagatay, N.; Lavik, G.; Kuypers, M. M.: INFLOW OF OXIC MEDITERRANEAN WATERS STIMULATES SULFIDE OXIDATION COUPLED TO AUTOTROPHIC DENITRIFICATION IN THE ANOXIC LAYERS OF THE BLACK SEA
15:00 Yakushev, E.: INFLUENCE OF MIXING ON THE WATER COLUMN REDOX INTERFACE BIOGEOCHEMICAL STRUCTURE: MODELLING SIMULATIONS FOR THE BLACK SEA, THE GOTLAND DEEP AND THE OSLO FJORD
GS07A Multiple stressor problems in aquatic systems - Session 1Chair(s): Iola G. Boechat, [email protected] Ione Hunt von Herbing, [email protected]: 10108:00 Hunt von Herbing, . I.; Pan, T.; Mendez, F.; Garduno, M.;
Gallegos, O.; Ruiz, L.; Rhodriguez, G.: HIGH ALTITUDE WATERSHED CONSERVATION PHYSIOLOGY IN MEXICO: USING PHYSIOLOGICAL TOOLS TO MEASURE ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSES
08:15 Boëchat, I. G.; Gücker, B.; Krüger, A.; Figueredo, C. C.; Giani, A.: AGRICULTURAL LAND USE AFFECTS THE LIPID COMPOSITION OF STREAM MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES
08:30 Starks, E. R.; Chow, S.; Wilson, C. C.; Wissel, B.: EFFECTS OF CLIMATE, LAND-USE AND FISHERIES ON TOP-PREDATOR PERSISTENCE IN NORTHERN PRAIRIE LAKES
08:45 Nielsen, S. L.; Nielsen, H. D.: THE EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND HEAVY METALS AS JOINT STRESSORS ON ADULT INDIVIDUALS AND GERMLINGS OF FUCUS SERRATUS
09:00 Bradley, P. M.; Writer, J. H.; Barber, L. B.; McMahon, P. M.; Gray, J. L.; Kolpin, D. W.: BIODEGRADATION OF ENDOCRINE DISRUPTING CHEMICALS IN STREAMS
09:15 Writer, J. H.; Ryan, J. N.; Barber, L. B.; Bradley, P. M.: TRANSFORMATION OF STEROIDAL HORMONES AND ALKYLPHENOLS BY STREAM BIOFILMS
09:45 Kolok, A. S.; Sellin , M. K.: SEDIMENTS FROM AGRICULTURALLY INTENSIVE WATERSHEDS DEFEMINIZE FEMALE FISH VIA ANTI-ESTROGENIC ACTIVITY.
GS07B Multiple stressor problems in aquatic systems - Session 2Chair(s): Jessica Ray, [email protected] Dörthe Müller-Navarra, doerthe.mueller-navarra@uni-
hamburg.deLocation: 10113:30 Crootof, A. B.; Saito, L.; Rosen, M. R.; Marchand, E.
A.; Nishonov, B.; Lamers, J.: ASSESSING WATER RESOURCES IN KHOREZM, UZBEKISTAN FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF AQUACULTURE
13:45 Hadley, K. R.; Paterson, A. M.; Reid, R. A.; Smol, J. P.: MULTI-PROXY INVESTIGATION OF CRAYFISH DECLINE IN ALGONQUIN PARK, ONTARIO, CANADA
14:00 Fertig, B.; Carruthers, T. J.; Dennison, W. C.: SPATIAL LIMITS TO THE APPLICATION OF OYSTER ?15N AS AN INDICATOR OF NITROGEN SOURCES
14:15 Hettinger, A.; Sanford, E.; Gaylord, B.; HIll, T. M.; Russell, A. D.: PERSISTENT CARRY-OVER EFFECTS OF PLANKTONIC EXPOSURE TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION IN THE OLYMPIA OYSTER
14:30 Ekvall, M. K.; Hansson, L. A.: SYNERGIES IN CLIMATE CHANGE: EFFECTS OF INCREASED TEMPERATURE AND WATER COLOR ON ZOOPLANKTON RECRUITMENT
14:45 Parrish, C. C.; French, V. M.: FATTY ACID COMPOSITION OF HARPACTICOID AND CALANOID COPEPODS FED VARIOUS COMBINATIONS OF AUTOTROPHIC AND HETEROTROPHIC PROTISTS
15:00 Burmester, V.; Müller-Navarra, D. C.: FATTY ACIDS OF TWO SYMPATRIC FISH LARVAE, ALOSA FALLAX AND OSMERUS EPERLANUS: DO THEY EXPLAIN OBSERVED DIFFERENCES IN GROWTH POTENTIAL?
15:15 Ray, J. L.; Luetkecosmann, S.; Larsen, A.; Sandaa, R. A.: VARIABLE TOLERANCE OF MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON TO LABORATORY PROCESSING STRESS
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
48
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
GS08A Plankton Ecology - Session 1Chair(s): Michelle Wood, [email protected]: 10208:00 Napoleon, C.; Fiant, L.; Raimbault, V.; Riou, P.;
Lefebvre, S.; Claquin, P.: USE OF FERRY BOATS TO STUDY THE SPATIO-TEMPORAL EVOLUTION OF PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMIC AND PHOTOSYNTHETIC PARAMETERS IN THE ENGLISH CHANNEL
08:15 Steichen, J. L.; Quigg, A. S.; Denby, A. M.; Brinkmeyer, R. L.: A TALE OF TWO PORTS: DINOFLAGELLATE COMMUNITIES WITHIN THE PORT OF HOUSTON AND THE PORT OF GALVESTON, TEXAS (USA)
08:30 Lloyd, M. C.; Neal, J. W.: SPATIOTEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF MACROPLANKTON IN CARITE RESERVOIR, PUERTO RICO.
08:45 yi xu, y. x.; Cahill Bronwyn, C. B.; John Wilkin, J. W.; Oscar Scholfield, O. S.: REGULATION OF THE PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM ON THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT BY WIND MIXING
09:00 Gemmell, B. J.; Jiang, H.; Buskey, E. J.: FLYING PLANKTON? COPEPODS TAKE TO THE SKY IN EFFORT TO AVOID PREDATORS
09:15 Roberts, Q. N.; Killberg-Thoreson, L. M.; Sanderson, M. P.; Mulholland, M. R.; Bernhardt, P. W.; Heil, C.; Garrett, M.; O’Neil, J.; Bronk, D. A.: NITROGEN UPTAKE IN THE EASTERN GULF OF MEXICO DURING KARENIA BREVIS BLOOMS
09:30 Guelzow, N.; Ptacnik, R.; Hillebrand, H.: SPATIAL EXTENT OF DISTURBANCE CONSTRAINS RESILIENCE IN AQUATIC METACOMMUNITIES
09:45 Klausmeier, C. A.; Litchman, E. G.: MODELING PLANKTON SEASONAL SUCCESSION
GS08B Plankton Ecology - Session 2Chair(s): Stella Berger, [email protected] William R. DeMott, [email protected]: 10213:30 Hansen, B. W.: ENERGETICS AND ECOLOGICAL
SIGNIFICANCE OF A SPIONID POLYCHAETE LARVAE (POLYDORA CILIATA) IN A EUTROPHIC ESTUARY
13:45 Behl, S.; de Schryver, V.; Stibor, H.: TROPHIC EFFECTS OF PHYTOPLANKTON DIVERSITY ON THE PERFORMANCE OF DAPHNIA MAGNA POPULATIONS
14:00 Haupt, F.; Stockenreiter, M.; Boersma, M.; Stibor, H.: THE EFFECT OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY SIZE STRUCTURE ON THE RESPONSE TO DAPHNIA DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATION
14:15 DeMott, W. R.; van Donk, E.: A TEST OF ALGAL DEFENSES AGAINST DAPHNIA GRAZING IN PHOSPHORUS-LIMITED MICROCOSMS
14:30 Gilbert, J. J.: DUAL INDUCED DEFENSES IN A ROTIFER
14:45 Souza, M. S.; Hansson, L. A.; Hylander, S.; Modenutti, B. E.; Balseiro, E.: RAPID PLASTICITY IN ZOOPLANKTON ENZYMATIC RESPONSE TO UV THREAT
15:00 Balseiro, E.; Souza, M. S.; Laspoumaderes, C.; Modenutti, B.: INDIRECT EFFECT OF UVR AND STOICHIOMETRIC CONSTRAINTS IN PLANKTONIC COPEPODS
15:15 Berger, S. A.; Diehl, S.; Stibor, H.: CLIMATIC DRIVERS AND GRAZER COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AFFECT SPRING SUCCESSION OF TEMPERATE LAKE PLANKTON – A SYNTHESIS OF MULTIPLE MESOCOSM EXPERIMENTS
ASLOMeeting Program
49
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
Tuesday, 15 February 2011 PostersS01 ASLOMP Student Symposium Chair(s): Benjamin Cuker, [email protected] Deidre Gibson, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall1 Middleton, J. K.; Pyrtle, A.: DETERMINATION OF
PERCENT MOISTURE, ORGANIC MATTER AND CARBONATE AT EMERSON POINT, TAMPA BAY
2 Arevalo, P. A.; Rich, J. J.: MICRODIVERSITY OF ANAMMOX BACTERIA ALONG ENVIRONMENTAL GRADIENTS IN PERU MARGIN SEDIMENTS
3 Lewis, J. R.; Johnson, A. K.: EFFECTS OF ACUTE HYPOXIA ON THE ATLANTIC CROAKER
4 Velázquez, A. L.: CORRELATION BETWEEN BATRACHOCHYTRIUM DENDROBATIDIS AND PARASITE ABUNDANCE IN LUNGS OF LEOPARD FROGS (RANA PIPIENS).
5 Santiago, M.: NUTRIENT COMPOSITION AND RELATIONSHIPS TO SALINITY IN MANGROVE SEDIMENTS FROM DIFFERENT GEOLOGICAL ORIGINS
6 Sutton, A. E.; Yankson, K.; Wubah, D. A.: THE EFFECT OF SALINITY ON PARTICLE FILTRATION RATES OF THE WEST AFRICAN MANGROVE OYSTER, CRASSOSTREA TULIPA
7 Flear, K.; Wiltse, B.; Paterson, A. M.; Cumming, B. F.: INVESTIGATING THE ROLE OF RECENT CLIMATE CHANGE ON ASSEMBLAGES OF SCALED CHRYSOPHYTES IN BOREAL LAKES FROM THE EXPERIMENTAL LAKES AREA, NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO
8 Watley, J. R.: ASSESSMENT OF THE U.S. COASTAL CARIBBEAN FISH HABITAT PARAMETERS FOR THE NATIONAL FISH HABITAT ACTION PLAN (NFHAP)
9 Boardman, E.; Rosas, K.: FACTORS CONTROLLING INSECT ASSEMBLAGES IN HEADWATER STREAMS ALONG AN ELEVATION GRADIENT
10 Garate, M. H.; Henderson, N. D.; Christian, A. D.: THE INFLUENCE OF LAND USE ON THE NEPONSET RIVER WATERSHED
11 Ruacho, A.; Primeau, F. W.; Guidi, L.; Stemmann, L.: CONTROLS ON THE REMINERALIZATION DEPTH PROFILE OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON IN THE OCEAN
12 Brown, J. M.; Hewson, I.: INSIGHTS INTO PHAGE ECOLOGY OF A TRICHODESMIUM SPP. LYSIS EVENT USING METAVIROMICS
13 Santiago- Merced, N. C.; McCabe, D. J.: RELATIONSHIP OF LOTIC MACROINVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES TO PHOSPHORUS AND SUSPENDED SOLIDS
14 Roberge, J. J.; McCabe, D. J.: THE EFFECTS OF PHOSPHORUS ON BENTHIC MACROINVERTEBRATES IN THE LAKE CHAMPLAIN BASIN
15 Barnes, L. B.: THE GOLDEN SHINER GRADING ASSESSMENT AND DEVELOPMENT OF ASSESSMENT CALCULATOR
16 Baker, B. C.; Scott, J. T.: LEAF LITTER STOICHIOMETRY AND DECOMPOSITION IN RESPONSE TO PHOSPHORUS ENRICHMENT FROM NUTRIENT DIFFUSING SUBSTRATA
17 Schulz, J. L.; Koch, R. W.: SUSCEPTIBILITIES OF NORTHERN MINNESOTA LAKES TO ACIDICATION: INFLUENCE OF WATER ALKALINITY AND MACROPHYTE PHOTOSYNTHESIS
18 Hammond, J. D.: BOAT GENERATED TURBULENCE ACCOUNTS FOR COPEPOD CARCASSES
19 Scott, K. R.; Velez, F. J.; Canals, M. F.; Ramirez, W. R.: COASTAL EROSION IN RINCNN, PUERTO RICO: BEACH PROFILES AND SHORELINE CHANGE
20 Nguluwe, B. S.; Johnson, A. K.; Willams, E.; Carlin, J.; Richards, A.; Place, A.: STOCK DISCRIMINATION OF AMERICAN MONKFISH IN NORTHWEST ATLANTIC USING MITOCHONDRIAL DNA
21 Fanestil, V. P.; Craft, E. A.; Alexander, J. A.; Glibert, P. M.; Solomon, C. M.: EFFECT OF VARYING N:P RATIOS - BUT NON-LIMITING CONDITIONS - ON GROWTH RATE, TOXICITY, AND PHYSIOLOGICAL STATE OF MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA
22 Purce, D.; Taylor, K.; O’Dea, L.; Veeck, D.: DATA FEATURES, USES AND COORDINATION OF WEB-BASED COASTAL ATLASES ON THE WEST COAST: A MODEL FOR OTHER REGIONS
S07 Tropical small mountainous river biogeochemistry: terrestrial losses, internal processing and coastal inputs. Chair(s): Ryan P. Moyer, [email protected] James E. Bauer, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall46 Huey, T. M.; Grottoli, A. G.; Matsui, Y.: LAND-USE
IMPACT ON THE CHARACTER AND AGE OF CARBON IN SMALL TEMPERATE STREAMS
S09 Benthic biogeochemical processes: From microscale patchiness to ecosystem functionChair(s): Frank Wenzhoefer, [email protected] Ronnie N Glud, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall48 Rolland, D.; Vincent, W. F.; Laurion, I.: RECRUITMENT
OF BLOOM-FORMING CYANOBACTERIA IN A DRINKING WATER RESERVOIR: FLUORESCENCE MAPPING OF BENTHIC SOURCE POPULATIONS
49 Bourgeois, S.; Pruski, A. M.; Charles, F.; Rivière, B.; Vétion, G.: LABORATORY STUDIES OF ORGANIC MATTER DEGRADATION IN PRODELTAIC SEDIMENTS (GULF OF LIONS, FRANCE)
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
50
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
50 Garcia-Robledo, E.; Olivé, I.; Papaspyrou, S.; Corzo, A.; Hernandez, I.: EFFECTS OF ULVA SP. IN THE PRODUCTION AND ACCUMULATION OF SULFIDE ON CYMODOCEA NODOSA MEADOWS: A MESOCOSM EXPERIMENT
51 Ishikawa, K.; Nakajima, T.; Ishikawa, T.: CLIMATE IMPACTS AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE: OXYGEN DEPLETION AND BENTHIC BACTERIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN LAKE BIWA, JAPAN
52 George, A. M.; Mills, S. W.; Mullineaux, L. S.: COMPARATIVE ECOLOGY OF K VENT AND P VENT ALONG THE EAST PACIFIC RISE
53 Wollenburg, J.; Tiedemann, R.: NOVEL AUTOCLAVE AQUARIA FACILITATES HIGH-PRESSURE METHANE SEEPAGE-EMULATING CULTURE EXPERIMENTS ON BAROPHILIC DEEP-SEA FORAMINIFERA
54 Raimonet, M.; Ragueneau, O.; Andrieux-Loyer, F.; Khalil, K.; Kerouel, R.; Philippon, X.; Soetaert, K.; Rabouille, C.; Mémery, L.: MODELING OF SEASONAL COUPLING AND DECOUPLING OF ELEMENTAL BENTHIC CYCLES (P, SI, N, C) ALONG SALINITY GRADIENTS OF TWO SUBTIDAL TEMPERATE ESTUARIES
55 Leon Zayas, R. I.; Bartlett, B. H.: ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF NOVEL PIEZOPHILIC MICROBES FROM PERU CHILE TRENCH SEDIMENT SAMPLES USING CHEMICAL GRADIENTS CULTURING TECHNIQUES
56 Thomas, C.; DeMaster, D.; Pirtle-Levy, R.; Null, K.; Hopkins, A.; Smith, C.: FOODBANCS-2: SEABED FLUXES ALONG A N/S TRANSECT ON THE WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA SHELF
57 Hansen, A. T.; Hondzo, M.: INFLUENCE OF EPIPHYTES ON MOMENTUM EXCHANGE AND NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY TO FILAMENTOUS ALGAE
58 Meerhoff, E.; Rodriguez-Gallego, L.; Gimenez, L.; Conde, D.; Muniz, P.: SPATIO-TEMPORAL VARIATION IN MACROBENTHIC COMMUNITIES OF COASTAL LAGOONS FROM URUGUAY
59 Afonso Souza, C.; Wayne Gardner, S.; Tamara Pease, K.: ROLE OF LEUCINE-AMINOPEPTIDASE ON AMMONIUM (NH4
+) REGENERATION IN MARINE SEDIMENTS61 Brin, L. D.; Rich, J. J.; Giblin, A. E.: NITROGEN LOSS
PATHWAYS IN COASTAL AND SHELF SEDIMENTS: BEGINNING TO DEFINE CONTROLS IN NEW ENGLAND AS A MODEL SYSTEM
62 Deemer, B. R.; Harrison, J. A.; Henderson, S. M.: DAM SPILL IS A HOT MOMENT FOR MICROBIAL NITROGEN REMOVAL IN A EUTROPHIC RESERVOIR
S10 Biological Invasions as a Driver of Change in Aquatic SystemsChair(s): Sarah Bailey, [email protected] Hugh MacIsaac, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall63 Welch, J. B.; Reed, A. J.; Hicks, R. E.: MOLECULAR
ANALYSIS OF BACTERIAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION OF SHIP BALLAST AND DULUTH-SUPERIOR HARBOR WATER
64 Acharya, P.; Kashian, D.; Ram, J.: ALGAL REGULATION OF SPAWNING IN THE FRESHWATER INVASIVE MUSSEL, DREISSENA BUGENSIS
65 Cooke, S. L.: SEASONAL AND SPATIAL DYNAMICS OF NON-INDIGENOUS DAPHNIA LUMHOLTZI IN TWO NUTRIENT-SENSITIVE RESERVOIRS AFFECTED BY MULTIPLE STRESSORS
66 Velez-Zuazo, X.; Navarro, M.; Mege, P. C.; Ruiz, C. P.; Patricio, A. R.; Toledo-Hernandez, C.: MTDNA ANALYSIS OF EXOTIC LIONFISH IN PUERTO RICO SUPPORT ORIGIN FROM US EAST COAST INVASION
67 Adebayo, A. A.; Bailey, S. A.; MacIsaac, H. J.: DOMESTIC VESSELS AS A POTENTIAL PATHWAY OF NONINDIGENOUS SPECIES IN THE GREAT LAKES – ST. LAWRENCE RIVER
68 Currie, W. J.; Koops, M. A.; Mandrak, N. E.; Cudmore, B.: MODELING RISK OF ASIAN CARP ESTABLISHMENT IN THE LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES USING A FOOD-WEB APPROACH
69 Strickland, B. A.; Vega - Grau, A. M.; Cotner, J. B.: INFULENCE OF INVASIVE EARTHWORMS ON THE PRODUCTIVITY OF LAKES
70 Beaver, J. R.; Hickman, G. J.; Rosati, T. C.; Maynard, M.; Thorson, M.; Scotese, K. C.: TROPHIC LEVEL INTERACTIONS IN LAKE HAVASU, AZ-CA FOLLOWING INVASION BY DREISSINID MUSSELS
72 Evans, T. M.; Bauer, J. E.; Barrett, A.; Loeffler, S.: IDENTIFYING FOOD AND NUTRTIONAL RESOURCES SUPPORTING INVASIVE SEA LAMPREY AMMOCOETES IN LAKES MICHIGAN AND HURON WATERSHEDS USING ISOTOPIC NATURAL ABUNDANCES
73 Asson, D. C.; Chapman, J. W.; Dumbauld, B. R.: SEX AND LOCATION, OR SIZE AND TIME? UPOGEBIA PUGETTENSIS CAN WAIT BUT CAN’T HIDE FROM ITS INTRODUCED ISOPOD PARASITE, ORTHIONE GRIFFENIS
74 Valentín Del Río, C. R.; Meléndez, J.; Negrón, G.; Saez, L.: PUERTO RICO LIONFISH MANAGEMENT PLAN
S12 In situ measurement of concentration, lability and bioavailability of chemical species in water, soils and sediments using diffusional techniques: DGT and DETChair(s): Aria Amirbahman, [email protected] Laurie S. Balistrieri, [email protected] Karen A. Merritt, [email protected]: 208B75 Cattani, I.; Beone, .; De Santis, .; Cozzolino, .; Boccelli,
.; Pigna, .; Violante, .: EFFECT OF ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZA AND PHOSPHORUS APPLICATION ON AS AND P AVAILABILITY IN A CONTAMINATED SOIL: COMPARISON BETWEEN DGT ESTIMATION AND MAIZE UPTAKE
76 Balistrieri, L. S.; Cox, S. E.; Swarzenski, P. W.: USING DIFFUSIVE GRADIENTS IN THIN FILMS (DGT) TO MONITOR DISSOLVED LABILE CONCENTRATIONS
ASLOMeeting Program
51
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN THE UPPER COLUMBIA RIVER, WA, USA
77 Amirbahman, A.; Lake, B. A.: SEASONAL PHOSPHORUS DYNAMICS IN THE SURFICIAL SEDIMENT OF SHALLOW TEMPERATE LAKES: A COMBINED DET AND 31P-NMR STUDY
78 Burton, G. A.; Costello, D.; Taulbee, K.; Custer, K.: BIOAVAILABILITY OF NICKEL AND COPPER IN SULFIDIC AND NON-SULFIDIC FRESHWATER SEDIMENTS
79 Docekalova, H.; Skarpa, P.; Mladkova, Z.; Travnickova, J.: ASSESMENT OF COPPER PHYTOAVAILABILITY TO RAPHANUS SATIVUS – COMPARISON WITH DGT MEASUREMENT
S16 Acidification in Coral Reef EcosystemsChair(s): Jorge E. Corredor, [email protected] Chris Langdon, [email protected] Dwight Gledhill, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall82 Winn, C. D.; Kahng, S. E.; Thompson, R. W.; Lantz,
C. A.; Kosaki, R.; Andersson, A.: CARBON SYSTEM DYNAMICS IN THE NEAR SHORE WATERS OF THE NORTHWEST HAWAIIAN ISLANDS
83 Melendez, M.; Corredor, J. E.; Gledhill , D.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AT LA PARGUERA, PUERTO RICO
S20 Multi-tracer approaches to understanding plankton community composition controls on POC export flux from the surface oceanChair(s): Gillian Stewart, [email protected] S. Bradley Moran, [email protected] Michael Lomas, [email protected]: 103B115 Puigcorbé, V.; Masqué, P.; Benitez-Nelson, C.; Bode,
A.; Scharek, R.; Fernández de Puelles, M. L.; Latasa, M.: DETERMINATION OF POC EXPORT USING A COMBINATION OF 234TH/238U AND 210PO/210PB DISEQUILIBRIA IN THE NW MEDITERRANEAN
116 Claquin, P.; Napoleon, C.; Raimbault, V.; Assam, H.; Fauchot, J.: RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN NUTRIENT LIMITATIONS, PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND TEP EXCRETIONS: FROM CULTURE STUDIES TO ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS
117 Fields, D. M.; Shema, S. D.; Browne, T. Q.: DO THE COCCOLITHS OF EMILIANIA HUXLEYI CONFER PROTECTION AGAINST COPEPOD GRAZING?
S22 Diatoms and Coccolithophores: from evolution to global biogeochemical cycles Chair(s): Thomas Mock, [email protected] Debora Iglesias-Rodriguez, debora.iglesias-rodriguez@
noc.soton.ac.ukLocation: Exhibit Hall126 Ashworth, J.; Lee, A.; Baliga, N. S.; Orellana, M.:
MOLECULAR RESPONSES OF DIATOMS TO RISING CO2 LEVELS AND OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
127 Zulkifly, S.; Graham, J. M.; Graham, L. E.: SILICON EFFECTS ON GROWTH OF DIATOMS ISOLATED FROM THE PERIPHYTON OF A HYPEREUTROPHIC LAKE
128 Bennett, J. M.; Sedwick, P. N.; DiTullio, G. R.: EFFECTS OF IRRADIANCE ON THE GROWTH AND PHYSIOLOGY OF THE ANTARCTIC DIATOM, FRAGILARIOPSIS CYLINDRUS
129 Haberyan, K. A.; Haddock, G. D.: DIFFERENTIAL DISTRIBUTION OF DIATOMS ON COVERSLIPS: A WARNING FOR PALEOLIMNOLOGISTS
S23 nutrient Limitation in River-Influenced Coastal SystemsChair(s): Nancy N. Rabalais , [email protected] R. Eugene Turner, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall134 Patoine, A.; Leavitt, P. R.: LANDSCAPE AND
TEMPORAL REGULATION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF FIXED NITROGEN TO PHYTOPLANKTONIC NUTRIENT BUDGETS
135 Markager, S.; Krause-Jensen, D.; Dalsgaard, T.: TOTAL PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND THE BALANCE BETWEEN BENTHIC AND PELAGIC PLANTS IN DIFFERENT NUTRIENT REGIMES IN A SHALLOW ESTUARY
136 Sinclair, G. A.; Molina, M.; Czubakowski, J.; Boling, B.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF NITROGEN UPTAKE AND ENZYME ACTIVITY ON THE LOUISIANA SHELF.
137 Santa-Rios, A.; Galindo-Bect, M. S.; Hernandez-Ayon, J. M.; Delgadillo-Hinojosa, F.; Huerta-Diaz, M. A.; Camacho-Ibar, V. F.: INORGANIC NUTRIENT DYNAMICS IN THE COLORADO RIVER DELTA UNDER THREE DIFFERENT WATER SUPPLY SCENARIOS
S25 Research Experiences of Undergraduates in Aquatic SciencesChair(s): Russell L Cuhel, [email protected] Carmen Aguilar, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall138 Brown, M. K.; Aguilar, C.; Cuhel, R.: PARTICULATE
PHOSPHORUS CONTENT IN THE TISSUE OF QUAGGA MUSSELS AND WATER COLUMN BIOMASS IN DISTINCT AREAS OF LAKE MICHIGAN
139 Heal, K. R.; Repeta, D. J.: CONCENTRATION OF
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
52
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
DISSOLVED ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS (DOP) IN SEAWATER USING MG(II)-MN(III) LAYERED DOUBLE HYDROXIDE
140 Everhart, J. C.; Hennige, S.; Warner, M. E.: TESTING THE IMPACT OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION IN A CONTINUOUS CULTURE OF THE HARMFUL RAPHIDOPHYTE HETEROSIGMA AKASHIWO FROM THE EASTERN UNITED STATES.
141 Wickel, C. J.: SECONDARY MACROBENTHIC PRODUCTION AND FOOD WEB STRUCTURE IN SHALLOW TIDAL FRESHWATER HABITATS INCLUDING BEDS OF THE EXOTIC PLANT HYDRILLA VERTICILLATA
142 Laber, C.; Kirkpatrick, G.; Hambridge, S.: INFLUENCE OF PIGMENT PACKAGING ON PHYTOPLANKTON LIGHT SCATTERING
143 Moritsch, M. M.; Van Alstyne, K. L.: ALLELOPATHIC INTERACTIONS OF GREEN ALGAE ULVA LACTUCA AND ULVARIA OBSCURA AND PHYTOPLANKTON IN MACROALGAL BLOOMS
144 Ramsey, M.; Cuhel, R. L.; Aguilar, C.: PHOSPHORUS AND IRON IN SHELLS OF THE INVASIVE MUSSEL DREISSENA BUGENSIS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO SEDIMENT COMPOSITION IN LAKE MICHIGAN
145 Klingensmith, I.; Aller, R. C.; Zhu, Q.: DIAGENETIC CYCLING OF SI IN SHALLOW WATER CARBONATE DEPOSITS: ROLE OF SEAGRASS, MANGROVES, AND BIOTURBATION.
146 Canady, C. S.; Kilbourne, K. H.: REPLICATING SURPRISINGLY COOL CORAL GEOCHEMISTRY-BASED PALEOTEMPERATURES IN THE CARIBBEAN AT THE END OF THE LITTLE ICE AGE.
147 Walsh, K.; Piehler, M.; Schwartz, R.; Thompson, S.: LAND USE AFFECTS IN-STREAM TEMPERATURE AND THERMAL LOADING FROM COASTAL STREAMS
148 Swinsburg, W.; McLellan, S.; Aguilar, C.; Cuhel, R. L.: SURVEY OF METAL-REDUCING ANAEROBIC BACTERIA IN LAKE MICHIGAN SEDIMENT.
149 Randall, R.; Bowen, S.; Perrtree, R.; Cox, T.: FORAGING BEHAVIORS OF ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS IN RELATION TO ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL VARIABLES WITHIN THE WATERWAYS OF SAVANNAH, GA.
150 Prechtl, M.: IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON THE HATCHING AND EARLY LARVAL DEVELOPMENT OF CALANUS PACIFICUS, CALANUS MARSHALLAE AND EUPHAUSIA PACIFICA
151 Obelcz, J.; Shank, C.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON (DOC) AND CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) CYCLING WITHIN THE NUECES MARSH, CORPUS CHRISTI, TX
152 Bedsole, P.: DIATOM-BOUND NITROGEN ISOTOPES: TRACKING CHANGES IN NUTRIENT UTILIZATION ACROSS THE LAST GLACIAL-INTERGLACIAL TRANSITION
153 Campbell, R. R.; McClellan, D. A.: WHAT FREED WILLY: ANCIENT RESPIRATORY ADAPTATIONS IN WHALES
154 Walus, B.; Fields, D. M.; Shema, S.: EFFECTS OF SUB-
LETHAL CONCENTRATIONS OF CRUDE OIL ON COPEPOD BEHAVIOR: ACARTIA TONSA
155 Gountanis, S.; Smyth, W.; Geyer, R.; Hoecker-Martinez, M. S.: FLOW MODELING OF THE CONNECTICUT RIVER ESTUARY
156 Moulton, D.; Alvarado-Bremer, J.: NOVEL METHODS FOR LARVAL DNA ISOLATION AND SPECIES IDENTIFICATION OF BILLFISH AND TUNA
157 McSweeney, J.; Wilkin, J. L.; Chant, R. J.: SEDIMENT AND PHYTOPLANKTON OPTICS IN THE DELAWARE ESTUARY
158 Ortiz, V.; Sieg, R. D.; Kubanek, J.: CHEMICAL DEFENSES OF SALT MARSH PLANTS AGAINST GRAZERS AND FUNGAL INFECTION
159 Shelton, N. L.; Condon, R. H.; Graham, W. M.; Linn, L. J.: SOURCE-SINK DYNAMICS OF OIL-DERIVED CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN COASTAL GULF OF MEXICO WATERS
160 Prugue, R.; Nitsche, F.; Kenna, T.: DETERMINING THE SEDIMENT BUDGET OF THE LOWER HUDSON RIVER
161 Parker, C.; Luther III, G. W.: IRON SPECIATION IN A SEASONALLY ANOXIC INLAND BAY AND IN THE CREEKS AND RIVER THROUGH THE GREAT MARSH, DELAWARE
S26 Improved Broader Impacts = Enhanced Scientific ImpactsChair(s): Liesl Hotaling, [email protected] Linda Duguay, [email protected]: 208A165 Roberts, S.; McConnell, M. C.: NATIONAL RESEARCH
COUNCIL REPORT ON OCEAN ACIDIFICATION: DEVELOPING AND COMMUNICATING SCIENTIFIC ADVICE FOR POLICYMAKERS
167 Beltrán Rodríguez, D. M.; Morales Núñez, A. G.: BRINGING MARINE KNOWLEDGE TO THE COMMUNITY: A CASE OF PUERTO RICO
168 Schutte, C. A.; D’Ambrosio, L.; Altunkaya, A.; Bayindirli, C.; Bergauer, K.; Carpintero de Moraes, P.; Chen, H.; Edwards, B.; Fernández Gomez, B.; Grote, J.; Hamisi, M.; Logares, R.; Nguyen, D.; Rii, Y.; Saeck, E.; Widner, B.: BLOOM CHASING: BIOLOGICAL RESPONSE TO MESOSCALE EDDIES IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE
169 Muller-Karger, F.; Ryan , J.; Feldman, A.; Gilbes, F.: THE CACCE CLIMATE EDUCATION PARTNERSHIP FOR THE SOUTHEAST US AND CARIBBEAN SEA
S27 Interactions Between Aquatic Microbial Eukaryotes: Intracellular to Community Processes Chair(s): Matthew D. Johnson, [email protected] Fabrice Not, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall174 Johnson, M. D.; Vardi, A.: USING FUNCTIONAL
GENOMICS APPROACHES TO STUDY THE ROLE OF CHEMICAL SIGNALING IN MICROZOOPLANKTON-PREY INTERACTIONS
175 Sieg, R. D.; Poulson-Ellestad, K. L.; Prince, E. K.; Myers,
ASLOMeeting Program
53
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
T. L.; Kubanek, J.: SPECIES-SPECIFIC EFFECTS AND PARTIAL CHARACTERIZATION OF ALLELOPATHIC COMPOUNDS PRODUCED BY THE RED TIDE DINOFLAGELLATE, KARENIA BREVIS
S35 Advances in coastal hypoxia modeling: from physics to fishChair(s): Dubravko Justic, [email protected] Robert Hetland, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall177 Rahm, L.; Danielsson, Å.: WAVE DRIVEN DIFFUSIVITY
IN THE SURFICIAL SEDIMENTS OF THE BALTIC PROPER, BALTIC SEA
424 Lehrter, J. C.; Ko, D.; Murrell, M. C.; Hagy, J. D.; Greene, R. M.: THE PRACTICAL LIMITATIONS OF A 3-D HYDRODYNAMIC MODEL AND THE IMPLICATIONS FOR SIMULATING BOTTOM-WATER HYPOXIA ON THE LOUISIANA SHELF
S36 Interactive and repeat exposure ef-fects of environmental perturbations upon corals and coral reef processesChair(s): David J Suggett, [email protected] Andrea G Grottoli, [email protected] Mark E Warner, [email protected]: 209178 Baumann, J. H.; Grottoli, A. G.; Levas, S. J.; Warner, M. E.:
THE EFFECTS OF REPEAT BLEACHING ON P/R AND FEEDING RATES OF THREE SPECIES OF CARIBBEAN CORAL
179 Vega-Rodriguez, M.; Muller-Karger, F.; Eakin, M.; Guild, L.; Hu, C.; Li, J.; Liu, G.; Teleki, K.; Quiles-Perez, G.: DEVELOPING HIGH-RESOLUTION SST CLIMATOLOGIES AND THERMAL STRESS INDICES TO ENHANCE NOAA’S CORAL REEF DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM
S37 Evolutionary rules in the brave new ocean – Climate Change and Life History StrategiesChair(s): Sam Dupont, [email protected] Mike Thorndyke, [email protected] Frank Melzner, [email protected]: 201181 Schade, F. M.; Lang, T.: BLOOD ANALYSES OF
EUROPEAN FLOUNDER: SPATIAL PATTERNS AND POSSIBLE ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
182 Shama, L. N.; Schade, F.; Wegner, K. M.: EVOLUTIONARY POTENTIAL AND THERMAL REACTION NORMS OF MARINE HOST-PARASITE INTERACTIONS
183 Hoving, H. J.; Robison, B. H.: INCREMENTAL DEPOSITION IN STATOLITHS: A TOOL TO RESEARCH LONGEVITY AND GROWTH IN DEEP-SEA SQUID
184 Torres, J. J.; Fraser, W. R.; Parker, M.; Ashford, J. R.:
DISAPPEARING SILVER: LOSS OF THE ANTARCTIC SILVERFISH ON THE WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA SHELF
S38 Eutrophication across aquatic systems: causes, consequences, and controlsChair(s): Alan Wilson, [email protected] Joseph Montoya, [email protected]: Ballroom A185 Chappell, J. C.; Whitmire, S.; Martínez, G. A.; Sotomayor-
Ramírez, D.: THE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN TWO PUERTO RICAN RESERVOIRS OF CONTRASTING NUTRIENT STATUS
186 Buck, C.; Wilkerson, F.; Parker, A.; Marchi, A.: THE INFLUENCE OF MARICULTURE AND UPWELLING ON SEASONAL VARIATIONS OF NUTRIENTS, PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES AND PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY WITHIN A LOW-INFLOW ESTUARY
187 Daggett, C. T.; Saros, J. E.: EFFECTS OF ENHANCED NITROGEN DEPOSITION AND CHANGING DOC CONCENTRATIONS ON PHYTOPLANKTON IN BOREAL LAKES
188 Martínez Gustavo, A.; Sotomayor-Ramírez David, .; Whitmire Stefanie, .; Chappell Jessica, .: PHOSPHOROUS DYNAMICS AND ASSOCIATED TROPHIC STATUS OF TWO RESERVOIRS OF PUERTO RICO
189 Aukamp, J. R.; Schaeffer, B. A.; Conmy, R.: VARIATION OF AQUATIC INHERENT OPTICAL PROPERTIES IN FOUR NORTHWEST FLORIDA ESTUARIES
190 Bertoni, R.; Callieri, C.; Contesini, M.: ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF LEVEL FLUCTUATIONS IN LAKE MAGGIORE (NORTHERN ITALY)
191 Stadmark, J.; Conley, D. J.: INFORMING THE PUBLIC, POLICY MAKERS, MANAGERS AND STAKEHOLDERS ON MITIGATION MEASURES TO RELIEVE THE DETRIMENTAL EFFECTS OF EUTROPHICATION IN THE BALTIC SEA
192 Puusepp, L.; Koff, T.: PALAEOLIMNOLOGICAL RECORDS OF HUMAN IMPACT AND EUTROPHICATION IN SMALL LAKES OF ESTONIA
193 Niesen, M. E.; Harris, L. A.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN TRACER DEVELOPMENT IN SUPPORT OF A CAMPAIGN TO IMPROVE WATER QUALITY PREDICTIONS FOR THE POTOMAC ESTUARY, USA
S42 Coastal and inland hypersaline envi-ronments and their differences to normal salinity waters and freshwater lakesChair(s): Janet Reimer, [email protected] Miguel Huerta-Diad, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall41 Valdivieso-Ojeda, J. A.; Huerta-Diaz, M. A.; Tellez-
Duarte, M.; Siqueiros-Valencia, A.: ENRICHMENT OF MOLYBDENUM AS A BIOSIGNATURE OF MICROBIAL MATS IN MODERN AND ANCIENT SEDIMENTARY STRUCTURES
42 Soto-Feliciano, K. M.; De Jesus-Cruz, M.; Casillas-
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
54
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
Martinez, L.; Visscher, P. T.; Rios-Velazquez, C.: DIVERSITY OF PURPLE NON SULFUR ANOXYPHOTOTROPHIC BACTERIA FROM TROPICAL HYPERSALINE MICROBIAL MATS IN THE CABO ROJO SALTERNS
43 Spackeen, J. L.; Morzaria-Luna, H. N.; Alvirde, S. L.: FOOD WEB STRUCTURE OF TWO NEGATIVE ESTUARIES IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF CALIFORNIA, MEXICO
44 Villafane, A.; Rios-Velazquez, C.; Casillas-Martinez, L.: CARBENICILLIN RESISTANCE GENES FROM METAGENOMIC LIBRARIES DERIVED FROM HYPERSALINE MICROBIAL MATS AT THE CABO ROJO SALTERNS
45 Fleming, E.; Wurtsbaugh, W. A.: DO ARTEMIA BIOACCUMULATE METHYLMERCURY FROM THE MONIMOLIMNION OF THE GREAT SALT LAKE (UTAH)?
S45 Protists in Extreme Environments: Beyond DiversityChair(s): Virginia Edgcomb, [email protected] Slava Epstein, [email protected] William Orsi, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall47 Medrinal Emmanuelle, E.; Terrado Ramon, .; Thaler
Mary, .; Comeau André, .; Lovejoy Connie, .: ARCTIC EXTREMES: FOLLOW THE SUN AND THE ENDLESS SUMMER VERSUS SURVIVING WINTER DARKNESS?
S53 Urban Aquatic Systems in a Changing Climate Chair(s): Linda Duguay, [email protected] James Moffett, [email protected] Douglas Capone, [email protected]: Ballroom A80 Greengrove, C. L.; Masura, J. E.: WATER QUALITY IN
QUARTERMASTER HARBOR, PUGET SOUND, WA81 Hermes, A. L.; Sikes, E. L.; Chant, R.; Hunter, E.:
SEASONAL CHANGES IN ORGANIC MATTER COMPOSITION AND PARTITIONING THROUGH THE DELAWARE ESTUARY
S58 Emerging Patterns of nitrogen Fixation and its Controls in the OceansChair(s): Douglas G. Capone, [email protected] Joseph P. Montoya, [email protected]: 20284 Landolfi, A.; Dietze, H.; Oschlies, A.: TRADE-OFFS
IN MODELED PHOSPHORUS ACQUISITION STRATEGIES AND THE MARINE N2 FIXATION PARADOX
85 Bombar, D.; Dippner, J. W.; Korth, F.; Loick-Wilde, N.; Liskow, I.; Ngoc, L.; Doan, H. N.; Voss, M.: INFLUENCE OF RIVER DISCHARGE AND UPWELLING ON NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA:
LESSONS FROM MESOCOSM EXPERIMENTS AND ECOSYSTEM MODELING
86 Langlois, R. J.; Mohr, W.; Sudhaus, S.; Bluhm , K.; Heller, M.; Mosseri, J.; Croot, P.; Moore, C. M.; LaRoche, J.: N-LIMITATION OF THE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
87 Roa Pascuali, L.; Demarcq, H.; Arístegui, J.: TESTING MODELS TO DETECT TRICHODESMIUM SPP. PRESENCE IN THE CANARY ISLANDS REGION
88 Böttjer, D.; Church, M. J.; Letelier, R. M.; Sadler, D.; Viviani, D.; Watkins-Brandt, K. S.: DIAZOTROPH ACTIVITY AND POPULATION STRUCTURE IN AN INCREASED CO2 WORLD
S60 Biogeochemistry of resuspended sedi-ments in aquatic and coastal marine environmentsChair(s): Ralph N. Mead, [email protected] Stephen A. Skrabal, [email protected] G. Brooks Avery, Jr., [email protected]: 20290 Salisbury, S. K.; Canuel, E. A.; Anderson, I. C.; Tobias, C.
R.; Stanhope, J. W.; Hardison, A. K.: AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO EXAMINING THE EFFECTS OF PHYSICAL PROCESSES ON SHALLOW SEDIMENT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
91 Mead, R. N.; Southwell, M. S.; Luquire, C. M.; Avery, G. B.; Kieber, R. J.; Skrabal, S. A.: LIPID MOLECULAR MARKERS AS TOOLS TO PREDICTING THE PHOTOCHEMICAL RELEASE OF DOC FROM RESUSPENDED SEDIMENTS
S62 Microbial Adaptation to Environ-mental Changes and Advances in Marine Microbial Diversity and Dynamics in Latin America and the Caribbean Chair(s): Lauren McDaniel, [email protected] John H. Paul, [email protected] Ernesto Otero, [email protected] Luis Felipe Artigas, [email protected]: 10492 Brown, R. W.; Scott, K. M.: FRESHWATER BENTHIC
ALGAL RESPONSE TO ELEVATED CARBON DIOXIDE
93 Colon-Padilla, B. L.; Suarez-Velez, E.; Gomez-Vallejo, A.; Castilla, A.; Schmidt, W.; Quintero, P. O.; Smith, M. C.: AN
95 Moraes, P. C.; Sumida, P. Y.; Castilho, D. F.; Pellizari, V. H.: SEDIMENTARY MICROORGANISM RESPONSE TO ORGANIC MATTER INPUT: A LABORATORY STUDY
96 Schunck, H.; Desai, D.; Großkopf, T.; LaRoche, J.: CHANGES IN THE MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE DURING WATER SAMPLING: A CASE STUDY FROM THE PERUVIAN OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE
ASLOMeeting Program
55
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
S65 Urbanization and its impacts on tropical aquatic ecosystems Chair(s): Alonso Ramirez, [email protected] Tim Moulton, [email protected] Rebeca De Jesus, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall97 Alexandra S. Marcano Rivas, A. M.; Jorge R. Ortiz Zayas,
J. O.: THE QUALITY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON ALONG A TROPICAL URBAN GRADIENT
98 Wendling, C. C.; Bachtiar, R.; Lenz, M.; von Juterzenka, K.; Wahl, M.: POPULATION DIFFERENCES IN SUSCEPTIBILITY TO SALINITY STRESS IN THE GREEN MUSSEL PERNA VIRIDIS FROM CONTAMINATED AND UNCONTAMINATED SITES IN INDONESIA
S66 The Ecology of Infectious Diseases in Marine and Freshwater Systems Chair(s): James W. Porter, [email protected] Rachel T. Nobel, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall99 Corinaldesi, C.; Dell’Anno, A.; Luna, G. M.; Danovaro ,
R.: VIRAL INFECTION AND DECAY IN DEEP-SEA SEDIMENTS
100 Danovaro, R.; Corinaldesi, C.; Luna, G. M.: TROPICAL STONY CORALS DISEASES: INTERACTIONS BETWEEN ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND MICROBIAL INFECTIONS
101 Hatcher, S. M.; Binder, E.; Blackwood, A. D.; Conn, K. E.; Helmy, T.; Oliver, J. D.; Noble, R. T.: THE INTERPLAY OF ESTUARINE DYNAMICS AND PATHOGENIC MEMBERS OF THE VIBRIO GENUS
102 Narvaez, D. A.; Klinck, J.; Powell, E.; Hofmann, E.; Wilkin, J.; Haidvogel, D.; Hedgecock, D.: EFFECTS OF LARVAL DISPERSION ON THE MOVEMENT OF DISEASE RESISTANT GENES BETWEEN OYSTER POPULATIONS
103 Anderson, D.; Smith, M.; Weil, E.: HOLOBIONT TRANSCRIPTOME REGULATION IN MONTASTRAEA FAVEOLATA AFFECTED BY YELLOW BAND DISEASE: FROM MICROBIAL COMMUNITY SHIFTS TO CORAL INNATE IMMUNITY
104 Zavala Lopez, A.; Hogue, C.: SHEDDING RATE OF FREE-LIVING INFECTIVE STAGES OF THE TREMATODE EUHAPLORCHIS CALIFORNIENSIS IN RESPONSE TO TEMPERATURE
105 Graff, J. R.; Menden-Deuer, S.; Forschner, S.; Rowley, D.: VIBRIO CHOLERAE ALTERS ITS MOTILITY IN RESPONSE TO SUB-LETHAL CONCENTRATIONS OF A COMPETITOR-PRODUCED ANTIBIOTIC
106 Burns, J. H.; Rozet, N. K.; Gregg, T. M.; Takabayashi, M.: IMPACTS OF SKELETAL GROWTH ANOMALY ON ORGANISMAL AND POPULATION VIABILITY OF THE CORAL MONTIPORA CAPITATA IN HAWAI`I
107 Soffer, N.; Brandt, M. E.; Smith, T.; Correa, A. S.; Vega Thurber, R. L.: VIRAL METAGENOMIC
COMPARISONS OF WHITE PLAGUE INFECTED, BLEACHED, AND HEALTHY MONTASTRAEA ANNULARIS CORALS FROM THE US VIRGIN ISLANDS
S67 Deep-sea corals and other communi-ties associated with hydrocarbon seeps and polymetallic sulfide deposits: life in the crosshairs of human impactChair(s): Erik Cordes, [email protected] Chuck Fisher, [email protected] Amanda Demopoulos, [email protected] Cheryl Morrison, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall108 Cordes, E. E.; Lunden, J. J.; Roberts, H. H.: ROBERTS
REEF: A NATURAL LABORATORY FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON THE DEEP-WATER CORAL LOPHELIA PERTUSA
110 Reed, J. K.; Messing, C.; Walker, B.; Brooke, S.; Brouwer, M.; Correa, T.; Farrington, S.: DISTRIBUTION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF DEEP-SEA CORAL ECOSYSTEM HABITATS OFF SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
111 Henry, L. V.; Torres, J. J.: METABOLISM OF AN ANTARCTIC SOLITARY CORAL, FLABELLUM IMPENSUM, AND THE DEEP-SEA STONY CORAL, LOPHELIA PERTUSA
S71 Beachfront real estate: Microbial ecol-ogy and activity along changing coastsChair(s): Alyson E. Santoro, [email protected] J. Michael Beman, [email protected]: 208B112 Grim, S. L.; Kirchman, D. L.; Campbell, B. J.: ACTIVELY
REPLICATING BACTERIA IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT AND SARGASSO SEA
113 Garcias-Bonet, N.; Arrieta, J. M.; Marco-Noales, E.; Duarte, C. M.; Marbà, N.: ENDOPHYTIC BACTERIAL DIVERSITY IN SEAGRASS TISSUES: COMPARING CULTURING METHODS AND MOLECULAR METHODS
114 Liu, Y.; Collier, J. L.: HOW DO BLOOMS OF AUREOCOCCUS ANOPHAGEFFERENS (BROWN TIDE) AFFECT PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY STRUCTURE?
S73 Biochemicals in action in trophic interactions: their role in information transfer and nutritional qualityChair(s): Patrick Fink, [email protected] Alexander Wacker, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall118 Hartwich, M.; Piepho, M.; Straile, D.; Gaedke, U.; Wacker,
A.: RE-OLIGOTROPHICATION REDUCES FOOD QUANTITY BUT IMPROVES FOOD QUALITY FOR HERBIVORES
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
56
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
119 Juengling, S.; Lukas, M.; Wacker, A.: CHOLESTEROL AND OXYGEN SHORTAGE: EFFECTS ON DAPHNIA MAGNA
120 Sperfeld, E.; Martin-Creuzburg, D.; Wacker, A.: SIMULTANEOUS LIMITATION OF DAPHNIA BY TWO ESSENTIAL LIPIDS: DIFFERENT TYPES OF CO-LIMITATION
121 DeBose, J. L.; Paul, V. J.: FOLLOWING THE SCENT OF OPPORTUNITY: REVEALING THE CHEMICAL ECOLOGY OF FISH FORAGING AGGREGATIONS
S75 Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning: Current needs and Future ChallengesChair(s): Nasseer Idrisi, [email protected] Simon Pittman, [email protected] Zdenka Willis, [email protected]: 103A122 Ortiz-Carrión, B.; Ortiz-Zayas, J.; Rodríguez, J. M.:
THE AGRICULTURAL DILEMMA OF LAND USE CHANGE IN THE SANTA ISABEL/COAMO AREA, SOUTHERN PUERTO RICO
123 O’Connell, C. A.; Swanson, R. L.; Cuomo, C.: IDENTIFYING SOCIAL PERSPECTIVES, VALUES, AND USE-CONFLICTS AS THE BASIS FOR COASTAL AND MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING (CSMP) FOR LONG ISLAND SOUND
125 Herrera-Montes, M. I.; Ortiz-Rosa, S.; Solórzano, M. C.; Rincón-Díaz, M. P.; Potts, G. S.; Crain, B.; Quiñones, M. V.; Gould, W. A.: THE PUERTO RICO AND US VIRGIN ISLANDS AQUATIC GAP ANALYSIS PROJECT (PRUSVI-AGAP PROJECT): MARINE COMPONENT
S78 Genetics of Aquatic Microbial PopulationsChair(s): Deana Erdner, [email protected] Lisa Campbell, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall130 Anantharaman, K.; Breier, J. A.; Toner, B. M.; Sylvan, J. B.;
Edwards, K. J.; Dick, G. J.: MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE OF HYDROTHERMAL PLUMES
131 Schiaffino, M. R.; Unrein, F.; Gasol, J. M.; Massana, R.; Balagué, V.; Izaguirre, I.: BIOGEOGRAPHY OF BACTERIOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGES IN A LATITUDINAL GRADIENT OF LAKES FROM PATAGONIA TO ANTARCTICA
132 LEE, P. O.; MCLELLAN, S.; YOUNG, E. B.: EXAMINING EFFECTS OF DREISSENID MUSSELS AND BENTHIC ALGAE ON BENTHIC BACTERIAL DIVERISTY IN NEARSHORE LAKE MICHIGAN
133 Steffen, M. M.; Farnsley, S. E.; Li, Z.; Kutovaya, O. A.; Bullerjahn, G. S.; Boyer, G. L.; Hauser, L. J.; VerBerkmoes, N. C.; Wilhelm, S. W.: COMPARATIVE TARGETED AND SHOTGUN METAGENOMICS OF GLOBALLY DISTRIBUTED TOXIC MICROCYSTIS SPECIES.
S92 Exploring the foundations of interac-tions among the major biogeochemical cycles: thermodynamics, kinetics and stoichiometry. Chair(s): Philip G. Taylor, [email protected] Brian Lutz, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall162 Taylor, P. G.; Townsend, A. R.: STOICHIOMETRIC
COHERENCE AMONG THE GLOBAL CARBON, NITRATE AND PHOSPHORUS CYCLES: AN EXPANDED MODEL
163 Lutz, B. D.; Bernhardt, E. S.; Roberts, B. J.; Mulholland, P. J.: EXAMINING THE COUPLING OF CARBON AND NITROGEN CYCLES IN APPALACHIAN STREAMS: THE ROLE OF ORGANIC NITROGEN
164 Schoepfer, V. A.; Burgin, A. J.: ANAEROBIC MICROBIAL METABOLISM IN A HIGHLY EUTROPHIC STRATIFIED LAKE
S94 Impact of Hypoxia on Biogeochemical CyclesChair(s): Daniel Conley, [email protected] Felix Janssen, [email protected] Don Boesch, [email protected] Nancy Rabalais, [email protected]: Ballroom B170 Amann, T.; Weiss, A.; Hartmann, J.: DECADAL
TRENDS OF BIOGEOCHEMICAL MATTER LAND-OCEAN FLUXES THROUGH A TIDAL ESTUARY CONSIDERING UPSTREAM CATCHMENT CHANGES (ELBE, GERMANY)
171 Danielsson, Å.: THE INFLUENCE OF HYPOXIA/ANOXIA ON SILICATE CONCENTRATIONS IN THE BALTIC PROPER (BALTIC SEA)
172 Victoria, I.; Hovdenes, J.; Tengberg, A.; Heltne, J.; Apostolidis, A.; Kononets, M.; Hall, P.: OPTODES FOR AQUATIC CO2 AND O2 MEASUREMENTS: EXPERIENCES AND NEW DEVELOPMENTS
173 Staubwasser, M.; Schoenberg, R.; von Blanckenburg, F.; Krüger, S.; Pohl, C.: FE ISOTOPE REDOX CYCLING IN THE ANOXIC GOTLAND DEEP, BALTIC SEA
GS07P Multiple Stressor Problems in Aquatic Systems - PostersLocation: Exhibit Hall194 Cooper, L. A.; McCutchan, Jr., J. H.; Detmer, T. M.;
Lewis, Jr., W. M.: EFFECTS OF LODGEPOLE PINE MORTALITY DUE TO MOUNTAIN PINE BEETLE INFESTATION ON STREAM CHEMISTRY
195 Tsugeki/Narumi, N. K.; Urabe/Jotaro , U.; Tani/Yukinori, Y.; Ueda/Shingo , U.; Agusa/Tetsuro , T.; Oda/Hirotaka , O.; Tanabe/Shinsuke , T.: DOES ATMOSPHERIC DUST TRANSPORTED FROM THE ASIAN CONTINENT INFLUENCE OLIGOTROPHIC LAKES IN JAPAN?
ASLOMeeting Program
57
TUESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
196 Di Fiori, E.; Pizarro, H. N.; Ramírez, M.; Cataldo, D. H.: INTERACTION OF TWO ANTHROPOGENIC STRESSORS IN FRESHWATER: GLYPHOSATE AND THE INVASIVE MUSSEL LIMNOPERNA FORTUNEI ON PERIPHYTON COMMUNITY.
197 Schwierzke-Wade, L.; Wetzel, D. L.; Wells, R. S.; O’Corry-Crowe, G.; Reynolds, J. E.: THE EFFECTS OF STRESSORS ON FERTILITY POTENTIAL IN THE BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN: APPLICATION OF ELISA-BASED BIOMARKER ANALYSIS
198 MARTINEZ-RIVERA, E.; MENZE, M. A.; HAND, S. C.; TORRES, J. J.: LIFE IN CONSTANT COLD: MITOCHONDRIAL BIOENERGETICS IN TELEOSTEI SPECIES FROM THE SOUTHERN OCEAN.
199 Loadman, N. L.; Huebner, J. D.; Huebner, E.; Wiegand, M. D.: EFFECTS OF CHRONIC ULTRAVIOLET-B RADIATION AT 20, 24 AND 30C ON THE HISTOLOGY OF DAPHNIA MAGNA
200 ZACARIAS RIOS, S. Z.; YEPEZ PINILLOS, V. E.: EFFECTS OF HUMAN ACTIVITY ON THE POPULATION OF FRESHWATER SHRIMP, CRYPHIOPS CAEMENTARIUS
201 Christian, A. D.; Dorval, E.; Hannigan, R. E.; Eisen-Cuadra, A.: PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL ANALYSIS AND CLASSIFICATION OF LAKE AZUEI, HAITI.
202 Burke, R. A.; McCranie, M. B.; Stanley, M. S.: INFLUENCE OF LAND USE AND IN-STREAM PARAMETERS ON DENITRIFICATION ENZYME ACTIVITY IN SOUTHEASTERN US PIEDMONT HEADWATER STREAMS
GS08P Plankton Ecology - PostersLocation: Exhibit Hall203 Lenes, J. M.; Darrow, B. A.; Walsh, J. J.; Dieterle, D. A.;
Weisberg, R. H.; Zheng, L.: A SIMULATION ANALYSIS OF THE DEVELOPMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF THE 2001 RED TIDE ON THE WEST FLORIDA SHELF
204 Peltomaa, E. T.; Ojala, A. K.: ALGAL GROWTH ENHANCEMENT WITH ORGANIC SUBSTRATES
205 Walsh, B. M.; O’Neil, J. M.: ZOOPLANKTON ABUNDANCE IN RELATION TO RED TIDE DINOFLAGELLATE KARENIA SPP. ON THE WEST FLORIDA SHELF OF THE GULF OF MEXICO
206 Huebner, J. D.; Huebner, E.; Loadman, N. L.; Wiegand, M. D.: A DETAILED LIGHT AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC EXAMINATION OF THE CELL AND TISSUE MORPHOLOGY OF DAPHNIA MAGNA
207 Maranda, L.; Sharif, R.; Borkman, D.; Berounsky, V. M.: CHLOROPHYLL THIN LAYERS OF THE NORTHERN BASIN OF THE PETTAQUAMSCUTT RIVER ESTUARY
208 Semcheski, M. R.; Marshall, H. G.; Nesius, K. K.; Egerton, T. A.; Muller, M. T.: MUDFLATS EXPOSED! THE UNTOLD STORY OF MICROPHYTOBENTHOS AND THEIR CONTRIBUTION TO CHESAPEAKE BAY PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY.
209 Garcia, D. N.; Kaufmann, R. S.; Lowery, M. S.: EFFECTS OF FREE-DRIFTING ICEBERGS ON THE PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITION OF ANTARCTIC KRILL, EUPHAUSIA SUPERBA, IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN
211 Noh, J. H.; Choi, D. H.; Lee, C. M.: DYNAMIC SEASONAL AND SPATIAL CHANGES OF SYNECHOCOCCUS LINEAGES IN MARGINAL SEAS OF THE NORTH-WESTERN PACIFIC OCEAN
212 Titelman, J.; Takahashi , K.; Tönnesson, K.; Calliari, D.; Møller, L. F.; Tiselius, P.: PREDATION AND DIEL BEHAVIORAL PATTERNS OF A CHAETOGNATH
213 Yoo, M. H.; Roh, S. M.; Jeon, S. J.; Choi, J. K.: THE CONTRIBUTION OF MICROPHYTOBENTHOS TO THE BIOMASS AND PRODUCTION IN WATER COLUMN AND BENTHIC ZONE OF INTERTIDAL AREA
214 GULECAL, Y.; MEYER-DOMBARD, D.; TEMEL, M.: WATER QUALITY MONITORING USING PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY IN BUYUKCEKMECE WATERSHED, TURKEY
215 Kozik, C. R.; Sandgren, C. D.; Berges, J. A.: BETHNIC RECRUITMENT AND PHYSIOLOGICAL CELL DEATH IN NATURAL COMMUNITIES OF FRESHWATER PHYTOPLANKTON
216 Jordan, K. R.; Brooks, M. L.: THE EFFECTS OF SUBLETHAL TEMPERATURE AND FOOD LIMITATION ON TIGRIOPUS CALIFORNICUS
217 Goodson, A.; Greenfield, D. I.: PRELIMINARY INSIGHT TO THE GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SPP. ALONG THE SOUTHEAST COAST OF THE UNITED STATES
218 Majchrowski, R.; Ston-Egiert, J.; Ficek, D.: DEPTH ALGAL ACCESSORY PIGMENT DISTRIBUTIONS IN CASE 2 WATERS BASED ON THE EXAMPLE OF THE BALTIC SEA– BRIEF MATHEMATICAL DESCRIPTION
219 Churchill, J. J.; Hembre, L. K.: DO PREY FEAR UNFAMILIAR PREDATORS?: PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES OF DAPHNIA TO NATIVE AND INVASIVE PREDATORS
220 Barba, A. P.; Roman, M. R.; Pierson, J. J.: COMPARING ZOOPLANKTON RESPONSE TO HYPOXIA IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
GS09 Community EcologyChair(s): Alan Covich, [email protected] Russell Schmitt, [email protected] Charlotte Fuller, [email protected] Concepcion Rodriguez, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall23 Kuhnz, L. A.; Osborn, K. J.; Holland, , N. D.: DEPTH
AND HABITAT DISTRIBUTION OF DEEP-SEA ENTEROPNEUSTS IN THE EASTERN PACIFIC AND HAWAI’I
24 Tucker, J. K.: IS THERE A CORRELATION BETWEEN CHYTRID FUNGUS AND LUNGWORMS IN RANA SYLVATICA (WOOD FROGS)
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
58
TUES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
25 Nunez, E.; Laffon, S.; Alderete, A.: CANONICAL NESTED MANOVA TO TEST FOR DIFFERENCES ON FISH COMMUNITY COMPOSITION BETWEEN DISTURBED AND NON-DISTURBED CORAL REEFS
26 Rodriguez, G. E.; Rassweiler, A.; Reed, D. C.; Holbrook, S.: PATTERNS OF BIRTH AND LOSS: WHAT EXPLAINS THE BIOMASS DYNAMICS OF THE WORLD’S MOST PRODUCTIVE MARINE ORGANISM, MACROCYSTIS PYRIFERA?
27 Sujata Poudel, s.; John L. Harris, J.; Alan D. Christian, A.; David Tenenbaum, .: COMMUNITY CLASSIFICATION AND DISTRIBUTION PATTERNS OF FRESHWATER MUSSELS OF STRAWBERRY RIVER, ARKANSAS
28 Fuller, C. M.; Petrecca, R. F.; Ramey, P.; Taghon, G. L.; Grassle, J. P.; Fuchs, H.: ROLE OF BOTTOM ROUGHNESS IN RECRUITMENT AND SURVIVAL OF SURFCLAMS, SPISULA SOLIDISSIMA, ON THE CONTINENTAL SHELF
29 Simmons, K.; Walter, K.; Sponaugle, S.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATION IN THE EARLY LIFE OF A CORAL REEF DAMSELFISH (STEGASTES PARTITUS)
30 Bluhm, B. A.; Iken, K.; Mincks Hardy, S. L.; Sirenko, B. I.; Holladay, B. A.: COMMUNITY STRUCTURE OF EPIBENTHIC MEGAFAUNA IN THE CHUKCHI SEA
31 Skjæraasen, J. E.; Meager, , J. J.; Rudolfsen , G.; Karlsen, Ø.; Mayer, , I.; Moberg, , O.; Staby,, A.; Dahle, G.; Fernö, A.: SPERM TRAITS AND REPRODUCTIVE ROLES IN A MARINE BROADCAST SPAWNER
32 Deary, A. L.; Hilton, E. J.: COMPARATIVE ONTOGENY OF THE ORAL JAWS IN THE DRUMS (SCIAENIDAE) OF CHESAPEAKE BAY: RELATIONSHIP TO DIET AND HABI
33 Fallon, N. M.; Christian, A. D.: CONSUMER-DRIVEN NUTRIENT RECYCLING AND ECOLOGICAL STOICHIOMETRY OF FRESHWATER MUSSELS IN A NEW ENGLAND NORTHEASTERN COASTAL ECOREGION POND
34 Trochine, C.; Modenutti, B. E.; Balseiro, E. G.: EFFECTS OF UV RADIATION ON ALLELOCHEMICALS FROM FILAMENTOUS ALGAE: DOES IT MAKE A DIFFERENCE FOR TARGET ALGAE?
35 Torn, K.; Kovtun, A.; Kotta, J.; Martin, G.: EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES ON THE RECOVERY OF CHARA ASPERA FROM MECHANICAL DISTURBANCES AND REDUCED LIGHT LEVEL.
36 Lin, W.; Miki, T.; Hsieh, C.: EFFECTS OF ADAPTIVE DISPERSAL ON THE COEXISTENCE OF COMPETING CONSUMERS
GS10 Environmental Impacts of the BP Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico Oil SpillChair(s): Tracy Villareal, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall37 Morey, S. L.; Dukhovskoy, D. S.; Chassignet, E. P.; Garcia,
O.; MacDonald, I.: OBJECTIVE EVALUATION OF OIL SPILL MODELS USING SAR IMAGERY
38 Van der Ham, J. L.; De Mutsert, K.: EFFECTS OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL ON GROWTH OF BROWN SHRIMP IN AN AFFECTED LOUISIANA ESTUARY.
39 Lopez-Veneroni, D.; Salazar-Coria, L.: OIL-RELATED BASELINE LEVELS IN TRIANGULOS REEF, BANK OF CAMPECHE (MEXICO)
40 Sarkodee-Adoo, J.; Cherrier, J.; Chasar, J.: MONITORING SHIFTS IN DRIVERS OF PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN TWO GULF OF MEXICO ESTUARIES FOLLOWING THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL
ASLOMeeting Program
59
WED
nESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
Wednesday, 16 February 2011 OralsS05 Ocean Color Radiometry of Coastal and Inland WatersChair(s): James Yoder, [email protected] Roy Armstrong, [email protected]: 103A08:15 Gege, P.; Pinnel, N.: SPECTRAL VARIABILITY OF
DOWNWELLING IRRADIANCE IN WATER INDUCED BY WAVE FOCUSING
08:30 Polikarpov, I. G.; Al-Yamani, F. Y.; Al-Rifaie, K. S.; Al-Enezi, M. Y.; Al-Mansouri , H. A.; Saburova, M. A.: VARIABILITY OF THE INHERENT AND APPARENT OPTICAL PROPERTIES IN THE KUWAIT’S WATERS (ARABIAN GULF)
08:45 Uy, T. C.; Soriano, M. N.: DETERMINATION OF ATTENUATION COEFFICIENT IN COASTAL WATERS USING A COMMERCIAL CAMERA
09:00 Metsamaa, L.; Kutser, T.: MODEL-BASED ASSESSMENT TO IMPROVE THE USE OF REMOTE SENSING ALGORITHMS IN THE OPTICALLY COMPLEX WATERS.
09:15 Leguet, J.; Cardille, J.; Del Giorgio, P.: REMOTE SENSING OF CARBON CONTENT OF LAKES IN QUEBEC: EARLY SUCCESSES AND LIKELY LIMITS.
09:30 Mouw, C. B.; McKinley, G. A.; Chen, H.: EVALUATION AND OPTIMIZATION OF BIO-OPTICAL INVERSION ALGORITHMS FOR REMOTE SENSING OF LAKE SUPERIOR’S OPTICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES
09:45 Armstrong, R. A.; Cedeño-Maldonado, D. J.: FIELD AND AIRBORNE RADIOMETRY DETECTION OF THE HARMFUL DINOFLAGELLATE COCHLODINIUM POLYKRIKOIDES IN SOUTHWESTERN PUERTO RICO
13:45 Keith, D. J.; Lunetta, R.; Hines, A.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATION IN FISH NURSERY AREAS OF THE ALBEMARLE-PAMLICO SOUND, NC ESTUARINE SYSTEM DERIVED FROM MERIS
14:00 Romero, S. I.; Ferrari, R.; Piola, A. R.; Garcia, E. C.; Garcia, V.: CHARACTERIZATION OF COASTAL WATER MASSES IN THE PLATA REGION INFERRED BY OCEAN COLOR RADIOMETRY
14:15 Dash, P.; Walker, N.; Mishra, D.; Hu, C.: ATMOSPHERIC CORRECTION, VICARIOUS CALIBRATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF ALGORITHMS FOR QUANTIFYING CYANOBACTERIA BLOOMS FROM OCEANSAT-1 OCM SATELLITE DATA
14:30 Schalles, J. F.; Hladik, C. M.; Seminara, D. N.; O’Donnell, J. P.: MAPPING COASTAL AND ESTUARINE CHLOROPHYLL CONCENTRATIONS
14:45 Cardille, J. A.; del Giorgio, P.; Leguet, J. B.: REFINING SATELLITE-DERIVED ESTIMATES OF DOC IN LIGHT OF NEW EVIDENCE
15:00 Cape, M. R.; Vernet, M.; Kahru, M.: GRADIENTS IN COASTAL PRIMARY PRODUCTION FOLLOWING
ICE SHELF COLLAPSE IN THE LARSEN ICE SHELF SYSTEM, ANTARCTICA
15:15 Vahtmäe, E.; Kutser, T.: DETECTING CHANGES IN BALTIC SEA BENTHIC ENVIRONMENT WITH REMOTE SENSING
S09 Benthic biogeochemical processes: From microscale patchiness to ecosystem functionChair(s): Frank Wenzhoefer, [email protected] Ronnie N Glud, [email protected]: Ballroom B08:00 Aller, R. C.: BIOGENIC STRUCTURE AND REDOX
REACTION COUPLING IN SEDIMENTARY DEPOSITS*08:30 Braeckman, U.; Provoost, P.; Soetaert, K.; Middelburg,
J. J.; Vincx, M.; Vanaverbeke, J.: MICROSCALE MINERALISATION RATES UNDER DIFFERENT MIXING REGIMES
08:45 Vanaverbeke, J.; Franco, M. A.; van Oevelen, D.; Soetaert, K.; Vincx, M.; Moens, T.: BENTHIC RESPIRATION PARTITIONING IN CONTRASTING SUBTIDAL SEDIMENTS: SEASONALITY AND RESPONSE TO A SPRING PHYTOPLANKTON DEPOSITION
09:00 Bosch, J. A.; Kemp, W. M.: EXPLORING THE EFFECTS OF SURFACE-FEEDING POLYCHAETE DENSITY AND DISSOLVED OXYGEN ON SEDIMENT FLUX RATES OF INORGANIC NITROGEN
09:15 Cathalot, C.; Pastor, L.; Deflandre, B.; Viollier, E.; Buscail, R.; Kerherve, P.; Tisnerat-Laborde, N.; Meysman, F.; Rabouille, C.: TOWARDS A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF THE BENTHIC BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES IN THE RHONE RIVER PRODELTA
09:30 Fischer, J. P.; Koop-Jakobsen, K.; Holtappels, M.; Wenzhöfer, F.: SPATIO-TEMPORAL OXYGEN DYNAMICS ON DIFFERENT SCALES: INVESTIGATIONS WITH A NOVEL MULTI FIBER OPTODE IN SEDIMENTS AND WATER COLUMN
09:45 Meysman, F.: A BOTTOM-UP PERSPECTIVE ON THE OCEAN’S ORGANIC CARBON PUMP: O2 CONSUMPTION IN MARINE SEDIMENTS
13:30 Glud, R. N.; Wenzhoefer, F.: SMALL TO MESO- SCALE O2 DYNAMICS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS: A NEW VIEW ON AN OLD TOPIC
13:45 Wenzhoefer, F.; Glud, R. N.: BENTHIC OXYGEN CONSUMPTION: IMPORTANCE FOR THE REGIONAL AND GLOBAL CARBON BUDGET
14:00 Katsev, S.; Li, J.; Crowe, S. A.; Miklesh, D.; Kistner, M.; Dittrich, M.: EXTREME SPATIAL VARIABILITY, DEEP PENETRATION OF OXYGEN, AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL DYNAMICS IN THE SEDIMENTS OF LAKE SUPERIOR
14:15 DeMaster, D. J.; Smith, C. R.; Thomas, C. J.; Pointer, B. H.; Evrard, V.: FOODBANCS-2: BIOGEOCHEMICAL DISTRIBUTIONS AND ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES ALONG A N/S TRANSECT ON THE WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA SHELF
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
60
WED
nES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
14:30 Gibson, P. J.; Martens, C. S.; Lindquist, N.; Popp, B. N.; Hench, J. L.: IMPACT OF BIOLOGICAL AND PHYSICAL PROCESSES ON BENTHIC WATER QUALITY OF A CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEM
14:45 Orvain, F.; De Crignis, M.; Guizien, K.; Lefebvre, S.; Dupuy, C.: RELEVANCE OF EXOPOLYMER SECRETION TO UNDERSTAND THE DYNAMIC BEHAVIOR OF ERODIBILITY IN RELATION TO MICROPHYTOBENTHOS, BACTERIA AND MACROFAUNA ACTIVITIES
15:00 Woelfel, J.; Wannicke, N.; Hübener, T.; Karsten, U.: EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT CO2 CONCENTRATIONS ON MICROPHYTOBENTHIC FUNCTION (SOUTHERN BALTIC SEA)
15:15 LEON SOON, S. G.; THOMAS, F. I.: INVESTIGATING THE EFFECTS OF BENTHIC ALGAL CANOPIES OF VARYING STRUCTURE ON WATER FLOW AND CHEMICAL EXCHANGE
16:00 Volkenborn, N.; Polerecky, L.; Matsui, G. Y.; Wethey, D. S.; Lovell, C. R.; Woodin, S. A.: DEEP-BURROWING ORGANISMS CAUSE DYNAMIC SPATIO-TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF FLUXES THROUGH THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE
16:15 Michaud, E. D.; Aller, R. C.; Zhu, Q.; Stora, G.: DENSITY AND SIZE DEPENDENT EFFECTS OF NEPHTYS INCISA POPULATIONS ON BIOGEOCHEMICAL FLUXES
16:30 Morris, E. P.; Peralta, G.; Brun, F. G.; Bouma, T. J.; Hendriks, I. E.; Benavente, J.; Lara, M.; Gonzalez-Ortiz, V.; van Engeland, T.; van Duren, L.; Perez-Llorens, J. L.: THE ROLE OF BIO-HYDRODYNAMIC INTERACTIONS IN DETERMINING THE FUNCTIONING OF SHALLOW, BENTHIC ECOSYSTEMS
16:45 Langerhuus, A. T.; Alperin, M. J.; Niggemann, J.; Jørgensen, B. B.; Lomstein , B. A.: NOVEL DIAGENETIC MODELLING OF BACTERIAL BIOMARKERS TO DETERMINE ACTIVITY IN DEEP-SEA SEDIMENT OFF CHILE
17:00 Cornwell, J. C.; O’Keefe, J.; Owens, M. S.; Jordan, T. E.; Bailey, E. M.; Boynton, W. R.: SEDIMENTARY PHOSPHORUS AND NITROGEN FLUXES CHANGE WITH SEASONAL INCREASES IN ESTUARINE SALINITY
17:15 Lehto, N. J.; Larsen, M.; Davison, W.; Glud, R. N.; Zhang, H.: DETERMINATION OF TRACE METAL DYNAMICS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS USING A JOINT OXYGEN SENSING OPTODE-DGT PROBE
17:30 Baumann, Z.; Fisher, N. S.: RELATING SEDIMENTARY METAL PHASE SPECIATION TO ITS BIOAVAILABILITY
17:45 Kelly, M. D.; Campbell, L. M.; Cumming, B. F.; Drevnick, P. E.; Muir, D.: ACIDIFICATION, TOXIC MERCURY, AND FISH; DESCRIBING CHANGES OF BIOACCUMULATION
S10 Biological Invasions as a Driver of Change in Aquatic SystemsChair(s): Sarah Bailey, [email protected] Hugh MacIsaac, [email protected]: 20116:00 Jerde, C. L.; Mahon, A. R.; Chadderton, W. L.; Lodge,
D. M.: EARLY DETECTION OF INVASIVE SPECIES USING ENVIRONMENTAL DNA: AN ONGOING CASE STUDY OF ASIAN CARP INVASION OF THE GREAT LAKES
16:15 Chan, F. T.; Bailey, S. A.; Wiley, C. J.; MacIsaac, H. J.: FIRST VECTOR-BASED RISK ASSESSMENT FOR SHIP-MEDIATED BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS IN THE CANADIAN ARCTIC
16:30 MacIsaac, H. J.; Sylvester, F.; Kalaci, O.: MODELS TO PREDICT INVASION RISK VIA SHIPS’ HULL FOULING
16:45 Bailey, S. A.; Briski, E.; Koops, M. A.; Wiley, C. J.: POTENTIAL VS. ACTUAL PROPAGULE PRESSURE: COMPARATIVE ESTIMATES OF INVASION RISK IN THE GREAT LAKES USING BALLAST VOLUME VS. BIOLOGICAL SAMPLING
17:15 Zhang, H.; Rutherford , E. S.; Mason , D. M.; Johnson, T. B.; Adamack, A. T.; Zhu, X.; Lodge, D. M.: ECOLOGICAL FORECAST OF THE IMPACTS OF ASIAN CARP ON LAKE ERIE FOOD WEB AND FISHERIES – AN EWE APPROACH
17:30 Jokela, A.; Arnott, S. E.; Beisner, B.: INFLUENCE OF THE EXOTIC PREDATORY CLADOCERAN BYTHOTREPHES LONGIMANUS ON THE VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ZOOPLANKTON PREY IN INLAND LAKES OF THE CANADIAN SHIELD
17:45 Berges, J. A.; Engevold, P. M.; Gronquist, D. J.; Sandgren, C. D.: IMMUNOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO DETERMINE EFFECTS OF INVASIVE, ZOOPLANKTON PREDATORS IN PELAGIC, LAKE MICHIGAN FOODWEBS
S21 Isotopic and Molecular Approaches to Study Microbe-Metazoan Trophic Dynamics Chair(s): Astrid Schnetzer, [email protected] Darcy Lonsdale, [email protected] David Caron, [email protected]: 103B08:00 Costas, B. A.; McManus, G. B.: USE OF SPECIES-
SPECIFIC PRIMERS TO UNDERSTAND TOP-DOWN CONTROL OF MICROZOOPLANKTON BY MESOZOOPLANKTON
08:15 Schnetzer, A.; Lonsdale, D.; Caron, D. A.: A GENE SEQUENCING APPROACH TO STUDY PROTISTAN-COPEPOD FEEDING RELATIONS
08:30 Cleary, A. C.; Durbin, E. G.; Rynearson, T. A.: NORTHERN KRILL BRING SEDIMENT CARBON BACK TO THE PELAGIC: DNA IN MEGANYCTIPHANES NORVEGICA GUT CONTENTS SHOWS BENTHIC FEEDING
ASLOMeeting Program
61
WED
nESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
08:45 Walters, T. L.; Pavel, C. A.; Frazier, L. M.; Thompson, M. E.; Gibson, D. M.; Paffenhöfer, G. A.; Frischer, M. E.: MOLECULAR GUT CONTENT PROFILING OF DOLIOLETTA GEGENBAURI IN SOUTHEASTERN SUBTROPICAL CONTINENTAL SHELF INTRUSION WATERS: WHAT ARE THEY EATING?
09:00 De Troch, M.; Cnudde, C.; Willems, A.; Moens, T.; Vanreusel, A.: BACTERIA ON FAECAL PELLETS OF HARPACTICOID COPEPODS: TROPHIC UPGRADING AT THE PLANT-ANIMAL INTERFACE
09:15 de Kluijver, A.; Schoon, P.; Schouten, S.; Downing, J. A.; Middelburg, J. J.: COMPOUND-SPECIFIC ISOTOPE CONSTRAINTS ON CARBON FLOWS IN FRESHWATER PLANKTON COMMUNITIES UNDER DIFFERENT PCO2 LEVELS
09:30 Guilini, K.; Van Oevelen, D.; Soetaert, K.; Middelburg, J. J.; Vanreusel, A.: THE NUTRITIONAL IMPORTANCE OF BENTHIC BACTERIA FOR DEEP-SEA NEMATODES STUDIED BY MEANS OF AN ISOTOPE TRACER EXPERIMENT.
S26 Improved Broader Impacts = Enhanced Scientific ImpactsChair(s): Liesl Hotaling, [email protected] Linda Duguay, [email protected]: 208A08:00 Bruno, B. C.; Padillo-Gamino, J.: PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT AT THE CENTER FOR MICROBIAL OCEANOGRAPHY: RESEARCH AND EDUCATION
08:15 Neuberger-Cywiak, L.: THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION AT POSTGRADUATE MARITIME TRANSPORT AND SEA-CAPTAIN STUDIES AT THE UNIVERSIDAD MARTTIMA DEL CARIBE (VENEZUELA)
08:30 Bhaskaran, H.; Rhodes, M.; Hutchinson, L.; Hammond, J.; Jacobs, J.: NOAA’S TEACHER IN THE LAB PROGRAM: COMMUNICATING NOAA SCIENCE TO THE CLASSROOM
08:45 Cáceres-Charneco, R. I.; Ortiz-Zayas, J.; Thiele, M.: THE PUERTO RICAN CRESTED TOAD TADPOLE RELEASE SITE IN GABIA, PUERTO RICO: AN OUTSIDE CLASSROOM FOR TEACHING LIMNOLOGY TO MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS
09:00 Kenna, T. C.; Pfirman, S.; Turrin, M. K.; Land, M.: RIVER SUMMER: A MODEL PROGRAM FOR FACULTY THAT PROMOTES INTERDISCIPLINARY LEARNING ABOUT THE EARTH AND ITS ENVIRONMENT
09:15 Baptista, A.; Lothrop, R.; Schumacker, E.; Roger, P.; Hudson, C.; Heinith, B.; Green, V.; Wegner, K.; Peterson, T.: BRINGING TOGETHER TRIBAL AND QUANTITATIVE OCEANOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVES IN A SCIENTIFIC FRAMEWORK FOR COASTAL MARGINS
09:30 Casillas-Maldonado, J. I.; Soto-Santiago , F. J.: GUARDARENAS PROJECT: WORKING FOR A SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
09:45 Cooley, S.; Benway, H.: EDUCATING NON-SCIENTISTS ABOUT OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
S28 Biogeochemical, ecological and physical dynamics of eastern boundary upwelling systems Chair(s): Carol Robinson, [email protected] Veronique Garcon, [email protected]: Ballroom A08:00 Lachkar, Z.; Gruber, N.; Turi, G.: THE FUTURE OF
EASTERN BOUNDARY UPWELLING SYSTEMS : POTENTIAL CHANGES AND VULNERABILITIES*
08:15 Anderson, C.; Kudela, R.; Benitez-Nelson, C.; Lane, J.; Hayashi, K.; Sekula-Wood, E.; Burrel, C.; Siegel, D.; Goodman, J.; Brzezinski, M.: IS THERE A LINK BETWEEN THE 2009-2010 CENTRAL PACIFIC ENSO EVENT AND PROLONGED HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN CENTRAL CALIFORNIA?
08:30 Ladah, L. B.; Lavin, M. F.; Filonov, A.; Leichter, J. J.; Zertuche, J. A.; Tapia, F.; Lievana, A.; Perez-Mayorga, D. M.; Konotchick, T.; Wyatt, A.: CHANGES IN VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION AND NUTRITIONAL STATUS OF PHYTOPLANKTON, ZOOPLANKTON, AND MACROALGAE DURING STRONG INTERNAL TIDAL FORCING IN BAJA CALIFORNIA
08:45 Bianucci, L.; Denman, K. L.: CARBON AND OXYGEN CYCLES ON THE VANCOUVER ISLAND SHELF: ROLE OF THE COASTAL CURRENT AND SENSITIVITY TO CHANGES IN ENVIRONMENTAL FORCING
09:00 Romanou, A.; Gregg, W. W.: EASTERN BOUNDARY UPWELLING SYSTEM CLIMATE MODELING: UNCERTAINTIES DUE TO VERTICAL OCEAN DISCRETIZATION
09:15 Kalvelage, T.; Jensen, M.; Lavik, G.; Kuypers, M.: OXYGEN DEPENDENCY OF AEROBIC AND ANAEROBIC N-TRANSFORMATIONS IN OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONES
09:30 Lincoln, S. A.; DeLong, E. F.; Summons, R. E.: BIOMARKER INSIGHTS INTO ARCHAEAL ECOLOGY IN OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE WATERS OFF THE CHILEAN COAST
09:45 JONCA, J.; GIRAUD, W.; THOURON, D.; COMTAT, M.; GARCON, V.: PHOSPHATE MONITORING IN THE OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONES : A NOVEL ELECTROCHEMICAL REAGENTLESS METHOD
13:30 Robinson, C.; Hardman-Mountford, N.; Serret, P.; Kitidis, V.; Tilstone, G.; Loucaides, S.; Torres, R.; Nightingale, P.; Smyth, T.; Stephens, J.: THE IMPACT OF COASTAL UPWELLING ON THE CYCLING OF DISSOLVED OXYGEN AND CARBON DIOXIDE
13:45 Ricardo Torres, R. J.; Carol Robinson, C.; Philip Nightingale, P.; Beatriz. Barreiro, B.; Eric Desmond Barton, E. D.; Thomas Meunier, T.; Vas Kitidis, V.; Simon Thomas, S.; Glen Tarran, G.; Timothy Smyth, T.: SMALL SCALE TURBULENCE DISTRIBUTION IN THE MAURITANIAN UPWELLING: LINKS WITH BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
14:00 Serret, P.; Kitidis, V.; Robinson, C.; Hill, P.; Zubkov, M. V.; Tarran, G.: LAGRANGIAN OBSERVATIONS OF PLANKTON COMMUNITY AND BACTERIAL PRODUCTION AND RESPIRATION ALONG NW AFRICAN UPWELLING FILAMENTS
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
62
WED
nES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
14:15 Steinhoff, T.; Bange, H. W.; Körtzinger, A.: NET COMMUNITY PRODUCTION IN THE MAURITANIAN UPWELLING ESTIMATED WITH A DUAL TRACE GAS APPROACH USING CO2 AND N2O
14:30 Loucaides, S.; Tyrrell, T.; Achterberg, E. P.; Robinson, C.; Hardman-Mountford, N.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING OF CARBON DIOXIDE ALONG AN UPWELLING FILLAMENT OFF CAPE BLANC, NW AFRICA: RESULTS FROM A LAGRANGIAN STUDY
14:45 Archer, S. D.; Stephens, J. A.; Stefels, J.; Hopkins, F. J.; Kimmance, S. A.: EXPLANATION OF THE TEMPORAL PROGRESSION OF DMS FLUX FROM A COASTAL UPWELLING SYSTEM
15:00 Hill, P. G.; Purdie, D. A.; Zubkov, M. V.: HIGH SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF MICROBIAL AMINO ACID UPTAKE IN AN EASTERN BOUNDARY UPWELLING SYSTEM, NORTH-WEST AFRICA
15:15 Bayindirli, C.; Thomas, S.; Gilbert, J.; Tarran, G.; Widdicombe, C.; Woodward, M.; Torres, R.; Achterberg, E.; Mingkwan, P.; Robinson, C.: TEMPORAL SUCCESSION IN MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND GENE EXPRESSION DURING A LAGRANGIAN STUDY IN THE NORTH WEST AFRICAN UPWELLING
S34 Bioluminescent Bays of Puerto Rico: Science, Education, Management and ConservationChair(s): Michael Latz, [email protected] Fernando Gilbes-Santaella, [email protected] Miguel Sastre, [email protected]: 208B13:30 González-Lagoa, J. G.: THE BIOLUMINESCENT
BAYS OF PUERTO RICO: RESEARCH ENDEAVORS (INVITED LECTURE)*
13:45 Soler-Figueroa, B. M.; Otero-Morales, E.: DAILY, SPATIAL AND SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF PYRODINIUM BAHAMENSE AND CERATIUM FURCA AT BAHIA FOSFORESCENTE, LA PARGUERA, PUERTO RICO
14:00 Sastre, M.; Rodríguez, J.; Nuñez, J.; Francis, V.; Santiago, M.; Olivieri, K.; Sánchez, E.; Maldonado, J.; Nazario, J.; Carrera, A.: POPULATION DYNAMICS OF PYRODINIUM BAHAMENSE AND CERATIUM FURCA AT LAGUNA GRANDE, PUERTO RICO, AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH WATER QUALITY PARAMETERS
14:15 Latz, M. I.; Martin Bras, M. P.: ESTABLISHMENT OF A BIOLUMINESCENCE OBSERVATORY AT PUERTO MOSQUITO, VIEQUES, PUERTO RICO
14:30 Gilbes, F.; Hernandez, W.: UNDERSTANDING BIOLUMINESCENT BAYS USING WEB-BASED TOOLS
14:45 VALIADI, M.; MARCINKO, C. L.; PAINTER, S. C.; ALLEN, J. T.; BALCH, W. M.; IGLESIAS-RODRIGUEZ, M. D.: BIOLUMINESCENT DINOFLAGELLATES IN SURFACE WATERS OF THE PATAGONIAN SHELF DURING EARLY AUSTRAL SUMMER 2008
15:00 Marcinko, C. L.; Allen, J. T.; Painter, S. C.; Martin, A. P.: DIURNAL VARIATION OF DINOFLAGELLATE BIOLUMINESCENCE AND ITS IMPACT UPON MEASURING SPATIAL VARIABILITY.
15:15 Orrico, C. M.; Zaneveld, J. R.; Barnard, A. H.; Moline, M. A.; Robbins, I.; Moore, C.: BIOLUMINESCENCE IN THE COASTAL ENVIRONMENT
S35 Advances in coastal hypoxia modeling: from physics to fishChair(s): Dubravko Justic, [email protected] Robert Hetland, [email protected]: 20108:00 Justic, D.; Rose, K.; Wang, L.; Hoda, A.; Huang,
H.: BEYOND CONVENTIONAL MODELING OF COASTAL HYPOXIA: COUPLING THREE DIMENSIONAL HYDRODYNAMIC-BIOLOGICAL HYPOXIA MODELS WITH INIVIDUAL BASED FISH MODELS
08:15 Obenour, D. R.; Michalak, A. M.; Scavia, D.; Zhou, Y.: UNDERSTANDING THE CAUSES OF GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIA: A GEOSTATISTICAL APPROACH
08:30 Forrest, D. R.; Hetland, R. D.; DiMarco, S. F.: MULTIVARIATE MODELLING OF SEASONAL HYPOXIA OVER THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL SHELF
08:45 Hetland, R. D.: NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIA AS SEEN THROUGH THE LENS OF CONTINENTAL SHELF DYNAMICAL PROCESSES
09:00 Zhang, X.; Hetland, R. D.; DiMarco, S. F.: A NUMERICAL INVESTIGATION OF THE TEXAS SHELF HYPOXIA IN 2007
09:15 Feng, Y.; DiMarco, S. F.; George , J. A.: UNDERSTANDING THE RELATIVE ROLE OF WIND AND NUTRIENT FORCING OF THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIA USING STATISTICAL AND A COUPLED NUMERICAL MODEL
09:30 Ganju, N. K.; Dickhudt, P. J.; Sherwood, C. R.; Hayn, M.; Howarth, R. W.: OBSERVATION AND MODELING OF NUTRIENT LOADING AND HYPOXIA IN A SHALLOW, GROUNDWATER-INFLUENCED ESTUARY
09:45 Sturdivant, S. K.; Brush, M. J.; Diaz, R. J.: MODELING THE EFFECT OF HYPOXIA ON MACROBENTHIC PRODUCTION IN THE LOWER RAPPAHANNOCK RIVER, CHESAPEAKE BAY, USA.
S39 Regional Ecosystem Research Inform-ing Management DecisionsChair(s): Kimberly Puglise, [email protected] David Hilmer, [email protected] Michael Dowgiallo, [email protected] Larry Pugh, [email protected] Felix Martinez, [email protected]: 20208:00 Ortner, P. B.; Boyer, J. N.; Mitchell, C. L.; Nuttle,
ASLOMeeting Program
63
WED
nESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
W.; Gayanilo, F.: A SYSTEMATIC PROCESS OF CONSENSUS BUILDING AND GOAL SETTING: THE MARES PROJECT
08:15 Allee, Ph.D., R. J.; Carollo, Ph.D., C.; Sutter, F. C.: ECOSYSTEM ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO: INTEGRATING SCIENCE WITH MANAGEMENT NEEDS
08:30 Kelble, C. R.; Bowder, J. A.: SETTING JUVENILE SPOTTED SEATROUT PERFORMANCE MEASURES TO ASSESS THE SUCCESS OF EVERGLADES RESTORATION ON FLORIDA BAY
08:45 Simoniello, C.; Tissot, P.; McKee, D.; Adams, J.; Ball, R.; Butler, R.; Jochens, A.: A COOPERATIVE APPROACH TO RESOURCE MANAGEMENT: TEXAS GAMEFISH WIN
09:00 Mullins, R. L.; DiMarco, S. F.; Guinasso, N.: UNRAVELING FRESHWATER SOURCES RESPONSIBLE FOR HYPOXIA FORMATION ALONG THE TEXAS COAST
09:15 Kress, N.; Dromi, D.; Yacobi, Y. Z.; Stambler, N.: THE EFFECT OF A REVERSE OSMOSIS SEAWATER DESALINATION PLANT ON THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT. A FIELD STUDY AT THE ISRAELI MEDITERRANEAN COAST
09:30 Austin, B. J.; Jackson, A.; Brick, K.; Evans-White, M. A.; Entrekin, S.: IMPACT OF NATURAL GAS WELLS ON METABOLISM AND PERIPHYTON IN HEADWATER STREAMS IN NORTH CENTRAL ARKANSAS
09:45 Rincón-Díaz, M. P.; Solórzano, M.; Crain, B.; Herrera-Montes , M. I.; Ortiz-Rosa, S.; Quiñones, M.; Potts, G.; Gould, W.: USING LANDSCAPE FEATURES TO CLASSIFY WATERSHEDS AND FRESHWATER HABITATS, AND TO QUANTIFY HUMAN FOOTPRINTS IN RIVERINE SYSTEMS OF PUERTO RICO
13:30 Wiener, C. S.; Toonen, R. J.; Leong, J. C.; Rivera, M. A.; Kosaki, R. K.; Karl, S. A.; Johnson, H.; Keller, K.: COMMUNICATING SCIENCE FOR ECOSYSTEM BASED MANAGEMENT: A CASE STUDY OF THE HAWAII INSTITUTE OF MARINE BIOLOGY NORTHWESTERN HAWAIIAN ISLANDS RESEARCH PARTNERSHIP
13:45 ROWLANDS, G. P.; Purkis, S. J.; Riegl, B. M.; Bruckner, A.; Renaud, P. G.: THE DIVERSITY, DISTRIBUTION AND MANAGEMENT OF CORAL REEFS IN THE SAUDI ARABIAN RED SEA
14:00 Relles, N. J.; Jones, D. O.: CORAL COVER CHANGE DETECTION TO IDENTIFY POTENTIAL AREAS OF MANAGEMENT CONCERN ON BONAIRE, NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
14:15 Ramos Álvarez, A.; Speight, M. R.: PUBLIC POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS: MANAGING PUERTO RICO’S MARINE ORNAMENTAL FISHERY WITH AN INTEGRATIVE APPROACH
14:30 Townsend, H.: USING MODELS TO SUPPORT INTER-JURISDICTIONAL ECOSYSTEM-BASED FISHERIES MANAGEMENT IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY
14:45 Fogarty, M. J.: ECOSYSTEM-BASED FISHERY
MANAGEMENT ON THE NORTHEAST U.S CONTINENTAL SHELF: OPTIONS FOR IMPLEMENTATION
15:15 Kerkering, H. A.; Dillon, A.: CALIFORNIA’S OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS: DESIGNED TO BRING SCIENCE TO MANAGEMENT
S46 The role of inland waters in the car-bon cycle of the boreal forest biomeChair(s): Jan Karlsson, [email protected] Rob Striegl, [email protected] Lars Tranvik, [email protected]: 20908:00 Humborg, C.; Mörth, C. M.; Giesler, R.: CARBON
SINK-SOURCE FUNCTION OF THE AQUATIC CONDUIT IN BOREAL AND SUBARCTIC BIOMES – A QUESTION OF FLOW PATHS?~
08:30 Weyhenmeyer, G. A.; Khalili, M. I.; Temnerud, J.; Kothawala, D.; Tranvik, L.; Fröberg, M.; Karltun, E.: ORGANIC CARBON QUALITY CHANGES FROM BOREAL SOILS VIA SURFACE WATERS TO THE SEA
08:45 Wickland, K. P.; Aiken, G. R.; Spencer, R. G.; Striegl, R. G.: BIOAVAILABILITY AND TRANSPORT OF TERRESTRIAL DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN BOREAL RIVERS
09:00 Tank, S. E.; Raymond, P. A.; Peterson, B. J.; Holmes, R. M.; McClelland, J. W.; Striegl, R. G.: DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON EXPORT FROM THE WORLD’S LARGEST CIRCUMPOLAR WATERSHEDS
09:15 Finlay, K.; Leavitt, P. R.; Vogt, R.; Bogard, M.; Wissel, B.: GLOBAL WARMING REDUCES CO2 EFFLUX FROM HARDWATER LAKES AND OFFSETS AGRICULTURAL CO2 EMISSIONS
09:30 Quinones-Rivera, Z. J.; Finlay, K.; Leavitt, P. R.; Wissel, B.: ASSESSING EFFECTS OF METABOLIC ACTIVITY AND HYDROLOGY ON DISSOLVED OXYGEN AND DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON DYNAMICS IN HARDWATER LAKES USING STABLE ISOTOPES
09:45 Ferec, F.; Bensoussan, N.; Benedetti, M. F.; Paolini, G.; Groleau, A.: AUTHIGENIC CALCITE PRECIPITATION IN HARDWATER LAKES: VARIABILITY FROM HOUR TO DECADE AND CONSEQUENCES ON CARBON BUDGET
13:30 del Giorgio, P. A.; St-Pierre, A.; Lapierre, J. F.; Vachon, D.; Ducharme-Riel, V.; Fauteux, L.: MAJOR ROLE OF BEAVER DAMS IN THE REGIONAL CARBON DIOXIDE AND METHANE BUDGET IN THE BOREAL REGION OF QUBBEC *
13:45 Seekell, D. A.; Pace, M. L.: LAKE SIZE-ABUNDANCE DISTRIBUTIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR BOREAL BIOME CARBON CYCLING
14:00 Bastviken, D.; Tranvik, L. J.; Downing, J. A.; Crill, P. M.; Enrich-Prast, A.: FRESHWATER METHANE EMISSIONS VERSUS THE CONTINENTAL CARBON SINK
14:15 Bennington, V.; McKinley, G. A.; Vasys, V.; Desai, A. R.; Urban, N. R.: LAKE SUPERIOR WITHIN THE REGIONAL CARBON BUDGET
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
64
WED
nES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
14:30 Tremblay, A.; Bastien, J.; Bonneville, M. C.; del Giorgio, P.; Demarty, M.; Garneau, M.; Helie, J. F.; Pelletier, L.; Prairie, Y.; Roulet, N.; Strachan, I.; Teodoru, C.: NET CHANGES IN THE REGIONAL C BALANCE AND THE DYNAMICS OF GHG EMISSIONS FOLLOWING THE CREATION OF THE EASTMAIN 1 RESERVOIR IN NORTHERN QUBBEC, CANADA
14:45 Lundin, E.; Giesler, R.; Persson, J.; Thompson, M.; Karlsson, J.: CO2 EMISSIONS FROM LAKES AND STREAMS IN A SUBARTIC CATCHMENT
15:00 Ojala, A. K.; Lopez Bellido, J.; Tulonen, T.; Kankaala, P.; Huotari, J.: GAS FLUXES FROM A BROWN-WATER AND A CLEAR-WATER LAKE DURING A SUMMER WITH EXTREME RAIN EVENTS
15:15 Vachon, D.; Prairie, Y. T.: GAS TRANSFER VELOCITY IN LAKES: A STEP TOWARDS UNIVERSALITY
16:00 Kortelainen, P.; Rantakari, M.; Pajunen, H.; Huttunen, J. T.; Alm, J.; Juutinen, S.; Larmola, T.; Silvola, J.; Martikainen, P. J.: CARBON EVASION/ACCUMULATION IN RANDOMLY SELECTED BOREAL LAKES
16:15 Ferland/ Marie-Eve, M. E.; Yves T. Prairie, Y. T.; Paul A. del Giorgio, P. A.: CARBON SEDIMENTATION AND ACCUMULATION IN BOREAL LAKES AT DIFFERENT TEMPORAL SCALES
16:30 Gudasz, C.; Sobek, S.; Bastviken, D.; Tranvik, L. J.: SIMILAR LONG-TERM TEMPERATURE SENSITIVITY OF THE ORGANIC CARBON MINERALIZATION IN CONTRASTING LAKE SEDIMENTS
16:45 Sobek, S.; Gudasz, C.; Bastviken, D.; Tranvik, L. J.: INTERACTIVE EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND OXYGEN PENETRATION DEPTH ON CARBON MINERALIZATION IN BOREAL LAKE SEDIMENTS
17:00 Prairie, Y. T.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Teodoru, C.; Tremblay, A.: RATES OF CARBON MINERALIZATION IN THE RECENTLY FLOODED EASTMAIN-1 BOREAL HYDROPOWER RESERVOIR, QUEBEC.
17:15 von Einem, J.; Graneli, W.: EFFECTS OF FETCH AND DOC ON LIGHT CLIMATE IN SMALL FOREST LAKES - IMPLICATIONS FOR LAKE CARBON BALANCE
17:30 Lapierre, J. F.; del Giorgio, P. A.: DOC OPTICAL PROPERTIES AND PHOTO-CHEMICAL REACTIVITY IN TEMPERATE AND BOREAL LAKES
S51 Who’s in the water? Recent advances in the detection and quantification of phytoplankton community composition in aquatic ecosystemsChair(s): Tammi L. Richardson, [email protected] Dianne I. Greenfield, [email protected]: 103B13:30 Salvitti, L. R.; Whereat, E. B.; Totora, J.; Coyne, K.
J.: CLASS-LEVEL QUANTITATIVE REAL-TIME PCR (QPCR) ASSESSMENT OF CHANGES IN PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN DELAWARE’S INLAND BAYS
13:45 Baker, L. J.; Kemp, P. F.: EXPLORING THE BACTERIA-DIATOM METAORGANISM USING SINGLE-CELL WHOLE GENOME AMPLIFICATION.
14:00 Pearson, G. A.; Canovas, F.; Cox, C. J.; Lago-Leston, A.; Agusti, S.; Duarte, C. M.; Serrão, E. A.: METATRANSCRIPTOMICS OF DIATOM-DOMINATED ANTARCTIC COMMUNITIES: ESTABLISHING LINKS BETWEEN DIVERSITY AND FUNCTION.
14:15 Ilikchyan, I. N.; Tripp, J.; Hewson, I.; Zehr, J. P.: GENE EXPRESSION OF ENVIRONMENTAL CYANOBACTERIAL POPULATIONS USING A HIGH-DENSITY FUNCTIONAL MICROARRAY
14:30 Chappell, P. D.; Jenkins, B. D.: THALASSIOSIRID BARCODING METHOD REVEALS COASTAL DIVERSITY AND REGIONS OF SINGLE SPECIES DOMINANCE IN THE EASTERN SUBARCTIC PACIFIC OCEAN
14:45 Zamor, R. M.; Glenn, K. L.; Hambright, K. D.: EARLY-WARNING DETECTION OF THE INVASIVE, TOXIGENIC GOLDEN ALGA, PRYMNESIUM PARVUM
15:00 Dasilva, C.; Lovejoy, C.; Li, W. K.: STRUCTURE AND DIVERSITY OF THE AUTUMN SUBSURFACE PICOPHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC
15:15 Alonso, A.; Orive, E.; Laza-Martinez, A.; Seoane, S.: PICOPLANKTON DETECTION IN ESTUARINE WATERS
16:00 Richardson, T. L.; Hill, L. S.; Baranowski, M. R.; Swanstrom, J. A.; Shaw, T. J.; Myrick, M. L.: SENSORS FOR CHARACTERIZATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON SIZE AND TAXONOMIC COMPOSITION USING SPECTRAL FLUORESCENCE SIGNATURES AND IMAGING MULTIVARIATE OPTICAL COMPUTING
16:15 Sosik, H. M.; Olson, R. J.: AUTOMATED SUBMERSIBLE FLOW CYTOMETRY FOR CHARACTERIZING PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION*
16:30 Lawrenz, E.; Richardson, T. L.: HOW DOES THE SPECIES USED FOR CALIBRATION AFFECT CHLOROPHYLL A MEASUREMENTS BY IN SITU FLUOROMETRY?
16:45 MacIntyre, H. L.; Cox, R.: LASER-INDUCED FLUORESCENCE EMISSION SPECTRA AS A TOOL FOR ASSESSING MICROALGAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN VIVO
17:00 Kirkpatrick, G. J.: IN-WATER ESTIMATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE USING THE OPTICAL PHYTOPLANKTON DISCRIMINATOR
17:15 Oxborough, K.; Moore, C. M.; Suggett, D.; Lawson, T.; Geider, R.: USING MULTI-WAVELENGTH FRR FLUOROMETRY TO IMPROVE THE ACCURACY OF PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY MEASUREMENTS WITHIN DIVERSE NATURAL PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES
17:30 Parker, A. E.; Kress, E.; Wilkerson, F. P.: PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY CHARACTERIZATION USING FLOW CYTOMETRY AND SUBMERSIBLE SPECTROFLUOROMETRY IN THE EUTROPHIC NORTHERN SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY DELTA, CA
ASLOMeeting Program
65
WED
nESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
17:45 Erickson, M. J.; Ducklow, H. W.: DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE OF MARINE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES NEAR THE WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA
S54 Student Engagement in Education and Public Outreach Chair(s): Liesl Hotaling, [email protected] Deidre Gibson, [email protected] Linda Duguay, [email protected]: 208A16:00 Bowser, C. H.; O’Reilly, C. M.; Mount, S. J.: HUDSON
RIVER EELS PROJECT: ENGAGING STUDENTS AND CITIZENS IN RESEARCH
16:15 Matsumoto, G. I.: EDUCATION AND PUBLIC OUTREACH AT THE MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM RESEARCH INSTITUTE
16:30 Crootof, A.; Lassaline, A.; Fitzgerald, C.: STUDENTS EDUCATING STUDENTS: INTERNATIONAL WATER DEVELOPMENT THROUGH EDUCATION
16:45 Gonsalves, L. C.: MINORITY RECRUITMENT, EDUCATIONS, AND COMMUNITY OUREACH: GRADUATE STUDENTS TO THE RESCUE
17:00 Kane, D. D.; Maxcy, J.; Mavroidis, S. M.; Czech, M.; McKay, R. M.; Griggs, N. D.: COLLEGIATE SERVICE LEARNING USING LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES TRIBUTARY WATER QUALITY MONITORING: MAKING THE MAUMEE RIVER GLISTEN
17:15 Rooney-Varga, J. N.; Brisk, A. A.; Ledley, T. S.: CLIMATE CHANGE EDUCATION: SCIENCE, SOLUTIONS, AND EDUCATION IN AN AGE OF MEDIA
17:30 Kirkpatrick, B. A.; Boyes, A. J.; Hall, E.; Nierenberg, K.: AN ART SCHOOL, A MARINE LAB, AND A TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE: A COLLABORATION FOR IMPROVED PUBLIC OUTREACH
17:45 Moss, A. G.; Waduwawara, S.; Welch, C.; Smith, K.; Dodson, M.; Donovan, E.; Tatum, T.; Joiner, D.: SILLY CILIA: A WIGGLING OUTREACH MODEL FOR THE UNDERSTANDING OF CILIA AND FLAGELLA-DRIVEN FLUID FLOW IN MARINE AND AQUATIC SYSTEMS
S76 Increasing Diversity in the Ocean Science Workforce: Effective Recruitment and Mentoring Chair(s): Ashanti Johnson, [email protected] Vivian Whitney-Williamson, [email protected] Deidre Gibson, [email protected]: 208A13:30 Jearld, Jr., A.; Liles, G.; Gutierrez, B.; Howard, J.: THE
WOODS HOLE PARTNERSHIP EDUCATION PROGRAM: INCREASING DIVERSITY IN THE OCEAN AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES IN ONE INFLUENTIAL SCIENCE COMMUNITY
13:45 Cuker, B. E.: THE ASLO MULTICULTURAL PROGRAM: 22 YEARS OF BUILDING DIVERSITY IN THE AQUATIC SCIENCES
14:00 Williamson Whitney, V. A.; Johnson, A.: A CASE STUDY: INTELLECTUAL MERIT AND BROADENED IMPACT ACTUALIZED THROUGH MENTOR ENGAGEMENT
14:15 Lescaze, M. M.; McCabe, D. J.; Haselton, A. R.: ENGAGING HIGH SCHOOL AND UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS IN WATERSHED RESEARCH: VT EPSCOR’S STREAMS PROJECT
14:30 Schmidt, W.; Smith, M.; Rodriguez, F.; Quintero, P.: BUILD IT AND THEY WILL COME: INTRODUCING ENGINEERING STUDENTS TO OCEANOGRAPHY
14:45 Casillas-Martinez, L.; Rios-Velazquez, C.; Visscher, P. T.: HYPERSALINE MICROBIAL MATS AS QUINTESSENTIAL TOOLS FOR TEACHING GEOMICROBIOLOGY
15:00 Allyson Fauver, A. M.; Ashanti Johnson, .; Sandra Thomas, .; Susie Valaitis, .; Liv Detrick, .; Dana Saywell, .: PATHWAYS TO OCEAN SCIENCES: BUILDING PARTNERSHIPS TO SUPPORT DIVERSITY IN THE OCEAN SCIENCES REU COMMUNITY
15:15 Johnson, A.; Thomas, S.; Valaitis, S.; Detrick, L.; Saywell, D.; Fauver, A.; Cash, C.; Williamson Whitney, V.; Ithier-Guzman, W.; Ricciardi, L.: PATHWAYS TO STEM
S77 Mesophotic Coral Ecosystems: Struc-ture, Patterns, Processes and RefugiaChair(s): Tyler B. Smith, [email protected] Richard Appeldoorn, [email protected] David Ballantine, [email protected] Kimberly Puglise, [email protected]: 10408:00 Colin, P. L.: RUNNING BOTH HOT AND COLD:
THERMAL INSTABILITY OF MESOPHOTIC REEF ENVIRONMENTS IN PALAU*
08:30 Schmidt, W. E.: EVIDENCE OF INTERNAL WAVES AND MESOSCALE EDDIES FROM MESOPHOTIC ADCP AND TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS, LA PARGUERA, PUERTO RICO
08:45 Appeldoorn, R. S.; Bejarano, I.; Nemeth, M.; Pagan, F. E.; Ruiz, H.; Sherman, C.: GROSS PATTERNS OF MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEM DEVELOPMENT ALONG INSULAR SLOPE ENVIRONMENTS IN THE US CARIBBEAN
09:00 Rooney, J. J.; Donham, E. M.; Montgomery, A.; Spalding, H.; Parrish, F. A.; Boland, R.: MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEMS (MCES) IN THE HAWAIIAN ARCHIPELAGO
09:15 Sherman, C.; Nemeth, M.; Ruiz, H.; Bejarano, I.; Appeldoorn , R.; Weil, E.; Hutchinson, Y.; Rojas , M.: GEOMORPHOLOGY AND SEDIMENT DYNAMICS IN MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEMS OF THE UPPER INSULAR SLOPE OF SOUTHWEST PUERTO RICO
09:30 Pagan, F. E.; Appeldoorn, R. S.: MESOPHOTIC ECOSYSTEMS UNDER A HEAVY RIVER OUTFLOW REGIME AND ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCE IN THE US CARIBBEAN: PONCE PUERTO RICO
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
66
WED
nES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
09:45 Smith, T. B.; Blondeau, J. E.; Nemeth, R. S.; Pittman, S. J.; Calnan, J. M.; Kadison, E. K.; Brandt, M. E.: SUSCEPTIBILITY TO MORTALITY LIMITS REFUGE POTENTIAL WITHIN MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEM HABITATS
13:30 GARCIA-SAIS, J. R.; Sabater-Clavell, J.; Castro, R.; Esteves, R.; Carlo, M.: MESOPHOTIC REEF HABITATS AND ASSOCIATED FISH COMMUNITIES AT BAJO DE SICO SEAMOUNT, MONA PASSAGE
13:45 Nemeth, M. I.; Bejarano, I.; Appeldoorn, R. S.; Ruiz, H. J.; Sherman, C.: SPATIAL PATTERNS OF REEF FISHES FROM MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEMS AND THE ROLE OF HABITAT CHARACTERISTICS
14:00 Bejarano, I.; Nemeth, M. I.; Appeldoorn, R. A.; Ruiz, H.; Sherman, C.: VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF FISHES FROM MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEMS MAY IMPACT ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION
14:15 Boland, R. C.; Parrish, F. A.; Rooney, J. J.: FISH COMMUNITIES OF THE MESOPHOTIC ECOSYSTEMS IN THE HAWAIIAN ARCHIPELAGO.
14:30 Kosaki, R. K.; Kane, C.; Pyle, R. L.; Boland, R.; McFall, G.; Gleason, K.: ENDEMIC FISHES DOMINATE MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEMS IN THE NORTHWESTERN HAWAIIAN ISLANDS
14:45 Popp, B. N.; Bradley, C. J.; Longenecker, K. R.; Langston, R.; Pyle, R.: COMPARISON OF THE TROPHIC STRUCTURE OF REEF FISHES IN SHALLOW AND MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEMS IN HAWAII
15:00 Longenecker, K.; Langston, R.: EXPLORING THE FISHERY-ENHANCEMENT POTENTIAL OF HAWAII’S MESOPHOTIC CORAL ECOSYSTEMS
16:00 Ballantine, D. L.; Ruiz, H.; Aponte, N. E.: ALGAL COMPOSITION AND COMMUNITY DYNAMICS AT TWO PUERTO RICAN MESOPHOTIC REEF SITES
16:15 Spalding, H. L.; Padilla-Gamiño , J. L.; Smith, C. M.: ECOPHYSIOLOGY OF MESOPHOTIC CORAL AND MACROALGAE IN HAWAII: HIGH PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN LOW LIGHT CONDITIONS
16:30 Kahng, S. E.; Hochberg, E. J.; Apprill, A. M.; Bidigare, R. R.: EFFICIENT LIGHT HARVESTING IN HAWAII’S DEEP WATER ZOOXANTHELLATE CORALS
16:45 Bradley, C. J.; Popp, B. N.: DOES WATER DEPTH CHANGE THE ACQUISITION AND ALLOCATION OF CARBON AND NITROGEN IN MESOPHOTIC CORAL SYMBIOSES?
17:00 Smith, E. G.; D’Angelo, C.; Tchernov, D.; Wiedenmann, J.: ADAPTATION TO LOW LIGHT: EXPLORING THE ROLE OF HOST PIGMENTS IN MESOPHOTIC CORALS
17:15 Weil, E.; Ruiz, H.; Anderson, D.: PERSPECTIVES ON CORAL DISEASES IN DEEP CORAL COMMUNITIES OFF THE SOUTHWEST COAST OF PUERTO RICO.
17:30 RIVERO-CALLE, S.; ARMSTRONG, R. A.: ECOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF SPONGES IN MESOPHOTIC CORAL REEFS
17:45 Lucas, M. Q.; Weil, E.; Smith, M.; Schizas, N.: GENETIC VARIATION OF SYMBIODINIUM SPP. AND THE CORAL HOST HOST AGARICIA LAMARCKI FROM MESOPHOTIC AND SHALLOW WATER POPULATIONS
S79 Dynamics of tropical aquatic systems: rivers, estuaries, and coastal watersChair(s): Bob Chen, [email protected]: 103A16:00 Becker, J. C.; Nowlin, W. H.; Labay, B. J.; Rodibaugh, K. J.:
INFLUENCE OF LAND USE AT MULTIPLE SPATIAL SCALES ON NUTRIENT CONCENTRATION AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION IN A WESTERN GULF SLOPE RIVER SYSTEM
16:15 Gücker, B.; Boëchat, I. G.: INFLUENCES OF AGRICULTURAL LAND USE ON STREAM ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING IN THE BRAZILIAN CERRADO SAVANNA
16:30 Soler-Lopez, L.: THE ROLE OF COASTAL LAGOONS ON THE CARBON CYCLE IN PUERTO RICO
16:45 Chen, R. F.; Gardner, G. B.; Cherrier, J.; Cable, J. E.; Meile, C.; Wang, X. C.; Peri, F.: OUTWELLING OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) FROM TROPICAL SALT MARSHES
17:00 Zurbrügg, R.; Wamulume, J.; Lehmann, M. F.; Nyambe, I.; Wehrli, B.; Senn, D. B.: EFFECTS OF HYDROLOGICAL RIVER-FLOODPLAIN EXCHANGE ON C AND N BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN THE DAM-IMPACTED KAFUE FLATS (ZAMBIA)
17:15 Van den Meersche, K.; Tamooh, F.; Meysman, F.; Borges, A.; Merckx, R.; Dehairs, F.; Bouillon, S.: INORGANIC CARBON IN THE TANA RIVER BASIN (KENYA): DISTRIBUTION, COMPOSITION AND PROCESS RATES.
17:30 Moellendorf, S. M.; Crisman, T. L.: ECOHYDROLOGY OF SEASONAL AND CANAL INFLUENCED PERENNIAL STREAMS OF GUANACASTE, COSTA RICA
17:45 Young, C. W.; Ruttenberg, K. C.; McManus, M. A.: PERTURBATION OF TROPICAL COASTAL NUTRIENT INVENTORIES AND PHYTOPLANKTON ECOLOGY DURING STORM EVENTS, OAHU, HAWAII
S83 Impacts of Climate Change and Secular Variability on the Caribbean and Tropical AmericasChair(s): William John, [email protected] Amy Clement, [email protected] Brian Soden, [email protected]: 20113:30 Vecchi, G. A.; Zhao, M.; Held, I. M.; Villarini, G.; Smith,
J.; Knutson, T. R.: PAST AND FUTURE CHANGES OF ATLANTIC HURRICAN ACTIVITY
13:45 Colbert, A. J.; Soden, B. J.: SENSITIVITY OF NORTH ATLANTIC TROPICAL CYCLONE TRACKS TO CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE
14:00 Gonzalez, J. E.; Comarazamy, D.: LARGE-SCALE LONG-TERM CLIMATE CHANGE (1950-2000) IN THE MID TROPICAL ATLANTIC AND ITS IMPACTS ON THE HYDROLOGICAL CYCLE OF PUERTO RICO
14:15 Shein, K. A.; Pirhalla, D. E.; Hendee, J. C.; Brandon, T. B.; Marzin, C. G.: TRENDS IN EXTREME CLIMATE EVENTS IN THE FLORIDA KEYS
ASLOMeeting Program
67
WED
nESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
14:30 Winter, A.; Miller, T.; Kuschnir, Y.; Beaufort, L.; Burnett, A.; Chang, H.; Edwards, R. L.; Haug, G.: A SEASONALLY RESOLVED 1000 YEAR SPELEOTHEM RECORD FROM THE GUATEMALA/BELIZE BORDER
14:45 Barkley, H.; Cohen, A.; de Putron, S.; Davis, C.; Pacala, S.: ESTABLISHING LINKS BETWEEN BASIN-SCALE CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND THE GROWTH OF ATLANTIC CORALS: AN EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION
15:00 Cohen, A.; Bedoya, L.; Oppo, D.: DECLINING GROWTH RATES OF ATLANTIC CORALS AND THE LINK TO BASIN-SCALE CLIMATE VARIABILITY
15:15 Jury, M. R.: ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON CARIBBEAN FISH CATCH
S87 Trace Metals and their nutritional Importance to Marine Phytoplankton and Bacteria Chair(s): Mak Saito, [email protected] Pete Sedwick, [email protected]: 10108:00 Lovvorn, J. R.; Cooper, L. W.; Raisbeck, M. F.; Chamberlain, K.
R.; Brooks, M. L.; Grebmeier, J. M.: EXCEPTIONAL TRACE ELEMENT BURDENS OF EIDERS WINTERING IN THE BERING SEA MAY REFLECT OCEANOGRAPHIC CONCENTRATING MECHANISMS
08:15 Sander, S. G.; Velasquez, I.; Ibisanmi, E. B.; Boyd, P. W.; Hunter, K. A.: FERRIOXAMINE SIDEROPHORES AMONG LIGANDS PRODUCED DURING BIOREMINERALIZATION OF MARINE PARTICLES
08:30 Roe, K. L.; Barbeau, K. A.; Hogle, S. L.; Castillo, R.: UTILIZATION OF HEME AS AN IRON SOURCE BY MARINE ROSEOBACTERS
08:45 Bertrand, E. M.; Saito, M. A.: A VITAMIN B12 STRESS MARKER FOR DIATOMS: QUANTITATIVE PROTEOMIC MASS SPECTROMETRY AS AN EMERGING TOOL FOR MONITORING MICRONUTRIENT STRESS
09:00 Mackey, K. R.; Casey, J.; Chen, Y.; Lomas, M. W.; Post, A.; Parcasio, C. A.; Sohrin, Y.; Paytan, A.: PICOPHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND TOXICITY RESPONSES TO ATMOSPHERIC METAL DEPOSITION
09:15 Stuart, R. K.; Busby, K. N.; Brahamsha, B.; Paulsen, I. T.; Palenik, B.: DIVERSE RESPONSE TO COPPER SHOCK BETWEEN MARINE SYNECHOCOCCUS CLADES
09:30 Chia-Te Chien, C.; Cheng-Ling Hu, C.; Tse-Hua Chu, T.; Tung-Yuan Ho, T.: NICKEL LIMITATION OF NITROGEN FIXATION BY TRICHODESMIUM
09:45 Whitney, L. P.; Mercier, M.; Dyhrman, S. T.; Saito, M. A.; Rynearson, T. A.; Jenkins, B. D.: RESPONSE TO IRON LIMITATION IN THE MARINE DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA REVEALED BY GLOBAL TRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSIS
13:30 Wells, M. L.; Hughes, M. P.; Ahmed, T.; Stocker, R.: MICROFLUIDIC ASSESSMENT OF CHEMOTAXIS OF MARINE MICROBES TOWARDS INORGANIC AND ORGANICALLY-COMPLEXED IRON SPECIES
13:45 Macey, A. I.; Moore, C. M.; Bibby, T. S.: ASSESSING COMMUNITY LEVEL PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO IRON AVAILABILITY IN THE HIGH LATITUDE NORTH ATLANTIC THROUGH QUANTIFICATION OF KEY METABOLIC PROTEINS
14:00 Bundy, R. M.; Barbeau, K.; Biller, D.; Bruland, K.: IRON COMPLEXATION IN COASTAL UPWELLING SYSTEMS USING MULTIPLE ANALYTICAL WINDOWS
14:15 Saito, M. A.; Moran, D. M.; Allen, A. E.; Bertrand, E. M.; Badger, J.: PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PROTEOMIC ANALYSES OF IRON LIMITED POLAR PHYTOPLANKTON
14:30 Jiang, M.; Charette, M.; Measures, C.; Zhou, M.: MODELING FE TRANSPORT AND LIMITATION TO PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOMS IN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA, DRAKE PASSAGE, AND SCOTIA SEA
14:45 Fisher, N. S.; Chen, X.; Wakeham, S. G.: PUMPING IRON PRODUCES FATTY PHYTOPLANKTON
15:00 Voelker, B. M.; Hansard, S. P.; Hansel, C. M.; Learman, D. R.: OXIDATION OF MN(II) BY SUPEROXIDE
15:15 Ho, T.; Yang, S.; Lin, T.; Lee, D.: CADMIUM ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION IN SOME MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON
S90 Biological Contamination of Puerto Rican Streams and Coastal Waters: Sources, Fate, Monitoring, and Predictive ModelingChair(s): Marirosa Molina, [email protected] Richard Zepp, [email protected] Ernesto Otero, [email protected]: 208B16:00 Merten, W. B.; Steve, T. F.: A COMMMUNITY-BASED
PROGRAM FOCUSING ON FECAL POLLUTION MONITORING AND SOURCE IDENTIFICATION ON THE NORTHWEST COAST OF PUERTO RICO
16:15 Dave Bachoon, D. S.; Ernesto Otero, E.; Adesh Ramsubaugh, A.; Trisha Philips, T.; Samendra Prasad Sherchan, S.: RAPID DETECTION AND QUANTIFICATION OF FECAL INDICATOR BACTERIA ESCHERICHIA COLI O157:H7 AND ATRAZINE DEGRADERS IN THE CARIBBEAN
16:30 Molina, M.; Hunter, S.; White, E.; Cyterski, M.; Zepp, R.: IMPACT OF NON-POINT SOURCES ON THE ENTEROCOCCI QPCR AND CULTURABLE SIGNALS
16:45 Zepp, R. G.; Cyterski, M.; Molina, M.; White, E.; Otero, E.; Wolfe, K.; Parmar, R.: PREDICTIVE MODELING OF CULTURABLE AND QPCR ENTEROCOCCI AT BOQUERNN BEACH, PUERTO RICO
17:00 Hertler, H.; Ramírez-Toro, G.: OYSTERS AS INDICATORS IN SUB-TROPICAL CLIMATES
17:15 Aponte, V. E.; Toro, A.; Quintero, H.; Ergas, S.: ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE OBSERVED IN ISOLATED ESCHERICHIA COLI FROM RIVERS IN THE WEST REGION OF PUERTO RICO
17:30 Lilly, L. A.; Sturm, P. E.: FINDING SOURCES OF CONTAMINATION IN TROPICAL WATERSHEDS: ILLICIT DISCHARGE DETECTION & ELIMINATION & SHORELINE SURVEY TECHNIQUES
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
68
WED
nES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
17:45 Sturm, P. E.; Viqueira-Rios, R. V.: GUoNICA AS AN EMBLEMATIC WATERSHED FACING LAND BASED SOURCES OF POLLUTION
S91 Oxygen Dynamics in Coastal Hypoxic ZonesChair(s): Brian J. Roberts, [email protected] Nancy N. Rabalais, [email protected] Location: Ballroom A16:00 Fry, B.; Justic, D.; Wang, L.: ESTIMATING
SUMMERTIME PLANKTONIC PRODUCTIVITY AND RESPIRATION FOR THE LOUISIANA-TEXAS CONTINENTAL SHELF USING OXYGEN AND CARBON ISOTOPE TECHNIQUES*
16:15 Cuker, B. E.; Cutter, G. C.; Burrell , C. T.: INTER-ANNUAL VARIATION IN THE NATURE OF EARLY SEASON OXYGEN DEPLETION IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY, 2001 – 2010.
16:30 Wissel, B.; Quinones-Rivera, Z. J.; Finlay, K.; Rabalais, N.; Justic, D.; Justic, D.: EFFECTS OF METABOLIC ACTIVITY AND PHYSICAL PROCESSES ON DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON DYNAMICS IN COASTAL HYPOXIC AREAS: WHAT DO WE LEARN BEYOND OXYGEN?
16:45 Lefort, S.; Gratton, Y.; Mucci, A.; Dadou, I.; Gilbert, D.: MODELING OXYGEN DYNAMICS IN THE ST. LAWRENCE ESTUARY SYSTEM
17:00 Janssen, F.; Donis, D.; Fischer, J. P.; Holtappels, M.; Lichtschlag, A.; Stanev, E.; Wenzhöfer, F.; Boetius, A.; HYPOX team, .: UNDERSTANDING OXYGEN DYNAMICS AT THE HYPOX PROJECT TARGET SITE AT THE CRIMEAN SHELF: COMBINING COMPLEMENTARY MONITORING APPROACHES
17:15 DiMarco, S. F.: GAUSS-MARKOV OPTIMAL INTERPOLATION AND SPATIAL SCALES OF DISSOLVED OXYGEN IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIC ZONE
17:30 Testa, J. M.; Kemp, W. M.: PATTERNS AND CONTROLS ON SPRING OXYGEN DEPLETION IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
17:45 Roberts, B. J.; Morrison, W.; Del Rio, R.; Pride, L.; Richardi, D.; Semmler, C. M.; Young, B.; Rabalais, N. N.; Turner, R. E.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS IN WATER COLUMN AND BENTHIC RESPIRATION IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIC ZONE
GS01 Physical Oceanography and General CirculationChair(s): Miguel F. Canals, [email protected] Bill Johns, [email protected]: 208B08:00 Torres-Garcia, L. M.; Yankovsky, A.; Torres, R.: TIDES AT
THE UPSTREAM LIMIT OF THEIR PROPAGATION IN THE SANTEE RIVER, SC, USA
08:15 Dukhovskoy, D. S.; Morey, S. L.: STORM SURGE MODELING IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO
08:30 Gonzalez, J. O.; Mercado, A.; Capella, J.; Morell, J.; Canals, M.: OPTIMUM MESH RESOLUTION FOR WAVE AND STORM SURGE MODELING OVER A STEEP AND COMPLEX-FEATURED SHELF USING AN UNSTRUCTURED CIRCULATION-WAVE COUPLED MODEL.
08:45 Suursaar, U.; Kullas, T.: REGIME SHIFTS IN LOCAL STORMINESS, SEA LEVEL VARIATIONS, CURRENTS AND WAVE CONDITIONS IN THE EASTERN BALTIC SEA
09:00 Lima, F. P.; Wethey, D. S.: ANALYSIS OF THREE DECADES OF HIGH-RESOLUTION COASTAL SEA TEMPERATURES
09:15 Auad, G.; Roemmich, D.: THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT VIEWED FROM THE ARGO NETWORK
09:30 Stryker, S. A.; DiMarco, S. F.; Stoessel, M.; Belabbassi, L.: HYDROGRAPHY IN THE ARABIAN SEA AND OMAN SEA FROM SATELLITE, ARGO, SURFACE DRIFTER AND MOORING OBSERVATIONS
09:45 Cook, A. B.; Sutton, T. T.; Galbraith, J. K.; Vecchione, M.: VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DEEP-PELAGIC (0-3000 M) FISHES OVER THE CHARLIE-GIBBS FRACTURE ZONE REGION OF THE NORTHERN MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
GS02 Chemical Oceanography/GEOTRACESChair(s): Greg Cutter, [email protected] Pere Masque, [email protected]: 10116:00 Steigenberger, S.; Klar, J.; Moore, C. M.; Achterberg,
E. P.: THE EFFECT OF THE EYAFJALLAJKKULL VOLCANIC ERUPTION ON THE IRON AND ALUMINIUM DISTRIBUTION IN THE HIGH LATITUDE NORTH ATLANTIC
16:15 Chever, F.; Rouxel, O. J.; Ponzevera, E.: SOURCES AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING OF IRON ISOTOPES IN MARINE ENVIRONMENTS
16:30 Sarthou, G.; Bucciarelli , E.; Chever, F.; Arhan, M.; Speich, S.: FE(II) DISTRIBUTIONS IN THE ATLANTIC SECTOR OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN, ALONG A TRANSECT FROM THE SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN TO THE WEDDELL SEA GYRE
16:45 Kenna, T. C.; Masqué, P.; Camara-Mor, P.; Puigcorbé, V.; Frank, M.; Rijkenberg, M.; Gerringa, L.; de Baar, H.: ANTHROPOGENIC RADIONUCLIDES IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN 4 DECADES AFTER GEOSECS: RESULTS FROM GEOTRACES CRUISES A11 AND A02
17:00 Hammerschmidt, C. R.; Bowman, K. L.: VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF METHYLMERCURY IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC
17:15 Fitzgerald, W. F.; Hammerschmidt, C. R.; Bowman, K. L.: DISTRIBUTION AND FLUXES OF MONOMETHYL AND DIMETHYL MERCURY ON THE CONTINENTAL MARGIN OF THE NORTHWEST ATLANTIC OCEAN
17:30 Noble, A. E.; Saito, M. A.; Goepfert, T. J.; Lamborg, C. H.: DISSOLVED COBALT DISTRIBUTIONS IN A FULL-DEPTH OCEAN SECTION ACROSS THE SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
ASLOMeeting Program
69
WED
nESD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
17:45 Vlahos, P.; Eglinton, T.; Montluco, D.; Fast, K.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON ALONG THE FRONTAL ZONE OF THE NW ATLANTIC
GS05A Food web interactions and trophic linkages - Session 1Chair(s): Mario Brauns, [email protected]: 10216:00 Meunier, C.; Hantzsche, F.; Boersma, M.; Malzahn, A.:
SELECTIVITY OF PROTOZOAN AND METAZOAN HERBIVORES FOR INTRASPECIFIC FOOD QUALITY DIFFERENCES
16:15 Rastorgueff, P.; Harmelin-Vivien, M.; Richard, P.; Chevaldonné, P.: DIVERSE FEEDING STRATEGIES AND RESOURCE PARTITIONING MITIGATE THE EFFECTS OF OLIGOTROPHY FOR MARINE CAVE MYSIDS
16:30 Christoph Plum, C. T.; Helmut Hillebrand, H.: THE IMPORTANCE OF RESOURCE LIMITATION AND DIVERSITY IN STOICHIOMETRIC INTERACTIONS
16:45 Faithfull, C. L.; Wenzel, A.; Bergström, A. K.; Vrede, T.: EFFECTS OF LIGHT AND NUTRIENTS ON META-ZOOPLANKTON BIOMASS AND SPECIES COMPOSITION IN A NATURAL PELAGIC COMMUNITY
17:00 Pusch, M. T.; Gücker, B.; Brauns, M.; Voss, M.; Solimini, A. G.: EFFECTS OF TERTIARY-TREATED WASTEWATER DISCHARGE ON ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING AND FOOD WEB STRUCTURE IN AN URBAN STREAM
17:15 Brauns, M.; Friese, M.; Graeber, D.; von Schiller, D.: RESOURCE QUALITY BUT NOT SPECIES IDENTITY AFFECTS STABLE ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION OF FRESHWATER MACROINVERTEBRATES
17:30 Abuzeineh, A. A.; Nowlin, W. H.; Smith, A.; Bonner, T. H.: ORGANIC MATTER SOURCES SUPPORTING COMMUNITIES OF AN ARID RIVERINE SYSTEM: THE LOWER RIO GRANDE DRAINAGE
17:45 Ghosh, P.; Findlay, R.: USE OF COMPOUND SPECIFIC STABLE ISOTOPE ANALYSIS TO CHARACTERIZE THE TROPHIC POSITION OF LEPOMIS MACROCHIRUS
GS06 Restoration ecology in aquatic systemChair(s): Katie Hossler, [email protected] Shannon Meseck, [email protected]: 20216:00 González-Marrero, R. L.; Yoshioka, P. M.: DYNAMICS
OF HAEMULID SETTLEMENT AND RECRUITMENT16:15 Heerhartz, S. M.; Toft, J. D.; Simenstad, C. A.; Ogston, A.
S.; Armbrust, E. A.: EVALUATING THE ECOLOGICAL PERFORMANCE OF NEARSHORE FISH HABITAT ENHANCEMENTS IN AN URBANIZED ESTUARY
16:30 Mitraki, C.; Crisman, T. L.: BENTHIC INVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES ON LAKES CREATED ON PHOSPHATE MINED LANDS IN CENTRAL FLORIDA
16:45 Meseck, S. L.; Li, Y.; Dixon, M. S.; Wikfors, G. H.; Chu, D.; MacDonald, D.; Rivara, K.; Luther, III, G. W.: CAN A
COMMERICIAL FLOATING UPWELLING SYSTEM (FLUPSY) HELP IN ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION: QUANTIFYING INTERACTIONS WITH THE LOCAL ENVIRONMENT.
17:00 Angel, D.; Krost, P.: DYNAMICS IN SEDIMENT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY FOLLOWING THE REMOVAL OF NET-CAGE FISH FARMS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF AQABA
17:30 Goodman, A. M.; Ganf, G. G.; Maier, H. R.; Dandy, G. C.: PREDICTING PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE OF WETLAND PLANTS UNDER ELEVATED SALINITY REGIMES
17:45 Hossler, K.; Bouchard, V.; Fennessy, M. S.; Frey, S.; Bauer, J. E.: RESTORATION POTENTIAL AND ECOLOGY OF ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAE IN FRESHWATER DEPRESSIONAL WETLANDS
GS08C Plankton Ecology - Session 3Chair(s): George Matsumoto, [email protected] Tony Moss, [email protected] Beatriz Modenutti, [email protected]: 10208:00 Moss, A. G.; Madin, L.: CILIARY ORGANIZATION OF
THE SALP FOOD WEB APPARATUS. 08:15 Egerton, T. A.; Marshall, H. G.: PHYTOPLANKTON
DIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
08:30 Barbara Bauer, B.; Matthijs Vos, .; Ursula Gaedke, .: DIVERSITY INFLUENCES ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION THROUGH SYNCHRONIZATION AND COMPENSATORY DYNAMICS
08:45 Sun, J.: PHYTOPLANKTON PROVINCES AND FUNCTIONAL GROUPS IN CHINA SEAS
09:00 Young, A. M.; Karp-Boss, L.; Jumars, P. A.: FORM AND FUNCTION IN PHYTOPLANKTON: INSIGHTS INTO MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF DIATOM CHAINS
09:30 Sexton, M. A.; Hood, R. R.: THE USE OF VISUAL COUNTS FOR MEASURING MEDUSA ABUNDANCE
09:45 Matsumoto, G. I.; Sherlock, R.; Robison, B. H.: LITTLE RED JELLIES IN THE EASTERN PACIFIC (FAMILY RHOPALONEMATIDAE)
GS08D Plankton Ecology - Session 4Chair(s): Owen Lind, [email protected]: 10213:30 Wikfors, G. H.; Li, J.; Alix, J. H.; Fuentes, M. S.: SURVIVAL
STRATEGIES OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA MULTISERIES IN APHOTIC ZONE CONDITIONS
13:45 Modenutti, B.; Bastidas Navarro, M.; Balseiro, E.: DEEP CHLOROPHYLL MAXIMA IN NORTH PATAGONIAN ANDEAN LAKES: STRATEGIES IN A STRONG LIGHT GRADIENT
14:00 Walter, B.; Peters, J.; van Beusekom, J. E.; St. John, M.: COMBINED EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE AND DEEP CONVECTION ON THE DYNAMICS OF SPRING BLOOM PHYTOPLANKTON IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
70
WED
nES
DAy
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
14:15 Houliez Emilie, E.; Lizon Fabrice, F.; Schmitt François, F.; Lefebvre Sebastien, S.; Artigas Luis Felipe, L. F.: VARIABILITY IN THE PHOTOSYNTHETIC ACTIVITY OF PHYTOPLANKTON IN THE EASTERN ENGLISH CHANNEL: USE OF MODULATED FLUORESCENCE
14:30 Lind, O. T.; Davalos-Lind, L. O.; Gantar, M.; Berry, J.: NITROGEN DETERMINATION OF CYLINDROSPERMOPSIS RACIBORSKII TRICHOME MORPHOTYPE
14:45 Kutovaya, O. A.; Bullerjahn , G. S.; McKay, R. M.: EXPRESSION OF PHOSPHORUS ASSIMILATION GENES IN ENDEMIC SYNECHOCOCCUS OF THE LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES
15:00 Stockenreiter, M.; Graber, A.; Haupt, F.; Stibor, H.: THE EFFECT OF SPECIES DIVERSITY ON THE LIPID PRODUCTION OF MICRO-ALGAL COMMUNITIES.
15:15 Dolan, J. R.: NICHE SEPARATION AND THE ROLE OF DOMINANTS AMONG TINTINNID CILIATES, GRAZERS OF THE MICROZOOPLANKTON
ASLOMeeting Program
71
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
Thursday, 17 February 2011 OralsS09 Benthic biogeochemical processes: From microscale patchiness to ecosystem functionChair(s): Frank Wenzhoefer, [email protected] Ronnie N Glud, [email protected]: Ballroom B08:00 Ackerman, J. D.; Quinn, N. P.: THE ROLE OF BOTTOM
ROUGHNESS HEIGHT AND SPACING ON SCALAR TRANSPORT IN NEAR-BED FLOWS.
08:15 Chatelain, M.; Guizien, K.: OXYGEN DYNAMICS NEAR THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE UNDER LOW-FREQUENCY FLOWS
08:30 van Duren, L. A.; Troost, K.; Troost, T.: FILTRATION RATES AND BOUNDARY-LAYER MODIFICATION BY NATIVE AND INVASIVE SHELLFISH SPECIES
08:45 Smyth, A. R.; Piehler, M. F.; Grabowski, J. H.: LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION: LANDSCAPE POSITION INFLUENCES OYSTER REEF NITROGEN DYNAMICS
09:00 Ibánhez, J. S.; Rocha, C.: CROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER DYNAMICS LINKED TO BENTHIC REACTIVITY IN AN INTERTIDAL SANDY SEEPAGE FACE
09:15 Robert, K.; Juniper, S. K.: CAMERAS, IMAGES AND UNDERWATER SURVEILLANCE: AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO THE QUANTIFICATION OF BIOTURBATION BY THE DEEP-SEA MEGABENTHOS
09:30 de Beer, D.; Feseker, T.; Boetius, A.; Foucher, J.; Olu, K.; Mienert, J.; Schlueter, M.; Waldmann, C.; German, C.; Yoerger, D.; Camilli, R.; Kinsey, J.: ONE YEAR DIRECT OBSERVATIONS OF VOLCANIC ACTIVITY OF A DEEP-SEA COLD SEEP, THE HAKON MOSBY MUD VOLCANO, (HMMV)
09:45 Yoerger, D. R.; German, C. R.; Camilli, R.; Kinsey, J.; Nakamura, K.; De Beer, D.; Boetius, A.: SYSTEMATIC EXPLORATION OF COLD SEEPS BY AUV? NEW RESULTS USING SENTRY AT THE HAAKON MOSBY MUD VOLCANO, SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2010.
S15 Land Based Sources of Pollution in Tropical Marine EcosystemsChair(s): Thomas Potter, [email protected] Candiss Williams, [email protected] David Whitall, [email protected] Angel Dieppa, [email protected]: 20208:00 Whitall, D.; Zitello, A.; Potter, T.; Dieppa, A.; Apeti, D.;
Pait, A.: LAND BASED SOURCES OF POLLUTION TO JOBOS BAY, PUERTO RICO~
08:30 Bosch, D. D.; Potter, T. L.; Rodriguez, J. M.; Dieppa, A.; Sotomayor-Ramirez, D.; Ardila-Sierra, G.; Strickland, T. C.; Lowrance, R. R.; Hubbard, R. K.; Marshall, L.: GROUNDWATER FLOW, VARIABILITY, AND TRANSPORT PATHWAYS IN THE MAR NEGRO OF THE JOBOS BAY NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE, PUERTO RICO
08:45 Potter, T. L.; Bosch, D. D.; Dieppa, A.; Sotomayor, D.; Ardila, G.; Vega, J.; Strickland, T. C.; Hubbard, R.; Lowrance, R. R.: PESTICIDE FATE AND TRANSPORT FROM FARM FIELDS ADJACENT TO THE JOBOS BAY NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE
09:00 Williams, C. O.; Lowrance, R.; Williams, R.; Williams, J. R.; Dieppa, A.; Sotomayor, D.; Más, E. G.; Strickland, T. C.; Bosch, D. D.; Hubbard, R. K.: A COMBINED MODELING APPROACH TO EVALUATE WATER QUALITY BENEFITS OF RIPARIAN BUFFERS IN THE JOBOS BAY WATERSHED
09:15 Martinez-Colon, M.; Hallock, P.; Gree-Ruiz, C.: “POLLUTION” AND BIOAVAILABILITY OF POTENTIALLY TOXIC ELEMENTS IN JOBOS BAY NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE
09:30 Detrés, Y.; Almodóvar, L.; Romero, A.; Hernández, W.; Mas, E.: SALT FLAT VEGETATION FOR COASTAL CONSERVATION BUFFERS IN PUERTO RICO
09:45 Brune, L. P.; Whitall, D.: A BASELINE ASSESSMENT OF CORAL CONTAMINATION NEAR GUNNICA BAY, PUERTO RICO IN SUPPORT OF WATERSHED RESTORATION
13:30 Vivas-Aguas, L. J.; Carvajalino-Fernández, M. A.; Tosic, M.: IMPACTS OF LAND-BASED SOURCES OF POLLUTION ON THE MARINE AND COASTAL WATERS OF COLOMBIA
13:45 Torres-Pulliza, D.; Hernández-Delgado, E.; Ramos-Scharrón, C. E.: LONG-TERM LAND USE DYNAMICS AND EROSION PROCESSES ON THE ROO FAJARDO WATERSHED AND THEIR EFFECTS ON CORAL REEF COMMUNITIES
14:00 Brooks, G. R.; Larson, R. A.; Devine, B.: NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCES ON COASTAL SEDIMENTATION IN THE USVI
14:15 Schwing, P. T.; Johnson, A.; Carvalho, K.: CONTROLS OF HEAVY METAL DISTRIBUTION IN THE MANATEE RIVER WATERSHED, FLORIDA OVER THE LAST ONE-HUNDRED YEARS
14:30 Simmons, C. C.; Jaward, F. M.; Johnson, A.: ASSESSING THE PRESENCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF POLYBROMINATED DIPHENYL ETHERS IN HILLSBOROUGH BAY A NORTHEASTERN REGION OF TAMPA BAY, FL.
14:45 Wagener, A. R.; Farias, C. O.; Nudi, A. H.; Scofield, A. L.: ARE TRADITIONAL TOOLS ACCURATE TO IDENTIFY SOURCES OF PAH IN TROPICAL MARINE SEDIMENTS?
15:15 Otero-Morales, E.; Carbery, K. K.: FURTHER RESULTS OF IRGAROL 1051 CONCENTRATION IN COASTAL WATERS OF PUERTO RICO AND US VIRGIN ISLANDS.
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
72
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
S17 Phosphorus Cycling in Marine Systems: Biogeochemical, Genomic and Model Studies Chair(s): Angelicque E. White, [email protected] Adina Paytan, [email protected] Sonya Dyhrman, [email protected]: 20908:00 Dyhrman, S. T.; Bethany Jenkins, J. D.; Tatiana Rynearson,
T. A.; Mak Saito, M. A.; Melissa Mercier, M.; Abigail Heithoff, A.; Harriet Alexander, H.; LeAnn Whitney, L.; Vladamir Bulygin, V.; Andrea Drzewianowski, A.; Wu, Z.: COORDINATION IN THE TRANSCRIPTOME AND PROTEOME OF THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA REVEALS NOVEL ASPECTS OF THE DIATOM PHOSPHORUS STRESS RESPONSE~
08:30 Mercier, M. L.; Whitney, L. P.; Jenkins, B.; Dyhrman, S.; Saito, M.; Rynearson, T.: EXPRESSION AND REGULATION OF A PUTATIVE PHOSPHATE TRANSPORTER IN THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA UNDER PHOSPHATE LIMITATION
08:45 Chin, J. P.; Villarreal-Chiu, J. F.; Kulakova, A. N.; Kulakov, L. A.; Gilbert, J. A.; Quinn, J. P.; McGrath, J. W.: PHOSPHONATE METABOLISM IN MARINE BACTERIA
09:00 Harke, M. J.; Berry, D. L.; Ammerman, J. W.; Gobler, C. J.: MOLECULAR ANALYSIS OF THE PHOSPHORUS LIMITATION RESPONSE IN MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA
09:15 Sun, M. M.; Sun, J.; Liu, H. B.: PROTEIOMIC PROFILES OF “TEXAS BROWN TIDE ALGA”-AUREOUMBRA LAGUNENSIS IN RESPONSE TO P AND N DEPLETION STRESS
09:30 Grant, S. R.; Laws, E. A.; Bienfang, P.: GROWTH RATE DEPENDENT KINETICS OF ALGAL PHOSPHATE TRANSPORT
09:45 Steenbergh, A. K.; Bodelier, P. L.; Heldal, M.; Slomp, C. P.; Laanbroek, H. J.: C:N:P RATIOS OF INDIVIDUAL BACTERIA: AN EXPLANATION FOR ENHANCED REGENERATION OF P RELATIVE TO CARBON FROM MARINE SEDIMENTS?
13:30 Zimmer, L.; Cutter, G. A.; Wurl, O.: HIGH RESOLUTION DISTRIBUTIONS OF REACTIVE PHOSPHATE AND ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE ACROSS NORTH ATLANTIC SURFACE WATERS
13:45 Bell, D. W.; Lomas, M. W.; Burke, A. L.; Lomas, D. A.; Dyhrman, S. T.; Ammerman, J. W.: DOP UTILIZATION IN THE WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE (NASG)
14:00 Paytan, A.; McLaughlin, K.; Sohm, J.; Cutter, G.; Lomas, M.: PHOSPHATE CYCLING IN THE SARGASSO SEA: INVESTIGATION USING THE OXYGEN ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION OF PHOSPHATE, ENZYME LABELED FLUORESCENCE, AND TURNOVER TIMES*
14:15 Davis, C. E.; Mahaffey, C.; Palmer, M. R.; Sharples, J.; Wolff, G.: ARE SHELF SEAS A NET SOURCE OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS TO THE PHOSPHORUS LIMITED NORTH ATLANTIC?
14:30 Ruttenberg, K. C.; Dyhrman, S. D.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS PRODUCTION DURING A SIMULATED PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM: EXPERIMENTS IN THE COASTAL OREGON UPWELLING REGION
14:45 Pal, S.; Benitez-Nelson, C.: CARBON AND PHOSPHORUS DYNAMICS IN THE CHUKCHI SEA
15:00 Wurl, O.; Zimmer, L.; Philipps, M. M.; Cutter, G. A.: AN ASSESSMENT OF ARSENIC SPECIES AS INDICATORS FOR PHOSPHATE STRESS IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
15:15 Fuentes, M. S.; Wikfors, G. H.; Meseck, S. L.: SILICA DEFICIENCY INDUCES ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE ENZYME ACTIVITY IN CULTURES OF THREE MARINE DIATOMS
S24 Climate and fishing effects on life history traits of exploited stocks and the consequences of population sustainabilityChair(s): Chih-hao Hsieh, [email protected] Juan-Carlos Molinero, [email protected] Hui-Yu Wang, [email protected]: 103B08:00 Wang, H.; Fogarty, M.; Juanes, F.: POPULATION
DYNAMICS REFLECT AN INTERACTION OF LIFE HISTORIES, FISHING, AND TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY: EVIDENCE DRAWN FROM ATLANTIC COD
08:15 Hidalgo, M.; Rouyer, T.; Olsen, E. M.; Cerviño, S.; Saborido-Rey, F.; Murua, H.; Piñeiro, C.; Stenseth, N. C.: LIVING CLOSE DOING DIFFERENTLY: THE ROLE OF THE BIOCOMPLEXITY IN FISHING-INDUCED TRUNCATED DEMOGRAPHIES
08:30 Molinero, J. C.; Hidalgo, M.; Morovic, M.; Coll, M.: NON-STATIONARY EFFECTS OF CLIMATE AND FISHING ON NORTHERN MEDITERRANEAN SMALL PELAGIC FISH
08:45 ROUYER, T.; HIDALGO, M.; FROMENTIN, J. M.: TIME SCALE DEPENDENT PROCESSES IN FISH STOCK FLUCTUATIONS
09:00 Friedland, K. D.; Todd, C. D.: CHANGES IN ARCTIC AND SUBARTIC CONDITIONS AND THE GROWTH RESPONSE OF ATLANTIC SALMON
09:30 Salinas, S.; Siskidis, J. A.; Munch, S. B.: TRANS-GENERATIONAL PLASTICITY IN AN ESTUARINE FISH AND ITS RELEVANCE TO CLIMATE CHANGE
09:45 Perez, K.; Munch, S. B.: PROLONGED COSTS OF EARLY GROWTH IN ATLANTIC SILVERSIDES
13:30 Sutton, T. T.; Hudson, J. M.; Hoffman, J. C.; Falkenhaug, T.; Bergstad, O. A.; Heino, M.: ALTERNATE TROPHIC PATHWAYS SUPPORT ENHANCED BATHYPELAGIC BIOMASS OVER A MID-OCEAN RIDGE SYSTEM
13:45 Sweetman, C. J.; Sutton, T. T.: DISTRIBUTION AND TROPHIC ECOLOGY OF BATHYLAGUS EURYOPS (TELEOSTEI: MICROSTOMATIDAE) ALONG THE NORTHERN MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
ASLOMeeting Program
73
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
14:00 Johnson, B. S.; Young, C. R.; Harvey, J. B.; Vrijenhoek, R. C.: AN EASTERN PACIFIC HYBRID ZONE INVOLVING DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENT MOLLUSKS
14:15 Perretti, C. T.; Munch, S. B.: AN EVALUATION OF ECOLOGICAL PHASE SHIFT INDICATORS UNDER REALISTIC CONDITIONS
14:30 Wiegand, M. D.; Johnston, T. A.; Porteous, L. R.; Wong, D. M.; Moles, M. D.; Casselman, J. M.; Leggett, W. C.: DIFFERENCES IN RESOURCE ALLOCATION TO REPRODUCTION IN TWO SYMPATRIC, EXPLOITED FISH: WALLEYE AND LAKE WHITEFISH
14:45 Gao, J.; Munch, S.: THE GENETIC COVARIANCE IN SIZE AT AGE AND FECUNDITY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR FISHERIES-INDUCED EVOLUTION.
15:00 Breck, J. E.; Rutherford, E. S.; Simon, C. P.; Low, B. S.; Lamberson, P. J.; Swank, D. R.: PREDICTING CLIMATE CHANGE AND FISHING EFFECTS ON FISH AGE AT MATURITY USING AN ANALYTIC LIFE HISTORY MODEL
15:15 Hsieh, C.; Yamauchi, A.; Nakazawa, T.; Wang, W.: FISHING EFFECTS ON AGE AND SPATIAL STRUCTURES UNDERMINE POPULATION STABILITY OF FISHES
S33 Effects of Global Change on Carbon Transport and Processing in Tropical Freshwater EcosystemsChair(s): Gaston E. “Chip” Small, [email protected] Bill McDowell, [email protected] Johan Six , [email protected] Catherine Pringle, [email protected]: Ballroom A13:30 Small, G. E.; Ardon, M.; Ellis, E. E.; Genereux, D. P.;
Hernes, P. J.; Johnson, M. S.; Mayorga, E.; McDowell, W. H.; Pringle, C. M.; Six, J. W.; Spencer, R. G.; Townsend-Small, A.; Whiles, M. R.; Wohl, E. E.: A SYNTHESIS OF CARBON TRANSPORT AND PROCESSING IN TROPICAL STREAMS AND RIVERS: EFFECTS OF GLOBAL CHANGE~
14:00 Richey, J. E.; Krusche, A. V.; Ellis, E. E.: HOW CARBON DYNAMICS IN LARGE TROPICAL RIVERS MGHT RESPOND TO GLOBAL CHANGE*
14:15 Ellis, E. E.; Richey, J. E.; Ingalls, A. E.; Keil, R. G.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY IN THE SOURCES OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON OF THE MEKONG RIVER, CAMBODIA
14:30 Townsend-Small, A.; Owen, L. A.; Haneberg, W. C.; Dietsch, C.: VULNERABILITY OF SOIL AND RIVER ORGANIC CARBON TO GLOBAL CHANGE IN THE GANGES RIVER HEADAWATERS, SUBTROPICAL INDIAN HIMALAYAS
14:45 Spencer, R. G.; Hernes, P. J.; Ruf, R.; Baker, A.; Dyda, R. Y.; Stubbins, A.; Six, J.: TEMPORAL CONTROLS ON DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AND LIGNIN BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN A PRISTINE TROPICAL RIVER
15:00 Ardon, M.; Duff, J. H.; Ramirez, A.; Small, G. E.; Jackman, A. P.; Triska, F. J.; Pringle, C. M.: EXPERIMENTAL ACIDIFICATION OF TWO NEOTROPICAL STREAMS ILLUSTRATES THE SENSITIVITY OF INVERTEBRATE ASSEMBLAGES AND IMPORTANCE OF BICARBONATE BUFFERING
15:15 Melack, J. M.: INUNDATION DYNAMICS, METHANE AND CARBON DIOXIDE EVASION AND ORGANIC CARBON SUPPLY IN LAKES AND WETLANDS OF THE AMAZON BASIN*
S44 The relevance of jellyfish blooms in the changing global oceansChair(s): Kylie Pitt, [email protected] Rob Condon, [email protected] Andrew Sweetman, [email protected]: 208B08:00 Haddock, S. H.: THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS A
JELLYFISH*08:30 Brotz, L.; Pauly, D.; Cheung, W. L.; Pakhomov, E.:
CHANGING JELLYFISH POPULATIONS – TRENDS IN LARGE MARINE ECOSYSTEMS
08:45 Condon, R. H.; Pitt, K. A.; Duarte, C. M.; Graham, W. M.; Lucas, C.; Robinson, K.; Lebrato, M.; Carlson, C. A.; del Giorgio, P. A.: EXPLORING THE PARADIGM OF A GLOBAL EXPANSION IN JELLYFISH BLOOMS: IMPLICATIONS FOR BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES AND FOOD WEBS IN A CHANGING OCEAN
09:00 Bolte, S.; Roy, A. S.; Kleinz, S.; Sparwel, M.; Moss, A. G.; Javidpour, J.; Feulner, P.; Bornberg-Bauer, E.; Rosenstiel, P.; Reusch, T. B.: MOLECULAR ECOLOGY OF MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI INVASIONS INTO EUROPE
09:15 Waduwawara, S.; Welch, C.; Moss, A.: A WIDE REPERTOIRE OF BEHAVIOR BY MNEMIOPSIS ARISE FROM COMPLEX MODES OF WATER MANIPULATION
09:30 Atienza, D.; Fuentes, V.; Tilves, U.; Marambio, M.; Gili, J. M.: IMPACT OF THE NEW INVASIVE CTENOPHORE MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI ON THE NW MEDITERRANEAN
09:45 Dawson, M. N.: EVOLUTIONARY CONTEXTS FOR GELATINOUS ZOOPLANKTON BLOOMS
13:30 Robinson, K. L.; Chiaverano, L. M.; Graham, W. M.: LINKING TEMPERATURE, POLYP MORPHOLOGY, AND MEDUSAE NUMBERS: A MECHANISM REGULATING THE MAGNITUDE OF JELLYFISH BLOOMS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO*
13:45 Pitt, K. A.; Rissik, D.; Arthur, M.; Warnken, J.: IDENTIFYING THE DRIVERS OF JELLYFISH BLOOMS IN SOUTHEAST QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA
14:00 Everett, J. D.; Baird, M. E.; Henschke, N.; Pitt, K. A.; Suthers, I. M.: SWARMS OF THE SALP THALIA DEMOCRATICA OFF SOUTH-EASTERN AUSTRALIA: THE INTERACTION OF OCEANOGRAPHY, FECUNDITY AND GROWTH
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
74
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
14:15 Fuentes, V.; Atienza, D.; Lewinsky, I.; Tilves, U.; Gentile, M.; Olariaga, A.; Gili, J. M.: THE “MEDUSA PROJECT”, AN ESTABLISHED MONITORING NETWORK STUDYING JELLYFISH THROUGH
14:30 Dicker, R. A.; Urban-Rich, J.: A POSITIVE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE SIZE OF THE MOON JELLY AURELIA AURITA AND THE SIZE OF EXTRACELLULAR POLYMERIC SUBSTANCES (EPS) RELEASED
14:45 Lebrato, M.; Pitt, K. A.; Sweetman, A. K.; Pahlow, M.; Oschlies, A.; Jones, D. O.; Condon, R. H.; Molinero, J. C.: THE FATE OF GELATINOUS ZOOPLANKTON PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTER (JELLY-POM) IN THE BIOLOGICAL PUMP: A MODELLING STUDY
S48 How will a continued ice retreat af-fect Arctic productivity and food webs?Chair(s): Emma Kritzberg, [email protected] Jesus Arrieta, [email protected] Dolors Vaque, [email protected] Raquel Vaquer Suñer, [email protected]: 208A08:00 Wassmann, P.; Slagstad , D.; Ellingsen, I.: EVALUATING
PRIMARY AND SECONDARY PRODUCTION IN AN ARCTIC OCEAN VOID OF SUMMER SEA ICE: AN EXPERIMENTAL SIMULATION APPROACH~
08:30 Holding, J. M.; Duarte, C. M.: THRESHOLDS OF WARMING FOR ARCTIC PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
08:45 Vaquer-Sunyer, R.; Holding, J.; Regaudie-de-Gioux, A.; Duarte, C. M.; Reigstad, M.; Wassmann, P.: SEASONAL PATTERNS IN ARCTIC PLANKTONIC METABOLISM (FRAM STRAIT - SVALBARD REGION) AND POSSIBLE CONSEQUENCES OF WARMING ON METABOLIC RATES
09:00 Gradinger, R.; Bluhm, B. A.; Iken, K.: SEDIMENTATION PROCESSES UNDER THE SEASONAL SEA ICE OF THE BERING SEA
09:15 Balzano, S.; Marie, D.; Gourvil, P.; Vaulot , D.: DISTRIBUTION OF NANO- AND PICO-EUKARYOTIC PHYTOPLANKTON IN BEAUFORT SEA
09:30 Ramos, A. A.; Serrão, E. A.; Canovas, F.; Cox, C. J.; Lago-Leston, A.; Pearson, G. A.: METATRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSIS OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN DISTINCT BARENTS SEA WATER MASSES
13:30 Arrieta, J. M.; Tovar-Sanchez, A.; Duarte, C. M.; Vaque, D.; Boras, J. A.; Sala, M. M.: TESTING THE EFFECT OF ICE MELTDOWN ON ARCTIC PROKARYOTIC COMMUNITIES
13:45 Vaqué, D.; Boras, J. A.; Lara, E.; Arrieta, J. M.; Duarte, C.; Sala, M. M.: EFFECT OF SEA ICE MELTING ON MICROORGANISMS OF THE MICROLAYER IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN
14:00 Boras, J. A.; Sala, M. M.; Arrieta, J. M.; Sà, E. L.; Agustí, S.; Duarte, D. M.; Vaqué, D.: EFFECT OF THE ARCTIC ICE MELTING ON BACTERIAL CARBON FLUXES VIA VIRAL LYSIS AND PROTISTAN GRAZING
14:15 Lara, E.; Garcia-Zarandona, I.; Arrieta, J. M.; Boras, J. A.; Duarte, C. M.; Agusti, S.; Vaqué, D.: ESTABLISHING TEMPERATURE THRESHOLDS AND TIPPING POINTS ON BACTERIAL CARBON FLUXES THROUGH VIRUSES AND PROTIST IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN
14:30 Brooks, M. L.; Lovvorn, J. R.; Cooper, L. W.: CDOM PHOTOOXIDATION IN THE ARCTIC: IMPLICATIONS FOR CLIMATE CHANGE EFFECTS ON FOODWEBS
14:45 Tomczak, M. T.; Weslawski, J. M.; Gluchowska, M.; Walkusz , W.; Kwasniewski , S.; Stempniewicz , L.: “PELAGIC ENERGY TRANSFER TO TOP TROPIC LEVELS IN TWO CONTRASTING ARCTIC FJORDS”
15:00 Eisenhauer, L.; Slagstad, D.; Wassmann, P.: CHANGES IN THE PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF ARCTIC CALANUS SP. CONGENERS AT MULTI-DECADAL SCALES IN RESPONSE TO CLIMATE WARMING
15:15 Hudson, E. M.; Torres, J. J.: METABOLIC ADAPTATIONS TO EXTREME COLD IN THE ANARCTIC KRILL EUPHAUSIA SUPERBA
S50 Advancing ocean color science from space into the 21st centuryChair(s): Jeremy Werdell, [email protected] Collin S. Roesler, [email protected] Hubert Loisel, [email protected]: 20108:00 Siegel, D. A.: SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR
ASSESSMENTS OF THE GLOBAL OCEAN BIOSPHERE: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE~
08:30 Franz, B. A.: ACHIEVING GLOBAL OCEAN COLOR CLIMATE DATA RECORDS
08:45 Messié, M.; Chavez, F. P.: GLOBAL TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL PATTERNS OF VARIABILITY IN OCEAN COLOR: SYNCHRONY WITH PHYSICAL VARIABLES AND UNDERLAYING MECHANISMS.
09:00 Condal, A. R.; Ardisson, P. L.: SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF CHLOROPHYLL IN THE GULF OF MEXICO, BAHAMAS, AND WESTERN CARIBBEAN AS DETECTED BY SATELLITE COLOR DATA (1979- 2010)
09:15 MELIN, F.; SCLEP, G.: UNCERTAINTIES ASSOCIATED WITH GLOBAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF OCEAN COLOR REMOTE SENSING REFLECTANCE
09:30 Vantrepotte, V.; Loisel, H.; Mériaux, X.; Ruddick, K.; Desailly, D.: COASTAL WATERS OPTICAL CLASSIFICATION: INTEREST FOR OPTIMIZING BIO-OPTICAL INVERSION ALGORITHMS
09:45 Werdell, P. J.; Franz, B. A.: GENERALIZING OCEAN COLOR INVERSION MODELS THAT RETRIEVE MARINE INHERENT OPTICAL PROPERTIES
13:30 BRICAUD, A.; CIOTTI, A. M.; GENTILI, B.: VARIATIONS IN PHYTOPLANKTON SIZE AND COLORED DETRITAL MATTER ABSORPTION AT GLOBAL AND REGIONAL SCALES, AS DERIVED FROM THE SEAWIFS TIME SERIES (1998-2009)
ASLOMeeting Program
75
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
13:45 Mitchell, B. G.; Seegers, B.; Schieber, B.; Kahru, M.; Arrigo, K. R.; Mills, M. M.: BIO-OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE CHUKCHI AND BEAUFORT SEAS
14:00 Sakagami, T.; Barber, R. T.: SEASONAL CYCLE OF CHLOROPHYLL BIOMASS IN PERU COASTAL UPWELLING ECOSYSTEM
14:15 Borsheim, K. Y.; Milutinovic, S.: DYNAMICS OF SATELITE-SENSED SURFACE CHLOROPHYLL DURING SPRING BLOOM
14:30 Kahru, M.; Kudela, R.; Manzano-Sarabia, M.; Mitchell, B. G.: DECADAL AND INTERANNUAL CHANGE IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT: VIEWS FROM OCEAN COLOR SATELLITES
14:45 Sauer, M. J.; Roesler, C. S.: APPLICATION OF A RADIATIVE TRANSFER-BASED CDOM CORRECTION TO SATELLITE-BASED ESTIMATES OF CHLOROPHYLL IN THE GULF OF MAINE
15:00 Gilerson, A. A.; Gitelson, A. A.; Ahmed, S. A.: ESTIMATION OF CHLOROPHYLL-A IN COASTAL AND INLAND WATERS USING REMOTE SENSING ALGORITHMS BASED ON RED AND NEAR INFRARED BANDS
15:15 Mannino, A.; Hooker, S. B.; Hyde, K.; Novak, M. G.; Pan, X.; Friedrichs, M.; Cahill, B.; Wilkin, J.: SATELLITE-DERIVED DISTRIBUTIONS, INVENTORIES AND FLUXES OF DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTER ALONG THE NORTHEASTERN U.S. CONTINENTAL MARGIN
S59 Advancing the Science and Ethics of Plankton Ecology: The Legacy of Peter VerityChair(s): Marc E. Frischer, [email protected] Deborah A. Bronk, [email protected]: 103A08:00 Smayda, T. J.: IN HOMAGE TO PETER G. VERITY:
THE CONTRASTING ECOLOGY OF DIATOMS AND DINOFLAGELLATES *
08:30 Menden-Deuer, S.; Harvey, E. L.; Day, W. S.: LINKING MICROSCOPIC PLANKTON BEHAVIORS TO LARGE-SCALE PATTERNS AND PROCESSES
08:45 Nejstgaard, J. C.; Frischer, M. E.; Troedsson, C.; Simonelli, P.; Anderson, J. T.; Zirbel, M. J.; Verity, P. G.: THE QUEST TO DEFINE WHO IS DOING WHAT IN PLANKTON COMMUNITIES – ZOOPLANKTON
09:00 Bronk, D. A.; Frischer, M. E.; Bradley, P. B.; Sanderson, M. P.; Roberts, Q.; Booth, M. G.: THE QUEST TO DEFINE WHO IS DOING WHAT IN PLANKTON COMMUNITIES - PHYTOPLANKTON
09:15 Patten, B. C.; Whipple, S. J.; Kazanci, C.: A METHOD FOR EXTENDING QUANTITATIVE NETWORK ENVIRON ANAYSIS TO QUALITATIVE FOOD WEBS
09:30 Whipple, S. J.; Patten, B. C.: NITROGEN PROCESSING IN THE NEUSE RIVER ESTUARY: WHY POINTS OF ENTRY DETERMINE SUBSEQUENT DYNAMICS
09:45 Landry, M. R.: PETER VERITY IN JGOFS: LESSONS AND LEGACY FROM THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC
13:30 Allen, A. E.; Badger, J. H.; Brussaard, C. P.; Hopkinson, B.; Frischer, M. E.; Verity, P. G.: COMPARATIVE GENOMICS OF PHAEOCYSTIS GLOBOSA TRANSCRIPT PROFILES DURING VIRAL INFECTION, COLONY FORMATION, AND OTHER DEFINED CONDITIONS*
14:00 Medlin, L. K.; Gaebler-Schwarz, S.: MICROSATELLITE MARKERS FOR PHAEOCYSTIS ANTARCTICA: ASSESSMENT OF POPULATION STRUCTURE AND PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES
14:15 Durbin, E. G.; Casas, M. C.; Rynearson, T. A.: DNA CHARACTERIZATION REVEALS DIVERSE ICE ALGAL AND WATER COLUMN PROTISTAN COMMUNITIES IN THE NORTHERN BERING SEA DURING EARLY SPRING
14:30 Birsa, L. M.; Frischer, M. E.; Verity, P. G.: ARE THE GELATINOUS PLANKTON INCREASING IN THE SKIDAWAY RIVER ESTUARY?
14:45 Frischer, M. E.; Birsa, L. M.; Verity, P. G.: THE SKIDAWAY RIVER ESTUARY: THE CONTINUING SAGA OF AN ANTHROPOGENIC EUTROPHICATION PROCESS
S68 Cyanobacteria in a changing worldChair(s): Jill Sohm, [email protected] Gabrielle Rocap, [email protected] Eric Webb, [email protected]: Ballroom A08:00 Webb, E. A.; Nelson, W. C.; Edmands, S.; Waterbury, J. B.;
Kyrpides, N.; Land, M.; Larimer, F.; Hauser, L.; Holladay, S.; Heidelberg, J. F.: TRICHODESMIUM SPP GENOMES – WINDOWS INTO THE GENETIC POTENTIAL AND EVOLUTION OF MARINE N2 FIXATION.
08:15 Hilton, J. A.; Villareal, T. A.; Tripp, H. J.; Foster, R. A.; Carter, B. J.; Zehr, J. P.: THE GENOME OF A DIATOM-ASSOCIATED HETEROCYSTOUS CYANOBACTERIUM
08:45 Touzet, N.; McCarthy, D.; Kilroy, K.; Ham, R.; Fleming, G.: COMPARATIVE DYNAMICS OF CYANOBACTERIA COMMUNITIES IN TWO WEST IRISH LAKES
09:00 Garcia-Pichel, F.; Ramirez-Reinat, E. L.; Gao, Q.: HOW CYANOBACTERIA BORE
09:15 Callieri, C.; Bertoni, R.; Lami, A.: MICROCOLONY FORMATION FROM SINGLE CELL SYNECHOCOCCUS STRAINS: A PROTECTIVE STRATEGY AGAINST UVR
09:30 Fragoso, G. M.; Neale, P. J.; Kana, T. M.; Pritchard, A.: PHOTOSYNTHETIC AND PHOTOPROTECTIVE RESPONSES OF SYNECHOCOCCUS SP. TO ULTRAVIOLET AND VISIBLE IRRADIANCE
09:45 Sohm, J. A.; Webb, E. A.; Ahlgren, N. A.; Thomson, Z.; Williams, C.; Rocap, G.: SYNECHOCOCCUS DIVERISTY IN THE OCEAN AND PHOTSYNTHETIC PARAMETERS OF DIVERSE CLADES
13:30 Wiedner, C.; Mehnert, G.; Wagner, C.; Rücker, J.; Nixdorf, B.: IMPACT OF GLOBAL WARMING AND TROPHIC STATUS ON THE PREDOMINANCE OF DIFFERENT CYANOBACTERIA TAXA IN DIFFERENT TYPES OF LAKES IN NORTHERN GERMANY
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
76
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
13:45 Posch, T.; Pernthaler, J.; Salcher, M. M.: WARMING PREVENTS HOLOMIXIS AND THUS FAVOURS PERSISTENT BLOOMS OF THE TOXIC CYANOBACTERIUM PLANKTOTHRIX SPP. –LONGTERM DATA (40 YEARS) OF LAKE ZURICH
14:00 Richier, S.; Macey , A. I.; Pratt, N.; Ragni, M.; Lawson, T.; Moore, C. M.; Bibby, T. S.: QUANTIFICATION OF KEY METABOLIC PROTEINS DRIVING BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES IN NATURAL POPULATIONS OF TRICHODESMIUM SPP
14:15 Berman-Frank, I. R.; Levitan, O.; Spungin, D.: TRICHODESMIUM’S CELLULAR ARSENAL FOR THRIVING IN THE FUTURE OCEANS
14:30 Wannicke, N.; Endres, S.; Unger, J.; Engel, A.; Grossart, H. P.; Nausch, M.; Voss, M.: GROWTH AND PRODUCTION OF NODULARIA SPUMIGENA UNDER ELEVATED CO2 CONCENTRATIONS
14:45 Aguilar, C.; Cuhel, R. L.: ALTERNATING YEARS OF UNICELLULAR CYANOBACTERIA DOMINANCE BETWEEN EPISODIC CLIMATE EVENTS IN LAKE MICHIGAN
15:00 Roache-Johnson, K. H.; Jacobs, P.; Lorrian, A.; Moore, L. R.: LOOKING FOR PHYSIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY AMONG LOW LIGHT-ADAPTED PROCHLOROCOCCUS ISOLATES
15:15 Baines, S. B.; Twining, B. S.; Bzezinski, M. A.; Krause, J. W.: A SURPRISING ROLE FOR PICOCYANOBACTERIA IN THE MARINE SILICON CYCLE
S80 Frontiers in ocean acidification research: Responses of marine carbon cycling and ecosystems to ocean acidification Chair(s): Lauren Juranek, [email protected] Simone Alin, [email protected] Anne Cohen, [email protected] Sarah Cooley, [email protected]: 10408:00 Munday, P. L.: NEW DISCOVERIES IN OCEAN
ACIDIFICATION RESEARCH ON CORAL REEFS~
08:30 Drenkard, E.; Cohen, A.; McCorkle, D. C.; de Putron, S.: FEEDING MODULATES THE IMPACT OF ELEVATED CO2 ON THE SKELETAL GROWTH OF AN ATLANTIC CORAL
08:45 Melzner, F.; Thomsen, J.; Huening , A.; Philipp, E.; Lucassen, M.; Gutowska, M. A.: DOMINANCE OF BIVALVE MOLLUSCS IN A NATURALLY CO2 ENRICHED HABITAT: WILL FUTURE ACIDIFICATION AFFECT CALCIFICATION AND FITNESS?
09:00 Brading, P.; Warner, M. E.; Smith, D. J.; Suggett, D. J.: THE COMBINED EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE AND CO2 ON CARBON ACQUISITION IN SYMBIODINIUM (DINOPHYCEAE): A COMPARISON OF PHYLOTYPES
09:15 Dugdale, R. C.; Fuller, J.; Wilkerson, F. P.; Marchi, A.; Parker, A. E.: THRESHOLD LIMITS ON CARBON UPTAKE BY PHYTOPLANKTON IN HIGH CO2 UPWELLING ECOSYSTEMS
09:30 Zbigniew, Z. S.; Tozzi, S.: BIMODAL EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON
09:45 Garcia, N. S.; Breene, C. L.; Fu, F. X.; Bernhardt, P. W.; Mulholland, M. R.; Webb, E. A.; Hutchins, D. A.: LOW CO2 REQUIREMENT FOR GROWTH, N2 AND CO2 FIXATION RATES IN CROCOSPHAERA WATSONII NEAR SATURATING IRRADIANCE
13:30 Ridgwell, A. J.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION: THE ‘OTHER CO2 PROBLEM’?*
13:45 Zeebe, R. E.: ACIDIFICATION WILL HIT MID/HIGH-LATITUDE CALCIFYERS HARDER THAN ANY TIME DURING THE PAST 65 MILLION YEARS
14:00 Kvale, K. F.; Matear, R. J.; McNeil, B.; Meissner, K.; England, M.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL FEEDBACKS IN A HIGH-CO2 OCEAN
14:15 Signorini, S. R.; Olsen, A.; Hakkinen, S.; Metzl, N.; Gudmundsson, K.; OMAR, A.; Olafsson, J.; Reverdin, G.; McClain, C.: TRENDS IN THE SUBPOLAR NORTH ATLANTIC CARBON SINK AND OCEAN ACIDIFICATION: 1981-2008
14:30 Passow, U.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND THE BIOLOGICAL PUMP: ABIOTIC FORMATION OF TRANSPARENT EXOPOLYMER PARTICLES (TEP)
14:45 Koeve, W.; Kim, H. C.; Lee, K.; Oschlies, A.: COMPUTATION OF FCO2 AND THE CONCENTRATION OF CARBONATE IONS AND THE POTENTIAL ROLE OF DOM ACCUMULATION IN OCEAN ACIDIFICATION EXPERIMENTS
15:00 Hauck, J.; Hillenbrand, C. D.; Hoppema, M.; Kuhn, G.; Nehrke, G.; Wolf-Gladrow, D.: CARBONATE SEDIMENTS ON ANTARTIC SHELVES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR A MECHANISM TO BUFFER OCEAN ACIDIFICATION IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN
15:15 Pfister, C. A.; McCoy, S.; Wootton, J. T.; Martin, P.; Colman, A.; Archer, d.: A RECORD OF CARBON CYCLE CHANGE IN MODERN AND ANCIENT CALIFORNIA MUSSELS FROM THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC
S82 Microbe-DOM Interactions in Aquatic EnvironmentsChair(s): Elizabeth Kujawinski, [email protected] Stephen Giovannoni, [email protected]: 10108:00 Giovannoni, S. J.: SAR11 INTERACTIONS WITH
DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON08:15 Salcher, M. M.; Pernthaler, J.; Posch, T.: SEASONAL
BLOOM DYNAMICS AND ECOPHSIOLOGY OF THE FRESHWATER SISTER CLADE OF SAR11 BACTERIA ‘THAT RULE THE WAVES’ (LD12, ALPHAPROTEOBACTERIA)
08:30 Morris, R. M.; Frazar, C. A.; Carlson, C. A.: UNIQUE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC
08:45 Sipler, R. E.; Bronk, D. A.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL LINK BETWEEN TRICHODESMIUM SP. AND RED TIDE KARENIA BREVIS:
ASLOMeeting Program
77
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
09:00 Jürgens, K.; Berg, C.; Bruckner, C.; Feike, J.; Glaubitz, S.; Grote, J.; Jost, G.; Labrenz, M.; Schott, T.: CHEMOAUTOTROPHIC ARCHAEAL AND BACTERIAL KEY PLAYERS LINKING THE NITROGEN AND SULFUR CYCLE IN A PELAGIC REDOXCLINE OF THE BALTIC SEA
09:15 Halsey, K. H.; Carter, A.; Giovannoni, S. J.: OBLIGATE METHYLOTROPHY AND METHYLOVORY IN OM43: THE SPECIALIZED METABOLIC STRATEGY OF AN ABUNDANT CLADE OF COASTAL BACTERIOPLANKTON
09:30 Booth, M. G.; Gifford, S.; Doherty, M.; Moran, M. A.: SINGLE-GENE TRANSCRIPT QUANTIFICATION OF TWO UNUSUAL METABOLIC GENES IDENTIFIED THROUGH TRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSIS OF ESTUARINE BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES
09:45 D’Ambrosio, L. A.; Ziervogel, K.; Arnosti, C.: A COMPARISON OF FREE-LIVING AND PARTICLE-ASSOCIATED COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND FUNCTION
13:30 Pohnert, G.; Vidoudez, C.; Paul, C.; Spielmeyer, A.; Prince, E.; Barofsky, A.: CHEMICAL INTERACTIONS OF PLANKTONIC ALGAE WITH THEIR ENVIRONMENT: HIGHVARIABILITY REVEALED BY METABOLOMICS AND BIOASSAYS~
14:00 Nelson, C. E.; Carlson, C. A.: SIMULTANEOUSLY TRACKING LABILITY AND COMMUNITY INCORPORATION OF VARIED SOURCES OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON BY EUPHOTIC AND MESOPELAGIC SARGASSO SEA BACTERIA
14:15 Morales, A. M.; Williams, C. J.; Xenopoulos, M. A.; Frost, P. C.: ASSESSING THE ROLE OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN THE COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND STOICHIOMETRY OF LAKE PICO AND NANOPLANKTON
14:30 Bird, K. C.; Lennon, J. T.: SPECIALIST AND GENERALIST UTILIZATION OF PHOSPHORUS FORMS BY AQUATIC MICROBES: A MECHANISM FOR MAINTAINING MICROBIAL DIVERSITY?
14:45 Kiene, R. P.; Li, C.; Yang, G. P.; Kieber, D. J.; Oswald, L.: BIO-AVAILABILITY AND TURNOVER OF DISSOLVED DIMETHYLSULFONIOPROPIONATE (DMSP) IN COASTAL WATERS OF THE GULF OF MEXICO
15:00 Zhang, S. J.; Santschi, P. H.; Spurgin, J.; Schwehr, K. A.; Quigg, A.; Chin, W. C.: THE ROLE OF EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES (EPS) IN MODIFYING TRANSPORT OF ENGINEERED NANOPARTICLES IN MARINE ENVIRONMENTS
15:15 Kujawinski, E. B.; Longnecker, K.: MOLECULAR-LEVEL CHARACTERIZATION OF DEEP-OCEAN DOM: SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES AMONG GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS
GS05B Food web interactions and trophic linkages - Session 2Chair(s): Stephanie Hampton, [email protected] Susanne Baden, [email protected]: 10208:00 Baden, S.; Emanuelsson, A.; Pihl, L.; Svensson, C. J.; Åberg,
P.: SHIFT IN SEAGRASS FOOD WEB STRUCTURE OVER DECADES LINKED TO OVERFISHING
08:15 Sieben, K.; Ljunggren, L.; Bergström, U.; Rippen, A. D.; Eriksson, B. K.: INTERACTING EFFECTS OF PREDATOR DECLINE AND RESOURCE ENRICHMENT ON DIFFERENT SPATIAL SCALES
08:30 Nilsson, P. A.: VISIBILITY AND PISCIVORE-PREY INTERACTIONS AND BEHAVIOURS
08:45 Wollrab, S.; Diehl, S.; de Roos, A. M.: ENERGY FLOW AND SPECIES PERSISTENCE IN A WIDESPREAD PELAGIC FOOD WEB MODULE
09:00 Filip, J.; HIllebrand, H.; Moorthi, S. D.: RELEVANCE OF FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY IN (MICROBIAL) FOOD WEBS
09:15 Vallina, S. M.; LeQuere, C.: STABILITY OF COMPLEX FOOD WEBS: RESILIENCE, RESISTANCE AND THE AVERAGE INTERACTION STRENGTH
09:30 Hampton, S. E.; Scheef, L. P.; Pendleton, D. E.; Holmes, E. E.; Scheuerell, M. D.; Ward, E. J.: CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS TO ANALYZING MARINE COMMUNITIES WITH MULTIVARIATE AUTOREGRESSIVE (MAR) MODELS
09:45 Scheef, L. P.; Pendleton, D. E.; Hampton, S. E.; Holmes, E. E.; Scheuerell, M. D.; Katz, S. L.; Johns, D. G.: USE OF MULTIVARIATE AUTOREGRESSIVE (MAR) ANALYSIS TO ASSESS MARINE PLANKTON COMMUNITY DYNAMICS FROM TIME SERIES DATA
GS05C Food web interactions and trophic linkages - Session 3Chair(s): Anja Scherwass, [email protected]: 10213:30 Davenport, E.; Fan, C.; Govoni, J.; Anderson, J.:
DESCRIPTION OF A DYNAMIC NPZD MODEL THAT SIMULATES HURRICANE EFFECTS ON SECONDARY PRODUCTION
13:45 Gluchowska, M.; Kwasniewski, S.; Jakubas, D.; Wojczulanis-Jakubas , K.; Walkusz, W.; Weslawski, J. M.; Karnovsky , N.; Blachowiak-Samolyk , K.; Stempniewicz , L.: MORE WORK IN SHORT TIME - BEHAVIOURAL RESPONSE OF LITTLE AUK (ALLE ALLE) TO CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE EUROPEAN ARCTIC
14:00 Ljungberg, P.; Berg Hasper, T.; Persson, A.; Nilsson, P. A.: THE EFFECTS OF HABITAT FRAGMENTATION ON TWO TROPHIC LEVELS WITHIN THE SEAGRASS COMMUNITY
14:15 Richoux, N. B.: VARIATIONS IN TROPHIC SIGNATURES (FATTY ACIDS AND STABLE ISOTOPES) OF TWO THALASSINIDEAN PRAWN SPECIES INHABITING A HIGHLY IMPACTED SOUTH AFRICAN ESTUARY
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
78
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
14:30 NAGAHAMA, Y.; NOMURA , M.; FUJIBAYASHI, M.; SHIN , W. S.; NISHIMURA , O.: IMPORTANCE OF ZOSTERA JAPONICA AS A FOOD SOURCE FOR BENTHOS IN INTERTIDAL ZONE
14:45 Acosta, V.; Stewart, G. M.: CONCENTRATION OF HEAVY METALS IN THE FOOD WEB OF AN URBAN LAKE
15:00 Ballester, K. E.; Ramirez-Toro, G.; Hertler, H.; Escudero, B. I.; Jaykus, L. A.; Levine, J. F.: USING OCCURRENCE OF MICROBIAL INDICATORS AND FRANK PATHOGENS IN WATER, SEDIMENT AND MOLLUSKS IN DEVELOPING A LOCAL SHELLFISH SANITATION PROGRAM IN PUERTO RICO
15:15 Cesarz, J.; Scherwass, A.; Willen, C.; Arndt, H.: CHANGE OF BACTERIAL ACTIVITY AS RESPONSE TO INTENSIVE PROTOZOAN GRAZING
ASLOMeeting Program
79
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
Thursday, 17 February 2011 PostersS02 Ocean Biogeochemistry Time-Series and ClimateChair(s): Frank Muller-Karger, [email protected] Michael Lomas, [email protected] Matthew Church, [email protected] Laura Lorenzoni, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall242 Junker, K.; Dippner, J. W.: A NEW BALTIC SEA
ENVIRONMENTAL INDEX243 Chandler, C. L.; Allison, M. D.; Groman, R. C.; Gegg, S.
R.; Wiebe, P. W.; Glover, D. M.: CARIACO TIME-SERIES DATA MANAGEMENT
244 Sakamoto, C. M.; Johnson, K. S.; Riser, S. C.; Swift, D. D.; Coletti, L. J.; Jannasch, H. W.: NITRATE SENSOR PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS ON PROFILING FLOATS
245 Jannasch, H. W.; Coletti, L. J.; Sakamoto, C. M.; Fitzwater, S. E.; Johnson, K. S.: NITRATE MEASUREMENTS ON APEX PROFILING FLOATS
246 Taylor, G. T.; Scranton, M. I.; Podlaska, A.; Cernadas-Martin, S.; Li, X. N.; Muller-Karger, F.; Fanning, K.; Rueda, D.; Thunell, R. C.; Varela, R.; Astor, Y.: PROCESSES DRIVING TEMPORAL VARIATIONS IN THE CARIACO BASIN’S MICROBIAL POPULATIONS
247 Pasulka, A. L.; Taniguchi, D. A.; Taylor, A. G.; Landry, M. R.: TEMPORAL VARIATIONS IN THE MICROPLANKTON COMMUNITY IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC SUBTROPICAL OPEN OCEAN AND POTENTIAL ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS INFLUENCING THESE VARIATIONS
249 Cisternas-Novoa, C. A.; Lee, C.; Engel, A.: MEASUREMENT OF PROTEINACEOUS AND POLYSACCHARIDE-RICH PARTICLES PRODUCED BY BUBBLING PHYTOPLANKTON EXUDATES
250 Wagner, C.; Boersma, M.; Edwards, M.; Pohlmann, T.; Peck, M. A.: LINKING FIELD, LABORATORY AND MODELING STUDIES TO EXPLAIN THERMAL HABITATS AND CLIMATE-DRIVEN CHANGES IN KEY NORTH SEA COPEPOD SPECIES
251 Casey, J. R.; Lomas, M. W.; Aucan, J.: INTERANNUAL DYNAMICS OF CARBON PARTITIONING WITHIN THE SARGASSO SEA PICOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGE
252 Best, C. H.; Purdie, D. A.; Lomas, M. W.: TEMPORAL DYNAMICS OF MICROPLANKTON IN THE SARGASSO SEA
253 Cobb, R. M.; Andrus, C. F.; Perez-Huerta, A.: STRUCTURAL DIFFERENCES IN GROWTH FEATURES OF DEEP-WATER CORALS
254 Lantz, C. A.; Kahng, S. E.; Winn, C.: SPATIOTEMPORAL ANALYSIS OF THE CARBONATE SYSTEM ON A NEAR SHORE CORAL REEF
255 Sasse, T. P.; McNeil, B. I.: INVESTIGATING NEW EMPIRICAL TECHNIQUES TO PREDICT PCO2 FROM STANDARD HYDROGRAPHIC DATA SETS IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC
S03 Heterotrophic Activity in Aquatic Ecosystems Revisited Chair(s): Susana Agusti, [email protected] Carlos M. Duarte, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall256 Pedler, B. E.; Azam, F.: SINGLE-CELL GROWTH
DYNAMICS OF A MARINE BACTERIAL ISOLATE’S UTILIZATION OF AMBIENT DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER
257 Brocco, B. A.; Morell, J.; Corredor, J.; López, J. M.; Antoun, H.: MODULATION OF THE PLANKTONIC HETEROTROPHIC ACTIVITY IN THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN SEA BY THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME
258 Lawrence, C. M.; Menden-Deuer, S.: PROTISTAN GRAZING IN NARRAGANSETT BAY, RI, IN RELATION TO PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
259 Adams, H. E.; Priscu, J. C.: BACTERIAL ACTIVITY IN METHANE-RICH, ICY HABITATS
260 Gómez, M.; Fernández-Urruzola, I.; Herrera, A.; Maldonado-Uribe, F.; Martínez, I.; Osma, N.; Packard, T.: THE RESPIRATORY ETS IS A CASUAL BASIS FOR THE ALLOMETRIC RELATIONSHIP IN KLEIBER’S LAW
S04 Biological and biogeochemical science enabled by the Aquarius and SMOS missionsChair(s): Joseph Salisbury, [email protected] Doug Vandemark, [email protected] Nico Reul, [email protected] Bertran Chapron, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall261 Salisbury, J.; Vandemark, D.; Reul, N.; Chapron, B.;
Campbell, J.; Hunt, C.; Wisser, D.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL COHERENCE BETWEEN AMAZON DISCHARGE, SALINITY AND LIGHT ABSORPTION BY COLORED ORGANIC CARBON IN THE SURFACE WESTERN TROPICAL ATLANTIC.
S05 Ocean Color Radiometry of Coastal and Inland WatersChair(s): James Yoder, [email protected] Roy Armstrong, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall262 Phan, S.; Subramaniam, A.: REMOTE SENSING OF
SEDIMENT CONCENTRATION IN THE HUDSON RIVER USING MODIS/AQUA LAND BANDS
263 Ficek, D.; Zapadka, T.; Meler, J.; Majchrowski, R.: ABSORPTION PROPERTIES OF PARTICULATE AND DISSOLVED MATTER IN POMERANIAN LAKES (POLAND)
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
80
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
264 Watanabe, S.; Laurion , I.; Vincent, W. F.: ABIOTIC CONTROL OF UNDERWATER LIGHT IN A DRINKING WATER RESERVOIR
265 Schaeffer, B. A.; Conmy, R.; Aukamp, J. R.; Craven, G.; Daniels, K.: OCEAN COLOR RADIANCE OF FOUR FLORIDA PAN-HANDLE ESTUARIES
S06 From Green Pastures to Green Water: Integrating Soil and Aquatic Approaches to Phosphorus Biogeochemistry ScienceChair(s): Barbara Cade-Menun, [email protected] George S. Bullerjahn, [email protected] J. Thad Scott, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall266 Ishee, E. R.; Ross, D. S.: CONTRIBUTION OF
STREAMBANK EROSION AS A NON-POINT SOURCE OF PHOSPHORUS TO LAKE CHAMPLAIN FROM 4 STREAMS IN CHITTENDEN COUNTY, VT
267 Vega, A. M.; Strickland, B.; Cotner, J. B.; Kellerman, A.: EARTHWORM INVASION EFFECTS ON FOREST SOIL NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY
268 Hoffman, A. R.; Armstrong, D. E.; Lathrop, R. C.: GEOCHEMICAL CONTROLS ON PHOSPHORUS CYCLING AND EUTROPHICATION IN FOUR DIMICTIC LAKES
S13 Biodiversity in a Changing World: Insights from Paleoecological DataChair(s): Irene Gregory-Eaves, [email protected] Beatrix Beisner, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall291 Ma, S.; Kingsbury, K. V.; Laird, K. R.; Cumming, B.
F.: IMPROVING OUR UNDERSTANDING OF WATER AVAILABILITY OVER MILLENNIA: AN INVESTIGATION OF DROUGHT FROM NEARSHORE CORES FROM A DRAINAGE LAKE IN NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO
292 Haig, H. A.; Laig, R.; Laird, K. R.; Kingsbury , M.; Cumming, B. F.: DIATOM- AND CHRYSOPHYTE-INFERRED CHANGES IN EFFECTIVE MOSITURE OVER THE PAST TWO MILLENNIA FROM NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO, CANADA
293 Chen, G. J.; Selbie, D. T.; Saulnier-Talbot, E.; Schindler, D. E.; Bunting, L.; Leavitt, P. R.; Finney, B. P.; Gregory-Eaves, I.: PACIFIC SALMON DRIVE DIATOM BETA-DIVERSITY PATTERNS IN FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS
294 Caffrey, M. A.; Horn, S. P.; Haberyan, K. A.; Sullivan, D. G.: PALEOLIMNOLOGY OF LAGUNA SALADILLA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC INFERRED FROM DIATOMS AND OTHER PALEOENVIRONMENTAL PROXIES
S14 Consequences of Hypoxia for Living Resources and Biogeochemical CyclesChair(s): Sarah Kolesar, [email protected] James Pierson, [email protected] Jeremy Testa, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall311 Yoshino Kenji, K.; Katano Toshiya, .; Ito Yuji, .; Hamada
Takaharu, .; Hayami Yuichi, .: HYPOXIC IMPACTS ON THE BENTHIC COMMUNITY IN ARIAKE BAY
312 Roman, M.; Pierson, J.; Brandt, S.; Kolesar, S.; Sellinger, C.; Cowan, J.; Mason, D.; Stow, C.; Sable, S.; Adamack, A.; Sutter, B.: CSCOR NGOMEX: EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON PRODUCTION POTENTIAL OF ECOLOGICALLY AND COMMERCIALLY IMPORTANT LIVING RESOURCES IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO
S15 Land Based Sources of Pollution in Tropical Marine EcosystemsChair(s): Thomas Potter, [email protected] Candiss Williams, [email protected] David Whitall, [email protected] Angel Dieppa, [email protected]: 202313 Parra-Lozano, J. P.; Espinosa-Diaz, L. F.; Betancourt-Portela,
J. M.; Garay-Tinoco, J. A.; Alonso-Hernández, C.; Díaz-Asencio, M.; Ruiz-Fernandez, A. C.; Sanchez-Cabeza, J. A.; Gerardo-Abaya, J.: HISTORICAL RECONSTRUCTION OF MERCURY CONTAMINATION IN SEDIMENTS FROM CARTAGENA BAY, COLOMBIA
314 McGeachy, C. T.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN OUTFALLS ON CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEMS
315 Medina-Muñiz, J. L.; Hernandez-Delgado, E. A.: IMPACT OF NON-POINT SOURCE SEWAGE POLLUTION IN NORTHEASTERN CORAL REEFS, PUERTO RICO
316 Castine, S. A.; Erler, D. V.; Trott, L. A.; de Nys, R.; Eyre, B. D.: BENTHIC NITROGEN CYCLING IN A SHRIMP FARM SETTLEMENT POND
317 Bargar, T. A.; Garrison, V. H.; Alvarez, D. A.; Orazio, C.: CONTAMINANTS ASSESSMENT OF CORAL REEFS IN THE VIRGIN ISLANDS NATIONAL PARK (VINP)
318 Neuberger-Cywiak, L.: WATER QUALITY MONITORING IN THE CENTRAL VENEZUELAN COAST AND ITS RELATION WITH THE INTEGRATED COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS
S17 Phosphorus Cycling in Marine Systems: Biogeochemical, Genomic and Model Studies Chair(s): Angelicque E. White, [email protected] Adina Paytan, [email protected] Sonya Dyhrman, [email protected]: 209319 Hull, D. K.; Young, C. W.; Ruttenberg, K. C.: SEASONAL
AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE ACTIVITY IN HE’EIA FISHPOND
ASLOMeeting Program
81
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
320 Rodríguez-Díaz, M.; Hanke, A.; Timm, K.; Strous, M.: MIMMIKING ENHANCED BIOLOGIAL PHOSPHORUS REMOVAL REDOX CYCLES IN SEA SEDIMENT.
321 Briggs, R. A.; Ruttenberg, K. C.: QUANTIFYING LABILE ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS IN SUSPENDED PARTICULATES AND AQUATIC SEDIMENTS: AN ADAPTATION TO THE SEDEX METHOD FOR SELECTIVE P EXTRACTION
322 Barnard, A. H.; Koch, C.; Egli, P.; Hanson, A.; Gregory, T.; Ragan, M. A.; Jones, B.; Campbell, R.; Needoba, J.: PERFORMANCE VALIDATION OF THE CYCLE-PO4, AN INSTRUMENT FOR IN-SITU AND LONG-TERM ORTHOPHOSPHATE MONITORING.
323 Bennett, M. A.; Ranhofer, M.; Benitez-Nelson, C.; Thunell, R.; Plessinger, W.; Tappa, E.: BIOAVAILABILITY OF P ACROSS AN OXIC/ANOXIC BOUNDARY
324 Burkhardt, B. G.; White, A. E.; Watkins-Brandt, K.; Paytan, A.: MICROBIALLY MEDIATED PHOSPHORUS REMINERALIZATION RATES VIA CONTINUOUS FLOW ANALYSIS
325 Turnewitsch, R.; Pohl, C.: DISSOLVED INORGANIC PHOSPHORUS TRAPPING AT A WATER-COLUMN REDOXCLINE: IMPLICATIONS FOR OCEAN ANOXIC EVENTS ?
S18 Connectivity of ecosystem processes in the upper and mesopelagic oceansChair(s): Richard B. Rivkin, [email protected] Louis Legendre, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall337 Le Moigne, F. A.; Sanders, R. J.; Villa Alfageme, M.; Morris, P.
J.: DOES A BALLAST EFFECT OCCUR IN THE OCEAN?338 Uchimiya, M.; Fukuda, H.; Ogawa, H.; Nagata,
T.: PROKARYOTE PRODUCTION IN THE MESOPELAGIC LAYER OF THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN
339 Corell, H.; Moksnes, P. O.; Engqvist, A.; Jonsson, P. R.: MODEL SIMULATION OF MARINE LARVAL DISPERSAL DISTANCE AS A FUNCTION OF SPAWNING TIME, PELAGIC LARVAL DURATION AND VERTICAL POSITION
S21 Isotopic and Molecular Approaches to Study Microbe-Metazoan Trophic Dynamics Chair(s): Astrid Schnetzer, [email protected] Darcy Lonsdale, [email protected] David Caron, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall340 Sawyer, T.; Rickborn, A.; Neuer, S.: THE ROLE OF
ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN SHAPING THE COMMUNITY STRUCTURE OF PRIMARY PRODUCERS IN CENTRAL ARIZONA RESERVOIRS
341 Leandre, M. Y.; Gibson, D. M.; Kirchman, D. L.; Frischer, M. E.; Thompson, M. E.: POPULATION DYNAMICS OF THE BACTERIAL COMMUNITY DURING TUNICATE DECOMPOSITION
342 Boling, W. B.; Wawrik, B.; Sinclair, J.: MOLECULAR DETECTION OF CALANOID PREY SPECIES BY GUT CONTENT ANALYSIS
S24 Climate and fishing effects on life history traits of exploited stocks and the consequences of population sustainabilityChair(s): Chih-hao Hsieh, [email protected] Juan-Carlos Molinero, [email protected] Hui-Yu Wang, [email protected]: 103B350 Arocho-Montes, A. I.; Sabat, A.: HOW FISH
STOCKS HAVE CHANGED IN PUERTO RICO: IS OVERFISHING THE OVERRIDING FACTOR?
351 Rueda Roa, D. T.; Achury, A.: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES SEASONAL CHANGES AND THE GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF SARDINES IN EASTERN VENEZUELA
S25 Research Experiences of Undergraduates in Aquatic SciencesChair(s): Russell L Cuhel, [email protected] Carmen Aguilar, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall369 Zaitsev, H. M.; Johnson, M.: INVESTIGATING THE
ROLE OF NITRIC OXIDE, OXIDATIVE STRESS, AND TEMPERATURE IN SYMBIODINIUM SPP.
370 Nemec, J. A.; Gronseth, A. D.; Nemec, K. H.: A SURVEY OF ENVIRONMENTAL BACTERIAL RESISTANCE LEVELS TO TRICLOSAN AND POTENTIAL IMPACTS OF WASTEWATER TREATMENT
371 Caddle, J. A.; Johnson, A. K.; Brill, R. W.; Crawford, K. C.; Horodysky, A. Z.: ONTOGENY OF AUDITORY AND VISUAL ECOPHYSIOLOGY IN BLACK SEA BASS (CENTROPRISTIS STRIATA)
372 Tellechea, J. S.; Roman, G.; Olsson, D.; Norbis, W.: SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN SOUND PRODUCTION AND SONIC MUSCLE IN THE STRIPED WEAKFISH (CYNOSCION GUATACUPA - SCIAENIDAE)
373 Seagroves, E. E.: TRANSLOCATION GROWTH RATE STUDY OF LITTORINA IRRORATA
375 Salk, K.; Weissburg, M. J.: INDUCTION OF CHEMICAL DEFENSES IN THE FRESHWATER MACROPHYTES, CABOMBA CAROLINIANA AND EGERIA DENSA
376 Mosby, A. F.; Lawrence, C.; Menden-Deuer, S.: EFFECTS OF COPEPOD GRAZING AND NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY ON MEASUREMENTS OF HETEROTROPHIC PROTIST GRAZING RATES IN NARRAGANSETT BAY, RHODE ISLAND, USA
377 Gronseth, A. D.; Nemec, J. A.; Byrnes, J. R.; Sigtermans, L. H.; Wammer, K. H.: ENHANCED ANTIBACTERIAL RESISTANCE AND COMMUNITY COMPOSITION SHIFTS DUE TO LONG-TERM TRICLOSAN EXPOSURE
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
82
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
378 Gonzalez, R.; Caldwell, T. J.; Wilhelm, F. M.: THE VERTICAL AND SPATIAL HETEROGENEITY OF ZOOPLANKTON IN LAKE PEND ORIELLE, NORTHERN IDAHO, WITH THE PRESENCE OF MYSIS DILUVIANA
379 Pérez-Pérez, N. M.; Franqui, R.; Pérez, L.; Rodríguez, C. J.; Sánchez, J.; Santiago, S.; Vázquez, E.; García, C. I.: MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY OF CHITONS (MOLLUSCA: POLYPLACOPHORA) OF THE GENUS CHITON IN THE CARIBBEAN
380 Stephenson Haskins, L. E.; Karnauskas, K.: SENSITIVITY OF ENSO TO ANTHROPOGENIC SST PATTERN FORMATIONS
381 Baldes, J. E.; Gross, J. A.; Webb, M.; Gresswell, B.: EFFECTS OF CARBON DIOXIDE ON RAINBOW TROUT LARVAE: APPLICATIONS FOR INVASIVE FISH ERADICATION
382 Johnson, S.; Garrett, A.: PRESERVING ENDANGERED SPECIES: PESTICIDE MANAGEMENT
383 Parveen, S.; Mudoh, M.; Burgos, J. A.: THE EFFECTS OF STORAGE TEMPERATURE ON THE GROWTH OF TOTAL AND PATHOGENIC VIBRIO PARAHAEMOLYTICUS IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY OYSTERS
384 Almodóvar Acevedo, L.; Romero, A.; Detres, Y.: DETERMINATION OF SOIL CHARACTERISTICS IN NATURAL UNDISTURBED SALT FLATS IN SOUTHERN PUERTO RICO
385 Green, S. R.: EFFECTS OF LAND USE, WATERSHED SIZE, AND SOIL TYPES ON THE CONCENTRATIONS OF N AND P IN COASTAL PLAIN STREAMS
386 Kristofco, L.; Maranda, L.: ULVA SPORE ADHESION ON TREATED OPTICALLY CLEAR SURFACES
387 Roldan, C.; Macy, A.; White, M.: COASTAL HYDROLOGY OF THE ISLANDS OF BIMINI, BAHAMAS
388 Manrique-Hernández, H.; Guerrero-Díaz, C.; Hart, T.; Simard, M. J.; Ecker, M. T.: IMPACTS OF CROSSROADS ON STREAM WATER QUALITY DURING BASE FLOW AND STORM FLOW IN BURLINGTON, VERMONT
389 Baptist, C. S.; Laber, C. P.; Smalley, G. W.; Place, A. R.: INFLUENCE OF IRRADIANCE ON GROWTH, FEEDING, AND TOXIN PRODUCTION IN THE MIXOTROPHIC DINOFLAGELLATE KARLODINIUM VENEFICUM
390 Carlson, B.; Jeremiason, J. D.; Sebestyen, S. D.; Kolka, R. K.: TRACE METAL AND DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) CYCLING IN AN OMBROTROPHIC BOG
391 Miklesh, D. M.; Li, J.; Crowe, S. A.; Katsev, S.: NUTRIENT FLUXES ACROSS THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE IN LAKE SUPERIOR INVESTIGATED USING A REACTION-TRANSPORT MODEL
392 Westman, W. M.; Fields, D. M.; Shema, S. D.: BARNACLES: FANS OF VISCOSITY. THE EFFECTS OF KINEMATIC VISCOSITY ON FEEDING BEHAVIORS IN BALANUS BALANOIDES.
S30 Mechanistic descriptions of diverse plankton communities: from observations to modelsChair(s): Andrew Pershing, [email protected] Andrew Barton, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall398 Vaillancourt, R. D.; Marra, J. F.; Lance, V.:
PHOTOSYNTHETIC EFFICIENCY IS CONTROLLED PRIMARILY BY ZEAXANTHIN IN THE WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
399 Bochdansky, A. B.; Herndl, G. J.: CHARACTERISTICS OF PARTICLES IN VIDEO PROFILES OF THE DEEP SUBTROPICAL AND TROPICAL ATLANTIC
400 Gyory, J.; Pineda, J.: TURBIDITY AS A CUE FOR SYNCHRONOUS REPRODUCTION IN THE BARNACLE SEMIBALANUS BALANOIDES
401 Wagner, C.; Adrian, R.: CONSEQUENCES OF CHANGES IN THERMAL REGIME FOR PLANKTON DIVERSITY AND FUNCTIONALITY IN A POLYMICTIC LAKE: A MATTER OF TEMPORAL SCALE
402 Allison, M. D.; Chandler, C. L.; Groman, R. C.; Wiebe, P. H.; Gegg, S. R.; Glover, D. M.: MANAGEMENT OF PLANKTON DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE DATA
403 Adjou, M.; Bendtsen, J.; Richardson, K.: MODELING THE INFLUENCE FROM OCEAN TRANSPORT, MIXING AND GRAZING PRESSURE ON PHYTOPLANKTON DIVERSITY
404 Lee, T. A.; Rollwagen-Bollens, G. C.; Bollens, S. M.: ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND TOXIC CYANOBACTERIA BLOOMS IN A SHALLOW, TEMPERATE LAKE (VANCOUVER LAKE, WASHINGTON, USA)
405 Kremer, C. T.; Klausmeier, C. A.; Litchman, E.: DETECTING THE ROLE OF RESOURCE COMPETITION IN DRIVING NITROGEN FIXING CYANOBACTERIA BLOOMS: A MECHANISTIC APPROACH
406 Neale, P. J.; Pritchard, A. L.: UV INHIBITION OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN SYNECHOCOCCUS SP.: BIOLOGICAL WEIGHTING FUNCTIONS AND EXPOSURE RESPONSE CURVE
S31 Coral Reefs in a Crystal Ball: What Will Be Their Future?Chair(s): Pamela Hallock, [email protected] Bernhard Riegl, [email protected] Edwin A. Hernández-Delgado, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall407 Graham, E. R.: TEMPERATURE EFFECTS ON
CARBONIC ANHYDRASE ACTIVITY IN SYMBIOTIC AND APOSYMBIOTIC CNIDARIANS
408 Logan, C. A.; Donner, S. D.; Dunne, J.; Eakin, C. M.: MODELING GLOBAL CORAL REEF BLEACHING UNDER CLIMATE CHANGE
ASLOMeeting Program
83
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
409 Cyphers, T. W.; Mason , C. M.; Wisenden, B. D.: MALE FATHEAD MINNOW TERRITORY DEFENSE BEHAVIOR BASED ON PATERNITY
410 Ruiz-Diaz, C. P.; Toledo-Hernández, C.; Sabat, A.; Marcano, M.: THE SIMULATION THE INTERACTION AMONG SEA FAN COLONY ITS IMMUNE SYSTEM, AND A POTENTIAL PATHOGEN
411 Hutchinson-Delgado, Y. M.; Hernandez-Delgado, E.: RAPID DEGRADATION OF FEDERAL DESIGNATED CRITICAL HABITATS OF THE THREATENED ELKHORN CORAL IN VEGA BAJA AND MANAT,, P.R.
S32 Variability in Freshwater Inputs and its Impacts on Coastal Marine SystemsChair(s): Juanita Urban-Rich, [email protected] Ellen Douglas, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall412 Ketover, R.; Loh, A. N.: EFFECTS OF TIDAL FLUSHING ON
BENTHIC REMINERALIZATION OF ORGANIC MATTER IN MANGROVE STANDS IN ESTERO BAY, FLORIDA, USA
413 Booe, T. L.; Steichen, J. L.; Windham, R.; Dorado, S.; McInnes, A. S.; Jiang, Y.; Quigg, A. S.: INFLUENCE OF FRESHWATER INFLOWS ON SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF WATER QUALITY IN GALVESTON BAY.
414 Kinney, J. W.; Flood, R. D.: INVESTIGATION OF THE PECONIC ESTUARY, LONG ISLAND, NY REVEALS CLUES TO THE EVOLUTION OF AN ESTUARINE ‘OYSTER TERRRAIN’
415 Lefébure, R.; Degerman, R.: IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON PELAGIC FOOD WEB EFFICIENCY AND FISH PRODUCTION
416 Chen, C.; Gong, G.: EFFECTS OF THE CHANGJIANG RIVER DISCHARGE ON PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY RESPIRATION IN SPRING IN THE EAST CHINA SEA
S33 Effects of Global Change on Carbon Transport and Processing in Tropical Freshwater EcosystemsChair(s): Gaston E. “Chip” Small, [email protected] Bill McDowell, [email protected] Johan Six , [email protected] Catherine Pringle, [email protected]: Ballroom A417 Machado-Silva, F.; Lima, V. N.; Sato, C. Y.; Oliveira, A. F.;
Andrade, P. M.; Silva-Junior, E. F.; Lima, R. F.; Moulton, T. P.: DETECTING ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT USING STABLE ISOTOPES IN PERIPHYTON AND FPOM OF COASTAL FOREST STREAMS IN RIO DE JANEIRO STATE, BRAZIL.
418 Lima, V. N.; Oliveira, A. F.; Machado-Silva, F.; Sato, C. Y.; Andrade, P. M.; Silva-Junior, E. F.; Lima, R. F.; Moulton, T. P.: USE OF STABLE ISOTOPES OF CARBON AND NITROGEN FOR IMPACT AND BASAL FOOD RESOURCES ASSESSMENT IN STREAMS OF GUAPI-MACACU WATERSHED, RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL
419 Potter, J. D.; McDowell, W. H.: PATTERNS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN A HIGHLY URBANIZED WATERSHED IN PUERTO RICO
420 Sato, C. Y.; Lima, V. N.; Moulton, T. P.: PERIPHYTON CONTROLS AND STOCKS IN ATLANTIC RAINFOREST STREAMS
421 Crosswell, J. R.; Hales, B.; Wetz, M.; Paerl, H.: AIR-WATER CO2 FLUXES AND INORGANIC CARBON DYNAMICS IN A MICROTIDAL, EUTROPHIC ESTUARY.
422 Tamooh, F. L.; Van Den Meersche , K.; Borges, A.; Merckx, R.; Dehairs, F.; Meysman, F.; Bouillon, S.: DISTRIBUTION AND COMPOSITION OF ORGANIC CARBON IN THE TANA RIVER BASIN (KENYA).
S34 Bioluminescent Bays of Puerto Rico: Science, Education, Management and ConservationChair(s): Michael Latz, [email protected] Fernando Gilbes-Santaella, [email protected] Miguel Sastre, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall423 Zayas-Santiago, C. M.; Colón-Rivera, R. J.; Feagin,
R. A.: BIOLUMINESCENCE IN THE HUMACAO NATURAL RESERVE: POPULATIONS DYNAMICS OF PYRODINIUM BAHAMENSI
S39 Regional Ecosystem Research Informing Management DecisionsChair(s): Kimberly Puglise, [email protected] David Hilmer, [email protected] Michael Dowgiallo, [email protected] Larry Pugh, [email protected] Felix Martinez, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall425 Rauenzahn, J. L.; Eakin, C. M.; Skirving, W. J.; Burgess, T.;
Christensen, T. R.; Heron, S. F.; Li, J.; Liu, G.; Morgan, J. A.; Nim, C.; Parker, B. A.; Strong, A. E.: NOAA CORAL REEF WATCH: DECISION SUPPORT TOOLS FOR CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEM MANAGERS
426 Venn, C.; Culp, B. M.; Huot, D. A.; Shepard, M. K.; Brunskill, J.: REMOTE SENSING AND GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SCIENCE AS TOOLS TO TRACK SALT MARSH CHANGES IN WALLOPS ISLAND, VA
427 Rodriguez-Matos, L.; Lado-Insua, T.; Torres-Pratts, H.; Rhyne, A. L.; Schizas, N. V.: TWO DISTINCT, GEOGRAPHICALLY OVERLAPPING LINEAGES OF THE CORALLIMORPHARIAN RICORDEA FLORIDA (CNIDARIA: HEXACORALLIA: RICORDEIDAE)
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
84
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
S44 The relevance of jellyfish blooms in the changing global oceansChair(s): Kylie Pitt, [email protected] Rob Condon, [email protected] Andrew Sweetman, [email protected]: 208B269 Chelsky Budarf, A.; Pitt, K. A.; Sweetman, A. K.:
SYNERGISTIC EFFECTS OF DECOMPOSING GELATINOUS ZOOPLANKTON AND ELEVATED WATER TEMPERATURE ON OXYGEN DYNAMICS IN THE PELAGIC ENVIRONMENT.
270 Tanabe, S.; Izuhara, Y.; Hosoi, M.: EXAMINATION OF EFFECTIVE USE OF JELLYFISH (AURELIA AURITA) GENERATED IN LARGE QUANTITIES IN THE JAPANESE COASTAL AREA
S46 The role of inland waters in the car-bon cycle of the boreal forest biomeChair(s): Jan Karlsson, [email protected] Rob Striegl, [email protected] Lars Tranvik, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall273 St-Pierre, A.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Thibodeau, G.; Lapierre, J.
F.; Désindes, J. P.: PATTERNS IN METABOLISM AND CARBON BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN BEAVER PONDS IN THE BOREAL REGION OF QUEBEC
274 María Morales-Pineda, M.; Bárbara Úbeda, B.; Andrés Cózar, A.; José Ángel Gálvez, J. A.: AIR-WATER CO2 EXCHANGE AND PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON SEDIMENTATION IN RESERVOIRS WITH DIFFERENT TROPHIC STATUS: A BUDGET BASED ON SIMULTANEOUS MEASUREMENTS
S48 How will a continued ice retreat af-fect Arctic productivity and food webs?Chair(s): Emma Kritzberg, [email protected] Jesus Arrieta, [email protected] Dolors Vaque, [email protected] Raquel Vaquer Suñer, [email protected]: 208A275 Lavrentyev, P. J.; Franze, G.; Solovyev, K. A.:
MICROZOOPLANKTON TROPHIC INTERACTIONS WITH PHYTOPLANKTON AND PLANKTONIC COPEPODS IN THE ICE-COVERED AND OPEN WATERS OF THE BARENTS SEA
276 Motard-Côté, J.; Levasseur, M.; Scarratt, M. G.; Michaud, S.; Lovejoy, C.; Rivkin, R.; Keats, K.; Gosselin, M.; Tremblay, J.; Kiene, R. P.: DYNAMICS AND PHYLOGENETIC AFFILIATION OF DIMETHYLSULFONIOPROPIONATE (DMSP)-DEGRADING BACTERIA IN ARCTIC WATERS
S50 Advancing ocean color science from space into the 21st centuryChair(s): Jeremy Werdell, [email protected] Collin S. Roesler, [email protected] Hubert Loisel, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall277 Pratt, P. D.; Hauss, B. I.: H-BRDF: A NEW SIMULATION
TOOL FOR INVESTIGATING OPTICAL CLOSURE USED IN VALIDATING OCEAN COLOR PRODUCTS
278 Goodwin, D. S.; Morrison, J. R.; Behrenfeld, M. J.: SEASONAL AND ANNUAL DYNAMICS OF PHYTOPLANKTON PHOTOPHYSIOLOGY FROM MODIS/AQUA-DERIVED FLUORESCENCE QUANTUM YIELDS
279 Cady-Pereira, K. E.; Snell, H. E.; Gioioso, M.; Chase, A.; Petroy, S.: A NEW APPROACH FOR OBTAINNING WATER LEAVING RADIANCE FROM AIRCRAFT AND SATELLITE MEASUREMENTS
280 Novak, M. G.; Mannino, A.: MODELING THE DISTRIBUTION OF POC AND DOC FROM DISCRETE AND ATONOMOUS UNDERWAY MEASUREMENTS COLLECTED SEASONALLY IN THE NORTHEASTERN US CONTINENTAL MARGIN
281 Hyde, K. J.; Fogarty, M. J.; Hare, J. A.; O’Reilly, J. E.: APPLICATION OF REMOTE SENSING PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSITION MODELS IN ESTIMATES OF FISHERIES PRODUCTION POTENTIAL
S51 Who’s in the water? Recent advances in the detection and quantification of phytoplankton community composition in aquatic ecosystemsChair(s): Tammi L. Richardson, [email protected] Dianne I. Greenfield, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall282 Lee, K. E.; Coyne, K. J.: USING MOLECULAR
METHODS TO EVALUATE DIATOM COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN DELAWARE’S INLAND BAYS
283 MARA, P.; MIHALOPOULOS, N.; PSARRA, S.: THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE PHYTOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGE IN THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF DMSX COMPOUNDS IN THE NORTH AEGEAN SEA (EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN)
284 Goldman, E. A.; Richardson, T. L.: SPECTRAL FLUOROMETRIC CHARACTERIZATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROUP-SPECIFIC FV/FM USING THE ALGAE ONLINE ANALYZER
285 Fuller, C.; Islam, M. S.; Bonner, J. S.; Ojo, T.; Kirkey, W.: FIELD EVALUATION OF THE APPLICABILITY OF USING ACOUSTIC BACKSCATTER DATA FOR SURROGATE SUSPENDED SOLIDS CONCENTRATION MEASUREMENTS
286 Cheah, W.; McMinn, A.; Griffiths , F. B.; Westwood, K. J.; Wright, S. W.; Clementson, L. A.: PHOTOSYNTHETIC RESPONSE OF SUBANTARCTIC AND POLAR FRONTAL ZONES PHYTOPLANKTON TO LIGHT AND NUTRIENTS
ASLOMeeting Program
85
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
287 Ahmed, S.; Tonizzo, , A.; Ibrahim, A.; Gilerson, A.; Gross, B.; Moshary, F.: ALGAL FLUORESCENCE : ANALYSIS OF ITS IMPACT AND POTENTIAL FOR RETRIEVAL FROM FIELD MEASUREMENTS AND SIMULATIONS OF THE UNDERWATER POLARIZED LIGHT FIELD
288 Hill, L. S.; Donaldson, K. A.; Baranowski, M. R.; Swanstrom, J. A.; Shaw, T. J.; Richardson, T. L.; Myrick, M. L.: CONSTRUCTION AND USE OF A SINGLE-CELL SPECTRAL FLUOROMETER FOR DISCRIMINATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON TAXA
289 Khan, A. L.; McKnight, D. M.; Hohner, A. K.; Rosario, F. O.; Summers, R. S.: EVALUATION OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DOM, CHLOROPHYLL-A AND ALGAL SPECIES IN COLORADO LAKES
290 Escoffier, N.; Bensoussan, N.; Bernard, C.; Guillerme, O.; Métivier, F.; Groleau, A.: REAL TIME MONITORING OF PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND CONTRIBUTION TO CARBON DYNAMICS IN THE URBAN PART OF THE SEINE RIVER HYDROSYSTEM
S54 Student Engagement in Education and Public Outreach Chair(s): Liesl Hotaling, [email protected] Deidre Gibson, [email protected] Linda Duguay, [email protected] Location: Exhibit Hall295 Rowbotham, K. L.; Petcovic, H. L.; Koretsky, C. M.:
STUDENT CONCEPTIONS OF EUTROPHICATION AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING IN A FIELD-BASED UNDERGRADUATE COURSE
296 Bullerjahn, G. S.; Woityra, W. C.; Beall, B. F.; McKay, R. M.: CREDIBLE DATA COLLECTION BY THE US COAST GUARD
297 Arache, A. V.; Ortíz , J.: RESTORATION OF RIPARIAN FOREST IN CAPETILLO, PUERTO RICO: OPTIMIZATION OF WATER QUALITY AND ECOSYSTEM’S FUNCTIONS IN A TROPICAL URBAN SETTING.
298 Morata, N.; Laclau, J. P.: THE CLASS CORE / LA CAROTTE DE CLASSE
S55 Microbial Carbon Pump: A multidis-ciplinary focus on origins, cycling and storage of DOM in the oceanChair(s): Gerhard Kattner, [email protected] Nianzhi Jiao, [email protected] Farooq Azam, [email protected] Steven Wilhelm, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall299 Li, Q.; Wang, G.; Jiao, N.: ECOLOGICAL STUDY
AND MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION OF THRAUSTOCHYTRIDS IN HAWAIIN WATERS
300 Xu, Y.; Zhang, R.; Zheng , Q.; Xiao, N.; Jiao, N.: ISOLATION AND GENOME SEQUENCE OF A PARACOCCUS SP. PHAGE PMJLF1
301 Tremblay, L.; Landry, C.: CHARACTERIZATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER FROM FRESH AND SEA WATERS BY AN HPLC-FTIR SYSTEM
302 Xiao, N.; Jiao, N. Z.: ACCUMULATION OF POLY(3-HYDROXYBUTYRATE) (PHB) IN DINOROSEOBCTER SHIBAE JL1447
303 Zhang, R.; Li, L.; Jiao, N.: GLOBAL PATTERN OF EPIPELAGIC VIRAL ABUNDANCE AND ITS ECOLOGICAL IMPACT
304 Liu/Jingwen, J. W.; Zhang /Zhilan, Z. L.; Jiao /Nianzhi, N. Z.; Zheng /Tianling, T. L.: MOLECULAR CLONING, SEQUENCING AND EXPRESSION IN ESCHERICHIA COLI OF THE MAJOR CAPSID PROTEIN (MCP) GENE FROM MARINE EMILIANIA HUXLEYIVIRUS (COCCOLITHOVIRUS)
305 Deutsch, B.; Humborg, C.; Mörth, M.: TRACING RIVERINE INPUTS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER INTO THE BALTIC SEA ECOSYSTEM
306 Zheng, Q.; Zhang, R.; Jiao, N.: PHOTOSYNTHETIC GENES GAIN AND LOSS: REVEALED BY COMPARISON OF TWO CITROMICROBIUM BACTERIAL GENOMES
307 Knudsen, H.; Markager, S.; Søndergaard, M.: BIOAVAILABILITY OF AUTOCHTHONOUS DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN IN MARINE PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
308 Lechtenfeld, O. J.; Koch, B. P.; Schmitt-Kopplin, P.; Flerus, R.; Kattner, G.: PRODUCTION AND SEQUESTRATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN THE WEDDELL SEA: TRACING DEEP-WATER FORMATION WITH FT-ICR-MS
309 PAENG, J.; DITTMAR , T.; COOPER, W.; CHANTON , J.; REZENDE, C.; SALOMAO, M.; BERNARDES, M.: THE SOURCES AND CYCLING OF PYROGENIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN THE ESTUARIES OF THE SUGAR CANE AREA OF SOUTHEASTERN BRAZIL
310 Zong, R.; Jiao, N. Z.: PROTEOME-BASED ANALYSIS OF METABOLIC PROFILE IN ROSEOBACTER LITORALIS OCH149 UNDER CARBON LIMITATION AND LIGHT REGIMEN
S57 Spatial connectivity in aquatic land-scapes: patterns, mechanisms and implica-tions for populations, communities and ecosystemsChair(s): Michele Casini, [email protected] Kenneth T. Frank, [email protected] Jonathan Fisher, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall326 Feagin, R. A.; Colón-Rivera, R. J.; West, J. B.; Yeager, K.
M.: HYDROLOGICAL CONNECTIVITY IN SALT MARSH PONDS: MULTIPLE METHODS INCLUDING TIDAL GAUGES, WATER ISOTOPES, AND LIDAR ELEVATION MODELS
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
86
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
S63 Broadening the Discussion: The Conse-quences of the Presence of Algal Toxins in Food WebsChair(s): Sibel Bargu, [email protected] Mary Silver, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall271 Cusick, K. D.; Minkin, Jr., S. C.; Wilhelm, S. W.;
Sayler, G. S.: THE PLASMA MEMBRANE COPPER TRANSPORTER AS A MOLECULAR TARGET OF SAXITOXIN IN MICROBIAL CELLS
272 Hitchcock, G. L.; Fouqurean, J. W.; Drake, J. L.; Hutter, V.; Mead, R. N.; Heil, C. A.: BREVETOXIN PERSISTENCE IN SEDIMENTS AND SEAGRASS EPIPHYTES OF EAST FLORIDA COASTAL WATERS.
S64 Instrumentation, Software, and Pro-tocols for Semi-automated Identification, Enumeration, and measurement of Plank-ton – Where Are We now?Chair(s): Malinda Sutor, [email protected] Harry Nelson, [email protected] Marc Picheral, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall328 John, D. E.; Paul, J. H.; Ulrich, R. M.; Fries, D. P.: A RAPID,
PORTABLE METHOD TO CONFIRM SEAFOOD TISSUE AS GROUPER BASED ON ISOTHERMAL NUCLEIC ACID AMPLIFICATION
S68 Cyanobacteria in a changing worldChair(s): Jill Sohm, [email protected] Gabrielle Rocap, [email protected] Eric Webb, [email protected]: Ballroom A329 Tulk, S. E.; Jeans, J. A.; Cockshutt, A. M.:
QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE CYANOBACTERIAL THYLAKOID MEMBRANE DURING IRON STARVATION
330 Garcia-Robledo, E.; Corzo, A.; Morris, E. P.; Papaspyrou, S.: PHOTOSYNTHETIC ACTIVITY OF DIATOM- AND CYANOBACTERIA-DOMINATED MICROPHYTOBENTHOS COMMUNITIES BELOW ULVA SP. CANOPIES
331 Journey, C. A.; Beaulieu, K. M.; Knight, R. R.; Graham, J. L.; Bradley, P. M.: CYANOBACTERIAL ABUNDANCE AND GEOSMIN OCCURRENCE IN TWO PIEDMONT DRINKING WATER RESERVOIRS, SPARTANBURG COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA
332 Lionard, M.; Péquin, B.; Lovejoy, C.; Vincent, W. F.: CYANOBACTERIAL MATS FROM THE HIGH ARCTIC: MICROSENSOR CHARACTERIZATION AND FLUORESCENCE RESPONSES TO A SALINITY GRADIENT.
333 Shi, D.; Ryan, D. E.; Lomas, M. W.; Morel, F. M.: EFFECTS OF ELEVATED PCO2 ON CARBON AND NITROGEN FIXATION BY TRICHODESMIUM AT THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY (BATS) REGION
334 Ma, Y.; Zeigler, L.; Palenik, B.: METAGENOMIC ANALYSIS REVEALS THE DIVERSITY AND GENOME DYNAMICS OF CYANOPHAGES IN OCEANIC ENVIRONMENT
335 Romero, I. C.; Klein , N. J.; Barada, L.; Vo, J.; Liss, A. M.; Cutter , L.; Gunderson , T.; Tiahlo , M.; Glass, J. B.; Sañudo-Wilhelmy , S. A.; Capone, D. G.: TRACE METAL CO-LIMITATION CONTROLS ON NITROGEN FIXATION IN LAKES WITH VARYING TROPHIC STATUS
336 Moisander, P. H.; Bench, S.; Ochiai, M.; Carter, B. J.; Bernick, D.; Zehr, J. P.: DRAFT GENOME SEQUENCE OF A NON-TOXIC MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA STRAIN FROM THE KLAMATH RIVER, CALIFORNIA
S77 Mesophotic Coral Ecosystems: Struc-ture, Patterns, Processes and RefugiaChair(s): Tyler B. Smith, [email protected] Richard Appeldoorn, [email protected] David Ballantine, [email protected] Kimberly Puglise, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall343 Schizas, N. V.; Lucas, M.: GENETIC DIVERSITY AND
CONNECTIVITY OF SHALLOW AND MESOPHOTIC REEFS
S79 Dynamics of tropical aquatic systems: rivers, estuaries, and coastal watersChair(s): Bob Chen, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall344 Enrich-Prast, A.; Chaves, F.; Estrada, G. D.; Marotta, H.;
Bento, L. F.; Peixoto, R.; Oliveira, V.; Soares, M.: CARBON BALANCE IN FORESTED AND HYPERSALINE COMPARTMENTS OF A MANGROVE IN BRAZIL
346 SHIN, W. S.; FUJIBAYASHI, M.; NAGAHAMA, Y.; NOMURA, M.; NISHIMURA, O.: THE STUDY ON CONTRIBUTION OF MICROBIAL ORGANIC MATTER IN FORMATION OF TIDAL FLAT SEDIMENT
347 Ocasio-Torres, M. E.; Sabat, A. M.: PREDATION ON THE TROPICAL FRESHWATER SHRIMP XIPHOCARIS ELONGATA: ANTIPREDATOR RESPONSES AND CASCADE EFFECTS
348 Soares, M. G.; Prestes, L.: LENGTH STRUCTURE OF FISHES FROM A CENTRAL AMAZONIAN FLOODPLAIN LAKE, AMAZON, BRAZIL
349 Rubim, M. A.; Lima, R. M.: INFLUENCE OF WATER LEVEL FLUCTUATION ON THE LIMNOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF PURAQUEQUARA BASIN, AMAZON, BRAZIL.
ASLOMeeting Program
87
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
S80 Frontiers in ocean acidification research: Responses of marine carbon cycling and ecosystems to ocean acidification Chair(s): Lauren Juranek, [email protected] Simone Alin, [email protected] Anne Cohen, [email protected] Sarah Cooley, [email protected]: 104352 Juranek, L. W.; Feely, R. A.; Alin, S. R.: ROBUST
PREDICTION OF NORTH PACIFIC CARBON SYSTEM DYNAMICS USING EMPIRICAL RELATIONSHIPS WITH HYDROGRAPHIC DATA
353 Whitehead, R. F.; Hagenson, N. L.; Oliver, J. A.; Szmant, A. M.: CALCIFICATION, PHOTOSYNTHETIC, AND RESPIRATION RATES OF THE REEF CORAL EUSYMILIA FASTIGIATA IN RESPONSE TO CHANGES IN SEAWATER CHEMISTRY
354 Yoshimura, T.; Suzuki, K.; Sugie, K.: IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON THE PRODUCTION OF ORGANIC MATTER
355 Nakamura, M.; Morita, M.; Kurihara, H.; Mitarai, S.: GENE EXPRESSION OF HSP IN CORAL LARVAE UNDER ACIDIFIED CONDITIONS
356 Robbins, L. L.; Yates, K. K.; Byrne, R.; Liu, X.; Dufore, C.; Patsavas, M.; Hansen, M.: A THREE-DIMENSIONAL VIEW OF CARBON SYSTEM PARAMETERS OF THE ARCTIC OCEAN
357 Yates, K. K.; Robbins, L. L.; Smiley, N.; Dufore, C. M.: DIURNAL VARIABILITY IN CARBONATE SYSTEM PARAMETERS AND AIR: SEA PCO2 GAS FLUXES IN DRY TORTUGAS NATIONAL PARK
358 Cooley, S. R.; Lucey, N.; Kite-Powell, H. L.; Doney, S. C.: COULD TODAY’S MOLLUSK HARVESTS SUGGEST TOMORROW’S VULNERABILITY TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION?
359 Morata, N.; Manno, C.: IMPACT OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON THE METABOLISM OF ARCTIC CALCIFYING MEROPLANKTONIC ORGANISMS
360 Manno, C.; Morata, N.; Bellerby, R.: SYNERGIC EFFECT OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND GLOBAL WARMING ON ARCTIC CALCIFYING ZOOPLANKTON : IMPLICATION FOR THE MARINE CARBON PUMP
S82 Microbe-DOM Interactions in Aquatic EnvironmentsChair(s): Elizabeth Kujawinski, [email protected] Stephen Giovannoni, [email protected]: 101361 Mou, X.; Sun, S.; Zhao, W.; Moran, M. A.: UBIQUITOUS
DISTRIBUTION AND GENETIC DIVERSITY OF POLYAMINE TRANSPORTER GENES IN MARINE ROSEOBACTER AND SAR11 MODEL SPECIES
362 Tang, T.; Lee, C.: DEGRADATION OF GLYCOPROTEINS IN MARINE ENVIRONMENTS
363 Widner, B.; Mulholland, M. R.: CYANATE AS A NITROGEN SOURCE FOR MARINE MICROBES: CYANATE UPTAKE IN THE COASTAL NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
364 SanClements, M. D.; McKnight, D. M.; Chin, Y. P.; Foreman, C. M.; Smith, H. J.; Kilduff, C.: SEARCH FOR THE ORIGINS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN A SUPRAGLACIAL STREAM ON THE COTTON GLACIER, ANTARCTICA
365 Rodibaugh, K. J.; Nowlin, W. H.: BACTERIALLY MEDIATED CARBON AND NUTRIENT DYNAMICS IN A HIGHLY-IMPACTED RIVER SYSTEM
S83 Impacts of Climate Change and Secular Variability on the Caribbean and Tropical AmericasChair(s): William John, [email protected] Amy Clement, [email protected] Brian Soden, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall366 RICAURTE, M.; Schizas, N. V.: PRELIMINARY
PROTEOMICS IN BLEACHED AND HEALTHY CARIBBEAN CORAL
S86 Linking the physiology of photoautotrophs to the generation of reactive trace gasesChair(s): Stephen D. Archer, [email protected] Steven L. Manley, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall367 DiTullio, G. R.; Lee, P. A.; Riseman, S. F.; McLenon, A.
L.; Saito, M.; Poulton, N.; Sieracki, M.: COLIMITATION EFFECTS OF NITROGEN AND IRON ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND INTRACELLULAR DMSP IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE
368 Spielmeyer, A.; Gebser, B.; Pohnert, G.: DIMETHYLSULFONIOPROPIONATE (DMSP): HOW TO UNRAVEL ROLES OF A MULTIFUNCTIONAL MOLECULE
S87 Trace Metals and their nutritional Importance to Marine Phytoplankton and Bacteria Chair(s): Mak Saito, [email protected] Pete Sedwick, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall393 Zhu, Q.; Aller, R. C.: ANALYSIS OF VITAMIN B12 IN
SEAWATER AND SEDIMENT POREWATER USING ELISA394 Vraspir, J. M.; Butler, A.: WIDE-SPREAD OCCURRENCE
OF SIDEROPHORE-PRODUCING BACTERIA395 Ryan-Keogh, T. J.; Bibby, T. S.; Nielsdottir, M. C.;
Achterberg, E. P.; Moore, C. M.: HIGH SPATIAL RESOLUTION IRON-ADDITION BIOASSAY EXPERIMENTS REVEAL SEASONAL IRON STRESS IN THE HIGH LATITUDE NORTH ATLANTIC
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
88
THU
RSD
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
396 Jennings, L. L.; Klein, N. J.; Beck, A. J.; Hutchins, D. A.; Sañudo Wilhelmy, S. A.: IMPACT OF TRACE METALS AND B -VITAMINS ON PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS DURING THE NORTH ATLANTIC SPRING BLOOM
S91 Oxygen Dynamics in Coastal Hypoxic ZonesChair(s): Brian J. Roberts, [email protected] Nancy N. Rabalais, [email protected] Location: Exhibit Hall397 Guinasso, N. L.; Mullins, R. L.; DiMarco, S. F.; Li, B.;
Chapman, P.; Walpert, J. N.: COMPARISON OF TWO OXYGEN SENSORS ON A TOWED CTD TO STUDY HYPOXIA IN THE GULF OF MEXICO
GS01 Physical Oceanography and General CirculationChair(s): Miguel F. Canals, [email protected] Bill Johns, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall221 Inoue, T.; Glud, R. N.: ESTIMATING SHEAR
VELOCITY USING IN SITU O2 MICRO PROFILE MEASUREMENTS: COMPARISON BETWEEN THREE DIFFERENT METHODS
222 Wang, Z.; DiMarco, S. F.; Belabbassi, L.; Al-Kharusi, L. H.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF VERTICAL DIEL MIGRATION FROM ADCP BACKSCATTER IN THE UPPER WATER COLUMN OF NORTHERN ARABIAN/OMAN SEAS
223 Canals, M. F.: FIELD OBSERVATIONS AND NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS OF THE HYDRODYNAMICS OF GUNNICA BAY: IMPLICATIONS FOR WATER QUALITY AND CORAL REEF MANAGEMENT
224 Lopez, O. L.; Canals, M. F.: NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS AND FIELD OBSERVATIONS OF SURFZONE CURRENTS AT SELECTED RECREATIONAL BEACHES IN PUERTO RICO
GS02 Chemical Oceanography/GEOTRACESChair(s): Greg Cutter, [email protected] Pere Masque, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall225 Kading, T. J.; Lamborg, C. H.; Mason, R. P.; Gosnell, K.;
Schartup, A.: LOW MOLECULAR WEIGHT THIOL CONCENTRATIONS IN THE NW ATLANTIC OCEAN
226 Munson, K. M.; Lamborg, C. H.; Mincer, T. J.; Bothner, M. H.; Harkness, J. S.: BIOLOGICAL DEMETHYLATION OF MERCURY IN A COASTAL ESTUARY
227 Liu, H.; Chien, C.; Ho, T.: DISTRIBUTION AND SOURCES OF CU, CD, MN, & CO IN THE EAST CHINA SEA
228 Devol, A. H.; Whitney,, H. R.; Mordy, C. W.; Shull, D. H.: DENITRIFICATION AND THE SOURCE OF THE NITRATE DEFICIT IN BERING SEA SHELF WATERS.
229 Adu, T.; Frew, R. D.; Hunter, K. A.: INFLUENCE OF BIOACTIVE TRACE METALS ON CADMIUM/PHOSPHATE RATIO AND PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN WATER MASSES AROUND SUBTROPICAL FRONT, SOUTHEAST NEW ZEALAND
230 Arellano, A. R.; Coble, P. G.; Conmy, R. N.: INVESTIGATION OF CARBON, NUTRIENTS, AND GROUNDWATER INPUTS IN COASTAL FLORIDA USING COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER
231 Ortiz-Rosa, S.; Corredor, J. E.: OPTICAL PROPERTIES AND PHOTOCHEMICAL RESPONSE OF COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) AT JOBOS BAY NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE (JOBANERR)
232 Borg, D. T.; Grottoli, A. G.; Olesik, J. W.: NATURAL VARIABILITY OF TRACE METALS IN TWO SPECIES OF SCLEROSPONGES FROM PALAU AND SAIPAN
233 Bowman, K. L.; Hammerschmidt, C. R.: DECOMPOSITION OF METHYLMERCURY IN SURFACE WATER OF THE NORTHWEST ATLANTIC OCEAN
234 Bucciarelli, E.; Sarthou, G.; Chever, F.: HYDROGEN PEROXIDE DISTRIBUTIONS IN THE ATLANTIC SECTOR OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN, ALONG A TRANSECT FROM THE SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN TO THE WEDDELL SEA GYRE
235 Miller, N. M.; Reynolds, J. C.: COLORIMETRIC ANALYSIS OF TOTAL NITROGEN IN MARINE AND ESTUARINE WATER USING SEGMENTED FLOW TECHNOLOGY WITH UV/PERSULFATE DIGESTION AND CADMIUM REDUCTION.
236 Takata, H.; Aono, T.; Tagami, K.; Uchida, S.: EFFECT OF SALINITY AND DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER ON THE PARTITIONING OF COBALT IN A TEMPERATE ESTUARY
237 Lamborg, C.; Bowman, K.; Hammerschmidt, C.: MERCURY CONCENTRATION AND SPECIATION FROM THE U.S. GEOTRACES NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN ZONAL SECTION
238 Day, R. D.; Roseneau, D. G.; Donard, O. F.; Moors, A. J.; Pugh, R. S.; Vander Pol, S. S.; Long, S. E.; Vocke, R.; Mann, J.; Becker, P. R.: COASTAL INFLUENCES ON MERCURY ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION PATTERNS IN ALASKAN SEABIRD EGGS
GS05P Food web interactions and trophic linkages - PostersLocation: Exhibit Hall428 FUJIBAYASHI, M.; SHIN, W. S.; NAGAHAMA, Y.;
NAKANO, K.; NISHIMURA, O.: A SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN POND SNAIL, BELLAMYA CHINENSIS AND ATTACHED ALGAE ON THEIR SHELL
429 Ferrareze, M.; Nogueira, M. G.: POTENTIAL ROLE OF ZOOPLANKTON AS FOOD RESOURCE FOR NEOTROPICAL FISH
ASLOMeeting Program
89
THU
RSD
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
430 Hodgson, J. R.; Brosseau, C. J.; Cline, T.; Zinn, L.: CHANGING GROWTH RATES AS A RESULT OF A TOP-DOWN MANIPULATION
431 Mathisen, P.; Andersson, A.: BACTERIAL RESPONSE TO NUTRITIONAL MANIPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF GRAZING RESISTANCE
432 Pirtle-Levy, R.; Thomas, C. J.; Belicka, L. L.; Jaffe, R.; DeMaster, D. J.: TROPHIC ECOLOGY OF ANTARCTIC BENTHIC MEGAFAUNA: A LIPID BIOMARKER APPROACH
433 Ho, P. C.; Hsieh, C. H.; Miki, T.: CHANGE THE MENU-IMPACTS OF OMNIVORY ON THE STRUCTURE OF SIZE SPECTRUM IN A PLANKTON SYSTEM
434 Freytes Ortiz, I. M.; Wahle, R.: INTEROCEANIC COMPARISON OF PREDATORY FISH RESPONSE TO PREY AVAILABILITY AFTER HABITAT DISTURBANCE
435 Glaz, P. N.; Nozais, C.; Sirois, P.: USING STABLE ISOTOPE ANALYSIS TO IDENTIFY DIETARY CHOICE AND TROPHIC POSITION OF BROOK TROUT IN EASTERN CANADIAN BOREAL SHIELD LAKES
436 Welsh, R. M.; Vega Thurber, R. L.; Rosales, S. M.: ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF THE PREDATORY BACTERIOVORAX FROM CARIBBEAN CORALS
437 Figary, S. E.; Schulz, K. L.; Teece, M. A.; Rudstam, L. G.: INVESTIGATING THE IMPACT OF AN INVASIVE ZOOPLANKTON, CERCOPAGIS PENGOI, ON THE LENGTH OF FOOD CHAINS IN NEW YORK’S FINGER LAKES
438 Brault, E. K.; Dickhut, R. M.; Geisz, H. N.; Cochran, M. A.: CHEMICAL TRACERS FOR STUDYING THE ANTARCTIC MARINE FOOD WEB
439 Brouillet-Gauthier, G.; Nozais, C.: DIET OF THE AMPHIPOD HYALELLA AZTECA (AMPHIPODA) IN THE LITTORAL ZONE OF BOREAL LAKES: INSIGHTS FROM STABLE ISOTOPE ANALYSIS
440 Bailey, J. A.; Rynearson, T. A.; Durbin, E. G.: TROPHIC DYNAMICS IN THE BERING SEA: INTERPLAY OF SPECIES DIVERSITY, PREY SPECTRUM, AND PARSITE INFECTION IN PSEUDOCALANUS COPEPODS
GS06 Restoration ecology in aquatic systemChair(s): Katie Hossler, [email protected] Shannon Meseck, [email protected]: Exhibit Hall239 Collins, C. J.; Kashian, D. R.; van Hees, E.
H.: COMPARATIVE EFFECTS OF PCB CONTAMINATION ON BENTHIC AND PLANKTONIC INVERTEBRATE SURVIVAL
240 Catton, K. B.: ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN URBAN LAKES UNDERGOING RESTORATION
241 Dabney, B. L.; Kashian, D. R.: TOXICITY DIFFERENCES BETWEEN DREISSENA POLYMORPHA (ZEBRA MUSSEL) AND D. BUGENSIS (QUAGGA MUSSEL)
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
90
FRID
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
Friday, 18 February 2011 OralsS02 Ocean Biogeochemistry Time-Series and ClimateChair(s): Frank Muller-Karger, [email protected] Michael Lomas, [email protected] Matthew Church, [email protected] Laura Lorenzoni, [email protected]: 20908:00 Johnson, K. S.; Riser, S. C.; Swift, D.; Coletti, L. J.; Jannasch,
H. W.; Plant, J. N.; Sakamoto, C. M.; Church, M. J.; Lomas, M. W.: HOT AND BATS: AN IN SITU COMPARISON USING PROFILING FLOATS WITH CHEMICAL SENSORS~
08:30 Dave, A. C.; Lozier, M. S.; Gerber, L. M.; Palter, J. B.; Barber, R. T.: STRATIFICATION AND PRODUCTIVITY IN THE SUBTROPICS
08:45 Nicholson, D. P.; Stanley, R. H.; Barkan, E.; Karl, D. M.; Luz, B.; Quay, P. D.; Doney, S. C.: EVALUATING TRIPLE OXYGEN ISOTOPE ESTIMATES OF GROSS PRIMARY PRODUCTION AT THE HAWAII OCEAN TIME-SERIES AND BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY SITES
09:00 Stanley, R. H.; Jenkins, W. J.; Doney, S. C.; Lott, III, D. E.: EXPORT PRODUCTION QUANTIFIED BY APPARENT OXYGEN UTILIZATION RATES AT THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY SITE
09:15 Grundle, D. S.; Juniper, S. K.; Lomas, M. W.; Giesbrecht, K.: EUPHOTIC ZONE NITRIFICATION IN THE NE PACIFIC AND SARGASSO SEA: IMPLICATIONS FOR MEASUREMENTS OF NEW PRODUCTION
09:30 Lomas, M. W.; Church, M. J.: BATS AND HOT: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF SIMILAR YET DIFFERENT MARINE ECOSYSTEMS.
09:45 Brzezinski, M. A.; Krause, J. W.; Li, B.; Church, M. J.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY AND DRIVERS OF THE SILICON CYCLE AT THE HAWAII OCEAN TIME SERIES STATION ALOHA
13:30 Muller-Karger, F. E.; Varela, R.; Thunell, R.; Astor, Y.; Scranton, M.; Taylor, G.; Lorenzoni, L.; Rueda, D.; Montes, E.; Fanning, K.: THE CARIACO OCEAN TIME-SERIES PROGRAM
13:45 Astor, Y. M.; Lorenzoni, L.; Thunell, R. C.; Varela, R.; Muller-Karger, F. E.; Troccoli, L.; Taylor, G. T.; Scranton, M. I.; Tappa, E. J.; Rueda, D. T.: TEMPERATURE EFFECT ON FCO2 IN THE CARIACO TIME-SERIES STATION FROM 1996 TO 2008
14:00 Montes-Herrera, E.; Muller-Karger, F. E.; Thunell, R.; Tappa, E.; Trocoli, L.; Lorenzoni, L.; Astor, Y.; Varela, R.: ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS ON THE NITROGEN ISOTOPE SIGNAL OF SINKING PARTICLES IN THE CARIACO BASIN, VENEZUELA
14:15 Scranton, M. I.; Samodurov, A. S.; Konovalov, S.; Taylor, G. T.; Li, X. N.; Astor, Y.: THE EFFECT OF INTRUSIONS OF CARIBBEAN WATER ON THE GEOCHEMISTRY OF THE CARIACO BASIN
14:30 Potter, M. F.; Fanning, K. A.: AMMONIUM-SILICA RELATIONSHIPS IN ANOXIC WATERS
14:45 Ducklow, H. W.; Bernard, K.; Erickson, M.; Middaugh, N.; Moran, X. A.; Schofield, O.; Steinberg, D.; Vernet, M.; Sailley, S.: PALMER LTER: WHY IS BACTERIAL PRODUCTION SUCH A LOW FRACTION OF PRIMARY PRODUCTION NEAR THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA?
15:00 Jacob, M.; Boetius, A.; Wenzhöfer, F.; Bergmann, M.; Bracher, A.; Nöthig, E. M.; Ramette, A.; Schewe, I.; Soltwedel, T.; Klages, M.: OBSERVING MICROBIAL BIODIVERSITY SHIFTS RELATED TO CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN
15:15 Young, J. N.; Rickaby, R. E.; Erez, J.; Conte, M.: USE OF STABLE CARBON ISOTOPES TO DETERMINE THE RESPONSE OF PHYTOPLANKTON TO ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON DIOXIDE
16:00 Fay, A. R.; McKinley, G. A.: ESTIMATING GLOBAL CARBON TRENDS USING IN-SITU PCO2 OBSERVATIONS
16:15 Belo do Couto, A. D.; Maharaj, A. M.; Holbrook, N. J.: INTERANNUAL PATTERNS OF GLOBAL NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION
16:30 Kamykowski, D.: ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION AND SYNCHRONY IN PACIFIC AND ATLANTIC OCEAN SARDINE-ANCHOVY POPULATIONS.
16:45 Cuhel, R. L.; Aguilar, C.: REGIONAL AND GLOBAL EPISODIC CLIMATE EVENTS ARE REVEALED IN TIME SERIES STUDIES OF SOUTHWESTERN LAKE MICHIGAN NUTRIENTS AND PHYTOPLANKTON PARAMETERS
17:00 Plant, J. N.; Johnson, K. S.; Riser, S. C.; Swift, D.; Coletti, L. J.; Sakamoto, C. M.; Jannasch, J. W.: PRODUCTIVITY AT PAPA: TWO YEARS OF DATA FROM BIOLOGICAL SENSORS ON PROFILING FLOATS IN THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC
17:15 Gloel, J.; Tilstone, G.; Robinson, C.; Kaiser, J.: TIME-SERIES OBSERVATIONS OF BIOLOGICAL OXYGEN FLUXES AT THE WESTERN ENGLISH CHANNEL OBSERVATORY DETERMINED FROM O2/AR MEASUREMENTS
17:30 Frigstad, H.; Andersen, T.; Hessen, D. O.; Bellerby, R. G.: SEASONAL AND LONG-TERM VARIATIONS IN SESTON ELEMENTAL RATIOS IN TWO 20-YEAR TIME-SERIES IN THE NORWEGIAN COASTAL CURRENT.
17:45 Kamenos, N. A.: ENHANCED SUMMER WARMING IN THE EAST ATLANTIC OVER THE LAST 650 YEARS AND THE RESPONSE OF MARINE ZOOPLANKTON
ASLOMeeting Program
91
FRID
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
S03 Heterotrophic Activity in Aquatic Ecosystems Revisited Chair(s): Susana Agusti, [email protected] Carlos M. Duarte, [email protected]: 10108:00 Packard, T. T.; Gómez, M. M.: THE METABOLIC THEORY
OF ECOLOGY WORKS BECAUSE BIOMASS PACKAGES THE RESPIRATORY ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN~
08:30 Agustí, S.; Regaudie-de-Gioux, A.; Arrieta, J. M.; Duarte, C. M.: EFFECTS OF UV RADIATION ON THE NET METABOLISM OF PELAGIC COMMUNITIES
08:45 Berggren, M.; del Giorgio, P. A.: HIGH BACTERIAL RESPIRATORY QUOTIENTS IN NET HETEROTROPHIC LAKES
09:00 Degerman, R. J.; Andersson, A.: THE EFFECT OF CHANGES IN TEMPERATURE AND SUBSTRATE SUPPLY ON THE GROWTH AND COMMUNITY COMPOSITION OF MARINE BACTERIA
09:15 Luna, G. M.; Dell’Anno, A.; Bianchelli, S.; Danovaro , R.: THE DARK PORTION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA IS A BIOREACTOR OF ORGANIC MATTER CYCLING
09:45 Ortega-Retuerta, E.; Joux, F.; Jeffrey, W. H.; Ghiglione, J. F.: PROKARIOTIC HETEROTROPHIC ACTIVITY AND DIVERSITY IN THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN: PATTERNS AND CONTROLLING FACTORS
13:30 Keats, K. F.; Hale, M. S.; Rivkin, R. B.: SPATIAL PATTERNS OF ABUNDANCE, PRODUCTION, AND GROWTH OF MARINE HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA IN THE EASTERN CANADIAN ARCTIC
13:45 Cuevas, L. A.; Tanaka, T.; Thingstad, T. F.; Børsheim, K. Y.; Egge, J. K.; Skjoldal, E. F.; Thyrhaug, R.; Töpper, B.: SHIFT IN THE TOTAL ORGANIC CARBON (TOC) ACCUMULATION RATES AS A RESPONSE OF SUPPLY RATIOS OF GLUCOSE-C TO MINERAL NUTRIENTS IN TWO ARCTIC MESOCOSM EXPERIMENTS
14:00 Aranguren-Gassis, M.; Serret, P.; Fernández, E.; Herrera, J. L.; Dominguez, J. F.; Pérez, V.; Escánez, J.: LAGRANGIAN OBSERVATIONS OF BALANCED PLANKTON METABOLISM IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC NORTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE
14:15 Tranvik, L. J.; Köhler, B.; Kothawala, D.; von Wachenfeldt, E.: LONG-TERM DEGRADATION KINETICS AND CONTINUUM OF REACTIVITY OF LAKE WATER DOC
14:30 Fulweiler, R. W.; Heiss, E. M.; Morgan, E. J.: HITTING A MOVING TARGET – SEDIMENT HETEROTROPHIC ACTIVITY IN A CHANGING COASTAL OCEAN ECOSYSTEM
14:45 Marra, J.; Jeffrey, W.; Cherrier, J.; Valentine, S.: THE ROLE OF LIGHT IN PHYTOPLANKTON EXTRACELLAR PRODUCTION AND BACTERIAL CONSUMPTION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER: IMPLICATIONS FOR COASTAL CARBON CYCLING.
15:00 Duarte, C. M.; Laita , P. A.; Agustí, S.: RAPID RELEASE AND USE OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC OCEAN
S04 Biological and biogeochemical science enabled by the Aquarius and SMOS missionsChair(s): Joseph Salisbury, [email protected] Doug Vandemark, [email protected] Nico Reul, [email protected] Bertran Chapron, [email protected]: 208B16:00 Chavez, F. P.; Messié, M.; Marinovic, B.; Pennington, J.
T.: SALINITY AS AN INDICATOR OF ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES IN THE EASTERN NORTH PACIFIC~
16:30 Morell, J. M.: ESTIMATION OF NUTRIENT VECTORS INTO CARIBBEAN SURFACE WATERS: THE ROLE OF REMOTELY SENSED SEA SURFACE SALINITY *
16:45 Gledhill, D. K.; Salisbury, J.; VANDERMARK, D.; WANNINKHOF, R.; REUL, N.: APPLICATION OF AMSR-E DERIVED SALINITY FIELDS TO ENHANCING ESTIMATES OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION WITHIN THE CARIBBEAN SEA
17:00 McGillis, W. R.; Els, B. N.; Zappa, C. J.; Turk, D.: SURFACE SALINITY AND CARBON DIOXIDE DILUTION DURING RAIN
17:15 BULUSU, S.; NYADJRO, E. S.; Murty, V. S.: NEAR SURFACE SALT TRANSPORT IN THE INDIAN OCEAN USING HYCOM
17:30 REUL Nicolas, n. r.; CHAPRON Bertrand, .; Brachet Sidonie, .; Joe Salisbury, .; Doug Vandemark, .: RECENT PROGRESSES IN THE SEA SURFACE SALINITY REMOTE SENSING FROM SPACE
17:45 Hunt, C. W.; Vandemark, D.; Chapron, B.; Reul, N.; Wisser, D.; Salisbury, J. E.: SPATIOTEMPORAL PATTERNS IN SEA SURFACE DENSITY IN THE TROPICAL ATLANTIC
S06 From Green Pastures to Green Water: Integrating Soil and Aquatic Approaches to Phosphorus Biogeochemistry ScienceChair(s): Barbara Cade-Menun, [email protected] George S. Bullerjahn, [email protected] J. Thad Scott, [email protected]: 103A08:00 Cade-Menun, B. J.: PHOSPHORUS FORMS IN
TERRESTRIAL AND AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS08:15 Sharpley, A. N.; Jarvie, H. P.: AGRICULTURAL
MANAGEMENT, WATER QUALITY AND PHOSPHORUS: THE LONG AND WINDING ROAD~
08:45 He, Z.: WATER EXTRACTABLE PHOSPHORUS IN SOILS AS IMPACTED BY CROPPING SYSTEM, TILLAGE PRACTICE, AND AMENDMENT HISTORY
09:00 RICHARDSON, C. J.; Hartman, W. H.: PHOSPHORUS BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND WETLAND FUNCTION ON THE LANDSCAPE
09:15 Baker, D. B.; Ewing, D. E.; Kramer, J. W.; Richards, R. P.: APPLICATION OF ANALYTICAL METHODS FOR WATER SAMPLES DIRECTLY TO SOILS: LESSONS LEARNED
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
92
FRID
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
09:30 Richards, R. P.; Baker, D. B.: INCREASING TRENDS IN DISSOLVED PHOSPHORUS IN LAKE ERIE TRIBUTARIES: THE ROLE OF AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES
09:45 Santos-Flores, C. J.; Sotomayor-Ramirez, D.; Martinez, G.; Pérez-Alegria, L. R.; Gualtero-Leal, D.: PERIPHYTON BIOMASS AND SPECIES RICHNESS AS BIOINDICATORS IN FIVE REFERENCE STREAMS IN PUERTO RICO
13:30 Cotner, J. B.; Godwin, C. M.; Scott, J. T.: TRADE-OFFS WITH PHOSPHORUS AND CARBON AMONG BACTERIA AND WINNIE-THE-POOH*
13:45 Young, E. B.; Lowes, C. I.; Hanson, A. M.: ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS SOURCES SUPPORT NEARSHORE PRODUCTIVITY IN FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS
14:00 Bullerjahn, G. S.; McKay, R. M.; Kane, D.; Struger, S.; Richardson, V.; Watson, S. B.: GLYPHOSATE AS A SOURCE OF DIFFUSE PHOSPHORUS LOADING IN LAKE ERIE
14:15 Jarvie, H. P.; Neal, C.; Withers, P. J.; Baker, D. B.; Richards, R. P.; Sharpley, A. N.: EXPLORING PHOSPHORUS RETENTION AND RELEASE IN RIVERS AND WATERSHEDS USING EXTENDED ENDMEMBER MIXING ANALYSIS.
14:30 Kane, D. D.; Conroy, J. D.; Culver, D. A.; Bridgeman, T. B.; Chaffin, J. D.; Bade, D. L.; Edwards, W. J.; McKay, R. M.; Richards, R. P.; Baker, D. B.; Kramer, J. W.: RE-EUTROPHICATION OF LAKE ERIE: INSIGHTS FROM THE MAUMEE AND SANDUSKY SYSTEMS
14:45 Toor, G. S.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF PHOSPHORUS TRANSPORT IN A SUBTROPICAL URBAN COASTAL WATERSHED
15:00 Gruber, R. K.; Scanes, P.; Ferguson, A. J.: SEASONAL AND SPATIAL VARIATION OF PHOSPHORUS ATTENUATION IN A TIDAL RIVER SYSTEM
15:15 Withers, P. J.; Jarvie, H. P.; Bowes, M. J.; Harper, D. M.: LINKING AGRICULTURAL PHOSPHORUS SOURCES TO EUTROPHICATION IMPACTS IN UK RIVERS: A REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE BASE
S08 Intraspecific variation: role in the ecology of harmful phytoplanktonChair(s): Orlando Sarnelle, [email protected] Alan Wilson, [email protected]: 208A13:30 Sarnelle, O.; Wilson, A. E.: INTRASPECIFIC
VARIATION: ROLE IN THE ECOLOGY OF HARMFUL PHYTOPLANKTON~
13:45 Davis, T. W.; Gobler, C. J.: DIFFERENTIAL ECOLOGY OF TOXIC AND NON-TOXIC STRAINS OF MICROCYSTIS DURING BLOOMS EVENTS
14:00 Otten, T. G.; Paerl, H. W.: BLOOM DYNAMICS AND CONTROLLING FACTORS OF PERENNIAL TOXIN-PRODUCING MICROCYSTIS BLOOMS IN CHINA’S LAKE TAIHU
14:15 Nayani Vidyarathna, N. V.; Edna Granéli, E.: CLIMATE CHANGE AND BLOOMS OF THE TOXIC BENTHIC DINOFLAGELLATE OSTREOPSIS OVATA WORLDWIDE: COMPARATIVE STUDIES ON DIFFERENT STRAINS
14:30 Sison-Mangus, M. P.; Tran, K.; Jiang, S.: GROWTH STIMULATION AND KILLING OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA BY NON-NATIVE EPIBIOTIC BACTERIA
14:45 Avery, D. E.; Dam, H. G.: INDIVIDUAL VARIATION IN THE RESPONSE OF THE COPEPOD EURYTEMORA HERDMANI TO THE TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM SP.
15:00 Chislock, M. F.; Kaul, R. B.; Jernigan, L. M.; Sarnelle, O.; Wilson, A. E.: IS GRAZER TOLERANCE TO TOXIC CYANOBACTERIA A GENERAL PHENOMENON?
15:15 Schwarzenberger, A.; Von Elert, E.: RESPONSE TO CYANOBACTERIAL PROTEASE INHIBITORS: INTRASPECIFIC VARIATION IN DAPHNIA MAGNA TARGET GENE-EXPRESSION
S13 Biodiversity in a Changing World: Insights from Paleoecological DataChair(s): Irene Gregory-Eaves, [email protected] Beatrix Beisner, [email protected]: 103B08:00 Gregory-Eaves, I.; Beisner, B. E.: PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL
AND PALEOCEANOGRAPHIC INSIGHTS FOR BIODIVERSITY SCIENCE~
08:15 Passy, S. I.: HABITAT NICHE DIMENSIONALITY CONSTRAINS THE POWER LAWS OF DIATOM DENSITY WITH BODY SIZE AND CONTINENTAL DISTRIBUTION
08:30 Cermeno, P.: EXTINCTION OF MICROBIAL PLANKTON IN THE SEA
08:45 van Tol, H. M.; Irwin, A. J.; Finkel, Z. V.: MACROEVOLUTIONARY TRENDS IN SILICOFLAGELLATE SKELETAL MORPHOLOGY: THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF BIOMINERALIZATION
09:00 Domaizon, I.; Savichtcheva , O.; Kirkham, A.; Debroas, D.; Villar, C.; Jenny, J. P.; Pignol, C.; Arnaud, F.; Perga, M. E.: THE ANALYSIS OF PRESERVED DNA TO ASSESS CHANGES IN CYANOBACTERIA AND DIATOMS DYNAMICS AND DIVERSITY: COUPLING PALEOLIMNINOGY AND MOLECULAR TOOLS
09:15 Velghe, K.; Vermaire, J.; Gregory-Eaves, I.: PHOSPHORUS AND FISH PREDATION AS DRIVERS OF DIATOM AND CLADOCERAN DIVERSITY ACROSS LAKES AND OVER TIME
09:30 Paterson, A. M.; Ruhland, K. M.; Hyatt, C. V.; Michelutti, N.; Smol, J. P.: ALGAL COMMUNITY AND BIOMASS RESPONSES TO RECENT WARMING IN THE LAKE OF THE WOODS, ONTARIO, CANADA
09:45 Wiltse, B. J.; Paterson, A. M.; Cumming, B. F.: AN ASSESSMENT OF THE RECENT CHANGES IN DIATOM ASSEMBLAGES FROM EIGHT UNDISTURBED ‘REFERENCE’ LAKES AT THE EXPERIMENTAL LAKES AREA, NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO
ASLOMeeting Program
93
FRID
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
S14 Consequences of Hypoxia for Living Resources and Biogeochemical CyclesChair(s): Sarah Kolesar, [email protected] James Pierson, [email protected] Jeremy Testa, [email protected]: 10408:00 Brandt, S. B.; Roman, M.; Pierson, J.; Kolesar, S.; Boicourt,
B.; Sellinger, C.: HOW DOES HYPOXIA AFFECT HABITAT QUALITY OF FISHES?~
08:30 Goto, D.; Rucinski, D.; DePinto, J. V.; Ludsin, S. A.; Scavia, D.; Höök, T. O.: POPULATION-LEVEL CONSEQUENCES OF HYPOLIMNETIC HYPOXIA IN LAKE ERIE: IMPLICATIONS FROM A SPATIALLY EXPLICIT INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL
08:45 Craig, J. K.; Magelnicki, M. A.; Crowder, L. B.; Rose, K. A.; Creekmore, S.; Diamond, S. A.: EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON FORAGING AND ENERGETICS OF ATLANTIC CROAKER IN THE NORTHWESTERN GULF OF MEXICO
09:00 De Mutsert, K.; Cowan, J. H.; Walters, C.: AN ECOPATH MODEL OF THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO WITH AN ADDED FUNCTION TO FACILITATE SIMULATIONS OF FISHERIES SPECIES RESPONSE TO HYPOXIA.
09:15 Adamack, A. T.; Clouse, M. A.; Ludsin, S. A.; Mason, D. M.; Brandt, S. B.; Zhang, H.: EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON FISH DIETS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO
09:30 Reese, B. K.; Romero, B. F.; Shepard, A.; Dowd, S.; DiMarco, S.; Morse, J. W.; Mills, H. J.: BENTHIC AND PELAGIC MICROBIAL ECOLOGY IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIC ZONE
09:45 Van Colen, C.; Rossi, F.; Montserrat , F.; Andersson, M. G.; Gribsholt, B.; Herman, P. M.; Degraer, S.; Ysebaert, T.; Middelburg , J. J.: SPECIES-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS DETERMINE POST-HYPOXIA RECOVERY OF FUNCTIONING
13:30 Robison, B. H.; Reisenbichler, K. R.; Sherlock, R. E.; Walz, K.: VERTICAL DISPLACEMENT OF MESOPELAGIC ANIMALS BY AN EXPANDING OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE IN MONTEREY BAY
13:45 Reisenbichler, K. R.; Okuda, C. M.; Robison, B. H.: CONTINUING DEVELOPMENT OF MBARI’S MIDWATER RESPIROMETRY SYSTEM AS A TOOL TO INVESTIGATE PHYSIOLOGICAL LIMITATIONS TO THE DISTRIBUTION OF DEEP PELAGIC ANIMALS
14:00 Riedel, B.; Zuschin, M.; Stachowitsch, M.: MARINE MACROBENTHOS: BEHAVIOUR AND SURVIVAL AS INTEGRATED INDICATOR OF OXYGEN THRESHOLDS AND MORTALITY EVENTS
14:15 Lichtschlag, Anna, A.; Wenzhöfer, Frank , F.; Janssen, Felix, F.; Struck, Ulrich , U.; Donis, Daphne , D.; Jessen, Gerdhard , G.; Boetius, Antje, A.: EFFECT OF VARIABLE OXYGEN CONDITIONS ON BENTHIC ACTIVITY AT THE CRIMEAN SHELF (BLACK SEA)
14:30 Lomstein, B. A.; Jørgensen, B. B.: BACTERIAL ACTIVITY AND ORGANIC MATTER REACTIVITY IN SEDIMENTS OFF PERU
14:45 Goransson, P.; Karlsson, M.; Tengberg, A.: MARINE ENVIRONMENT IN CHANGE: EXPERIENCES LEARNED FROM 15 YEARS OF ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING IN THE OERESUND STRAIGHT (BALTIC SEA)
15:00 Savchuk, O. P.; Gustafsson, B. G.; Müller-Karulis, B.: QUANTIFYING ECOSYSTEM-WIDE EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON THE BALTIC SEA EUTROPHICATION WITH LONG-TERM OBSERVATIONS AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS
15:15 Smith, L. M.; Oviatt, C. A.: THE INFLUENCE OF WATER COLUMN METABOLISM ON HYPOXIA IN NARRAGANSETT BAY, RI, USA
16:00 Ruef, W. M.; Devol, A. H.; Newton, J.; Bassin, C.: QUANTIFYING THE ROLE OF MARINE NUTRIENT LOADING TO UPPER LAYER PRODUCTION AND BOTTOM WATER HYPOXIA IN A COASTAL ESTUARY
16:15 Grantz, E. M.; Scott, J. T.: DINITROGEN GAS ACCUMULATION IN THE HYPOLIMNIA OF THREE SHALLOW RESERVOIRS DETERMINED USING N2:AR RATIOS
16:30 Brek-Laitinen, G.; Lopez Bellido, J.; Ojala, A.: RESPONSES OF MICROBIAL FOOD WEB TO THE PROLONGED SEASONAL HYPOXIA IN A BOREAL LAKE
16:45 Doherty, M.; Crump, B. C.; Cornwell, J. C.: SUCCESSION OF METABOLICALLY ACTIVE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN SEASONALLY ANOXIC WATERS OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY ASSESSED WITH PYROTAG SEQUENCING
17:00 Zhou, Y.; Michalak, A. M.; Obenour, D.: TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF HYPOXIC VOLUME IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY
17:15 Breitburg, D.; Hondorp, D.; Audemard, C.; Carnegie, R.; Burrell, R.; Clark, V.: BREATHLESS NIGHTS: DIEL-CYCLING HYPOXIA AND THE PREVALENCE OF PERKINSUS MARINUS (DERMO) INFECTIONS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY OYSTERS
17:30 Pierson, J. J.; Roman, M.; Stoecker, D.; Houde, E.; Decker, M.; Elliott, D.; Barba, A.; Liu, K.: DIFFERENTIATING THE IMPACTS OF HYPOXIA ON COPEPODS FROM FOOD WEB EFFECTS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
S18 Connectivity of ecosystem processes in the upper and mesopelagic oceansChair(s): Richard B. Rivkin, [email protected] Louis Legendre, [email protected]: 208A08:00 Hansell, D. A.: EMERGING BIOGEOCHEMICAL
PROCESSES IN THE OCEANIC CARBON CYCLE: CONNECTIONS BETWEEN THE SURFACE AND DEEP OCEAN~
08:30 Martínez-García, S.; Fernández, E.; Teira, E.: RESPONSE OF CONTRASTING PLANKTONIC MICROBIAL FOOD WEBS TO INPUTS OF INORGANIC AND ORGANIC NUTRIENTS
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
94
FRID
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
08:45 Allen, J. T.; Martin, A. P.: BAROCLINIC INSTABILITY: THE PHYSICAL TRANSPORT ROUTE THROUGH STRATIFICATION
09:00 Legendre, L.; Coppola, L.; Gattuso, J. P.; Goyet, C.; Daeden, A.: PARTIAL PRESSURES OF O2 AND CO2 AND RESPIRATION INDEX DOWN TO 2000 M IN THE NORTHWESTERN MEDITERRANEAN: SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL VARIATIONS 1998-2008
09:15 Marsay, C. M.; Achterberg, E. P.; Sanders, R. J.; Statham, P. J.; Lampitt, R. S.: MESOPELAGIC-DEPTH MEASUREMENTS OF POC, BIOMINERALS AND PARTICULATE TRACE METALS IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC, USING NEUTRALLY BUOYANT, FREE DRIFTING SEDIMENT TRAPS
09:30 FUKUDA, Hideki, H.; OGAWA, Hiroshi, H.; NAGATA, Toshi, T.: EFFECIVE DENSITY AND FRACTAL DIMENSION OF SUSPENDED PARTICLES IN THE SURFACE LAYER OF THE WESTERN PACIFIC
09:45 Rivkin, R. B.: MICROBIAL FOOD WEB STRUCTURE AND CONNECTIVITY IN THE UPPER AND MESOPELAGIC LAYERS OF THE OCEAN: COMPARISON AMONG OCEAN REGIONS.
S30 Mechanistic descriptions of diverse plankton communities: from observations to modelsChair(s): Andrew Pershing, [email protected] Andrew Barton, [email protected]: 103B13:30 Litchman, E.; Klausmeier, C. A.: LINKING TRAITS AND
ECOLOGICAL NICHES OF PHYTOPLANKTON TO PREDICT COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING~
14:00 Edwards, K. F.; Klausmeier, C. A.; Litchman, E.: EVIDENCE FOR A FUNDAMENTAL THREE-WAY TRADEOFF IN A TRAIT COMPILATION OF MARINE AND FRESHWATER PHYTOPLANKTON
14:15 Nelles, A. M.; Finkel, Z. V.; Irwin, A. J.: ECOLOGICAL RESPONSE FUNCTIONS FOR NORTH ATLANTIC DIATOMS AND DINOFLAGELLATES
14:30 Barton, A. D.; Finkel, Z. V.; Ward, B. A.; Follows, M. J.: THE IMPACT OF GROWTH RATE AND NUTRIENT ACQUISITION STRATEGY ON THE ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION OF DIATOMS AND DINOFLAGELLATES
14:45 Goebel, N. L.; Edwards, C. A.; Zehr, J. P.; Follows, M. J.: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MODELED PHYTOPLANKTON PRODUCTIVITY AND BIODIVERSITY IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM
15:00 Armstrong, R. A.; Schartau, M.; Landry, M. R.: A MODEL FRAMEWORK WITH SUFFICIENT DIVERSITY TO ALLOW BOTH EXTENSION BLOOMS AND IRRUPTIVE BLOOMS OF PHYTOPLANKTON
15:15 Schulz, K. L.; Abbott, R. L.; Walz, K. C.; Baker, D. M.; Figary, S. E.; Cáceres, C.: CONSTRUCTED AND EXISTING VERNAL POOLS AS MICROCOSMS FOR INVESTIGATING ABIOTIC CONSTRAINTS ON PLANKTON COMMUNITIES
16:00 Record, N. R.; Pershing, A. J.: BIODIVERSITY DYNAMICS IN THE GULF OF MAINE PELAGIC ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITY
16:15 Meier, S.; Hillebrand, H.; Ptacnik, R.: SPATIOTEMPORAL TURNOVER IN PHYTOPLANKTON METACOMMUNITIES IN A NATURAL COASTAL SYSTEM
16:30 Suthers, I. M.; Fife, F. J.; Power, M. J.; Stephenson, R. L.: BOTTOM-UP AND TOP-DOWN DYNAMICS OF ZOOPLANKTON PARTICLE SIZE SPECTRA OVER 27 YEARS IN THE BAY OF FUNDY
16:45 Wiltshire, K. H.; Boersma, M.; Franke, H. D.; Kraberg, A. C.; Scharfe, M.: NORTH SEA, GERMAN BIGHT: A REVIEW OF 45 YEARS OF CHANGE
17:00 Kraberg, A. C.; Loeder, M.; Shchekinova, E.; Wiltshire, K. H.: THE IMPORTANCE OF DIATOM RESTING STAGES AS A DETERMINANT OF PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM DYNAMICS AT THE HELGOLAND ROADS LONG-TERM MONITORING STATION
17:15 Stauffer, B. A.; Gellene, A. G.; Oberg, C.; Sukhatme, G. S.; Caron, D. A.: TIMESERIES ANALYSIS OF COASTAL MARINE ECOSYSTEM REVEALS STRONG PHYSICAL FORCING OF PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS AND DIVERSITY
17:30 Anas, M.; Scott, K.; Wissel, B.: IMPORTANCE OF SPATIAL EFFECTS ON ENVIRONMENT-ZOOPLANKTON RELATIONSHIPS IN PRISTINE BOREAL LAKES THREATENED BY ACIDIFICATION
17:45 Thyssen, M.; Denis , M.; Gregori , G.; Guiselin, N.; Artigas, L. F.: AUTOMATED FLOW CYTOMETRY FOR HIGH FREQUENCY SPATIO-TEMPORAL PHYTOPLANKTON MONITORING: A NEW CHALLENGE IN OCEANOLOGY.
S31 Coral Reefs in a Crystal Ball: What Will Be Their Future?Chair(s): Pamela Hallock, [email protected] Bernhard Riegl, [email protected] Edwin A. Hernández-Delgado, [email protected]: Ballroom A13:30 McField, M. D.; Thompson, A.; Drysdale, I.; Rueda,
M.; Marks, K.: REGION-WIDE DECLINES IN REEF HEALTH CONTINUE IN THE MESOAMERICAN REEF DESPITE SIGNIFICANT LOCAL, NATIONAL AND REGIONAL MANAGEMENT ACTIONS
13:45 Eakin, C. M.; Liu, G.; Heron, S. F.; Christensen, T. R.; Rauenzahn, J. A.; Morgan, J. A.; Parker, B. A.; Skirving, W. S.; Burgess, T.; Nim, C. J.; Strong, A. E.: HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH? RECORD CARIBBEAN CORAL BLEACHING IN 2005, AGAIN IN 2010?
14:00 Couce, E.; Ridgwell, A.; Hendy, E.: MODELLING THE DECADAL TO CENTENNIAL IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE GLOBAL DISTRIBUTION OF CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEMS
14:15 Teneva, L. T.; Logan, C.; Karnauskas, M.; Bianucci, L.; Currie, J.; Kleypas, J. A.: IMPACT OF ADAPTATION
ASLOMeeting Program
95
FRID
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
RATES AND NATURAL SST VARIABILITY ON CORAL BLEACHING PREDICTIONS: NEW INSIGHTS FROM COMMUNITY CLIMATE SYSTEM MODEL 3
14:30 Cantin, N. E.; Cohen, A. L.; Tarrant, A. M.: INTERSPECIFIC VARIABILITY IN THE CORAL RESPONSE TO RISING SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES ON A CENTRAL RED SEA REEF
14:45 Hernandez-Delgado, E. A.; Hernandez-Pacheco, R.; Cabrera, J.; Ruiz, T. M.; Sabat, A. M.: SEA SURFACE WARMING, MASSIVE BLEACHING AND THE DEMISE OF CARIBBEAN CORAL REEFS: CASE STUDIES FROM PUERTO RICO
15:00 Carrigan, A. D.; Puotinen, M. L.: TO WHAT EXTENT DO TROPICAL CYCLONE ‘COOL WAKES’ CREATE THERMAL REFUGIA FOR CORAL REEFS?
15:15 Hernandez-Pacheco, R.; Hernandez-Delgado, E. A.; Sabat, A. M.: DEMOGRAPHIC EFFECTS OF BLEACHING IN THE PRINCIPAL CARIBBEAN REEF-BUILDING CORAL MONTASTRAEA ANNULARIS
16:00 Hallock, P.: WHAT DO REEF-DWELLING FORAMINIFERA REVEAL ABOUT STRESSORS OF CORAL REEFS?
16:15 Aranda Lastra, M.; Banaszak, A. T.; Bayer, T.; Medina, M.; Voolstra, C. R.: DIFFERENTIAL SENSITIVITY OF CORAL LARVAE TO NATURAL LEVELS OF ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION (UVR) DURING DEVELOPMENT
16:30 Schopmeyer, S. A.; Lirman, D.; Herlan, J.; Thyberg, T.; Huntington, B.; Santos, R.; Drury, C.; Hill, C.; Young-Lahiff, C.: THE ROLE OF CORAL NURSERIES IN THE RESTORATION OF THE THREATENED STAGHORN CORAL ACROPORA CERVICORNIS.
16:45 Padilla-Gamino, J. L.; Gates, R. D.: SEDIMENTATION EFFECTS ON THE ECOPHYSIOLOGY OF PORITES RUS IN MOOREA, FRENCH POLYNESIA
17:00 Ahmadia, N.: RESPONSE OF CRYTOBENTHIC FISH COMMUNITY STRUCTURE TO A DECLINE IN REEF HABITAT QUALITY IN THE WAKATOBI MARINE NATIONAL PARK, INDONESIA
17:30 Neal, B. P.; Beijbom, O.; Kline , D. I.; Treibitz, T.; Kriegman , D.; Belongie, D.; Cummings, L.; Lin, T. H.; Winters, R.; Mitchell, B. G.: SEMI-AUTOMATED PROCESSING OF CORAL REEF PHOTOGRAPHS FROM TIME SERIES OBSERVATIONS AT BOCAS DEL TORO PANAMA
17:45 Treibitz, T.; Neal, B. P.; Beijbom, O.; Kriegman, D.; Belongie, S.; Kline, D. I.; Mitchell, B. G.: UNDERWATER COLOR AS A SOURCE OF SCIENTIFIC DATA FOR CORAL COMMUNITIES
S32 Variability in Freshwater Inputs and its Impacts on Coastal Marine SystemsChair(s): Juanita Urban-Rich, [email protected] Ellen Douglas, [email protected]: 20208:00 Andersson, A.: INFLUENCE OF RIVER INFLOW
ON THE PRODUCTIVITY AND BIODIVERSITY IN COASTAL AREA OF THE NORTHERN BALTIC SEA
08:30 Letscher, R. T.; Hansell, D. A.: DISTRIBUTION AND DYNAMICS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN IN THE SURFACE ARCTIC OCEAN
08:45 Hartmann, J.; Lauerwald, R.; Moosdorf, N.; Amann, T.; Weiss, A.: GLORICH: GLOBAL RIVER AND ESTUARY CHEMICAL DATABASE
09:00 Douglas, E. M.: CHANGING HYDROLOGIC VARIABILITY IN NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND AND THE POTENTIAL IMPACTS ON SHALLOW COASTAL MARINE SYSTEMS.
09:15 Whitney, M. M.: VARIABILITY OF DISTRIBUTED RIVER INPUTS AND INFLUENCES ON ESTUARINE DYNAMICS IN LONG ISLAND SOUND
09:30 Linhoff, B. S.; Breier, C.; Charette, M.: SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE AS A SINK FOR URANIUM
09:45 Loh, A. N.; Tomasello, L. L.; Ketover, R.: BENTHIC SOURCES OF NUTRIENTS AND CARBON TO THE GULF OF MEXICO
13:30 Wood, R. J.; Johnson, J. M.; Martino, E. J.; Zhang, X.: LINKAGES BETWEEN CLIMATE DYNAMICS, SEASONAL AND DECADAL VARIABILITY IN HYDROGRAPHIC CONDITIONS, AND PLANKTON AND FISH STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
13:45 Urban-Rich, J.; Dicker, R.; Stanton, J.: CHANGES IN PLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN A SMALL EMBAYMENT IN BOSTON HARBOR IN RELATIONSHIP TO FRESHWATER INPUTS
14:00 Byars, N. L.; Wetz, M. S.: HOW DOES RIVER FLOW VARIABILITY AFFECT THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF PHYTOPLANKTON IN APALACHICOLA BAY, FLORIDA?
14:15 Schuster, T.; Urban-Rich, J.: IDENTIFYING ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN BOSTON HARBOR AND INTERPRETING THEIR RESPONSE TO CHANGES IN FRESHWATER INPUTS
14:30 Ogburn, M. B.; Forward, Jr., R. B.: FRESHWATER INFLOW AFFECTS RECRUITMENT SUCCESS OF THE BLUE CRAB CALLINECTES SAPIDUS
15:00 Vargas, C. A.; Arriagada, N. L.; Cancino, S.; Cascales, E. K.; Contreras, P. Y.; Farías, A.; Manríquez, V.; Placencia, J.; Urrutia, R.; Sobarzo, M.: INFLUENCES OF ALLOCTHONOUS ORGANIC MATTER AND NUTRIENTS ON THE COASTAL OCEAN FOOD WEB AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN A LAND-OCEAN CONTINUUM OFF CENTRAL CHILE
15:15 Dornback, L. M.; Lohrenz, S. E.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATIONS IN PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS IN MISSISSIPPI COASTAL WATERS
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
96
FRID
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
S49 Atmospheric control of nutrient cycling and production in the surface oceanChair(s): Cecile Guieu, [email protected] Doug Wallace, [email protected] Cliff Law, [email protected]: 20108:15 Zamora, L. M.; Hansell, D. A.; Prospero, J. M.; Trapp, J.
M.: ATMOSPHERIC PHOSPHORUS DEPOSITION TO THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC: SOURCES, PROPERTIES, AND RELATIONSHIP TO NITROGEN DEPOSITION
08:30 Heimburger, A.; Losno, R.; Dulac, F.: ATMOSPHERIC DEPOSITION OF TRACE ELEMENTS OVER THE SOUTH INDIAN OCEAN: A TIME SERIES AT KERGUELEN ISLANDS
08:45 Altieri, K. E.; Hastings, M. G.; Peters, A.; Sigman, D. M.: THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF ORGANIC NITROGEN IN MARINE RAINWATER AND AEROSOLS
09:00 Nieto-Cid, M.; García-Martín, E. E.; Gómez-Tellado, L.; Gómez, B.; Pazó, M. J.; Martínez-García, S.; Vieitez, V.; Arbones, B.; Serret, P.; Figueiras, F. G.; Pérez-Muñuzuri, V.; Teira, E.; Álvarez-Salgado, X. A.: ORGANIC AND INORGANIC NUTRIENTS OF RAIN WATER IN A TEMPERATE COASTAL EMBAYMENT (RAA DE VIGO, NW SPAIN)
09:15 Cheize, M.; Sarthou, G.; Bucciarelli, E.; Croot, P. L.; Baker, A. R.; Baudoux, A. C.: DEVELOPMENT OF A VOLTAMMETRIC METHOD TO MEASURE IRON ORGANIC SPECIATION IN RAINWATER
09:30 Sedwick, P. N.; Sholkovitz, E. R.; Church, T. M.; Edwards, P. R.: ATMOSPHERIC INPUT OF BIOACTIVE TRACE METALS TO THE SURFACE OCEAN: EVIDENCE FOR IMPORTANCE OF HUMAN EMISSIONS AND WET DEPOSITION
09:45 Dickhut, R. M.; Jayne, E. A.: ORDER OF MAGNITUDE ESTIMATES OF AIR-SEA GAS FLUXES OF VOLATILE ORGANIC CARBON
13:30 Marañón, E.: SEARCHING FOR GENERAL PATTERNS IN THE RESPONSE OF MICROBIAL PLANKTON TO ATMOSPHERIC NUTRIENT DEPOSITION
14:00 Dulac, F.; Desboeufs, K. V.; Bon Nguyen, E.; Tran, S.; Losno, R.; Chevaillier, S.; Guieu, C.; Leblond, N.; Labiadh, M.: A METHOD TO PRODUCE LARGE AMOUNTS OF MINERAL DUST FOR CONTROLLED IN SITU EXPERIMENTS ON THE MARINE BIOGEOCHEMICAL IMPACT OF ATMOSPHERIC DEPOSITION
14:15 Guieu, C. C.; Ridame, C.; Pulido-Villena, E.; Blain, S.; Wagener, T.; Dulac, F.; Desboeufs, K.; Pondaven, P.; Leblond, N.; Stemman, L.; Obernesterer, I.; Dominici, J. M.: DUST INPUTS AND MARINE CARBON CYCLE: NEW INSIGHTS FROM MESOCOSMS STUDY
14:30 Wuttig, K.; Dammshäuser, A.; Bressac, M.; Wagener, T.; Streu, P.; Guieu, C.; Croot, P. L.: TEMPORAL CHANGES IN THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF MN, FE AND AL AFTER AN ARTIFICIAL DUST DEPOSITION TO LARGE MESOCOSMS (DUNE PROJECT).
14:45 LaRoche, J.; Baustian, T.; Grefe, I.; Schunck, H.: ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS INFLUENCING NITROGEN FIXATION AND DIAZOTROPH DISTRIBUTION IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN
15:00 HERNANDO-MORALES, V.; TEIRA, E.; ARBONES, B.; FIGUEIRAS, F. G.; ÁLVAREZ-SALGADO, X. A.: IMPACT OF RAINWATER ON THE BACTERIOPLANKTON COMMUNITY IN A COASTAL EUTROPHIC ECOSYSTEM
15:15 Wang, S.; Moore, J. K.; Mahowald, N.: IMPACTS OF DUST DEPOSITION VARIABILITY ON BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES AND PRIMARY PRODUCTION
S52 Ocean-Atmosphere Interactions in coastal regions: Observations and Model-ing ApproachesChair(s): Maria Tzortziou, [email protected] Carolyn Jordan, [email protected]: 20116:00 Subramaniam, A.: BIDIRECTIONAL FLUXES OF
MATERIAL BETWEEN OCEAN, ATMOSPHERE, AND ADJACENT COASTAL AREAS*
16:15 Volkamer, R.; Coburn, S.; Dix, B.; Sinreich, R.: A HETEROGENEOUS OPEN OCEAN SOURCE FOR IODINE OXIDE AND GLYOXAL*
16:30 Bressac, M.; Guieu, C.; Doxaran, D.; Bourrin, F.; Wagener, T.; Obolensky, G.: FATE AND EFFECTS OF SAHARAN DUST IN SEAWATER: A SIMULATED DUST DEPOSITION DURING THE DUNE (DUST EXPERIMENT IN A LOW NUTRIENT LOW CHLOROPHYLL ECOSYSTEM) PROJECT
16:45 Swarthout, R. F.; Sive, B. C.; Russo, R. S.; Haase, K. B.; Salisbury, J.; Vandemark, D.: QUANTIFYING THE INFLUENCE OF SEA WATER CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL FACTORS ON AIR-SEA FLUXES OF TRACE GASES IN THE GULF OF MAINE, USA
17:00 Jayne, E. A.; Dickhut, R. M.; Falconer, R.; Cochran, M. A.: AIR-SEA FLUX OF VOLATILE ORGANIC CARBON
17:15 Dueker, M. E.; Weathers, K. C.; O’Mullan, G. D.; Juhl, A. R.; Uriarte, M.: ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS ON CONCENTRATION AND MICROBIAL CONTENT OF COASTAL COARSE AEROSOLS
17:30 Zappa, C. J.; Raymond, P. A.; McGillis, W. R.: THE EFFECT OF ATMOSPHERIC STABILITY ON GAS TRANSFER AND REGIONAL ESTUARINE CO2 FLUX
17:45 Orellana, M. V.; Matrai, P. A.; Leck, C.; Rauschenberg, C. D.; Lee, A. M.; Coz, E.: MARINE MICROGELS AND CLOUD FORMATION IN THE HIGH ARCTIC
ASLOMeeting Program
97
FRID
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
S55 Microbial Carbon Pump: A multidis-ciplinary focus on origins, cycling and storage of DOM in the oceanChair(s): Gerhard Kattner, [email protected] Nianzhi Jiao, [email protected] Farooq Azam, [email protected] Steven Wilhelm, [email protected]: Ballroom B08:00 Jiao, N.; Azam, F.: MICROBIAL CARBON PUMP
-- A MECHANISM FOR LONG-TERM CARBON STORAGE IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN~
08:30 Benner, R.: BACTERIAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO REFRACTORY DOM IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN*
09:00 Herndl, G. J.; Bochdansky, A. B.; Baltar, F.; Aristegui, J.; Reinthaler, T.: MICROBIAL CARBON CYCLING IN THE MESO- AND BATHYPELAGIC NORTH ATLANTIC
09:15 Steen, A. D.; Ziervogel, K.; Arnosti, C.: ORGANIC MATTER LABILITY IS A FUNCTION OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITY METABOLIC CAPABILITIES
09:30 Jørgensen, L.; Stedmon, C. A.; Kragh, T.; Markager, S.; Middelboe, M.; Søndergaard, M.: TRACING THE FORMATION OF BIOREFRACTORY HUMIC ORGANIC MATTER IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN
09:45 Carlson, C. A.; Hansell, D. A.; Goldberg, S. J.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER ACCUMULATION, TRANSFORMATION AND EXPORT IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC BASIN
13:30 Kattner, G.; Koch, B. P.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN THE OCEAN: AN EXTREME COMPLEX AND DIVERSE MIXTURE OF ORGANIC MOLECULES
13:45 Rassoulzadegan, F.; Herndl, G. J.; Mari, X.; Weinbauer, M. G.: BLACK CARBON: A NEW FACTOR SHAPING MICROBIAL FOOD WEBS
14:00 Malfatti, F.; Azam, F.: SYNECHOCOCCUS-HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA ASSOCIATION IN THE OCEAN AND IMPLICATIONS FOR CARBON BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLE
14:15 Reinthaler, T.; Alvarez-Salgado, X. A.; Alvarez, M.; van Aken, H.; Herndl, G. J.: LINKING MICROBIAL ECOLOGY TO THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN THE DEEP EASTERN NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN USING OPTIMUM MULTIPARAMETER ANALYSIS
14:30 Weinbauer, M. G.; Rassoulzadegan, F.: ROLE OF VIRAL LYSIS FOR THE COMPOSITION AND USE OF ORGANIC MATTER
14:45 Flerus, R.; Koch, B. P.; Lucio, M.; Schmitt-Kopplin, P.; Lechtenfeld, O. J.; Kattner, G.: MOLECULAR LEVEL INVESTIGATION OF COMPOSITION AND SURFACE-TO-DEPTH TRANSFORMATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN THE EAST ATLANTIC OCEAN USING FT-ICR MS
15:00 Goldberg, S. J.; Carlson, C. A.; Brzezinski, M.; Aluwihare, L. I.; Nelson, N. B.; Siegel, D. A.: PREDICTABLE GLUCOSE ENRICHMENT IN “AGED” OCEANIC DOM
15:15 Chen, C. A.: EXPORT OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON FROM THE NOTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA
16:00 Rocker, D.; Kisand, V.; Brinkhoff, T.; Schulz-Boettcher, B.; Rullkoetter, J.; Simon, M.: DECOMPOSITION OF HUMIC ACIDS BY ESTUARINE AND MARINE BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES
16:15 Romera-Castillo, C.; Sarmento, H.; Álvarez-Salgado, X. A.; Gasol, J. M.; Marrasé, C.: NET PRODUCTION/CONSUMPTION OF FLUORESCENT COLOURED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER BY NATURAL BACTERIAL ASSEMBLAGES GROWING ON MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON EXUDATES
16:30 Guillemette, F.; del Giorgio, P. A.: BACTERIOPLANKTON PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION OF SPECIFIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON POOLS: LINKS TO ORGANIC MATTER ORIGIN AND BACTERIAL METABOLISM
16:45 Koren, L. M.; McCallister, S. L.; Franklin, R. B.; Kattner, G.; Koch, B.: LINKING MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN: RECONSIDERING ECOLOGICAL BIOGEOGRAPHY
17:00 Tzortziou, M.; Neale, P. J.; Megonial , P. J.; Dacquisto, J.; Rudolf , J.; Butterworth, M.: MICROBIAL AND PHOTOCHEMICAL PROCESSING OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER EXPORTED FROM TIDAL MARSHES IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY
17:15 Koblizek, M.; Hauruseu, D.; Mlcouskova, J.: PHOTOHETEROTROPHIC METABOLISM AND CARBON UTILIZATION IN AEROBIC ANOXYGENIC PHOTOTROPHS
17:30 Roettgers, R.; Koch, B.: EVIDENCE FOR A SINGLE CHROMOPHOR/FLUOROPHOR IN THE OCEAN’S OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE.
17:45 Ramaiah, N.; Paul, J. T.; Fernandes, V.: PRODUCTION RATES OF DOM IN BAY OF BENGAL: ITS ASSIMILABLE PROPORTIONS AND UTILIZATION RATES BY HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA
S57 Spatial connectivity in aquatic land-scapes: patterns, mechanisms and implica-tions for populations, communities and ecosystemsChair(s): Michele Casini, [email protected] Kenneth T. Frank, [email protected] Jonathan Fisher, [email protected]: 10208:00 Bradbury, I. R.: CONNECTIVITY AND DISPERSAL
IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS: DEFINING A ROLE FOR NATURAL SELECTION AND ADAPTATION~
08:30 Walsh, E. J.; Schroeder, T.; Gill, T. E.; Wallace, R. L.: DISPERSAL, SPECIES DIVERSITY, AND PHYLOGENETIC DISPERSION OF ROTIFERS AMONG HIGHLY DISCONNECTED CHIHUAHUAN DESERT HABITATS
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
98
FRID
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
09:00 Gee, E. M.; Western, A. W.; Swearer, S. E.; Williams, J.: CAN PASSIVE TRANSPORT EXPLAIN THE DISPERSAL PATTERNS OF EGGS AND LARVAE IN A STRONGLY STRATIFIED ESTUARY?
09:15 Rojas, M. L.; Schizas, N. V.: GENETIC POPULATION STRUCTURE OF TWO BRITTLE STARS (OPHIOCOMA ECHINATA AND AMPHIPHOLIS SQUAMATA) WITH CONTRASTING LIFE HISTORIES
09:30 Valencia, J. A.; Ladah, L. B.; Lavin, M. F.; Filonov, A.: HOW DO WINDS AND INTERNAL WAVES CONTROL THE TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF BARNACLE SETTLEMENT IN BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO?
09:45 GUIZIEN, K.; BELHARET, M.; MORITZ, C.; GUARINI, J. M.: ACCOUNTING FOR SPATIAL CONNECTIVITYDUE TO LARVAL DISPERSAL WHEN DESIGNINGMARINE PROTECTED AREA
13:30 Ptacnik, R.; Moorthi, S. D.; Hillebrand, H.: HUTCHINSON REVERSED OR WHY THERE NEED TO BE SO MANY SPECIES
13:45 Spence Cheruvelil, K.; Booker, J.: LOCAL LAKE AND REGIONAL LANDSCAPE FACTORS DRIVE ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES
14:00 Wurtsbaugh, W. A.; Epstein, D.; Kalinin, A.; McGlynn, B.: NUTRIENT AND WATER MASS FLOW PATHS DETERMINE “FIRST-ACCESS” COMPETITIVE UPTAKE OF NITROGEN BY PHYTOPLANKTON AND PERIPHYTON IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC MOUNTAIN LAKE
14:15 Reche, I.; Gómez, J. M.; Soininen, J.; Beisner , B. E.; Casamayor, E. O.; Crump , B. C.; Kling , G. W.; Lindström , E.; Perfectti , F.; Van der Gucht , K.: NESTEDNESS IN MICROBIAL METACOMMUNITIES OF LAKE LANDSCAPES
14:30 Ng, S. M.; Antenucci, J. P.; Hipsey, M. R.; Tibor, G.; Zohary, T.: PROCESSES CONTROLLING PHYTOPLANKTON SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION IN A LARGE LAKE
14:45 Yu, H.; Bi, H.; Peterson, B.: ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS AFFECTING SAPTIAL DISTRIBUTION OF JUVENILE CHINOOK SALMON OFF WASHINGTON AND OREGEON, U.S.A
15:00 Schärer-Umpierre, M. T.; Nemeth, M. I.; Appeldoorn, R. S.: CORAL REEF CONNECTIVITY AND ONTOGENETIC MIGRATIONS OF REEF FISHES: TESTING LANDSCAPE SCALE VARIABLES AND REEF FISH SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION PATTERNS
15:15 Ye, H.; Glaser, S.; Teo, S.: IDENTIFYING SPATIAL STRUCTURE IN NORTH PACIFIC ALBACORE TUNA (THUNNUS ALALUNGA) USING CHAOTIC TIME SERIES ANALYSIS
16:00 Jones, C. M.: CAN OTOLITH CHEMISTRY MEASURE PHILOPATRY AND CONNECTIVITY?: FACT AND FICTION
16:15 Hein, C. L.; Englund, G.; Öhlund, G.; Karlsson, J.; Byström, P.: DISPERSAL BARRIERS LIMIT CLIMATE-DRIVEN RANGE EXPANSION OF A TOP PREDATOR (ESOX LUCIUS): IMPLICATIONS FOR LAKE COMMUNITIES WITH EMPHASIS ON SALMONIDS
16:30 Fisher, J. A.; Frank, K. T.; Leggett, W. C.: QUANTIFYING MARINE FISH CONNECTIVITY ON THE SCOTIAN SHELF: RESULTS FROM FOUR DECADES OF ECOSYSTEM MONINTORING
16:45 Eriksson, B. K.; Sieben, K.; Eklöf, J.; Ljunggren, L.; Olsson, J.; Casini, M.; Bergström, U.: CONSEQUENCES FOR COASTAL HABITATS OF HUMAN TRANSFORMATION OF OFFSHORE FOOD-WEBS
17:00 Casini, M.; Blenckner, T.; Müller-Karulis, B.; Möllmann, C.; Lindegren, M.; Gårdmark, A.; Bergström, L.; Llope, M.; Kornilovs, G.; Stenseth, N. C.; Diekmann, R.; Plikss, M.: SPATIAL CONNECTIVITY AND PREDATOR SPILLOVER AFFECT FOOD-WEB STRUCTURE IN ECOLOGICAL SINKS: THE BALTIC SEA CASE
17:15 Blenckner, T.; Möllmann, C.; Casini, M.; Gårdmark, A.; Diekmann, R.; Müller-Karulis, B.; Humborg, C.; Lindegren, M.; Bergström, L.; Kornilovs, G.: CLIMATE-INDUCED SYNCHRONOUS REGIME SHIFTS ALONG SPATIALLY-CONNECTED BALTIC SEA SUB-SYSTEMS
17:30 Niiranen, S.; Tomczak, M. T.; Hjerne, O.; Blenckner, T.: LACK OF SPATIAL CONNECTIVITY AS A CONTRIBUTOR TO THE LATE 1980S CENTRAL BALTIC SEA REGIME SHIFT?
17:45 Reilly, R.; Jones, C. M.; Grosch, C. E.; Schaffler, J. J.: LIFE HISTORY SCANS QUANTIFY INGRESS PATTERNS OF ATLANTIC MENHADEN IN CHESAPEAKE BAY
S63 Broadening the Discussion: The Consequences of the Presence of Algal Toxins in Food WebsChair(s): Sibel Bargu, [email protected] Mary Silver, [email protected]: 208A16:00 Bargu, S.; Silver, M.: THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE
PRESENCE OF ALGAL TOXINS IN AQUATIC FOOD WEBS
16:15 Novoveská, L.; Smith, W. L.; Dorsey, C. P.; MacIntyre, H. L.: SEASONAL AND INTER-ANNUAL CHANGES IN DINOFLAGELLATE COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN NEAR-SHORE ALABAMA WATERS
16:30 Cherrier, J.; Owens, H.; Morton, S.: THE EFFECTS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) ON KARENIA BREVIS GROWTH AND TOXIN PRODUCTION
16:45 Burrell, C. T.; Anderson, C.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Thunell, R.; Tappa, E.: DEGRADATION OF THE MARINE TOXIN DOMOIC ACID IN COASTAL SYSTEMS
17:00 Finiguerra, M. B.; Flores, H. M.; Senft, C.; Chen, L.; Avery, D. E.; Dam, H. G.: FUNCTIONAL SHIFTS IN ZOOPLANKTON GRAZING DURING THE PROGRESSION OF A TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE BLOOM
17:15 Flores, H. M.; Wikfors, G. H.; Dam, H. G.: REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES ARE LINKED TO TOXICITY OF ALEXANDRIUM SPP. TO PROTISTS
ASLOMeeting Program
99
FRID
Ay
(*) represents Invited presentations
17:30 MAZZILLO, F.; POMEROY, C.; KUO, J.; RAMONDI, P. T.; SILVER, M. W.: ANGLER EXPOSURE TO DOMOIC ACID VIA CONSUMPTION OF CONTAMINATED FISHES
17:45 Hinder, S. L.; Gravenor, M. B.; Hays, G. C.; Edwards, M.; Walne, A. W.: THREAT TO HUMAN HEALTH: IS THE INCIDENCE OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM SPECIES INCREASING?
S64 Instrumentation, Software, and Protocols for Semi-automated Identific ation, Enumeration, and measurement of Plankton – Where Are We now?Chair(s): Malinda Sutor, [email protected] Harry Nelson, [email protected] Marc Picheral, [email protected]: 208B08:00 Sutor, M.; Nelson, H.; Picheral, M.; MacLeod, N.;
Culverhouse, P.; Benefield, M.: APPLICATION OF IMAGING INSTRUMENT AND SEMI-AUTOMATED CLASSIFICATION TECHNIQUES FOR PLANKTON ANALYSIS: AN OVERVIEW~
08:30 Denis, K.; Tunin-Ley, A.; Maurer, D.; Grosjean, P.: STATISTICAL ERROR CORRECTION OF ZOO/PHYTOIMAGE IDENTIFICATION BY PARTIAL MANUAL VALIDATION OF SUSPECT PARTICLES
08:45 Tunin-Ley, A.; Maurer, D.; Denis, K.; Belin, C.; Grosjean, P.: COUPLING OPTICAL DETECTION BY FLOWCAM TO AUTOMATIC CLASSIFICATION BY THE SOFTWARE ZOO/PHYTOIMAGE FOR AUTOMATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY IDENTIFICATION
09:00 Maurer, D.; Tunin-Ley, A.; Denis, K.; Barbier, C.; Pouvreau, S.; Grosjean, P.: SEMI-AUTOMATED IDENTIFICATION OF PLANKTONIC LARVAE OF THE OYSTER CRASSOSTREA GIGAS USING FLOWCAM COUPLED TO THE IMAGE ANALYSIS SOFTWARE ZOO/PHYTOIMAGE
09:15 Thompson, C. M.; Hare, M. P.; Gallager, S. M.: AUTOMATED IMAGE-ANALYSIS FOR THE IDENTIFICATION OF BIVALVE LARVAE
09:30 Goodwin, J. D.; North, E. W.: IDENTIFYING AND MAPPING BIVALVE LARVAE IN A SUB-ESTUARY OF CHESAPEAKE BAY
09:45 Ye, L.; Chang, C. Y.; Hsieh, C. H.: BAYESIAN PROBABILISTIC MODEL FOR AUTOMATED ZOOPLANKTON CLASSIFICATION: A NOVEL FRAMEWORK WITH EMPHASIS ON PREDICTIVE CONFIDENCE AND RAPID CATEGORY AGGREGATION
13:30 Nelson, H.; Sieracki, C. K.; Duplisea, M.; Smith, M.: THE EVOLUTION OF THE FLOWCAM – 15 YEARS IN THE MAKING
13:45 Lehman, P. W.; Poulton, N. J.; Marr, K.: USING THE FLOWCAM TO QUANTIFY MICROCYSTIS ABUNDANCE IN SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY
14:00 Campbell, J. R.; Buskey, E. J.: IMAGING TECHNOLOGY AND MICROPLANKTON MONITORING IN THE MISSION-ARANSAS NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE
14:15 Moberg, E. A.; Sosik, H. M.: AUTOMATED CALCULATION OF CELL VOLUME FROM 2D IMAGES OF PHYTOPLANKTON WITH COMPLEX SHAPES
14:30 Ryan, J.; Greenfield, D.; Marin, R.; Preston, C.; Roman, B.; Jensen, S.; Pargett, D.; Birch, J.; Mikulski, C.; Doucette, G.; Scholin, C.: HARMFUL PHYTOPLANKTON ECOLOGY STUDIES USING AUTONOMOUS MOLECULAR ANALYTICAL AND OCEAN OBSERVING NETWORKS
14:45 Harvey, J. B.; Ryan, J. P.; Marin, R.; Robidart, J.; Preston, C.; Alvarado, N.; Zhang, Y.; McEwen, R. S.; Py, F.; Bellingham, J. G.; Rajan, K.; Chavez, F.; Scholin, C. A.; Vrijenhoek, R. C.: TWO ROBOTIC PLATFORMS FOR MOLECULAR DETECTION OF MARINE ZOOPLANKTON, PHYTOPLANKTON, BACTERIOPLANKTON AND HAB PHYCOTOXINS: A MULTI-TROPHIC LEVEL APPROACH.
15:00 Chekalyuk, A.: CHARACTERIZATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON AND CYANOBACTERIA IN DIVERSE AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS WITH ADVANCED LASER FLUOROMETRY
15:15 Zetsche, E.; Dubois, F.; Yourassowsky, C.; El Mallahi, A.; Meysman, F.: ALIVE OR DEAD? COMBINING STAINING METHODS AND DIGITAL HOLOGRAPHIC MICROSCOPY FOR VIABILITY DETERMINATION OF MICRO- AND MESOPLANKTON
S69 The biogeochemistry of coral– microbe interactionsChair(s): Krystal Rypien, [email protected] David Baker, [email protected]: 103A16:00 Lema, K. A.; Willis, B. L.; Bourne, D. G.: NITROGEN
FIXING BACTERIA ASSOCIATED WITH CORALS OF THE GREAT BARRIER REEF
16:15 Apprill, A.; Hughen, K.; Mincer, T.: BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES ASSOCIATED WITH HEALTHY AND DISEASED CORALS IN COMPARISON TO REEF WATER BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
16:30 Arif, C.; Ferrier-Pagés, C.; Bayer, T.; Aranda, M.; Zoccola, D.; Voolstra, C. R.: TOWARDS MICROBIAL COMMUNITY PROFILING OF SOFTCORALS
16:45 Ichim-Moreno, N.; Bajic, V.; Ravasi, T.; Micklem, G.; Voolstra, C. R.: THE GENOME SEQUENCE OF THE DINOFLAGELLATE SYMBIODINIUM SP., A SYMBIONT FROM SCLERACTINIAN CORALS
17:00 Barott, K. L.; Rodriguez-Brito, B.; Marhaver, K. L.; Smith, J. E.; Rohwer, F. L.: COMPETITION BETWEEN CORALS AND BENTHIC ALGAE LEADS TO CHANGES IN CORAL PHYSIOLOGY AND ASSOCIATED BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
100
FRID
Ay
(~) represents Tutorial presentations
17:15 Baker, D. M.; Fogel, M. L.: A BIOGEOCHEMICAL BASIS FOR CORAL-ALGAL ASSOCIATIONS
S80 Frontiers in ocean acidification research: Responses of marine carbon cycling and ecosystems to ocean acidification Chair(s): Lauren Juranek, [email protected] Simone Alin, [email protected] Anne Cohen, [email protected] Sarah Cooley, [email protected]: Ballroom A08:00 Chan, F.; Menge, B. A.; Hales, B.; Barth, J. A.: HYPOXIA
AND OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AS COUPLED ECOSYSTEM STRESSORS: INSIGHTS FROM TIME-SERIES OBSERVATIONS ON THE OREGON UPWELLING SHELF
08:15 Martz, T. R.; Johnson, K. S.; Send, U.; Alin, S.; Jannasch, H.; Plant, J.; Elrod, V.; Coletti, L.; Takeshita, Y.; Peterson, B.: OPERATIONAL CAPABILITIES OF AUTONOMOUS PH SENSORS: REDUCING KEY UNCERTAINTIES IN ENVIRONMENTAL PROPERTIES
08:30 Jiang, L. Q.; Raymond, P. A.; Butman, D.: CARBONATE MINERAL SATURATION STATES IN RIVERS OF THE CONTERMINOUS UNITED STATES OVER THE LAST 100 YEARS
08:45 Hawley, S. M.; Meseck, S. L.; Wikfors, G. H.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND PHYTOPLANKTON: TESTING TWO WAYS TO DO SMALL VOLUME OCEAN ACIDIFICATION EXPERIMENTS
09:00 Challener, R. C.; McClintock, J. B.: IMPACTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON GROWTH AND BEHAVIOR OF THE ECOLOGICALLY IMPORTANT COASTAL SEA URCHIN LYTECHINUS VARIEGATUS
09:15 Ellis, R. P.; Parry, H.; Spicer, J. I.; Widdicombe, S.: THE IMPACT OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION, TEMPERATURE AND A BACTERIAL CHALLENGE ON THE IMMUNE RESPONSE OF MYTILUS EDULIS
09:30 Sugie/Koji, S.; Endo/Hisashi, .; Suzuki/Koji, .; Yoshimura/Takeshi, .: INFLUENCE OF PCO2 AND FE ON SI AND N CONSUMPTION RATIO OF THE BERING SEA PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY
09:45 Frommel, A. Y.; Maneja, R.; Geffen, A.; Folkvord, A.; Piatkowski, U.; Clemmesen, C.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF NORTH SEA COD AND HERRING
S86 Linking the physiology of photoautotrophs to the generation of reactive trace gasesChair(s): Stephen D. Archer, [email protected] Steven L. Manley, [email protected]: 10116:00 Exton, D. A.; McGenity, T.; Steinke, M.; Suggett, D. J.:
SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS IN BIOGENIC ISOPRENE EMISSIONS FROM A TEMPERATE ESTUARY
16:15 del Valle, D. A.; Kiene, R. P.; Karl, D. M.: LIGHT DEPENDENCE OF DISSOLVED DMSP-SULFUR ASSIMILATION AND DMS PRODUCTION IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE
16:30 Weinberg, I.; Bahlmann, E.; Seifert, R.; Michaelis, W.: FLUXES AND ISOTOPE COMPOSITION OF SELECTED HALOCARBONS FROM SEAGRASS MEADOWS
16:45 Burdett, H. L.; Aloisio, E.; Calosi, P.; Widdicombe, S.; Findlay, H.; Hatton, A.; Kamenos, N. A.: HIGH CO2 INDUCES A NEW PATHWAY FOR THE RELEASE OF DMSP FROM CORALLINE ALGAE
17:00 Manley, S. L.; Lin, C. Y.: LIFE AFTER DEATH: IS BROMOFORM PRODUCED IN SEAWATER FROM BROMOPEROXIDASE RELEASED FROM DEAD PHYTOPLANKTON?
17:15 Rellinger, A. N.; McParland, E. L.; Kieber, D. J.; Kiene, R. P.: EFFECTS OF HYDROGEN PEROXIDE ON OXIDATIVE STRESS AND DMS PRODUCTION IN PHAEOCYSTIS GLOBOSA
17:30 Lyon, B. R.; Lee, P. A.; DiTullio, G. R.; Janech, M. G.: DIATOM PROTEOMICS IMPLICATE IMPORTANCE OF ACTIVATED METHYL CYCLE IN DMSP PRODUCTION
17:45 Kieber, D. J.; Spiese, C. E.; Kiene, R. P.; Liu, C.: DIRECT DMS AND DMSO PRODUCTION FROM DMSP REACTIONS WITH REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES
ASLOMeeting Program
101
AAbbott, R. L. 94Åberg, P. 77Abessa, M. 39Abigail Heithoff, A. 72Abuzeineh, A. A. 69Acharya, P. 50Achterberg, E. 41, 62, 68, 87, 94Achterberg, E. P.
41, 62, 68, 87, 94Achury, A. 81Ackerman, J. D. 71Acosta, V. 78Adamack, A. 60, 80, 93Adamack, A. T. 60, 93Adam-Guillermin, C. 35Adams, H. E. 79Adams, J. 63Adam, T. C. 42Adebayo, A. A. 50Adesh Ramsubaugh, A. 67Adjou, M. 82Adrian, R. 82Adu, T. 88Afonso Souza, C. 50Aguilar, C. 42, 51, 52, 76, 90Agusa/Tetsuro , T. 56Agusti, S. 64, 74Agustí, S. 74, 91Ahlgren, N. A. 75Ahmadia, N. 95Ahmed, S. 75, 85Ahmed, S. A. 75Ahmed, T. 67Aiken, G. R. 63Aikman, F. 34Alan D. Christian, A. 58Alberts, J. M. 44Alderete, A. 58Al-Enezi, M. Y. 59Alexander, C. R. 36Alexander, J. 32, 49Alexander, J. A. 49Alexander, M. A. 43Alexandra S. Marcano Rivas, A.
M. 55Alexandririds, K. 46Alin, S. 87, 100Alin, S. R. 87Ali, S. 45Alix, J. H. 69Al-Kharusi, L. H. 88Allan, J. 46Allee, Ph.D., R. J. 63Allen, A. E. 31, 67, 75Allen, A. L. 34Allen, J. T. 62, 94ALLEN, J. T. 62Aller, J. Y. 45Aller, R. C. 52, 59, 60, 87Allison, J. 30Allison, M. D. 79, 82
Allyson Fauver, A. M. 65Al-Mansouri , H. A. 59Alm, J. 64Almodóvar Acevedo, L. 82Almodóvar, L. 71Aloisio, E. 100Alonso, A. 64Alonso, C. 45Alonso-Hernández, C. 80Alperin, M. J. 60Alpermann, T. J. 32Al-Rifaie, K. S. 59Altabet, M. 32, 47Altabet, M. A. 47Altamira, I. 40Altieri, K. E. 96Altunkaya, A. 52Aluwihare, L. I. 97Alvarado-Bremer, J. 52Alvarado, N. 99Alvarez, D. A. 80Alvarez, M. 97Alvarez-Salgado, X. A. 97Álvarez-Salgado, X. A. 96, 97ÁLVAREZ-SALGADO, X. A. 96Alvirde, S. L. 54Al-Yamani, F. Y. 59Amacher, J. A. 41Amann, T. 56, 95Amat, A. 31Amirbahman, A. 51Ammerman, J. W. 72Amundsen, T. 43Anantharaman, K. 56Anas, M. 94Andersen, T. 39, 90Anderson, C. 61, 98Anderson, D. 34, 38, 55, 66Anderson, D. M. 34, 38Anderson, I. C. 54Anderson, J. 75, 77Anderson, J. T. 75Anderson, M. R. 46Anderson, R. 35Andersson, A. 31, 51, 89, 91, 95Andersson, A. J. 31Andersson, M. G. 93Anders Stigebrandt, A. 33Andrade, P. M. 83Andrea Drzewianowski, A. 72Andrés Cózar, A. 84Andrewartha, J. 34Andrieux-Loyer, F. 50Andrus, C. F. 79Angel, B. 36Angel, D. 69Anselmi-Molina, C. M. 46Antenucci, J. P. 98Antoun, H. 31, 79Aono, T. 88Apeti, D. 71Aponte-Bermúdez, L. D. 46Aponte, N. E. 66Aponte, V. E. 67
Apostolidis, A. 56Appeldoorn , R. 65Appeldoorn, R. A. 66Appeldoorn, R. S. 65, 66, 98Apprill, A. 66, 99Apprill, A. M. 66Arache, A. V. 85Aragon, S. J. 30Aranda Lastra, M. 95Aranda, M. 45, 99Aranguren-Gassis, M. 91Araujo, W. L. 31Arbones, B. 96ARBONES, B. 96Archer, d. 76Archer, S. D. 62Ardila, G. 71Ardila-Sierra, G. 71Ardisson, P. L. 74Ardon, M. 73Arellano, A. R. 88Arevalo, P. A. 49Arhan, M. 68Arif, C. 99Aristegui, J. 97Arístegui, J. 54Armbrust, E. A. 69Armbrust, E. V. 31, 38, 45Armstrong, A. 40Armstrong, D. E. 80Armstrong, R. A. 59, 94ARMSTRONG, R. A. 66Arnaud, F. 43, 92Arnberg, M. 43Arndt, H. 78Arnone, R. A. 40, 44Arnosti, C. 37, 77, 97Arnott, S. E. 60Arocho-Montes, A. I. 81Arriagada, N. L. 95Arrieta, J. M. 55, 74, 91Arrigo, K. R. 75Arthur, M. 73Artigas, L. F. 45, 94Artigas Luis Felipe, L. F. 70Aschaffenberg, M. D. 42Aschaffenburg, M. D. 42Ashanti Johnson, . 65Ashford, J. R. 53Ashworth, J. 51Asper, V. 37, 40Assam, H. 51Asson, D. C. 50Astor, Y. 79, 90Astor, Y. M. 90Atienza, D. 73, 74Atkinson, L. 46Atkinson, M. J. 31Auad, G. 68Aubeneau, A. F. 34Aucan, J. 79Audemard, C. 93Augustine, S. 35Aukamp, J. R. 53, 80
Aultman, T. V. 42Austin, B. J. 63Avery, D. E. 92, 98Avery, G. B. 44, 45, 54Avrani, S. 38Azam, F. 79, 97
BBachtiar, R. 55Bade, D. L. 92Baden, S. 77Badger, J. 67, 75Badger, J. H. 75Baeyens, W. 41Bahlmann, E. 100Bahner, L. 35Bailey, E. M. 60Bailey, J. A. 89Bailey, S. A. 50, 60Baines, S. B. 39, 76Baird, M. E. 73Bajic, V. 99Baker, A. 73, 96Baker, A. R. 96Baker, B. C. 49Baker, D. B. 91, 92Baker, D. M. 94, 100Baker, L. A. 39Baker, L. J. 64Balagué, V. 56BALCH, W. M. 62Baldes, J. E. 82Baliga, N. S. 51Balistrieri, L. S. 50Ballantine, D. L. 66Ballester, K. E. 78Ball, R. 63Balmer, M. B. 33Balseiro, E. 48, 58, 69Balseiro, E. G. 58Baltar, F. 97Balzano, S. 74Banaszak, A. T. 95Bange, H. W. 62Baptista, A. 32, 34, 38, 61Baptista, A. M. 34, 38Baptist, C. S. 82Barada, L. 86Baranowski, M. R. 64, 85Barba, A. 57, 93Barba, A. P. 57Barbara Bauer, B. 69Bárbara Úbeda, B. 84Barbeau, K. 67Barbeau, K. A. 67Barber, L. B. 47Barber, R. T. 75, 90Barbier, C. 99Barbosa, J. G. 37Bargar, T. A. 80
Author Index
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
102
Bargu, S. 98Barkan, E. 90Barkley, H. 67Barnard, A. 32, 40, 62, 81Barnard, A. H. 62, 81Barnes, L. B. 49Barnes, M. K. 32Barofsky, A. 77Barott, K. L. 99Barrett, A. 50Barrett, J. 44Barros, F. 40Barth, J. A. 100Bartlett, B. H. 50Barton, A. D. 94Bassin, C. 93Bastidas Navarro, M. 69Bastien, J. 64Bastviken, D. 63, 64Bates, N. R. 31Baudoux, A. C. 96Bauer, J. E. 30, 50, 69Baumann, H. 43Baumann, J. H. 53Baumann, Z. 60Baustian, T. 96Bayer, T. 45, 95, 99Bayindirli, C. 52, 62Baysinger, C. W. 41Beall, B. F. 85Beatriz. Barreiro, B. 61Beaufort, L. 67Beaulieu, K. M. 86Beaver, J. R. 50Bebout, B. M. 35Bechmann, R. K. 43Beck, A. J. 88Becker, E. L. 37Becker, J. C. 66Becker, P. R. 88Bedoya, L. 67Bedsole, P. 52Beer, L. 37Behl, S. 48Behrenfeld, M. J. 84Behringer, D. C. 36Beijbom, O. 42, 95Bein, A. M. 34Beisner, B. 60, 92Beisner , B. E. 98Beisner, B. E. 92Bejarano, I. 65, 66Belabbassi, L. 68, 88BELHARET, M. 98Belicka, L. L. 89Belin, C. 99Bell, D. W. 72Bellerby, R. 87, 90Bellerby, R. G. 90Bellingham, J. G. 99Belli, S. L. 39Belo do Couto, A. D. 90Belongie, D. 95Belongie, S. 42, 95Beman, J. M. 45Benavente, J. 60Bench, S. 86
Bendtsen, J. 82Benedetti, M. F. 63Benefield, M. 99Bengt Liljebladh, B. L. 33Benitez-Nelson, C.
37, 51, 61, 72, 81, 98Benitez-Nelson, C. R. 98Benner, I. 31Benner, R. 97Bennett, J. M. 51Bennett, M. A. 81Bennington, V. 63Bensoussan, N. 39, 63, 85Bento, L. F. 86Benway, H. 61Beone, . 50Berdnikov, S. V. 35Bergauer, K. 52Berg, C. 77Berger, S. A. 48Berges, J. A. 57, 60Berggren, M. 91Berg Hasper, T. 77Bergmann, M. 90Berg, P. 42Bergstad, O. A. 72Bergström, A. K. 69Bergström, L. 98Bergström, U. 77, 98Berman-Frank, I. R. 76Bernard, C. 85BERNARDES, M. 85Bernardi, G. 42Bernard, K. 90Bernhardt, E. S. 39, 56Bernhardt, P. W. 44, 48, 76Bernick, D. 86Bernstein, W. N. 42Bernthal, C. 46Berounsky, V. M. 57Berry, D. L. 72Berry, J. 70Bertics, V. 46Bertics, V. J. 46Bertoni, R. 53, 75Bertrand, E. M. 67Best, C. H. 79Betancourt-Portela, J. M. 80Bethany Jenkins, J. D. 72Bhaskaran, H. 61Bianchelli, S. 91Bianchi, T. S. 34, 35Bianucci, L. 61, 94Bibby, T. S. 67, 76, 87Bidigare, R. R. 66Bidle, K. D. 32Bienfang, P. 72Bigham, D. L. 43Bi, H. 98Biller, D. 67Binder, E. 55Bini, E. 38Birch, J. 99Bird, K. C. 77Birsa, L. M. 75Blachowiak-Samolyk , K. 77Blackwood, A. D. 36, 55
Blain, S. 96Blanco-Ameijeiras, S. 31Blanco, J. 44Blaser, S. 43Blenckner, T. 98Blondeau, J. E. 66Bluhm, B. A. 58, 74Bluhm , K. 54blumberg, a. f. 46Boardman, E. 49Boccelli, . 50Bochdansky, A. B. 35, 82, 97Bochenek, R. 46Bode, A. 51Bodelier, P. L. 72Boëchat, I. G. 47, 66Boersma, M. 48, 69, 79, 94Boetius, A. 37, 47, 68, 71, 90Boetius, Antje, A. 93Bogard, M. 33, 63Bohlen, L. 47Bohnsack, J. A. 35Boicourt, B. 93Boicourt, W. 46Boland, R. 65, 66Boland, R. C. 66Boling, B. 51Boling, W. B. 81Bollens, S. M. 82Bolte, S. 73Bombar, D. 54Bond, N. A. 43Bonner, J. S. 41, 84Bonner, T. H. 69Bonnet, S. 44Bonneville, M. C. 64Bon Nguyen, E. 96Booe, T. L. 32, 83Booker, J. 98Booth, M. G. 75, 77Bootsma, H. A. 33Boras, J. A. 74Borg, D. T. 88Borges, A. 66, 83Borkman, D. 57Bornberg-Bauer, E. 73Borsheim, K. Y. 75Børsheim, K. Y. 91Bosch, D. D. 71Bosch, J. A. 59Boss, E. S. 44Bothner, M. H. 88Bottjer, D. 44Böttjer, D. 54Bouchard, V. 69Bouillon, S. 66, 83Bouma, T. J. 60Bounds, J. 44Bourdon, J. 45Bourgeois, S. 49Bourne, D. G. 99Bourrin, F. 96Bouskill, N. J. 45Bowder, J. A. 63Bowen, J. D. 36Bowen, J. L. 45Bowen, S. 52
Bowes, M. J. 92Bowie, A. 41Bowlby, E. 46Bowles, M. 37, 44Bowles, M. W. 37Bowman, K. 68, 88Bowman, K. L. 68, 88Bowser, C. H. 65Boyarsky, S. 38Boyd, P. W. 67Boyer, G. L. 56Boyer, J. N. 43, 62Boyes, A. J. 65Boynton, W. R. 60Bracco, A. 40Bracher, A. 90Brachet Sidonie, . 91Bradbury, I. R. 97Brading, P. 76Bradley, C. J. 66Bradley, P. B. 75Bradley, P. J. 33Bradley, P. M. 47, 86Braeckman, U. 59Brahamsha, B. 38, 67Braissant, O. 35Brame, J. 46Brander, K. M. 43Brandes, J. 37Brandon, T. B. 66Brandt, M. E. 36, 55, 66Brandt, S. 80, 93Brandt, S. B. 93Brault, E. K. 89Brauns, M. 69Breck, J. E. 73Breene, C. L. 76Breier, C. 95Breier, J. A. 56Breitbart, M. A. 37Breitburg, D. 93Brek-Laitinen, G. 93Bressac, M. 96BRICAUD, A. 74Briceno, H. O. 43Brick, K. 63Bridgeman, T. B. 92Briggs, R. A. 81Brill, R. W. 30, 81Brinkhoff, T. 97Brinkmeyer, R. L. 48Brin, L. D. 50Brisk, A. A. 65Briski, E. 60Bristow, L. A. 47Brito, E. F. 36Brocco, B. 31, 79Brocco, B. A. 79Brodeur, R. D. 30Bronk, D. A.
32, 33, 39, 48, 75, 76Bronmark, C. 37Brooke, S. 55Brooks, A. J. 40, 42Brooks, B. 33Brooks, B. W. 33Brooks, G. R. 30, 71
ASLOMeeting Program
103
Brooks, J. M. 37Brooks, M. L. 57, 67, 74Broquet, G. 34Brosseau, C. J. 89Brotz, L. 73Brouillet-Gauthier, G. 89Brouwer, M. 55Brown, A. S. 30Brown, C. 34, 43Brown, C. W. 34, 43Brown, E. E. 43Browne, T. Q. 51Brown, J. M. 37, 49Brown, M. K. 51Brown, R. W. 54Brown, S. M. 45Brownson, E. A. 33Brown, W. 46Bruckner, A. 63Bruckner, C. 77Bruland, K. 67Brune, L. P. 71Brun, F. G. 60Bruno, B. C. 61Bruno, M. 46Brunskill, J. 83Brush, M. J. 33, 62Brussaard, C. P. 75Brzezinski, M. 61, 90, 97Brzezinski, M. A. 90Bucciarelli , E. 68Bucciarelli, E. 88, 96Buck, C. 53Buck, T. L. 47Buesseler, K. 41Bukaveckas, P. A. 45Bullerjahn , G. S. 70Bullerjahn, G. S. 56, 85, 92Bullock, A. 32BULUSU, S. 91Bumpers, P. M. 34Bundy, R. M. 67Bunge, J. 35Bunting, L. 32, 80Burdett, H. L. 100Burford, M. A. 33Burge, C. A. 36Burgess, A. K. 30Burgess, E. 37Burgess, T. 83, 94Burgin, A. J. 56Burgos, J. A. 82Burgos, S. 30, 36Burke, A. L. 72Burke, R. A. 57Burkhardt, B. G. 81Burmester, V. 47Burnett, A. 67Burnett, W. C. 33Burns, J. H. 55Burrel, C. 61Burrell , C. T. 68Burrell, C. T. 98Burrell, R. 93Burton, G. A. 51Busby, K. N. 67Buscail, R. 59
Bushek, D. 36Buskey, E. J. 48, 99Butler, A. 87Butler, M. J. 36Butler, R. 63Butman, D. 100Butterfield, D. A. 31Buttermore, E. N. 36Butterworth, M. 97Buttle, J. M. 39Byars, N. L. 95Byrne, M. 43Byrne, R. 87Byrnes, J. R. 81Byström, P. 98Bzezinski, M. A. 76
CCable, J. E. 66Cabrera, J. 95Cáceres, C. 94Cáceres-Charneco, R. I. 61Caddle, J. 30, 81Caddle, J. A. 81Cade-Menun, B. J. 91Cady-Pereira, K. E. 84Caffrey, M. A. 80Çagatay, N. 47Cahill, B. 75Caldow, C. 46Caldwell, T. J. 82Calliari, D. 57Callieri, C. 53, 75Calnan, J. M. 66Calosi, P. 100Calzas, M. 39Camacho-Ibar, V. F. 51Camara-Mor, P. 68Camilli, R. 37, 71Campbell, B. J. 55Campbell, J. 79, 99Campbell, J. R. 99Campbell, L. 34, 38, 60Campbell, L. M. 60Campbell, R. 52, 81Campbell, R. R. 52Campbell, S. J. 42Canady, C. S. 52Canals, M. 30, 49, 68, 88Canals, M. F. 30, 49, 88Canals-Silander, M. F. 46Cancino, S. 95Canepa, A. 39Canovas, F. 64, 74Cantin, N. E. 95Canuel, E. A. 54Capella, J. 31, 46, 68Capella, J. E. 46Cape, M. R. 59Capone, D. G. 44, 86Carassou, L. 33Carbery, K. K. 71Cardille, J. 59Cardille, J. A. 59Carini, S. A. 47
Carlin, J. 49Carlo, M. 66Carlos Javier Sanchez, C. J. 41Carlsen, D. H. 47Carlson, B. 82Carlson, C. A. 73, 76, 77, 97Carnegie, R. 93Caro, A. 45Carollo, Ph.D., C. 63Carol Robinson, C. 61Caron, D. A. 35, 60, 94Carpenter, E. J. 31Carpenter, R. C. 31, 42Carpintero de Moraes, P. 52Carrera, A. 62Carrigan, A. D. 42, 95Carruthers, T. 42, 47Carruthers, T. J. 47Carstensen/Jacob, J. 32Carter, A. 77Carter, B. J. 75, 86Carvajalino-Fernández, M. A. 71Carvalho, K. 71Carvalho, L. R. 40Cary, S. C. 35Casamayor, E. O. 98Casas, M. C. 75Cascales, E. K. 95Casey, B. 44Casey, B. J. 44Casey, J. 41, 67, 79Casey, J. R. 41, 79Cash, C. 65Casillas-Maldonado, J. I. 61Casillas-Martinez, L. 35, 54, 65Casini, M. 98Casselman, J. M. 73Castilho, D. F. 54Castilla, A. 54Castillo, R. 67Castine, S. A. 80Castro, R. 66Cataldo, D. H. 57Cathalot, C. 59Cattani, I. 50Cattolico, R. A. 31Catton, K. B. 89Cedeño-Maldonado, D. J. 59Cembella, A. 32Cermeno, P. 92Cernadas-Martin, S. 79Cervin, G. 37Cervino, J. M. 42Cerviño, S. 72Césaire, T. 45Cesarz, J. 78Chadderton, W. L. 60Chaffin, J. D. 92Challener, R. C. 100Chamberlain, K. R. 67Chandler, C. L. 79, 82Chan, F. 47, 60, 100Chan, F. T. 60Chang, C. Y. 99Chang, H. 67CHANTON , J. 85Chanton, J. P. 35
Chant, R. 52, 54Chant, R. J. 52Chapman, J. W. 30, 50Chapman, P. 88Chappell, J. C. 53Chappell Jessica, . 53Chappell, P. D. 64Chapron, B. 79, 91CHAPRON Bertrand, . 91Characklis, G. W. 36Charette, M. 67, 95Charles, F. 49Chasar, J. 58Chase, A. 84Chassignet, E. P. 58Chatelain, M. 71Chaves, F. 86Chavez, F. 74, 91, 99Chavez, F. P. 74, 91Cheah, W. 84Cheize, M. 96Chekalyuk, A. 99Chelsky Budarf, A. 84Chen, C. 83, 97Chen, C. A. 97Chen, F. 34Chen, G. J. 80Cheng-Ling Hu, C. 67Chen, H. 31, 52, 59Chen, L. 98CHEN, M. 38Chen, R. F. 41, 44, 66Chen, X. 39, 67Chen, Y. 67Cherrier, J. 58, 66, 91, 98Cheung, W. L. 43, 73Chevaillier, S. 96Chevaldonné, P. 69Chever, F. 68, 88Chia-Te Chien, C. 67Chiaverano, L. M. 73Chien, C. 88Childers, D. L. 39Chin, J. P. 72Chin, W. C. 77Chin, Y. P. 87Chislock, M. F. 33, 43, 92Chistoserdov, A. Y. 45Choi, D. H. 57Choi, J. K. 57Cho, K. H. 34Chow, S. 47Cho, W. W. 37Christensen, T. R. 83, 94Christian, A. D. 39, 49, 57, 58Christoph Plum, C. T. 69Chu, D. 69Churchill, J. J. 57Church, M. J. 44, 54, 90Church, T. M. 96CIOTTI, A. M. 74Cisternas-Novoa, C. A. 79Claquin, P. 48, 51Clardy, T. R. 30Clarisse, O. 41Clark, V. 93Cleary, A. C. 60
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
104
Clementson, L. A. 84Clemetson, A. O. 44Clemmesen, C. 100Clerici, S. J. 41Cline, T. 89Clouse, M. A. 93Cluck, R. E. 46Cnudde, C. 61Cobb, R. M. 79Coble, P. 40, 45, 88Coble, P. G. 45, 88Coburn, S. 96Cochran, M. A. 89, 96Cockshutt, A. M. 30, 86Cohen, A. 67, 76, 95Cohen, A. L. 95Colbert, A. J. 66Coles, J. 39Coletti, L. 79, 90, 100Coletti, L. J. 79, 90Colin, P. L. 65Collier, J. L. 55Collins, A. 31Collins, C. J. 89Coll, M. 72Colman, A. 76Colon-Padilla, B. L. 54Colón-Rivera, R. J. 33, 83, 85Colwell, R. 43Comarazamy, D. 66Comeau André, . 54COMTAT, M. 61Condal, A. R. 74Conde, D. 50Condon, R. H. 52, 73, 74Conley/Daniel, D. 32Conley, D. J. 46, 53Conmy, R. 53, 80, 88Conmy, R. N. 88Conn, K. E. 36, 55Conover, D. O. 43Conroy, J. D. 92Constantin de Magny, G. 43Conte, M. 90Contesini, M. 53Conti-Jerpe, I. 36Contreras, P. Y. 95Cook, A. B. 68Cooke, S. L. 50Cooley, S. 61, 87Cooley, S. R. 87Cooney, P. B. 36Cooper, L. A. 56Cooper, L. W. 67, 74COOPER, W. 85Cope, W. G. 36Coppola, L. 94Cordes, E. 31, 37, 55Cordes, E. E. 31, 37, 55Corell, H. 81Corinaldesi, C. 55Cornwell, J. C. 32, 60, 93Correa, A. S. 55Correa, T. 55Corredor, J. 31, 46, 51, 79, 88Corredor, J. E. 31, 51, 88Corzo, A. 50, 86
Costagliola, M. 45Costas, B. A. 60Costa, Y. 40Costello, D. 51Cotner, J. B. 39, 42, 50, 80, 92Cotner, S. H. 42Couce, E. 94Couceiro, F. 44Couch, C. S. 37Countway, P. D. 35Covich, A. P. 39Cowan, J. 80, 93Cowan, J. H. 93Cowen, R. K. 36Cox, C. J. 64, 74Cox, R. 64Cox, S. E. 50Cox, T. 52Coyne, K. J. 35, 64, 84Coz, E. 96Cozzolino, . 50Craft, E. A. 49Craig, J. K. 93Crain, B. 46, 56, 63Craven, G. 80Crawford, K. C. 81Crawley Crawford, K. E. 30Creekmore, S. 93Crespo-Medina, M. 37, 40Cressie, N. 34Crill, P. M. 63Crim, R. 42, 43Crim, R. N. 43Crisman, T. L. 66, 69Crootof, A. 47, 65Crootof, A. B. 47Croot, P. 46, 54, 96Croot, P. L. 96Croquer, A. 36Crosson, L. M. 37Crosswell, J. R. 83Crowder, L. B. 93Crowe, S. A. 59, 82Crowl, T. A. 39Crump , B. C. 98Crump, B. C. 30, 38, 93Cudmore, B. 50Cuet, P. 31Cuevas, L. A. 91Cuhel, R. 42, 51, 52, 76, 90Cuhel, R. L. 42, 52, 76, 90Cuker, B. E. 65, 68Cullison, S. E. 31Culp, B. M. 83Culver, D. A. 92Culverhouse, P. 99Cumbaa, N. O. 46Cumbo, V. R. 31Cumming, B. F. 49, 60, 80, 92Cummings, L. 95Cunningham, M. A. 39Cuomo, C. 56Curchitser, E. N. 43Curran, M. C. 42Currie, J. 94Currie, W. J. 50Cusick, K. D. 86
Custer, K. 51Cutter, G. 68, 72Cutter, G. A. 72Cutter, G. C. 68Cutter , L. 86Cyphers, T. W. 83Cyterski, M. 67Czech, M. 65Czubakowski, J. 51
DDabney, B. L. 89Dacquisto, J. 97Dadou, I. 68Daeden, A. 94Daggett, C. T. 53Dahle, G. 58Dahlgren-Jordan, E. 36Dale, A. 46, 47Dale, A. W. 46, 47Dalsgaard, T. 46, 51D’Ambrosio, L. 52D’Ambrosio, L. A. 77Dam, H. G. 92, 98Dammshäuser, A. 96Dana Saywell, . 65Dandy, G. C. 69D’Angelo, C. 42, 66Daniel, L. D. 45Daniels, E. F. 38Daniels, K. 80Danielsson, Å. 53, 56Danovaro , R. 55, 91Danovaro, R. 55Darrow, B. A. 57Dash, P. 59Davalos-Lind, L. O. 70Dave, A. C. 90Davenport, E. 77David Tenenbaum, . 58Davis, C. 67, 72Davis, C. E. 72Davison, W. 41, 60Davis, R. 42Davis, T. W. 92Dawson, M. N. 73Dawson, S. C. 35Day, R. D. 88Day, W. S. 75Deary, A. L. 58de Baar, H. 68de Beer, D. 37, 71De Beer, D. 71de Boer, M. K. 40DeBose, J. L. 56Debroas, D. 92De Carlo, E. H. 31DeCarlo, E. H. 31Decker, M. 34, 93Decker, M. B. 34De Crignis, M. 60Deemer, B. R. 50Deflandre, B. 59DeFreitas, D. 46Degerman, R. 83, 91
Degerman, R. J. 91Degraer, S. 93DeGrandpre, M. D. 31Dehairs, F. 66, 83Deis, D. 46De Jesus-Cruz, M. 54Dekaezemacker, J. 44Dekas, A. E. 44de Kluijver, A. 61Delgadillo-Hinojosa, F. 35, 51del Giorgio, P. 59, 63, 64, 73, 84,
91, 97Del Giorgio, P. 59del Giorgio, P. A. 63, 64, 73, 84,
91, 97Dell’Anno, A. 55, 91DeLong, E. F. 45, 61Del Rio, R. 68del Valle, D. A. 100Delworth, T. L. 43Demarcq, H. 54Demarty, M. 64DeMaster, D. 50, 59, 89DeMaster, D. J. 59, 89de Mazancourt, C. S. 34DeMott, W. R. 48De Mutsert, K. 58, 93Denby, A. M. 48Denis, K. 99Denis , M. 94Denman, K. L. 61Dennison, W. C. 47de Nys, R. 80Deonarine, S. 44De Paiva, P. C. 40DePinto, J. V. 93de Putron, S. 31, 67, 76deRada, S. 44de Roos, A. M. 77Desai, A. R. 63Desai, D. 54Desailly, D. 74De Santis, . 50Desboeufs, K. 96Desboeufs, K. V. 96de Schryver, V. 48Désindes, J. P. 84de Souza, M. M. 36Detmer, T. M. 56Detres, Y. 82Detrés, Y. 71Detrick, L. 65De Troch, M. 61Deutsch, B. 85Devine, B. 30, 71Devol, A. H. 88, 93Dexter, E. 31Dhanju, A. 46Diamond, S. A. 93Díaz-Asencio, M. 80Diaz, P. L. 39Diaz, R. J. 62Dicker, R. 74, 95Dicker, R. A. 74Dick, G. J. 56Dickhudt, P. J. 62Dickhut, R. M. 89, 96
ASLOMeeting Program
105
Diehl, S. 48, 77Diekmann, R. 98Dieppa, A. 71Diercks, A. 37, 40Dieterle, D. A. 57Dietsch, C. 73Dietze, H. 54Di Fiori, E. 57Dill, B. D. 38Dillon, A. 63DiMarco, S. 34, 42, 62, 63, 68,
88, 93DiMarco, S. F. 34, 42, 62, 63, 68,
88Dionisi, H. M. 45D’Iorio, M. 46Dippner/Joachim, J. W. 32Dippner, J. W. 54, 79DITTMAR , T. 85Dittrich, M. 59DiTullio, G. R. 51, 87, 100Dix, B. 96Dixon, M. S. 69Doan, H. N. 54Dobbs, F. C. 37Docekal, B. 41Docekalova, H. 51Dodson, M. 65Doherty, M. 30, 77, 93Dolan, J. R. 70Dolan, T. W. 36Domaizon, I. 92Dominguez, J. F. 91Dominici, J. M. 96Donadi, S. 40Donald, D. B. 33Donaldson, K. A. 85Donard, O. F. 88Donelson, J. M. 43Doney, S. C. 87, 90Donham, E. M. 65Donis, D. 68Donis, Daphne , D. 93Donner, S. D. 82Donovan, E. 65Dorado, S. 32, 44, 83Dorey, N. 43Dorfmeier, E. M. 36Dornback, L. M. 95Dorsey, C. P. 98Dorval, E. 57Doucette, G. 99Doughty, C. 37Douglas, E. M. 95Douglas, N. L. 36Doug Vandemark, . 91Dowd, S. 93Downing, J. A. 33, 61, 63Doxaran, D. 96Drake, J. L. 86Drake, M. K. 31Drenkard, E. 76Drevnick, P. E. 60Drezen, C. 39Dromi, D. 63Drummond, J. D. 34Drupp, P. S. 31
Drury, C. 95Drysdale, I. 94Duarte, C. 55, 64, 73, 74, 91Duarte, C. M. 55, 64, 73, 74, 91Duarte, D. M. 74Dubois, F. 99Ducharme-Riel, V. 63Ducklow, H. W. 65, 90Dueker, M. E. 96Duff, J. H. 73Dufore, C. 87Dufore, C. M. 87Dugan, D. 46Dugdale, R. C. 43, 76Dukhovskoy, D. S. 58, 68Dulac, F. 96Dumbauld, B. R. 30, 50Dunlap, D. 37Dunn, D. 37Dunne, J. 43, 82Dunne, J. P. 43Duplisea, M. 99Dupont, C. L. 31Dupont, S. 41, 43Dupont, S. T. 43Dupraz, C. 35Dupuy, C. 60Durbin, E. G. 60, 75, 89Durkin, C. 31Dyda, R. Y. 73Dyhrman, S. 67, 72Dyhrman, S. D. 72Dyhrman, S. T. 67, 72Dzwonkowski, B. 33
EEakin, C. M. 82, 83, 94Eakin, M. 53Earl, S. 39Echeverría, C. A. 40Ecker, M. T. 82Edgcomb, V. 35Edmands, S. 75Edmunds, P. J. 31, 42Edna Granéli, E. 92Edwards, B. 52Edwards, C. 34, 94Edwards, C. A. 94Edwards, K. F. 94Edwards, K. J. 56Edwards, M. 79, 99Edwards, P. R. 96Edwards, R. L. 67Edwards, W. J. 92Egerton, T. A. 57, 69Egge, J. K. 91Eglinton, T. 69Egli, P. 81Eisen-Cuadra, A. 57Eisenhauer, L. 74Eklöf, J. 40, 98Ekström, S. 33Ekvall, M. K. 47Eldridge, Z. 34Elisabeth, N. H. 45
Ellingsen, I. 74Elliott, D. 93Ellis, E. E. 73Ellis, R. P. 100El Mallahi, A. 99Elrod, A. K. 39Elrod, V. 100Els, B. N. 91Emanuelsson, A. 77Enderlein, T. 37Endo/Hisashi, . 100Endres, S. 76Engel, A. 76, 79Enge, S. 37Engevold, P. M. 60England, M. 76Englund, G. 98Engman, A. C. 36Engqvist, A. 81Enrich-Prast, A. 63, 86Entrekin, S. 63Epel, D. 41Epstein, D. 98Epstein, S. 35Erdner, D. L. 38Erez, J. 90Ergas, S. 67Eric Desmond Barton, E. D. 61Erickson, M. 65, 90Erickson, M. J. 65Eriksson , B. K. 40Eriksson, B. K. 40, 77, 98Erken, M. 45Erler, D. V. 80Ernesto Otero, E. 67Escánez, J. 91Escoffier, N. 39, 85Escudero, B. I. 78Espinosa-Diaz, L. F. 80Estapa, M. L. 44Esteves, R. 66Estrada, G. D. 86Etnoyer, P. 37, 40Etnoyer, P. J. 40Evans, M. A. 34Evans, T. M. 50Evans-White, M. A. 34, 39, 43, 63Eveillard, D. 45Everett, J. D. 73Everhart, J. C. 52Evrard, V. 59Ewing, D. E. 91Exton, D. A. 100Eyre, B. D. 80
FFaithfull, C. L. 69Falconer, R. 96Falkenhaug, T. 72Falkowski, P. G. 38Fallon, N. M. 58Falter, J. 31, 34Falter, J. L. 31, 34Fan, C. 77Fanestil, V. P. 49
Fanning, K. 44, 79, 90Fanning, K. A. 44, 90Fan, T. Y. 31Farías, A. 95Farias, C. O. 71Farnsley, S. E. 56Farrington, S. 55Fast, K. 69Fauchot, J. 51Fauteux, L. 63Fauver, A. 65Fauville, G. 41Fawcett, S. E. 41Fay, A. R. 90Feagin, R. A. 33, 83, 85Feely, R. A. 31, 87Feike, J. 77Feldman, A. 52Fenchel, T. 35Feng, Y. 62Fennessy, M. S. 69Ferec, F. 39, 63Ferguson, A. J. 92Ferland/ Marie-Eve, M. E. 64Fernandes, V. 97Fernández de Puelles, M. L. 51Fernández, E. 91, 93Fernández Gomez, B. 52Fernández-Urruzola, I. 79Fernie, A. 31Fernö, A. 58Ferrareze, M. 88Ferrari, R. 59Ferrier-Pagés, C. 99Fertig, B. 47Feseker, T. 71Feulner, P. 73Fiant, L. 48Ficek, D. 57, 79Fields, D. M. 51, 52, 82Fife, F. J. 94Figary, S. E. 89, 94Figueiras, F. G. 96FIGUEIRAS, F. G. 96Figueredo, C. C. 47Figueroa-Nieves, D. 36Filip, J. 77Fillingham, J. H. 33Filonov, A. 61, 98Filstrup, C. T. 33Findlay, H. 100Findlay, R. 69Finiguerra, M. B. 98Finkel, Z. V. 30, 92, 94Fink, P. 37Finlay, K. 33, 63, 68Finney, B. P. 80Fischer, J. P. 59, 68Fisher, C. R. 37Fisher, J. A. 98Fisher, K. M. 34Fisher, N. S. 39, 60, 67Fisher, T. 30, 32Fisher, T. R. 32Fissore, C. 39Fitzgerald, C. 65Fitzgerald, W. F. 68
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
106
Fitzwater, S. E. 79Flear, K. 49Fleming, E. 54Fleming, G. 75Flerus, R. 85, 97Flood, R. D. 83Flores, H. M. 98Flores, L. M. 30Fogarty, M. 63, 72, 84Fogarty, M. J. 63, 84Fogel, M. 32, 100Fogel, M. L. 100Foissner, W. 35Folkvord, A. 100Follows, M. J. 94Fones, G. R. 44Ford, S. E. 36Foreman, C. M. 87Forrest, D. R. 62Forschner, S. 55Forsgren, E. 43Forsyth, M. K. 35Fortunato, C. S. 38Forward, Jr., R. B. 95Foster, R. A. 75Foucher, J. 71Fouqurean, J. W. 86Fowler, A. 35FOWLER, S. W. 41Fox, R. J. 32Foy, R. H. 43Fragoso, G. M. 75Francis, V. 62Franco, M. A. 59Franke, H. D. 94Frank, K. T. 98Franklin, R. B. 45, 97Frank, M. 68Franqui, R. 82Franz, B. A. 74Franze, G. 84Fraser, W. R. 53Frazar, C. A. 76Frazier, L. M. 61Fredrickson, K. 30Freibott, A. 41French, V. M. 47Frew, R. D. 88Frey, C. 46Frey/Claudia, C. 32Frey, S. 69Freytes Ortiz, I. M. 89Friedland, K. D. 72Friedman, C. S. 36, 37Friedrichs, C. 34Friedrichs, M. 75Fries, D. P. 86Friese, M. 69Frigstad, H. 90Frischer, M. E. 61, 75, 81Fritze, B. 46Fröberg, M. 63FROMENTIN, J. M. 72Frommel, A. Y. 100Frost, P. C. 39, 77Fry, B. 68Fuchs, H. 58
Fuentes, M. S. 69, 72Fuentes, V. 73, 74Fuessel, J. 47Fu, F. X. 76FUJIBAYASHI, M. 78, 86, 88Fukuda, H. 81FUKUDA, Hideki, H. 94Fuller, C. 58, 84Fuller, C. M. 58Fuller, J. 76Fulweiler, R. W. 40, 45, 91Funkey, C. P. 32, 39Furby, K. 42
GGable, G. 33Gaebler-Schwarz, S. 75Gaedke, U. 55Gagnaire, B. 35Galasso, G. 46Galbraith, J. K. 68Galindo-Bect, M. S. 51Gallager, S. M. 99Gallagher, K. L. 35Gallegos, C. L. 33Gallegos, O. 47Gallegos, S. C. 40Gamfeldt, L. 38Ganf, G. G. 69Gangnery, A. 44Ganju, N. K. 62Gantar, M. 70Gao, J. 73Gao, Q. 75Gao, Y. 32GAO, Y. 41Garate, M. H. 49Garay-Tinoco, J. A. 80Garcia, A. M. 39García, C. I. 82Garcia, D. N. 57Garcia, E. C. 59García-Martín, E. E. 96Garcia, N. S. 76Garcia, O. 58Garcia-Pichel, F. 75Garcia-Robledo, E. 50, 86GARCIA-SAIS, J. R. 66Garcias-Bonet, N. 55Garcia-Tenorio, R. 41Garcia, V. 59Garcia-Zarandona, I. 74GARCON, V. 61Gardiner, N. 43Gårdmark, A. 98Gardner, B. 44Gardner, G. B. 66Gardner , W. S. 40Gardner, W. S. 40, 47Garduno, M. 47Garley, R. 31Garneau, M. 64Garrett, A. 82Garrett, M. 32, 48Garrison, C. 35
Garrison, V. H. 80Gasol, J. M. 56, 97Gates, R. D. 95Gattuso, J. P. 94Gautam, S. 39Gayanilo, F. 63Gaylord, B. 47Gebser, B. 87Gee, E. M. 98Geffen, A. 100Gege, P. 59Gegg, S. R. 79, 82Geider, R. 64Geisz, H. N. 89Gelber, A. 46Gellene, A. G. 94Gemmell, B. J. 48Genereux, D. P. 73Gentile, M. 74GENTILI, B. 74Georgas, n. 46George, A. M. 50George , J. A. 62Gerardo-Abaya, J. 80Gerber, L. M. 90Gerido, L. 42German, C. 37, 71German, C. R. 37, 71Gerringa, L. 68Geyer, R. 52Ghiglione, J. F. 91Ghosh, P. 69Giani, A. 47Giblin, A. E. 50Gibson, D. 42, 61, 81Gibson, D. M. 61, 81Gibson, P. J. 60GIBSON, R. E. 31Giesbrecht, K. 90Giesler, R. 63, 64Gifford, S. 77Gilbert, D. 68Gilbert, J. 48, 62, 72Gilbert, J. A. 72Gilbert, J. J. 48Gilbert, M. L. 32Gilbert, W. 30Gilbes, F. 52, 62Gilerson, A. 75, 85Gilerson, A. A. 75Gilg, I. 30Gili, J. M. 73, 74Gillikin, D. P. 39Gill, T. E. 97Gimenez, L. 50Gioioso, M. 84Giovannoni, S. J. 76, 77GIRAUD, W. 61Gitelson, A. A. 75Gittins, J. 42Gladics, A. J. 30Glaser, S. 98Glass, J. B. 86Glaubitz, S. 77Glaz, P. N. 89Gleason, K. 66Gledhill , D. 51
Gledhill, D. 31, 91Gledhill, D. K. 91Glenn, K. L. 64Glenn, S. M. 46Glen Tarran, G. 61Glibert, P. M. 32, 49Gloel, J. 90Glover, D. M. 79, 82Gluchowska, M. 74, 77Glud, R. N. 59, 60, 88Glunk, C. 35Gobler, C. J. 43, 72, 92Godet, L. 37Godwin, C. M. 39, 92Goebel, N. 34, 94Goepfert, T. J. 68Goff, N. 32Goldberg, S. J. 97Goldinger, D. 30Gold, J. R. 38Goldman, E. A. 84Gómez, B. 96Gómez, J. M. 98Gómez, M. 79, 91Gómez, M. M. 91Gómez-Tellado, L. 96Gomez-Vallejo, A. 54Gong, G. 83Goni, M. A. 30Gonsalves, L. C. 65Gonzalez, J. E. 66Gonzalez, J. O. 68González-Lagoa, J. G. 62González-López, J. O. 46González-Marrero, R. L. 69Gonzalez-Ortiz, V. 60Gonzalez, R. 82Gooding, R. A. 42Goodman, A. M. 69Goodman, J. 61Goodson, A. 57Goodwin, D. S. 84Goodwin, J. D. 99Goransson, P. 93Gorbunov, M. Y. 32Gosnell, K. 88Gosselin, M. 84Goto, D. 93Got, P. 45Gould, W. 46, 56, 63Gould, W. A. 56Gould, W. W. 46Gountanis, S. 52Gourvil, P. 74Govoni, J. 77Goyet, C. 94Graber, A. 70Grabowski, J. H. 71Gradinger, R. 74Gradoville, M. R. 44Graeber, D. 69Graff, J. R. 55Graham, E. R. 82Graham, J. L. 86Graham, J. M. 51Graham, L. E. 51Graham, W. M. 33, 52, 73
ASLOMeeting Program
107
Graneli, W. 33, 64Granholm, A. 46Grant, J. 38Grant, S. R. 72Grantz, E. 32, 93Grantz, E. M. 93Grassle, J. P. 58Gratton, Y. 68Gravenor, M. B. 99Gray, J. L. 47Grebmeier, J. M. 67Green, D. 43Greene, J. 46Greene, R. M. 53Greene, S. 43Greenfield, D. 57, 99Greenfield, D. I. 57Greengrove, C. 44, 54Greengrove, C. L. 54Green, S. R. 82Green, V. 61Greenwood, N. 44Gree-Ruiz, C. 71Grefe, I. 96Gregg, T. M. 55Gregg, W. W. 61Gregori , G. 94Gregory-Eaves, I. 80, 92Gregory, T. 81Gregusova, M. 41Gresswell, B. 82Gribsholt, B. 93Griffies, S. M. 43Griffith, J. F. 36Griffiths , F. B. 84Griggs, N. D. 65Grimm, N. B. 39Grim, S. L. 55Groleau, A. 39, 63, 85Groman, R. C. 79, 82Gronquist, D. J. 60Gronseth, A. D. 81Grosch, C. E. 98Grosjean, P. 99Gros, O. 45Grossart, H. P. 76Gross, B. 85Gross, J. A. 82Großkopf, T. 44, 54Grote, J. 52, 77Grottoli, A. G. 30, 42, 49, 53, 88Grover, J. 33Grover, J. P. 33Gruber, N. 61Gruber, R. K. 92Grundle, D. S. 90Gualtero-Leal, D. 92GUARINI, J. M. 98Gücker, B. 47, 66, 69Gudasz, C. 64Gudmundsson, K. 76Gueguen, C. 41Guelzow, N. 48Guerrero-Díaz, C. 82Gueta, R. 31Guidi, L. 49Guieu, C. 96
Guieu, C. C. 96Guild, L. 53Guilini, K. 61Guillemette, F. 97Guillerme, O. 85Guinasso, N. 34, 63, 88Guinasso, N. L. 34, 88Guiselin, N. 94Guizien, K. 60, 71GUIZIEN, K. 98GULECAL, Y. 57Gundersen, K. 46Gunderson , T. 86Guo, X. 36Gurgisz, C. 42Gustafson, A. B. 32Gustafsson, B. 46, 93Gustafsson, B. G. 93GUSTAVE DIT DUFLO, S. 45Gutierrez, B. 65Gutowska, M. A. 76Gyory, J. 82
HHaase, K. B. 96Haberyan, K. A. 51, 80Haddock, G. D. 51Haddock, S. H. 73Hadley, K. R. 47Hagenson, N. L. 87Hagy, J. D. 53Haidvogel, D. 36, 55Haidvogel, D. B. 36Haig, H. A. 80Hairston, Jr., N. G. 37Hakkinen, S. 76Hale, M. S. 91Hale, R. 39Hales, B. 83, 100Hall, E. 65Hall, J. M. 30Hallock, P. 71, 95Hall, P. 56Halpin, P. 37Halsey, K. H. 77Haltuch, M. A. 43Hamada Takaharu, . 80Hambridge, S. 52Hambright, K. D. 64Hamdan, L. K. 30Hamilton, S. K. 33Hamisi, M. 52Hammerschmidt, C. 68, 88Hammerschmidt, C. R. 68, 88Hammond, J. 49, 61Hammond, J. D. 49Hampton, S. E. 32, 77Ham, R. 75HAND, S. C. 57Haneberg, W. C. 73Hanke, A. 81Hannigan, R. E. 39, 57Hansard, S. P. 67Hansel, C. M. 67Hansell, D. A. 93, 95, 96, 97
Hansen, A. M. 41Hansen, A. T. 50Hansen, B. W. 48Hansen, M. 87Hanson, A. 81, 92Hanson, A. M. 92Hanson, P. C. 34Hansson, L. A. 47, 48Hantzsche, F. 69Harding, J. 34Hardison, A. K. 54Hardman-Mountford, N. 61, 62Hare, J. A. 43, 84Hare, M. P. 99Harke, M. J. 72Harkness, J. S. 88Harley, C. D. 42Harmelin-Vivien, M. 69Harper, D. M. 92Harriet Alexander, H. 72Harris, L. A. 35, 39, 40, 53Harrison, J. A. 50Hartmann, J. 56, 95Hartman, W. H. 91Hart, M. W. 42Hart, T. 82Hartwich, M. 55Harvell, C. D. 36, 37Harvey, E. L. 75Harvey, J. B. 73, 99Haselton, A. R. 65Hassett, B. A. 39Hastings, M. G. 96Hatcher, P. G. 31Hatcher, S. M. 55Hatje, V. 36, 40Hatton, A. 100Hauck, J. 76Haug, G. 67Haupt, F. 48, 70Hauruseu, D. 97Hauser, L. 38, 56, 75Hauser, L. J. 38, 56Hauss, B. I. 84Haustein, M. D. 39Hawley, S. M. 100Hayami Yuichi, . 80Hayashi, K. 61Hayden, N. 33, 46Hayden, N. J. 33Hayes, N. M. 33Hayes-Pontius , E. M. 41Hayes-Pontius, E. M. 30Hay, M. E. 37Hayn, M. 62Hays, G. C. 99Heal, K. R. 52Hearne, L. 46Heathcote, A. J. 33Hedgecock, D. 55Heerhartz, S. M. 69Heidelberg, J. F. 75Heil, C. 32, 46, 48, 86Heil, C. A. 32, 46, 86Heimburger, A. 96Hein, C. L. 98Heinith, B. 61
Heino, M. 72Heiss, E. M. 91Heldal, M. 72Held, I. M. 66Helie, J. F. 64Heller, M. 54Helmle, K. P. 31Helmut Hillebrand, H. 69Helmy, T. 36, 55Heltne, J. 56Hembre, L. K. 57Hench, J. L. 60Hendee, J. C. 66Henderson, N. D. 39, 49Henderson, S. M. 50Hendriks, I. E. 60Hendy, E. 94Hennessey, J. 46Hennige, S. 52Henrichs, D. W. 38Henry, K. M. 40Henry, L. V. 55Henschke, N. 73Hensen, C. 46, 47He, R. 34Herfort, L. 34, 38Herfort, L. M. 34Herlan, J. 95Herman, P. M. 93Hermes, A. L. 54Hernandez-Ayon, J. M. 51Hernández-Becerril, D. U. 45Hernandez-Delgado, E. 80, 83, 95Hernández-Delgado, E. 71Hernandez-Delgado, E. A. 80, 95Hernandez, F. J. 33Hernandez, I. 50Hernandez-Pacheco, R. 95Hernandez, W. 62Hernández, W. 71HERNANDO-MORALES, V. 96Herndl, G. J. 82, 97Hernes, P. J. 31, 73Heron, S. F. 83, 94Herrera, A. 79Herrera, J. L. 91Herrera-Montes , M. I. 63Herrera-Montes, M. I. 46, 56Herrington, t. o. 46Hershberger, P. K. 37Hertler, H. 67, 78Herzfeld, M. 34Hessen, D. O. 39, 90Hetland, R. 34, 62Hetland, R. D. 62Hettinger, A. 47Hewitt, N. 33Hewson, I. 37, 38, 49, 64He, Z. 91Hickman, G. J. 50Hicks, R. E. 50Hidalgo, M. 72HIDALGO, M. 72Hietanen, S. 46Hietanen/Susanna, S. 32Highsmith, R. 37Hilbish, T. J. 35
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
108
Hill, C. 95Hillebrand, H. 32, 38, 48, 94, 98HIllebrand, H. 77Hillebrand, H. L. 32Hillenbrand, C. D. 76Hill, L. S. 64, 85Hill, P. 61, 62Hill, P. G. 62HIll, T. M. 47Hilton, E. J. 58Hilton, J. A. 75Hinder, S. L. 99Hines, A. 59Hinson, K. I. 30Hipsey, M. R. 98Hirst, M. B. 35Hitchcock, G. L. 86Hitchcock, J. N. 33Hjerne, O. 98Hladik, C. M. 59Hoagland, P. 30Hobbie, S. 39Hochberg, E. J. 66Hoda, A. 62Hodgson, J. R. 89Hodin, J. 41Hoecker-Martinez, M. S. 52Hoffman, A. R. 80Hoffman, J. C. 72Hofmann, E. 36, 55Hofmann, E. E. 36Ho, G. E. 32Hogle, S. L. 67Hogue, C. 55Hohner, A. K. 85Holbrook, N. J. 90Holbrook, S. 40, 42, 58Holbrook, S. J. 40, 42Holcomb, M. 45Holden, D. 30Holding, J. 74Holding, J. M. 74Holladay, B. A. 58Holladay, S. 75Hollander, D. 45Holland, , N. D. 57Hollowed, A. B. 43Holmes, E. E. 77Holmes, R. M. 63Holtappels, M. 47, 59, 68Hondorp, D. 93Hondzo, M. 50Hönisch, B. 31Hood, R. 34, 43, 69Hood, R. R. 34, 43, 69Hooker, S. B. 75Höök, T. O. 93Hoover, K. M. 42Ho, P. C. 89Hopkins, A. 50Hopkins, F. J. 62Hopkinson, B. 75Hoppema, M. 76Horn, S. P. 80Horodysky, A. Z. 30, 81Hoskins, D. 30, 44Hoskins, D. L. 44
Hosoi, M. 84Hossler, K. 69Ho, T. 67, 88Hotaling, L. A. 41Houde, E. 35, 93Houde, E. D. 35Houliez Emilie, E. 70Hovdenes, J. 56Hoving, H. J. 53Howard, J. 65Howarth, R. W. 62Howlett, E. 34, 46Hozbor, C. 45Hrouzek, P. 35Hsieh, C. 58, 73, 89, 99Hsieh, C. H. 89, 99Hsing, P. Y. 37Huang, H. 62Huang, W. 44Hubbard, R. 71Hubbard, R. K. 71Hübener, T. 60Hu, C. 53, 59Hudson, C. 61Hudson, E. M. 74Hudson, J. M. 72Huebert, K. B. 35Huebner, E. 57Huebner, J. D. 57Huening , A. 76Huerta-Diaz, M. A. 35, 51, 53Huey, T. M. 49Hughen, K. 42, 99Hughen, K. A. 42Hughes, M. P. 67Hull, D. K. 80Humbert, J. F. 39Humborg, C. 63, 85, 98Hunt, C. 79, 91Hunt, C. W. 91Hunter, E. 54Hunter, K. A. 67, 88Hunter, K. S. 37, 40Hunter, S. 67Huntington, B. 95Huotari, J. 64Huot, D. A. 83Hutchins, D. A. 76, 88Hutchinson-Delgado, Y. M. 83Hutchinson, L. 61Hutchinson, Y. 65Hutter, V. 86Huttunen, J. T. 64Hyatt, C. V. 92Hyatt, M. 38Hyde, K. 44, 75, 84Hyde, K. J. 84Hylander, S. 48HYPOX Team 68
IIbánhez, J. S. 71Ibisanmi, E. B. 67Ibrahim, A. 85Ichim-Moreno, N. 99
Idrisi, N. 46Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D. 31, 43IGLESIAS-RODRIGUEZ, M. D. 62Ihsan, Y. N. 47Iken, K. 58, 74Ilikchyan, I. N. 64Ingalls, A. E. 73Ingram, T. H. 42Inoue, T. 88Irwin, A. J. 92, 94Ishee, E. R. 80Ishikawa, K. 50Ishikawa, T. 50Islam, M. S. 84Ithier-Guzman, W. 65Ito Yuji, . 80Iturriaga, R. 40Ivey, G. N. 34Ivey, J. E. 46Izaguirre, I. 56Izuhara, Y. 84
JJackman, A. P. 73Jackson, A. 63Jackson, K. J. 30Jacob, J. 43Jacob, M. 90Jacobs, J. 43, 61Jacobs, J. M. 43Jacobs, M. J. 31Jacobs, P. 76Jaffe, R. 89Jakobsen, H. H. 37Jakubas, D. 77Janech, M. G. 100Jannasch, H. 79, 90, 100Jannasch, H. W. 79, 90Jannasch, J. W. 90Janssen, F. 68Janssen, Felix, F. 93Jarvie, H. P. 41, 91, 92Javidpour, J. 73Jaward, F. M. 71Jaykus, L. A. 78Jayne, E. A. 96Jean-Louis, P. 45Jeans, J. A. 86Jearld, Jr., A. 65Jeffrey, W. 91Jeffrey, W. H. 91Jenkins, B. 45, 64, 67, 72Jenkins, B. D. 45, 64, 67Jenkins, W. J. 90Jennings, L. L. 88Jenny, J. P. 43, 92Jensen, M. 47, 61Jensen, M. M. 47Jensen, S. 99Jeon, S. J. 57Jeon, S. O. 35Jerde, C. L. 60Jeremiason, J. D. 82Jernigan, L. M. 92Jessen, Gerdhard , G. 93
Jezequel, D. 39JEZEQUEL, D. 41Jiang, H. 48Jiang, L. Q. 100Jiang, M. 67Jiang, S. 30, 92Jiang, Y. 32, 83Jiao, N. 85, 97Jiao /Nianzhi, N. Z. 85Jiao, N. Z. 85Jilbert, T. 30, 46Jilbert/Tom, J. 32Jin, D. 30Jing, H. 38Jochens, A. 46, 63Jochens, A. E. 46Joe Salisbury, . 91Johengen, T. H. 33John, D. E. 86John L. Harris, J. 58Johns, D. G. 77Johnson, A. 30, 49, 65, 71, 81Johnson, A. K. 30, 49, 81Johnson, B. S. 73Johnson, H. 63Johnson, J. M. 95Johnson, K. S. 79, 90, 100Johnson, M. 31, 40, 52, 73, 81Johnson, M. D. 31, 52Johnson, M. K. 40Johnson, M. S. 73Johnson, S. 82Johnson, T. B. 60Johnson, W. R. 36Johnston, T. A. 73John, U. 32John Wilkin, J. W. 48Joiner, D. 65Jokela, A. 60Jokela, J. 37Jolley , D. F. 41Jolliff, J. 44Jolliff, J. K. 44JONCA, J. 61Jones, B. 31, 81Jones, B. M. 31Jones, C. M. 98Jones, D. O. 63, 74Jones, E. 34Jones, E. M. 34Jones, S. J. 35Jonsson, P. R. 81Jordan, G. 36Jordan, K. R. 57Jordan, T. 32, 60Jordan, T. E. 60Jørgensen, B. B. 60, 93Jørgensen, L. 97Jorge R. Ortiz Zayas, J. O. 55José Ángel Gálvez, J. A. 84Jost, G. 77Journey, C. A. 86Joux, F. 91Joye, S. 37, 40, 44, 45Joye, S. B. 37, 40, 45Joyner, J. 36Joyner, J. L. 36
ASLOMeeting Program
109
Juanes, F. 72Juengling, S. 56Juhl, A. 39, 96Juhl, A. R. 96Jumars, P. A. 31, 69Juniper, S. K. 71, 90Junker, K. 79Juranek, L. W. 87Jürgens, K. 35, 77Jury, M. R. 67Justic, D. 62, 68Jutfelt, F. 43Juutinen, S. 64
KKading, T. 35, 88Kading, T. J. 88Kadison, E. K. 66Kadko, D. C. 31Kahng, S. E. 51, 66, 79Kahru, M. 59, 75Kaiser, J. 90Kalaci, O. 60Kalinin, A. 98Kalvelage, T. 61Kamenos, N. A. 90, 100Kamykowski, D. 90Kana, T. M. 75Kane, C. 66Kane, D. 65, 92Kane, D. D. 65, 92Kankaala, P. 64Kanopsic, J. 34Karl, D. M. 44, 90, 100Karl, S. A. 63Karlsen, Ø. 58Karlsson, J. 64, 98Karlsson, M. 93Karltun, E. 63Karnauskas, K. 82Karnauskas, M. 94Karnovsky , N. 77Karp-Boss, L. 31, 69Karsten, U. 60Karvonen, A. 37Kashian, D. 33, 50, 89Kashian, D. R. 33, 89Katano Toshiya, . 80Katherine Binford Turner , K. B. 41Katsev, S. 59, 82Kattner, G. 85, 97Katz, L. A. 38Katz, S. L. 77Kaufmann, R. S. 57Kaul, R. B. 92Kautza, A. 44Kazanci, C. 75Keafer, B. A. 34Kearney, K. A. 43Kearns, C. M. 37Keats, K. 84, 91Keats, K. F. 91Keener, P. 42Keil, R. G. 73Keith, D. J. 59
Kelble, C. R. 63Keller, K. 63Kellerman, A. 80Kelley, C. A. 35Kelly, M. D. 60Kemp, P. F. 45, 64Kemp, W. M. 46, 59, 68Kendall, D. L. 33Kendall, M. S. 46Kenna, T. 52, 61, 68Kenna, T. C. 61, 68Kerherve, P. 59Kerkering, H. A. 63Kerouel, R. 50Ketover, R. 83, 95Khalili, M. I. 63Khalil, K. 50Khan, A. L. 85Kieber, D. J. 77, 100Kieber, R. J. 44, 45, 54Kiene, R. P. 77, 84, 100Kilbourne, K. H. 52Kilduff, C. 87Killberg-Thoreson, L. M. 33, 48Kilroy, K. 75Kimes, N. E. 36Kim, H. C. 76Kimmance, S. A. 62King, J. 39Kingsbury, K. V. 80Kingsbury , M. 80Kinlan, B. P. 46Kinney, J. W. 83Kinsey, J. 37, 71Kiørboe, T. 37Kirchman, D. L. 55, 81Kirkey, W. 41, 84Kirkham, A. 92Kirkpatrick, B. A. 65Kirkpatrick, G. 52, 64Kirkpatrick, G. J. 64Kisand, V. 97Kistner, M. 59Kite-Powell, H. L. 87Kitidis, V. 61Klages, M. 90Klar, J. 68Klausmeier, C. A. 45, 48, 82, 94Klein, A. M. 30Klein , N. J. 86Klein, N. J. 88Kleinz, S. 73Kleypas, J. A. 94Klinck, J. 36, 55Klinck, J. M. 36Kline , D. I. 95Kline, D. I. 42, 95Klingensmith, I. 52Kling , G. W. 98Klug, J. L. 42Knapp, A. N. 44Kneeland, J. 42Kneeland, J. M. 42Knight, R. R. 86Knoll, L. B. 39Knudsen, H. 85Knutson, T. R. 66
Kobayashi, T. 34Koblizek, M. 35, 97Koch, B. 85, 97Koch, B. P. 85, 97Koch, C. 32, 40, 81Koch, C. R. 40Koch, R. W. 49Ko, D. 44, 53Ko, D. S. 44Koepfler, E. T. 39, 47Koester, J. A. 30, 45Koeve, W. 76Koff, T. 53Köhler, B. 91Kolber, Z. 38Kolesar, S. 80, 93Kolka, R. K. 82Kollie, S. 39Kolok, A. S. 47Kolpin, D. W. 47Komada, T. 31Kononets, M. 56Konotchick, T. 61Konovalov, S. 90Kooijman, S. A. 35Koop-Jakobsen, K. 59Koops, M. A. 50, 60Kordas, R. L. 43Koren, L. M. 97Koretsky, C. M. 85Kornilovs, G. 98Kortelainen, P. 64Korth, F. 32, 54Korth/Frederike, F. 32Körtzinger, A. 62Kosaki, R. 51, 63, 66Kosaki, R. K. 63, 66Kothawala, D. 63, 91Kotta, J. 58Kovtun, A. 58Kozik, C. R. 57Kraberg, A. C. 94Kragh, T. 97Kramer, J. W. 91, 92Krause-Jensen, D. 51Krause, J. W. 76, 90Kremer, C. T. 45, 82Kress, E. 64Kress, N. 63Kress, W. 38Kriegman , D. 95Kriegman, D. 42, 95Krishna Prasad Mathukumalli,
B. 43Kristofco, L. 82Kritzberg, E. S. 33Kroeker, K. J. 43Krogman, A. M. 39Krom, M. D. 41Krost, P. 69Krüger, A. 47Krüger, S. 56Krusche, A. V. 73Kubanek, J. 32, 37, 52, 53Kudela, R. 61, 75Kuehl, S. A. 36Kuhn, G. 76
Kuhnz, L. A. 57Kujawinski, E. B. 77Kulakova, A. N. 72Kulakov, L. A. 72Kulis, D. 38Kullas, T. 68KUO, J. 99Kurihara, H. 87Kurtz, A. 30Kuschnir, Y. 67Kustka, A. B. 32Kutovaya, O. A. 56, 70Kutser, T. 59Kuypers, M. 47, 61Kuypers, M. M. 47Kvale, K. F. 76Kwak, T. J. 36Kwasniewski , S. 74Kwasniewski, S. 77Kwityn, C. J. 32Kyrpides, N. 75
LLaanbroek, H. J. 72LaBarre, B. A. 37Labay, B. J. 66Laber, C. 52, 82Laber, C. P. 82Labiadh, M. 96Labrenz, M. 77Lachkar, Z. 61Laclau, J. P. 85Ladah, L. B. 61, 98Ladner, S. 44Ladner, S. D. 44Lado-Insua, T. 83Laffon, S. 58Lago-Leston, A. 64, 74Laig, R. 80Laird, K. R. 80Laita , P. A. 91Lajuenesse, T. C. 42Lake, B. A. 51Lakowitz, T. 37Lamberson, P. J. 73Lamborg, C. 68, 88Lamborg, C. H. 68, 88Lamers, J. 47Lami, A. 75Lamond, M. E. 39Lam, P. 47Lampitt, R. S. 94Lance, V. 82Landis Susanne, H. 36Land, M. 61, 75Landolfi, A. 54Landry, C. 85Landry, M. R. 75, 79, 94Lane, J. 61Lanerolle, L. W. 34, 43Langdon, C. 31Langerhuus, A. T. 60Langlois, R. J. 54Langston, R. 66Lang, T. 53
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
110
Lanier, A. 46Lantz-Andersson, A. 41Lantz, C. A. 51, 79Lapierre, J. F. 63, 64, 84Lara, E. 74Lara, M. 60Largier, J. L. 33Larimer, F. 75Larkum, J. A. 47Larmola, T. 64LaRoche, J. 44, 54, 96Larsen, A. 47Larsen, M. 60Larsen, S. 39Larson, L. A. 45Larson, R. A. 30, 71Lars Rahm, L. 33Laspoumaderes, C. 48Lassaline, A. 65Latasa, M. 51Lathrop, R. C. 80Latour, R. J. 39Latz, M. I. 62Lauerwald, R. 95Laurion , I. 80Laurion, I. 49Lavelle, K. A. 40Lavik, G. 47, 61Lavin, M. F. 61, 98Lavrentyev, P. J. 84Lawrence, C. 79, 81Lawrence, C. M. 79Lawrence, M. 34Lawrenz, E. 64Laws, E. A. 72Lawson, T. 64, 76Laza-Martinez, A. 64Lazaro, P. R. 36Leakey, R. 41Leandre, M. Y. 81LeAnn Whitney, L. 72Learman, D. R. 67Leavitt, P. R. 32, 33, 43, 44, 51,
63, 80Leblond, N. 96Lebrato, M. 31, 43, 73, 74Lechtenfeld, O. J. 85, 97Leck, C. 96Ledley, T. S. 65Lee, A. 51, 96Lee, A. M. 96Lee, C. 35, 57, 79, 87Lee, C. K. 35Lee, C. M. 57Lee, D. 67Lee, K. 76, 84Lee, K. E. 84Lee, P. A. 87, 100LEE, P. O. 56Lee, R. W. 44Lee, T. A. 82Lefébure, R. 83Lefebvre, S. 31, 44, 48, 60Lefebvre, S. C. 31Lefebvre Sebastien, S. 70Lefort, S. 68Legendre, L. 94
Leggett, W. C. 73, 98Leguet, J. 59Leguet, J. B. 59Lehmann, M. F. 66Lehman, P. W. 99Lehmpfuhl, V. 38Lehodey, P. 43Lehrter, J. C. 53Lehto, N. J. 60Leichter, J. J. 61Lema, K. A. 99Le Moigne, F. A. 41, 81Lenes, J. M. 57Lennon, J. T. 77Lenz, M. 55Leong, J. C. 63LEON SOON, S. G. 60Leon Zayas, R. I. 50LeQuere, C. 77Lescaze, M. M. 65Leslin, C. 35Lessard-Pilon, S. 37Letelier, R. M. 44, 47, 54Letovsky, E. 39Letscher, R. T. 95Leuze, M. R. 38Levasseur, M. 84Levas, S. J. 42, 53Levin, D. 34Levine, J. F. 78Levin, L. A. 43Levin, S. A. 43Levitan, O. 76Levy, J. L. 41Lewinsky, I. 74Lewis, J. R. 49Lewis, Jr., W. M. 56Liao, W. 32Li, B. 34, 88, 90Libera, K. 38Li, C. 36, 77Lichtschlag, A. 47, 68Lichtschlag, Anna, A. 93Liefer, J. 33, 45Liefer, J. D. 33Lievana, A. 61Li, J. 53, 59, 69, 82, 83Li, L. 85Liles, G. 65Lilly, L. A. 67Lilyestrom, C. G. 36Lima, F. P. 35, 68Lima, R. F. 83Lima, R. M. 86Lima, V. N. 83Lincoln, S. A. 61Lin, C. Y. 100Lindegren, M. 98Lindell, D. 38Lind, O. T. 70Lindquist, N. 60Lindsey, J. 46Lindström , E. 98Linhoff, B. S. 95Link, J. S. 43Linn, L. J. 52Lin, P. 41
Lin, T. 67, 95Lin, T. H. 95Lin, W. 58Lin, X. 40Lionard, M. 86Lipcius, R. N. 40Lipp, E. K. 36Li, Q. 85Lirman, D. 33, 95Lisi, P. J. 34Liskow, I. 32, 54Liss, A. M. 86Litchman, E. 45, 48, 82, 94Litchman, E. G. 48Liu, C. 100Liu, G. 53, 83, 94Liu, H. 38, 72, 88LIU, H. 38Liu, H. B. 72Liu, J. 40Liu/Jingwen, J. W. 85Liu, K. 93Liu, X. 87Liu, Y. 55Liu, Z. 40Liv Detrick, . 65Li, W. K. 45, 64Li, X. N. 79, 90Li, Y. 69Li, Z. 38, 56Lizon Fabrice, F. 70Ljungberg, P. 77Ljunggren, L. 77, 98Llauger, L. 30Llope, M. 98Lloyd, M. C. 48Loadman, N. L. 57Lodge, D. M. 60Loebl, M. 30Loeder, M. 94Loeffler, S. 50Logan, C. 82, 94Logan, C. A. 82Logares, R. 52Loh, A. N. 83, 95Lohrenz, S. E. 95Loick-Wilde, N. 54Loisel, H. 74Lomas, D. A. 72Lomas, M. 41, 67, 72, 79, 86, 90Lomas, M. W.
41, 67, 72, 79, 86, 90Lombard, F. 37Lomstein , B. A. 60Lomstein, B. A. 47, 93Longenecker, K. 66Longenecker, K. R. 66Long, M. H. 42Longnecker, K. 77Long, S. E. 88Long, W. 34, 35, 43Lonsdale, D. 60Lopez Bellido, J. 64, 93Lopez, J. E. 34López, J. M. 79Lopez, O. 30, 88Lopez, O. L. 88
Lopez-Veneroni, D. 58Loreau, M. 34Lorenzoni, L. 90Lorrian, A. 76Losno, R. 96Lothrop, R. 61Lott, III, D. E. 90Loucaides, S. 61, 62Louhi, K. R. 37Lovejoy, C. 64, 84, 86Lovejoy Connie, . 54Lovell, C. R. 60Lovvorn, J. R. 67, 74Low, B. S. 73Lowe, R. J. 31, 34Lowery, M. S. 57Lowes, C. I. 92Lowes, S. 41Lowrance, R. 71Lowrance, R. R. 71Lozier, M. S. 90Lucas, C. 73Lucas, M. 66, 86Lucas, M. Q. 66Lucassen, M. 76Lucey, N. 87Lucio, M. 97Ludsin, S. A. 35, 93Luetkecosmann, S. 47Luettich, R. 34, 36Luettich, R. A. 36Lugo, A. E. 31Lukas, M. 38, 56Luna, G. M. 55, 91Lunden, J. J. 31, 55Lundin, E. 64Lunetta, R. 59Luquire, C. M. 54Luria, C. M. 45Luther III, G. W. 52Luther, III, G. W. 69Lutz, B. D. 56Luz, B. 90Lyon, B. R. 100Lyons, M. M. 37
MMacDonald, D. 69MacDonald, I. 58Macduff, S. D. 30Macey , A. I. 76Macey, A. I. 67Machado-Silva, F. 83MacIntyre, H. L. 33, 64, 98MacIsaac, H. J. 50, 60Mackenzie, F. T. 31Mackey, K. R. 67MacLeod, N. 99Macy, A. 82Madin, L. 69Madsen, K. 46Maenner-Jones, S. 31Magalhães-Fraga, S. A. 36Magalhães, W. F. 40Magelnicki, M. A. 93
ASLOMeeting Program
111
Mahaffey, C. 72Maharaj, A. M. 90Mahon, A. R. 60Mahowald, N. 96Maier, H. R. 69Majchrowski, R. 57, 79Mak Saito, M. A. 72Maldonado, J. 62Maldonado-Uribe, F. 79Malfatti, F. 97Malzahn, A. 69Mandrak, N. E. 50Maneja, R. 100Mangangu, A. 31Manganini, S. J. 37Mangubhai, S. 42Manley, S. L. 100Mannino, A. 44, 75, 84Mann, J. 88Manno, C. 42, 87Manrique-Hernández, H. 82Manríquez, V. 95Mansot , J. L. 45Manzano-Sarabia, M. 75Maontagna, P. 31Marambio, M. 73Maranda, L. 57, 82Marañón, E. 96MARA, P. 84Marbà, N. 55Marcano, M. 83Marchand, E. A. 47Marchetti, A. 38Marchi, A. 43, 53, 76Marcinko, C. L. 62MARCINKO, C. L. 62Marco-Noales, E. 55Marcus, H. 45Margvelashvili, N. 34Margvelshvili, N. 34Marhaver, K. L. 99María Morales-Pineda, M. 84Marie, D. 74Marine, R. 38Marin III, R. 45Marinovic, B. 91Marin, R. 99Mari, X. 97Markager, S. 51, 85, 97Markager , S. S. 33Marks, K. 94Marotta, H. 86Marra, J. 82, 91Marra, J. F. 82Marrasé, C. 97Marr, K. 99Marsay, C. M. 94Marshall, H. G. 57, 69Marshall, L. 71Martens, C. S. 60Martikainen, P. J. 64Martin, A. P. 62, 94Martin Bras, M. P. 62Martin-Creuzburg, D. 37, 38, 56Martin, D. 46Martinez-Colon, M. 71Martinez, G. 30, 92
Martínez, G. A. 53Martínez-García, S. 93, 96Martínez Gustavo, A. 53Martínez, I. 79Martinez, J. A. 31Martinez Martinez, J. 30Martinez-Perez, C. 31MARTINEZ-RIVERA, E. 57Martinez-Vincente, V. 32Martin, G. 58Martinó-Cardona, D. M. 36Martino, E. J. 35, 95Martin, P. 76Martz, T. R. 100Marvasi, M. 35Marzin, C. G. 66Ma, S. 80Mas, E. 71Más, E. G. 71Mason , C. M. 83Mason, D. 80, 93Mason , D. M. 60Mason, D. M. 93Mason, R. P. 88Masque, P. 41Masqué, P. 51, 68Massana, R. 56Masura, J. E. 44, 54Matear, R. J. 76Mathisen, P. 89Mathukumalli, B. K. 34Matrai, P. A. 96Matsui, G. Y. 60Matsui, Y. 49Matsumoto, G. I. 65, 69Matthiessen, B. 40Matthijs Vos, . 69Maurer, D. 99Mavroidis, S. M. 65Maxcy, J. 65Ma, Y. 86Mayer, , I. 58Mayer, L. M. 44Maynard, M. 50Mayo, M. 44Mayorga, E. 46, 73MAZZILLO, F. 99McCabe, D. J. 30, 39, 41, 49, 65McCallister, S. L. 97McCammon, M. E. 46McCarthy, D. 75McCarthy, M. J. 40, 47McCauley, L. A. 38McClain, C. 76McClellan, D. A. 52McClelland, J. W. 63McClintock, J. B. 100McConnell, M. C. 52McCorkle, D. C. 76McCormick, M. I. 43McCoy, C. 33McCoy, S. 76McCranie, M. B. 57McCulloch, M. 31McCutchan, Jr., J. H. 56McDaniel, L. D. 45McDonald, A. J. 39
McDowell, W. H. 31, 36, 73, 83McElarney, Y. 43McEwen, R. S. 99McFall, G. 66McField, M. D. 94McGeachy, C. T. 80McGenity, T. 100McGillicuddy, Jr., D. J. 34McGillis, W. R. 91, 96McGinley, M. 42McGinley, M. P. 42McGinnis, D. F. 46McGlynn, B. 98McGrath, J. W. 72McInnes, A. S. 32, 83McIntyre, P. B. 34McKay, J. F. 31McKay, R. M. 65, 70, 85, 92McKee, D. 63McKinley, G. A. 59, 63, 90McKnight, D. M. 34, 85, 87McLaughlin, K. 72McLellan, S. 52MCLELLAN, S. 56McLenon, A. L. 87McMahon, G. 39McMahon, P. M. 47McManus, G. B. 32, 38, 60McManus, M. A. 36, 66McMinn, A. 84McNeil, B. 31, 76, 79McNeil, B. I. 31, 79McParland, E. L. 100McSweeney, J. 52Mead, R. N. 44, 45, 54, 86Meager, , J. J. 58Measures, C. 67Medina, M. 42, 45, 95Medina-Muñiz, J. L. 80Medlin, L. K. 75Medova, H. 35Medrinal Emmanuelle, E. 54Meerhoff, E. 50Mege, P. C. 50Megonial , P. J. 97Mehnert, G. 75Meier, S. 94Meile, C. 66Meissner, K. 76Melack, J. M. 73Meléndez, J. 50Melendez, M. 51Meler, J. 79MELIN, F. 74Melissa Mercier, M. 72Mellendorf, M. 39Melzner, F. 43, 76Mémery, L. 50Menden-Deuer, S. 55, 75, 79, 81Mendez, F. 47Menge, B. A. 100Menking, K. I. 39Menza, C. 46MENZE, M. A. 57Mercado, A. 68Mercado-Irizarry, A. 46Mercier, M. 67, 72
Mercier, M. L. 72Merckx, R. 66, 83Mérette, M. R. 39Mériaux, X. 74Merten, W. B. 67Meseck, S. L. 69, 72, 100Messié, M. 74, 91Messing, C. 55Métivier, F. 85Metsamaa, L. 59Metzger, K. 46Metzger, R. C. 45Metzl, N. 76Meunier, C. 69MEYER-DOMBARD, D. 57Meyers, M. K. 36Meysman, F. 59, 66, 83, 99Michaelis, W. 100Michalak, A. M. 62, 93Michaud, E. D. 60Michaud, S. 84Michelutti, N. 92Micklem, G. 99Middaugh, N. 90Middelboe, M. 97Middelburg , J. J. 93Middelburg, J. J. 59, 61Middleton, J. K. 49Mienert, J. 71MIHALOPOULOS, N. 84Miki, T. 58, 89Miklas, J. 32Miklesh, D. 59, 82Miklesh, D. M. 82Mikulski, C. 99Miller, A. 45Miller, N. M. 88Miller, P. 41Miller, T. 67Mills, H. J. 45, 93Mills, M. M. 75Mills, S. W. 50Milutinovic, S. 75Mincer, T. 88, 99Mincer, T. J. 88Mincks Hardy, S. L. 58Mingkwan, P. 62Minkin, Jr., S. C. 86MIQUEL, J. C. 41Mishra, D. 59Mitarai, S. 87Mitchell, B. G. 42, 75, 95Mitchell, C. L. 62Mitraki, C. 69Mitrovic, S. M. 33, 34Mladkova, Z. 51Mlcouskova, J. 97Moberg, E. A. 99Moberg, , O. 58Mock, T. 31, 38Modenutti, B. 48, 58, 69Modenutti, B. E. 48, 58Moellendorf, S. M. 66Moens, T. 59, 61Mohr, W. 44, 54Moisander, P. H. 44, 86Moksnes, P. O. 81
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
112
Moles, M. D. 73Molina, M. 51, 67Moline, M. A. 62Molinero, J. C. 72, 74Møller, L. F. 57Möllmann, C. 98Mölzner, J. 37Montes, E. 90Montes-Herrera, E. 90Montgomery, A. 65Montluco, D. 69Montoya, J. 37, 40Montoya, J. P. 40Montserrat , F. 93Moore, A. 34Moore, C. 54, 62, 64, 67, 68, 76,
87Moore, C. M. 54, 64, 67, 68, 76,
87Moore, E. 30Moore, J. K. 44, 96Moore, L. R. 76Moore, W. S. 37Moor, H. 40Moors, A. J. 88Moorthi, S. D. 32, 77, 98Moosdorf, N. 95Mopper, K. 31Moraes, P. C. 54Morales, A. M. 77Morales Núñez, A. G. 52Moran, D. M. 67Moran, M. A. 77, 87Moran, S. B. 41Moran, X. A. 90Morata, N. 85, 87Mordy, C. W. 88Morel, F. M. 86Morell, J. 46, 68, 79, 91Morell, J. M. 91Morey, S. L. 58, 68Morgan, E. J. 40, 91Morgan, J. A. 83, 94Morgan-Smith, D. 35Moriarty, V. 42Morita, M. 87Moritsch, M. M. 52MORITZ, C. 98Morovic, M. 72Morris, E. P. 60, 86Morris, J. T. 39Morrison, C. L. 37Morrison, J. R. 46, 84Morrison, W. 32, 68Morrison, W. M. 32Morris, P. J. 36, 81Morris, R. M. 41, 76Morse, J. W. 45, 93Mörth, C. M. 63Mörth, M. 85Mortimer, R. J. 41Morton, S. 98Morzaria-Luna, H. N. 54Mosby, A. F. 81Moshary, F. 85Moss, A. 65, 69, 73Moss, A. G. 65, 69, 73
Mosseri, J. 54Moss, J. A. 36Motard-Côté, J. 84Mouchka, M. E. 37Mouland, R. 45Moulton, D. 52Moulton, T. P. 36, 83Moulton, V. 31, 38Mount, S. J. 65Mouw, C. B. 59Mou, X. 87Moxon, S. 38Moyer, R. P. 30, 31Mucci, A. 68Mudoh, M. 82Muir, D. 60Mulholland, M. R. 44, 48, 76, 87Mulholland, P. J. 56Muller-Karger, F. 52, 53, 79, 90Muller-Karger, F. E. 90Müller-Karulis, B. 93, 98Muller, M. T. 57Müller-Navarra, D. C. 47Mullineaux, L. S. 50Mullins, R. L. 42, 63, 88Munch, S. 35, 72, 73Munch, S. B. 35, 72, 73Munday, P. L. 43, 76Muniz, P. 50Munson, K. M. 88Murasko, S. 32, 45Murphy, M. E. 30Murray, L. 42Murrell, M. C. 53Murtugudde, R. 34, 35, 43Murty, S. 42Murty, V. S. 91Murua, H. 72Musasko, S. 46Muscielewics, S. 31Mwamba, V. 31Mydlarz, L. D. 36, 41, 42Myers, I. 39Myers, T. L. 53Mylnikov, A. P. 35Myrick, M. L. 64, 85
NNAGAHAMA, Y. 78, 86, 88Nagata, T. 81NAGATA, Toshi, T. 94Nakajima, T. 50Nakamura, K. 71Nakamura, M. 87NAKANO, K. 88Nakazawa, T. 73Napoleon, C. 48, 51Napoli, N. 46Narciso, L. 43Narvaez, D. A. 55Nausch, M. 76Navarro, M. 50Nazario, J. 62Neal, B. P. 42, 95Neal, C. 92
Neale, P. J. 75, 82, 97Neal, J. W. 48Needoba, J. 32, 34, 40, 81Needoba, J. A. 32, 34Negrón, G. 50Nehrke, G. 76Neisch , M. 33Nejstgaard, J. C. 75Nelles, A. M. 94Nelson, C. E. 77Nelson, H. 99Nelson, N. B. 97Nelson, R. K. 37Nelson, W. C. 75Nemec, J. A. 81Nemec, K. H. 81Nemergut, D. 34Nemeth, M. 65, 66, 98Nemeth, M. I. 66, 98Nemeth, R. S. 66Nesius, K. K. 57Neubauer, S. C. 39Neuberger-Cywiak, L. 61, 80Neuer, S. 41, 81Neve, R. 36Newell, S. E. 40, 47Newton, J. 46, 93Ngoc, L. 54Ng, S. M. 98Ng, T. F. 37Nguluwe, B. S. 49Nguyen, D. 52Nicholson, D. P. 90Nidzgorski, D. 39Nielsdottir, M. C. 87Nielsen, H. D. 47Nielsen, S. L. 33, 47Nierenberg, K. 65Niesen, M. E. 53Nieto-Cid, M. 96Niggemann, J. 47, 60Nightingale, P. 61Nigro, O. D. 36Niiranen, S. 98Nilakantan, S. 30Nilsen, M. 43Nilsson, G. 43Nilsson, P. A. 77Nim, C. 83, 94Nim, C. J. 94NISHIMURA , O. 78NISHIMURA, O. 86, 88Nishonov, B. 47Nitsche, F. 52Nixdorf, B. 75Nixon, S. W. 45Noble, A. E. 68Noble, R. T. 36, 55Noffke, A. 46Nogueira, M. G. 88Noh, J. H. 57NOMURA , M. 78NOMURA, M. 86Norbis, W. 81Norf, H. 45Norman, E. J. 39, 43North, E. W. 99
Nöthig, E. M. 90Novak, M. G. 75, 84Novoveská, L. 98Nowlin, W. H. 66, 69, 87Noyes, T. 31Nozais, C. 89Nudi, A. H. 71Null, K. 50Nunes-Nesi, A. 31Nunez, E. 58Nuñez, J. 62Nuttle, W. 63NYADJRO, E. S. 91Nyambe, I. 66Nylund, G. M. 37
OOates, R. H. 33Obelcz, J. 44, 52Obelcz, J. B. 44Obenour, D. 62, 93Obenour, D. R. 62Oberg, C. 94Obernesterer, I. 96Obolensky, G. 96O’Brien, K. 33Ocasio-Torres, M. E. 86Ochiai, M. 86O’Connell, C. A. 56O’Corry-Crowe, G. 57Oda/Hirotaka , O. 56O’Dea, L. 49O’Donnell, J. P. 59Ogawa, H. 81OGAWA, Hiroshi, H. 94Ogburn, M. B. 95Ogston, A. S. 69Öhlund, G. 98Ojala, A. 57, 64, 93Ojala, A. K. 57, 64Ojo, T. 41, 84O’Keefe, J. 60Okereke, J. 36Okimura, K. M. 31Okuda, C. M. 93Olafsson, J. 76Olariaga, A. 74Olesik, J. W. 88Olivé, I. 50Oliveira, A. F. 83Oliveira, V. 86Oliver, J. A. 87Oliver, J. D. 55Olivieri, K. 62Olsen, A. 76Olsen, E. M. 72Olson, R. J. 38, 64Olson, W. 33Olsson, D. 81Olsson, J. 98Olu, K. 71OMAR, A. 76O’Mullan, G. D. 39, 96O’Neil, J. 32, 48, 57O’Neil, J. M. 32
ASLOMeeting Program
113
Oppo, D. 67Orazio, C. 80O’Reilly, C. M. 39, 65O’Reilly, J. E. 84Orellana, M. 51, 96Orellana, M. V. 96Orihel, D. M. 33Orive, E. 64Orphan, V. J. 44Orpin, A. 36Orrico, C. M. 62Orsi, W. 35Ortega-Retuerta, E. 91Ortiz-Carrión, B. 56Ortíz , J. 85Ortiz-Rosa, S. 46, 56, 63, 88Ortiz, V. 52Ortiz-Zayas, J. 56, 61Ortmann, A. C. 45, 46Ortner, P. B. 62Orvain, F. 44, 60Osborn, K. J. 57Oscar Scholfield, O. S. 48Oschlies, A. 54, 74, 76Osma, N. 79Ossolinski, J. 42Ossolinski, J. E. 42Ostrom, N. E. 40Oswald, L. 77Otero, E. 45, 67Otero-Morales, E. 62, 71Otero, X. L. 35Otten, T. G. 92Ottesen, E. A. 45Oviatt, C. A. 93Owen, L. A. 73Owens, H. 98Owens, M. S. 60Oxborough, K. 64Ozaki, L. S. 45
PPacala, S. 67Pace, M. L. 63Packard, T. 79, 91Packard, T. T. 91Packman, A. I. 34Padilla-Gamino, J. L. 95Padilla-Gamiño , J. L. 66Padillo-Gamino, J. 61PAENG, J. 85Paerl, H. 33, 36, 83, 92Paerl, H. W. 33, 36, 92Paerl, R. W. 38Paffenhöfer, G. A. 61Pagach, J. 44Pagan, F. E. 65Pahlow, M. 74Paige, C. 36Painter, S. C. 62PAINTER, S. C. 62Pait, A. 71Pajunen, H. 64Pakhomova, S. 46Pakhomov, E. 73
Palenik, B. 38, 67, 86Palmer-Felgate, E. J. 41Palmer, M. R. 72Pal, S. 72Palter, J. B. 90Pan, T. 47Pan, X. 75Paolini, G. 39, 63Papaspyrou, S. 50, 86Paranhos, R. 45Parcasio, C. A. 67Pargett, D. 99Paris, C. B. 36Park, A. 36Parker, A. 43, 53, 64, 76Parker, A. E. 43, 64, 76Parker, B. A. 83, 94Parker, C. 52Parker, E. R. 44Parker, M. 38, 44, 53Park, K. 33Parmar, R. 67Parra-Lozano, J. P. 80Parrish, C. C. 47Parrish, F. A. 65, 66Parry, H. 100Parslow, J. 34Parveen, S. 82Passow, U. 37, 40, 76Passy, S. I. 92Pastor, L. 59Pasulka, A. L. 79Patchen, R. C. 34Paterson, A. M. 47, 49, 92Patoine, A. 51Patricio, A. R. 50Patsavas, M. 87Patten, B. C. 75Paul A. del Giorgio, P. A. 64Paul, C. 32, 77Paul, J. H. 45, 86Paul, J. T. 97Paulsen, I. T. 67Paul, V. J. 37, 56Pauly, D. 73Pavel, C. A. 61Pavia, H. 37Paytan, A. 67, 72, 81Pazó, M. J. 96Pearson, G. A. 64, 74Pecchiar, I. 42Peck, K. E. 33Peck, M. A. 79Pedersen, T. M. 33Pedler, B. E. 79Pegau, S. 40Peierls, B. L. 33Peixoto, R. 86Pelletier, L. 64Pellizari, V. H. 54Peltomaa, E. T. 57Pendleton, D. E. 77Pennington, J. T. 91Péquin, B. 86Peralta, G. 60Peressutti, S. 45Perez, A. I. 44
Perez-Alegria, L. R. 30Pérez-Alegria, L. R. 92Perez-Huerta, A. 79Perez, K. 72Pérez, L. 82Perez-Llorens, J. L. 60Perez-Mayorga, D. M. 61Pérez-Muñuzuri, V. 96Pérez-Pérez, N. M. 82Pérez-Rodríguez, I. M. 38Pérez, V. 91Perfectti , F. 98Perga, M. E. 43, 92Per Hall, P. 33Peri, F. 44, 66Pernthaler, J. 76Perretti, C. T. 73Perroud, A. 41Perrtree, R. 52Pershing, A. J. 94Persson, A. 77Persson, J. 64Petcovic, H. L. 85Peters, A. 96Peters, J. 69Peterson, B. 63, 98, 100Peterson, B. J. 63Peterson, R. 33Peterson, T. 34, 61Peterson, T. D. 34Petersson, E. 41Petrecca, R. F. 58Petroy, S. 84Pfannkuche, O. 46Pfirman, S. 61Pfister, C. A. 76Phan, S. 79Philip Nightingale, P. 61Philipp, E. 76Philippon, X. 50Philipps, M. M. 72Phillips, P. 30Phillips, V. J. 33, 43Piatkowski, U. 100Piccini, C. 45Picheral, M. 99Pick, F. R. 39Piecuch, C. 38Piehler, M. 33, 34, 52, 71Piehler, M. F. 33, 34, 71Piepho, M. 38, 55Pierson, J. 35, 57, 80, 93Pierson, J. J. 57, 93Pigna, . 50Pignol, C. 43, 92Pihl, L. 77Piil, K. 47Pilditch, C. A. 35Pimentel, M. 43Pineda, J. 82Piñeiro, C. 72Pinnel, N. 59Piola, A. R. 59Pirhalla, D. E. 66Pirtle-Levy, R. 50, 89Pitt, K. A. 73, 74, 84Pittman, S. J. 66
Pizarro, H. N. 57Place, A. 49, 82Place, A. R. 82Placencia, J. 95Plant, J. 90, 100Plant, J. N. 90Plessinger, W. 81Plikss, M. 98Podlaska, A. 79Podowski, E. L. 37Pohl, C. 56, 81Pohlmann, T. 79Pohnert, G. 32, 77, 87Pointer, B. H. 59Polerecky, L. 60Polikarpov, I. G. 59Polson, S. W. 38POMEROY, C. 99Pondaven, P. 96Ponzevera, E. 68Poole, J. 35Popp, B. N. 60, 66Porteous, L. R. 73Porter, J. W. 36Portier, E. F. 30Posch, T. 76Post, A. 67Postel, J. R. 44Poteat, M. D. 32Potter, J. D. 36, 83Potter, M. F. 90Potter, T. 71Potter, T. L. 71Potts, G. 46, 56, 63Potts, G. S. 56Poulson-Ellestad, K. L. 32, 53Poulton, N. 87, 99Poulton, N. J. 99Pouvreau, S. 99Powell, B. S. 36Powell, E. 36, 55Powell, E. N. 36Power, M. J. 94Powers, S. P. 33Prairie, Y. 64Prairie, Y. T. 64Prasad, M. 35, 43Prasad, M. B. 43Prater, C. 39, 43Pratt, N. 76Pratt, P. D. 84Prechtl, M. 52Prestes, L. 86Preston, C. 45, 99Preston, C. M. 45Price, H. L. 41Pride, L. 68Primeau, F. W. 49Prince, E. 53, 77Prince, E. K. 53Pringle, C. M. 73Priscu, J. C. 79Pritchard, A. 75, 82Pritchard, A. L. 82Prospero, J. M. 96Prosser, K. 33Provoost, P. 59
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
114
Prugue, R. 52Pruski, A. M. 49Przekop, K. M. 35PSARRA, S. 84Ptacnik, R. 48, 94, 98Pugh, R. S. 88Puigcorbé, V. 51, 68Pulido-Villena, E. 96Puotinen, M. L. 42, 95Purce, D. 49Purdie, D. A. 62, 79Purkis, S. J. 63Puusepp, L. 53Py, F. 99Pyle, R. 66Pyle, R. L. 66Pyrtle, A. 49
QQuattrini, A. M. 37Quay, P. D. 90Quigg, A. 32, 44, 48, 77, 83Quigg, A. S. 32, 48, 83Quiles-Perez, G. 53Quinn, J. P. 72Quinn, N. P. 71Quiñones, M. 46, 56, 63Quiñones, M. V. 56Quinones-Rivera, Z. J. 63, 68Quintero, H. 67Quintero, P. 54, 65Quintero, P. O. 54
RRabalais, N. 32, 68Rabalais, N. N. 32, 68Rabouille, C. 50, 59Ragan, M. A. 81Raghukumar, K. 34Ragni, M. 76Ragueneau, O. 50Rahm, L. 53Raimbault, V. 48, 51Raimonet, M. 50Raisbeck, M. F. 67Rajan, K. 99Ralston, E. 30Ramers, D. L. 34Ramette, A. 90Ramey, P. 58Ramirez, A. 30, 36, 73Ramírez, A. 36Ramirez, L. A. 36Ramírez, L. A. 36Ramírez, M. 57Ramirez-Reinat, E. L. 75Ramirez-Toro, G. 78Ramírez-Toro, G. 67Ramirez, W. R. 49Ram, J. 50RAMONDI, P. T. 99Ramos, A. A. 74
Ramos Álvarez, A. 63Ramos, J. C. 30Ramos-Scharrón, C. E. 71Ramsey, M. 52Randall, R. 52Ranhofer, M. 81Rantakari, M. 64Rasser, M. 46Rasser, M. K. 46Rassoulzadegan, F. 97Rassweiler, A. 58Rastorgueff, P. 69Rauenzahn, J. A. 94Rauenzahn, J. L. 83Rauschenberg, C. D. 96Ravasi, T. 99Ray, J. L. 47Raymond, P. A. 30, 63, 96, 100Raymundo, L. 36Recart, W. 30Record, N. R. 94Reddy, C. M. 37Reece, K. S. 36Reed, A. J. 50Reed, D. 46, 58Reed, D. C. 58Reeder, W. H. 35Reed, J. K. 55Reese, B. K. 45, 93Regaudie-de-Gioux, A. 74, 91Reichart, G. J. 30Reid, R. A. 47Reigstad, M. 74Reilly, R. 98Reimer, J. J. 35Reinthaler, T. 97Reisenbichler, K. R. 93Relles, N. J. 63Rellinger, A. N. 100Rellstab, C. 37Renagi, O. 35Renaud, P. G. 63Ren, L. 32Renshaw, M. A. 38Renwick, W. H. 39Repeta, D. J. 52Repolho, T. 43Reul, N. 79, 91REUL, N. 91REUL Nicolas, n. r. 91Reuscher, M. G. 40Reusch, T. B. 73Reverdin, G. 76Reynolds, J. C. 88Reynolds, J. E. 57Reyss, J. L. 43REZENDE, C. 85Rheuban, J. E. 42Rhodes, M. 43, 61Rhodriguez, G. 47Rhyne, A. L. 83Ricardo Torres, R. J. 61Ricciardi, L. 65Ricci, J. 38Rice, E. J. 44Richardi, D. 68Richard, P. 69
Richards, A. 49Richardson, C. J. 39RICHARDSON, C. J. 91Richardson, K. 82Richardson, R. W. 32Richardson, T. L. 64, 84, 85Richardson, V. 92Richards, R. P. 91, 92Richey, J. E. 73Richier, S. 76Rich, J. J. 49, 50Richlen, M. L. 38Richmond, R. H. 30, 31Richoux, N. B. 77Rickaby, R. E. 90Rickborn, A. 81Ridame, C. 96Ridd, P. V. 35Ridgwell, A. 76, 94Ridgwell, A. J. 76Riedel, B. 93Riegl, B. M. 63Rignanese, D. R. 38Rii, Y. 52Rijkenberg, M. 68Riley, J. S. 41Rincón-Díaz , M. P. 46Rincón-Díaz, M. P. 56, 63Rios-Velazquez, C. 35, 54, 65Riou, P. 48Rippen, A. D. 77Riseman, S. F. 87Riser, S. C. 79, 90Rissik, D. 73Ritchie, K. B. 45Ritson-Williams, R. 37Rivara, K. 69Rivera, M. A. 63RIVERO-CALLE, S. 66Rivière, B. 49Rivkin, R. 45, 46, 84, 91, 94Rivkin, R. B. 45, 46, 91, 94Rizwi, F. 34Roache-Johnson, K. H. 76Roa Pascuali, L. 54Robbins, I. 62Robbins, L. L. 87Roberge, J. J. 49Robert, K. 71Robert Morris , R. M. 41Roberts, B. J. 56, 68Roberts, H. H. 55Roberts, Q. 32, 48, 75Roberts, Q. N. 32, 48Roberts, S. 36, 37, 52Roberts, S. B. 36, 37Robidart, J. 99Robinson, C. 61, 62, 90Robinson, K. 73Robinson, K. L. 73Robison, B. H. 53, 69, 93Rocap, G. 31, 75Rocha, C. 71Rocker, D. 97Rodibaugh, K. J. 66, 87Rodriguez-Brito, B. 99Rodriguez, C. 40
Rodríguez, C. J. 82Rodríguez-Díaz, M. 81Rodriguez, F. 65Rodriguez-Gallego, L. 50Rodriguez, G. E. 58Rodríguez, J. 35, 56, 62Rodriguez, J. M. 71Rodríguez, J. M. 56Rodriguez-Matos, L. 83Roegner, C. G. 34Roe, K. L. 67Roelke, D. L. 33Roemmich, D. 68Roesler, C. S. 75Roettgers, R. 97Roger, P. 61Roh, S. M. 57Rohwer, F. L. 99Rojas , M. 65Rojas, M. L. 98Roldan, C. 82Rolland, D. 49Rollwagen-Bollens, G. C. 82Roman, B. 99Roman, G. 81Roman, M. 35, 57, 80, 93Roman, M. R. 57Romanou, A. 61Romera-Castillo, C. 97Romero, A. 71, 82Romero, B. F. 93Romero, I. C. 86Romero, S. I. 59Rooker, J. R. 44Rooker, K. 40Rooney, J. J. 65, 66Rooney-Varga, J. N. 65Rosales, S. M. 89Rosa, R. 43Rosario, F. O. 85Rosas, K. 36, 49Rosas, K. G. 36Rosati, T. C. 50Rose, J. M. 44Rose, K. 43, 62, 93Rose, K. A. 43, 93Rose, L. 36Roseneau, D. G. 88Rosen, M. R. 47Rosenstiel, P. 73Ross, C. 37Ross, D. S. 80Rossi, F. 93Rossignol, P. E. 31Roth Olivia, . 36Roulet, N. 64Rousso, I. 31Rouxel, O. J. 68Rouyer, T. 72ROUYER, T. 72Rowbotham, K. L. 85ROWLANDS, G. P. 63Rowley, D. 55Roy, A. S. 73Rozet, N. K. 55Ruacho, A. 49Rubim, M. A. 86
ASLOMeeting Program
115
Rucinski, D. 93Rücker, J. 75Ruddick, K. 74Rude, J. E. 30Rudolf , J. 97Rudstam, L. G. 89Rueda, D. 79, 90Rueda, D. T. 90Rueda, M. 94Rueda Roa, D. T. 81Ruef, W. M. 93Ruf, R. 73Ruhland, K. M. 92Ruiz, C. P. 50Ruiz-Diaz, C. P. 83Ruiz-Fernandez, A. C. 80Ruiz, H. 65, 66Ruiz, H. J. 66Ruiz, L. 47Ruiz-Moreno, D. 36Ruiz, T. M. 95Rullkoetter, J. 97Rumrill, S. 46Russell, A. D. 47Russo, R. S. 96Rutherford , E. S. 60Rutherford, E. S. 73Ruttenberg, K. C. 66, 72, 80, 81Ruzicka, R. 36Ryan, D. E. 86Ryan , J. 52Ryan, J. 47, 99Ryan, J. N. 47Ryan, J. P. 99Ryan, K. A. 30Ryan-Keogh, T. J. 87Rykaczewski, R. R. 43Rynearson, T.
38, 60, 67, 72, 75, 89Rynearson, T. A.
38, 60, 67, 75, 89
SSabat, A. 81, 83, 86, 95Sabat, A. M. 86, 95Sabater-Clavell, J. 66Sabine, C. L. 31Sable, S. 80Saborido-Rey, F. 72Saburova, M. A. 59Sadler, D. 54Saeck, E. 33, 52Saeck, E. A. 33Sà, E. L. 74Saez, L. 50Sailley, S. 90Saito, L. 47Saito, M. 67, 68, 72, 87Saito, M. A. 67, 68Sakagami, T. 75Sakamoto, C. M. 79, 90Sakowski, E. 38Sala, M. M. 74Salazar-Coria, L. 58Salcher, M. M. 76
Salinas, S. 72Salisbury, J. 79, 91, 96Salisbury, J. E. 91Salisbury, S. K. 54Säljö, R. 41Salk, K. 81SALOMAO, M. 85Saluta, G. G. 40Salvitti, L. R. 64Samendra Prasad Sherchan, S. 67Samodurov, A. S. 90Sanchez-Cabeza, J. A. 80Sanchez, C. J. 41Sánchez, E. 62Sánchez, J. 82Sánchez Riascos, N. E. 40SanClements, M. D. 87Sandaa, R. A. 47Sander, S. G. 67Sanderson, M. P. 32, 48, 75Sanders, R. 41, 81, 94Sanders, R. J. 41, 81, 94Sandgren, C. D. 57, 60Sand-Jensen, K. 33Sandra Thomas, . 65Sanford, E. 47Santa-Rios, A. 51Santiago, M. 49, 62Santiago- Merced, N. C. 49Santiago, S. 82Santos, C. 30Santos-Flores, C. J. 92Santos, R. 33, 95Santos, R. O. 33Santschi, P. H. 77Sañudo Wilhelmy, S. A. 88Sañudo-Wilhelmy , S. A. 86Sarkodee-Adoo, J. 58Sarmento, H. 97Sarmiento, J. L. 43Sarnelle, O. 92Saros, J. E. 53Sarthou, G. 68, 88, 96Sasse, T. P. 79Sastre, M. 62Sato, C. Y. 83Sauer, M. J. 75Saulnier-Talbot, E. 80Savchuk, O. P. 93Savichtcheva , O. 92Sawyer, T. 81Sayler, G. S. 86Saywell, D. 65Scanes, P. 92Scarratt, M. G. 84Scatena, F. N. 31Scavia, D. 34, 62, 93Schade, F. 53Schade, F. M. 53Schaeffer, B. A. 53, 80Schafer, J. S. 33Schaffler, J. J. 98Schalles, J. F. 59Scharek, R. 51Schärer-Umpierre, M. T. 98Scharfe, M. 94Schartau, M. 94
Schartup, A. 88Schatz, M. 44Scheef, L. P. 77Scherwass, A. 78Scheuerell, M. D. 77Schewe, I. 90Schiaffino, M. R. 56Schieber, B. 75Schindler, D. E. 32, 34, 80schindler, d. w. 33Schindler, D. W. 33Schizas, N. 66, 83, 86, 87, 98Schizas, N. V. 83, 86, 87, 98Schlotz, N. 38Schlueter, M. 71Schmidt, H. 38Schmidt, W. 54, 65Schmidt, W. E. 65Schmitt François, F. 70Schmitt-Kopplin, P. 85, 97Schmitt, R. J. 40, 42Schnetzer, A. 60Schoenberg, R. 56Schoener, D. M. 32Schoepfer, V. A. 56Schoepf, V. 42Schofield, O. 90Scholin, C. 45, 99Scholin, C. A. 45, 99Scholz, F. 46Schoon, P. 61Schopmeyer, S. A. 95Schorp, T. 46Schott, T. 77Schouten, S. 61Schroeder, T. 97Schulz-Boettcher, B. 97Schulz, J. L. 49Schulz, K. L. 89, 94Schumacker, E. 61Schumer, R. 34Schunck, H. 54, 96Schuster, T. 95Schutte, C. A. 45, 52Schwartz, R. 33, 52Schwarzenberger, A. 37, 92Schwehr, K. A. 77Schwierzke-Wade, L. 57Schwing, F. B. 43Schwing, P. T. 30, 71SCLEP, G. 74Scofield, A. L. 71Scotese, K. C. 50Scott, J. T. 32, 33, 49, 92, 93Scott, K. 30, 49, 54, 94Scott, K. M. 54Scott, K. R. 30, 49Scott, S. E. 34Scranton, M. 79, 90Scranton, M. I. 79, 90Seagroves, E. E. 81Seaton, C. M. 34Sebestyen, S. D. 82Sedwick, P. N. 51, 96Seegers, B. 75Seekell, D. A. 63Segui, L. M. 30
Seifert, R. 100Sekula-Wood, E. 61Selander, E. 37Selbie, D. T. 80Sellinger, C. 80, 93Sellin , M. K. 47Semcheski, M. R. 57Seminara, D. N. 59Semmler, C. M. 68Semon, K. 36Send, U. 100Senft, C. 98Senn, D. B. 66Seoane, S. 64Serafy, J. E. 35Serrão, E. A. 64, 74Serret, P. 61, 91, 96Sexton, M. A. 69Shah, M. 38Shama, L. N. 53Shamberger, K. 31Shamberger, K. E. 31Shank, C. 52Shank, G. C. 44Shank, T. 37Shank, T. M. 37Sharif, R. 57Sharon, I. 38Sharpe, S. C. 30Sharp, J. H. 39Sharples, J. 72Sharpley, A. N. 91, 92Shaw, E. C. 31Shaw, T. J. 64, 85Shchekinova, E. 94Shea, D. 36Shein, K. A. 66Shelton, N. L. 52Shema, S. 51, 52, 82Shema, S. D. 51, 82Shepard, A. 93Shepard, M. K. 83Sherlock, R. 69, 93Sherlock, R. E. 93Sherman, C. 65, 66Sherwood, C. R. 62Shi, D. 86Shields, J. D. 36SHIN , W. S. 78SHIN, W. S. 86, 88Shirley, T. C. 40Sholkovitz, E. R. 96Shull, D. H. 88Shyka, T. 46Sieben, K. 77, 98Siegel, D. 61, 74, 97Siegel, D. A. 74, 97Sieg , R. D. 32Sieg, R. D. 52, 53Sieracki, C. K. 99Sieracki, M. 87Sigman, D. M. 41, 96Signorini, S. R. 76Sigtermans, L. H. 81Sikes, E. L. 54Silva-Junior, E. F. 36, 83Silver, M. 98
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
116
SILVER, M. W. 99Silvola, J. 64Simard, M. J. 82Simenstad, C. A. 69Simmons, C. C. 71Simmons, K. 58Simms, J. 44Simon, C. P. 73Simonelli, P. 75Simoniello, C. 63Simon, M. 97Simon Thomas, S. 61Sinclair, G. A. 51Sinclair, J. 46, 81Singh, G. G. 43Sinreich, R. 96Sipler, R. E. 33, 76Siqueiros-Valencia, A. 53Sirenko, B. I. 58Sirois, P. 89Siskidis, J. A. 72Sison-Mangus, M. P. 30, 92Sive, B. C. 96Sivyer, D. S. 44Six, J. 31, 73Six, J. W. 73Skarpa, P. 51Skerratt, J. 34Skirving, W. J. 83Skirving, W. S. 94Skjæraasen, J. E. 58Skjoldal, E. F. 91Skrabal, S. A. 44, 45, 54Slagstad , D. 74Slagstad, D. 74Slasor, L. 40Slaughter, J. 40Sloger, W. 46Slomp, C. 46, 72Slomp/Caroline, C. 32Slomp, C. P. 72Smalley, G. W. 82Small, G. E. 73Smayda, T. J. 75Smiley, N. 87Smith, A. 69Smith, C. 40, 44, 50, 59, 66Smith, C. G. 44Smith, C. M. 66Smith, C. R. 40, 59Smith, D. J. 42, 76Smith, E. A. 34Smith, E. G. 66Smith, E. M. 47Smith, H. J. 87Smith, J. 66, 99Smith, J. E. 99Smith, K. 65Smith, L. M. 93Smith, M. 54, 55, 65, 66, 99Smith, M. C. 54Smith, R. 42Smith, S. L. 34Smith, T. 36, 55, 66Smith, T. B. 36, 66Smith, V. H. 43Smith, W. L. 98
Smoak, J. M. 34, 44Smol, J. P. 47, 92Smyth, A. R. 71Smyth, T. 32, 61Smyth, T. J. 32Smyth, W. 52Snell, H. E. 84Soares, M. 86Soares, M. G. 86Sobarzo, M. 95Sobek, S. 64Sochaczewski, L. 41Soden, B. J. 66Soetaert, K. 50, 59, 61Soffer, N. 55Sogor, A. 30Sohm, J. 44, 72, 75Sohm, J. A. 44, 75Sohrin, Y. 67Soininen, J. 98Soler-Figueroa, B. M. 62Soler-Lopez, L. 66Solo-Gabriele, H. M. 44Solomon, C. M. 49Solórzano, M. 46, 56, 63Solórzano, M. C. 56Solovyev, K. A. 84Soltwedel, T. 90Sommer, S. 46, 47Søndergaard, M. 85, 97Sorek, R. 38Soriano, M. N. 59Sorokina, V. V. 35Sosik, H. M. 64, 99Soto-Feliciano, K. M. 54Sotomayor, D. 30, 71Sotomayor, D. R. 30Sotomayor-Ramirez, D. 71, 92Sotomayor-Ramírez, D. 53Sotomayor-Ramírez David, . 53Soto-Santiago , F. J. 61Southwell, M. 44, 45, 54Southwell, M. S. 54Souza, A. 40Souza, M. S. 48Spackeen, J. L. 54Spalding, H. 65, 66Spalding, H. L. 66Sparwel, M. 73Spatharis, S. 34SPATHARIS , S. 33Speich, S. 68Speight, M. R. 63Spence Cheruvelil, K. 98Spencer, R. G. 31, 63, 73Sperfeld, E. 37, 56Spicer, J. I. 100Spielmeyer, A. 77, 87Spiese, C. E. 100Spitz, Y. H. 34Sponaugle, S. 58Spungin, D. 76Spurgin, J. 77SPYROPOULOU, A. 33Srsen, P. 40Staby,, A. 58Stachowitsch, M. 93
Stadmark, J. 53Stambler, N. 63Stanev, E. 68Stanhope, J. W. 54Stanish, L. 34Stanley, K. A. 40Stanley, M. S. 57Stanley, R. H. 90Stanton, J. 95Starks, E. R. 47Starovoytov, V. 38Statham, P. J. 44, 94Staubwasser, M. 56Stauffer, B. A. 94Stedmon, C. A. 97Steen, A. D. 97Steenbergh, A. K. 72Stefels, J. 62Steffen, M. M. 56Steichen, J. L. 32, 48, 83Steigenberger, S. 68Steinberg, D. 90Steinhoff, T. 62Steinke, M. 100Stemman, L. 96Stemmann, L. 49Stempniewicz , L. 74, 77Stenseth, N. C. 72, 98Stephens, J. 61, 62Stephens, J. A. 62Stephenson Haskins, L. E. 82Stephenson, R. L. 94Sterner, R. W. 39Steve, T. F. 67Steward, G. F. 36Stewart, G. M. 44, 78Stibor, H. 48, 70Stieglitz, T. C. 35Stillman, J. H. 31St. John, M. 69St. John , M. A. 38Stock, C. A. 43Stockdale, A. 41Stockenreiter, M. 48, 70Stocker, R. 67Stoecker, D. 32, 93Stoecker, D. K. 32Stoessel, M. 68Stolkin, R. A. 41Ston-Egiert, J. 57Stora, G. 60Stork, N. 35Stouffer, R. J. 43Stow, C. 80St-Pierre, A. 63, 84Strachan, I. 64Straile, D. 55Strauss, J. 31Streu, P. 96Strickland, B. 50, 80Strickland, B. A. 50Strickland, T. C. 71Striegl, R. G. 63Strom, S. 30, 32Strom, S. L. 32Strong, A. E. 83, 94Strous, M. 81
Struck, U. 47Struck, Ulrich , U. 93Struger, S. 92Stryker, S. A. 68Stuart, J. 38Stuart, R. K. 67Stubbins, A. 31, 73Stumpf, R. P. 34Stumpp, M. 43Sturdivant, S. K. 62Sturm, P. E. 67, 68Suarez-Bosche, N. E. 43Suarez, G. 30Suarez, P. 35Suarez-Velez, E. 54Subramaniam, A. 37, 40, 79, 96Sudduth, E. B. 39Sudhaus, S. 54Sugeno, M. 35Suggett, D. 32, 42, 64, 76, 100Suggett, D. J. 32, 42, 76, 100Sugie, K. 87Sugie/Koji, S. 100Sujata Poudel, s. 58Sukhatme, G. S. 94Sukkestad, K. E. 42Sullivan, D. G. 80Sullivan, M. S. 44Sumida, P. Y. 54Summers, R. S. 85Summons, R. E. 61Sunagawa, S. 45Sundareshwar, P. V. 39Sunday, J. M. 42Sun, J. 69, 72Sun, M. M. 72Sun, S. 87Suryan, R. M. 30Susie Valaitis, . 65Sutherland, K. P. 36Suthers, I. M. 73, 94Sutor, M. 99Sutter, B. 80Sutter, F. C. 63Sutton, A. E. 49Sutton, T. T. 68, 72Suursaar, U. 68Suzuki, K. 87Suzuki/Koji, . 100Svensson, C. J. 77Svensson, J. R. 37Swank, D. R. 73Swanson, R. L. 56Swanstrom, J. A. 64, 85Swarthout, R. F. 96Swarzenski, P. W. 50Swearer, S. E. 98Sweetman, A. K. 74, 84Sweetman, C. J. 72Swift, D. 79, 90Swift, D. D. 79Swinsburg, W. 52Sylvan, J. B. 56Sylvester, F. 60Sylvestre, M. N. 45Szmant, A. M. 87
ASLOMeeting Program
117
TTaban, I. C. 43Tagami, K. 88Taghon, G. L. 58Tagwireyi, P. 44Takabayashi, M. 55Takata, H. 88Takeshita, Y. 100Talmage, S. C. 43Tamara Pease, K. 50Tamooh, F. 66, 83Tamooh, F. L. 83Tamura, M. 38Tanabe/Shinsuke , T. 56Tanaka, T. 91Tandberg, A. H. 43Tang, T. 87Taniguchi, D. A. 79Tani/Yukinori, Y. 56Tank, S. E. 63Tanner, C. A. 43Tapia, F. 61Tappa, E. 81, 90, 98Tappa, E. J. 90Tarran, G. 61, 62Tarrant, A. M. 95Tassin, B. 39Tatiana Rynearson, T. A. 72Tatum, T. 65Taulbee, K. 51Taylor, A. G. 79Taylor, D. 43Taylor, G. 35, 79, 90Taylor, G. T. 35, 79, 90Taylor, K. 49Taylor, P. G. 56Tazaz, A. M. 35Tchernov, D. 66Tedesco, M. A. 44Teece, M. A. 89Teira, E. 93, 96TEIRA, E. 96Teleki, K. 53Tellechea, J. S. 81Tellez-Duarte, M. 53TEMEL, M. 57Temnerud, J. 63Teneva, L. T. 94Tengberg, A. 56, 93Teng, J. 40Teodoru, C. 64Teo, S. 98Terrado Ramon, . 54Teske, A. P. 37Testa, J. M. 46, 68Teupe, M. 46Thaler Mary, . 54Thamatrakoln, K. 32Thibodeau, G. 84Thiele, M. 61Thingstad, T. F. 91Thomas, C. 50, 59, 89Thomas, C. J. 59, 89THOMAS, F. I. 60Thomas Meunier, T. 61Thomas, M. K. 45
Thomas, S. 62, 65THOMAZO, F. 41Thompson, A. 94Thompson, C. 44, 99Thompson, C. M. 99Thompson, F. L. 45Thompson, L. 45Thompson, L. E. 45Thompson, M. 61, 64, 81Thompson, M. E. 61, 81Thompson, P. 34Thompson, R. W. 51Thompson, S. 33, 52Thompson, S. P. 33Thomsen, J. 76Thomson, Z. 75Thorndyke, M. 41, 43Thorndyke, M. S. 43Thoroughgood, C. 46Thorson, M. 50Thorsten Reusch, B. H. 36THOURON, D. 61Thunell, R. 79, 81, 90, 98Thunell, R. C. 79, 90Thyberg, T. 95Thyrhaug, R. 91Thyssen, M. 94Tiahlo , M. 86Tibor, G. 98Tiedemann, R. 50Tilbrook, B. 31Tillmann, U. 32Tilstone, G. 32, 61, 90Tilstone, G. H. 32Tilves, U. 73, 74Timm, K. 81Timothy Smyth, T. 61Tiselius, P. 57Tisnerat-Laborde, N. 59Tissot, P. 63Titelman, J. 57Tobias, C. R. 54Todd, C. D. 72Toft, J. D. 69Toledo-Hernandez, C. 50Toledo-Hernández, C. 83Tomaras, J. 32Tomasello, L. L. 95Tomczak, M. T. 74, 98Tomlinson, M. 34Tomlinson, M. C. 34Toner, B. M. 56Tonizzo, , A. 85Tönnesson, K. 57Toonen, R. J. 63Toor, G. S. 92Töpper, B. 91Torn, K. 58Toro, A. 67Torres-Garcia, L. M. 68Torres, J. J. 53, 55, 74TORRES, J. J. 57Torres-Pratts, H. 83Torres-Pulliza, D. 71Torres, R. 61, 62, 68Toseland, A. 31, 38Toseland, A. E. 38
Tosic, M. 71Toth, G. B. 37Totora, J. 64Touzet, N. 75Tovar-Sanchez, A. 74Townsend, A. R. 56Townsend, D. W. 34Townsend, H. 63Townsend-Small, A. 73Tozzi, S. 38, 76Tran, K. 30, 92Tran, K. N. 30Tran, S. 96Tranvik, L. 63, 64, 91Tranvik, L. J. 63, 64, 91Trapp, J. M. 96Travnickova, J. 51Treibitz, T. 42, 95Tremblay, A. 64Tremblay, J. 84Tremblay, L. 85Treude, T. 46Tripp, H. J. 38, 75Tripp, J. 64Trisha Philips, T. 67Triska, F. J. 73Troccoli, L. 90Trochine, C. 58Trocoli, L. 90Troedsson, C. 75Troost, K. 71Troost, T. 71Trotter, J. 31Trott, L. A. 80Truong, T. 31Tse-Hua Chu, T. 67TSIRTSIS, G. 33Tsugeki/Narumi, N. K. 56Tucker, J. K. 57Tucker, J. M. 45Tulk, S. E. 86Tulonen, T. 64Tung-Yuan Ho, T. 67Tunin-Ley, A. 99Turi, G. 61Turk, D. 91Turk, K. 44Turnbull, L. 39Turner, A. M. 43Turner, K. B. 41Turner, R. E. 32, 68Turnewitsch, R. 81Turrin, M. K. 61Twilley, R. R. 40Twining, B. S. 76Tyrrell, T. 41, 62Tzortziou, M. 97
UUbertini, M. 44Uchida, S. 88Uchimiya, M. 81Ueda/Shingo , U. 56Uhlig, C. 38Ulrich, R. M. 86
Umphres, G. 33Unger, J. 76Unrein, F. 56Urabe/Jotaro , U. 56Urban, N. R. 63Urban-Rich, J. 74, 95Uriarte, M. 96Urrutia, R. 95Ursula Gaedke, . 69Uy, T. C. 59
VVachon, D. 63, 64Vadeboncoeur, Y. 34Vahtmäe, E. 59Vaillancourt, R. D. 82Valaitis, S. 65Valdivieso-Ojeda, J. A. 53Valencia, J. A. 98Valentín Del Río, C. R. 50Valentine, S. 91Valentin, K. 38Valenti , T. 33VALIADI, M. 62Vallina, S. M. 77van Aken, H. 97Van Alstyne, K. L. 52Vanaverbeke, J. 59van Beusekom, J. E. 69VanBlaricom, G. 37Van Colen, C. 93van de Koppel , J. 40Vandemark, D. 79, 91, 96Van den Meersche, K. 66Van Den Meersche , K. 83Van der Gucht , K. 98Van der Ham, J. L. 58van der Heide , T. 40VANDERMARK, D. 91Vander Pol, S. S. 88van der Zee , E. 40van Donk, E. 48Van Dover, C. L. 37van Duren, L. 60, 71van Duren, L. A. 71van Engeland, T. 60van Hees, E. H. 89Van Mooy, B. 42Vanni, M. J. 33, 34, 39van Oevelen, D. 59Van Oevelen, D. 61Vanreusel, A. 61van Tol, H. M. 92Vantrepotte, V. 74Vaque, D. 74Vaqué, D. 74Vaquer-Sunyer, R. 74Vardi, A. 52Varela, R. 35, 79, 90Vargas, C. A. 95Vas Kitidis, V. 61Vasys, V. 63Vaulot , D. 74Vázquez, E. 82Vdacny, P. 35
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
118
Vecchi, G. A. 43, 66Vecchione, M. 68Veeck, D. 49Vega, A. M. 80Vega - Grau, A. M. 50Vega, J. 71Vega-Rodriguez, M. 53Vega Thurber, R. L. 55, 89Vega-Thurber, R. L. 36Velasquez, I. 67Velázquez, A. L. 49Velez, F. J. 49Velez-Zuazo, X. 50Velghe, K. 92Veneziani, M. 34Venn, C. 83Venti, A. M. 31VerBerkmoes, N. C. 38, 56Verity, P. G. 75Vermaire, J. 92Vernet, M. 59, 90Vétion, G. 49Vetriani, C. 38Victoria, I. 56Vidoudez, C. 77Vieitez, V. 96Villa Alfageme, M. 81Villafane, A. 54Villalta, C. 30Villa, M. 41Villar, C. 92Villareal, T. A. 40, 75Villarini, G. 66Villarreal-Chiu, J. F. 72Vincent, W. F. 49, 80, 86Vincx, M. 59Vinebrooke, R. D. 33Violante, . 50Viollier, E. 59Viqueira-Rios, R. V. 68Viso, R. 33Visscher, P. T. 35, 54, 65Vivas-Aguas, L. J. 71Viviani, D. 44, 54Viviani, D. A. 44Vizcaino, M. I. 36Vladamir Bulygin, V. 72Vlahos, P. 69Vocke, R. 88Voelker, B. M. 67Vogt, R. 44, 63Vogt, R. J. 44Vo, J. 86Volkamer, R. 96Volkenborn, N. 37, 60von Blanckenburg, F. 56von Einem, J. 64Von Elert, E. 37, 92von Juterzenka, K. 55von Schiller, D. 69von Wachenfeldt, E. 91Voolstra, C. R. 45, 95, 99Voss, M. 32, 46, 54, 69, 76Voss/Maren, M. 32Vossmeyer, A. 37, 40Vraspir, J. M. 87Vrede, T. 69
Vrijenhoek, R. C. 73, 99
WWabakanghanzi, J. 31Wacker, A. 37, 38, 55, 56Wade, T. 37Waduwawara, S. 65, 73Wagener, A. R. 71Wagener, T. 96Wagner, C. 75, 79, 82Wahle, C. 46Wahle, R. 89Wahl, M. 55Wakeham, S. G. 67Waldmann, C. 71Walker, B. 55Walker, N. 59Walkusz , W. 74Walkusz, W. 77Wallace, D. 44Wallace, R. L. 97Wallmann, K. 46, 47Walne, A. W. 99Walpert, J. N. 88Walsh, B. M. 57Walsh , E. J. 30Walsh, E. J. 30, 97Walsh, J. J. 57Walsh, K. 52Walter, B. 69Walter, J. F. 35Walter, K. 58Walters, C. 93Walters, T. L. 61Walus, B. 52Walz, K. 93, 94Walz, K. C. 94Wammer, K. H. 81Wamulume, J. 66Wang, G. 85Wang, H. 36, 72Wang, L. 62, 68Wang, S. 96Wang, W. 73Wang, X. C. 66Wang, Z. 88Wannicke, N. 60, 76WANNINKHOF, R. 91Ward, B. A. 94Ward, B. B. 40, 41, 45Ward, E. J. 77Ward, J. E. 37Wares, J. 36Warner, M. E. 42, 52, 53, 76Warnken, J. 73Wassmann, P. 74Watanabe, S. 80Waterbury, J. B. 75Waters, M. N. 34Watkins-Brandt, K. 44, 54, 81Watkins-Brandt, K. S. 44, 54Watley, J. R. 49Watson, S. B. 92Wawrik, B. 81Wayne Gardner, S. 50
Waziak, C. 34Weathers, K. C. 96Webb, E. A. 75, 76Webb, M. 82Weber, F. 35Wegner, K. 37, 53, 61Wegner, K. M. 37, 53Wehrli, B. 66Weil, E. 36, 55, 65, 66Weinbauer, M. G. 97Weinberg, I. 100Weisberg, R. H. 57Weiss, A. 56, 95Weissburg, M. J. 81Weisse, T. 35Weitere, M. 45Welch, C. 65, 73Welch, J. B. 50Welle, P. 34Weller, N. 39Wells, M. L. 67Wells, R. S. 57Welsh, R. M. 89Wendling, C. 37, 55Wendling, C. C. 55Wenzel, A. 69Wenzhoefer, F. 59Wenzhöfer, F. 59, 68, 90Wenzhöfer, Frank , F. 93Werdell, P. J. 74Werner, F. E. 43Weslawski, J. M. 74, 77Westerlund, S. 43Western, A. W. 98Westhorpe, D. P. 34West, J. B. 85Westman, W. M. 82Westwood, K. J. 84Wethey, D. S. 35, 60, 68Wetzel, D. L. 57Wetz, M. 83, 95Wetz, M. S. 95Weyhenmeyer, G. A. 63Wey, J. K. 45Whereat, E. B. 64Whiles, M. R. 73Whipple, A. C. 36Whipple, S. J. 75Whitall, D. 71White, A. E. 44, 81White, E. 67Whitehead, R. F. 87White, M. 82White, S. J. 36Whitmire, S. 53Whitmire Stefanie, . 53Whitney,, H. R. 88Whitney, L. P. 67, 72Whitney, M. M. 95Whittaker, K. A. 38Wickel, C. J. 52Wickland, K. P. 63Widdicombe, C. 32, 62Widdicombe, S. 100Widner, B. 52, 87Wiebe, P. H. 82Wiebe, P. W. 79
Wiedenmann, J. 42, 66Wiedner, C. 75Wiegand, M. D. 57, 73Wiener, C. S. 63Wiggert, J. 34, 43Wiggert, J. D. 34, 43Wikfors, G. H. 69, 72, 98, 100Wild-Allen, K. 34Wiley, C. J. 60Wilhelm, F. M. 82Wilhelm, S. W. 38, 56, 86Wilkerson, F. 43, 53, 64, 76Wilkerson, F. P. 43, 64, 76Wilkin, J. 36, 52, 55, 75Wilkin, J. L. 52Willams, E. 49Willems, A. 61Willen, C. 78Williams, C. 39, 71, 75, 77Williams, C. J. 39, 77Williams, C. O. 71Williams, J. 71, 98Williams, J. R. 71Williams, K. 36Williamson, S. J. 38Williamson Whitney, V. 65Williamson Whitney, V. A. 65Williams, R. 71Willis, B. 36, 99Willis, B. L. 99Wilson, A. E. 33, 92Wilson, C. C. 47Wilson, D. 34Wilson, J. 42Wilson, L. 33Wilson, W. H. 30Wiltse, B. 49, 92Wiltse, B. J. 92Wiltshire, K. H. 94Windham, R. 32, 83Winn, C. 51, 79Winn, C. D. 51Winter, A. 67Winters, R. 95Winton, J. R. 37Wisenden, B. D. 83Wissel, B. 47, 63, 68, 94Wisser, D. 79, 91Withers, P. J. 92Woelfel, J. 60Woerner, J. 42Wohl, E. E. 73Woityra, W. C. 85Wojczulanis-Jakubas , K. 77Wolanski, E. 30Wolfe, G. V. 35Wolfe, K. 67Wolff, G. 72Wolf-Gladrow, D. 76Wollenburg, J. 50Wollrab, S. 77Wommack, K. E. 38Wong, D. M. 73Wong, T. 38Wood-Charlson, E. M. 36Woodin, S. A. 35, 60Wood, M. 43
ASLOMeeting Program
119
Wood, R. 35, 43, 95Wood, R. J. 35, 95Woodward, M. 62Wootton, J. T. 76Wray, J. 38Wright, L. D. 34Wright, S. W. 84Wright, V. 46Writer, J. H. 47Wubah, D. A. 49Wurl, O. 72Wurtsbaugh, W. A. 54, 98Wurtzel, O. 38Wuttig, K. 96Wu, Z. 72Wyatt, A. 61Wyatt, L. H. 41Wylezich, C. 35Wynne, T. T. 34
XXenopoulos, M. A. 39, 77Xiao, N. 85Xu, J. 34, 43Xu, Y. 85
YYacobi, Y. Z. 63Yakushev, E. 46, 47Yamauchi, A. 73Yang, G. P. 77Yang, S. 67Yankovsky, A. 68Yankson, K. 49Yates, K. K. 31, 87Yeager, K. M. 85Ye, H. 98Ye, L. 99YEPEZ PINILLOS, V. E. 57yi xu, y. x. 48Yoerger, D. 37, 71
Yoerger, D. R. 37, 71Yoo, M. H. 57York, J. 32Yoshimura, T. 87Yoshimura/Takeshi, . 100Yoshino Kenji, K. 80Yoshioka, P. M. 69Young, A. M. 31, 69Young, B. 68Young, C. R. 73Young, C. W. 66, 80Young, E. 45, 92Young, E. B. 92YOUNG, E. B. 56Young, E. C. 45Young, J. 90Young, J. N. 90Young-Lahiff, C. 95Young, S. 39Young, S. M. 39Yourassowsky, C. 99Ysebaert, T. 93Yu, H. 98Yunker, A. 46Yves T. Prairie, Y. T. 64
ZZACARIAS RIOS, S. Z. 57Zaitsev, H. M. 81Zamora, L. M. 96Zamor, R. M. 64Zaneveld, J. R. 62Zapadka, T. 79Zappa, C. J. 91, 96Zavala Lopez, A. 55Zayas-Santiago, C. C. 40Zayas-Santiago, C. M. 83Zbigniew, Z. S. 76Zeebe, R. E. 76Zehr, J. 34, 38, 44, 64, 75, 86, 94Zehr, J. P.
ASLO 2011 ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting
120
Membership Dues: (Please indicate category.)ASLO membership is based on a calendar year (Jan-Dec) and includes the L&O Bulletin and discounts on meeting registration fees. Members with print or electronic subscriptions receive L&O and L&O: Methods. Members without a subscription will not have access to L&O: Methods. Higher mailing and printing costs have increased fees for print subscriptions.
Regular Member with Subscription to the Journals, Limnology and Oceanography and L&O: Methods.
Printed Version .................................................................................$215.00 Electronic Version Only ......................................................................$85.00 Regular Member without Journal Subscription....................................$60.00
Early Career Professional Member with Subscription to the Journals, Limnology and Oceanography and L&O: Methods. (Non-student members who have received their highest degree within the last 10 years)
Printed Version .................................................................................$130.00 Electronic Version Only ......................................................................$20.00
Student Member with Subscription to the Journals, Limnology and Oceanography and L&O: Methods. (5-year limit for graduate students)
Printed Version .................................................................................$170.00 Electronic Version Only ......................................................................$40.00 Student Member without Journal Subscription....................................$15.00
Emeritus Member with Subscription to the Journals,Limnology and Oceanography and L&O: Methods.
Printed Version .................................................................................$175.00 Electronic Version Only ......................................................................$45.00
Emeritus Member without Journal Subscription .......................... No Charge
NOTE: Subscription to printed version includes access to electronic version. Use your ASLO Member ID Number (P#) to access the electronic version via the ASLO web site.
Society Fund Contributions: Donation to Student Travel Fund ................................. $ (This fund supports student members at ASLO meetings.)
Donation to Endowment Fund .................................... $ (This fund supports awards, special projects, and programs.)
Donation to Education & Outreach Fund .................. $ (Contributors to be recognized in the L&O Bulletin.)
Limnology and Oceanography CD-ROM Offer: L&O Archival CD-ROM set (1956-1998, Volumes 1-43) ......................$150.00
Shipping Charges—North America .................................................$10.00
Shipping Charges—Outside North America ..................................$15.00
Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin:All members receive an electronic subscription.
Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin Printed Version ....No Charge
ASLO Biography Series: Alfred C. Redfield .....................................................................................$20.00 Ramon Margalef .....................................................................................$20.00
Membership Directory:The membership directory is available to members online. To purchase a printed biennial directory, please contact [email protected]
Total Amount Enclosed ......................... $(Total includes dues, contributions, and any special offers)
I DO NOT wish to be included in third-part mailings. Please add me to the mailing list of the ASLO Policy Action Network.
You can also apply online at www.aslo.org!
Demographic Information:Please complete and/or indicate any changes to the following in the space provided below.
Institution/Organization:
Dept/School:
Telephone:
Fax:
E-Mail:
Gender (M/F): Birth Year:
Highest Degree: Year Completed:
Discipline: Enter in order of priority B - Biological O - Optical C - Chemical P - Physical G - Geological
Disciplinary Specialty (Use no more than 30 characters.):
Field: LIM (Limnology) or OCE (Oceanography). Enter primary first if listing both.
Environmental Specialty:Enter no more than four in order of priority. 1 - Lakes/Reservoirs/Ponds 4 - Wetlands 7 - Open Ocean2 - Rivers/Streams 5 - Estuaries 8 - Most or all3 - Great Lakes 6 - Coastal Ocean
Please list recent awards and/or honors received:
Your Information:PMEMBERSHIP ID NUMBER
FIRST NAME MIDDLE INITIAL LAST NAME
ADDRESS LINE 1
ADDRESS LINE 2
ADDRESS LINE 3
ADDRESS LINE 4
CITY STATE ZIP/POST CODE
COUNTRY
Membership Application 2011
Payment Information:
Check enclosed. Make your check payable in US dollars to: ASLO. (Checks must be drawn on a US or Canadian bank.)
Credit card payment:
VISA MasterCard American Express Discover
CARDHOLDER NAME
CARD NUMBER EXP. DATE
SIGNATURE
Send remittance to: ASLO5400 Bosque Blvd., Suite 680 Waco, Texas 76710-4446 USAVoice: 800-929-ASLO or 254-399-9635Fax: 254-776-3767Email: [email protected]
Conference management for the 2011 Aquatic Sciences Meeting is provided by:
sg Meeting & Marketing Services5400 Bosque Boulevard, Suite 680
Waco, Texas [email protected] E-mail
http://www.aslo.org/sanjuan2011 Web800-929-ASLO (Within the U.S., Canada, and the Caribbean), 254-399-9635 (All other countries) Phone
254-776-3767 Fax
ASLO would like to thank and acknowledge the University of Puerto Rico – Mayaguez
for providing the printing of the conference program for this meeting.
Upcoming ASLO Meetings:
2012 Ocean Sciences Meeting (with TOS and AGU)19-24 February 2012
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
2012 Summer Meeting6-13 July 2012
Lake Biwa, Otsu, Japan
2013 Aquatic Sciences Meeting17-22 February 2013
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA