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Isabelle Rombouts and Grégory Beaugrand (Plenary Speaker for S1, Université de Lille, France) Integrative approaches to assess marine ecosystem health [pdf, 3 Mb] |
Michael Foreman, Wendy Callendar, Diane Masson, John Morrison and Isaak Fain ( Plenary Speaker for S2, Institute of Ocean Sciences, Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Canada ) Regional ocean climate model projections and their ecosystem implications for British Columbia [pdf, 8 Mb] |
William T. Peterson, Jay Peterson, Jennifer Fisher, Cheryl Morgan and Brian Burke (Plenary Speaker for S3, Hatfield Marine Science Center, NOAA-Fisheries, USA) Challenges in communicating science and engaging the public — A case study from the northern California Current [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Deborah K. Steinberg (Plenary Speaker for S4, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, USA) Ecosystem comparison of trends in zooplankton community structure and role in biogeochemical cycling [pdf, 9 Mb] |
Mat Collins (Plenary Speaker for S5, University of Exeter, UK) Long term climate change: Projections, commitment and irreversibility [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Elizabeth A. Fulton (Plenary Speaker for S6, CSIRO, Australia) Exactly how resilient are ecosystems? [pdf, 3 Mb] |
Scott Large on behalf of Jason S. Link (Plenary Speaker for S7, NOAA-Fisheries, USA) Solutions for marine ecosystem-based management in a changing climate [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Jake Rice (Plenary Speaker for S8, Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Canada) Adaptation to climate change requires resilience in governance as well as ecosystems [pdf, 1 Mb] |
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CANADA: Robin Brown [pdf, 0.5 Mb]
CHINA: Fangi Qiao [pdf, 4 Mb]
JAPAN: Hiroaki Saito [pdf, 4.5 Mb]
KOREA: Chul Park [pdf, 1 Mb]
RUSSIA: Oleg Katugin [pdf, 12 Mb]
USA: John Stein [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Convenors:
Plenary Speaker: Coastal and offshore marine ecosystems of the North Pacific are impacted by increasing temperature, changing iron supply, harmful algal bloom events, invasive species, hypoxia/eutrophication and ocean acidification. These multiple pressures can act synergistically to change ecosystem structure, function and dynamics in unexpected ways that differ from single pressure responses. It is also likely that pressures and responses will vary geographically. A key objective of the FUTURE program is to identify and characterize these pressures in order to facilitate comparative studies of North Pacific ecosystem responses to multiple stressors and how these systems might change in the future. This session has two primary objectives: 1) to identify key stressors and pressures on North Pacific marine ecosystems, and to compare how these stressors/pressures may differ in importance in different systems and how they may be changing in time; and 2) to identify ecosystem responses to these multiple stressors and pressures, including gaining an understanding of how natural and human perturbations may cascade through ecosystems, and whether there may be amplifiers or buffers which modify the effects of perturbations on marine systems. Papers using conceptual, model-based, observation-based, or experimental-based approaches are welcome, as well as papers which evaluate approaches to linking pressures to ecosystem changes, such as pathways of effects or driver-pressure-state-impact-response models. The overall goal of this session is to obtain an overview of the pressures being experienced by North Pacific marine ecosystems, how these pressures may be hanging with time, variation in these pressures (both singly and in combination) among regions, and the combined effects of pressures, both now and in the future, on the marine ecosystems of the North Pacific. |
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Jameal Samhouri, A.O. Shelton, B. Feist, G. Williams, K. Bartz, M. Sheer and P. Levin How much city is too much city? Diversity and ecosystem functions along an urban gradient in Puget Sound (9358) |
R. Ian Perry, Motomitsu Takahashi, Jameal Samhouri, Chang-Ik Zhang, Rebecca Martone, Jennifer Boldt, Baisong Chen and Stephani Zador Multiple interacting natural pressures and human activities in North Pacific marine ecosystems (9307) [pdf, 0.5 Mb] |
Jennifer Boldt, Ik Kyo Chung, Sachihiko Itoh, Rebecca Martone, Ian Perry, Jameal Samhouri and Naoki Yoshie Development of ecosystem indicators to characterize ecosystem responses to multiple stressors (9302) |
Stephani Zador and Heather Renner Red flags or red herrings revisited: Using ecosystem indicators to track ecosystem status in the Gulf of Alaska (9321) [pdf, 1.5 Mb] |
Cathryn Clarke Murray, Selina Agbayani and Natalie Ban Current and future cumulative effects of human activities on the Northeast Pacific with climate change and industrial development (9306) |
Rebecca Martone, Erin T.H. Crockett, Allison Thompson and Kai M.A. Chan Linking pathways of effects to assess cumulative impacts on ecosystem services: Modeling effects of nutrient run-off on shellfish aquaculture in British Columbia, Canada (9300) (waiting for permission to post) |
Sukgeun Jung Fishing vs. climate change: An example of filefish (Thamnaconus modestus) in the northern East China Sea (9406) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Jeffrey Polovina and Phoebe Woodworth-Jefcoats Projected responses of the central North Pacific subtropical ecosystem to future pressures of fishing and climate change (9297) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Gen Del Raye and Kevin Weng Challenges for peak aerobic metabolism in the future oceans: The effect of multiple climate variables on exercise performance in a model teleost fish (9393) (waiting for permission to post) |
Motomitsu Takahashi, Sachihiko Itoh, Naoki Yoshie, Kazuhiko Mochida, Masakazu Hori, Shigeru Itakura and Mingyuan Zhu Ecosystem responses to anthropogenic activities and natural stressors among inland, shelf and oceanic waters in the western North Pacific (9383) [pdf, 1.5 Mb] |
Nam-Il Won, Min-Gyu Ji, Young-Teck Hur and Jin-Hyeog Park Freshwater input as multiple stressors on coastal ecosystems under a changing ocean: Implication of possible mitigation effect (9413) [pdf, 6Mb] |
Vladimir Kulik Multiplicative effect of SST variation during spawning period and 1 year after on the catches of walleye pollock 5 years later in the waters off the northeastern part of Sakhalin Island (9327) [pdf, 2.5 Mb] |
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Convenors:
Plelnary Speaker:
Invited Speakers: Regional climate models (RCMs) are vital tools for understanding changes in regional climate. They serve as a good starting point for many socio-economic impact and adaptation considerations to climate changes. Despite their limitations, including systematic errors in forcing fields supplied by global climate models, RCMs are the most promising means of providing information on regional climate changes, mainly through their ability to accommodate much higher spatial resolution. This session invites papers addressing RCM efforts including downscaling techniques, assessment of added values of RCMs in comparison with global climate models, identification and evaluation of regional climate changes in the North Pacific Ocean simulated from global climate models, assessment of RCM uncertainty, and coupling of RCMs to ecosystem models. The goal of the session is to assemble and access existing regional climate modeling efforts, providing a platform to discuss limitation and reliability of RCMs. |
Arthur J. Miller, Dian Putrasahan and Hyodae Seo (Invited) Isolating mesoscale coupled ocean-atmosphere interactions in the Kuroshio Extension region (9373) [pdf, 6 Mb] |
Takashi Mochizuki, Masahiro Watanabe and Masahide Kimoto (Invited) Regional information in decadal climate prediction (9354) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Enrique Curchitser, Justin Small, William Large, Kate Hedstrom and Brian Kaufman Downscaling climate simulations for boundary currents (9356) [pdf, 1.5 Mb] |
Fangli Qiao Zhenya Song, Chuanjiang Huang, Changshui Xia and Dejun Dai |
Chan Joo Jang, Chul Min Ko and Chun Yong Jung Climate change projection for the western North Pacific: Dynamical downscaling (9334) [pdf, 4 Mb] |
Angelica Peña, Diane Masson and Michael Foreman A regional biogeochemical climate model for the British Columbia continental shelf (9379) |
Jerome Fiechter, Enrique Curchitser, Christopher Edwards, Fei Chai, Nicole Goebel and Francisco Chavez Impact of horizontal model resolution on air-sea CO2 exchange in the California Current (9293) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Francisco E. Werner, Enrique Curchitser, F. Castruccio, G. Hervieux and C. Stock Downscaled coupled bio-physical projections in the California Current Ecosystem (9357) [pdf, 1.5 Mb] |
Albert J. Hermann, Georgina A. Gibson, Nicholas A. Bond, Enrique Curchitser, Kate Hedstrom, Wei Cheng, Muyin Wang and Phyllis J. Stabeno Multiple realizations of future biophysical states in the Bering Sea (9347) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
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Convenors:
Plelnary Speaker:
Invited Speaker: Communicating scientific findings to the public has never been more important and challenging than in the present era of global climate change unfolding against the backdrop of rapidly accelerating human population growth. Engaging the public in factually based dialogs about environmental change and its impacts on the ecosystems on which we depend is increasingly challenging. The compelling existential nature of the discussion has attracted people of many different professions and cultures who speak a wide variety of mutually unintelligible jargons and many different national languages. As members of the international marine scientific community served by PICES, we are mindful that the first language of most participants is not English and that those from outside our area of specialization do not necessarily share our professional lexicon. FUTURE is remarkable as a marine scientific program that explicitly addresses the area of public education and outreach within the broader scientific context of identifying major sources of uncertainty and impediments to improving the skill of assessments and forecasts, suggesting research areas for priority development, and providing coordination of potential PICES products through the FUTURE Advisory Panel on Status, Outlooks, Forecasts, and Engagement (SOFE). Building on expertise and information in workshop (W2) that precedes the session, this session welcomes papers that address challenges presented by uncertainty in the uptake of forecasts by decision makers within the context of communication challenges presented by the diversity of disciplines and languages necessary to address global climate change. We encourage contributions or case study reports that illustrate effective ways of communicating outlooks/forecasts of climate change impacts to specific audiences/communities. The context of communication challenges presented by the diversity of disciplines and languages necessary to address global climate change established during the session will form the basis for setting priorities in FUTURE products. |
Satoquo Seino (Invited) Multi-sectoral collaboration through coastal policy evolution (9402) (waiting for permission to post) |
Nobuyuki Yagi, Kazumi Wakita, Yuhen Lu and Robert Blasiak Heterogeneities in human utility of marine ecosystem services and behavioral intentions for marine conservation (9404) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Ekaterina P. Kurilova Challenges in communicating science and engaging public in Russia: Large country - different expectations (9408) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Shin-ichi Ito, and Harumi Yamada Oceanographic information needs of set net fishermen in the Pacific coast of northeastern Japan (9400) |
Joseph A. Orsi and Phillip R. Mundy Challenges in communicating uncertainty of production and timing forecasts to salmon fishery managers and the public (9376) [pdf, 7 Mb] |
Eric C. Volk, William D. Templin, Christopher Habicht and Andrew R. Munro Effective engagement of stakeholders in designing and communicating science: The Western Alaska Salmon Stock Identification Program (9394) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Steven J. Barbeaux and Jae Bong Lee Broadening stakeholder involvement in fisheries research through the development of cooperative research initiatives in Korean fisheries (9319) [pdf, 3 Mb] |
Chang-Ik Zhang, Young-Il Seo, Man-Woo Lee, Sang-Chul Yoon, Hee-Joong Kang and Eun-Ji Lee Status of IFRAME as an approach for EAF (9415) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Session 4. Ecosystem status, trends and forecasts
Convenors:
Plenary Speaker:
Marine ecosystems are constantly changing. Therefore, researchers need to develop and to communicate information on ecosystem status, trends, and forecasts to ensure that sound management and policy decisions are made for the benefit of the societies that depend on them. Ecosystem indicators are one way to communicate
such information, but the selection of the most appropriate indicators can prove challenging, especially given increasingly complex array of audiences. It is likely that different indicators will be needed where the scale of ecosystem responses to different stressors must be reconciled with the scale of the perturbation (e.g., coastal versus oceanic). orecast ecosystem change demands good understanding of how multiple stressors affect ecosystem structure and function. A key element of the FUTURE program is the ability to convey to diverse audiences, in |
Sanae Chiba, Sayaka Yasunaka, Tomoko Yoshiki, Hiroya Sugisaki, Sonia Batten and Tadafumi Ichikawa Oceanic currents dynamics and zooplankton diversity in the Kuroshio-Oyashio-Extension (KOE) Region (9324) [pdf, 8 Mb] |
Sonia Batten Lower trophic level ecosystem indicators from CPR data (9296) [pdf, 2.5 Mb] |
Douding Lu and Xinfeng Dai Evolvement of HAB causative species and possible links during the past five decades in Chinese coastal waters (9317) [pdf, 9 Mb] |
Ichiro Imai, Masafumi Natsuike, Keigo Yamamoto, Tetsuya Nishikawa and Satoshi Nagai Long-term trends of red tides by eutrophication and toxic blooms by oligotrophication in the Seto Inland Sea of Japan (9412) [pdf, 7 Mb] |
Jon Brodziak and Marc Mangel Understanding ecosystem productivity and predicting population resilience via steepness (9353) [pdf, 1.5 Mb] |
Haruka Nishikawa, Yoichi Ishikawa, Shiro Nishikawa and Toshiyuki Awaji Possible effects of global warming on the neon flying squid winter-spring cohort (9298) [pdf, 1.5 Mb] |
Yongjun Tian, Xuhui Xie, Kazuhisa Uchikawa, Jürgen Alheit, Jiahua Cheng and Akira Tomosada Regime shifts in the fish assemblages around Japan over the last century and their early warning signals (9352) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Hiroaki Saito Wind off Hawaii and fisheries in Japan: Expected benefit from marine science to society (9378) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Session 5 . Mechanisms of change: Processes behind climate variability in the North Pacific
Convenors:
Plenary Speaker:
Invited Speakers: In recent years, much progress has been made in our understanding of the large-scale physical dynamics of Pacific climate variability and change. New modes of ocean and atmospheric variability over the Pacific have been recognized and shown to influence ecosystem processes. The impact that these modes have on marine biophysical interactions in upwelling systems has also become a research focus under a new collaboration between CLIVAR and IMBER, to which PICES is contributing. Diagnosing the mechanisms underlying the statistical correlations between the physical forcing and the ecosystem response strongly relies on our ability to model and synthesize the processes controlling the variability in the climate system, and unveiling the dominant set of physical controls on marine ecosystem dynamics. This synthesis activity is a core component of FUTURE and involves developing low-order (e.g., low number of dimensions) process-models of the climate system, which reduce the complex processes to their most basic and dominant mechanics. Process-models such as these can be used statistically to provide uncertainty estimates of decadal variability in recent historical climate and ecosystem time series, and to provide improved metrics to test the mechanisms of climate variability and change in IPCC models. This session invites contributions that combine model and observational methods to provide syntheses of the mechanisms controlling North Pacific climate variability, and that show how these improved syntheses enable better diagnosing and predicting of the dynamics of Pacific climate and of the marine ecosystem responses to climate forcing. We also welcome contributions that explore new mechanisms of physical-biological linkages that can only be partially tested with currently available observations, yet provide the theoretical foundation to understand the dynamics of Pacific climate variability and its impact on marine populations, and develop new observational programs. During the session there will be discussion time where the contributors will be asked to participate in developing a synthesis paper on North Pacific climate variability as part of the PICES WG27 activities (http://wg27.pices.int). |
James A. Johnstone and Nathan J. Mantua (Invited) Causes and consequences of NE Pacific climate trends and variations from 1900-2012 (9367) [pdf, 5 Mb] |
Matthew Newman, Michael A. Alexander and Dimitry Smirnov The Pacific Decadal Oscillation, Revisited (9396) [pdf, 7 Mb] |
Bo Qiu, Shuiming Chen, Niklas Schneider and Bunmei Taguchi A coupled decadal prediction of the Kuroshio Extension system (9381) [pdf, 2.5 Mb] |
Niklas Schneider and Bunmei Taguchi The role of spiciness in North Pacific decadal variability (9386) [pdf, 9 Mb] |
Andrey Krovnin, Boris Kotenev and George Moury Role of North Atlantic climatic variability in recent North Pacific warming (9299) [pdf, 2.5 Mb] |
Shoshiro Minobe, Curtis Deutsch, Yutaka Hosoya and Hartmut Frenzel Secular nutrient changes in observation and numerical modeling in the western North Pacific in the last 50-years (9387) |
Takamitsu Ito, Yohei Takano, Curtis Deutsch and Athanasios Nenes (Invited) Changing oxygen content of the Pacific basin: Anthropogenic trend or natural variability? (9315) |
Sung Yong Kim and Bruce Cornuelle A description of T/S and oxygen variability off southern California using regional- and globalscale climate indices (9283) |
Mercedes Pozo Buil, Emanuele Di Lorenzo and Steven J. Bograd Decadal prediction of hypoxia along the US West Coast (9389) [pdf, 7 Mb] |
Arthur J. Miller, Hajoon Song and Aneesh Subramanian The physical oceanographic environment of the southern California Current during past decade: Changes in climate and concepts (9374) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Shin-ichi Ito, Sohsuke Ohno, Takeshi Okunishi, Satoshi Suyama, Masayasu Nakagami, Daisuke Ambe and Takahiko Kameda A challenge to investigate environmental factors which determine spawning migration variability of small pelagic: An example of Pacific saury (9332) |
Sukgeun Jung Asynchronous responses of fish assemblages to climate-driven ocean regime shifts between the upper and deep layer in the Ulleung Basin of the East Sea from 1986 to 2010 (9405) [pdf, 25 Mb] |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Session 7. Strategies for ecosystem management in a changing climate
Convenors:
Plenary Speaker: This session will explore the complex issue of implementing an ecosystem approach to management under changing climate conditions. Climate change is expected to impact the distribution and abundance of fish and shellfish through direct and indirect pathways. The temporal signature of these changes will be dominated by long term trends and thus may necessitate new approaches to setting biological reference points for single species management. Projection models indicate that climate change will affect the distribution and/or abundance of particular species, which in-turn would alter the structure and function of the system. New approaches may be needed to address the complex issues of defining biological and ecosystem reference points under uncertain future states of nature. For fished stocks that are projected to decline under changing climate conditions, it is unclear when or if additional precautionary approaches would sustain the populations or the fishery that depends on them. This session seeks papers that: 1) explore implementations of an ecosystem approach to management under projected climate change, 2) propose techniques that identify how uncertainty in climate and biological responses can be incorporated into biological or ecosystem reference points, 3) evaluate the performance of proposed strategies under changing climate, and 4) define the precautionary approach under changing climate. |
Samuel Pooley Distributed governance of marine ecosystems (9309) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Jake Rice What information is really needed to inform adaptation strategies to climate change (9414) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Manuel Barange, J. Scholtens, E.H. Allison, G. Merino, J.L. Blanchard, J. Harle, J. Icarus Allen, J. Holt and S. Jennings So what? How will climate change impacts on fisheries production differentially affect fisheries dependent communities (9410) [pdf, 3 Mb] |
Paul D. Spencer, Nicholas A. Bond, Anne B. Hollowed, Stephani Zador, Kirstin Holsman and Franz J. Mueter Projected spatial distributions of eastern Bering Sea arrowtooth flounder under simulated climate scenarios, and their potential impact on predation and stock dynamics of walleye pollock (9301) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Kirstin Holsman, Kerim Aydin, Jim Ianelli and André E. Punt Using multi-species models to evaluate climate and trophic impacts on recommended harvest rates of groundfish in the Bering Sea (AK) (9304) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Jacquelynne R. King, Gordon A. McFarlane and André E. Punt Shifts in fisheries management: Adapting to regime shifts (9366) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Kerim Aydin, Ivonne Ortiz, Albert J. Hermann, Georgina A. Gibson and André E. Punt Evaluating long-term climate predictions for the Bering Sea ecosystem using a suite of modeling approaches (9345) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Nicholas A. Bond, Sukyung Kang, Jae Bong Lee and Anne B. Hollowed Projections of chub mackerel recruitment for incorporation in stock assessment models (9409) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Timothy E. Essington, Megan Stachura, Christine Stawitz, Trevor Branch, Melissa Haltuch, Anne B. Hollowed, Nathan J. Mantua and Paul D. Spencer Challenges and opportunities for understanding environmental controls on stock productivity: Insights from a meta-analysis of the Northeast pacific (9380) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Anne B. Hollowed and Cody Szuwalski Setting biological reference points under a changing climate (9329) (waiting for permission to post) |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Session 8. Human dimension indicators of the status of the North Pacific ecosystem
Convenors:
Plenary Speaker:
Invited Speaker: Forecasting and understanding trends, uncertainty and responses of the North Pacific ecosystem requires an understanding anthropogenic pressures on marine ecosystems, the impacts of ecosystem change on dependent human populations, and social strategies to cope with those changes. This session will present human dimension indicators that have been created or assembled for the next North Pacific Ecosystem Status Report (NPESR). The session will be composed of invited and contributed papers that elucidate commonalities and differences in regional trends of these indicators and their spatio-temporal linkages to ecosystem status indicators and to human well-being. |
Ron Felthoven, Amber Himes and Stephen Kasperski Fishing community resilience and vulnerability to changing ecosystems (9362) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Kristy Wallmo and Rosemary Kosaka Marine protected area designations off the U.S. west coast: Mixed-use designs to optimize public economic value (9338) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Minling Pan The linkages between the economic performance indicators and ecosystem status indicators (9322) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Patrick Christie and Richard Pollnac (Invited) Human dimensions research to improve science networks and marine resource management effectiveness (9417) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Keith R. Criddle and Mitsutaku Makino Preliminary analysis of trends in time series observations of human dimension indicator data for the North Pacific ecosystem (9391) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Masahito Hirota A review of the human dimension indicators in the NPESR of Japan (9398) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Keith R. Criddle A review of similarities and differences in fisheries regulatory frameworks across the PICES region (9364) [pdf, 3 Mb] |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Workshop 1. Top predators as indicators of climate change: Statistical techniques, challenges and opportunitiess
Convenors:
Invited Speakers: Top predators such as fish, turtles, marine mammals, and seabirds integrate multiple lower trophic level processes and can also exert top-down control of marine food webs. Climate change and variability affect the timing and productivity of pelagic ecosystems. This variability is integrated into the life histories of top predators, potentially affecting their breeding patterns, migration strategies, diets, and ultimately fitness and reproductive success. Pan-Pacific data about top predators are generated by surveys, animal tracking studies, dietary analyses, and measurements of reproductive performance. Environmental and climate data can be synthesized and compared to ecosystem responses in many locations. This workshop invites participants to present and to discuss topics that address: (1) oceanographic and top predator datasets that can be used to examine responses to climate variability and change, (2) statistical techniques that can be used in differentiating top predator responses to climate variability and climate change, (3) identification of sentinel species that respond directly to climate effects and can be used as leading indicators of ecosystem state, and (4) synthetic approaches to understanding how climate variability and change is incorporated in top predator distribution, abundance, or foraging datasets. From the workshop, a pan-Pacific meta-analysis and review paper examining this subject are planned. |
Gadea Pérez-Andújar, Christina Comfort and Kevin Weng Deep-water sharks: Their ability to withstand hypoxic conditions provides hints on how animals may respond to climate change (9326) [pdf, 11 Mb] |
Rachael A. Orben, Rosana Paredes, Daniel D. Roby, Richard Phillips, David B. Irons and Scott A. Shaffer Annual variation in habitat use of black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) wintering in the sub-arctic North Pacific (9320) |
William J. Sydeman, Sarah Ann Thompson, Julie A. Thayer, Mike Litzow, Marisol Garcia-Reyes, Jarrod A. Santora, Heather Renner, John F. Piatt and Yutaka Watanuki (Invited) Challenges and opportunities for assessment and attribution of climate change impacts on North Pacific seabirds (9375) [pdf, 3 Mb] |
Takashi Yamamoto, Akinori Takahashi, Katsufumi Sato, Nariko Oka and Yutaka Watanuki Spatial utilization of streaked shearwaters in the Northwestern Pacific (9382) |
Robert M. Suryan, Amanda J. Gladics, Julia K. Parrish, Elizabeth A. Daly and William T. Peterson Diet composition and isotopic signatures of sentinel species as indicators of climate change (9370) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Chandra Goetsch, Melinda Conners, Yoko Mitani, William Walker, Samantha E. Simmons, Colleen Reichmuth, Suzanne Budge and Daniel P. Costa Climate variability is linked to diet switching in a marine predator, the northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostrus) (9316) [pdf, 3 Mb] |
Jeffrey Polovina, Jason Baker, George Balazs and Denise Parker (Invited) Loggerhead sea turtles and Hawaiian monk seals as sentinels of climate change in the central North Pacific (9286) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Kevin Weng, Gen Del Raye, Christina Comfort, Gadea Pérez-Andújar and Danielle Garcia (Invited) Fish futures: Observation, adaptation and response to climate change (9395) [pdf, 5 Mb] |
Briana H. Witteveen, Kate M. Wynne and Lei Guo Whales as sentinels in a changing marine environment in the Gulf of Alaska (9285) [pdf, 5 Mb] |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Workshop 2 . Bridging the divide between models and decision-making: The role of uncertainty in the uptake of forecasts by decision makers
Convenors:
Invited Speakers: Uncertainty is a key theme of the FUTURE program. Scientific uncertainty extends beyond the outputs of oceanographic or ecosystem models and has significant consequences on human dimensions ranging from public and stakeholder perception to tactical and strategic decision making by managers and policy makers. The workshop will consider uncertainty along the entire path from data, through model design and implementation to communication and uptake of results by decision makers. Such end-to-end consideration of uncertainty is critical to improve the uptake of oceanographic model results by stakeholders and decision makers in all PICES member countries, particularly as the modeling community moves towards end-to-end models, and faces the challenges of managing multiple stressors. This workshop will thus bridge two central themes of the FUTURE Open Science Meeting: quantification and measurement of uncertainty in observations and projects, and communication and engagement in the development and dissemination of FUTURE products. The workshop will be centered on two themes. The first of them concerns input data, model structure, and parameterization, and will focus on how sources of uncertainty can be articulated and presented on a technical level. This theme challenges the modeling community to explain the credibility of their results, articulate their assumptions, and generally expose sources of uncertainty. Models of any topic including stock assessment, ecosystem dynamics, and cumulative effects are welcome. The second theme will consider decision analysis and decision making, including psychological insights into how people perceive, understand, and incorporate complex information into decision-making. Discussions will focus on: (1) how FUTURE can best articulate uncertainty assessments, and develop a communication strategy to broaden the engagement of the public, communities, decision makers and other stakeholders in the results emerging from FUTURE; and (2) how FUTURE products can link to coastal communities, with an emphasis on how and to what degree these products are relevant to the communities whose decisions they presume to affect. This includes the fundamental challenge of how to scale FUTURE scientific outputs with impacts on human dimensions, generally considered at more local extents. This theme in particular will consider approaches to communicate the value of FUTURE products beyond the natural science community. Potential topics of additional discussion include outreach to other disciplines (e.g., psychologists and anthropologists) with the intent of developing more insightful and applicable inter-disciplinary outputs and strategies for presenting FUTURE products to the broader, international stakeholder community. From this workshop, we plan a primary publication outlining how FUTURE products can be effectively communicated to the intended audiences. |
Edward J. Gregr and Kai M.A. Chan Uncertainty from observations to decision-making: What we know, what we assume, and what matters (9341) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Georgina A. Gibson (Invited) Ecosystem modeling predictions – How reliable are they? (9346) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
William T. Peterson Modelers: Know thy fish (9403) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Shin-ichi Ito, Takeshi Okunishi, Michio J. Kishi and Muyin Wang Uncertainty of fish growth projection caused by uncertainty of physical forcing (9401) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Rowenna Gryba and Edward J. Gregr Evaluation of predictive habitat suitability: Using contemporary sightings and prey data to assess model assumptions (9335) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Kai M.A. Chan and Edward J. Gregr The problem isn't uncertainty, but its monotypic treatment (9342) [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Lee Failing (Invited) How decision science can improve the relevance of oceanographic research to managers and stakeholders (9377) [pdf, 3 Mb] |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Workshop 3 . Climate change and ecosystem-based management of living marine resources: Appraising and advancing key modelling tools
Convenors:
Invited Speakers: Climate variability and climate change interact with other pressures to affect the productivity and dynamics of marine ecosystems. Managers charged with the stewardship of sustainable living marine resources are challenged to deal with consequences of this variability, and better tools are needed to inform them. Process-oriented research on climate-driven changes in ecosystem dynamics is occurring at the same time that new ecosystem-related tactics to manage species interactions (time/area restrictions-marine spatial planning) and maximum retention allowances (bycatch restrictions) are being explored. These new management tactics, if applied broadly, suggest that international agreements regarding straddling and shared fish stocks and highly migratory species need to be re-visited. This workshop is organized by the ICES-PICES Strategic Initiative (Section) on the Impacts of Climate Change on Marine Ecosystems (SICCME) to discuss state-of-the-art tools for: (1) calculating biological reference points under changing climate conditions that recognize that equilibrium states no longer apply; (2) assessing the relative ecological and economic costs and tradeoffs of different ecosystem-based management scenarios, and (3) estimating the vulnerability and stability of ecosystems (and their key components) required to make informed, ecosystem-based fisheries management. The workshop is intended to provide a critical review of modelling tools available for fisheries management needs and to understand what advancements are required to address climate-driven changes in ecosystem dynamics. These goals will be facilitated by inviting fisheries managers as well as members of the ICES Working Group on Integrative, Physical-biological and Ecosystem Modelling (WGIPEM) and PICES modelling expert groups. All issues will be discussed in light of the upcoming release of IPCC's synthesis of impacts on marine ecosystems. A "Dahlem-type" format will require the convenors to pre-define workshop questions and direct participants to background reading material. After a morning of selected short presentations on management needs and modelling tools, break-out groups will discuss a set of pre-determined questions. A plenary discussion will synthesize group discussions leading to the next steps required to deliver specific outputs (one or more review papers to be published in a peer-reviewed journal). |
J. Icarus Allen, Y. Artioli, J. Blackford, J. Bruggeman, L. Polimene and S. Sailley (Invited) Towards a next generation marine ecosystem model (9407) [pdf, 3 Mb] |
Elizabeth A. Fulton, P. Johnson and R. Gorton (Invited) Modelling change (9384) [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Alan C. Haynie FishSET: A spatial economics toolbox to better incorporate fisher behavior into fisheries management and ecosystem modeling (9336) (waiting for permission to post) |
Myron A. Peck, Erik Buisman, Momme Butenschön, Jose A. Fernandes, Marc Hufnagl,
Miranda C. Jones, Alexander Kempf, John K. Pinnegar, Ana Queiros, Sébastien Rochette,
Sarah Simons, Lorna R. Teal and Morgan Travers-Trolet Current status of integrated bio-physical, economic modeling approaches examining fish stocks in the North Sea: Some results from the EU VECTORS program (9390) (waiting for permission to post) |
PICES 2014 FUTURE OPEN SCIENCE MEETING
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Workshop 4 . Ecosystem projection model inter-comparison and assessment of climate change impacts on global fish and fisheries
Convenors: This workshop will assemble an international team of modeling experts in order to: (1) identify the optimal means of combining global earth system models (ESMs), high resolution regional modeling frameworks, and ecosystem models of varying complexity to provide robust assessments of climate-change impacts on marine ecosystems and fisheries, and (2) coordinate international efforts to assess biological and societal impacts of climate-driven changes to future marine resources. These experts will discuss the options for interfacing fisheries and ecosystem models with next generation of ESMs. Discussion topics will include: 1) identification of candidate ESMs for use in regional models based on a common set of the most recent IPCC projections, 2) quality and spatial resolution of phytoplankton and zooplankton output from ESMs; 3) identification of which marine ecosystems require dynamic downscaling to address regional ocean processes; and 4) strengths and weakness of simplifying assumptions for higher trophic level projection. Following the workshop, participants will conduct paired simulations using agreed upon climate scenarios and model structures to project climate-driven changes to marine ecosystems. Results will be presented and analyzed at the 3rd PICES/ICES/IOC Symposium on "Effects of climate change on the world's oceans" to be held in March 2015, in Santos, Brazil. |
Charles Stock Climate models: Status and future - USA/GFDL |
Enrique Curchitser Climate models: Status and future - USA/NCAR [pdf, 1 Mb] |
J. Icarus Allen/Myron A. Peck Climate models: Status and future - Europe |
Michio Kawamiya Climate models: Status and future - Japan |
Elizabeth A. Fulton Models linking climate to lower tropic levels: Status and future - South Pacific [pdf, 4 Mb] |
Michael Foreman Models linking climate to lower tropic levels: Status and future - Canada [pdf, 6 Mb] |
Albert J. Hermann Models linking climate to lower tropic levels: Status and future - Bering Sea [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Shin-ichi Ito Models linking climate to lower tropic levels: Status and future - Japan |
William Cheung Models linking climate to fish: Spatial shifts |
Kerim Aydin Models linking climate to fish: Spatially explicit ecosystem model [pdf, 2 Mb] |
Melissa Haltuch Models linking climate to fish: Climate enhanced stock projection model |
Kirstin Holsman Models linking climate to fish: Climate enhanced multispecies stock projection model |
Elliott Hazen Models linking climate to fish: Spatially explicit top trophic level model [pdf, 4 Mb] |
Pheobe Woodworth Models linking climate to fish: Ecosystem model [pdf, 1 Mb] |
Nicholas A. Bond Models linking climate to fish: Short-term projections [pdf, 2 Mb] |