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Parallel Session Abstracts

Below is a list of talks and abstracts currently confirmed for each of the parallel sessions. Click on a talk title to view the full abstract. Specific parallel session agendas will be available soon.

1.1. Advances in Understanding Arctic System Components

Advancements and Limitations in Understanding and Predicting Arctic Climate Change

Wieslaw Maslowski, Naval Postgraduate School

Arctic Ocean Boundary Current Modeling With Transient Tracers

Abigail R. Mauldin, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory-Comer

Changes in the Growth Response of Larch to Climate Variability Along a Latitudinal Gradient in Central Siberia

Andrea H. Lloyd, Middlebury College

Climate Effects on Contaminant Exposure of Arctic Marine and Freshwater Biota

Gary A. Stern, Freshwater Institute

Incorporating a Meteorological Constraint to Plant Migration in a Dynamic Vegetation Model: Projections of Future Vegetation Distribution in the Pan-Arctic

Eunjee Lee, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Investigation of Beluga (Delphinapterus leucas) Habitat Ecology Through Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) in Northern Quebec (Nunavik), Canada

Kaitlin Breton-Honeyman, Trent University

Observations of Melt Pond Evolution and Sea Ice Albedo

Chris Polashenski, Dartmouth College

Properties of Arctic Clouds from Multiple Atmospheric Observatories

Matthew D. Shupe, University of Colorado

Recent Changes in the Sea Ice of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago

Tom A. Agnew, Environment Canada

State of Arctic Social and Economic Conditions: An Analysis of the Circumpolar Regions

Gerard Duhaime, Université Laval

The Circulation of the Deep Bering Sea and Exchanges with the North Pacific: A High-Resolution Model Perspective

Jaclyn Clement Kinney, Naval Postgraduate School

Vegetation Biomass, Leaf Area Index, and NDVI Patterns and Relationships Along Two Latitudinal Transects in Arctic Tundra

Howard E. Epstein, University of Virginia

1.2. Understanding the Linkages and Feedbacks Between the Arctic System Components

Arctic Sea Ice Sensitivity to Changing Precipitation Regimes

Benjamin Blazey, University of Colorado Boulder

Atmospheric Forcing of Hudson Bay Sea Ice in Spring

Klaus P. Hochheim, University of Manitoba

Circumpolar Arctic Tundra Vegetation Change is Linked to Sea-ice Decline

Uma S. Bhatt, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Ecological Consequences of Upwelling in the Southeast Beaufort Sea

Jean-Eric Tremblay, Laval University

Environmental Variability, Bowhead Whale Distributions, and Iñupiat Subsistence Whaling Near Barrow, AK

Carin J. Ashjian, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Hydrologically Triggered Regime Shifts in Terrestrial Arctic Ecosystems: A Cross-Scale Perspective

Johanna Mard Karlsson, Stockholm University

Inputs of Nutrients and Organic Matter from Land to the Arctic Ocean and their Potential Impact on Ocean Processes

Suzanne E. Tank, Marine Biological Laboratory

Linkages of Arctic Sea Ice, Cloud Cover, and Surface Temperature from Satellite Observations

Yinghui Liu, Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies

Long-term Warming and Litter Additions Affect Moss-associated Nitrogen Fixation in a Subarctic, Moist Heath

Pernille L. Sorensen, University of Copenhagen

Spatial and Temporal Influences of Thermokarst Failures on Surface Processes in Arctic Landscapes

William "Breck" Bowden, University of Vermont

The Arctic Hydrologic System in Transition: A Heuristic Look at This Dynamic Environment

Daniel M. White, Institute of Northern Engineering

1.3. Approaches to Integrated Studies of the Arctic System

Development of a Regional Arctic Climate System Model

John Cassano, University of Colorado

Electricity, Population, and Climate: Modeling Change in Alaska Towns and Villages

Lawrence Hamilton, University of New Hampshire

Modeling of the Coupled Sea Ice-Ocean Ecosystem in the Pan-Arctic Ocean

Meibing Jin, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Proposed Development of a Community Arctic System Model for Understanding Environmental Complexity

Andrew Roberts, University of Alaska

The Changing Carbon Cycle of the Arctic

A. David McGuire, University of Alaska Fairbanks

The Declining Arctic Sea Ice Cover: In Situ Insights and Synthetic Finding

Donald K. Perovich, ERDC - CRREL

The International Polar Year (IPY) Circumpolar Flaw Lead (CFL) System Study

David G. Barber, University of Manitoba

The State of Arctic Data

Mark A. Parsons, National Snow and Ice Data Center

Tidal Mixing, Polynas, and Human Settlement in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago

Maribeth S. Murray, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Understanding Ecosystem Processes in the Bering Sea: The BEST-BSIERP Program

Rodger Harvey, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

1.4. Challenges in Arctic System Studies

Arctic System Science: Advances in the Past Two Decades, Expectations for the Next Two Decades

Larry D. Hinzman, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Catching Falling Water: Challenges and Progress on Precipitation Research in the Arctic

Jessica Cherry, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Challenges When Quantifying Arctic Ecosystems

John K. Horne, University of Washington

Data Assimilation of Ocean and Sea-ice Data for Forecast and Reanalysis with the TOPAZ System

Intissar Keghouche, Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center

Delineation of Surface and Near-Surface Melt on the Greenland Ice Sheet using MODIS and QuikSCAT Data

Dorothy K. Hall, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Mesoscale Influences on Climate-Change Observations at an Arctic Site

Ola Persson, University of Colorado

On the Processes Controlling the Ongoing Reduction of Multiyear Sea Ice in the Northern Hemisphere

David G. Barber, University of Manitoba

Ongoing Climatic Changes in the Eurasian Arctic: Why They Force Us to be Expedient in Our Research

Pavel Groisman, UCAR at NOAA National Climatic Data Center

Quantifying Watershed Export in the Arctic: Challenges and Rewards of Capturing Highly Variable River Water Chemistry over Time and Space

James W. McClelland, University of Texas at Austin

2.1. Observations of Arctic Change

A Century of Humans in the Arctic: Population of the Northern Regions During the International Polar Years

Timothy E. Heleniak, University of Maryland

Analysis of the Arctic System for Freshwater Cycle Intensification: Observations and Expectations

Michael A. Rawlins, Dartmouth College

Davis Strait Transport and Freshwater Fluxes

Craig M. Lee, University of Washington

Extreme Warming and Ecosystem Collapse in the Canadian High Arctic

Warwick F. Vincent, Laval University

Fate of Early-2000s Arctic Warm Water Pulse

Igor V. Polyakov, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Fifty Years of Glacier-Climate Research on McCall Glacier, Arctic Alaska

Matt Nolan, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Mapping of the Growing Season on Svalbard Based on Satellite Data for the 1985 to 2009 Period

Rune Storvold, Northern Research Institute Tromsø

Observing the State of Arctic Sea Ice

Son V. Nghiem, California Institute of Technology

Pan-Arctic Sea-Ice Mass-Balance Observations: Status and Challenges

Christian Haas, University of Alberta

Patterns and Possible Drivers of Rapid Glacier Change Around Greenland

Mark Fahnestock, Complex Systems Research Center, UNH

Tracking Trends in Arctic Wildlife: The Arctic Species Trend Index

Michael Gill, Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program

Trends and Patterns in Sea Ice Age Distributions Within the Arctic Basin and Their Implications for Changes in Ice Thickness and Albedo

Mark A. Tschudi, University of Colorado

2.2. Design and Optimization of an Integrated Arctic Observing System

Approaches to Monitoring the Sub-Arctic

Cecilie Mauritzen, Norwegian Meteorological Institute

Autonomous Platforms in the Arctic Observing Network

Craig M. Lee, University of Washington

Circumpolar Permafrost Monitoring with Satellite Data: The ESA DUE Permafrost Project

Annett Bartsch, Vienna University of Technology

Coordinating for Arctic Conservation: Towards Integrated Arctic Biodiversity Monitoring, Data Management, and Reporting

Michael J. Gill, Environment Canada

Linking Biology to Physics in an Arctic Ocean Observing System: Development of a Distributed Biological Observatory (DBO) in the Pacific Arctic

Sue E. Moore, NOAA

Optimizing the Arctic Social Observation System With an Arctic System Model

Matthew Berman, University of Alaska Anchorage

The Space Component of an Integrated Arctic Observing System: Past, Present, and Future

Jeff Key, NOAA/NESDIS

2.3. Arctic Change and Natural Variability

Assessing the Contribution of Climate Change to the Arctic Methane Budget

Colm Sweeney, NOAA/ESRL

Beaufort Sea Survey: Geographic and Historical Comparisons

John Horne, University of Washington

Characteristics of the Beaufort Sea High

Mark C. Serreze, CIRES/National Snow and Ice Data Center

Fire and Ice: Surprises in a Warming Arctic Land Surface

Gaius R. Shaver, The Ecosystems Center

Five Years of Near-Surface Land Cover Reflectance in a Large Scale Hydrological Manipulation in an Arctic Tundra Landscape

Santonu Goswami, University of Texas at El Paso

Natural Components of Climate Change During the Last Few Hundred Years

Syun-Ichi Akasofu, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Pan-Svalbard Assessment of Climate Forcing and Ecosystem Variation: Decadal-scale Evidence from Bivalve Growth Rates

Michael L. Carroll, Polar Environmental Center

Pleistocene Glacial Lake Ahtna, Alaska: Constraints on Lake Extent and Volume, and Relationships to Modern Glaciers

Gregory J. Leonard, University of Arizona

Timescales of Glacier Responses to Environmental Perturbations: What They Mean for the 21st Century

Jeffrey S. Kargel, University of Arizona

Two Decades of Long-Term Sediment Trap Studies Across the Arctic Ocean: Evidences for Change or Continuity?

Alexandre Forest, Université du Québec

2.4. Understanding Arctic Change and Projection of Future States of the Arctic System

A Three-dimensional Characterization of Arctic Aerosols from Airborne Sun Photometer Observations: PAM-ARCMIP, April 2009

Robert S. Stone, CIRES/NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory

A Three-way Connection: The Arctic Express and Its Feedbacks to Global Environmental Change

Øystein Kristiansen, University of Oslo

Arctic Cloud Changes During Intervals of Rapid Sea Ice Loss

Steve Vavrus, University of Wisconsin

Arctic Ocean Primary Production in the Next Decades: What are the Projections?

Paul Wassmann, University of Tromso

Futures of Arctic Marine Transport by 2030: An Explorative Scenario Approach

Marc Mueller-Stoffels, University of Alaska Fairbanks

How Soon Will We See a Sea-Ice-Free Summer Arctic?

Muyin Wang, University of Washington

Increased Freshwater and Biogenic Fluxes: The Flip-side of Arctic Sea-ice Retreat

Robert Newton, Columbia University

Is the Loss of Perennial Arctic Sea Ice Reversible?

Marika M. Holland, National Center for Atmospheric Research

Observed and Projected Changes in Permafrost Thermal State in the Northern Hemisphere

Sergey Marchenko, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Quantifying Future Changes in High-Latitude Methane Emissions Under Regional Climate Change Uncertainty

Xiang Gao, MIT

2.5. Responses to Arctic Change

A Comprehensive Analysis of Ship-mediated Invasion Risk in the Canadian Arctic

Farrah T. Chan, University of Windsor

Biodiversity Mapping: Merging Traditional Ecosystem Knowledge and Western Science

Caleb Pungowiyi, Oceana, Inc.

Experimental Increases of Temperature and Snow Depth in the High and Low Arctic Alter the Magnitudes and Patterns of Ecosystem CO2 Exchange

Jeff Welker, University of Alaska Anchorage

Formation and Melting of 'Alien' Arctic Sea Ice

Robert Newton, Columbia University

High Resilience in the Yamal-Nenets Social-Ecological System, West Siberian Arctic, Russia

Bruce C. Forbes, University of Lapland

Marine Mammals and Sea Ice Loss: Convergence of Ecological and Evolutionary Time

Brendan P. Kelly, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Northern Places: A Circumpolar Human-dimensions Data Framework

Lawrence Hamilton, University of New Hampshire

3.1. Interactions Between the Arctic and the Earth System

Arctic Climate Feedbacks: Global Implications

Martin Sommerkorn, WWF International Arctic Programme

Arctic Feedbacks and Atmospheric Teleconnection Patterns

Klaus Dethloff, Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

Arctic Sea Ice Behaving Strangely Impacts Mid-Latitudes

James E. Overland, NOAA/Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory

On the Microphysical Representation of Observed Arctic Mixed-Phase Clouds

Paquita Zuidema, University of Miami

Radical Spatial Shift of Atmospheric Circulation Pattern: The Driving Force for Recent Rapid Changes in Arctic Climate System

Xiangdong Zhang, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Sources of Freshwater in the East Greenland Current, 2002, from Water Mass Analysis Using Oxygen Isotope Data

Abigail R. Maudlin, Columbia University

Spatial Variation of the Arctic Oscillation and its Long-term Change

Jinping Zhao, Ocean University of China

The Arctic Middle Atmosphere in the Earth System: IPY Observations and Recent Model Results

Richard L. Collins, University of Alaska Fairbanks

The Importance of Arctic Highs to the Winter Climate of the High and Mid-Latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere

Judah Cohen, Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc.

The Variability of the Temperature and Velocity Fields of the Atlantic Inflow to the Nordic Seas Toward the Arctic From Moored Measurements in the Svinøy Section 1995-2010

Kjell Arild Orvik, University of Bergen

Using Scenarios to Explore the Complex Linkages of Arctic Marine Transportation to the Global System

Lawson W. Brigham, University of Alaska Fairbanks

3.2. The Arctic System and Low-Latitude Forcing

300 Years of Acid Deposition in the Arctic from Greenland Ice Cores

Daniel R. Pasteris, Desert Research Institute

A History of Aerosols in the Western Arctic During Recent Centuries

Joseph R. McConnell, Desert Research Institute

Arctic Aerosols, Springtime Forest Fires, and Climate

Charles Brock, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory

Atmosphere-Snowpack Ozone Exchanges at Summit, Greenland and Their Role in the Polar Tropospheric Ozone Budget

Brie A. Van Dam, University of Colorado

Evaluating Anthropogenic Impacts to the Nitrogen Cycle Based on the Isotopes of Nitrate in Ice Cores

Meredith G. Hastings, Environmental Change Initiative & Department of Geological Science

Multi-year Measurements of Long-range Transport Impacts at Summit, Greenland

Louisa J. Kramer, Michigan Technological University

Observations and Modeling Studies of Atmospheric Radical Chemistry on the Greenland Ice Sheet

Jochen Stutz, University of California Los Angeles

Organic and Elemental Carbon in Central Greenland Air and Snow: Towards a Better Understanding of Sources, Source Regions, and Radiative Forcing

Mike H. Bergin, Georgia Insititute of Technology

Ozone at Summit, Greenland as Seen in Surface and Profile Observations

Samuel J. Oltmans, NOAA Earth System Research Labboratory

Polar Amplifications Feedbacks

Vladimir A. Alexeev, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Why Does NOAA ESRL Consider Summit a Key Arctic Site?

Brian A. Vasel, NOAA

3.3. Arctic System Change

Carbon Dioxide Exchange Responses to Changes in Water Table and Surface Warming of Coastal Tundra at Barrow, Alaska

Steven F. Oberbauer, Florida International University

Changes in Watermass Properties Between the North Pole and Ellesmere Island After the 2007 Summer Sea Ice Retreat

William M. Smethie, Columbia University

Detection of Snow Surface Thawing and Refreezing Using Satellite Data: Implications for Reindeer Herding

Annett Bartsch, Vienna University of Technology

Greening of the Arctic: A "Plant to Planet" Analysis of Vegetation Change in the Arctic

Donald A. Walker, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Integrating Geophysical and Inupiat Knowledge on Alaska Shorefast Ice Stability Using Fault Tree Analysis

Matthew L. Druckenmiller, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Long-term Patterns of Change in High-latitude and Altitude Terrestrial Ecosystems: An Update on IPY: Back to the Future

David R. Johnson, University of Texas at El Paso

Recent Changes in the Freshwater Distribution of the Arctic Seas

Michael Steele, University of Washington

Seasonal Patterns of Carbon, Water, and Energy Fluxes in Three Tundra Ecosystems in the Northern Foothills of the Brooks Range, Alaska

Eugenie S. Euskirchen, University of Alaska Fairbanks

The IASOA Legacy: Planning for an Atmospheric Arctic Observing Network Beyond the IPY

Taneil Uttal, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

The Key Role of Inventory and Monitoring Information in Adapting to Climate Change Effects in Arctic National Parks

Donald S. McLennan, Parks Canada Agency

Thermal Erosion of an Arctic Coastline: Field Observations and Model Calibration

Cameron Wobus, Stratus Consulting

3.4. Heterogeneity and Resilience of Human-Rangifer Systems: A Circumpolar Social-Ecological Synthesis

Heterogeneity in Habitat Trends Among Circumpolar Caribou and Reindeer Herds

Brad Griffith, U.S. Geological Survey

High Resilience in the Yamal-Nenets Social-ecological System, West Siberian Arctic, Russia

Bruce Forbes, Arctic Centre

Indigenous Social Responses to Imposed Regulations in Northern Alaska as a Measure of Resilience

Stephanie Martin, University of Alaska Anchorage

Modeling for Decision-Support: Identifying Thresholds and Reducing Uncertainty in the Harvest Management of Barren Ground Caribou

Craig Nicolson, University of Massachusetts

Modeling Regional Dynamics of Human-Rangifer Systems: A Framework for Comparative Analysis

Matthew Berman, University of Alaska Anchorage

Modelling the Abundance of Rangifer: The Frame Size Model

Don Russell, Yukon College

Responses of Human-Rangifer Systems to the Fall of the Soviet Union

Konstantin Klokov, St. Petersberg State University

Three Periods of Taimyr Management: Low, Subsidized, and Open Access Harvesting

Leonid Kolpashchikov, Academy of Agriculture, Russia

Towards Adaptive Co-Management of Human-Caribou Systems?: Lessons from Regional Comparisons and International Cooperation

Gary Kofinas, University of Alaska Fairbanks

What Drives Caribou Cycles?

Don Russell, Yukon College

4.1. Defining the Solution Space

Arctic Concerns: A Big Challenge to Cooperation of Scientists with Decision-makers

Valeriy Kryukov, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Inuit Knowledge Centre

Scot Nickels, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami

Melting Ice and Drifting Interests: Assessing the Arctic's Importance as an Energy Region

Elisa D. Burchert, Harvard University

North by 2020: A Forum to Explore Responses and Adaptation to Arctic Change

Hajo Eicken, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Rising Above the Rhetoric: Listening to Northern Voices in the Rapidly Changing Circumpolar World

Peter J. Kikkert, University of Western Ontario

Strategic Approach for Socially-oriented Observations of Coupled Human-nature Changes in the Russian Arctic: From Quality of Life Issues Recognition to Solutions

Tatiana Vlasova, Russian Academy of Sciences

4.2. Establishing Priorities for Mitigation and Adaptation and Evaluating Solutions

Are We Asking Too Much of the Yukon River? Food Security, Human Values, and Policy in a Changing North

Philip A. Loring, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Can We Adapt to Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic?

James D. Ford, McGill University

Defining Environmental Change and Security in the Arctic

Elisa D. Burchert, Harvard University

How Does Climate Change Compare to Natural Variability for Managing Energy Infrastructure in the North?

Jessica Cherry, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Negotiating the Value(s) of Small-scale Societies: Environmental Migration, Climate Change, and Political Challenge

Elizabeth K. Marino, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Towards Ecosystem Resilience-based Arctic Conservation: A Rapid Place-based Assessment to Stay Ahead of Arctic Climate Change

Susan Evans, WWF Canada

Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change in Arctic Communities: Preliminary Comparative Results from the IPY CAVIAR Project

Laura Fleming, University of Guelph

4.3. Communicating Knowledge and Information

A Multi-prong Approach to Arctic Change Knowledge Transfer

Elena B. Sparrow, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Assisting Arctic Inhabitants in Adapting to a Changing Climate

Daniel White, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Communicating Changes in the Arctic Environment

Nancy N. Soreide, NOAA

Communication and Developing Meaningful Research Relationships with Inuit Communities in Canada

Scot Nickels, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami

From the Arctic Field into the Classroom with the PolarTREC Teacher Research Experience Program

Elizabeth D. Eubanks, St. Mark Catholic School / PolarTREC

Local and Traditional Knowledge in Understanding Arctic Change

Mark A. Parsons, National Snow and Ice Data Center

Overcoming the Distance: Using Digital Media and Collaborative Video-making to Amplify Northern Voices and Share the Western Arctic with the World

Suzanne M. Robinson, University of Essex

Strike the Drum–Holders of the Scientific Method and Inuit Traditional Knowledge Dance Together: Innovative Approaches to Bring Narwhal Tusk Discoveries to a Wide, Public, and Participating Audience

Katherine Tiisler, Harvard University

The Arctic in Your Backyard: Making Arctic Messages Matter to Mainstream Audiences

Clive D. Tesar, WWF International Arctic Programme

4.4. The Interface of Science and Policy

Alaska's Climate Change Executive Roundtable: Coordinating Federal and State Agency Efforts in the Great Land

Molly McCammon, Alaska Ocean Observing System (for Amy E. Holman, National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration)

Designing an Effective Arctic Observing Network: Collecting Sea Ice System Data to Inform Multiple Stakeholder Concerns

Amy L. Lovecraft, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Development of Emerging Issues as Defined by Federal, State, and Local Governments Charged with Resource Management in the U.S. Arctic

Bill Streever, BP Exploration Alaska, Inc.

Limits to Resilience Framing

Marilyn Averill, University of Colorado at Boulder

The Matrix: Getting Inside the Science-Policy Interface

David Hik, University of Alberta

Understanding the Role of Science in Resource Management Decisions for a Changing Arctic: A Policymaker's View

Michael Tubman, Pew Center on Global Climate Change

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National Science Foundation | Division of Arctic Sciences
National Science Foundation
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
International Arctic Systems for Observing the Atmosphere
International Arctic Systems for Observing the Atmosphere
Study of Environmental Arctic Change
Study of Environmental Arctic Change
Arctic System Science Program
Arctic System Science Program
US Arctic Research Commission
US Arctic Research Commission
North Slope Science Initiative
North Slope Science Initiative
International Arctic Science Committee
International Arctic Science Committee
Arctic Ocean Sciences Board
Arctic Ocean Sciences Board
Alaska Ocean Observing System
Alaska Ocean Observing System
Department of Energy
Department of Energy
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
World Wildlife Fund
WWF
Association of Polar Early Career Scientists
Association of Polar Early Career Scientists
Bureau of Land Management
Bureau of Land Management
International Study of Arctic Change
International Study of Arctic Change
ArcticNet
ArcticNet
DAMOCLES
Developing Arctic Modeling and Observing Capabilities for Long-term Environmental Studies

This work is supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under the ARCUS Cooperative Agreement ARC-0618885. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the NSF.