30.01.2013 Views

CONFERENCE PROGRAM - ASLO

CONFERENCE PROGRAM - ASLO

CONFERENCE PROGRAM - ASLO

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 AQUATIC SCIENCES MEETING<br />

17-22 FEBRUARY 2013 · NEW ORLEANS · LOUISIANA<br />

<strong>CONFERENCE</strong> <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> RETURNS TO THE BIG EASY!<br />

Held at Ernest N. Morial Convention Center under the<br />

theme “Learning for the Future,” this meeting will bring<br />

together scientists, engineers, students, educators, policy<br />

makers and other stakeholders to learn from the past and<br />

look to the future of aquatic sciences.<br />

Sponsored by the Association for the<br />

Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography<br />

PLEASE VISIT <strong>ASLO</strong>.ORG/NEWORLEANS2013 FOR UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION


Meeting Program<br />

About the Sponsor ................................................................................................... 2<br />

2013 Aquatic Sciences Meeting Organizers ....................................................... 2<br />

Co-Chairs .................................................................................................................................2<br />

Scientific Committee .............................................................................................................2<br />

Local Committee ....................................................................................................................2<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Board of Directors ....................................................................................... 2<br />

Officers/Executive Committee ............................................................................................2<br />

Members-at-Large ..................................................................................................................2<br />

Student Board Members .......................................................................................................2<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Staff ................................................................................................................................2<br />

Questions? We’re here to help! ............................................................................. 2<br />

Plenary Lectures and Presentations ..................................................................... 3<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013 – Opening Session .................................................................3<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013 – Morning Plenary Session ................................................3<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013 – Lunchtime Plenary Session ............................................4<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013 – Morning Plenary Session ..............................................4<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013 – Morning Plenary Session ..........................................5<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013 – Lunchtime Plenary Session ......................................5<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013 – Morning Plenary Session ..............................................5<br />

Friday, 22 February 2013 – Morning Plenary Session ..................................................6<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 Tick Talk Sessions .............................................................................. 7<br />

Society Award Presentations ................................................................................. 7<br />

About the Conference Meeting Site .................................................................... 8<br />

Concessions and Vendors at the Convention Center .................................................8<br />

Email/Internet Access .........................................................................................................8<br />

Transportation in the Downtown Area .............................................................................8<br />

Conference Registration and Check In..............................................................................8<br />

Message Boards .......................................................................................................................9<br />

Special Needs ...........................................................................................................................9<br />

Coffee Breaks ...........................................................................................................................9<br />

Lunchtime During the Meeting ..........................................................................................9<br />

Exhibitors and Sponsors ......................................................................................... 9<br />

Audubon Aquarium of the Americas Reception ............................................ 11<br />

Special Opportunities and Information for Students ................................... 12<br />

Student Social Mixer ............................................................................................................12<br />

Outstanding Student Presentation Awards ....................................................................12<br />

Career Center ........................................................................................................................12<br />

Scientific Speed Dating: Networking for the 21st Century .......................................12<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Student Workshops .................................................................................................12<br />

Early Career Events ................................................................................................ 12<br />

Early Career Meet and Mix ................................................................................................12<br />

Early Career Workshop:<br />

Strategies for Funding Your Aquatic Research ..............................................................12<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 Multicultural Program .................................................................... 12<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Multicultural Program Training Session ............................................................13<br />

Emerging Issues Workshop ................................................................................ 13<br />

Conference Events .................................................................................................. 13<br />

Student Volunteer Training ................................................................................................13<br />

Sunday Opening Plenary Session ......................................................................................13<br />

Mardi Gras Indian Show and Opening Mixer and Reception ...................................13<br />

Plenary Sessions and Award Acceptance Presentations ..............................................14<br />

Annual <strong>ASLO</strong> Business and Membership Meeting ....................................................14<br />

Poster Sessions and Receptions .........................................................................................14<br />

Art Exhibit: “Past, Current, Future – GULF OF MEXICO” ......................................14<br />

Teacher EXPO ......................................................................................................... 14<br />

Workshops, Town Halls, and Auxiliary Meetings ........................................ 14<br />

SCOR Working Group ........................................................................................................14<br />

C-MORE Career Networking Workshop .......................................................................14<br />

SCINTILLATION: A Workshop to Make Your Science<br />

Communication Scintillate through “Critical Storytelling” .......................................15<br />

GEARS: A Workshop for Broadening the Impacts of Your Research ......................15<br />

Preparing Workforce and Transfer Students<br />

in Two-Year Colleges for Geoscience Careers ...............................................................15<br />

How to Interview and Negotiate for an Academic Position .......................................15<br />

CONTENTS<br />

1<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

S-Factor 3 (Film Analysis Workshop) - Part I ................................................................16<br />

SNAP IT UP: Advice from Hollywood for Short Presentations ................................16<br />

L&O e-Lectures Town Hall: An Effective Approach<br />

for Addressing Broader Impacts .......................................................................................16<br />

NSF Ocean Science Town Hall Meeting .........................................................................16<br />

Getting People to Hang On (Almost) Every Word:<br />

Telling Stories About Your Science ..................................................................................16<br />

S-Factor 3 (Film Analysis Workshop) - Part II ..............................................................16<br />

Frontiers of Ecosystem Science Workshop.....................................................................17<br />

Science Journalism: Out of Gulf Coast Waters and Onto the News Wires ............17<br />

Informal Ocean Science Education: An Introduction .................................................17<br />

Town Hall: Informal Ocean Science Education: Trends and Opportunities ..........17<br />

Town Hall - Marine Microbial Eukaryote Transcriptome Project ...........................18<br />

SENSEnet Showcase ............................................................................................................18<br />

Be Inclusive I: Share Your Research Effectively .............................................................18<br />

Be Inclusive II: Address Barriers to Participation .........................................................18<br />

Teaching Large Classes ........................................................................................................18<br />

SENSEnet Project Meeting ................................................................................................18<br />

Field Trips ................................................................................................................. 18<br />

Floating Peat Marshes of Jean Lafitte National Park ....................................................18<br />

Turtle Cove Environmental Research Station, Lake Maurepas .................................19<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Membership ................................................................................................ 19<br />

Registration Information ...................................................................................... 19<br />

Additional Participant and Attendee Information ........................................ 19<br />

Receipts and Letters of Participation ...............................................................................19<br />

Child Care Information ....................................................................................................19<br />

Business Services ..................................................................................................................19<br />

Instructions for Poster Presenters ...................................................................... 20<br />

Poster Set Up .........................................................................................................................20<br />

Poster Teardown ...................................................................................................................20<br />

Instructions for Oral Presenters.......................................................................... 20<br />

Preparing Your Electronic Presentation ........................................................................20<br />

Advance Submission ............................................................................................................20<br />

Microsoft PowerPoint Tips ................................................................................................20<br />

Apple Macintosh Users .......................................................................................................21<br />

Bring a Backup ......................................................................................................................21<br />

During Your Presentation ...................................................................................................21<br />

Computer Equipment ..........................................................................................................21<br />

Laptops ....................................................................................................................................21<br />

Rental of Additional Audio-Visual Equipment .............................................................21<br />

Presentation Room ...............................................................................................................21<br />

Security ...................................................................................................................................21<br />

Speaker Ready Room ...........................................................................................................21<br />

Ernest N. Morial Convention Center - First Floor ......................................... 22<br />

Ernest N. Morial Convention Center - Second Floor .................................... 23<br />

Ernest N. Morial Convention Center - Third Floor ....................................... 24<br />

Exhibit Hall E - Poster and Exhibitor Numbers .............................................. 25<br />

Map of Conference Hotels ................................................................................... 26<br />

French Quarter & Downtown Parking Map .................................................... 27<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 Aquatic Sciences Meeting Schedule ............................................ 28<br />

Monday At A Glance ............................................................................................. 30<br />

Tuesday At A Glance ............................................................................................. 32<br />

Wednesday At A Glance ....................................................................................... 34<br />

Thursday At A Glance ........................................................................................... 36<br />

Friday At A Glance ................................................................................................. 38<br />

Daily Presentation Schedules .......................................................................40-104<br />

Monday, 18 February - Orals .............................................................................................40<br />

Tuesday, February 19 - Orals..............................................................................................50<br />

Tuesday, 19 February - Posters ..........................................................................................59<br />

Wednesday, February 20 - Orals .......................................................................................69<br />

Thursday, 21 February - Orals ...........................................................................................79<br />

Thursday, 21 February - Posters ........................................................................................88<br />

Friday 22, February - Orals .................................................................................................98<br />

Author Index .........................................................................................................105


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

WELCOME TO THE <strong>ASLO</strong> 2013<br />

AQUATIC SCIENCES MEETING<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> is returning to the Big Easy for the first time since 1990! The<br />

Aquatic Sciences Meeting will be held on 17-22 February 2013 at the<br />

Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, Louisiana. Situated<br />

at the junction between the Mississippi River and the Gulf, the city of<br />

New Orleans is an ideal location to celebrate aquatic sciences. Under the<br />

theme “Learning for the Future,” the meeting will bring together scientists,<br />

engineers, students, educators, policy makers and other stakeholders to<br />

learn from the past and look to the future of aquatic sciences. The Aquatic<br />

Sciences Meeting is a widely recognized venue for scientific exchange across<br />

all aquatic disciplines. Abstracts of<br />

This program is produced for<br />

assistance on site at the meeting.<br />

It contains the scientific<br />

program as 10 January 2013.<br />

Changes after this date will be<br />

noted at the meeting. Additional<br />

information can be found on the<br />

conference Web site.<br />

papers presented during the meeting<br />

will be published on the conference<br />

Web site.<br />

ABOUT THE<br />

SPONSOR<br />

The 2013 Aquatic Sciences<br />

Meeting is sponsored by <strong>ASLO</strong>,<br />

Association for the Sciences of<br />

Limnology and Oceanography. <strong>ASLO</strong> is the leading professional organization<br />

for researchers and educators in the field of aquatic sciences, fostering<br />

a diverse, international scientific community that creates, integrates and<br />

communicates knowledge across the full spectrum of aquatic science.<br />

2013 AQUATIC SCIENCES<br />

MEETING ORGANIZERS<br />

CO-CHAIRS<br />

Deidre Gibson, Hampton University, deidre.gibson@hamptonu.edu<br />

Hans-Peter Grossart, Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland<br />

Fisheries, IGB-Berlin, hgrossart@igb-berlin.de<br />

Nancy Rabalais, Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUM-<br />

CON), nrabalais@lumcon.edu<br />

Kam Tang, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, kamtang@vims.edu<br />

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE<br />

Adrian Burd, University of Georgia<br />

Völker Bruchert, Stockholm University<br />

Robert Chen, University of Massachusetts - Boston<br />

Nicole Cormier, US Geological Survey<br />

Claudio DiBacco, Fisheries and Oceans Canada<br />

Allison Fong, University of Hawaii-Manoa<br />

Dionne Hoskins, NOAA<br />

Rebecca Klaper, University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee<br />

Carl Lamborg, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution<br />

Rubens Lopes, Instituto Oceanografico, Universidade de Sao Paulo<br />

Miroslav Macek, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México<br />

2<br />

Laura Murray, University of Maryland, Center for Environmental Science<br />

Qinglong Wu, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology<br />

LOCAL COMMITTEE<br />

Brian Roberts, Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUMCON)<br />

Sibel Bargu, Louisiana State University<br />

R. Eugene Turner, Louisiana State University<br />

Emily Smith, Louisiana State University<br />

Sandra Gibson, Retired Public School Teacher, New Orleans<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> BOARD OF DIRECTORS<br />

OFFICERS/EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE<br />

John Downing, President<br />

Deborah Bronk, Past-President<br />

James Elser, President-Elect<br />

Lisa Campbell, Secretary<br />

Patricia Matrai, Treasurer<br />

MEMBERS-AT-LARGE<br />

Roxane Maranger Uta Passow<br />

Anya Waite Paul del Giorgio<br />

Claudia Benitez-Nelson Robinson “Wally” Fulweiler<br />

Gernard Herndl Peter Leavitt<br />

STUDENT BOARD MEMBERS<br />

Allison Fong Amy Burgess<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> STAFF<br />

Joe Ackerman, Editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Fluids and Environments<br />

M. Robin Anderson, Editor, Web-Based Books<br />

Jennifer Cherrier, Editor, Limnology and Oceanography e-Lectures<br />

John Dolan, Co-editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Bulletin<br />

Lucille Doucette, Journals Manager<br />

Everett Fee, Editor, Limnology and Oceanography<br />

Susana Feng, Managing Editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods<br />

Paul Kemp, Web Editor and Editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods<br />

Helen Schneider Lemay, <strong>ASLO</strong> Business Manager<br />

Adrienne Sponberg, Co-editor, Limnology and Oceanography: Bulletin<br />

QUESTIONS? WE’RE HERE TO HELP!<br />

Have a question about <strong>ASLO</strong> or the meeting? Members of the organizing<br />

committee along with the <strong>ASLO</strong> board members will be wearing ribbons.<br />

Please feel free to ask if you have a question.<br />

The event management staff, located in the registration area, will also be<br />

happy to help you


Meeting Program<br />

PLENARY LECTURES AND PRESENTATIONS<br />

To promote cross-disciplinary dialogs on issues of global importance, this<br />

meeting introduces a new format where duo speakers present on some<br />

days with complementary expertise to address the issues, covering both<br />

the natural science aspects and socio-economic aspects. Additionally, the<br />

meeting will begin on Sunday afternoon with a opening plenary session.<br />

Local aspects will be covered during plenary sessions on Monday and<br />

Wednesday from 12:00 to 13:30.<br />

SUNDAY, 17 FEBRUARY 2013 – OPENING SESSION<br />

DR. JOHN DOWNING<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> President, Regent’s Excellence Professor of Ecology, Evolution, and<br />

Organismal Biology and Chair of the Environmental Science Graduate<br />

Program, Iowa State University<br />

Presentation: <strong>ASLO</strong> President John Downing will provide opening<br />

remarks for the conference.<br />

Biographical Information: John Downing is president of the Association<br />

for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography, a Board<br />

member of the Council of Scientific Society Presidents, and a member<br />

of the Consortium of Aquatic Science Societies. He is a Regent’s Excellence<br />

Professor of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, and<br />

the Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering at Iowa<br />

State University. He is Chair of the Environmental Science Graduate<br />

Program. He is also an adjunct professor at Itasca Community<br />

College where he is helping create a water quality technology program<br />

to provide employment opportunities to students in an economically<br />

depressed region. His research interests include limnology, aquatic<br />

ecology, terrestrial ecology, microbial ecology, biogeochemistry, population<br />

conservation, and whole ecosystem restoration and management.<br />

He has advised many policy-makers and citizens groups concerning<br />

water quality management, and is a frequent consultant to firms and<br />

boards regionally, nationally, and internationally. He was recently<br />

awarded <strong>ASLO</strong>’s Ruth Patrick award for his work in understanding<br />

and mitigating eutrophication in agricultural regions. He was formerly<br />

a professor at McGill University and the University of Montreal where<br />

he was Director of the Laurentian Biological Station.<br />

RICHARD CAMPANELLA<br />

Geographer and Senior Professor of Practice, Tulane School of Architecture,<br />

Tulane University<br />

Presentation: New Orleans: A Historical Geography, 1700s-2000s<br />

This illustrated presentation will explain the formation of the Mississippi<br />

Delta and the settlement and early development of New Orleans with<br />

respect to its deltaic environment throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth<br />

centuries. It will then describe, through time-sequence maps and<br />

graphs, the environmental manipulations of the “long twentieth century”<br />

and the ensuing geophysical deterioration of the delta, the population<br />

loss and urban decline of New Orleans, and the circumstances that led<br />

to the Katrina debacle. We will conclude with a synopsis of the progress<br />

made since 2005, and the path ahead.<br />

3<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Biographical Information: Richard Campanella, a geographer with the<br />

Tulane School of Architecture, is the author of six critically acclaimed<br />

books on New Orleans, including Bienville’s Dilemma and Geographies<br />

of New Orleans. The only two-time winner of the Louisiana<br />

Endowment for the Humanities “Book of the Year” Award,<br />

Campanella has also received the Williams Prize for Louisiana<br />

History, the Mortar Board Award for Excellence in Teaching from<br />

Tulane University, and the Monroe Fellowship from the Tulane<br />

University New Orleans Center for the Gulf South. Some of his<br />

work may be viewed at http://richcampanella.com.<br />

MONDAY, 18 FEBRUARY 2013 – MORNING PLENARY SESSION<br />

DR. KAREN KIDD<br />

Canada Research Chair and Professor of Biology, University of New Brunswick<br />

Presentation: Is the Birth Control Pill an Effective Form of Contraception<br />

for Wild Fish?<br />

It is well known that sewage effluents contain substances that affect the<br />

endocrine system and reproduction of wild fish. However, it is not well<br />

understood whether the responses observed at the organism level, such<br />

as feminization of male fish living downstream, can be linked to impacts<br />

at the population level. To investigate this, a whole lake experiment was<br />

done at the Experimental Lakes Area in northwestern Ontario, Canada<br />

from 1999-2010 and examined the effects of the synthetic estrogen ethynylestradiol<br />

(EE2) used in birth control pills on the fish populations and<br />

their supporting food web. Continuous additions of EE2 (5-6 ng/L)<br />

were made to the lake in the summers of 2001-2003; biochemical- and<br />

tissue-level endpoints were examined in several species of fish and<br />

population data were collected for all trophic levels before, during and<br />

after EE2 additions and contrasted to reference lake data. The experiment<br />

was successful at reproducing the impacts observed downstream<br />

of wastewater discharges. Male fish from the treated lake produced high<br />

concentrations of vitellogenin (an egg yolk protein precursor) and had<br />

delayed spermatocyte development. In addition, in the second and third<br />

summer of additions, reproductive failures occurred for the shortestlived<br />

fish species, the fathead minnow, with a subsequent collapse in<br />

the population. Ongoing monitoring of the lake after EE2 additions<br />

stopped showed that the fathead minnow population has recovered.<br />

Continuous inputs of low levels of the estrogen used in birth control<br />

pills can impact the sustainability of fish populations.<br />

Biographical Information: Karen Kidd has been a Canada Research<br />

Chair and Professor of Biology at the University of New Brunswick,<br />

Canada since 2004. Before this, she worked for 6 years as a research<br />

scientist with Fisheries and Oceans Canada. She received her B.Sc. in<br />

Environmental Toxicology from the University of Guelph and a Ph.D.<br />

in Environmental Biology and Ecology from the University of Alberta.<br />

Karen’s research focuses on understanding the effects of municipal and<br />

industrial effluents, aquaculture and agricultural runoff on fish and<br />

invertebrate populations and food web structure of lakes, wetlands and<br />

rivers, and the factors affecting the accumulation of persistent contaminants<br />

such as chlorinated pesticides and mercury through freshwater<br />

communities in tropical through arctic systems. She led a whole lake<br />

experiment at the Experimental Lakes Area in northwestern Ontario,<br />

Canada to understand the effects of the estrogen used in birth control<br />

pills and released in municipal wastewaters on fish populations and their<br />

supporting food web.


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

MONDAY, 18 FEBRUARY 2013 – LUNCHTIME PLENARY SESSION<br />

DR. CARL BRASSEAUX<br />

Professor Emeritus of History, University of Louisiana at Lafayette and<br />

Oral History Fieldworker, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program<br />

DR. DONALD W. DAVIS<br />

Director of Oral Histories, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program,<br />

Louisiana State University<br />

Presentation: People and Solutions: Cultural Hind-Casts Must Precede<br />

Restoration Forecasts<br />

South Louisiana’s coastal plain has witnessed two extinction events since<br />

1699. The first—extending from 1699 to approximately 1915—was zoological,<br />

evidenced by the disappearance of numerous species indigenous<br />

to the area. The second—presently unfolding—is cultural, as the cultural<br />

landscape begins to implode in the wake of physical and economic changes<br />

wrought by Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Gustav, Ike, and Isaac, the BP oil<br />

spill disaster, and the flood of 2011. In their presentations, Davis and<br />

Brasseaux will focus on the second watershed event. They will examine<br />

the occupation and development of the coastal wetlands, the subsequent<br />

emergence of unique regional cultures, and the threats posed to that way<br />

of life. In the end, Louisiana’s near sea level wetlands can continue to function<br />

as a “working coast” only when the people living there become part of<br />

the solution.<br />

Biographical Information: As Professor of History and Director of the<br />

Center for Cultural and Eco-Tourism, Carl is one of the world’s leading<br />

authorities on French North America, with extensive expertise in the<br />

areas of Acadian/Cajun and Creole history and culture. His doctorate<br />

is from the Université de Paris, from which he was graduated with<br />

the highest distinction. Brasseaux has published thirty-three volumes<br />

of material on Louisiana and French North America. His 1,850-page<br />

biographical dictionary includes sketches of all persons known to have<br />

served the French monarchy in the Mississippi Valley and Gulf Coast<br />

regions during the eighteenth century. In addition, Brasseaux has published<br />

101 chapters in books or articles in scholarly journals throughout<br />

North America and Europe. In 1976, he helped organize the Louisiane<br />

Bien-Aimée exhibit that occupied an entire floor of the Radio France<br />

building in Paris. This exhibit was awarded a gold medal by the United<br />

States Department of Commerce as the best United States exhibit sent<br />

abroad during the bicentennial year.<br />

Biographical Information: Donald (Don) Davis has been involved in<br />

coastal-related research for more than forty years. His professional career<br />

was influenced by a number of coastal scientists while working on his<br />

Ph.D. in LSU’s Department of Geography and Anthropology. Each of<br />

these individuals focused their individual research on some cultural or<br />

physical element in the landscape. From this exposure, Dr. Davis came to<br />

appreciate the importance of humankind on Louisiana’s coastal wetlands.<br />

His research interest has focused on the wide array of renewable and<br />

non-renewable resources that are a vital part in the use of the marsh/<br />

swamp landscape complex. He and a colleague are currently working with<br />

Louisiana’s Sea Grant College Program on an oral history project that<br />

focuses on learning to value heritage, tradition and culture in a place that,<br />

to some, does not matter but to the marsh dweller is home. In addressing<br />

this challenge he has recently published: Washed Away? The Invisible People<br />

of Louisiana’s Wetlands.<br />

4<br />

TUESDAY, 19 FEBRUARY 2013 – MORNING PLENARY SESSION<br />

DR. ANDREW WEAVER<br />

Lansdowne Professor and Canada Research Chair, School of Earth and<br />

Ocean Sciences, University of Victoria<br />

NANCY BARON<br />

Outreach Director, COMPASS, and Lead Communications Trainer,<br />

Leopold Leadership Program.<br />

Presentation: The Risks and Rewards of Communicating Your Science<br />

Dr. Andrew Weaver: “Neither I, nor most of my colleagues in climate<br />

science, started our careers expecting to be drawn into the public spotlight.<br />

As an undergraduate studying physics and mathematics, I always wanted<br />

my science to be directly relevant to society. That’s why as a graduate<br />

student, I chose to apply my mathematical expertise to problems in atmospheric<br />

science and physical oceanography. This path led to my ongoing research<br />

efforts to understand internal feedbacks within the climate system.<br />

But as many of us have experienced, science that is relevant to society also<br />

can also become highly politicized.<br />

In this talk I will provide a personal account of some of the risks and<br />

rewards, successes and failures in science communication and interacting<br />

with the media. I will also address the importance of balancing the social<br />

obligation to communicate climate science and its inherent uncertainties--<br />

with the need to continue scientific inquiry.”<br />

Nancy Baron: “Not a day goes by that the public and policy makers could<br />

not benefit from the knowledge of scientists to inform current events and<br />

decisions that that have the power to shape our future. Yet too often, science<br />

is absent from the discussion. Public confusion and scientific frustration over<br />

hot button issues including climate change, ocean acidification and fisheries<br />

only underscore the need for society to be better informed by science.<br />

How can scientists rise above the clamor to communicate more effectively?<br />

I will draw on a decade of experience in the trenches as a communications<br />

coach to share stories of scientists who have taken the leap – their<br />

struggles, successes and most importantly their lessons learned. This<br />

talk will provide useful techniques to help scientists better manage their<br />

messages, deliver them clearly and compellingly, and hopefully, renew their<br />

motivation to engage in society’s most important debates.”<br />

Biographical information: Andrew Weaver is the Lansdowne Professor<br />

and Canada Research Chair in the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences<br />

at the University of Victoria. He was a Lead Author in the UN Intergovernmental<br />

Panel on Climate Change 2nd, 3rd and 4th and ongoing 5th<br />

scientific assessments. Weaver is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada,<br />

Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society and the American<br />

Meteorological Society. He is a past recipient of NSERC Steacie, Killam<br />

and Guggenheim Fellowships as well as a CIAR Young Explorers Award,<br />

CMOS President’s Prize, Royal Society of Canada Miroslaw Romanowski<br />

Medal and Huntsman Award for Excellence in Marine Science. He was<br />

appointed to the Order of British Columbia in 2008.<br />

Biographical information: Nancy Baron is the outreach director for<br />

COMPASS and the lead communications trainer for the Leopold Leadership<br />

Program. Her book, Escape from the Ivory Tower, is a practical and<br />

entertaining guide for scientists who want to engage their audiences, ace<br />

their interviews, promote their papers and enter the political fray. She and<br />

her COMPASS team offer a wide range of workshops for academic scien-


Meeting Program<br />

tists as well as scientists who work for government and non-governmental<br />

organizations in North America and abroad. Her experience as both a<br />

biologist for Canadian National Parks and as a science writer motivated<br />

her to try to help bridge the gaps among scientists, journalists and policy<br />

makers. She is based at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and<br />

Synthesis (NCEAS) in Santa Barbara.<br />

WEDNESDAY, 20 FEBRUARY 2013 – MORNING PLENARY SESSION<br />

DR. SUSAN R. SINGER<br />

Laurence McKinley Gould Professor of Natural Sciences, Department of<br />

Biology, Carleton College<br />

Presentation: Promising Practices in Undergraduate Science and<br />

Engineering Education: Why Don’t We Implement Them?<br />

Improving undergraduate science and engineering education for all<br />

students is a national imperative, called out in many recent reports,<br />

including the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology’s<br />

(PCAST) Engage to Excel and Excel. Globally we face profound challenges<br />

to provide adequate resources to a growing human population in the face<br />

of climate change, pollution, and loss of biodiversity that can be addressed,<br />

in part, by scientists, engineers, and a scientifically literate society. Undergraduate<br />

science education serves a range of purposes from providing<br />

foundational knowledge for all students, to preparing the future teachers<br />

who will be using the new Framework for K-12 Science Education, to<br />

preparing a STEM workforce. A shortage of STEM workers is predicted<br />

in the coming decade and improving retention of undergraduate STEM<br />

majors through improved STEM education in the first two years of college<br />

is a solution called out in the PCAST report. The National Research<br />

Council’s Discipline-based Education Research: Understanding and Improving<br />

Learning in Undergraduate Science and Engineering report provides<br />

the evidence base for effective teaching practices in undergraduate science<br />

and engineering. This presentation will explore what is known about<br />

improving students’ problem solving skills and conceptual understanding<br />

in science and engineering through more effective teaching and unpack the<br />

challenges to widespread uptake of these practices.<br />

Biographical Information: Dr. Susan R. Singer, Laurence McKinley<br />

Gould Professor of Natural Sciences, joined the Department of Biology<br />

at Carleton in 1986 and has pursued a career that integrates science and<br />

education. She has B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees, all from Rensselaer<br />

Polytechnic Institute and completed a teacher certification program in<br />

New York State. Susan has directed Carleton’s Perlman Center for Learning<br />

and Teaching and worked at the National Science Foundation as a<br />

program officer in Developmental Mechanisms. Her biological research<br />

focuses on the evolution, genetics, and development of flowering in<br />

legumes with an interest in prairie legumes as a biofuel source. NSF supports<br />

her flowering research and her research on undergraduate genomics<br />

education. She co-authors an introductory biology text and is actively<br />

engaged in efforts to improve undergraduate science education. In 2004<br />

she received the Excellence in Teaching award from the American Society<br />

of Plant Biology. Within Minnesota she coaches Northfield High School’s<br />

Science Olympiad team and works with the Agricultural Utilization<br />

Research Institute’s Renewable Energy Roundtable. Nationally she serves<br />

on the board of directors for Project Kaleidoscope, for the NSF-funded<br />

iPlant cyberinfrastructure collaborative, and for the National Academies’<br />

Board on Science Education. National Academies committee service<br />

has included contributions to the Committee on Undergraduate Science<br />

Education, the committee that authored America’s Lab Report (chair), the<br />

5<br />

committee that authored Taking Science to School (science consultant),<br />

a committee on agriculture education, and the committee on Promising<br />

Practices in STEM Undergraduate Education (chair).<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

WEDNESDAY, 20 FEBRUARY 2013 – LUNCHTIME PLENARY SESSION<br />

SHIRLEY LASKA<br />

Professor Emerita of Sociology, Founding Director Emerita, Center for<br />

Hazards Assessment, Response and Technology (UNO-CHART),<br />

University of New Orleans<br />

Presentation: Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina<br />

Defining Hurricane Katrina as a natural disaster has been rejected in multiple<br />

ways. One striking rejection of that definition is demonstrated by the<br />

role played by the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet (MRGO) in the damaging<br />

storm surge that drowned the City of New Orleans. The engineered<br />

waterway was an act against Nature rather than an act of Nature. This<br />

presentation will consider: 1) how this waterway came to be—the “growth<br />

machine,” 2) the “Peter Principle” of construction momentum that led to<br />

the creation of a transportation technology ahead of a societal understanding<br />

of its negative implications and their mitigation, and 3) the refusal to<br />

take heed of the impending catastrophe when confronted with evidence<br />

from highly qualified scientists. Prospects for future ‘control’ of technology<br />

with coastal restoration will be considered in light of this history.<br />

Biographical Information: Shirley Laska, Professor Emerita of Sociology and<br />

Founding Director Emerita of the UNO Center for Hazards Assessment,<br />

Response and Technology (UNO-CHART), is an environmental sociologist<br />

and specialist in long-term community recovery. UNO-CHART is an<br />

innovative applied research center that strives to support the resiliency of<br />

communities facing environmental challenges. Her post-Katrina research<br />

includes co-authoring Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina<br />

and the Disasters of Tomorrow about the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet<br />

and the flooding of New Orleans, as well as multiple peer-reviewed journal<br />

publications. She previously served for eight years as the Vice President of<br />

Research for the University of New Orleans and has received numerous<br />

awards including from the American Sociological Association, the Rural<br />

Sociological Society, and the Southern Sociological Society.<br />

THURSDAY, 21 FEBRUARY 2013 – MORNING PLENARY SESSION<br />

DR. JAMES SYVITSKI<br />

Executive Director, Community Surface Dynamics Modeling System,<br />

University of Colorado at Boulder<br />

Presentation Topic: Geo-engineering of Lowland Floodplains and Deltas<br />

While recent debate has focused on the utility of geo-engineering in relationship<br />

to amelioration of greenhouse gas impacts, we should recognize<br />

that humans have been engineering the earth’s surface for millennia. Humans<br />

have worked to change natural aquatic systems, particularly floodplains<br />

and delta plains, into unnatural conduits of water, sediment, carbon,<br />

nutrients and pollutants. While the engineering of rivers began some 3000<br />

years ago with ancient civilizations, serious waterway engineering began<br />

in earnest between the 14th and 17th centuries, when great canals were<br />

built, rivers were straitened and levee systems were developed. Deforestation<br />

during these and later periods, introduced vast amounts of fresh<br />

sediment into these aquatic environments; fluvial sediment loads doubled<br />

on average. A major dam (>15 m in height) has been built every day for<br />

the last 110 years, on average, sequestering hundreds of GT of sediment<br />

and carbon in reservoirs and greatly limiting the transport of sediment to


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

the coast. This interception of upstream sediment has left modern rivers<br />

with cleaner water, reduced flood magnitudes, and discharge through<br />

fewer distributary channels that are armored with artificial levees. Today<br />

deltas are subsiding at rates four times larger than the sea level is rising,<br />

on average; subsurface mining (oil, gas or groundwater) being the main<br />

culprit. Tens of millions of hectares of our coastlines are flooded every<br />

year. Coastal retreat has accelerated from m/y to km/y as further impacted<br />

by the removal of protective coastal mangrove forests or wetlands, often<br />

to make room for shrimp farms. Human manipulation of our waterways<br />

have thus contributed to coastal land loss, reduced biodiversity, saltwater<br />

intrusion with soils turning saline, increased water temperatures, coastal<br />

erosion, loss of coastal infrastructure, and loss of wetlands. Only through<br />

understanding the global footprint of humans can we begin to develop effective<br />

policies and protocols for supporting global sustainability. We may<br />

also recognize our successes and failures at geo-engineering.<br />

Biographical information: Professor James P.M. Syvitski received a Ph.D. at<br />

the University of British Columbia in 1978, where he developed a quantitative<br />

understanding of particle dynamics across the land-sea boundary. He<br />

has held a variety of appointments within Canadian universities (1978-<br />

95) and was a Senior Research Scientist within the Geological Survey of<br />

Canada and the Bedford Institute of Oceanography (1981-95). He served<br />

as Director of INSTAAR – a U Colorado - Boulder Earth and Environmental<br />

Systems Institute from 1995-2007, and presently holds CU faculty<br />

appointments in Geological Sciences, Applied Mathematics, Atmosphere<br />

& Ocean Sciences, Hydrological Sciences, and Geophysics. Professor<br />

Syvitski is presently Executive Director of CSDMS— Community Surface<br />

Dynamics Modeling System, an international effort to develop, support,<br />

and disseminate integrated software modules to the broader Geoscience<br />

community. Syvitski also is Chair of the International Geosphere-Biosphere<br />

Program that provides essential scientific leadership and knowledge of the<br />

Earth system to help guide society onto a sustainable pathway during rapid<br />

global change. Professor Syvitski received the 2009 Royal Society of Canada,<br />

Huntsman Medal for Outstanding Achievements in Marine Science, and is<br />

a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union.<br />

FRIDAY, 22 FEBRUARY 2013 – MORNING PLENARY SESSION<br />

DR. KLEMENT TOCKNER<br />

Professor, Aquatic Ecology, Freie Universität Berlin, and Director, Leibniz-<br />

Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries<br />

Presentation Title: Domesticated Rivers: Rethinking Science and Management<br />

Throughout the past centuries most large rivers have increasingly become<br />

human-dominated ecosystems as a result of land reclamation, floodplain<br />

drainage, hydropower production, and channelization for navigation.<br />

Their domestication, i.e. their optimization for few ecosystem services, has<br />

fundamentally altered habitat conditions and led to the formation of nonanalogous<br />

biotic communities as well as to the truncation of vital ecosystem<br />

processes. The gains associated with domestication of freshwater ecosystems<br />

have been counter-balanced by deplorable trade-offs, the most severe of<br />

which are loss of biodiversity and decrease in related ecosystem services.<br />

Domestication of ecosystems, combined with the rapid turnover of biotic<br />

communities, calls for a fundamental rethinking of the future management<br />

of freshwater ecosystems. Persistent emphasis on an idealistic vision of ecosystems<br />

may not be feasible for ecosystems that continuously change. Concurrently,<br />

river management competes with the more human-focused targets<br />

and directives in the energy, flood control and agricultural sectors. Therefore,<br />

there is an urgent need for innovative, adaptive strategies to sustainably man-<br />

6<br />

age rivers. Conservation efforts will need to be complemented by, or perhaps<br />

even replaced by, increasing levels of management intervention, in order to<br />

maintain, or create, the desired ecological values of freshwater ecosystems.<br />

Biographical information: Klement Tockner is professor for aquatic ecology<br />

at the Freie Universität Berlin and director of the Leibniz-Institute of<br />

Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB), the largest freshwater<br />

ecology institute in Germany (www.igb-berlin.de). He received a PhD<br />

at the University of Vienna, and a titular professorship from ETH. He<br />

has special expertise on freshwater biodiversity, ecosystem functioning,<br />

and river and wetland restoration and management. He is editor-in-chief<br />

of the journal Aquatic Sciences, and he has published more than 180<br />

scientific papers including 100+ ISI papers. Tockner was elected member<br />

of the Austrian Academy of Sciences as well as of several scientific committees<br />

including the crosscutting group on freshwater biodiversity of<br />

DIVERSITAS. At present, he coordinates a large EC-funded project on<br />

freshwater biodiversity (www.freshwaterbiodiversity.eu).<br />

DR. MARK DAVIS<br />

Senior Research Fellow, Tulane University Law School and Director, Tulane<br />

Institute on Water Resources Law and Policy<br />

Presentation Title: Square Pegs, Round Holes: The Disconnect Between<br />

New Water Realities and Current Water Management<br />

Until relatively recently under Euro-American traditions water has been<br />

treated as a public thing or a commons with few centralized points of management<br />

or prioritized uses. Growing populations and expanding industrialization<br />

have propelled a shift toward more intensive water management,<br />

a trend that greatly accelerated over the past 100 years or so. The resulting<br />

administrative structures and priorities were largely driven by the desire<br />

to foster growth and largely assumed that water could be commanded to<br />

serve that growth and the environmental and cultural costs, when they were<br />

acknowledged at all, could be effectively managed. The resulting sprawl of<br />

cities and the development and “reclamation” of wetlands and arid areas has<br />

produced unprecedented prosperity and production but there is increasing<br />

evidence that that growth, prosperity, and production will not be sustainable,<br />

at least with significant changes to way water resources are managed and<br />

most importantly to the underlying assumption that water in the future will<br />

be as available as it has been in the past.<br />

Biographical Information: Mark Davis is a Senior Research Fellow at Tulane<br />

University Law School and Director of the Institute on Water Resources<br />

Law and Policy at the Law School. The mission of the Institute is to foster<br />

an appreciation of the importance of water resources and the vital roles that<br />

law and policy play in their management and stewardship. Prior to coming<br />

to the Law School, Davis served for fourteen years as Executive Director of<br />

the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana, a broad based organization committed<br />

to the stewardship of Louisiana’s coast. He is a member of the bar in<br />

Indiana, the District of Columbia, Illinois and Louisiana. Davis has taught<br />

as an adjunct faculty member at the Indiana University School of Business<br />

(Indianapolis), IIT Chicago-Kent School of Law, and Loyola Law School<br />

(New Orleans). He is currently an adjunct instructor at the Tulane University<br />

Law School. Davis has a BS and JD from Indiana University and an<br />

MLT from Georgetown University. Davis sits on a number of boards and<br />

commissions including: America’s Wetland Foundation Board of Directors,<br />

Gulf Restoration Network Advisory Board, Coalition to Restore Coastal<br />

Louisiana Advisory Board, Governor’s Advisory Commission on Coastal<br />

Restoration and Conservation, Legal and Land Rights Committee, LSU Sea<br />

Grant Legal Program Advisory Board, Louisiana State University School of<br />

the Coast and Environment Advisory Committee.


Meeting Program<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 TICK TALK SESSIONS<br />

We are introducing two exciting, potentially dangerous sessions for <strong>ASLO</strong><br />

2013, with the aim of stimulating discussion on the topic of the morning<br />

plenary among conference participants. These new sessions will have a<br />

format, with only three speakers in each session. Each speaker will have<br />

up to 10 slides and six (6) minutes (strictly enforced) to be speculative,<br />

creative, thought provoking, and to encourage attendees to think outside<br />

of the box on the topic of the associated plenary. Each speaker will have an<br />

additional four (4) minutes for questions. These sessions are not necessarily<br />

the venue to introduce new results. Rather they are a stage to put forth<br />

speculative ideas about how our science can affect the larger picture and to<br />

unleash your creativity to get the community talking.<br />

SS83: ASM 2013 TICK TALK SESSION - CLIMATE CHANGE SCIENCE<br />

AND COMMUNICATION<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

13:30 to 14:00 - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Speakers:<br />

Dr. Brian Helmuth, University of South Carolina<br />

Dr. Gretchen Hofmann, Dept. of Ecology, University of California at<br />

Santa Barbara<br />

Dr. Don Boesch, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science<br />

SS84: ASM 2013 TICK TALK SESSION - GEO-ENGINEERING OF<br />

AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

13:30 to 14:00 - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Speakers:<br />

Dr. Ken Buesseler, Woods Hole Institute for Oceanography<br />

Dr. Richard W. Murray, Boston University<br />

Dr. Dan Conley, Lund University<br />

SOCIETY AWARD PRESENTATIONS<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 society awards will be presented during the opening plenary<br />

session on Sunday, at the business meeting on Monday and during the<br />

morning plenary sessions Monday through Thursday.<br />

Biographical information and award citations were included in the February<br />

issue of the L&O: Bulletin.<br />

SUNDAY OPENING SESSION:<br />

2013 A.C. Redfield Award presented to<br />

Bruce J. Peterson, Senior Scientist, The Ecosystems<br />

Center, Marine Biological Laboratory,<br />

Woods Hole, Massachusetts<br />

About the Award: The Lifetime Achievement<br />

Award recognizes and honors major, long-term<br />

achievements in the fields of limnology and<br />

oceanography, including research, education<br />

and service to the community and society. In<br />

2004, the <strong>ASLO</strong> Board renamed the Lifetime Achievement Award in<br />

honor of Alfred C. Redfield. Emphasis in selection is given to established<br />

aquatic scientists whose work is recognized for its importance<br />

and long-term influence.<br />

7<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

MONDAY PLENARY SESSION:<br />

2013 Ruth Patrick Award presented to Asit<br />

Mazumder, NSERC-Industry Research Chair,<br />

Department of Biology, University of Victoria,<br />

Victoria, British Columbia, Canada<br />

About the Award: The Ruth Patrick Award honors<br />

outstanding research by a scientist in the application<br />

of basic aquatic science principles to the identification,<br />

analysis and/or solution of important<br />

environmental problems. The award is given to<br />

aquatic scientists who have made either sustained contributions or a single,<br />

but critical contribution towards solving an environmental problem.<br />

2013 Yentsch-Schindler Early Career Award<br />

presented to Emily S. Bernhardt, Associate<br />

Professor, Department of Biology, Duke<br />

University, Durham, North Carolina<br />

About the Award: In 2012, the <strong>ASLO</strong> Board<br />

initiated a new annual award in honor of early<br />

career scientists. The Yentsch-Schindler Early<br />

Career Award honors an aquatic scientist within<br />

12 years of the completion of their terminal<br />

degree, for outstanding and balanced contributions to research, science<br />

training, and broader societal issues such as resource management,<br />

conservation, policy, and public education. The award will be presented<br />

for the first time in 2013.<br />

MONDAY BUSINESS MEETING:<br />

2013 G. Evelyn Hutchinson Award presented<br />

to Curtis A. Suttle, Professor of Earth and<br />

Ocean Sciences, Microbiology and Immunology,<br />

and Botany; Senior Fellow of the Canadian<br />

Institute for Advanced Research; Associate<br />

Dean of Science, University of British Columbia,<br />

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada<br />

About the Award: The G. Evelyn Hutchinson<br />

Award has been presented annually since 1982 to<br />

recognize excellence in any aspect of limnology or oceanography. The award<br />

is intended to symbolize the quality and innovations toward which the<br />

society strives and to remind its members of these goals. In lending his name<br />

to the award, Hutchinson asked that recipients be scientists who had made<br />

considerable contributions to knowledge, and whose future work promised<br />

a continuing legacy of scientific excellence. The award is given to mid-career<br />

scientists for work accomplished during the preceding five to 10 years.<br />

TUESDAY PLENARY SESSION:<br />

2013 Citation for Scientific Excellence<br />

presented posthumously to Scott W. Nixon,<br />

Narragansett, Rhode Island. (Dr. Nixon’s<br />

daughter, Beth Nixon, will accept the award<br />

on his behalf.)<br />

About the Award: This episodic award was initiated<br />

in 1987 to recognize members who could<br />

not fulfill their career potential because of early<br />

death or disability.


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

WEDNESDAY PLENARY SESSION:<br />

2013 John Martin Award presented<br />

to Val Smith, Professor, Ecology and<br />

Evolutionary Biology, University of<br />

Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas for:<br />

V.H. Smith, “Low Nitrogen to Phosphorus Ratios<br />

Favor Dominance by Blue-Green Algae<br />

in Lake Phyplankton,” Science 221: 669-671<br />

(August 12, 1983)<br />

About the Award: The John Martin Award recognizes a paper in aquatic<br />

sciences that is judged to have had a high impact on subsequent research<br />

in the field. The model for such a paper is Martin et al (1991), which laid<br />

out the case for iron limitation of phytoplankton productivity in the ocean.<br />

The Martin Award is for papers at least 10 years old.<br />

2013 Raymond L. Lindeman Award presented<br />

to Jillian Petersen, Scientist, Max Planck<br />

Institute for Marine Microbiology Symbiosis<br />

Group, Bremen, Germany for:<br />

J.M. Petersen, F.U. Zielinski, T. Pape, R. Seifert, C.<br />

Moraru, R. Amann, S. Hourdez, P.R. Girguis,<br />

S. D. Wankel, V. Barbe, E. Pelletier, D. Fink,<br />

C. Borowski, W. Bach, and N. Dubilier (2011)<br />

Hydrogen is an energy source for hydrothermal<br />

vent symbioses. Nature 476, 176-180.<br />

About the Award: This annual award in honor of Raymond L. Lindeman<br />

(1915-1942) was first presented in 1987 to recognize an outstanding<br />

paper written by a young aquatic scientist age written by a scientist 35<br />

years of age or less.<br />

THURSDAY PLENARY SESSION:<br />

2013 Ramón Margalef Award for Excellence<br />

in Education presented to Warwick Vincent,<br />

Professor of Biology, Canada Research Chair<br />

in Aquatic Ecosystem Studies, Laval University,<br />

Quebec, QC, Canada<br />

About the Award: This award is targeted toward<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> members at any stage in their careers and<br />

is presented to the <strong>ASLO</strong> member who best<br />

exemplifies the highest standards of excellence in<br />

education. The Ramón Margalef Award for Excellence in Education was<br />

first presented in 2009 and is presented annually.<br />

ABOUT THE <strong>CONFERENCE</strong> MEETING SITE<br />

CONCESSIONS AND VENDORS AT THE CONVENTION CENTER<br />

Coffee vendors and other concession areas will be available at the Convention<br />

Center throughout the week. They offer a wide variety of breakfast<br />

items, entrees, Cajun fare, soups, sandwiches, snacks, fruit, and beverages.<br />

Starbucks is located on the first floor of the Convention Center in the<br />

Atrium. Concessions are available in the Food Court located in Lobby<br />

F and in the back of Exhibit Hall E. Daystar Coffee is located in Lobby<br />

8<br />

D/E. Hours are subject to change. The concession area in Exhibit Hall E<br />

will not be open on Friday.<br />

Starbucks ................................................................................... 07:30 – 16:00<br />

Food Court ................................................................................ 09:00 – 16:00<br />

Daystar Coffee ........................................................................... 07:30 – 16:00<br />

Concessions - Exhibit Hall E ................................................ 09:00 – 16:00<br />

EMAIL/INTERNET ACCESS<br />

Complimentary wireless Internet access is limited but is available at the<br />

New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in all public areas. To<br />

connect to Wi-Fi at the convention center you should enable your wireless<br />

access on your device and look for <strong>ASLO</strong>13. This is the network you will<br />

connect through. No password is necessary after you connect to the network,<br />

if you click on your browser, it will take you directly to the Internet.<br />

Note: Wireless cannot be used for networking purposes.<br />

Most hotels have Internet access available to guests. Check with your<br />

hotel to see what charges may apply.<br />

TRANSPORTATION IN THE DOWNTOWN AREA<br />

Visitors to New Orleans will notice the streetcars. They are a great way to<br />

see the city with three different lines: St. Charles, Canal Street, and the Riverfront,<br />

each of which originates downtown but takes you to different parts<br />

of the city. One-way fares are $1.25 and can be paid with exact change when<br />

you board. One, 3- and 5-day unlimited ride passes are also available for $5,<br />

$12 and $20 respectively. (These fares are subject to change.) If you prefer to<br />

take a cab, most journeys by cab are very affordable.<br />

Busses also are available in the downtown area, but they do not run to<br />

the airport.<br />

If you are driving to the meeting, a map showing parking near the convention<br />

center is available at http://www.aslo.org/meetings/neworleans2013/<br />

files/asm2013-parking_map-061112.pdf.<br />

Ample parking is available at the Convention Center for a daily fee.<br />

The destination address for GPS or online mapping is 900 Convention<br />

Center Blvd., New Orleans, LA 70130<br />

<strong>CONFERENCE</strong> REGISTRATION AND CHECK IN<br />

Registration and check in for the meeting will be available all week in the<br />

Prefunction Area of Exhibit Hall E on the first floor. Please check in<br />

upon your arrival at the meeting in order to receive your name badge and<br />

other important materials and information.<br />

REGISTRATION HOURS:<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013 .......................................................13:00 to 20:00<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013<br />

through Thursday, 21 February 2013 ...................................07:00 to 18:00<br />

Friday, 22 February 2013 .........................................................07:00 to 16:00<br />

In order to facilitate easier check in at the meeting, it is very important that<br />

you bring a copy of the email confirmation that you received when you registered.<br />

This will allow us to locate your name badge quickly and efficiently.


Meeting Program<br />

MESSAGE BOARDS<br />

There will be a message board located near the conference registration<br />

desk in the Exhibit Hall E lobby area where you may post or check for<br />

messages throughout the conference.<br />

SPECIAL NEEDS<br />

If you have a disability or limitation that may require special consideration<br />

in order to ensure your full participation in this meeting, please see a staff<br />

person at the conference registration desk.<br />

COFFEE BREAKS<br />

Coffee breaks are planned Monday through Friday from 09:30 to 10:00<br />

immediately following the plenary and award presentation sessions and in<br />

the afternoon from 15:30 to 16:00. Complimentary coffee and tea will be<br />

served. Bottled water will not be served. Water will be provided in coolers,<br />

and attendees are encouraged to bring their own water bottles. Breaks<br />

will be set in Exhibit Hall E Monday through Thursday and will be in the<br />

foyer area of La Nouvelle Ballroom C on Friday.<br />

LUNCHTIME DURING THE MEETING<br />

12:00 to 13:30 Monday through Friday<br />

We encourage you to stay at the convention center during the 1 ½ hour<br />

lunch break each day. This meeting offers many events that take place over<br />

lunch including several informative workshops, meetings, and plenary sessions<br />

that you will enjoy. The convention center offers a number places to<br />

purchase a quick lunch along with many other dining options nearby. You<br />

will also find comfortable places to relax and visit with fellow attendees<br />

and colleagues.<br />

EXHIBITORS AND SPONSORS<br />

Exhibits will be open in Exhibit Hall E of the Convention Center. Attendees<br />

will enjoy being able to visit with vendors during conference hours<br />

Monday through Thursday. Attendees will have access to the exhibit hall<br />

during the exhibit hall hours listed below. Morning and afternoon coffee<br />

breaks and poster sessions will be set in the exhibit area, as well. Exhibits<br />

will be open during the breaks and any time that the exhibit hall is open,<br />

including during lunch. Posters will be displayed in the Exhibit Hall as<br />

well, and poster receptions will take place Tuesday and Thursday evenings<br />

from 18:00 to 19:30.<br />

Monday, 18 February ...............................................................09:30 – 17:30<br />

Tuesday, 19 February ................................................................09:30 – 19:30<br />

Wednesday, 20 February............................................................09:30 – 18:00<br />

Thursday, 21 February ...............................................................09:30 – 19:30<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 EXHIBITOR ROSTER<br />

American Meteorological Society (Booth 25)<br />

1200 New York Avenue, NW<br />

Suite 500<br />

Washington, DC 20005<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Kira Nugnes<br />

Phone: 202-737-1043<br />

Email: dcmeetings@ametsoc.org<br />

Website: http://metsoc.org/<br />

9<br />

Arizona Geological Survey (Booth 31)<br />

416 W Congress St, Ste 100<br />

Tucson, AZ 85701<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Kim Patten<br />

Phone: 520-209-4125<br />

Email: kim.patten@azgs.az.gov<br />

Website: http://azgs.az.gov<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>: Association for the Sciences<br />

of Limnology and Oceanography<br />

(Booth 1 and 30)<br />

5400 Bosque Boulevard, Suite 680<br />

Waco, TX 76710-4446<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Helen Schneider Lemay<br />

Phone: 254-776-3550<br />

Fax: 254-776-3767<br />

Email: business@aslo.org<br />

Website: http://www.aslo.org<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Students (Booth 2 and 29)<br />

5400 Bosque Boulevard, Suite 680<br />

Waco, TX 76710-4446<br />

USA<br />

Contact: <strong>ASLO</strong> Business Office<br />

Phone: 254-776-3550<br />

Fax: 254-776-3767<br />

Email: business@aslo.org<br />

Website: http://www.aslo.org<br />

Blue Water Satellite, Inc. (Booth 36)<br />

440 E. Poe Rd., Suite 203<br />

Bowling Green, OH 43402<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Reid McEwen<br />

Phone: 419-728-0060<br />

Email: rmcewen@bluewatersatellite.com<br />

Website: http://bluewatersatellite.com<br />

CAMECA (Booth 14)<br />

5500 Nobel Dr., Suite 100<br />

Madison, WI 57311<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Jane Lindner<br />

Phone: 608-274-6880<br />

Fax: 608-442-0622<br />

Email: jane.lindner@ametek.com<br />

Website: http://www.cameca.com<br />

CODAR Ocean Sensors (Booth 28)<br />

1914 Plymouth Street<br />

Mountain View, CA 94043<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Laura Pederson<br />

Phone: 408-773-8240<br />

Fax: 408-773-0514<br />

Email: laura@codar.com<br />

Website: http://codar.com/<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Join us at the <strong>ASLO</strong> booth on<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013,<br />

from 19:00 to 20:00 for<br />

a champagne toast to launch<br />

the newest Limnology and<br />

Oceanography e-Book!


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Consortium for Ocean Leadership (Booth 20)<br />

1201 New York Ave, NW<br />

Washington, DC 20005<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Kristin Kracke<br />

Phone: 202-787-1644<br />

Email: kkracke@oceanleadership.org<br />

Website: http://www.oceanleadership.org/<br />

Duke University Press (Booth 1 and 30)<br />

905 West Main Street, Suite 18B<br />

Durham, NC 27701<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Katie Anderson<br />

Phone: 919-687-8013<br />

Fax: 919-680-6078<br />

Email: Katie.Anderson@dukeupress.edu<br />

Website: http://www.dukeupress.edu<br />

Fluid Imaging Technologies, Inc. (Booth 23 and 24)<br />

65 Forest Falls Drive<br />

Yarmouth, ME 04096<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Harry Nelson<br />

Phone: 207-846-6100<br />

Email: harry@fluidimaging.com<br />

Website: http://fluidimaging.com/<br />

Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (Booth 21)<br />

1201 New York Ave, NW<br />

Washington, DC 20005<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Leigh Zimmermann<br />

Phone: 202-448-1225<br />

Email: lzimmermann@oceanleadership.org<br />

Website: http://gulfresearchinitiative.org/<br />

Hach Hydromet (Booth 19)<br />

5600 Lindbergh Drive<br />

Loveland, CO 80539<br />

USA<br />

Contact: David Procyk<br />

Phone: 970-669-3050<br />

Email: dprocyk@hach.com<br />

Website: http://www.hach.com<br />

Hawaii Convention and Visitors Bureau (Booth 16)<br />

Hawai’i Convention Center/SMG<br />

1801 Kalakaua Ave.<br />

Honolulu, HI 96815<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Gary Uyeda<br />

Phone: 808.943.3048<br />

Fax: 808.943.3099<br />

Email: guyeda@hccsmg.com<br />

Website: http://www.hawaiiconvention.com<br />

10<br />

Hydroptic (Booth 12)<br />

8 Avenue du Commandant Taillefer<br />

L’Isle en Doden 31230<br />

France<br />

Contact: Jérôme Coindat<br />

+33 (0)9 6324 8220<br />

+33 (0)5 6189 3788<br />

Email: jerome.coindat@hydroptic.com<br />

Website: http://hydroptic.com<br />

JFE Advantech Co., Ltd. (Booth 26)<br />

7-2-3 Ibukidai-Higashi<br />

Kobe 651-2242<br />

Japan<br />

Contact: Koji Ochi<br />

Phone: +81-78-997-8686<br />

Fax: +81-78-997-8609<br />

Email: ocean@jfe-advantech.co.jp<br />

Website: http://www.jfe-advantech.co.jp/eng/index.html<br />

Loligo Systems (Booth 6)<br />

Niels Pedersen Alle 2<br />

Tjele 8830<br />

Denmark<br />

Contact: Awantha Dissanayake<br />

Phone: +45 8999 2565<br />

Email: ad@loligosystems.com<br />

Website: http://www.loligosystems.com/<br />

Lotek Wireless/Sirtrack Ltd. (Booth 33)<br />

114 Cabot Street<br />

St. John’s, Newfoundland<br />

Canada<br />

Contact: Padraic O’Flaherty<br />

Phone: 709-746-9798<br />

Email: poflaherty@lotek.com<br />

Websites: http://lotek.com / http://www.sirtrack.com<br />

Nortek (Booth 22)<br />

27 Drydock Avenue<br />

Boston, MA 02210<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Freda Zifteh<br />

Phone: 617-206-5753<br />

Fax: 617-275-8955<br />

Email: freda@nortekusa.com<br />

Website: http://nortekusa.com<br />

Ocean Opportunities (Booth 17)<br />

WHOI<br />

266 Woods Hole Rd<br />

Woods Hole, MA 02543<br />

USA<br />

Contact: James Yoder<br />

Phone: 508-289-2200<br />

Email: jyoder@whoi.edu<br />

Website: http://www.whoi.edu


Meeting Program<br />

Oxford University Press (Booth 27)<br />

198 Madison Avenue<br />

New York, NY 10016<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Erin Norris<br />

Phone: 800-451-7556<br />

Email: gab.exhibitions.us@oup.com<br />

Website: http://global.oup.com<br />

Precision Measurement Engineering, Inc. (Booth 9)<br />

1487 Poinsettia Ave., Suite 129<br />

Vista, CA 92081<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Kristin Elliott<br />

Phone: 760-727-0300<br />

Fax: 760-727-0333<br />

Email: kristinhead@pme.com<br />

Website: http://pme.com/<br />

RBR (Booth 11)<br />

5-95 Hines Road<br />

Ottawa, ON K2K 2M5<br />

Canada<br />

Contact: Emily MacPherson<br />

Phone: 613-599-8900<br />

Fax: 613-599-8929<br />

Email: info@rbr-global.com<br />

Website: http://rbr-global.com/<br />

Rockland Scientific, Inc. (Booth 5)<br />

520 Dupplin Road<br />

Victoria, BC V8Z 1C1<br />

Canada<br />

Contact: Fabian Wolk<br />

Phone: 250-370-1688<br />

Email: Fabian@rocklandscientific.com<br />

Website: http://rocklandscientific.com/<br />

Sea-Bird Scientific (Booth 3 and 4)<br />

13431 NE 20th Street<br />

Bellevue, WA 98005<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Julie Rodriguez<br />

Phone: 425-644-3207<br />

Fax: 425-643-9954<br />

Email: jrodriguez@seabird.com<br />

Website: http://seabird.com/<br />

Scientists and Environmentalists for Population Stabilization (Booth 15)<br />

Biology Department<br />

San Diego State University<br />

San Diego, CA 92182-4614<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Stuart Hurlbert<br />

Phone: 619-594-5409<br />

Email: shurlbert@sunstroke.sdsu.edu<br />

Website: http://www.bio.sdsu.edu/<br />

11<br />

Turner Designs, Inc. (Booth 7)<br />

845 W. Maude Avenue<br />

Sunnyvale, CA 94085<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Jenifer Sluga<br />

Phone: 408-749-0994<br />

Fax: 408-749-0998<br />

Email: marketing@turnerdesigns.com<br />

Website: http://turnerdesigns.com/<br />

Unisense (Booth 8)<br />

Unisense A/S<br />

Tueager 1<br />

Aarhus DK-8200<br />

Denmark<br />

Contact: Thomas Rattenborg<br />

Phone: +45 8944 9500<br />

Fax: +45 8944 9549<br />

Email: tr@unisense.com<br />

Website: http://www.unisense.com/<br />

Unity Scientific (Booth 10)<br />

117 Old State Rd.<br />

Brookfield, CT 06804<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Tom Bloomer<br />

Phone: 203-740-2999<br />

Fax: 203-740-2955<br />

Email: tbloomer@unityscientific.com<br />

Website: http://unityscientific.com/<br />

Xylem Incorporated / Aanderaa Data Instruments, Inc.<br />

(Booths 13 and 18)<br />

182 East Street, Suite B<br />

Attleboro, MA 02703<br />

USA<br />

Contact: Richard Butler<br />

Phone: 508-226-9300<br />

Fax: 508-226-9306<br />

Email: infousa@xyleminc.com<br />

Website: http://www.xyleminc.com<br />

AUDUBON AQUARIUM<br />

OF THE AMERICAS RECEPTION<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

18:00 - 21:00 - Aquarium of the Americas<br />

Cost: $70 USD per person<br />

Tickets may be purchased until noon on Monday, 18 February 2013.<br />

This will be a wonderful evening featuring New Orleans cuisine, bar<br />

stations scattered throughout the Aquarium of the Americas, and nice<br />

background music.<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Upon entering the aquarium you will find yourself in an underwater<br />

paradise. When you arrive, you will be directed to the Caribbean Reef,<br />

where cocktails coupled with a 30-foot acrylic tunnel will take guests<br />

on an under-water journey through the 132,000 gallon exhibit. Moray<br />

eels, parrotfish and cownose rays are among the hundreds of specimens<br />

that surround you in this exhibit. Cascading waterfalls, rare orchids, and


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

infamous red bellied piranha offer an adventurous trek in the next gallery,<br />

the Amazon Rain Forest. Emerging from the Amazon, you will be greeted<br />

by the sights and sounds of playful penguins.<br />

You will find food stations in the Living in Water gallery, set amongst the<br />

back drop of the Tropical Sharks and Seahorses area. Enjoy the reception,<br />

along with swimming penguins, circling sharks, mystifying sea dragons.<br />

After browsing the Living in Water Gallery, you will have the opportunity<br />

to encounter Buck and Emma, the Aquarium’s two playful Sea Otters.<br />

From here you may walk at your leisure down the boat launch into the<br />

Mississippi River gallery. Rare white alligators, pre-historic Paddlefish and<br />

Longnose gar are among Louisiana’s native species found here.<br />

SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES AND<br />

INFORMATION FOR STUDENTS<br />

STUDENT SOCIAL MIXER<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013<br />

19:00 to 21:00 - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B<br />

An informal student social mixer will be held on Monday evening following<br />

the <strong>ASLO</strong> Membership and Business Meeting. Senior scientists will<br />

be invited to attend and meet with students on an informal basis. Beverages<br />

and snacks will be available. All students are invited to attend.<br />

OUTSTANDING STUDENT PRESENTATION AWARDS<br />

Recognition and awards will be provided to the most outstanding posters<br />

and talks presented by students at the 2013 Aquatic Sciences Meeting.<br />

Presentations will be judged on the basis of innovation/scientific insight,<br />

quality of experimental design/methods, and clarity/effectiveness of<br />

presentation. There is no need to apply; all <strong>ASLO</strong> student presentations<br />

will be judged and eligible presentations will be evaluated in consideration<br />

for the awards. Award winners will be notified via email and a list will be<br />

included in an upcoming issue of the L&O: Bulletin.<br />

CAREER CENTER<br />

There will be a Career Center set up in Exhibit Hall E, where students<br />

and early career professionals can meet each other and the <strong>ASLO</strong> Board<br />

members in a fun, relaxed setting. This center will host the Career Bulletin<br />

Board, where prospective employers are invited to post job announcements<br />

and students and early career professionals are invited to post a one-page<br />

CV. Students should also stop by for information and to sign up for the<br />

Career Development Workshops and student social events.<br />

SCIENTIFIC SPEED DATING: NETWORKING FOR THE 21ST CENTURY<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B<br />

Panelists: Advanced scientists from a variety of aquatic science fields<br />

It can be daunting to try to introduce yourself to someone at a large<br />

scientific meeting, but given the right opportunity, a quality exchange can<br />

have a lasting impression. Scientific speed dating is a twist on the popular<br />

singles speed dating phenomenon. The goal here is to foster an interactive<br />

environment between small groups of advanced scientists and graduate<br />

students in hopes of creating some short, high impact exchanges. It’s<br />

amazing what can be accomplished in five minutes! Join us for this workshop<br />

to start building new connections.<br />

12<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> STUDENT WORKSHOPS<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Rooms 343 and 345<br />

Student Career Development Workshops will be held over lunch on<br />

Tuesday and Thursday during the meeting. These are informal workshops<br />

led by senior scientists on a variety of topics relating to careers in<br />

the aquatic sciences. A range of topics will be covered to address different<br />

career paths in the aquatic sciences, skills or expertise important for these<br />

careers, and strategies for successfully competing for jobs, grants, or fellowships.<br />

A limited number of lunches will be provided.<br />

EARLY CAREER EVENTS<br />

“Early Career” scientists are non-student <strong>ASLO</strong> members who have<br />

received their highest degree within the last 10 years. Come join us!<br />

EARLY CAREER MEET AND MIX<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013<br />

19:00-21:00 - Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area (1st Floor)<br />

A “meet and mix” reception is planned and organized by members of<br />

the <strong>ASLO</strong> early career (EC) committee to give early career members<br />

an opportunity to provide feedback on various topics relevant to them,<br />

including any concerns or expectations as an early career member. This is a<br />

social gathering for early career members to get to know each other and to<br />

network. Refreshments will be served. Come and meet the <strong>ASLO</strong> Board<br />

and members of the EC committee!<br />

EARLY CAREER WORKSHOP:<br />

STRATEGIES FOR FUNDING YOUR AQUATIC RESEARCH<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

12:00-13:30 – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B (3rd Floor)<br />

The <strong>ASLO</strong> Early Career committee will convene a panel of scientists<br />

representing diverse funding organizations that support aquatic research<br />

- ranging from the National Science Foundation to private philanthropic<br />

foundations and including some leading aquatic scientists. The panel will<br />

share their perspectives on matching funding sources with individuals’ research<br />

ideas, writing proposals, and engaging with funders. Scientists at all<br />

career stages are invited to attend and interact with the panel, to find out<br />

essentials about grant writing and more about funding aquatic research,<br />

for themselves, their students and their institutions. While this workshop<br />

is being planned to benefit “early career” scientists - that is, non-student<br />

members of <strong>ASLO</strong> who have received their highest degree within the<br />

last 10 years - all attendees are invited to participate. A limited number of<br />

boxed lunches will be served.<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 MULTICULTURAL <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

Since 1990 the <strong>ASLO</strong> Multicultural Program has brought 770 diverse<br />

undergraduate and graduate students to the annual <strong>ASLO</strong> meetings. The<br />

year the program will support 85 students. The program features a preconference<br />

dinner and field trip, meeting-mentors to help guide the students,<br />

a student-symposium, and various other activities. The goal of the program<br />

is to increase the human diversity of aquatic scientists. This year’s program<br />

will feature a special Sunday field trip that includes kayaking, bicycling and a<br />

visit to the New Orleans Botanical Gardens. Dr. Deidre Gibson of Hampton<br />

University, and Co-chair of the New Orleans meetings, will deliver


Meeting Program<br />

the keynote address at the opening dinner on Saturday night. There will<br />

be a special student symposium on Wednesday that is open to all <strong>ASLO</strong><br />

participants – we encourage you to attend. The <strong>ASLO</strong>MP students will<br />

be involved all the regular meeting activities. Please take the opportunity to<br />

introduce yourself when you see then at the meetings. For further information,<br />

contact Dr. Ben Cuker (benjamin.cuker@hamptonu.edu).<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> MULTICULTURAL <strong>PROGRAM</strong> TRAINING SESSION<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

15:00 to 17:00 - Room 335-336<br />

Since its inception in 1990, the <strong>ASLO</strong> Multicultural Program has<br />

bought over 750 undergraduate and graduate students to participate<br />

in the annual <strong>ASLO</strong> meetings and attendant activities. The success of<br />

this program attributes to the many <strong>ASLO</strong> members who volunteered<br />

to be meeting-mentors over the years. By serving as meeting-mentors,<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> members share themselves with the next generation of ocean<br />

and aquatic scientists. Meeting-mentors first meet their charges at<br />

15:00 on Sunday, 17 February.<br />

EMERGING ISSUES WORKSHOP<br />

Beginning with the summer meeting in 2010, the <strong>ASLO</strong> board of directors<br />

initiated funding for Emerging Issues Seminars that will further<br />

encourage dialog among scientists who wish to develop emerging, cuttingedge,<br />

controversial issues and/or topics that integrate knowledge across<br />

communities. In accordance with this, <strong>ASLO</strong> is sponsoring a two-day<br />

workshop following the meeting that is connected to a special session that<br />

will take place during the 2013 Aquatic Sciences Meeting in New Orleans.<br />

Organizers will submit a report with a summary of the outcome to the<br />

L&O Bulletin along with a table of contents of the written products stemming<br />

from the seminar.<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 EMERGING ISSUES WORKSHOP: LINKING<br />

OPTICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER IN NATURAL WATERS<br />

Saturday and Sunday, 23 and 24 February 2013<br />

08:00 to 17:00 - Belle Chasse Room, Hilton Hotel, 3rd Floor<br />

This is an open workshop immediately following the 2013 Aquatic Sciences<br />

Meeting. The workshop will be held in the Belle Chase Room at the<br />

Hilton Riverside Hotel.<br />

A substantial increase in the number of studies using the optical<br />

properties (absorbance and fluorescence) of dissolved organic matter<br />

(DOM) as a proxy for its chemical properties has occurred during<br />

the last decade. This is due in part to improved instrumentation and<br />

algorithms for interpreting the spectral data. Chemical characterization<br />

of DOM involves intensive laboratory work and often large sample<br />

volumes, whereas optical characterization is attractive to many scientists<br />

as it is relatively simple and inexpensive and these techniques can also be<br />

measured in-situ and via remote sensing. Linking the optical and chemical<br />

properties of dissolved organic matter is now a topic that requires<br />

consolidation and a combined effort if the aquatic science community is<br />

to continue to gain from these techniques, which are becoming routine<br />

analyses in the aquatic sciences. The Aquatic Sciences Meeting has<br />

several sessions related to this topic. However, the workshop will address<br />

two specific urgent needs for utilization and proliferation of these techniques<br />

by the aquatic sciences community:<br />

13<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

1. Link organic compounds (e.g. lignin) and classes of compounds<br />

(e.g. humic substances) present in natural waters that give rise to the<br />

spectral properties; and<br />

2. Link optical properties to sources and the wider biogeochemical<br />

properties of aquatic systems (i.e. the role that DOM will play in the<br />

aquatic ecosystem).<br />

The workshop will begin with plenary speakers on Saturday morning and<br />

continue Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning with open discussions<br />

focused on several key sub topics related to these two over-arching<br />

needs. Confirmed plenary speakers who will provide overview talks for<br />

this workshop are: George Aiken, Ron Benner, Neil Blough, Paula Coble,<br />

and Antonio Maninno. The workshop will end early Sunday afternoon. A<br />

complete agenda will be announced prior to the meeting.<br />

<strong>CONFERENCE</strong> EVENTS<br />

STUDENT VOLUNTEER TRAINING<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

15:00 to 16:00 - Meet at Registration Area outside Exhibit Hall E Prefunction<br />

Area<br />

This is a mandatory training session for student volunteers. Please contact<br />

Sue Rulla at suer@sgmeet.com<br />

SUNDAY OPENING PLENARY SESSION<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

16:00 - 18:00 - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

The opening session will begin at 16:00 on Sunday, 17 February. You will<br />

not want to miss this. Following a brief welcome and opening remarks by<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> President John Downing, the session will include a presentation by<br />

Richard Campanella, a geographer and senior professor of practice, Tulane<br />

School of Architecture, Tulane University. His presentation, “New Orleans:<br />

A Historical Geography, 1700s to 2000s,” will be illustrated to explain the<br />

formation of the Mississippi Delta, the settlement and early development of<br />

New Orleans all the way through the circumstances that led to the Katrina<br />

debacle. The A.C. Redfield Lifetime Achievement Award also will be presented<br />

during the opening session on Sunday. The Mixer Reception will kick<br />

off with a traditional New Orleans Mardi Gras Indian Show.<br />

MARDI GRAS INDIAN SHOW<br />

AND OPENING MIXER AND RECEPTION<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

18:00 - 20:00 - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B<br />

Enjoy this time of entertainment and get caught up with friends and<br />

colleagues! The Mardi Gras Indian Show consists of seven performers<br />

including a Big Chief Mardi Gras Indian, a Brass Band, and a Second<br />

Line. (The “main line” or “first line” is the main section of the parade, or<br />

the members of the actual club with the parading permit as well as the<br />

brass band. Those who follow the band just to enjoy the music are called<br />

the “second line.” The second line’s style of traditional dance, in which<br />

participants walk and sometimes twirl a parasol or handkerchief in the air,<br />

is called “second lining.”) This will be a unique welcome to New Orleans<br />

and to the 2013 Aquatic Sciences Meeting.


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

PLENARY SESSIONS AND AWARD ACCEPTANCE PRESENTATIONS<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013, through Friday, 22 February 2013<br />

08:00 to 09:30 - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Plenary Sessions will be held each morning of the meeting and will<br />

include brief opening announcements and remarks by committee member,<br />

plenary presentations, and award acceptance presentations. Plenary presentations<br />

and awardee information is listed in this program.<br />

ANNUAL <strong>ASLO</strong> BUSINESS AND MEMBERSHIP MEETING<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013<br />

17:45 to 19:00 - La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Annual Business and Membership Meeting of <strong>ASLO</strong> including Hutchinson<br />

Award Presentation. We encourage everyone to attend-- especially<br />

new members and student members. You do not need to be a member of<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> in order to attend.<br />

POSTER SESSIONS AND RECEPTIONS<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013 and Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

18:00 to 19:30 - Exhibit Hall E<br />

Though posters will be on display and available for viewing throughout<br />

the day, poster presentations will take place during evening sessions.<br />

Those who are presenting their research will do so during the receptions<br />

on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. Posters numbered 1 through 245<br />

will be presented on Tuesday. Posters numbered 246 through 479 will be<br />

presented on Thursday. Light reception foods will be served.<br />

ART EXHIBIT: “PAST, CURRENT, FUTURE – GULF OF MEXICO”<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013, through Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

09:30 to 17:30 – Room E1<br />

Artist exhibition featuring original works in the form of painting, photography,<br />

sculpture, ceramics and fibers mixed media by Louisiana students ages<br />

6-18 and the Gulf Coast community. All works will relate to the Gulf of<br />

Mexico as an inspiration. During the week, meeting scientists will vote on<br />

their favorite student art pieces. Winners will be announced on Thursday at<br />

17:00 in Room E2 of the Convention Center. The top three student artwork<br />

pieces chosen by the scientists will be presented with awards.<br />

TEACHER EXPO<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

16:00 to 19:00 – Room E2<br />

Scientists want to learn how to communicate their research into information<br />

useful to teachers. Teachers want experiences working with scientists<br />

to learn about current ideas in aquatic sciences.<br />

During the expo, scientists will present four 15-minute introductory talks<br />

for teachers on topics such as ocean acidification, chemical pollutants<br />

and phytoplankton; scientist “mentors” will be on hand to answer your<br />

questions, discuss current water issues and show you relevant scientific<br />

posters; aquatic scientists and educators will provide hands-on activities<br />

and resources for your classroom.<br />

16:00-17:00 4 Mini-Lectures on Freshwater and Marine Science<br />

topics (snacks provided)<br />

14<br />

17:00 Student Art Competition Winners will be announced<br />

17:00-17:30 Mentors meet with teachers and explore the poster hall<br />

17:30-19:00 Teachers can visit Resource Roundtables where scientists<br />

and education groups share hands-on activities and other<br />

resources with teachers<br />

19:00 Reception and Tour of R/V Pelican (Tentative)<br />

Teachers receive FREE admission to the Expo, but need to register in<br />

order to get a badge for the day. Teachers who have not registered online<br />

must register at the registration desk outside Exhibit Hall E.<br />

WORKSHOPS, TOWN HALLS,<br />

AND AUXILIARY MEETINGS<br />

SCOR WORKING GROUP<br />

Saturday, 16 February 2013<br />

08:00 to 17:30 - Room 340<br />

Members of an ICSU Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research<br />

(SCOR) WG 139: Organic ligands- A key control on trace metal<br />

biogeochemistry in the ocean will meet for the second time on Saturday,<br />

February 16, 2013. Organic ligands, molecules that form stable<br />

complexes with metals, have been shown to play an integral role in the<br />

bioavailability and cycling of bio-essential trace metals in the marine<br />

environment. This working group aims to combine the expertise of trace<br />

metal biogeochemists, organic geochemists and biogeochemical modelers<br />

toward advancing our understanding of metal-binding ligands in the<br />

oceans. Overarching goals for this working group over the next three<br />

years are: 1) Promote improvements in quality, accessibility, and development<br />

of analytical methodologies for characterizing metal-binding<br />

ligands in seawater; 2) Characterize which components of the dissolved<br />

organic matter pool make a significant contribution to biogeochemistry<br />

of trace metals in the oceans; and 3) Identify the role of metal-binding<br />

ligands in microbial ecology and marine biogeochemical cycles and successfully<br />

incorporate this into biogeochemical models. While the February<br />

2013 meeting is restricted to full and associate members of SCOR<br />

WG 139, participation in working group activities, including intercalibration<br />

efforts, is open to the broader scientific community. Anyone<br />

interested in the activities of this working group is encouraged to join<br />

our e-mail list (contact kristen.buck@bios.edu) and follow our progress<br />

on the SCOR website (www.scor-int.org/Working_Groups/wg139.<br />

htm). In addition, the co-chairs of SCOR WG 139 are also chairing a<br />

special session at the <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting in New Orleans,<br />

SS08: Biogeochemistry of metal-binding organic ligands in the ocean,<br />

scheduled for Tuesday, February 19 with a poster session Thursday,<br />

February 21. For more information, please contact co-chairs Kristen<br />

Buck (kristen.buck@bios.edu), Maeve Lohan (maeve.lohan@plymouth.<br />

ac.uk), or Sylvia Sander (sylvias@chemistry.otago.ac.nz).<br />

C-MORE CAREER NETWORKING WORKSHOP<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

08:30 to 15:30 - Room 342<br />

C-MORE is sponsoring a group of students and post-docs to hold a oneday<br />

career/networking workshop just before the New Orleans meeting.


Meeting Program<br />

SCINTILLATION: A WORKSHOP TO MAKE YOUR<br />

SCIENCE COMMUNICATION SCINTILLATE THROUGH<br />

“CRITICAL STORYTELLING”<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

09:00 to 16:00 - Room 345<br />

Organized by: Jonathan H. Sharp (University of Delaware) and Adrienne<br />

Sponberg (<strong>ASLO</strong>)<br />

If you would like to participate in this workshop, please contact Jon Sharp<br />

(jsharp@udel.edu).<br />

The Challenge: To communicate your science effectively. Whether communicating<br />

with fellow researchers, local policymakers, or the lay public, relaying<br />

technical information accurately while keeping an audience engaged<br />

is a critical skill. An all too common perception about scientists is that<br />

they are tedious, boring, and unlikeable. Since we are experts on science<br />

issues important to society, often we assume audiences await our gems<br />

of knowledge; in the words of Mark Twain: “with parted lips and bated<br />

breath the audience hung upon his words”. However, lay public audiences<br />

do not hang upon our words and even our science peers will tune us out if<br />

the presentation is not interesting. And in today’s fast-paced, information-<br />

glutted world, even “interesting” isn’t enough; it must be scintillating! It is<br />

a matter of critical storytelling.<br />

The Premise: Storytelling/narrative structure is at the core of virtually all<br />

effective broad communication. For obvious commercial reasons the Hollywood<br />

entertainment industry has traditionally been the source of both<br />

innovation and perfection of narrative elements, yet their basic approach is<br />

equally applicable to the communication of science to all audiences, from the<br />

general public to academics. For the past five years scientist-turned-filmmaker<br />

Randy Olson has been developing an approach he calls “critical storytelling,”<br />

bringing together the broadly creative energy of Hollywood with the<br />

rigorous discipline and commitment to accuracy of the science world.<br />

This is an all-day workshop to help you improve communication of your<br />

science is scheduled for Sunday before the formal opening of the 2013<br />

Aquatic Sciences Meeting, featuring a trio of communication specialists.<br />

The specialists are Randy Olson (actor and independent filmmaker), with<br />

assistance from Hollywood veterans Dorie Barton (actress and script<br />

consultant for screenwriters) and Brian Palermo (actor and improv acting<br />

instructor). The three served as the panel for the S-Factor 2 film analysis<br />

at the 2012 Ocean Sciences meeting in Salt Lake City and will do so again<br />

for S-Factor 3 in New Orleans. Participation in the Scintillation workshop<br />

will be limited and prior registration required, but without a fee. Much<br />

of the day will consist of rotating split-off small group hands-on activities<br />

with the specialists where you will learn how to: 1. capture audience<br />

interest at the start of the presentation, 2. “act” throughout the presentation<br />

so that the audience remains excited, and, 3. create structure for each<br />

presentation so that it tells an engaging, relatable story. The full group will<br />

re-assemble for the latter part of the workshop to put together the parts<br />

they learned from each of the subgroup activities.<br />

It is our hope that improved communication skills will assist the aquatic<br />

science community in reaching out to the lay public explaining the results<br />

of our research. The skills needed to “wow” a lay audience should also<br />

assist scientists in presenting information to peers, especially in presenting<br />

results to broad audiences, outside one’s specialty area. In planning plenary<br />

talks for meetings, a question that we often hear is: “while he/she is clearly<br />

15<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

an expert in this subject, does he/she give an exciting and interesting talk?”<br />

The workshop registration is open to anyone interested, and we hope<br />

to attract graduate students, early career scientists, and also established<br />

scientists. While not everyone can become a super star speaker, almost<br />

everyone can improve his/her skills. Financial support for this workshop<br />

has been received from the Ocean Sciences Division of the US National<br />

Science Foundation.<br />

GEARS: A WORKSHOP FOR BROADENING<br />

THE IMPACTS OF YOUR RESEARCH<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

8:30 to 16:00 - Room 343<br />

This all-day workshop addresses skills that include deconstructing your<br />

science, understanding how people learn, building effective knowledge for<br />

a variety of audiences, and broadening the reach of your science. Attendees<br />

will think creatively about how to integrate their research and<br />

education activities so that their research can be communicated to a<br />

broader audience. Education and outreach experts from three COSEE<br />

Centers include: Ari Daniel Shapiro, Annette DeCharon, and Bob Chen.<br />

Pre-register and qualify for $150 to defray the cost of one-night lodging by<br />

contacting Bob Chen (bob.chen@umb.edu).<br />

PREPARING WORKFORCE AND TRANSFER STUDENTS IN TWO-<br />

YEAR COLLEGES FOR GEOSCIENCE CAREERS<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

13:00 to 17:30 - Room 344<br />

This workshop will cover best practices for preparing workforce and<br />

transfer students in two-year colleges (2YC) for ocean science careers. Participants<br />

will explore successful 2YC college transfer and workforce programs<br />

and practices, effective student research and internship programs,<br />

and geoscience career resources for 2YC students and faculty. Discussion<br />

will include strategies for effectively incorporating career information and<br />

professional skills into introductory oceanography courses.<br />

HOW TO INTERVIEW AND NEGOTIATE<br />

FOR AN ACADEMIC POSITION<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 346 - 347<br />

Jim Yoder, WHOI, has worked at three different academic/research institutions<br />

and served on seven search committees (chaired three) and has participated<br />

on promotion and tenure committees at two different institutions. He<br />

has led this discussion with graduate students and postdocs previously on<br />

3 separate occasions and will comment on the questions and topics below.<br />

Lunch provided by COSEE OCEAN to the first 25 attendees.<br />

• What happens throughout a typical interview process?<br />

• What are key strategies to consider for your interviews?<br />

• How do you prepare for an on-site interview?<br />

• What questions can you expect? When and to whom should you<br />

answer?<br />

• What questions are allowed/not allowed to be asked? How do you<br />

deal with inappropriate questions?<br />

• What are some of the “hidden agendas” of search committee members?<br />

• What do you need to ask of the institution when offered a job?<br />

• Other Advice


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

S-FACTOR 3 (FILM ANALYSIS WORKSHOP) - PART I<br />

Monday, 19 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 345<br />

Following our previous successes (2010, 2011, and 2012 winter meetings),<br />

at the 2013 meeting in New Orleans (February 17-22), we will conduct<br />

the S-Factor Video Workshop once again. Randy Olson, the marine<br />

biologist–turned filmmaker, will bring his Hollywood “S Team” for expert<br />

critiques. Randy has written and directed films about the oceans (his<br />

Shifting Baselines shorts), evolutionary biology (“Flock of Dodos”) and<br />

climate change (“Sizzle”), authored the book Don’t Be Such a Scientist,<br />

and for 2013 has a new historical documentary about a part of World War<br />

II featuring the voices of Richard Dreyfuss, Martin Sheen, and Brian Dennehy.<br />

As he did for the 2012 Ocean Sciences Meeting, he will bring two<br />

Hollywood veterans: Dorie Barton, script analyst and actress (e.g, Meet<br />

the Fockers, Down with Love) and Brian Palermo, improv instructor and<br />

actor (e.g., The Social Network, Disney’s Girl VS. Monster) to join him<br />

on the S Factor Panel and other workshops in New Orleans.<br />

We Want Your Short Videos! As with previous S Factor Workshops, the<br />

target is to explain aquatic science for lay public consumption. We invite<br />

anyone interested to submit a short video (not to exceed 5 minutes in You-<br />

Tube format). All submitted videos will be posted and discussed on-line<br />

prior to the meeting. A selection of submitted ones will be given critiques<br />

at the meeting. Similar to the OSM2012 response, we hope to get submissions<br />

from a broad array of graduate students, early career scientists, more<br />

established scientists, professional filmmakers, and high school teachers. S-<br />

Factor 3 is scheduled in two parts, at the mid-day lunch break on Monday<br />

and on Tuesday evening. S-Factor 3 is partially supported by a grant from<br />

the Ocean Sciences Division of the US National Science Foundation. For<br />

more information or to submit a video, contact jsharp@udel.edu.<br />

SNAP IT UP: ADVICE FROM HOLLYWOOD<br />

FOR SHORT PRESENTATIONS<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 345<br />

Jonathan H. Sharp (University of Delaware) and Adrienne Sponberg (<strong>ASLO</strong>)<br />

as co-chairs.<br />

You have only 15 minutes to present your data -- it’s a challenge. But in<br />

the world of Hollywood, where they know how to tell entire stories in 5<br />

seconds (literally) that amount of time is an eternity. Randy Olson is a<br />

former scientist who knew the science talk format well before moving to<br />

Hollywood and becoming a filmmaker. In this workshop he brings with<br />

him two voices directly from this rapid communication world of Hollywood:<br />

actress/script consultant Dorie Barton, and actor/improv instructor<br />

Brian Palermo. They have been working as a team (The S Team!) for<br />

over a year, with this being their fifth workshop. They will be attending<br />

science sessions on Monday and will share tips and tricks over lunch on<br />

Tuesday that will help you be more effective in your 15-minutes of fame.<br />

L&O E-LECTURES TOWN HALL: AN EFFECTIVE APPROACH FOR<br />

ADDRESSING BROADER IMPACTS<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 344<br />

Please join us for a Limnology & Oceanography e-Lectures Town Hall:<br />

“L&O e-Lectures: An Effective Approach for Addressing Broader<br />

Impacts.” Several funding agencies now require proposals to not only<br />

16<br />

provide justification for the intellectual merit of their work, but must<br />

also include a plan for activities demonstrating the broader impacts on<br />

society. For many, the task is arduous and elusive, with outcomes difficult<br />

to assess. L&O e-Lectures, a new publication from <strong>ASLO</strong>, offers a fresh<br />

and effective alternative for addressing societal benefit requirements by<br />

providing a high impact venue for publication in lecture format. The<br />

lectures can be used at the post-secondary level, or for the public at<br />

large. Over the past year, the L&O e-Lectures website has received over<br />

40,000 hits and this number is growing exponentially. If, for example,<br />

just 1% of these hits were to result in e-Lecture downloads by post-secondary<br />

instructors, this would amount to approximately 400 instructors<br />

using these e-Lectures to teach their courses. As university class sizes<br />

range anywhere from 20 to 150 students, this translates to reaching 8000<br />

to 60,000 students. The net outcome of publishing in L&O e-Lectures<br />

is win-win: a researcher submits their findings for publication in L&O,<br />

L&O Methods, L&O e-Books or L&O Fluids in the Environment, and<br />

can also submit a companion publication in L&O e-Lectures.<br />

This Town Hall will introduce one of <strong>ASLO</strong>’s newest peer-reviewed<br />

publications, L&O e-Lectures, and will provide a forum to discuss<br />

publishing opportunities. Hosted by Jennifer Cherrier, Florida A&M<br />

University and Editor-in-Chief L&O e-Lectures. For more information<br />

about L&O e-Lectures visit www.aslo.org/lectures (http://www.aslo.<br />

org/lectures) Contact Jennifer Cherrier: lolectures-editor@aslo.org or<br />

Jason Emmett: lolectures-manager@aslo.org<br />

NSF OCEAN SCIENCE TOWN HALL MEETING<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 343<br />

NSF program officers and staff will report on new and upcoming solicitations,<br />

describe proposed changes to the ships scheduling process, and<br />

answer questions from participants.<br />

GETTING PEOPLE TO HANG ON (ALMOST) EVERY WORD:<br />

TELLING STORIES ABOUT YOUR SCIENCE<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 346 – 347<br />

This workshop will be led by Ari Daniel Shapiro. We are made up of<br />

stories. They are the strongest currency of communication and memory.<br />

In this workshop, you will learn how to take your science – and the way<br />

you usually present data and research – and tell stories about it. Humorous<br />

stories that make people smile, meaningful stories that last, and<br />

engaging stories that make your listeners interested in the science. You will<br />

hear some examples, and get to try it yourself. Lunch provided by COSEE<br />

OCEAN to the first 25 attendees.<br />

S-FACTOR 3 (FILM ANALYSIS WORKSHOP) - PART II<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

19:30 to 21:00 - Room 345<br />

A continuation of the S-Factor 3 (Film Analysis Workshop) Organized by:<br />

Jonathan H. Sharp (University of Delaware) and Adrienne Sponberg (<strong>ASLO</strong>)<br />

Following the success of the S-Factor 2 at the 2012 Ocean Sciences<br />

Meeting (see the website: http://www.sfactorpanels.org/sf2.html for<br />

information about the last workshop), we propose another film analysis<br />

workshop in New Orleans. The workshop will be led by scientistturned-filmmaker,<br />

Randy Olson, who has been assisting <strong>ASLO</strong> with


Meeting Program<br />

film analysis workshops since 2010. Selected submitted videos will<br />

be critiqued by a team consisting of Olson (actor and independent<br />

filmmaker) and Hollywood veterans Dorie Barton (actress and story<br />

line consultant for screenwriters) and Brian Palermo (actor and improv<br />

acting instructor). The three served as the panel for the S-Factor 2<br />

workshop at the 2012 Ocean Sciences meeting and are now becoming<br />

a team, including special workshops for organizations like the Natural<br />

Resources Defense Council and the Center for Disease Control. Similar<br />

to the previous workshops, we will invite anyone interested to submit a<br />

short video (not to exceed 5 minutes in You-Tube format). All submitted<br />

videos will be posted and discussed on-line prior to the meeting. A selection<br />

of submitted ones will be given critiques at the meeting. Similar<br />

to the OSM2012 response, we hope to get submissions from a broad<br />

array of graduate students, early career scientists, more established scientists,<br />

professional filmmakers, high school teachers. We want to schedule<br />

this workshop in two-parts, at the mid-day break and in the evening on<br />

Tuesday. Financial support for this workshop has been received from the<br />

Ocean Sciences Division of the US National Science Foundation.<br />

FRONTIERS OF ECOSYSTEM SCIENCE WORKSHOP<br />

Tuesday, 19 February 2013<br />

19:30 to 21:30 - Room 346 - 347<br />

Ecosystem science has a long history as a core program at the National<br />

Science Foundation (NSF), and although topics of research have<br />

fluctuated over the years as in any program, it retains a clear identity<br />

and continues to attract exciting proposals. As science is becoming<br />

more interdisciplinary, particularly the science of global environmental<br />

change, ecosystem scientists often find themselves in positions of intellectual<br />

and organizational leadership because of their experience working<br />

across disciplines. Now is an appropriate time to energize and bring<br />

together the discipline in pursuit of a research agenda for the future.<br />

The NSF funded a series of workshops (PeterGroffman and Kathleen<br />

Weathers, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, are PIs) to accomplish<br />

this. The workshops and discussion groups will be held at multiple<br />

scientific-society meetings over the next two years, culminating in a<br />

Frontiers of Ecosystem Science Symposium. Relevant target societies<br />

in addition to <strong>ASLO</strong> include AGU, ASM, ERF, ESA, SFS (formerly<br />

NABS), ISME, IALE, AAG and SSSA. For this workshop, our<br />

organizing committee (Groffman, Weathers, Emily Bernhardt – Duke,<br />

Trina McMahon - University of Wisconsin, Joshua Schimel - UC<br />

Santa Barbara) will make an overview presentation to serve as a jumping<br />

off point for the session, which will focus on exciting developments<br />

in ecosystem ecology and its interfaces with otherdisciplines. Results<br />

from the discussion will serve as input for our final symposium that will<br />

involve approximately 50 participants and will produce a “white paper”<br />

that would serve as an evaluation and direction for the science that<br />

could be used at NSF and elsewhere.<br />

This workshop will focus on exciting developments in ecosystem ecology<br />

and its interfaces with other disciplines as part of a National Science<br />

Foundation funded, multi-scientific society effort to address frontiers<br />

in ecosystem science and produce a “white paper” that will serve as an<br />

evaluation and direction for the discipline. Organized by Nancy B.<br />

Grimm, Ph.D., Professor, School of Life Sciences, Senior Sustainability<br />

Scientist, Global Institute of Sustainability, Arizona State University,<br />

Tempe, AZ USA 85287<br />

17<br />

SCIENCE JOURNALISM: OUT OF GULF COAST WATERS<br />

AND ONTO THE NEWS WIRES<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 344<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Organizer: Cheryl Lyn Dybas, National Science Foundation, cdybas@nsf.gov<br />

Oil in New Gulf Slick Matches that of 2010 Spill. Through Gulf Waters:<br />

Pointing Sea Turtles Back to Sea. After Spill, Gulf Oil Drilling Rebounds.<br />

These headlines introduced recent marine science news stories. Did these<br />

articles attract readers? If so, what’s the secret to their success? Nancy Rabalais,<br />

Executive Director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium<br />

(LUMCON), will offer opening thoughts on communicating about<br />

the ocean sciences. Participants in this workshop will learn how to present<br />

science in an interesting way while retaining factual accuracy — the key to<br />

good science communication and science journalism.<br />

Science journalism aims to transmute scientific concepts and results from<br />

jargon-based language often understandable only by scientists, to news<br />

relevant to the lives of general readers (listeners/viewers).<br />

The workshop explores science writing for a non-scientific audience.<br />

Participants will review examples of good science writing from newspapers<br />

like the New York Times and Washington Post, and news magazines like<br />

Science News and New Scientist; “dissect” the structure of science news<br />

and feature articles; discuss how popular coverage of science has changed<br />

in recent years; and learn the basics of science journalism. Participants will<br />

have the opportunity to write a general audience science article about research<br />

presented at the conference, and individual feedback will be offered<br />

to those interested.<br />

INFORMAL OCEAN SCIENCE EDUCATION: AN INTRODUCTION<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

12:00-13:30 - Room 346-347<br />

Workshop Leader: Jerry R. Schubel, PhD; President of the Aquarium of<br />

the Pacific<br />

• This workshop will explore the following:<br />

• The nature of informal science education, how it differs fundamentally<br />

from formal science education and occupies a separate and<br />

distinct domain of the educational landscape.<br />

• Why academic and governmental scientists might want to expand<br />

their programs to include informal science education and how the<br />

driving forces behind the motivation could, and perhaps should, dictate<br />

how the modes by which they pursue informal science education.<br />

• The value of partnerships with informal science institutions and the<br />

power of energizing networks.<br />

Lunch provided by COSEE OCEAN to the first 25 attendees.<br />

TOWN HALL: INFORMAL OCEAN SCIENCE EDUCATION:<br />

TRENDS AND OPPORTUNITIES<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

18:00 to 19:30 - Room 343<br />

Town Hall Leaders: Jerry R. Schubel, PhD; President of the Aquarium<br />

of the Pacific and John Fraser, PhD, President and CEO for the New<br />

Knowledge Organization<br />

Learning happens everywhere, not only in classrooms. As climate changes,<br />

sea level rises, and coastal areas get developed, all people need to increase


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

their awareness and understanding of the ocean to make appropriate decisions<br />

in their everyday lives. This Town Hall will present a review of the<br />

recent trends in informal ocean science education and offer a discussion<br />

of opportunities for future investigation, implementation, and scaling up<br />

of effective practices in informal science education regarding the ocean. A<br />

blue ribbon panel has written a forthcoming report that will form the basis<br />

of this discussion.<br />

TOWN HALL - MARINE MICROBIAL EUKARYOTE<br />

TRANSCRIPTOME PROJECT<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

18:00 to 19:30 - Room 345<br />

This is a town hall meeting focusing on microeukaryote sequencing and<br />

bioinformatics and will feature presentations and discussions focusing<br />

on bioinformatics methods to analyze microbial eukaryote transcriptomes.<br />

Highlights include presentations from the National Center for<br />

Genome Resources about their sequencing methods and their informatics<br />

analysis of data generated by the Marine Microbial Eukaryote<br />

Transcriptome Sequencing Project. This is a collaborative project<br />

supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to sequence the<br />

transcriptomes of approximately 750 samples from hundreds of diverse<br />

organisms. The town hall will also feature short presentations from<br />

students and researchers who are developing bioinformatics methods<br />

for transcriptome analysis. In addition, the J. Craig Venter Institute will<br />

present their PhyloMetarep tool, a comparative transcriptomics analysis<br />

and visualization environment. Organizers: Jon Kaye, Gordon and<br />

Betty Moore Foundation; Bethany Jenkins, University of Rhode Island;<br />

P. Dreux Chappell, University of Rhode Island; and Sonya Dyhrman,<br />

Columbia University.<br />

SENSENET SHOWCASE<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

18:00 to 20:00 - Room 342<br />

Young researchers from the SENSEnet project which has focused on in<br />

situ sensors for the marine environment will give short sharp presentations<br />

on their latest work. There will be an opportunity to discuss their work<br />

further over drinks and nibbles.<br />

BE INCLUSIVE I: SHARE YOUR RESEARCH EFFECTIVELY<br />

Wednesday, 20 February 2013<br />

18:00 to 21:00 - Room 344<br />

As individuals, we can strive to communicate in inclusive ways. As members<br />

of academic systems, we can foster practices that support diversity.<br />

This workshop will help you effectively share your research and pathway<br />

to science. The Institute for Broadening Participation’s “Be Inclusive II”<br />

workshop offers strategies to connect with diverse audiences while addressing<br />

barriers to participation. Attending both is recommended but not<br />

required. Food will be provided to the first 50 participants.<br />

BE INCLUSIVE II: ADDRESS BARRIERS TO PARTICIPATION<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 344<br />

As individuals and members of academic systems, we can strive to communicate<br />

in inclusive ways and to foster practices that support diversity.<br />

This workshop will offer ways to connect with diverse audiences while<br />

18<br />

addressing barriers to participation. The Center for Ocean Sciences Education<br />

Excellence’s “Be Inclusive I” workshop will help you effectively share<br />

your research and pathway to science. Attending both is recommended but<br />

not required. Food will be provided to the first 50 participants.<br />

TEACHING LARGE CLASSES<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

12:00 to 13:30 (Lunch Time) - Room 346-347<br />

This workshop will be led by Bob Chen, University of Massachusetts,<br />

Boston. Introductory environmental, ocean, and aquatic science courses<br />

provide an excellent opportunity to prepare majors and non-majors for<br />

thinking about some of the largest issues facing society such as climate<br />

change and energy needs. Large courses can also serve to attract students<br />

into the field. This workshop will provide some strategies to overcome<br />

some of the challenges of teaching large courses while making your teaching<br />

engaging, relevant, and effective.Lunch provided by COSEE OCEAN<br />

to the first 25 attendees.<br />

SENSENET PROJECT MEETING<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013<br />

19:30 to 21:30 - Room 342<br />

SENSEnet final project meeting<br />

FIELD TRIPS<br />

FLOATING PEAT MARSHES OF JEAN LAFITTE NATIONAL PARK<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

08:00 to 17:00 - Off-site<br />

The Barataria Preserve of Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and<br />

Preserve is a 20,000 acre expanse of subtropical peat marsh and swamp<br />

forest, located just 15 miles south of New Orleans. The Preserve is situated<br />

in the upper, low-salinity reaches of an interdistributary basin of<br />

the Mississippi River Delta. The floating peat marshes have an atypical<br />

hydrology with subsurface water exchange and limited inundation. The<br />

substrate consists of root-derived organic matter, and is fully buoyant,<br />

moving vertically in response to water level fluctuations. Scrub-shrub<br />

thickets colonize and persist on some of these floating marsh habitats.<br />

Cypress swamp borders the emergent marshes along the low flanks of<br />

relict distributary ridges of the Mississippi River. Bottomland hardwoods<br />

dominate the infrequently flooded ridge-tops and spoil banks.<br />

Signs of declining forest health and encroachment to marsh due to<br />

regional subsidence and relative sea level rise are visible. The tour will<br />

include a boat ride through Preserve waterways, an optional short walk<br />

on a floating marsh and wax-myrtle thicket with extensive Sphagnum<br />

spp. ground cover, and a walk on a boardwalk trail chronicling the transition<br />

from marsh to bottomland hardwood forest in space. We may see<br />

alligators, nutria and possibly poisonous snakes, so come with cameras!<br />

We will see plenty of mosquitoes. Note: Bring calf boots, rain gear, mosquito<br />

repellant. Tour includes lunch.<br />

Participants should meet just prior to 08:00 outside the Convention Center<br />

in front of Hall E. Busses will pick up and drop off from the bus lane<br />

on Convention Center Boulevard in front of Hall E.


Meeting Program<br />

TURTLE COVE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH STATION,<br />

LAKE MAUREPAS<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013<br />

08:00 to 17:00 - Off-site<br />

Attendees will be taken by bus from the Convention Center to the Turtle<br />

Cove (https://www.selu.edu/acad_research/programs/turtle_cove/directions/index.html)<br />

Classroom on Galva Canal (approximate 45-minute<br />

drive) for an introductory presentation on environmental issues in the<br />

Lake Pontchartrain Basin. Attendees will be ferried to Turtle Cove Environmental<br />

Research Station for a tour of the facilities and a self-guided<br />

boardwalk tour into the Manchac marsh. The next bus stop will be at<br />

Middendorf ’s Restaurant located on Pass Manchac. (Lunch cost is not<br />

included; attendees will be responsible for purchasing their own lunch).<br />

After lunch attendees will be taken on a tour of an ongoing wetland<br />

restoration project in the Joyce Wildlife Management Area north of Pass<br />

Manchac. The field trip will conclude with a tour of Big Branch Marsh<br />

National Wildlife Refuge .<br />

Participants should meet just prior to 08:00 outside the Convention Center<br />

in front of Hall E. Busses will pick up and drop off from the bus lane<br />

on Convention Center Boulevard in front of Hall E.<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> MEMBERSHIP<br />

Membership in <strong>ASLO</strong> is strongly encouraged. We welcome the non-<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> members in attendance, and we hope you will join the society while<br />

you are at the conference. If you are an <strong>ASLO</strong> member already, you may<br />

renew your membership at the registration desk.<br />

REGISTRATION INFORMATION<br />

The full registration fee includes admission to all sessions, exhibits, town<br />

hall meetings and workshops (unless otherwise specified), Sunday opening<br />

reception, poster session receptions, coffee breaks, and the program book<br />

(if you requested a copy prior to the meeting). Optional events such as the<br />

field trips and the Wednesday evening reception at the Aquarium of the<br />

Americas are not included.<br />

GUEST/SPOUSE FEE: $75.00 USD ON SITE AT THE MEETING<br />

The spouse and guest fees cover only the conference social events such as<br />

the Sunday welcome reception, coffee services, and the poster receptions.<br />

Optional events such as the field trips and the Wednesday evening reception<br />

at the Aquarium of the Americas are not included.<br />

ADDITIONAL PARTICIPANT AND<br />

ATTENDEE INFORMATION<br />

RECEIPTS AND LETTERS OF PARTICIPATION<br />

Your registration confirmation that was emailed to you when you<br />

registered for the meeting will serve as your receipt. In keeping with our<br />

conservation efforts, we will not provide printed receipts to attendees on<br />

site at the meeting. If you have misplaced your original receipt and need<br />

another copy, you may print your own receipt by going to: https://www.<br />

sgmeet.com/aslo/neworleans2013/userlogon.asp.<br />

19<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Your username is your email address, and your password is your registration<br />

ID number which is printed on your conference name badge.<br />

Likewise, letters of participation only will be provided to those who are<br />

registered for the meeting. If you need a letter of participation, please go to<br />

https://www.sgmeet.com/aslo/neworleans2013/userlogon.asp<br />

CHILD CARE INFORMATION<br />

While you are attending the 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting, your<br />

children can enjoy their own camp organized by ACCENT on Children’s<br />

Arrangements, Inc., a national company specializing in children’s activities.<br />

Daycare service will be available during the meeting in Room 337 at the<br />

convention center from 07:30 to 18:30 (7:30 am to 6:30 pm), Monday, 18<br />

February, through Friday, 22 February. This is a complete morning to early<br />

evening entertainment program packed with activities for children ages six<br />

months to 12 years. Children will participate in age-appropriate activities,<br />

including arts and crafts projects and active games in a safe, nurturing,<br />

and educational environment. The high ratio of caregiver to child (1:2 for<br />

children six to 12 months; 1:3 for children 13 months to two years; 1:5<br />

for children three to five years; and 1:8 for children six to 12 years) ensures<br />

that campers receive lots of personal attention.<br />

Program costs include morning and afternoon snacks and juice, entertainment,<br />

and craft materials. Lunch is not included. However, a lunch<br />

can be purchased when registering, or parents can send or bring a lunch<br />

to their child.<br />

Arrangements for child care need to be made on an individual basis through<br />

ACCENT on Arrangements, Inc. by completing the registration form<br />

online at http://www.accentregister.com/events/ch_events.asp?eId=6365<br />

The deadline for advance child care registration is 8 February 2013. After<br />

this date, rates are subject to increase, so please register early. <strong>ASLO</strong> assumes<br />

no responsibility or liability for services rendered.<br />

BUSINESS SERVICES<br />

Located in Lobby F of the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center,<br />

The UPS Store is both a self-service and full-service operation, depending<br />

on the customer’s needs. A wide range of office supplies and services<br />

including shipping, high volume copying, and faxing are available.<br />

For more information regarding their services, please contact:<br />

The UPS Store<br />

Phone: (504)670-8941<br />

Fax: (504)670-8887<br />

Email: store6216@theupsstore.com<br />

FedEx Office Center is located just across the street from the convention<br />

center. For more information about the services they provide, please<br />

contact them directly:<br />

FedEx Office Print & Ship Center<br />

901 Convention Center Blvd, Suite 100<br />

New Orleans, LA 70130<br />

Phone: (504) 585-5750<br />

Fax: (504) 585-5742<br />

E-mail: usa2153@fedex.com


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

INSTRUCTIONS FOR<br />

POSTER PRESENTERS<br />

Posters will be placed on large poster boards. There will be two posters<br />

per side so posters must be no larger than 45.0 inches high by 45.5 inches<br />

wide. Because two posters will be mounted side by side, it is very important<br />

that your poster not exceed these dimensions. Posters will adhere to<br />

the boards using push pins that will be provided.<br />

Poster presenters are asked to adhere to the designated set-up and teardown<br />

instructions and times.<br />

All posters will be assigned a number, and these numbers are available<br />

online and will be included in the conference program. Poster presenters<br />

have been notified of their poster session’s time and day. If you will be<br />

giving a poster presentation, you will be expected to be available to present<br />

your poster during your designated poster session.<br />

Posters numbered 1 through 245 will be presented on Tuesday. Posters<br />

numbered 246 through 479 will be presented on Thursday.<br />

POSTER SET UP<br />

Poster presenters must be available to put up their posters on Monday, 18<br />

February, 2013, from 12:00 to 17:00 in Exhibit Hall E.<br />

POSTER TEARDOWN<br />

Posters may be taken down on Thursday, 21 February, 2013, from 19:30<br />

to 20:30, immediately following the conclusion of the poster session that<br />

evening. If you are not able to dismantle your poster at this time, you may<br />

do so on Friday morning from 8:00 to 10:00. Please be aware that if you<br />

are not able to remove your poster by 10:00 on Friday, the convention<br />

decorator will discard any posters that remain on the boards.<br />

INSTRUCTIONS FOR<br />

ORAL PRESENTERS<br />

Talks will be scheduled in 15-minute time slots. We strongly encourage<br />

a presentation of no more than 12 minutes to allow three minutes for<br />

discussion and to entertain questions from those in the audience. The time<br />

limit will be strictly enforced to facilitate movement between sessions.<br />

No recording is allowed in any of the session rooms during the meeting.<br />

PREPARING YOUR ELECTRONIC PRESENTATION<br />

The audio visual company for the 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

is PSAV Audio Visual. Please contact PSAV if you have questions about<br />

preparing your presentation for the meeting and/or submitting your<br />

presentation electronically prior to the meeting:<br />

Email: CMSsupport@psav.com<br />

Phone: 214-210-8006<br />

ADVANCE SUBMISSION<br />

Speakers will receive an email with login credentials and instructions to<br />

submit online. Please make sure to upload all media files required for<br />

your presentation. Any necessary video or audio files not included in your<br />

20<br />

online upload folder along with your PowerPoint, will cause your presentation<br />

to fail in the meeting room. Please see the list of preferred media<br />

formats in the “Additional Information” section below. Speakers who<br />

submit in advance will have a faster check in at the Presentation Room.<br />

Although online submission may not be required, it is strongly encouraged.<br />

The following presentation file types are acceptable for ONLINE submission:<br />

• Microsoft Office PowerPoint (.ppt), (.pptx)<br />

• Adobe Acrobat (.pdf )<br />

MICROSOFT POWERPOINT TIPS<br />

PowerPoint embeds image files directly into the file when you save them,<br />

while video files are not embedded. Only a link is made to the video<br />

file. Copy the video clips you want to insert into the same folder as the<br />

PowerPoint file. This will eliminate the problem of PowerPoint losing the<br />

link to the file. Be certain to bring the video files and the PowerPoint files<br />

to the meeting.<br />

Please try to keep the video files size to less than 20MB if possible. Use<br />

short video segments when needed<br />

List of Preferred Media (Video/Audio) Formats: (.wmv) (.mpg) (.avi) (.swf )<br />

(.wav) (.mov)<br />

Compatible Codecs:<br />

• Microsoft - RLE, Video1, Windows Media Series 8 and 9<br />

• Divx 3/4/5<br />

• Intel Indeo Video


Meeting Program<br />

APPLE MACINTOSH USERS<br />

Apple Macintosh users can also upload PowerPoint presentations to the<br />

website. Speakers creating presentations using Apple Keynote (.key) will<br />

need to bring their files directly to the Presentation Room to have them<br />

loaded to the network. PSAV will have a Macintosh computer in each<br />

breakout room.<br />

BRING A BACKUP<br />

Be sure to bring a backup copy of your presentation with you to the meeting.<br />

If you plan to upload files on-site, bring two copies. USB/Flash drives<br />

are preferred.<br />

DURING YOUR PRESENTATION<br />

Each meeting room will be staffed with a PSAV technician who will assist<br />

with starting each presentation. Once the presentation is launched, the<br />

speaker will control the program from the podium using a computer mouse<br />

or the up/down/right/left keys on a keyboard.<br />

COMPUTER EQUIPMENT<br />

The Presentation Room and all meeting rooms will be equipped with<br />

both a Windows 7 based PCs with Microsoft PowerPoint 2007 and an<br />

Apple Macintosh with Keynote ‘09. Verification of proper performance in<br />

the Presentation Room is essential, particularly if video and animation is<br />

included in the presentation. Please note that Internet access will not be<br />

available during your presentation.<br />

LAPTOPS<br />

Personal laptops cannot be used in the meeting rooms. You must upload your<br />

files in the Presentation Room at all times regardless of arrival time. PSAV<br />

support staff will be available to transfer from your laptop if needed. Please<br />

make sure you bring laptop video port adapters and power cables with you.<br />

Always bring a backup of the presentation on flash drive/memory stick or disc<br />

to the Presentation Room.<br />

RENTAL OF ADDITIONAL AUDIO-VISUAL EQUIPMENT<br />

Rental of a VCR, monitor, slide projector, audio systems, provision of<br />

extra power outlets, extra tables, stands, etc. can be handled for an additional<br />

cost. Costs for additional equipment will be billed to the presenting<br />

author. Please contact the conference management office for other<br />

presentation requests.<br />

21<br />

PRESENTATION ROOM<br />

Room 339<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Sunday ............................................................................................. 13:00 to 21:00<br />

Monday ......................................................................................... 07:00 to 19:00<br />

Tuesday ......................................................................................... 07:00 to 19:00<br />

Wednesday ................................................................................... 07:00 to 19:00<br />

Thursday ....................................................................................... 07:00 to 19:00<br />

Friday ............................................................................................. 07:00 to 15:30<br />

All speakers must check in at the Presentation Room preferably the day<br />

before your session to preview your presentation. If you are checking in on<br />

the day of your session, please come by at least 4 hours prior to the start<br />

of your session. PSAV technicians will assist with the upload of your files<br />

and provide the opportunity to preview and/or edit the presentation as<br />

necessary. If you are unavoidably delayed, you must still go directly to the<br />

Presentation Room.<br />

Do not bring a laptop or other media device to the session room.<br />

When reviewing your presentation in the Presentation Room, make sure<br />

all fonts, images, and animations appear as expected and that all audio or<br />

video clips are working properly. The computers in the meeting rooms are<br />

the same as the computers in the Presentation Room, therefore:<br />

IF THE PRESENTATION DOES NOT PLAY PROPERLY<br />

IN THE PRESENTATION ROOM, IT WILL NOT PLAY PROP-<br />

ERLY IN THE MEETING ROOM.<br />

SECURITY<br />

Speakers are required to provide identification in order to submit their<br />

presentation as well as to access it in the Presentation Room. Recording<br />

devices such as cameras are not permitted in the Presentation Room.<br />

All presentation files are deleted at the end of the conference, unless<br />

permission has been granted to the conference association to retain the<br />

presentation files.<br />

SPEAKER READY ROOM<br />

A practice room will be open for <strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 presenters in Room 340<br />

during the following times:<br />

Sunday, 17 February 2013 ......................................................13:00 to 21:00<br />

Monday, 18 February 2013 through<br />

Thursday, 21 February 2013 ..................................................07:00 to 19:00<br />

Friday, 22 February 2013 ........................................................07:00 to 15:30


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

ERNEST N. MORIAL CONVENTION CENTER - FIRST FLOOR<br />

22


Meeting Program<br />

ERNEST N. MORIAL CONVENTION CENTER - SECOND FLOOR<br />

23<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

ERNEST N. MORIAL CONVENTION CENTER - THIRD FLOOR<br />

24


Meeting Program<br />

EXHIBIT HALL E - POSTER AND EXHIBITOR NUMBERS<br />

25<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

MAP OF <strong>CONFERENCE</strong> HOTELS<br />

26


Meeting Program<br />

FRENCH QUARTER & DOWNTOWN PARKING MAP<br />

27<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 AQUATIC SCIENCES<br />

MEETING SCHEDULE<br />

Events are at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center unless noted otherwise.<br />

SATURDAY, 16 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

08:00 – 17:00 <strong>ASLO</strong> Board Meeting – Hilton Hotel<br />

08:00 – 17:30 SCOR Working Group – Room 340<br />

SUNDAY, 17 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

08:00 – 17:00 <strong>ASLO</strong> Board Meeting – Hilton Hotel<br />

08:00 – 17:00 Field Trip: Floating Peat Marshes of Jean Lafitte National Park<br />

– Off-site<br />

08:00 – 17:00 Field Trip: Turtle Cove Environmental Research Station,<br />

Lake Maurepas – Off-site<br />

08:30 – 15:30 C-MORE Career Networking Workshop – Room 342<br />

09:00 – 16:00 SCINTILLATION: A Workshop to Make Your Science<br />

Communication Scintillate through Critical Storytelling –<br />

Room 345<br />

08:30 – 16:00 GEARS: A Workshop for Broadening the Impacts of Your<br />

Research – Room 343<br />

13:00 – 20:00 Registration – Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area<br />

13:00 – 21:00 Presentation Room Open – Room 339<br />

13:00 – 21:00 Speaker Ready Room Open – Room 340<br />

13:00 – 17:30 Preparing Workforce & Transfer Students in 2-Year Colleges for<br />

Geoscience Careers – Room 344<br />

15:00 – 16:00 Student Volunteer Training – Meet at Registration Desk<br />

15:00 – 17:00 <strong>ASLO</strong> Multicultural Program Training Session – Room 335-336<br />

16:00 – 18:00 Opening Session and Award Presentation<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Welcome and Opening Remarks by John Downing,<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> President<br />

Presentation: Richard Campanella<br />

Redfield Award Acceptance Presentation: Bruce Peterson<br />

18:00 – 20:00 Mixer Reception and Mardi Gras Indian Show<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B<br />

MONDAY, 18 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

07:00 – 18:00 Registration – Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Speaker Ready Room Open – Room 340<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Presentation Room Open – Room 339<br />

07:30 – 18:30 Child Care Room Open – Room 337<br />

08:00 – 09:30 Plenary Session and Award Presentations<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Plenary Presentation: Karen Kidd<br />

Ruth Patrick Award Acceptance Presentation: Asit Mazumder<br />

Yentsch-Schindler Early Career Award Acceptance Presentation:<br />

Emily Bernhardt<br />

09:30 – 10:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

09:30 – 17:30 Exhibits Open – Exhibit Hall E<br />

09:30 – 17:30 Art Exhibit – Room E1<br />

28<br />

10:00 – 12:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

12:00 – 17:00 Poster Set-up – Exhibit Hall E<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Lunch (on your own)<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Lunchtime Plenary Session – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Presentation: Don Davis and Carl Brasseaux<br />

12:00 – 13:30 How to Interview and Negotiate for an Academic Position<br />

– Room 346-347<br />

12:00 – 13:30 S-Factor 3 (Film Analysis Workshop) - Part I – Room 345<br />

13:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

16:00 – 17:30 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

17:45 – 19:00 <strong>ASLO</strong> Business and Membership Meeting<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Hutchinson Award Acceptance Presentation: Curtis Suttle<br />

Open to all attendees; you do not have to be an <strong>ASLO</strong><br />

member to attend.<br />

19:00 – 21:00 Early Career Mixer – Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area<br />

19:00 – 21:00 Student Mixer – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B<br />

TUESDAY, 19 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

07:00 – 18:00 Registration – Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Speaker Ready Room Open – Room 340<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Presentation Room Open – Room 339<br />

07:30 – 18:30 Child Care Room Open – Room 337<br />

08:00 – 09:30 Plenary Session and Award Presentations<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Plenary Presentation: Andrew Weaver and Nancy Baron<br />

Citation for Scientific Excellence Acceptance Presentation:<br />

Presented Posthumously to Scott Nixon<br />

09:30 – 19:30 Exhibits Open – Exhibit Hall E<br />

09:30 – 19:30 Art Exhibit – Room E1<br />

09:30 – 10:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

10:00 – 12:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Lunch (on your own)<br />

12:00 – 13:30 <strong>ASLO</strong> Student Scientific Speed-Dating Workshop<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B<br />

12:00 – 13:30 NSF Ocean Science Town Hall Meeting – Room 343<br />

12:00 – 13:30 L&O e-Lectures Town Hall: An Effective Approach<br />

for Addressing Broader Impacts – Room 344<br />

12:00 – 13:30 SNAP IT UP: Advice from Hollywood for Short Presentations<br />

– Room 345<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Getting People to Hang On (Almost) Every Word: Telling<br />

stories about your science – Room 346-347<br />

13:30 – 14:00 ASM Tick – Talk Session SS83: Climate Change Science<br />

and Communication – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

14:00 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

16:00 – 18:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

18:00 – 19:30 Poster Session and Reception – Exhibit Hall E


Meeting Program<br />

19:30 – 21:00 S-Factor 3 (Film Analysis Workshop) - Part II – Room 345<br />

19:30 – 21:30 Frontiers of Ecosystem Science Workshop – Room 346-347<br />

WEDNESDAY, 20 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

07:00 – 18:00 Registration – Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Speaker Ready Room Open – Room 340<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Presentation Room Open – Room 339<br />

07:30 – 18:30 Child Care Room Open – Room 337<br />

08:00 – 09:30 Plenary Session and Award Presentations<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Plenary Presentation: Susan Singer<br />

Lindeman Award Acceptance Presentation: Jillian Petersen<br />

accepting via video taped presentation<br />

Martin Award Acceptance Presentation: Val Smith<br />

09:30 – 18:00 Exhibits Open – Exhibit Hall E<br />

09:30 – 18:00 Art Exhibit – Room E1<br />

09:30 – 10:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

10:00 – 12:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Lunch (on your own)<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Lunchtime Plenary Session – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Presentation: Shirley Laska, “Catastrophe in the Making: The<br />

Engineering of Katrina”<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Early Career Workshop – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Science Journalism Workshop – Out of Gulf Coast Waters and<br />

Onto the News Wires – Room 344<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Informal Ocean Science Education: An Introduction<br />

– Room 346-347<br />

13:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

16:00 – 18:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

18:00 – 19:30 Town Hall: Informal Ocean Science Education: Trends<br />

and Opportunities – Room 343<br />

18:00 – 19:30 Town Hall: Marine Microbial Eukaryote Transcriptome Project<br />

– Room 345<br />

18:00 – 20:00 SENSEnet Showcase – Room 342<br />

18:00 – 21:00 Be Inclusive I: Share Your Research Effectively – Room 344<br />

18:00 – 21:00 Reception at Audubon Aquarium of the Americas<br />

(Optional Ticketed Event) – Off-site<br />

THURSDAY, 21 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

07:00 – 18:00 Registration – Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Speaker Ready Room Open – Room 340<br />

07:00 – 19:00 Presentation Room Open – Room 339<br />

07:30 – 18:30 Child Care Room Open – Room 337<br />

08:00 – 09:30 Plenary Session and Award Presentations<br />

– La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Plenary Presentation: James Syvitski<br />

Margalef Award Acceptance Presentation: Warwick Vincent<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 Volunteer Recognition<br />

29<br />

09:30 – 19:30 Exhibits Open – Exhibit Hall E<br />

09:30 – 19:30 Art Exhibit – Room E1<br />

09:30 – 10:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

10:00 – 12:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Lunch (on your own)<br />

12:00 – 13:30 <strong>ASLO</strong> Student Workshops – Rooms 343 and 345<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Be Inclusive II: Address Barriers to Participation – Room 344<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Teaching Large Classes – Room 346-347<br />

13:30 – 14:00 ASM Tick – Talk Session SS84: Geo-Engineering<br />

of Aquatic Systems – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

14:00 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break – Exhibit Hall E<br />

16:00 – 18:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

16:00 – 19:00 Teacher EXPO – Room E2 and Exhibit Hall<br />

17:00 – 19:00 Teaching Resource Roundtables – Room E2<br />

18:00 – 19:30 Poster Session and Reception – Exhibit Hall E<br />

19:30 – 20:30 Poster Teardown – Exhibit Hall E<br />

19:30 – 21:30 SENSEnet Project Meeting – Room 342<br />

FRIDAY, 22 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

07:00 – 16:00 Registration – Exhibit Hall E Prefunction Area<br />

07:00 – 15:30 Speaker Ready Room Open – Room 340<br />

07:00 – 15:30 Presentation Room Open – Room 339<br />

07:30 – 18:30 Child Care Room Open – Room 337<br />

08:00 – 10:00 Poster Teardown – Exhibit Hall E<br />

08:00 – 09:30 Plenary Session – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

Plenary Presentation: Klement Tockner<br />

Plenary Presentation: Mark Davis<br />

09:30 – 10:00 Coffee Break – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C Foyer Area<br />

10:00 – 12:00 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

12:00 – 13:30 Lunch (on your own)<br />

13:30 – 15:30 Concurrent Sessions – Various Rooms<br />

15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break – La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C Foyer Area<br />

16:00 – 17:30 Concurrent Session – Room 348-349<br />

SATURDAY, 23 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop: Linking Optical and Chemical<br />

Properties of Dissolved Organic Matter in Natural Waters<br />

– Hilton Hotel<br />

SUNDAY, 24 FEBRUARY 2013<br />

08:00 – 17:00 Emerging Issues Workshop (continued) – Hilton Hotel<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

MONDAY AT A GLANCE<br />

Room Room 333-334 Room 343 Room 344 Room 345 Room 346-347 Room 352<br />

08:00-09:30<br />

Karen Kidd, University of New Brunswick, “Is the Birth Control Pill an Effective Form of Contraception for Wild Fish?”<br />

Ruth Patrick Award Acceptance Presentation - Asit Mazumder<br />

Yentsch - Schindler Early Career Award Acceptance Presentation - Emily Bernhardt<br />

09:30-10:00 Morning Break<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

12:00-13:30<br />

13:30-15:30<br />

GS07: Multiple<br />

Stressor Problems<br />

in Aquatic<br />

Systems<br />

SS36:Presence<br />

and impacts<br />

of emerging<br />

contaminants in<br />

aquatic systems<br />

SS26:Coccolithophores:<br />

biogeochemical<br />

impacts and<br />

response to a<br />

changing ocean<br />

30<br />

SS45:Employing<br />

Riverine Organic<br />

Matter as an<br />

Integrated Signal<br />

of Catchment<br />

Processes,<br />

Climate and<br />

Land-Use<br />

Change<br />

Lunch and Workshops including:<br />

SS14:<br />

Natural and<br />

anthropogenic<br />

driven responses<br />

of microbial<br />

communities in<br />

the ocean<br />

SS21: Optical<br />

signatures<br />

of the global<br />

carbon cycle:<br />

Characterization of<br />

the sources, sinks<br />

and chemistry<br />

of CDOM and<br />

FDOM<br />

Special Lunchtime Plenary Presentation by Don Davis and Carl Brasseaux:<br />

“People and Solutions: Cultural Hind-Casts Must Precede Restoration Forecasts” (La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C)<br />

GS07: Multiple<br />

Stressor Problems<br />

in Aquatic<br />

Systems<br />

SS36:Presence<br />

and impacts<br />

of emerging<br />

contaminants in<br />

aquatic systems<br />

SS49:Microbial<br />

mediated<br />

retention/<br />

transformation<br />

of organic and<br />

inorganic materials<br />

in freshwater<br />

and marine<br />

ecosystems<br />

15:30-16:00 Afternoon Break<br />

16:00-17:30<br />

17:30-19:00<br />

SS36:Presence<br />

and impacts<br />

of emerging<br />

contaminants in<br />

aquatic system<br />

SS49:Microbial<br />

mediated<br />

retention/<br />

transformation<br />

of organic and<br />

inorganic materials<br />

in freshwater<br />

and marine<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS45:Employing<br />

Riverine Organic<br />

Matter as an<br />

Integrated Signal<br />

of Catchment<br />

Processes,<br />

Climate and<br />

Land-Use<br />

Change<br />

SS45:Employing<br />

Riverine Organic<br />

Matter as an<br />

Integrated Signal<br />

of Catchment<br />

Processes,<br />

Climate and<br />

Land-Use<br />

Change<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Membership Meeting and Award Presentation<br />

Hutchinson Award Acceptance Presentation - Curtis Suttle<br />

SS14:<br />

Natural and<br />

anthropogenic<br />

driven responses<br />

of microbial<br />

communities in<br />

the ocean<br />

SS17: The USGS<br />

Delta Research<br />

and Global<br />

Observation<br />

Network<br />

(DRAGON)<br />

19:00-21:00 <strong>ASLO</strong> Early Career Mixer (Prefunction Area/ Lobby E - Level 1)<br />

SS21: Optical<br />

signatures of the<br />

global carbon<br />

cycle: Characterization<br />

of the<br />

sources, sinks<br />

and chemistry<br />

of CDOM and<br />

FDOM<br />

GS08A: Plankton<br />

Ecology -<br />

Phytoplankton


Meeting Program<br />

Room 353 Room 354 Room 355 Room 356 Room 357 Room 348-349 Room 350-351 Room<br />

SS58: Ocean<br />

provinces, food<br />

web structure<br />

and particle flux<br />

SS58: Ocean<br />

provinces, food<br />

web structure<br />

and particle flux<br />

SS69: Coastal<br />

and Marine<br />

Ecological<br />

Classification<br />

Standard<br />

(CMECS)<br />

SS12:<br />

Cooperation - the<br />

key to success:<br />

Symbioses in<br />

aquatic systems<br />

SS29:<br />

Opportunities<br />

and Challenges<br />

of Teaching<br />

Introductory<br />

Oceanography to<br />

Undergraduates<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C 08:00-09:30<br />

31<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Morning Break 09:30-10:00<br />

SS50:<br />

Zooplankton<br />

responses to<br />

environmental<br />

stressors<br />

SS23: Dissolved<br />

organic matter<br />

dynamics:<br />

towards a<br />

molecular-level<br />

understanding<br />

SS31:<br />

Biology and<br />

Biogeochemistry<br />

of Sea Ice<br />

Communities<br />

SS74: Tackling<br />

Harmful Algal<br />

Blooms: Synergy<br />

between<br />

Research,<br />

Management &<br />

Education<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

Please see the program for a complete list of workshops, meetings, and lunchtime activities 12:00-13:30<br />

SS12:<br />

Cooperation - the<br />

key to success:<br />

Symbioses in<br />

aquatic systems<br />

SS06: New<br />

Insights into<br />

Microbial Ecology<br />

of Hypersaline<br />

Habitats<br />

SS29:<br />

Opportunities<br />

and Challenges<br />

of Teaching<br />

Introductory<br />

Oceanography to<br />

Undergraduates<br />

SS50:<br />

Zooplankton<br />

responses to<br />

environmental<br />

stressors<br />

SS23: Dissolved<br />

organic matter<br />

dynamics:<br />

towards a<br />

molecular-level<br />

understanding<br />

SS22: Vanishing<br />

glaciers:<br />

Consequences<br />

for aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS74: Tackling<br />

Harmful Algal<br />

Blooms: Synergy<br />

between<br />

Research,<br />

Management &<br />

Education<br />

13:30-15:30<br />

Afternoon Break 15:30-16:00<br />

SS27: Surface<br />

and Subsurface<br />

Fluxes Across<br />

the Land-Ocean<br />

Interface of Large<br />

Rivers<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C<br />

SS23: Dissolved<br />

organic matter<br />

dynamics:<br />

towards a<br />

molecular-level<br />

understanding<br />

SS22: Vanishing<br />

glaciers:<br />

Consequences<br />

for aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS01:<br />

Ecosystembased<br />

Marine<br />

Spatial Planning<br />

for Better<br />

Management of<br />

Our Oceans<br />

(The membership meeting and award presentation is open to all attendees; you do not have to be an <strong>ASLO</strong> member to attend.)<br />

16:00-17:30<br />

17:30-19:00<br />

Student Mixer (La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B) 19:00-21:00


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

TUESDAY AT A GLANCE<br />

Room Room 333-334 Room 343 Room 344 Room 345 Room 346-347 Room 352<br />

08:00-09:30<br />

Plenary Presentation: Andrew Weaver and Nancy Baron “The Risks and Rewards of Communicating Your Science”<br />

Citation for Scientific Excellence Acceptance Presentation-Presented Posthumously to Scott Nixon<br />

09:30-10:00 Morning Break<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

12:00-13:30<br />

GS08 A:Plankton<br />

Ecology-<br />

Phytoplankton<br />

SS50:<br />

Zooplankton<br />

responses to<br />

environmental<br />

stressors<br />

32<br />

SS54: Carbon<br />

Fluxes at the<br />

Land-Ocean<br />

Interface:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

Lunch and Workshops including:<br />

SS75: Role and<br />

significance of<br />

chemosynthesis<br />

in the ocean<br />

L&O e-Lectures Town Hall: An Effective Approach for Addressing Broader Impacts (Room 344)<br />

Scientific Speed-Dating Student Workshop (La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B)<br />

13:30-14:00 ASM Tick Talk Session 83: Climate Change Science and Communication<br />

14:00-15:30<br />

GS08 A:Plankton<br />

Ecology-<br />

Phytoplankton<br />

SS50:<br />

Zooplankton<br />

responses to<br />

environmental<br />

stressors<br />

15:30-16:00 Afternoon Break<br />

16:00-18:00<br />

SS17: The USGS<br />

Delta Research<br />

and Global<br />

Observation<br />

Network<br />

(DRAGON)<br />

SS50:<br />

Zooplankton<br />

responses to<br />

environmental<br />

stressors<br />

SS54: Carbon<br />

Fluxes at the<br />

Land-Ocean<br />

Interface:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

SS54: Carbon<br />

Fluxes at the<br />

Land-Ocean<br />

Interface:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

18:00-19:30 Poster Session and Reception<br />

19:30-21:00 Town Halls and Evening Meetings<br />

SS27: Surface<br />

and Subsurface<br />

Fluxes Across<br />

the Land-Ocean<br />

Interface of Large<br />

Rivers<br />

SS01:<br />

Ecosystembased<br />

Marine<br />

Spatial Planning<br />

for Better<br />

Management of<br />

Our Oceans<br />

SS48:<br />

Geochemical<br />

consequences<br />

of advection<br />

in aquatic<br />

sediments<br />

SS30:<br />

Biological and<br />

biogeochemical<br />

responses to<br />

human impacts<br />

at the sedimentwater<br />

interface


Meeting Program<br />

Room 353 Room 354 Room 355 Room 356 Room 357 Room 348-349 Room 350-351 Room<br />

SS58: Ocean<br />

provinces, food<br />

web structure<br />

and particle flux<br />

SS20: Let it<br />

Snow! Aquatic<br />

Exopolymers,<br />

Suspended<br />

Particles,<br />

& Organic<br />

Aggregates<br />

SS20: Let it<br />

Snow! Aquatic<br />

Exopolymers,<br />

Suspended<br />

Particles,<br />

and Organic<br />

Aggregates<br />

SS49: Microbial<br />

mediated<br />

retention/<br />

transformation<br />

of organic and<br />

inorganic materials<br />

in freshwater<br />

and marine<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS02: Catapults,<br />

Ferries, and<br />

Bridges: Getting<br />

Aquatic Science<br />

Results to Policy<br />

and Management<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C 08:00-09:30<br />

33<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Morning Break 09:30-10:00<br />

SS81: Getting a<br />

grip on microbial<br />

change: the<br />

freshwater Earth<br />

Microbiome<br />

Project<br />

SS35: Climate<br />

extremes – Is<br />

the future of<br />

ecosystems<br />

predictable and<br />

manageable?<br />

SS08:<br />

Biogeochemistry<br />

of metal-binding<br />

organic ligands in<br />

the ocean<br />

SS18: Oxygen<br />

Minimum Zones<br />

and Climate<br />

Change:<br />

Impacts on<br />

Higher Trophic<br />

Levels<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

Please see the program for a complete list of workshops, meetings, and lunchtime activities 12:00-13:30<br />

SS49: Microbial<br />

mediated<br />

retention/<br />

transformation<br />

of organic and<br />

inorganic materials<br />

in freshwater<br />

and marine<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS73: Impact of<br />

submesoscale<br />

processes on<br />

upper ocean<br />

ecology,<br />

biogeochemistry<br />

and contaminant<br />

dispersal<br />

SS02: Catapults,<br />

Ferries, and<br />

Bridges: Getting<br />

Aquatic Science<br />

Results to Policy<br />

and Management<br />

SS21: Optical<br />

signatures<br />

of the global<br />

carbon cycle:<br />

Characterization of<br />

the sources, sinks<br />

and chemistry<br />

of CDOM and<br />

FDOM<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C 13:30-14:00<br />

SS64: Quasi-<br />

Lagrangian<br />

Approaches in<br />

Pelagic Ecology<br />

SS35: Climate<br />

extremes – Is<br />

the future of<br />

ecosystems<br />

predictable and<br />

manageable?<br />

SS08:<br />

Biogeochemistry<br />

of metal-binding<br />

organic ligands in<br />

the ocean<br />

SS18: Oxygen<br />

Minimum Zones<br />

and Climate<br />

Change:<br />

Impacts on<br />

Higher Trophic<br />

Levels<br />

14:00-15:30<br />

Afternoon Break 15:30-16:00<br />

SS64: Quasi-<br />

Lagrangian<br />

Approaches in<br />

Pelagic Ecology<br />

SS82: Progress<br />

in understanding<br />

nutrient budgets<br />

in marginal<br />

basins and<br />

coastal systems<br />

SS08:<br />

Biogeochemistry<br />

of metal-binding<br />

organic ligands in<br />

the ocean<br />

SS62: CO2-<br />

Induced<br />

Environmental<br />

Change and<br />

the Occurrence<br />

and Severity of<br />

Harmful Algal<br />

Blooms<br />

16:00-18:00<br />

Exhibit Hall 18:00-19:30<br />

See program for a complete list of town halls and evening meetings. 19:30-21:00


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

WEDNESDAY AT A GLANCE<br />

Room Room 333-334 Room 343 Room 344 Room 345 Room 346-347 Room 352<br />

08:00-09:30<br />

Dr. Susan R. Singer, “Promising Practices in Undergraduate Science and Engineering Education: Why Don’t We Implement Them?”<br />

John Martin Award Acceptance Presentation - Val Smith<br />

Lindeman Award Acceptance Presentation - Jillian Petersen<br />

09:30-10:00 Morning Break<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

12:00-13:30<br />

13:30-15:30<br />

GS08 B: Plankton<br />

Ecology -<br />

Zoology<br />

GS08 B: Plankton<br />

Ecology -<br />

Zoology<br />

SS40:<br />

Perspectives on<br />

restoration in the<br />

Gulf of Mexico<br />

SS05: Advances<br />

in Coastal<br />

Hypoxia<br />

Modeling: From<br />

Physics to Fish<br />

34<br />

SS56: Carbon<br />

fluxes in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

at catchment,<br />

regional and<br />

continental scales<br />

Lunch and Workshops including:<br />

SS53: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

Special Lunchtime Plenary Presentation by Shirley Laska,<br />

“Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina” (La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C)<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Early Career Workshop (La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom B)<br />

SS40:<br />

Perspectives on<br />

restoration in the<br />

Gulf of Mexico<br />

SS05: Advances<br />

in Coastal Hypoxia<br />

Modeling: From<br />

Physics to Fish<br />

15:30-16:00 Afternoon Break<br />

16:00-18:00<br />

18:00-21:00<br />

GS08 B: Plankton<br />

Ecology -<br />

Zoology<br />

GS06:<br />

Restoration<br />

Ecology in<br />

Aquatic System<br />

SS05: Advances<br />

in Coastal Hypoxia<br />

Modeling: From<br />

Physics to Fish<br />

SS56: Carbon<br />

fluxes in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

at catchment,<br />

regional and<br />

continental scales<br />

SS56: Carbon<br />

fluxes in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

at catchment,<br />

regional and<br />

continental scales<br />

SS53: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

SS53: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

Optional Evening Event: Reception at Audubon Aquarium of the Americas<br />

plus Workshops and Evening Meetings<br />

SS30:<br />

Biological and<br />

biogeochemical<br />

responses to<br />

human impacts<br />

at the sedimentwater<br />

interface<br />

SS30: Biological<br />

and biogeochemical<br />

responses to<br />

human impacts<br />

at the sedimentwater<br />

interface<br />

SS30:<br />

Biological and<br />

biogeochemical<br />

responses to<br />

human impacts<br />

at the sedimentwater<br />

interface


Meeting Program<br />

Room 353 Room 354 Room 355 Room 356 Room 357 Room 348-349 Room 350-351 Room<br />

SS76: Microbial<br />

Interactions:<br />

From Species<br />

Survival to<br />

Biogeochemical<br />

Cycles<br />

SS76: Microbial<br />

Interactions:<br />

From Species<br />

Survival to<br />

Biogeochemical<br />

Cycles<br />

SS39:Science and<br />

Policy Framework<br />

for Future<br />

Development of<br />

the Oil and Gas<br />

Resources of<br />

the USA Outer<br />

Continental Shelf<br />

(OCS)<br />

SS04: <strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Student<br />

Symposium<br />

SS57: Trace<br />

Elements and<br />

Isotopes in the<br />

Ocean and<br />

Atmosphere:<br />

the International<br />

GEOTRACES<br />

Program<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C 08:00-09:30<br />

35<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Morning Break 09:30-10:00<br />

SS44: Factors<br />

promoting the<br />

expansion of<br />

harmful algal<br />

blooms in marine<br />

and freshwater<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS82: Progress<br />

in understanding<br />

nutrient budgets<br />

in marginal basins<br />

and coastal<br />

systems subject<br />

to eutrophication<br />

and climate<br />

warming<br />

SS43:Long<br />

Island Sound,<br />

America’s Urban<br />

Estuary: Science,<br />

Policy, and Public<br />

Outreach<br />

SS33: Microbial<br />

nitrogen cycling<br />

in marine pelagic<br />

waters<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

Please see the program for a complete list of workshops, meetings, and lunchtime activities. 12:00-13:30<br />

SS04: <strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Student<br />

Symposium<br />

SS04: <strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Student<br />

Symposium<br />

SS57: Trace<br />

Elements and<br />

Isotopes in the<br />

Ocean and<br />

Atmosphere:<br />

the International<br />

GEOTRACES<br />

Program<br />

SS57: Trace<br />

Elements and<br />

Isotopes in the<br />

Ocean and<br />

Atmosphere:<br />

the International<br />

GEOTRACES<br />

Program<br />

SS44: Factors<br />

promoting the<br />

expansion of<br />

harmful algal<br />

blooms in marine<br />

and freshwater<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS78: Assessing<br />

Vulnerability of<br />

U.S. Lakes and<br />

Reservoirs to<br />

Climate Change<br />

SS43:Long<br />

Island Sound,<br />

America’s Urban<br />

Estuary: Science,<br />

Policy, and Public<br />

Outreach<br />

SS33: Microbial<br />

nitrogen cycling<br />

in marine pelagic<br />

waters<br />

13:30-15:30<br />

Afternoon Break 15:30-16:00<br />

SS44: Factors<br />

promoting the<br />

expansion of<br />

harmful algal<br />

blooms in marine<br />

and freshwater<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS78: Assessing<br />

Vulnerability of<br />

U.S. Lakes and<br />

Reservoirs to<br />

Climate Change<br />

SS61:<br />

Ecosystem<br />

engineering<br />

as coastal<br />

protection –<br />

lessons from<br />

theory and<br />

practice<br />

SS33: Microbial<br />

nitrogen cycling<br />

in marine pelagic<br />

waters<br />

16:00-18:00<br />

Please see the program for a complete list of workshops and evening meetings. 18:00-21:00


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

THURSDAY AT A GLANCE<br />

Room Room 333-334 Room 343 Room 344 Room 345 Room 346-347 Room 352<br />

08:00-09:30<br />

Plenary Presentation: Dr. James Syvitski, “Geo-engineering of Lowland Floodplains and Deltas”<br />

Margalef Award Acceptance Presentation - Warwick Vincent<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 Volunteer Recognition<br />

09:30-10:00 Morning Break<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

12:00-13:30<br />

SS71:<br />

Watersheds of<br />

the Caribbean:<br />

Global Change,<br />

Science, Policy<br />

and Security<br />

SS67: Role of<br />

the metalimnion<br />

and other internal<br />

transition zones<br />

in lakes<br />

36<br />

SS56: Carbon<br />

fluxes in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

at catchment,<br />

regional and<br />

continental scales<br />

Lunch and Workshops including:<br />

Student Workshops (Rooms 343 and 345)<br />

SS53: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

13:30-14:00 ASM Tick Talk Session 84: Geo-Engineering of Aquatic Systems<br />

14:00-15:30<br />

SS65: The role of<br />

Arabia’s Seas in<br />

projecting marine<br />

ecosystem<br />

resilience and<br />

adaptation to<br />

global climate<br />

change<br />

SS67: Role of<br />

the metalimnion<br />

and other internal<br />

transition zones<br />

in lakes<br />

15:30-16:00 Afternoon Break<br />

16:00-18:00<br />

TEACHER EXPO<br />

Room E2<br />

(16:00 to 19:00)<br />

SS65: The role of<br />

Arabia’s Seas in<br />

projecting marine<br />

ecosystem<br />

resilience and<br />

adaptation to<br />

global climate<br />

change<br />

SS63: Long-term<br />

perspectives on<br />

lake research and<br />

management<br />

SS56: Carbon<br />

fluxes in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

at catchment,<br />

regional and<br />

continental scales<br />

18:00-19:30 Poster Session and Reception<br />

19:30-21:00 Workshops and Evening Meetings<br />

SS28: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

SS28: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

SS30:<br />

Biological and<br />

biogeochemical<br />

responses to<br />

human impacts<br />

at the sedimentwater<br />

interface<br />

SS34: Biogeochemistry<br />

of<br />

resuspended<br />

sediments in<br />

aquatic and<br />

coastal marine<br />

environments<br />

SS34:<br />

Biogeochemistry<br />

of resuspended<br />

sediments in<br />

aquatic and<br />

coastal marine<br />

environments


Meeting Program<br />

Room 353 Room 354 Room 355 Room 356 Room 357 Room 348-349 Room 350-351 Room<br />

SS16:<br />

Opportunities<br />

in the study of<br />

ocean particle<br />

flux<br />

SS16:<br />

Opportunities<br />

in the study of<br />

ocean particle<br />

flux<br />

SS16:<br />

Opportunities<br />

in the study of<br />

ocean particle<br />

flux<br />

GS08 B: Plankton<br />

Ecology - Zoology<br />

SS77:<br />

Transmission of<br />

terrestrial signals<br />

to the coastal<br />

ocean by (large)<br />

rivers<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C 08:00-09:30<br />

37<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Morning Break 09:30-10:00<br />

SS44: Factors<br />

promoting the<br />

expansion of<br />

harmful algal<br />

blooms in marine<br />

and freshwater<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS13: Integrative<br />

approaches to<br />

ecological risk<br />

assessment of<br />

nonindigenous<br />

aquatic species<br />

SS46:<br />

Groundwater and<br />

coastal ecology:<br />

Microbial<br />

alterations<br />

and ecological<br />

consequences<br />

of groundwater<br />

discharge<br />

SS33: Microbial<br />

nitrogen cycling<br />

in marine pelagic<br />

waters<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

Please see the program for a complete list of workshops, meetings, and lunchtime activities 12:00-13:30<br />

GS05: Food Web<br />

Interactions and<br />

Trophic Linkages<br />

GS05: Food<br />

Web Interactions<br />

and Trophic<br />

Linkages<br />

SS79:<br />

Phytoplankton<br />

interactions<br />

in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS79:<br />

Phytoplankton<br />

interactions<br />

in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C 13:30-14:00<br />

SS42:<br />

Comparative<br />

Analysis<br />

of Marine<br />

Ecosystem<br />

Organization<br />

(CAMEO)<br />

SS13: Integrative<br />

approaches to<br />

ecological risk<br />

assessment of<br />

nonindigenous<br />

aquatic species<br />

SS46:<br />

Groundwater and<br />

coastal ecology:<br />

Microbial<br />

alterations<br />

and ecological<br />

consequences<br />

of groundwater<br />

discharge<br />

14:00-15:30<br />

Afternoon Break 15:30-16:00<br />

SS42:<br />

Comparative<br />

Analysis<br />

of Marine<br />

Ecosystem<br />

Organization<br />

(CAMEO)<br />

SS13: Integrative<br />

approaches to<br />

ecological risk<br />

assessment of<br />

nonindigenous<br />

aquatic species<br />

SS51: Iron,<br />

carbon cycling,<br />

and ecosystem<br />

dynamics in the<br />

Southern Ocean<br />

SS10: Shedding<br />

Light On The<br />

‘Black Box’<br />

of Dissolved<br />

Organic Nitrogen<br />

16:00-18:00<br />

Exhibit Hall 18:00-19:30<br />

See program for a complete list of workshops and evening meetings. 19:30-21:00


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

FRIDAY AT A GLANCE<br />

Room Room 333-334 Room 343 Room 344 Room 345 Room 346-347 Room 352<br />

08:00-09:30<br />

Klement Tockner, “Domesticated rivers: rethinking science and management “<br />

Mark Davis, “Square Pegs, Round Holes: The Disconnect Between New Water Realities & Current Water Management”<br />

09:30-10:00 Morning Break<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

SS51: Iron,<br />

carbon cycling,<br />

and ecosystem<br />

dynamics in the<br />

Southern Ocean<br />

SS63: Long-term<br />

perspectives on<br />

lake research and<br />

management<br />

12:00-13:30 Lunch<br />

13:30-15:30<br />

SS51: Iron,<br />

carbon cycling,<br />

and ecosystem<br />

dynamics in the<br />

Southern Ocean<br />

SS63: Long-term<br />

perspectives on<br />

lake research and<br />

management<br />

15:30-16:00 Afternoon Break<br />

16:00-17:30<br />

38<br />

SS24: Monitoring<br />

and forecasting<br />

of surface<br />

current-affected<br />

phenomena in<br />

coastal regions<br />

SS24: Monitoring<br />

and forecasting<br />

of surface<br />

current-affected<br />

phenomena in<br />

coastal regions<br />

SS28: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

SS28: Sensor<br />

Networks in<br />

Aquatic Systems:<br />

Research and<br />

Education<br />

SS80:<br />

Illuminating the<br />

biogeochemical<br />

roles of microbe<br />

SS80: Illuminating<br />

the biogeochemical<br />

roles of<br />

microbe


Meeting Program<br />

Room 353 Room 354 Room 355 Room 356 Room 357 Room 348-349 Room 350-351 Room<br />

SS25: Evolution<br />

of coastal<br />

change in the<br />

Northern Gulf of<br />

Mexico<br />

SS25: Evolution<br />

of coastal<br />

change in the<br />

Northern Gulf of<br />

Mexico<br />

GS05: Food Web<br />

Interactions and<br />

Trophic Linkages<br />

GS05: Food Web<br />

Interactions and<br />

Trophic Linkages<br />

GS09:<br />

Community<br />

Ecology<br />

GS09:<br />

Community<br />

Ecology<br />

La Nouvelle Orleans Ballroom C 08:00-09:30<br />

39<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Morning Break 09:30-10:00<br />

SS72: Studies of<br />

zooplankton and<br />

other particles<br />

using optical<br />

instruments<br />

SS79:<br />

Phytoplankton<br />

interactions<br />

in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS85: Extreme<br />

Aquatic<br />

Ecosystems<br />

and Their<br />

Astrobiological<br />

Relevance – A<br />

Session in<br />

Honor of Robert<br />

Wharton Jr.<br />

SS52:<br />

Populations<br />

and activity<br />

of ammoniaoxidizing<br />

and<br />

denitrifying<br />

organisms in<br />

coastal waters<br />

10:00-12:00<br />

Lunch 12:00-13:30<br />

SS72: Studies of<br />

zooplankton and<br />

other particles<br />

using optical<br />

instruments<br />

SS79:<br />

Phytoplankton<br />

interactions<br />

in aquatic<br />

ecosystems<br />

SS85: Extreme<br />

Aquatic<br />

Ecosystems<br />

and Their<br />

Astrobiological<br />

Relevance – A<br />

Session in<br />

Honor of Robert<br />

Wharton Jr.<br />

SS52:<br />

Populations<br />

and activity<br />

of ammoniaoxidizing<br />

and<br />

denitrifying<br />

organisms in<br />

coastal waters<br />

13:30-15:30<br />

Afternoon Break 15:30-16:00<br />

SS85: Extreme<br />

Aquatic<br />

Ecosystems<br />

and Their<br />

Astrobiological<br />

Relevance – A<br />

Session in<br />

Honor of Robert<br />

Wharton Jr.<br />

16:00-17:30


MONDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

MONDAY, 18 FEBRUARY - ORALS<br />

GS07 MULTIPLE STRESSOR PROBLEMS IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Rebecca North, rebeccalnorth@gmail.com<br />

Jeff Hudson, jeff.hudson@usask.ca<br />

Location: Room 333-334<br />

10:00 Hudson, J.; Sereda, J.; Vandergucht, D.; North, R.; Wheater,<br />

H.; Davies, J.: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE LAKE<br />

DIEFENBAKER STUDY<br />

10:15 Vandergucht, D. M.; Johansson, J.; Hunter, K.; Yip, H.; Head, K.;<br />

Prestie, C. C.; Abirhire, O.; Sereda, J. M.; Hudson, J. J.: INITIAL<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF A LARGE PRAIRIE RESERVOIR<br />

DURING THE ICE-FREE SEASON<br />

10:30 Yip, H.; Guo, X.; Johansson, J.; Hunter, K.; Prestie, C.; Vandergucht,<br />

D.; Hudson, J.: REMOTE SENSING USING LANDSAT<br />

IMAGERY TO PREDICT CHLOROPHYLL A AND SECCHI<br />

DEPTH AT LAKE DIEFENBAKER, SASKATCHEWAN,<br />

CANADA<br />

10:45 Johansson, J.; Hunter, K.; Head, K.; Yip, H.; Sereda, J.; Vandergucht,<br />

D.; Hudson, J.: A MASS BALANCE APPROACH TO<br />

CHARACTERIZING PHOSPHORUS AND NITROGEN<br />

DYNAMICS IN A COMPLEX PRAIRIE RESERVOIR.<br />

11:00 Hunter, K.; Johansson, J.; Sereda, J.; Vandergucht, D.; Hudson, J.:<br />

DETERMINATION OF THE TYPE AND DEGREE OF<br />

NUTRIENT DEFICIENCY IN A LARGE RESERVOIR<br />

POTENTIALLY IMPACTED BY ANTHROPOGENIC<br />

ACTIVITIES<br />

11:15 Abirhire, O.; Hunter, K.; Johansson, J.; Vandergucht, D.; Yip,<br />

H.; Head, K.; Prestie, C.; Hudson, J.: INFLUENCE OF<br />

AGRICULTURE, URBAN, AND AQUACULTURE LAND USE<br />

ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION<br />

IN LAKE DIEFENBAKER (SK, CANADA)<br />

11:30 North, R. L.; Khan, N. H.; Ahsan, M.; Prestie, C.; Korber, D. R.;<br />

Lawrence, J. R.; Hudson, J.: BACTERIAL ABUNDANCES AND<br />

WATER QUALITY OBJECTIVES IN A LARGE PRAIRIE<br />

RESERVOIR: LAKE DIEFENBAKER (SK, CANADA)<br />

11:45 Prestie, C. C.; Sereda, J.; Hudson, J.; Johansson, J.; Hunter,<br />

K.; Yip, H.; Head, K.; Vandergucht, D.; Perry, T.: CARBON<br />

SOURCES SUPPORTING FISH GROWTH IN A LARGE<br />

SASKATCHEWAN RESERVOIR<br />

13:30 Head, K.; Sereda, J.; Pollock, M.; Hudson, J.: RESPONSE OF<br />

NATIVE FISH HABITAT TO REGIONAL CLIMATE<br />

CHANGE IN THE SOUTH SASKATCHEWAN RIVER<br />

13:45 Deyle, E. R.; Fogarty, M. J.; Hsieh, C. H.; Kaufman, L.; MacCall,<br />

A. D.; Perretti, C. T.; Rosenberg, A.; Ye, H.; Sugihara, G.:<br />

UNDERSTANDING THE EFFECT OF FISHING ON<br />

OTHER POPULATIONS<br />

14:00 Glaser, S. M.; Hendrix, C. S.: COMPLEX FEEDBACKS<br />

BETWEEN FISHERIES, FOOD SECURITY, AND CIVIL<br />

CONFLICT<br />

14:30 Davison, I. R.; Tellez, E.; Woodke, R. L.; Bidner, R. J.; Wyatt,<br />

K. H.: REGULATION AND FATE OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC CARBON RELEASE BY THE GREEN<br />

ALGA CLADOPHORA GLOMERATA<br />

14:45 Herbert, E. R.; Johnson, L. T.; Craft, C. B.: THE RESPONSE OF<br />

WATER COLUMN AND BENTHIC BIOFILM METABOLISM<br />

TO CARBON, NITROGEN, AND PHOSPHORUS<br />

ENRICHMENT ACROSS AN ESTUARINE SALINITY<br />

GRADIENT (GEORGIA, USA)<br />

40<br />

15:00 Marton, J. M.; Roberts, B. J.: PATTERNS OF PHOSPHORUS<br />

SORPTION IN LOUISIANA TIDAL BRACKISH AND SALT<br />

MARSHES IMPACTED BY THE DEEPWATER HORIZON<br />

OIL SPILL<br />

15:15 Hasan, M. M.; Kaneko, G.; Ushio, H.; Watabe, S.; Ochiai, Y.:<br />

WIDESPREAD EXPRESSION OF MYOGLOBIN IN<br />

MUSCLE AND NON-MUSCLE TISSUES OF HYPOXIA-<br />

INTOLERANT SPECIES, RAINBOW TROUT<br />

GS08A PLANKTON ECOLOGY - PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

Chair(s): Donald Redalje, Donald.Redalje@USM.edu<br />

Daniel Roelke, droelke@tamu.edu<br />

Ed Laws, edlaws@lsu.edu<br />

Chris Filstrup, Filstrup@iastate.edu<br />

Nasseer Idrisi, nidrisi@uvi.edu<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

16:00 Clayton, S. A.; Dutkiewicz, S.; Jahn, O.; Follows, M. J.: OCEAN<br />

EDDIES AND DISPERSAL MAINTAIN PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

DIVERSITY<br />

16:15 Bachman, B. E.; Lomas, M. W.; Goldman, E. A.; Lachenmyer, E.;<br />

Richardson, T. L.: PICOPHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS<br />

AND PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN EDDIES OF THE<br />

SARGASSO SEA<br />

16:30 Lachenmyer, E. M.; Lomas, M. W.; Richardson, T. L.:<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC NUTRIENTS AND BACTERIAL<br />

PRODUCTIVITY IN EDDIES OF THE SARGASSO SEA<br />

17:00 Fujiki, T.; Matsumoto, K.; Mino, Y.; Sasaoka, K.; Wakita, M.;<br />

Kawakami, H.; Honda, M.; Saino, T.: SEASONAL VARIATIONS<br />

OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSITION AND<br />

PHOTOSYNTHETIC PHYSIOLOGY IN THE WESTERN<br />

SUBARCTIC GYRE OF THE NORTH PACIFIC<br />

SS01 ECOSYSTEM-BASED MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING FOR BETTER<br />

MANAGEMENT OF OUR OCEANS<br />

Chair(s): Tundi Agardy, tundiagardy@earthlink.net<br />

Steven Degraer, S.Degraer@MUMM.ac.be<br />

Angel Borja, aborja@azti.es<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

16:00 Ferran, K. G.: UTILIZING GIS & REMOTE SENSING FOR<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT AND ANALYSIS TO<br />

IMPROVE THE SPATIAL DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM<br />

FOR COASTAL&MARINE RESOURCE MANAGEMENT<br />

16:15 Melendez-Diaz, J.; Quiñones-Vilches, N.; Rodriguez, A.; Gervais,<br />

G.; Roberson, L.: HABITAT AND BIODIVERSITY MAPPING<br />

FOR THE DETERMINATION OF ALGAL BIOMASS<br />

MARICULTURE SITES IN COASTAL AREAS OF PUERTO<br />

RICO<br />

16:30 Palamara, L.; Manderson, J.; Kohut, J.; DiDomenico, G.; Curchitser,<br />

E.; Kang, D.; Oliver, M. J.; Dobson, C.; Snow, A.: PUTTING THE<br />

DYNAMICS OF THE OCEAN INTO MARINE SPATIAL<br />

PLANNING: TEMPORAL VARIATION IN BUTTERFISH<br />

HABITAT<br />

16:45 Wing, S. R.; Jack, L. C.: A SAFETY NETWORK AGAINST<br />

POPULATION COLLAPSE: MATURE SUBPOPULATIONS<br />

IN REFUGES DISTRIBUTED ACROSS A LANDSCAPE.<br />

17:00 O’Connell, C. A.; Baumann, H.: ANALYSIS OF STAKEHOLDER<br />

OPINIONS AND ECOSYSTEM VALUATIONS<br />

REGARDING MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING IN LONG<br />

ISLAND SOUND<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS06 NEW INSIGHTS INTO MICROBIAL ECOLOGY OF<br />

HYPERSALINE HABITATS<br />

Chair(s): Virginia Edgcomb, vedgcomb@whoi.edu<br />

Joan Bernhard, jbernhard@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

16:00 Oremland, R. S.: A RANDOM BIOGEOCHEMICAL WALK<br />

INTO THREE SODA LAKES OF THE WESTERN USA:<br />

WITH AN INTRODUCTION TO A FEW OF THEIR<br />

MICROBIAL DENIZENS T<br />

16:30 Wu, Q.; Wang, J.: DO PATTERNS OF BACTERIAL TAXON<br />

RICHNESS ALONG SALINITY GRADIENTS DIFFER<br />

FROM THOSE OBSERVED FOR MACROORGANISMS<br />

16:45 Bernhard, J. M.; Edgcomb, V. P.; Morrison, C.; Orsi, W.; Beaudoin,<br />

D. J.: HALOCLINE SEDIMENTS OF DEEP HYPERSALINE<br />

ANOXIC BASINS APPEAR TO SUPPORT PROTIST<br />

POPULATIONS<br />

17:00 Edgcomb, V. P.; Bernhard, J. M.; Visscher, P. T.; Summons, R.<br />

E.: EUKARYOTIC COMMUNITIES OF DIFFERENT<br />

MICROBIALITES IN HYPERSALINE HAMELIN POOL,<br />

SHARK BAY, AUSTRALIA<br />

17:15 Joye, S. B.; Habicht, K.; Hinrichs, K. U.; MacDonald, I. R.;<br />

MacGregor, B.; Teske, A. P.: SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN THE<br />

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND MICROBIAL ACTIVITY AND<br />

DIVERSITY IN GULF OF MEXICO SEAFLOOR BRINES<br />

SS12 COOPERATION - THE KEY TO SUCCESS: SYMBIOSES IN<br />

AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Hans-Peter Grossart, hgrossart@igb-berlin.de<br />

Kam W. Tang, kamtang@vims.edu<br />

Claudia Dziallas, cdziallas@bio.ku.dk<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

10:00 Amin, S. A.; Hmelo, L. R.; Tol, H. V.; Parker, M. S.; Parsek, M.;<br />

Armbrust, E. V.: WHOLE CELL TRANSCRIPTOMICS<br />

REVEAL MULTIPLE COMPLEX INTERACTIONS<br />

BETWEEN A TOXIGENIC DIATOM AND A<br />

MUTUALISTIC BACTERIUM<br />

10:15 Jauzein, C.; Evans, A.; Erdner, D. L.: THE IMPACT OF<br />

ASSOCIATED BACTERIA ON MORPHOLOGY<br />

AND PHYSIOLOGY OF THE DINOFLAGELLATE<br />

ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE<br />

10:30 Klueter, A.; Crandall, J. B.; Archer, F. I.; Coffroth, M. A.; Teece, M.<br />

A.: M ETABOLIC FINGERPRINTS OF FOUR DIFFERENT<br />

TYPES OF SYMBIODINIUM SPP<br />

10:45 Nissimov, J. I.; Kimmance, S. A.; Napier, J. A.; Allen, M. J.: PROTEIN<br />

FOLD DIFFERENCES IN THE COCCOLITHOVIRUS-<br />

ENCODED SERINE PALMITOYLTRANSFERASE AND<br />

ITS POSSIBLE IMPLICATIONS FOR THE DEMISE OF<br />

EMILIANIA HUXLEYI<br />

11:00 Baker, L. J.; Kemp, P. F.; Alvarez-Valdez , G.: RESPONSE OF<br />

DIATOM-ATTACHED AND FREE-LIVING BACTERIA TO<br />

CHANGES IN GROWTH STATE OF THE HOST CELLS, IN<br />

A DIATOM-BACTERIA-VIRUS MODEL SYSTEM<br />

11:15 Graff, J. R.; Menden-Deuer, S.; Forschner, S.; Long, R. A.; Rowley, D.<br />

C.: PARTICLE COLONIZATION BY VIBRIO CHOLERAE<br />

IS REGULATED BY BEHAVIORAL MODIFICATION IN<br />

RESPONSE TO CHEMICAL CUES FROM BACTERIA AND<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON EXUDATES<br />

41<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

11:30 Bingham, B. L.; Dimond, J. L.; Muller-Parker, G.; Francis, L.:<br />

REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGY IS DETERMINED<br />

BY SYMBIONT PRESENCE AND IDENTITY IN A<br />

TEMPERATE SEA ANEMONE<br />

11:45 Dziallas, C.; Riemann, L.: NITROGEN-FIXING BACTERIA IN<br />

MARINE CILIATES<br />

13:30 Skovgaard, A.: ZOOPLANKTON EPIBIONTS: DO THEY<br />

MATTER?<br />

13:45 Dong, Y.; Tang, K. W.; Yang, P. G.: DIETARY EFFECTS ON<br />

ABUNDANCE AND CARBON UTILIZATION ABILITY<br />

OF DMSP-CONSUMING BACTERIA ASSOCIATED WITH<br />

THE COPEPOD ACARTIA TONSA DANA<br />

14:00 Bickel, S. L.; Tang, K. W.; Grossart, H. P.: TEMPORAL<br />

CHANGES OF GENETIC AND FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY<br />

OF ZOOPLANKTON-ASSOCIATED BACTERIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES<br />

14:15 Fiore, C. L.; Lesser, M. P.: NITROGE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY<br />

IN THE GIANT BARREL SPONGE, XESTOSPONGIA<br />

MUTA ACROSS THE CARIBBEAN<br />

14:30 Crandall, J. B.; Teece, M. A.; Coffroth, M. A.: METABOLIC AND<br />

SYMBIONT DIFFERENCES BETWEEN A REEF-BUILDING<br />

CORAL AND A WEEDY CORAL IN THE FLORIDA KEYS<br />

REEF TRACT<br />

14:45 Paul, J. H.; Young, E. C.; McDaniel, L. D.; daniels, C. A.; Voolstra, c.;<br />

RITCHIE, K. B.: NOVEL EFFECTS OF GENE TRANSFER<br />

AGENTS IN THE REEF ENVIRONMENT<br />

15:00 Jani, A. J.; Briggs, C. J.: SHIFTS IN AMPHIBIAN SYMBIOTIC<br />

BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES ARE LINKED TO<br />

EPIZOOTIC SPREAD OF THE AQUATIC FUNGAL<br />

PATHOGEN BATRACHOCHYTRIUM DENDROBATIDIS<br />

15:15 Corno, G.; Salka, I.; Grossart, H. P.: PREDATION<br />

MODIFIES BACTERIAL SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION<br />

RAISING PRODUCTIVITY IN AQUATIC BACTERIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES ADAPTED TO REFRACTORY<br />

SUBSTRATES<br />

SS14 NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVEN RESPONSES OF<br />

MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN THE OCEAN: EFFECTS ON THE<br />

BIOLOGICAL AND MICROBIAL CARBON PUMPS<br />

Chair(s): Louis Legendre, legendre@obs-vlfr.fr<br />

M. Robin Anderson, m.robin.anderson@dfo-mpo.gc.ca<br />

Richard B. Rivkin, rrivkin@mun.ca<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

10:00 Azam, F.; Jiao, N.: MICROBIAL SEQUESTRATION AND<br />

MOBILIZATION OF CARBON IN THE OCEAN—THE<br />

MICROBIAL CARBON PUMP T<br />

10:30 Owen, K. R.; Creach, V.; Malin, G.: CALCULATING THE<br />

CARBON CONTENT OF A DROP IN THE OCEAN:<br />

ALTERNATIVES TO CHLOROPHYLL A IN ESTIMATIONS<br />

OF PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS<br />

10:45 Viviani, D. A.; Church, M. J.; Böttjer, D.: VARIABILITY IN<br />

DISSOLVED PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND MICROBIAL<br />

GROWTH IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE<br />

11:00 Benner, R.: TRACING BACTERIAL C AND N IN THE<br />

MICROBIAL CARBON PUMP*<br />

11:15 Mousing, E. A.; Ellegaard, M.; Richardson, K.: TEMPERATURE<br />

INFLUENCES ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY<br />

SIZE STRUCTURE<br />

11:30 Williams, C. A.; Mahaffey, C.; Sharples, J.: PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

COMMUNITY RESPONSE TO AN EPISODIC WIND EVENT<br />

MONDAY


MONDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

11:45 Legendre, L.; Guidi, L.; Uitz, J.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS<br />

OF OCEAN WARMING ON THE BIOLOGICAL AND<br />

MICROBIAL CARBON PUMPS<br />

13:30 Turner, J. T.; Petitpas, C. M.: A QUARTER-CENTURY<br />

OF BACTERIOPLANKTON, TEMPERATURE AND<br />

CHLOROPHYLL IN BUZZARDS BAY, MASSACHUSETTS,<br />

USA (1987-2012)*<br />

13:45 Endres, S.; Flerus, R.; Galgani, L.; Roa, J.; Engel, A.: ORGANIC<br />

MATTER TURNOVER BY PELAGIC MICROORGANISMS<br />

UNDER THE IMPACT OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION<br />

14:00 Davis, M. E.; Smayda, T. J.; Borkman, D. G.: LONG-TERM<br />

BLOOM PATTERNS OF THE DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA<br />

NORDENSKIOELDII CLEVE IN NARRAGANSETT BAY<br />

14:15 Van Oostende, N.; Dunne, J. P.; Fawcett, S. E.; Ward, B. B.:<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON SUCCESSION AND ACCLIMATION<br />

EXPLAINS NITRATE UPTAKE FOLLOWING AN<br />

UPWELLING EVENT<br />

14:30 Hennon, G. M.; Armbrust, E. V.: ACCLIMATED<br />

PHYSIOLOGY AND GENE EXPRESSION OF THE<br />

DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA UNDER<br />

ELEVATED CO 2<br />

14:45 Hartmann, M.; Gomez-Pereira, P.; Grob, M. C.; Osrtowski,<br />

M.; Tarran, G. A.; Martin, A. P.; Scanlan, D. J.; Zubkov, M. V.:<br />

UNEQUIVOCAL DOMINATION OF CO 2 FIXATION<br />

BY PROCHLOROCOCCUS IN SURFACE WATERS OF THE<br />

LOW LATITUDE ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

15:00 Andersson, A.: INTERPLAY BETWEEN BOTTOM-UP AND<br />

TOP-DOWN FACTORS REGULATING BACTERIAL<br />

GROWTH RATE ALONG A NUTRITIONAL GRADIENT.<br />

15:15 Rivkin, R. B.: MICROBES AND OCEAN BIOGEOCHEMICAL<br />

PROCESSES<br />

SS17 PREDICTING DRIVERS AND MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN LARGE<br />

RIVERS AND DELTAS: THE USGS DELTA RESEARCH AND GLOBAL<br />

OBSERVATION NETWORK (DRAGON)<br />

Chair(s): Matthew E. Andersen, mandersen@usgs.gov<br />

D. Phil Turnipseed, pturnip@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

16:00 Turnipseed, D. P.: PREDICTING DRIVERS AND<br />

MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN LARGE RIVERS AND<br />

DELTAS: THE USGS DELTA RESEARCH AND GLOBAL<br />

OBSERVATION NETWORK (DRAGON)*<br />

16:15 Wilson, S. A.; Thatcher, C. A.: GEOSPATIAL TOOLS<br />

AND DATA DEVELOPED TO SUPPORT THE USGS’S<br />

FORECAST MEKONG EFFORT*<br />

16:30 Andersen, M. E.; Patricio, H. C.; Hewitt, D. A.; Ainsley, S. M.;<br />

Beeman, J. W.: DEVELOPING A PILOT FISH DATABASE AND<br />

<strong>PROGRAM</strong> FOR THE MEKONG RIVER BASIN TO ASSIST<br />

IN PLANNING SUSTAINABLE FOOD SECURITY*<br />

16:45 Densmore, B. K.; Dietsch, B. J.; Wilson, R. C.: HYDROGRAPHIC<br />

SURVEY IN THE LOWER MEKONG, TONLE SAP, AND<br />

BASSAC RIVERS NEAR PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA*<br />

17:00 Doyle, T. W.; Bhattarai, D.; Feng, S.: A GRAPHIC<br />

VISUALIZATION TOOL OF THE MEKONG RIVER TO<br />

INFORM PLANNERS AND DESIGNERS OF ECOSYSTEM<br />

DEVELOPMENT, PROTECTION, AND RESTORATION*<br />

17:15 Middleton, B. A.: DEVELOPING WETLAND RESTORATION<br />

AND PROTECTION PARTNERSHIPS IN THE RIVER<br />

DELTAS OF CHINA*<br />

42<br />

SS21 OPTICAL SIGNATURES OF THE GLOBAL CARBON CYCLE:<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF THE SOURCES, SINKS AND CHEMISTRY<br />

OF CDOM AND FDOM<br />

Chair(s): Aron Stubbins, aron.stubbins@skio.usg.edu<br />

Natasha McDonald, natasha.mcdonald@bios.edu<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

10:00 Nelson, N. B.; Siegel, D. A.: CDOM IN THE OCEAN: A GLOBAL<br />

PERSPECTIVE T<br />

10:30 Helms, J. R.; Stubbins, A.; Mopper, K.: PHOTOCHEMICAL<br />

BLEACHING OF DEEP-SEA DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER*<br />

10:45 Yamashita, Y.; Nosaka, Y.; Suzuki, K.; Ogawa, H.; Takahashi,<br />

K.; Saito, H.: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE<br />

CHARACTERISTICS OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER IN THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC<br />

11:00 Jaffe, R.; Cawley, K.; Yamashita, Y.: DETERMINING OPTICAL<br />

PROPERTIES TO QUANTIFY CDOM AND FDOM<br />

CONTRIBUTIONS FROM FRINGE MANGROVES IN A<br />

SUB-TROPICAL ESTUARY.<br />

11:15 Barron, R. K.; Siegel, D. A.; Gillocheau, N.: UV-ABSORBING<br />

SUBSTANCES LINKED TO PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

COMMUNITY DYNAMICS IN A COASTAL OCEAN<br />

11:30 Powers, L. C.; Miller, W. L.: ESTIMATING THE MAGNITUDE<br />

OF DIRECT PHOTOCHEMICAL CARBON OXIDATION<br />

IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO USING OCEAN<br />

COLOR<br />

11:45 Mannino, A.; Hyde, K.; Novak, M. G.; Hooker, S. B.:<br />

DEVELOPMENT AND ANALYSIS OF OCEAN COLOR<br />

SATELLITE DOM PRODUCTS FOR STUDIES IN COASTAL<br />

OCEAN DYNAMICS<br />

13:30 Osburn, C. L.; Paerl, H. W.; Handsel, L. T.: FLUORESCENCE<br />

TRACKING OF PARTICULATE AND DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER QUALITY IN A RIVER-DOMINATED<br />

ESTUARY<br />

13:45 Hulatt, C. J.; Kaartokallio, H. K.; Stedmon, C. A.; Sonninen,<br />

E.; Oinonen, M.; Thomas, D. N.: RADIOCARBON AGE,<br />

LABILITY AND OPTICAL FINGERPRINTS OF RIVERINE<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER EXPORTED FROM A<br />

NORTHERN PEAT-DOMINATED CATCHMENT.<br />

14:00 Dainard, P. G.; Gueguen, C.: DISTRIBUTION OF PARAFAC<br />

MODELLED CDOM COMPONENTS IN THE NORTH<br />

PACIFIC AND WESTERN ARCTIC OCEANS<br />

14:15 Salyuk, P. A.; Krikun, K. A.; Golik, I. A.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER FLUORESCENCE SPECTRA IN THE FAR<br />

EASTERN SEAS OF RUSSIA<br />

SS22 VANISHING GLACIERS: CONSEQUENCES FOR AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Ruben Sommaruga, ruben.sommaruga@uibk.ac.at<br />

Tom Battin, tom.battin@univie.ac.at<br />

Eran Hood, ewhood@uas.alaska.edu<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

13:30 Jacobsen, D.: DO FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS BENEFIT<br />

FROM GLACIAL RUNOFF? T<br />

14:00 Scott, D. T.; Hood, E.; Vermilyea, A.; Schroth, A.: SEASONAL<br />

NUTRIENT AND IRON FLUXES FROM A GLACIER<br />

ALONG THE GULF OF ALASKA: INSIGHT INTO<br />

MATERIAL EXPORT INTO COASTAL ESTUARIES<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

14:15 Vermilyea, A. W.; Hood, E. W.; Scott, D.; Stubbins, A.; Spencer,<br />

R.; Raymond, P.; Fellman, J.; Schroth, A.: ALASKAN GLACIER<br />

DICHOTOMY: MELT SEASON DYNAMICS OF<br />

NUTRIENTS AND MERCURY<br />

14:30 Schroth, A. W.; Hood, E.; Vermilyea, A.; Fellman, J. B.; Scott, D.:<br />

TIME-SERIES INSIGHTS TO TRACE METAL DYNAMICS<br />

IN ALASKAN CATCHMENTS WITH VARYING DEGREES<br />

OF GLACIATION<br />

14:45 Hood, E. W.; Hock, R. M.; Scott, D. T.; Schroth, A. W.; Zhang, J.:<br />

FUTURE CHANGES IN WATER AND NUTRIENT FLUXES<br />

FROM GLACIER WATERSHEDS IN ALASKA<br />

15:00 Koziol, K. A.; Moggridge, H. L.; Hodson, A. J.: THE ORGANIC<br />

CARBON BUDGET OF A GLACIAL SYSTEM: TEMPORARY<br />

OVERDRAFT OR A MASSIVE DEFICIT?<br />

15:15 Battin, T. J.; Wilhelm, L.; Singer, G. A.; Fasching , C.; Besemer, K.:<br />

VANISHING GLACIERS: CONSEQUENCES FOR AQUATIC<br />

ECOSYSTEMS<br />

16:00 Sommaruga, R.; Kandolf, G.: BACK TO THE ORIGIN:<br />

TURBID GLACIER-FED LAKES LACK HETEROTROPHIC<br />

NANOFLAGELLATES<br />

16:15 Slemmons, K. E.; Saros, J. E.: IMPLICATIONS OF NITROGEN-<br />

RICH GLACIAL MELTWATER FOR PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

DIVERSITY AND PRODUCTIVITY<br />

16:30 Tartarotti, B.; Saul, N.; Sommaruga, R.; Steinberg, C. E.: UV<br />

STRESS-INDUCED DNA DAMAGE IN COPEPODS FROM<br />

CLEAR AND TURBID ALPINE LAKES<br />

16:45 Kammerlander, B.; Sommaruga, R.; Sonntag, B.: CONSEQUENCES<br />

OF A RETREATING GLACIER FOR CILIATES IN<br />

TWO REMOTE ALPINE LAKES OF CONTRASTING<br />

TRANSPARENCY<br />

17:00 Warner, K. A.; Saros, J. E.; Simon, K. S.: NITROGEN SUBSIDIES<br />

IN GLACIAL MELTWATER: IMPLICATIONS FOR HIGH<br />

ELEVATION AQUATIC CHAINS<br />

17:15 Gluchowska, M.; Weslawski , J. M.; Lydersen, C.; Steen, H.; Hop, H.;<br />

Falk Petersen, S.; Zajaczkowski, M.; Walczowski, W.; Stempniewicz,<br />

L.: CAN WE REPLACE GLACIER BAYS WITH RIVER<br />

MOUNTS IN ARCTIC ECOSYSTEM?<br />

SS23 DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER DYNAMICS: TOWARDS A<br />

MOLECULAR-LEVEL UNDERSTANDING<br />

Chair(s): Aron Stubbins, aron.stubbins@skio.usg.edu<br />

Thorsten Dittmar, tdittmar@mpi-bremen.de<br />

Jutta Niggemann, jniggema@mpi-bremen.de<br />

Location: Room 357<br />

10:00 Kellerman, A. M.; Dittmar, T.; Kothawala, D. N.; Tranvik, L. J.:<br />

CHEMODIVERSITY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER:<br />

PATTERNS AND REGULATION ACROSS 125 BOREAL<br />

LAKES<br />

10:15 Kothawala, D. N.; Stedmon, C. A.; Köhler, S. J.; Müller, R. A.;<br />

Weyhenmeyer, G. A.; Tranvik, L. J.: DECONSTRUCTING<br />

THE STRUCTURE OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER IN BOREAL LAKES USING FLUORESCENCE<br />

SPECTROSCOPY<br />

10:30 Goldberg, S. J.; Ball, G.; Allen, B.; Schladow, G.; Simpson, A.; Masoom,<br />

H.; Soong, R.; Aluwihare, L. I.: SEASONAL VARIATION IN<br />

THE SOURCE AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID PHASE<br />

EXTRACTED DOM FROM LAKE TAHOE AND SHORTER<br />

RESIDENCE TIME LAKES IN THE SIERRA NEVADA, CA<br />

43<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

10:45 Echevarría Román, Y. A.; Pullin, M. J.; Cooray, A. T.; Jackson, K. J.:<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) DYNAMICS<br />

IN THREE PRIMARY STREAMS IN A MONTANE<br />

GRASSLAND OF NORTHERN NEW MEXICO<br />

11:00 Kaplan, L. A.; Sleighter, R. L.; Cory, R. M.; Hatcher, P. G.:<br />

COUPLED GEOCHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER FROM A HEADWATER STREAM<br />

11:15 Hatcher, P. G.; Abdulla, H. A.; Sleighter, R. L.: TWO<br />

DIMENSIONAL CORRELATIONS ANALYSIS OF FOURIER<br />

TRANSFORM ION CYCLOTRON RESONANCE MASS<br />

SPECTRA OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

11:30 Chen, H.; Abdulla, H. A.; Sun, L.; Mopper, K.; Hatcher, P.:<br />

PHOTOCHEMICAL FLOCCULATION OF ORGANIC<br />

MATTER IN IRON RICH WATERS STUDIED BY ESI FTICR<br />

MASS SPECTROMETRY<br />

11:45 Miller, W. L.; Powers, L. C.: PRELIMINARY WORK ON THE<br />

PHOTOCHEMICAL REACTIVITY OF DEEP OCEAN<br />

REFRACTORY CARBON: “PHOTOCHEMISTRY IN THE DORC”<br />

13:30 Shen, Y.; Fichot, C. G.; Benner, R.: NET DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

CARBON ACCUMULATION IN A RIVER-INFLUENCED<br />

OCEAN MARGIN<br />

13:45 Steen, A. D.; Webber, A. T.; Vazin, J. P.; Gainer, P. J.; Wilhelm, S.<br />

W.: LEUCYL AMINOPEPTIDASE IS NOT ENOUGH:<br />

CONTROLS ON THE ACTIVITIES OF DIVERSE<br />

PEPTIDASES IN FRESHWATER AND SEAWATER<br />

14:00 Pollard, P. C.: INSTANTANEOUS MEASURES OF<br />

BACTERIAL RESPIRATION RATE QUANTIFY THE<br />

SUPER LABILE DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN<br />

FRESHWATER<br />

14:15 Daley, M. C.; Moisander, P.; Urban-Rich, J.: DOC RELEASED BY<br />

THE HYDROMEDUSA NEMOPSIS BACHEI AND ITS<br />

AFFECTS ON BACTERIA<br />

14:30 Johnson, W. M.; Howard-Åkerfeldt, I.; Longnecker, K.; Kido<br />

Soule, M.; Kujawinski, E.: THE IMPACT OF CARBON<br />

SUBSTRATE ON THE METABOLIC PROFILE OF THE<br />

HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIUM RUEGERIA POMEROYI<br />

14:45 Osterholz, H.; Dittmar, T.; Müllenmeister, S.; Kramer, C.; Simon,<br />

M.; Niggemann, J.: FAST TRANSFORMATION OF FRESHLY<br />

PRODUCED COMPOUNDS INTO REFRACTORY<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

15:00 Niggemann, J.; Gerdts, G.; Dittmar, T.: DIVERSITY OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AS A DIRECT<br />

CONSEQUENCE OF MICROBIAL DIVERSITY?<br />

15:15 Jaekel, U.; Dittmar, T.; Girguis, P. R.; Expedition 336 Scientists:<br />

TRANSFORMATIONS OF ORGANIC MATTER UNDER<br />

DISTINCT SEDIMENTARY REDOX HORIZONS AT<br />

NORTH POND<br />

16:00 Cao, X.; Aiken, G. R.; Mao, J.; Schmidt-Rohr, K.: EVIDENCE<br />

FOR PRESERVATION OF A MAJOR COMPONENT IN<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER FROM RIVER TO<br />

COASTAL MARINE WATERS<br />

16:15 Walker, B. D.; Abdulla, H. A.; Hatcher, P. G.; McCarthy, M. D.;<br />

Druffel, E.: MOLECULAR AND ISOTOPIC VARIABILITY OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER WITHIN A UNIQUE<br />

COASTAL UPWELLING SYSTEM: A COMBINED 114C<br />

AND H-NMR AND APPROACH<br />

16:30 Koch, B. P.; Lechtenfeld, O. J.; Flerus, R.; McCallister, S. L.; Schmitt-<br />

Kopplin, P.; Kaiser, K.; Benner, R.; Kattner, G.: A MOLECULAR<br />

PERSPECTIVE ON THE AGEING OF MARINE DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER<br />

MONDAY


MONDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

16:45 Follett, C. L.; Repeta, D. J.; Rothman, D. H.; Xu, L.: HIDDEN CYCLE<br />

OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN THE OCEAN<br />

17:00 Longnecker, K.; Kujawinski, E. B.: ASSEMBLING COMPLEX<br />

ORGANIC MOLECULES IN THE DEEP SEA<br />

17:15 Dittmar, T.; Blasius, B.; Feenders, C.; Steinbrink, C.; Stumm, M.;<br />

Christoffers, J.; Simon, M.; Stubbins, A.; Niggemann, J.: THE<br />

NEUTRAL REACTIVITY THEORY: A MECHANISTIC<br />

EXPLANATION FOR THE STABILITY OF DOM IN THE<br />

DEEP OCEAN<br />

SS26 COCCOLITHOPHORES: BIOGEOCHEMICAL IMPACTS AND<br />

RESPONSE TO A CHANGING OCEAN<br />

Chair(s): William M. Balch, bbalch@bigelow.org<br />

Nicholas R. Bates, nick.bates@bios.edu<br />

Phoebe J. Lam, pjlam@whoi.edu<br />

Benjamin S. Twining, btwining@bigelow.org<br />

Location: Room 344<br />

10:00 Balch, W. M.; Twining, B. S.; Drapeau, D. T.; Bowler, B. C.; Lubelczyk, L.<br />

C.; Bates, N. R.; Lam, P. J.; Smith, H. E.; Poulton, A. J.: THE GREAT<br />

CALCITE BELT: A CIRCUM-GLOBAL COCCOLITHOPHORE<br />

FEATURE IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

10:15 Bates, N. R.; Garley, R.; Balch, W. M.; Twining, B. S.; Lam, P. J.:<br />

FEEDBACKS BETWEEN AIR-SEA CO2 FLUXES AND<br />

COCCOLITHOPHORES<br />

10:30 Rosengard, S. Z.; Lam, P. J.; Auro, M. E.; Pike, S. M.; Balch, W.<br />

M.: ORGANIC CARBON EXPORT ACROSS THE GREAT<br />

CALCITE BELT: INVESTIGATING BALLAST IN CALCITE-<br />

RICH SURFACE WATERS OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

10:45 Poulton, A. J.; Stinchcombe, M. C.; Holland, R.; Zubkov, M. V.;<br />

Bakker, D. C.; Lee, G. A.; Suggett, D. J.; Richier, S.; Young, J. R.:<br />

COCCOLITHOPHORE CALCIFICATION IN NORTH-<br />

WEST EUROPEAN SHELF WATERS<br />

11:00 Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D.; Jones, B. M.; Lebrato, M.; Blanco-<br />

Ameijeiras, S.: STRAIN VARIABILITY AND MOLECULAR<br />

INSIGHTS ON ACCLIMATION TO ELEVATED CO2<br />

THROUGH PROTEOMICS<br />

11:15 Lefebvre, S. C.; Valas, R.; Allen, A. E.; Dupont, c. L.; Carpenter, E. J.;<br />

Stillman, J. H.: TANSCRIPTOME ANALYSIS OF EMILIANIA<br />

HUXLEYI REVEALS DIFFERENTIAL RESPONSES TO<br />

LIGHT, PCO2 AND NITROGEN SOURCE<br />

11:30 von Dassow, P.; Mella-Flores, D.; Herrera, Y.; Bendif, E.; Torres, R.:<br />

COCCOLITHOPHORES IN NATURALLY HIGH PCO2<br />

ENVIRONMENTS<br />

11:45 Fulton, J. M.; Fredricks, H. F.; Kendricks, B. J.; DiTullio, G.<br />

R.; Vardi, A.; Bidle, K. D.; Van Mooy, B.: LIPIDOME OF<br />

THE EMILIANIA HUXLEYI-COCCOLITHOVIRUS<br />

SYSTEM IN A CHANGING OCEAN<br />

SS27 SURFACE AND SUBSURFACE FLUXES ACROSS THE<br />

LAND-OCEAN INTERFACE OF LARGE RIVERS<br />

Chair(s): Mead A. Allison, mallison@mail.utexas.edu<br />

Karen H. Johannesson , kjohanne@tulane.edu<br />

Alexander S. Kolker, akolker@lumcon.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

16:00 Lohrenz, S. E.; Cai, W. J.; Tian, H.; He, R.; Xue, Z.; Fennel,<br />

K.; Hopkinson, C. S.; Howden, S. D.: CHARACTERIZING<br />

CLIMATE AND HUMAN INFLUENCES ON LAND-<br />

OCEAN FLUXES IN A LARGE RIVER SYSTEM USING<br />

COUPLED TERRESTRIAL-COASTAL OCEAN MODELS*<br />

44<br />

16:15 Mitra, S.; Wozniak, A. S.; Miller, R.; Hatcher, P.; Druffel, E. R.:<br />

MARINE-TO-LAND ATMOSPHERIC TRANSPORT OF<br />

ORGANIC MATTER IN COASTAL AREAS<br />

16:30 Kolker, A. S.; Cable, J. E.; Johannesson, K. H.; Allison, M. A.:<br />

SUBSURFACE HYDROLOGICAL AND GEOCHEMICAL<br />

FLUXES IN THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER DELTA<br />

16:45 Furukawa, Y.; Reed, A. H.; Zhang, G.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL<br />

CONTROL ON THE PARTICLE FLUX AND TRANSPORT<br />

DYNAMICS IN RIVER-DOMINATED COASTAL REGIONS<br />

17:00 Gardner, C. B.; Lyons, W. B.; Carey, A. E.: ROCK-DERIVED<br />

MICRONUTRIENT FLUXES AND WEATHERING IN<br />

HIGH-STANDING OCEAN ISLANDS AND SMALL<br />

MOUNTAINOUS RIVERS<br />

17:15 Scott, J. T.; Grantz, E. M.; Haggard, B. E.; Jarvie, H. P.; Sharpley, A.<br />

N.: PHOSPHORUS RETENTION BY SMALL RESERVOIRS<br />

IS DISPROPORTIONATELY GREATER THAN THEIR<br />

DISTRIBUTION IN THE LANDSCAPE<br />

SS29 OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES OF TEACHING INTRODUC-<br />

TORY OCEANOGRAPHY TO UNDERGRADUATES<br />

Chair(s): Allison Beauregard, beaurega@nwfsc.edu<br />

Jan Hodder, jhodder@uoregon.edu<br />

Location: Room 355<br />

10:00 Frashure, K. M.: SUSTAINABLE OCEAN HABITS INFUSED<br />

WITH THE PEDAGOGICAL “LEARNING COMMUNITES”<br />

MODEL ENHANCES STUDENT SUCCESS RATES AT<br />

BUNKER HILL COMMUNITY COLLEGE<br />

10:15 Conrad, S. H.: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES<br />

OF TEACHING INTRODUCTORY PHYSICAL<br />

OCEANOGRAPHY TO UNDERGRADUATES AT A<br />

COMMUNITY COLLEGE IN THE HUDSON RIVER<br />

WATERSHED<br />

10:30 Olney, J. L.; Caldwell, M.: THE CHALLENGES OF<br />

DEVELOPING AN INTRODUCTORY OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

COURSE FOR A DIVERSE 2-YEAR-COLLEGE<br />

COMMUNITY.<br />

10:45 Rodriguez, A. M.: HOW TO DEVELOP AN ONLINE<br />

INTERACTIVE OCEANOGRAPHY LABORATORY<br />

11:00 Trujillo, A. P.: BEST PRACTICES FOR TEACHING<br />

ONLINE: TIPS, STRATEGIES, AND TECHNIQUES<br />

FOR SUCCESSFUL ONLINE INSTRUCTION OF<br />

INTRODUCTORY OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

11:15 Ramirez, A.: MULTIPLE ASSESSMENT STRATEGIES AND<br />

STUDENT SUCCESS IN AN ONLINE OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

COURSE<br />

11:30 Brey, J. A.; Geer, I. W.; Moran, J. M.; Mills, E. W.; Nugnes,<br />

K. A.; Moses, M. N.: AMS EDUCATION <strong>PROGRAM</strong>:<br />

TEACHING INTRODUCTORY OCEANOGRAPHY TO<br />

UNDERGRADUATES SINCE 2005<br />

11:45 True, M. B.: ADAPTION OF A PUBLISHER’S COURSE<br />

PACKAGE FOR THE TEACHING OF INTRODUCTORY<br />

OCEANOGRAPHY TO UNDERGRADUATES IN A<br />

COMMUNITY COLLEGE ENVIRONMENT<br />

13:30 Norton Henry, E. N.; Cheruvelil, K. S.: STUDENT<br />

UNDERSTANDING OF STATISTICAL RESULTS<br />

DEPICTED BY FIGURES AND TEXT<br />

13:45 Waggett, R. J.; Huber, D. R.; Jones, L. B.: MATH BITES: AN<br />

INTEGRATED APPROACH TO TEACHING SCIENCE<br />

AND MATHEMATICS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

14:15 Jester, R. J.; Milbrandt, E. C.: SCIENTISTS FOR A DAY:<br />

ENGAGING COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENTS IN<br />

FIELD RESEARCH AND ECOSYSTEM RESORATION<br />

PROMOTES SCIENCE LITERACY<br />

14:30 Beauregard, A. Y.; Schwartz, M. C.: USING GIS WITH<br />

REAL-TIME WATER QUALITY ASSESSMENT TO<br />

GUIDE SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY AND LEARNING IN AN<br />

INTRODUCTORY OCEANOGRAPHY COURSE<br />

14:45 Kveven, A. L.: UTILIZING HIGH IMPACT EDUCATIONAL<br />

PRACTICES IN COMMUNITY COLLEGE<br />

INTRODUCTORY OCEANOGRAPHY COURSES<br />

15:00 Montoya-Ospina, R.; Maldonado-Rivera, P.; Gomez-Garzón, D.;<br />

Fuentes-Claudio, L.; Infante-Mendez, G.; Harris, L.; Cornwell, J.;<br />

Pierson, J.; Moser, F.: CONNECTING UNDERGRADUATE<br />

SCIENCE DISCIPLINES THROUGH MARINE SCIENCE<br />

RESEARCH AT BIOLUMINESCENT BAYS IN PUERTO<br />

RICO, A PILOT REU<br />

15:15 Fitzpatrick, J.: ISOLATED ISLAND HOTSPOTS, CORAL<br />

REEFS, AND HUMPBACK WHALES PROVIDE AN<br />

EXCELENT FIELD LABORATORY FOR EXPLORING<br />

OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

SS31 BIOLOGY AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY<br />

OF SEA ICE COMMUNITIES<br />

Chair(s): Susanne Neuer, susanne.neuer@asu.edu<br />

Andrew Juhl, andyjuhl@ldeo.columbia.edu<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

10:00 Assmy, P.; Sundfjord, A.; Hop, H.; Ehn, J. E.; Kristiansen, S.; Tatarek,<br />

A.; Bluhm, K.; Daase, M.; Wiktor, J.; Granskog, M. A.: MASS AND<br />

WIDESPREAD OCCURRENCE OF FLOATING ICE-ALGAL<br />

AGGREGATES BELOW MELTING ARCTIC SEA ICE*<br />

10:15 Juhl, A. R.; Aumack, C.; Neuer, S.; Krembs, C.: EXPORT OF SEA<br />

ICE ALGAE AND RETENTION OF ORGANIC MATTER BY<br />

FIRST YEAR ARCTIC SEA ICE<br />

10:30 Aumack, C. F.; Juhl, A. R.; Neuer, S.: LINKING SEA ICE<br />

ORGANIC MATTER TO THE UNDERLYING MARINE<br />

ENVIRONMENT: PARTICLE SINKING VELOCITY UPON<br />

EXPORT<br />

10:45 Lavrentyev, P.; Franze, G.; Conley, R.; Putland, J.; Solovyev,<br />

K.; Svensen, C.; Young, K.; Tarasenko, A.; Vesman, A.:<br />

MICROZOOPLANKTON ROLE IN THE WARMING<br />

ARCTIC: A CROSS-SYSTEM COMPARISON<br />

11:00 Noble, A. E.; Saito, M. A.; Moran, D. M.: DISSOLVED AND<br />

PARTICULATE TRACE METAL MICRONUTRIENTS<br />

UNDER THE MCMURDO SOUND SEASONAL SEA ICE<br />

11:15 Kinsey, J. D.; Tyssebotn, I. M.; Kieber, D. J.; Kiene, R. P.:<br />

EFFECTS OF IRRADIANCE ON PHAEOCYSTIS<br />

ANTARCTICA ORGANOSULFUR AND ACRYLATE<br />

PRODUCTION<br />

11:30 Rellinger, A. N.; Kiene, R. P.; Kieber, D. J.: THE EFFECTS OF<br />

PROLONGED DARKNESS ON DMSP AND OTHER<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICALLY- RELEVANT CONSTITUENTS<br />

INPHAEOCYSTIS ANTARCTICA<br />

11:45 McKay, R. M.; Beall, B. F.; Twiss, M. R.; Morris, P.; Bullerjahn, G. S.:<br />

MICROBIAL CHANGE AS RELATED TO ICE COVER IN<br />

THE LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES<br />

45<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

SS36 PRESENCE AND IMPACTS OF EMERGING CONTAMINANTS<br />

IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Karen Kidd, kiddk@unb.ca;<br />

Rebecca Klaper, rklaper@uwm.edu<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

10:00 Klaper, R. D.: PREDICTING THE IMPACTS OF EMERGING<br />

CONTAMINANTS IN FRESHWATER SYSTEMS BASED<br />

ON REALISTIC ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES: DOSE<br />

AND MECHANISM OF ACTION MAKE THE POISON T<br />

10:30 Brooks, B. W.; Du, B.; Connors, K. A.; Scott, W. C.; Kristofco,<br />

L. A.: PERSPECTIVES ON BIOACCUMULATION OF<br />

PHARMACEUTICALS IN INLAND AND COASTAL<br />

SYSTEMS*<br />

10:45 Anger, C. T.; Sueper, C.; Blumentritt, D.; McNeill, K.; Engstrom,<br />

D. R.; Arnold, W. A.: QUANTIFICATION OF TRICLOSAN,<br />

CHLORINATED TRICLOSAN DERIVATIVES, AND THEIR<br />

DIOXIN PHOTOPRODUCTS IN SEDIMENT CORES*<br />

11:00 Cheever, B. M.; Frost, P. C.; Higgins, S. N.; Xenopoulos, M. A.:<br />

EFFECTS OF SILVER NANOPARTICLE EXPOSURE ON<br />

LENTIC ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION<br />

11:15 Bidigare, R. R.; Christensen, S. J.: DETECTION AND<br />

QUANTIFICATION OF THE CYANOTOXIN BMAA IN<br />

AQUATIC INVERTEBRATES<br />

11:30 Goto, D.; Hamel, M.; Hammen, J.; Rugg, M.; Pegg, M. A.; Forbes,<br />

V. E.: PREDICTING LONG-TERM EXPOSURE EFFECTS<br />

OF ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS ON STURGEON<br />

RECRUITMENT IN A STRESSED RIVERINE SYSTEM<br />

11:45 Perez, X. G.; Diaz, L.; Miller, M.; Roberson, L.: PRESENCE AND<br />

DISTRIBUTION OF EMERGING CONTAMINANTS IN<br />

THE SAN JUAN BAY ESTUARY, PUERTO RICO.<br />

13:30 Bogard, M. B.; Vogt, R. J.; Donald, D. B.; Bunting, L.; Leavitt,<br />

P. R.: DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF UREA ON ALGAL<br />

COMMUNITY COMPOSITION ALONG A GRADIENT OF<br />

FERTILIZATION IN EUTROPHIC LAKES<br />

13:45 Ozhan, K.; Miles, S. M.; Bargu, S.: LOUISIANA SWEET<br />

CRUDE OIL IMPACT ON THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

14:00 Gong, L.; Ojima, M.; Moss, A. G.: MESOCOSM-BASED<br />

ANALYSIS OF OIL AND DISPERSANT-INDUCED<br />

MICROPARTICULATES.<br />

14:15 Anaya, J. M.; Chen, C. S.; Zhang, S.; Spurgin, J.; Chuang, C.<br />

Y.; Xu, C.; Miao, A. J.; Quigg, A.; Santschi, P. H.; Chin, W. C.:<br />

EFFECTS OF ENGINEERED NANOPARTICLES ON THE<br />

ASSEMBLY OF EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES FROM<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

14:30 Bush, C. H.; Ishaque, A. I.: DETERMINATION OF CECS IN<br />

WATER SAMPLES AND VITELLOGENIN CONTENT<br />

IN MALE STRIPED KILLIFISH AND MUMMICHOG<br />

FISHTISSUE FROM THE MCBS.<br />

14:45 Griffith, D. R.; Kido Soule, M. C.; Matsufuji, H.; Eglinton, T. I.;<br />

Kujawinski, E. B.; Gschwend, P. M.: FREE, CONJUGATED,<br />

AND HALOGENATED ESTROGENS IN TREATED<br />

WASTEWATER EFFLUENT<br />

15:00 Roberson, L. M.; Rivera, P.; Diaz, L.: IMPACT OF EMERGING<br />

CONTAMINANTS ON MARINE MACROALGAE<br />

15:15 Du, B.; Connors, K. A.; Scott, W. C.; Kristofco, L. A.; Breed, C.; Byars,<br />

B. W.; Chambliss, C. K.; Brooks, B. W.: BIOACCUMULATION OF<br />

PHARMACEUTICALS AND OTHER CONTAMINANTS<br />

OF EMERGING CONCERN IN AQUATIC ORGANISMS IN<br />

ESTUARY AREA ALONG GULF OF MEXICO<br />

MONDAY


MONDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

16:00 Blakelock, G. C.; Xenopoulos, M. A.; Cheever, B. M.; Frost, P. C.:<br />

EFFECTS OF CHRONIC AND LONG-TERM EXPOSURE<br />

OF SILVER NANOPARTICLES ON NATURAL LAKE<br />

BACTERIOPLANKTON<br />

16:15 Vincent, J. L.; Frost, P. C.; Cheever, B. M.; Xenopoulos, M. A.:<br />

RESPONSES OF NATURAL PHYTOPLANKTON AND<br />

ZOOPLANKTON TO CHRONIC EXPOSURE OF SILVER<br />

NANOPARTICLES<br />

16:30 Pizarro, H. N.; di Fiori, E.; Cataldo, D.; Ramirez, M.; Rodriguez, P.; do<br />

Santos Afonso, M.: EFFECT OF THE INTERACTION OF TWO<br />

STRESSORS, GLYPHOSATE AND THE INVASIVE MUSSEL<br />

LIMNOPERNA FORTUNEI, ON FRESHWATER MICROBIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES<br />

16:45 Elfadul, R. A.; May, E. B.; Chen , N.; Ishaque, A. B.:<br />

DETERMINATION OF CONTAMINANTS OF EMERGING<br />

CONCERN (CECS) IN MARYLAND COASTAL BAYS<br />

17:00 Gonzalez, A. J.; Arkoosh , M.; Dietrich, J.; Krupkin, A.: EFFECTS<br />

ASSOCIATED WITH EXPOSURE TO POLYBROMINATED<br />

DIPHENYL ETHERS (PBEDS) IN JUVENILE CHINOOK<br />

SALMON.<br />

17:15 Kidd, K. A.; Jobling, S.: THE ONGOING ISSUE OF<br />

ENDOCRINE DISRUPTING CHEMICALS: RECENT<br />

TRENDS IN WILDLIFE HEALTH AND EXPOSURES<br />

SS45 EMPLOYING RIVERINE ORGANIC MATTER AS AN INTEGRATED<br />

SIGNAL OF CATCHMENT PROCESSES, CLIMATE AND LAND-USE CHANGE<br />

Chair(s): Erin Ellis, ellise@evergreen.edu<br />

Robert Spencer, rspencer@whrc.org<br />

Peter Hernes, pjhernes@ucdavis.edu<br />

Location: Room 345<br />

10:00 Aiken, G. R.; Butman, D.; Hanley, K.; Spencer, R. G.: DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER AS AN INDICATOR OF WATERSHED<br />

PROCESSES *<br />

10:15 Hosen, J. D.; McDonough, O. T.; Febria, C. M.; Williams, M. R.;<br />

Palmer, M. A.: ANTHROPOGENIC LAND COVER LINKED<br />

TO SHIFTS IN STREAM DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

COMPOSITION<br />

10:30 Cawley, K. M.; Campbell, J.; Zwilling, M.; Jaffe, R.: EVALUATION<br />

OF WATERSHED FOREST MANAGEMENT AND<br />

VEGETATION COVER ON DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER CHARACTERISTICS IN STREAMS FROM<br />

NORTHEASTERN FORESTS<br />

10:45 Xenopoulos, M. A.; Porter-Goff, E.; Spooner, D. E.; Williams, C.<br />

J.; Wilson, H. F.: THE PREVALENCE OF NONLINEARITY<br />

AND DETECTION OF ECOLOGICAL THRESHOLDS<br />

FOR DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER, NUTRIENTS<br />

AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONS ACROSS LAND USE<br />

GRADIENTS<br />

11:00 Fellman, J.; Hood, E.; Stubbins, A.; Spencer, R.; Raymond,<br />

P.: VARIABLE GLACIAL COVERAGE INFLUENCES<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN<br />

COASTAL WATERSHEDS OF SOUTHEAST ALASKA<br />

11:15 Roehm, C. L.: DOM CHARACTERSITICS ALONG A<br />

STREAM NETWORK OF A WATERSHED IN NORTHERN<br />

SWEDEN<br />

11:30 Louchouarn, P.; Amon, R.; Peirce, K.; Myers-Pigg, A. N.; Prokushkin,<br />

A.: MOLECULAR EVIDENCE OF LABILE PYROGENIC<br />

DOC IN MAJOR ARCTIC RIVERS: IMPLICATIONS FOR<br />

WILDFIRE-STREAM METABOLIC LINKAGES<br />

46<br />

11:45 Sleighter, R. L.; Abdulla, H. A.; Stubbins, A.; Spencer, R. G.; Holmes,<br />

R. M.; McClelland, J. M.; Hatcher, P. G.: MULTIVARIATE<br />

STATISTICS ASSIST IN THE CHARACTERIZATION OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN ARCTIC RIVERS<br />

ANALYZED BY ADVANCED ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES<br />

13:30 Galy, V.; Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B.; Eglinton, T.: EROSIONAL<br />

CONTROL OF THE GLOBAL TRANSFER OF<br />

TERRESTRIAL ORGANIC CARBON TO THE OCEAN*<br />

13:45 Tucker, A. N.; McCallister, S. L.: GLOBAL SYNTHESIS OF THE<br />

RADIOCARBON AGE OF PARTICULATE AND DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC CARBON EXPORTED FROM AQUATIC<br />

SYSTEMS<br />

14:00 Voss, B. M.; Eglinton, T. I.; Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B.; Galy, V.:<br />

TRACING RIVERINE ORGANIC MATTER WITH<br />

INORGANIC RADIOISOTOPES<br />

14:15 Ellis, E. E.; Ingalls, A. E.; Richey, J. E.; Keil, R. G.; Santos, G. M.;<br />

Druffel, E. R.: TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN THE AGE<br />

OF CARBON EXPORTED BY THE MEKONG RIVER,<br />

CAMBODIA: A COMPARISON BETWEEN LIGNIN<br />

PHENOLS AND BULK ORGANIC MATTER<br />

14:30 Vonk, J. E.; Spencer, R. G.; Mann, P. J.; Peterse, F.; Feng, X.; Holmes,<br />

R. M.; Eglinton, T. I.: MOLECULAR INSIGHTS INTO<br />

SEASONAL PATTERNS OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC<br />

MATTER RELEASE IN THREE MAJOR ARCTIC RIVERS<br />

14:45 Rosenheim, B. E.; Williams, E. K.; Roberts, B. J.; Allison, M. A.:<br />

HIGH DISCHARGE AND PARTICULATE ORGANIC<br />

CARBON TRANSPORT ON THE MISSISSIPPI-<br />

ATCHAFALAYA SYSTEM<br />

15:00 Mann, P. J.; Vonk, J. E.; McIntyre, C.; Wacker, L.; Eglinton, T. I.;<br />

Holmes, R. M.; Spencer, R. G.: SUSCEPTIBILITY OF ANCIENT<br />

ORGANIC CARBON TO RAPID TURNOVER IN ARCTIC<br />

STREAMS AND RIVERS<br />

15:15 Panneer Selvam, B.; Laudon, H.; Berggren, M.: WINTER<br />

CONDITIONS ALTER THE CHARACTER AND<br />

REACTIVITY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON AT<br />

THE SOIL-STREAM INTERFACE.<br />

16:00 Hartnett, H. E.: INVESTIGATING CARBON TRANSPORT<br />

AND TRANSFORMATION IN THE COLORADO RIVER<br />

THROUGH FIELD-BASED TEACHING<br />

16:15 Raleigh, M. L.; Bowman, M. M.; Smith, Z. P.; Coe, J. D.; Hartnett,<br />

H. E.: MICROBIAL BIOAVAILABILITY OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC CARBON IN THE COLORADO RIVER<br />

16:30 Kendrick, M. R.; Huryn, A. D.: HIGH EARLY AND LATE<br />

SEASON METABOLISM IN AN ARCTIC RIVER<br />

16:45 Berggren, M.; del Giorgio, P. A.: THE METABOLIC FOOTPRINT<br />

OF RIVERINE DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON FROM<br />

DIFFERENT TERRESTRIAL SOURCES<br />

17:00 Asmala, E.; Autio, R.; Kaartokallio, H.; Pitkänen, L. M.; Stedmon,<br />

C. A.; Thomas, D. N.: RIVERINE DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER IN THREE BOREAL ESTUARIES ENTERING<br />

THE BALTIC SEA<br />

17:15 Dunton, K. H.; McClelland, J. W.; Crump, B. C.; Connelly, T.<br />

L.; Kellogg, C.; Linn, S. E.; Khosh, M. S.: THE ROLE OF<br />

TERRESTRIAL INPUTS OF ORGANIC MATTER IN<br />

ARCTIC LAGOONS: COMPARATIVE STUDIES FROM<br />

OPEN-WATER AND ICE-COVERED PERIODS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS49 MICROBIAL MEDIATED RETENTION/TRANSFORMATION<br />

OF ORGANIC AND INORGANIC MATERIALS IN FRESHWATER AND<br />

MARINE ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer J Mosher, jmosher@stroudcenter.org<br />

Richard Devereux, Devereux.Richard@epamail.epa.gov<br />

Anthony V Palumbo, palumboav@ornl.gov<br />

Location: Room 344<br />

13:30 Kirchman, D. L.; Campbell, B. A.; Cottrell, M. T.; Dittmar, T.;<br />

Niggemann, J.: A “MOLECULAR” VIEW OF BACTERIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES AND DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATERIAL<br />

IN THE DELAWARE ESTUARY T<br />

14:00 Lennon, J. T.; Muscarella, M. E.; Jones, S. E.: BACTERIA AND<br />

BROWNING: IMPLICATIONS OF TERRESTRIAL CARBON<br />

SUBSIDIES FOR AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS *<br />

14:15 Findlay, R. H.: LINKAGES AMONG AQUATIC<br />

MICROORGANISMS AND DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER IN LOW-ORDER STREAMS AND RIVERS.*<br />

14:30 Mosher, J. J.; Kan, J.; Kaplan, L. A.: A META-ECOSYSTEM<br />

APPROACH TO INVESTIGATING BACTERIAL<br />

COMMUNITY AND DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

INTERACTIONS IN THREE DISTANT WATERSHEDS<br />

14:45 Lee, D. Y.; Doherty, M.; Owens, M. S.; Crump, B. C.; Cornwell, J. C.:<br />

MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES AND METABOLIC CARBON<br />

CYCLES REFLECT REDOX CONDITIONS IN THE<br />

SEASONALLY ANOXIC CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

15:00 Kaartokallio, H.; Asmala, E.; Autio, R.; Thomas, D. N.:<br />

VARIABILITY IN BACTERIAL PRODUCTION,<br />

ABUNDANCE AND CELL PROPERTIES IN THREE<br />

BOREAL BALTIC SEA ESTUARIES<br />

15:15 King, E. L.; Sornborger, A.; Meile, C.: PREDICTING BACTERIAL<br />

METABOLIC FUNCTIONING UNDER VARYING<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL FORCING<br />

16:00 Corman, J. R.; Moody, E.; Nevarez, N.; Elser, J. J.: NUTRIENT<br />

LIMITATION OF PRIMARY PRODUCERS IN TRAVERTINE<br />

STREAMS IN SOUTHEASTERN ARIZONA<br />

16:30 Risse-Buhl, U.; Schlief, J.; Mutz, M.: CRUCIAL ROLE OF<br />

PHAGOTROPHIC PROTISTS DURING MICROBIAL<br />

MEDIATED LEAF LITTER PROCESSING UNDER<br />

CRITICAL OXYGEN CONCENTRATIONS<br />

16:45 Appling, A. P.; Heffernan, J. B.: NUTRIENT RETENTION BY<br />

PLASTIC ORGANISMS IN DYNAMIC ECOSYSTEMS<br />

17:00 Cotner, J. B.; Godwin, C. M.: ARSENIC AND OLD LACE: JUST<br />

HOW MUCH PHOSPHORUS DOES A BACTERIUM NEED?<br />

17:15 Scott, E. E.; Evans-White, M. A.; Scott, J. T.: PHOSPHORUS<br />

CONCENTRATION AND LIGHT AVAILABILITY<br />

DIFFERENTIALLY AFFECT MICROBIAL-MEDIATED LEAF<br />

LITTER CONDITIONING.<br />

SS50 ZOOPLANKTON RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS:<br />

FROM INDIVIDUAL RESPONSES TO LARGER SCALE IMPLICATIONS<br />

Chair(s): Amy E. Maas, amaas@whoi.edu<br />

David T. Elliott, delliott@umces.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

10:00 Condon, R. H.; Duarte, C. M.; Pitt, K. A.; Lucas, C. H.; Arthur, J. M.;<br />

Decker, M. B.; Hollyhead, C.; Martin, M. S.; NCEAS Global Jelly Group:<br />

GLOBAL JELLYFISH BLOOMS: ASSESSING CURRENT<br />

PARADIGM, AND NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC<br />

DRIVERS OF LONG-TERM JELLYFISH POPULATIONS<br />

FROM THE 19TH CENTURY TO PRESENT T<br />

47<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

10:30 Hopcroft, R. R.; Doubleday, A. J.; Ulrich, S.: THE GULF OF<br />

ALASKA’S SALP BLOOM OF 2011: IGNORANCE OR<br />

HARBINGER OF CHANGE?<br />

10:45 Green, S. R.; Gibson, D.; Elliott, D.: FEEDING RATES OF<br />

PHOROZOOIDS OF THE DOLIOLID, DOLIOLETTA<br />

GEGENBAURI<br />

11:00 McNamara, M. E.; Lonsdale, D. J.; Cerrato, R. M.: THE ROLE OF<br />

EUTROPHICATION IN STRUCTURING PLANKTONIC<br />

COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE PRESENCE OF THE<br />

CTENOPHORE MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI (AGASSIZ 1865)<br />

11:15 Nejstgaard, J. C.; Arora, V.; Birsa, L. M.; Jakobsen, H. H.: VIDEO<br />

ASSESSMENT OF MICROZOOPLANKTON SWIMMING<br />

IN RESPONSE TO PREDATORS<br />

11:30 Robinson, H. E.; Koehl, M. A.: FLOW MICROHABITATS<br />

OVER BENTHIC SUSPENSION FEEDERS INFLUENCE<br />

PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTIONS<br />

11:45 Liu, H.; Fogarty, M. J.; Hare, J.; Hsieh, C. H.; Glaser, S. M.; Sugihara,<br />

G.: MECHANISTIC UNDERSTANDING OF DYNAMICS<br />

AND COHERENCE FROM MARINE ZOOPLANKTON TO<br />

FISHES IN A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT<br />

13:30 Elliott, D. T.; Pierson, J. J.; Roman, M. R.: INFLUENCE<br />

OF HYPOXIA ON LIFE HISTORY TRAITS OF THE<br />

WIDESPREAD COASTAL COPEPOD ACARTIA TONSA.<br />

13:45 Keister, J. E.; Tuttle, L. B.; McLaskey, A.; Raatikainen, L.; Winans, A.<br />

K.: ZOOPLANKTON SPECIES DIVERSITY COMPLICATES<br />

MEASUREMENT AND UNDERSTANDING THE EFFECTS<br />

OF DECREASING OXYGEN AND PH ON ECOSYSTEMS<br />

14:00 Maas, A. E.; Lawson, G. L.: THE SYNERGISTIC EFFECT OF<br />

LOW OXYGEN AND HIGH CO2 ON THE PHYSIOLOGY<br />

OF THECOSOME PTEROPODS IN THE ATLANTIC AND<br />

PACIFIC<br />

14:15 Grear, J. S.; Borsay Horowitz, D.: EFFECTS OF COASTAL<br />

ACIDIFICATION ON THE LIFE CYCLE AND FITNESS OF<br />

THE MYSID SHRIMP AMERICAMYSIS BAHIA<br />

14:30 Gravinese, P. M.; Tankersley, R. A.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN<br />

ACIDIFICATION ON EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT AND<br />

LARVAL MORPHOLOGY IN THE FLORIDA STONE CRAB<br />

14:45 Murray, C. S.; Gobler, C.; Baumann, H.: SURVIVAL AND<br />

GROWTH AT ELEVATED CO2 CONDITIONS IN<br />

ATLANTIC SILVERSIDE EGGS AND LARVAE: EVIDENCE<br />

FOR SEASONAL VARIABILITY<br />

15:15 Seuront, L.; Stanley, H. E.: BEHAVIORALLY-MEDIATED IMPACT<br />

OF CLIMATE CHANGE: A CASE FROM THE DOWNSIDE<br />

SS58 OCEAN PROVINCES, FOOD WEB STRUCTURE AND PARTICLE FLUX<br />

Chair(s): Uta Passow, passow@lifesci.ucsb.edu<br />

Adrian Burd, adrianb@uga.edu<br />

Deborah Steinberg, debbies@vims.edu<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

10:00 Wassmann, P.; Svensen, C.; Koski, M.; Reigstad, M.; Wexels Riser, C.:<br />

UPPER WATER COLUMN VERTICAL FLUX RETENTION<br />

AND REGULATION BY ZOOPLANKTON T<br />

10:30 Koski, M.: ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE<br />

AND FLUX ATTENUATION – PHYSIOLOGY AND<br />

BEHAVIOR CAN INDUCE MANY-FOLD VARIABILITY IN<br />

CONSUMPTION OF SINKING PARTICLES<br />

10:45 Pakhomov, E. A.; Podeswa, Y.; Hunt, B. P.: ACTIVE CARBON<br />

TRANSPORT AND FEEDING ECOLOGY OF PELAGIC<br />

DECAPODS IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL<br />

GYRE<br />

MONDAY


MONDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

11:00 Stock, C. A.; Dunne, J. P.; John, J.: GLOBAL-SCALE CARBON<br />

AND ENERGY FLOWS THROUGH THE PLANKTONIC<br />

FOOD WEB: AN ANALYSIS WITH A COUPLED<br />

PHYSICAL-BIOLOGICAL MODEL<br />

11:15 Davison, P. C.; Checkley, D. M.; Koslow, J. A.; Barlow, J.: SPATIAL<br />

VARIABILITY IN THE PRIMARY PRODUCTION<br />

REQUIRED AND CARBON FLUX MEDIATED BY<br />

MESOPELAGIC FISHES IN THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC<br />

OCEAN<br />

11:30 Wilson, S. E.; Neuer, S.; Condon, R. H.; Shelton, N. L.: EFFECT<br />

OF SEASONAL AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN<br />

THE DIETS AND FECAL PELLET PRODUCTION OF<br />

MESOZOOPLANKTON ON PARTICLE FLUX<br />

11:45 Steinberg, D. K.; Gleiber, M. R.; Conroy, B. J.; Berelson, W. M.:<br />

CONTRIBUTION OF ZOOPLANKTON FECAL PELLETS<br />

TO CARBON FLUX IN THE AMAZON RIVER PLUME<br />

AND WESTERN TROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

13:30 Buesseler, K. O.: WHY EZ-RATIOS MAKE IT EASIER TO<br />

UNDERSTAND PARTICLE FLUX ATTENUATION IN THE<br />

OCEAN T<br />

14:00 Stewart, G. M.; Choi, H. Y.; Lomas, M. W.; Moran, S. B.:<br />

CONNECTING PLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE<br />

WITH POC EXPORT USING PO-210/PB-210 TRACERS<br />

ALONG LINE P, SUBARCTIC PACIFIC<br />

14:15 Guidi, L.; Uitz, J.; Stemmann, L.; Legendre, L.: USING GLOBAL<br />

THORIUM, SEDIMENT TRAP, AND OPTICAL DATA TO<br />

REGIONALIZE OCEAN CARBON REMINERALIZATION<br />

AND SEQUESTRATION<br />

14:30 Iversen, M. H.; Nowald, N.; Klawonn, I.; Ploug, H.; Jackson, G. A.;<br />

Fischer, G.: IMPORTANCE OF MICROBES, ZOOPLANKTON,<br />

AND BALLASTING ON CARBON FLUX ATTENUATION<br />

14:45 Olli, K.; Reigstad, M.; Wassmann, P. F.: DECONVOLUTING THE<br />

VERTICAL FLUX ATTENUATION IN THE TWILIGHT<br />

ZONE<br />

15:00 Jackson, G. A.: COMPARING PREDICTIONS FROM<br />

COAGULATION MODELS WITH OBSERVATIONS OF<br />

PARTICLE SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS MADE WITH OPTICAL<br />

INSTRUMENTS.<br />

15:15 Close, H. G.; Hurley, S. J.; Wilkes, E.; Pearson, A.: LIPID AND<br />

ISOTOPIC SIGNATURES OF A PLANKTON COMMUNITY<br />

GRADIENT IN THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC OCEAN<br />

SS69 COASTAL AND MARINE ECOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION STANDARD<br />

(CMECS): A COMMON LANGUAGE FOR SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Emily Shumchenia, emily@gso.uri.edu<br />

Rebecca J. Allee, becky.allee@noaa.gov<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

16:00 Allee, R. J.; Finkbeiner, M.: THE COASTAL AND MARINE<br />

ECOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION STANDARD (CMECS):<br />

AN OVERVIEW OF THE NEW FEDERAL STANDARD T<br />

16:30 Finkbeiner, M. A.; Robinson, C.: APPLYING CMECS TO<br />

EXISTING GEOSPATIAL DATASETS: CASE STUDIES<br />

WITH SCHEME<br />

16:45 Allee, R. J.; Kurtz, J.; Finkbeiner, M.; Gould, R. W.; Ko, D. S.; Goodin,<br />

K.: APPLICATION OF THE COASTAL AND MARINE<br />

ECOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION STANDARD USING<br />

SATELLITE-DERIVED DATA FOR PELAGIC HABITATS IN<br />

THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

48<br />

17:00 LaFrance, M.; King, J.: DEVELOPING BENTHIC HABITAT<br />

MAPS TO ASSIST OFFSHORE WIND FARM SITING IN<br />

RHODE ISLAND, USA<br />

17:15 Shumchenia, E. J.; Cicchetti, G.: COMPARISONS OF<br />

HISTORICAL VS. RECENT BENTHIC BIOTOPE EXTENT<br />

AND BENTHIC HABITAT QUALITY<br />

SS74 TACKLING HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS: SYNERGY BETWEEN<br />

RESEARCH, MANAGEMENT & EDUCATION<br />

Chair(s): Vincent Lovko, vlovko@mote.org<br />

Alina Corcoran, alina.corcoran@myfwc.com<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

10:00 Jochens, A. E.; Kirkpatrick, B.; Wolfe, S. H.: WHAT IS IT? WHERE<br />

IS IT? WHERE IS IT GOING? WORKING TOGETHER<br />

TO BUILD A HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM INTEGRATED<br />

OBSERVING SYSTEM FOR THE GULF OF MEXICO*<br />

10:15 Corcoran, A. A.; Flewelling, L. J.; Henschen, K.; Wolny, J.; Kirkpatrick,<br />

G. J.; Lovko, V. J.; Kirkpatrick, B. A.; Hu, C.; Lenes, J. M.; Weisburg,<br />

R. H.: A FLORIDA RED TIDE BLOOM COLLABORATIVE<br />

RESPONSE – OVERVIEW<br />

10:30 Kudela, R. M.; Caron, D. A.; Carter, M. L.; Cochlan, W. p.; Dale,<br />

G.; Howard, M. D.; Langlois, G.; McAfee, S.; Stumpf, R.; Gulland,<br />

F.: DEVELOPMENT OF THE CALIFORNIA HARMFUL<br />

ALGAL BLOOM MONITORING AND ALERT <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

(CALHABMAP)<br />

10:45 Caron, D. A.; Jones, B. H.; Robertson, G.; Mengel, M.; Kudela,<br />

R.; Howard, M.; Ryan, J.; Scholin, C.; Terrill, E.; Holt, B.:<br />

HAB MONITORING DURING A MAJOR EFFLUENT<br />

DIVERSION EVENT IN COASTAL SOUTHERN<br />

CALIFORNIA: THE ROLE OF SCIENCE AND<br />

PARTNERSHIPS IN MONITORING AND DECISION<br />

MAKING<br />

11:00 Greenfield, D. I.; Coyne, K. J.; Doll, C. R.; Main, C.; Bianco, C.:<br />

COMPARISON OF SANDWICH HYBRIDIZATION<br />

ASSAY AND QUANTITATIVE PCR FOR HAB RESEARCH<br />

AND MANAGEMENT USING THE RAPHIDOPHYTE<br />

HETEROSIGMA AKASHIWO<br />

11:15 Accorsi, E. K.; Palacios, S. L.; Kudela, R. M.: DIFFERENTIATION<br />

OF THE CYANOBACTERIAL HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM<br />

SPECIES APHANIZOMENON AND MICROCYSTIS<br />

REFLECTANCE SPECTRA: AN EARLY WARNING TOOL?<br />

11:30 Lundgren, V. M.; Roelke, D. L.; Grover, J. P.; Brooks, B. W.;<br />

Prosser, K. N.; Scott, W. C.; Laws, C. A.; Umphres, G. D.:<br />

MITIGATION OF PRYMNESIUM PARVUM BLOOMS:<br />

AT THE INTERFACE OF ECOLOGY, HYDROLOGY AND<br />

STAKEHOLDER INTERESTS<br />

11:45 Kirkpatrick, B. A.; Fleming, L. E.; Kohler, K.; Currier, R. D.:<br />

KARENIA BREVIS AEROSOLS: FROM MONITORING<br />

PEOPLE TO REAL TIME BEACH REPORTING TO<br />

MINIMIZE HUMAN HEALTH IMPACTS*<br />

13:30 Neill, B.; Kirkpatrick, B.: NGOS: CONTRIBUTING TO<br />

HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM RESEARCH AND EDUCATION<br />

13:45 Boyer, G. L.; Kishbaugh, S.; Perkins, M.; Mueller, N.: THE NEW<br />

YORK STATE CITIZEN-BASED MONITORING <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

FOR CYANOBACTERIA TOXINS<br />

14:00 Seubert, E. L.; Chilton, L.; Gellene, A. G.; Stauffer, B. A.; Jones, A.;<br />

Seegers, B.; Thomas, J.; Terrill, E.; Caron, D. A.: CONSTRUCTION<br />

OF A COMMUNITY BASED HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM<br />

MONITORING <strong>PROGRAM</strong>: BRIDGING UNIVERSITY<br />

RESEARCH WITH INFORMAL SCIENCE CENTERS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

14:15 Smith, E. A.; Blanchard, P.; Bargu, S.: EDUCATION AND<br />

OUTREACH CONCERNING HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS<br />

IN ESTUARIES OF SOUTH LOUISIANA<br />

49<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

14:30 Kennison, R.; Chilton, L.: WHAT ARE HARMFUL ALGAL<br />

BLOOMS AND WHAT CAN WE DO ABOUT THEM? HOW<br />

SCIENTISTS, EDUCATORS AND THE PUBLIC CAME<br />

TOGETHER TO ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS<br />

MONDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19 - ORALS<br />

GS08A PLANKTON ECOLOGY - PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

Chair(s): Donald Redalje, Donald.Redalje@USM.edu<br />

Daniel Roelke, droelke@tamu.edu<br />

Ed Laws, edlaws@lsu.edu<br />

Chris Filstrup, Filstrup@iastate.edu<br />

Nasseer Idrisi, nidrisi@uvi.edu<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

10:00 Filstrup, C. T.; Wagner, T.; Soranno, P. A.; Stanley, E. H.; Stow, C. A.;<br />

Webster, K. E.; Downing, J. A.: REGIONAL VARIABILITY IN<br />

NON-LINEAR CHLOROPHYLL RESPONSE TO TOTAL<br />

PHOSPHORUS ENRICHMENT IN LAKES<br />

10:15 Fredrick, N. D.; Berges, J. A.; Twining, B. S.; Nuñez-Milland,<br />

D.; Hellweger, F. L.: EXPLORING MECHANISMS OF<br />

P CONTENT HETEROGENEITY IN CULTURED<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON USING AGENT-BASED MODELING<br />

10:30 Laws, E. A.; Pei, S.; Bienfang, P.: PHOSPHATE-LIMITED<br />

GROWTH OF THE MARINE DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA<br />

WEISSFLOGII: EVIDENCE OF NON-MONOD GROWTH<br />

KINETICS<br />

10:45 Windecker, L. A.; Brzezinski, M. A.; Wear, E. K.; Carlson, C. A.;<br />

Jones, J. L.: PATTERNS OF TRANSPARENT EXOPOLYMER<br />

RELEASE BY MARINE DIATOMS UNDER SILICATE AND<br />

NITRATE STRESS<br />

11:00 Chen, G.; Rynearson, T.: GENETIC VARIATION IN THE<br />

MARINE PLANKTONIC DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA<br />

GRAVIDA<br />

11:15 Ryan-Keogh, T. J.; Macey, A. I.; Nielsdottir, M. C.; Lucas, M. I.;<br />

Steigenberger, S. S.; Stinchcombe, M. C.; Achterberg, E. P.; Bibby, T. S.;<br />

Moore, C. M.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL DEVELOPMENT<br />

OF PHYTOPLANKTON IRON STRESS IN RELATION TO<br />

BLOOM DYNAMICS IN THE HIGH LATITUDE NORTH<br />

ATLANTIC<br />

11:30 Marquez, I. A.; Krause, J. W.; Brzezinski, M. A.; Medrano, M. R.;<br />

Baines, S. B.: SYNECHOCOCCUS: A MAJOR PLAYER IN THE<br />

OCEAN SILICON CYCLE?<br />

11:45 Hunter-Cevera, K. R.; Sosik, H. M.; Neubert, M. G.; Solow,<br />

A. R.; Olson, R. J.; Shalapyonok, A.: SYNECHOCOCCUS<br />

POPULATION GROWTH RATES FROM A MATRIX<br />

POPULATION MODEL: VALIDATION AND FIELD<br />

STUDIES<br />

14:00 Redalje, D. G.; Stone, M.; Chen, X.: QUANTUM YIELD<br />

FOR TWO SPECIES OF MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

GROWN IN SEMICONTINUOUS CULTURE UNDER<br />

FLUCTUATING AND STATIC IRRADIANCE<br />

CONDITIONS<br />

14:15 Boeing, W. J.; Bartley, M.; Lammers, P.; Van Voorhies, W.:<br />

ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS AND INVASION RATES OF<br />

ALGAE PRODUCTION SYSTEMS UNDER VARYING<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS<br />

14:30 Xu, Y.; Boeing, W. J.: MODELLING MAXIMUM LIPID<br />

PRODUCTIVITY OF MICROALGAE: REVIEW AND NEXT<br />

STEP<br />

14:45 Roelke, D. L.; Spatharis, S.: PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

OVERYIELDING IN FLUCTUATING ENVIRONMENTS<br />

AND THE PARADOX OF COMPLEMENTARITY<br />

15:00 Niesen, M.; Harris, L. A.: PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY<br />

COMPOSITION IN THE POTOMAC RIVER ESTUARY<br />

50<br />

15:15 Mayor, E.; Kennedy, V.; Pierson, J.; Chigbu, P.: POPULATION<br />

BIOLOGY OF MYSIDS IN THE MARYLAND COASTAL<br />

BAYS<br />

SS01 ECOSYSTEM-BASED MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING FOR BETTER<br />

MANAGEMENT OF OUR OCEANS<br />

Chair(s): Tundi Agardy, tundiagardy@earthlink.net<br />

Steven Degraer, S.Degraer@MUMM.ac.be<br />

Angel Borja, aborja@azti.es<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

16:00 Borja, A.; Galparsoro, I.; Pascual, M.; Aranda, M.; Menchaca, I.;<br />

Uyarra, M. C.: MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING IN THE<br />

BASQUE COUNTRY (BAY OF BISCAY): A WAY FOR A<br />

FUTURE ECOSYSTEM-BASED MANAGEMENT<br />

16:15 Shumchenia, E. J.; Grilli, A. R.: CHARACTERIZATION OF<br />

ECOLOGICALLY RELEVANT MARINE LANDSCAPES TO<br />

INFORM MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING<br />

16:30 Kyriazi, Z.; Maes, F.; Vanaverbeke, J.; Vincx, M.: GAME<br />

THEORETICAL MODELLING OF OFFSHORE<br />

RENEWABLE ENERGY AND NATURE CONSERVATION<br />

INTERACTIONS IN THE CONTEXT OF MARINE<br />

SPATIAL PLANNING<br />

16:45 Degraer, S.; Beare, D.; Cronin, K.; Essid, M.; Jones, P. J.; Katsanevakis,<br />

S.; Qiu, W.; Rabaut, M.; Stamford, T.; Stelzenmüller, V.; Sutton, G.;<br />

ter Hofstede, R.; Vanaverbeke, J.; van Dalfsen, J.; Vassilopoulou, V.;<br />

Vincx, M.; van Hoof, L.: MESMA: AN INTEGRATED TOOL<br />

TO MONITOR AND EVALUATE SPATIALLY MANAGED<br />

AREAS<br />

17:00 Stelzenmüller, V.; Probst, W. N.; Schulze, T.; Pastoors, M.; Maes, F.;<br />

Sorensen, T. K.; Hommes, S.: TOWARDS AN ECOSYSTEM-<br />

BASED MSP IN THE SOUTHERN NORTH SEA: CURRENT<br />

STATE, GAPS AND SCIENCE NEEDS<br />

17:15 Hall, C. M.: MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING FOR<br />

RENEWABLE ENERGY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES ON<br />

THE U.S. OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF<br />

SS02 CATAPULTS, FERRIES, AND BRIDGES: GETTING AQUATIC<br />

SCIENCE RESULTS TO POLICY AND MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Elizabeth Turner, elizabeth.turner@noaa.gov<br />

Dwight Trueblood, dwight.trueblood@noaa.gov<br />

Kalle Matso, kmatso@wildcats.unh.edu<br />

Felix Martinez, felix.martinez@noaa.gov<br />

Location: Room 355<br />

10:00 Meyer, R. M.; McAfee, S. T.; Parris, A.; Whiteman, E.; Simpson, C.:<br />

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO UNDERSTAND THE SCIENCE<br />

NEEDS OF DECISION MAKERS?<br />

10:30 Brady, D. C.; Fitzpatrick, J.; DePinto, J.; Di Toro, D. M.; Kemp, W.<br />

M.; Scavia, D.: THE FEASABILITY OF TRANSITIONING<br />

COASTAL ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT MODELS FROM<br />

DEVELOPMENT TO OPERATIONAL STATUS<br />

10:45 Mesner, N. O.; Walker, A.; Kinder, T.: STREAM SIDE<br />

SCIENCE: WATERSHED EDUCATION THAT MAKES A<br />

DIFFERENCE<br />

11:00 Martinez, F. A.; Chadderton, W. L.; Wittman, M. E.; Newcomb, T.;<br />

Lodge, D. M.: BRIDGING SCIENCE, SOCIAL SCIENCE, AND<br />

MANAGEMENT OF AQUATIC INVASIVE SPECIES IN THE<br />

LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

11:15 McKenzie, C. H.; Deibel, D.; Lowen, J. B.; Ma, K. C.; Pilgrim, B.:<br />

CANADIAN CASE STUDIES IN AQUATIC INVASIVE<br />

SPECIES MITIGATION<br />

11:30 Stow, C. A.; Kashian, D. R.; DePinto, J. V.; Peacor, S. D.; Hook, T.<br />

O.: SCIENCE TO MANAGEMENT: EXPERIENCES IN THE<br />

GREAT LAKES<br />

11:45 Leon Soon, S.; Lemus, J.; Thomas, F.: COMMUNITY-<br />

DRIVEN SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH FACILITATES THE<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF EFFECTIVE MANAGEMENT<br />

STRATEGIES<br />

14:00 Gardner, M. W.; Rogers, T. M.: BRINGING WETLANDS<br />

TO MARKET: CREATING PRACTICAL SCIENCE<br />

COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE END-USER IN MIND<br />

14:15 Palmer, S. M.; Madden, K. M.; Buskey, E. J.; Peterson, T. R.; Ward,<br />

G. H.: BALANCING FRESHWATER INFLOWS IN A<br />

CHANGING ENVIRONMENT: COLLABORATING FOR<br />

WATER CONSERVATION ON THE TEXAS COAST<br />

14:30 Hagy, J. D.; Greene, R. M.: SUPPORTING A NUTRIENT<br />

CRITERIA PROMULGATION IN FLORIDA<br />

14:45 Lucena-Moya, P.; Dyer, F.; Harrison, E. T.; Jarrod, K.; Tschierschke,<br />

A.; ElSawah, S.: LOOKING FOR THRESHOLDS: THE<br />

RESPONSE OF MACROINVERTEBRATE ASSEMBLAGES<br />

TO PREDICTOR VARIABLES IN THE UPPER<br />

MURRUMBIDGEE RIVER CATCHMENT (AUSTRALIA)<br />

15:00 Wang, F.; Reuter, H.: AN AGENT-BASED MODEL ON THE<br />

EFFECTS OF DIVE TOURISM ON KOH TAO, THAILAND:<br />

USING COMPUTER SIMULATION AS A SUSTAINABLE<br />

TOURISM MANAGEMENT TOOL<br />

15:15 Castendyk, D.: FROM OPEN PITS TO LAKE DISTRICTS:<br />

DESIGNING THE REHABILITATION OF CANADA’S OIL<br />

SANDS MINES<br />

SS08 BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF METAL-BINDING ORGANIC LIGANDS<br />

IN THE OCEAN: SOURCES, COMPOSITION AND IMPACTS ON<br />

TRACE METAL CYCLING<br />

Chair(s): Maeve C. Lohan, maeve.lohan@plymouth.ac.uk<br />

Sylvia G. Sander, sylvias@chemistry.otago.ac.nz<br />

Kristen N. Buck, kristen.buck@bios.edu<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

10:00 Sander, S. G.; Lohan, M.; Buck, K. N.: BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF<br />

METAL-BINDING ORGANIC LIGANDS IN THE OCEAN:<br />

SOURCES, COMPOSITION AND IMPACTS ON TRACE<br />

METAL CYCLING T<br />

10:30 Buck, K. N.: THE ORGANIC COMPLEXATION OF<br />

DISSOLVED IRON ACROSS THE NORTH ATLANTIC<br />

BASIN: RESULTS FROM THE U.S. GEOTRACES NORTH<br />

ATLANTIC SECTION CRUISES<br />

10:45 Bundy, R. M.; Biller, D. V.; Barbeau, K. A.; Buck, K. N.: SOURCES<br />

OF IRON-BINDING LIGANDS IN CENTRAL CALIFORNIA<br />

AND SAN FRANCISCO BAY<br />

11:00 Waska, H.; Beck, M.; Brumsack, H.; Koschinsky, A.; Ruiz Chancho,<br />

M. J.; Seidel, M.; Simon, H.; Dittmar, T.: DISSOLVED IRON AND<br />

COPPER SPECIATION IN A SUBTERRANEAN ESTUARY<br />

IN THE GERMAN WADDEN SEA: THE INFLUENCE OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM)<br />

11:15 Sulzberger, B.: ROLES OF ORGANIC LIGANDS IN THE<br />

LIGHT-INDUCED REDOX CYCLING OF IRON<br />

51<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

11:30 Abdulla, H. A.; Chen, H.; Sun, L.; Helms, J.; Mopper, K.; Hatcher,<br />

P. G.: PHOTOCHEMICALLY INDUCED IRON AND<br />

ORGANIC MATTER FLOCCULATION<br />

11:45 Porcal, P.; Frejlachova, K.; Savrdova, T.; Kopacek, J.:<br />

PHOTOCHEMICAL REDUCTION OF PHOSPHORUS<br />

MOBILITY IN SURFACE WATERS<br />

14:00 Boiteau, R.; Fitzsimmons, J. N.; Repeta, D. J.; Boyle, E. A.; Coe,<br />

A.; Chisholm, S.: HPLC-ICP-MS CHARACTERIZATION<br />

OF ORGANIC LIGANDS FROM CYANOBACTERIA<br />

LABORATORY CULTURES AND NATURAL SEAWATER<br />

14:15 Farst, C. M.; Stenson, A.; Buck, K. N.; Landing, W. M.:<br />

ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF MARINE<br />

SIDEROPHORES BY ELECTROSPRAY IONIZATION MASS<br />

SPECTROMETRY AND CLE-ACSV<br />

14:30 Baars, O.; Perlman, D. H.; Morel, F. M.: METALLOPHORES IN<br />

NATURAL SAMPLES AND SPENT MEDIA ANALYSED BY<br />

HIGH RESOLUTION LC-MS/MS<br />

14:45 Hogle, S. L.; Barbeau, K. A.; Roe, K. L.: HETEROTROPHIC<br />

BACTERIOPLANKTON UTILIZE HEME-BASED<br />

MOLECULES FOR GROWTH: A CASE STUDY IN THE<br />

BIOLOGICAL CONTROLS ON A MODEL IRON-BINDING<br />

LIGAND<br />

15:00 Hassler, C. S.; Norman, L.; Angles, E.; Robinson, C.; Doblin, M.;<br />

Bowie, A.; Mancuso Nichols, C.: IMPACT OF BACTERIAL,<br />

PHYTOPLANKTONIC AND NATURAL EXOPOLYMERIC<br />

SUBSTANCES ON IRON BIOGEOCHEMISTRY<br />

15:15 Norman, L.; Hassler, C. S.: OCEANIC IRON ENRICHMENT<br />

FROM ATMOSPHERIC DUST: FROM CHEMISTRY TO<br />

BIOAVAILABILITY<br />

16:00 Wozniak, A. S.; Shelley, R. U.; Gurganus, S. C.; Sleighter, R. L.;<br />

Abdulla, H. A.; Willoughby, A. S.; Landing, W. M.; Hatcher, P. G.:<br />

EXPLORING THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN ORGANIC<br />

MATTER MOLECULAR CHARACTERISTICS AND TRACE<br />

METAL SOLUBILITIES OF COMBUSTION- AND DUST-<br />

INFLUENCED MARINE AEROSOLS<br />

16:15 Gurganus, S. C.; Wozniak, A. S.; Shelley, R. U.; Willoughby, A.<br />

S.; Sleighter, R. L.; Abdulla, H. A.; Landing, W. M.; Hatcher,<br />

P. G.: TRACE METAL AND ORGANIC MATTER<br />

CHARACTERISTICS OF AEROSOLS FROM MARINE AIR<br />

MASSES<br />

16:30 Kleint, C.; Koschinsky, A.; Powell, Z.: GEO-BIO INTERACTIONS<br />

IN SHALLOW WATER HYDROTHERMAL VENTS AND<br />

THEIR IMPACT ON TRACE METALS<br />

16:45 Carrasco, G. G.; Fitzsimmons, J. N.; Donat, J. R.; Boyle, E. A.:<br />

ASSESSING ZINC AND CADMIUM LIGANDS FROM<br />

HYDROTHERMAL PLUMES AND RIVERINE MATTER :<br />

POINT SOURCES OR GLOBAL TRENDSETTERS?<br />

17:00 Schijf, J.; Christenson, E. A.; Potter, K. J.: DIFFERENT<br />

BINDING MODES OF CU AND PB VS. NI, ZN, AND<br />

CD WITH THE TRIHYDROXAMATE SIDEROPHORE<br />

DESFERRIOXAMINE B AT SEAWATER IONIC STRENGTH<br />

17:15 Ye, Y.; Tagliabue, A.; Voelker, C.: CYCLING OF ORGANIC FE-<br />

BINDING LIGANDS IN 3D BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODEL<br />

17:30 Cabaniss, S. E.: MOLECULAR-LEVEL MODELING OF TRACE<br />

METAL BINDING BY NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER<br />

17:45 Sherman, E. M.; Moore, K.: A QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT<br />

OF MARINE IRON SIMULATION<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS17 PREDICTING DRIVERS AND MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN LARGE<br />

RIVERS AND DELTAS: THE USGS DELTA RESEARCH AND GLOBAL<br />

OBSERVATION NETWORK (DRAGON)<br />

Chair(s): Matthew E. Andersen, mandersen@usgs.gov<br />

D. Phil Turnipseed, pturnip@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

16:00 Gaweesh, A. M.; Meselhe , E. A.; Allison, M. A.; McCorquodale,<br />

J. A.; Sadid, K. M.; Pereira, J. F.; Georgiou, I. Y.; Vosburg, B. M.:<br />

NUMERICAL MODELING OF PULSED SEDIMENT<br />

DIVERSIONS; EFFECT ON STABILITY OF LATERAL<br />

SAND BARS IN THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER*<br />

16:15 Sadid, K. M.; Meselhe , E. A.; Allison, M. A.; McCorquodale, J.<br />

A.; Gaweesh, A. M.; Pereira, J. F.; Georgiou, I. Y.; Vosburg, B. M.:<br />

HYDRODYNAMIC AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT<br />

MODELING OF BONNET CARRE SPILLWAY DURING<br />

THE 2011 MISSISSIPPI RIVER FLOOD*<br />

16:30 Moura, J. S.; Victoria, R. L.; Oliveira, E. C.; Ometto, J. H.;<br />

Martinelli, L. A.; Mitsuya, M.: HYDROLOGICAL AND<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESS IN AN AMAZON BASIN<br />

FLOODPLAIN – CURUAI VRRZEA, BRAZIL*<br />

16:45 Pusch, M. T.; Irvine, K.; Solimini, A.: ECOLOGICAL<br />

ASSESSMENT OF HYDROMORPHOLOGICAL<br />

ALTERATIONS TO THE SHORES OF EUROPEAN LAKES*<br />

17:00 Chen, Y. W.; Liu, X.; Wu, Z. S.; Xu, C. P.: CYANOBACTERIA<br />

DISTRIBUTION RELATED TO WATER LEVEL CHANGE<br />

IN THE BIGGEST FRESHWATER LAKE, LAKE POYANG<br />

CHINA*<br />

17:15 Henderson, N. D.; Hannigan, R. E.; Christian, A. D.: SEASONAL<br />

LAND USE/COVER AFFECTS ON MICROBIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES IN THE NEPONSET RIVER<br />

WATERSHED*<br />

17:30 Costea, G.; Pusch, M.: INVERTEBRATE DIVERSITY IN A<br />

CLAY-DOMINATED RIVER CORRIDOR (PRUT RIVER,<br />

ROMANIA)*<br />

SS18 OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONES AND CLIMATE CHANGE: IMPACTS<br />

ON HIGHER TROPHIC LEVELS<br />

Chair(s): Brad Seibel, seibel@uri.edu<br />

Karen Wishner, kwishner@gso.uri.edu<br />

Lisa Levin, llevin@ucsd.edu<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

10:00 Seibel, B. A.: CRITICAL OXYGEN LEVELS IN MARINE<br />

ANIMALS<br />

10:15 Robison, B. H.; Reisenbichler, K. R.; Sherlock, R. E.; Walz,<br />

K. R.: EXPANDING OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONES:<br />

PHYSIOLOGICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES<br />

FOR MESOPELAGIC ANIMALS<br />

10:30 Netburn, A. N.; Koslow, J. A.: THE ROLE OF THE OXYGEN<br />

MINIMUM ZONE IN CONFINING DEEP SCATTERING<br />

LAYERS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT<br />

10:45 Friedman, J. R.; Drazen, J. C.; Condon, N. E.: GILL SURFACE<br />

AREA AND METABOLIC ENZYME ACTIVITIES OF<br />

DEMERSAL FISHES ASSOCIATED WITH THE OXYGEN<br />

MINIMUM ZONE OFF CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.<br />

11:00 Barry, J. P.; Buck, K. R.; Taylor, J. R.; Herlien, R.; Lovera, C.;<br />

Whaling, P. J.; Kuhnz, L.: THE EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA<br />

AND HYPERCAPNIA ON METABOLISM IN BATFISH<br />

(DIBRANCHUS SPONGIOSA) FROM THE OXYGEN<br />

MINIMUM ZONE OF THE GULF OF CALIFORNIA<br />

52<br />

11:15 Pierson, J. J.; Elliott, D.; Roman, M. R.; Stoecker, D.; Decker, M. B.;<br />

Houde, E.; Liu, K.; Barba, A.: LIFE AND DEATH IN THE DEAD<br />

ZONE: BALANCING PREDATORS, PREY, AND HYPOXIA<br />

FOR COPEPODS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

11:30 Roman, M.; Elliott, D.; Pierson, J.: ONLY THE GOOD DIE<br />

YOUNG: BOTTOM WATER HYPOXIA AS A MORTALITY<br />

SOURCE FOR COPEPOD EGGS AND NAUPLII IN<br />

CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

11:45 Liu, W.; Decker, M. B.; Pierson, J. J.: EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA<br />

ON GELATINOUS ZOOPLANKTON PREDATION OF<br />

COPEPODS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

14:00 Gomes, H. R.; Goes, J. I.; Matondkar, S. P.; Basu, S.; Parab, S. G.;<br />

Buskey, E. J.; Thoppil, P.: ECOSYSTEM DISRUPTION IN THE<br />

ARABIAN SEA LINKED TO THE SPREAD OF HYPOXIA<br />

14:15 Williams, R. L.; McKinney, R.; Wakeham, S.; Wishner, K. F.:<br />

OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE ZOOPLANKTON: VERTICAL<br />

TRENDS OF CARBON AND NITROGEN STABLE<br />

ISOTOPES<br />

14:30 Chu, S. N.; Wang, Z. A.; Hoering, K. H.: OCEAN<br />

ACIDIFICATION IN THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC OXYGEN<br />

MINIMUM ZONE<br />

14:45 Gobler, C. J.; Wallace, R. B.; Depasquale, E.; Griffith, A.; Baumann, H.:<br />

DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES OF ACIDIFICATION<br />

AND HYPOXIA IN COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS<br />

15:00 Rahman, M. S.; Thomas, P.: MOLECULAR RESPONSES OF<br />

ATLANTIC CROAKER EXPOSED TO HYPOXIA IN THE<br />

NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO: COMPARISON WITH<br />

LABORATORY FINDINGS<br />

15:15 Wishner, K. F.; Levin, L.: OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONES AND<br />

COASTAL HYPOXIA: PRESENT AND POTENTIAL<br />

FUTURE EFFECTS ON BENTHIC AND PELAGIC<br />

COMMUNITIES<br />

SS20 LET IT SNOW! AQUATIC EXOPOLYMERS, SUSPENDED<br />

PARTICLES, AND ORGANIC AGGREGATES<br />

Chair(s): Karen Shapiro , kshapiro@ucdavis.edu<br />

Fred C. Dobbs, fdobbs@odu.edu<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

14:00 Silver, M.: A HISTORICAL RAMBLE THROUGH THE FIELD<br />

OF MARINE PLANKTONIC AGGREGATES T<br />

14:30 Shapiro, K.; Silver, M.; Mazzillo, F.; Largier, J.; Conrad, P.; Mazet, J.:<br />

FROM CATS TO SEA OTTERS: THE ROLE OF MARINE<br />

SNOW IN TRANSMISSION OF A LETHAL ZOONOTIC<br />

PATHOGEN IN THE NEARSHORE<br />

14:45 Ward, J. E.; Doyle, J. J.; Ortiz, V. L.; Mason, R. P.: THE DARK SIDE<br />

OF MARINE SNOW: INCORPORATION, EFFECTS, AND<br />

TROPHIC UPTAKE OF ANTHROPOGENIC MATERIALS<br />

15:00 Kramer, A. M.; Dobbs, F. C.; Ward, J. E.; Pierce, M.; Drake, J. M.:<br />

UNDERSTANDING THE CONTRIBUTION OF MARINE<br />

AGGREGATE-ASSOCIATED BACTERIA TO PATHOGEN<br />

LOAD IN OYSTERS USING AN AGENT-BASED MODEL<br />

15:15 Dobbs, F. C.; Lyons, M. M.: EVIDENCE FOR COMPLEX<br />

LIFESTYLES AMONG AQUATIC BACTERIA: TEMPORAL<br />

VARIATION IN MICROHABITAT EFFECT DRIVEN<br />

BY CHANGES IN THE FREE-LIVING MICROBIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

16:00 Passow, U.: MARINE SNOW AND AGGREGATES: WHAT IS<br />

ALL THE EXCITEMENT ABOUT?*<br />

16:15 Ziervogel, K.; Passow, U.; Sweet, J.; Arnosti , C.: MARINE SNOW<br />

AND ASSOCIATED MICROBIAL PROCESSES AS DRIVERS<br />

FOR OIL TRANSFORMATION IN SURFACE GULF OF<br />

MEXICO WATERS<br />

16:30 Asper, V. L.; Dike, C.; Diercks, A. R.; Passow, U.: IN SITU<br />

MEASUREMENTS OF MARINE SNOW SINKING SPEEDS<br />

NEAR THE MACONDO WELL IN THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

16:45 Edwards, B. R.; May, A. L.; Ossolinski, J. E.; Fredricks, H. F.;<br />

Campagna, S. R.; Van Mooy, B. A.: THE POTENTIAL IMPACTS<br />

OF ALLELOPATHY BETWEEN DIATOMS AND PARTICLE<br />

ATTACHED BACTERIA ON EXPORT EFFICIENCY.<br />

17:00 Fong, A. A.; Bidigare, R. R.; Kemp, P. F.: COMPARISON OF<br />

AGGREGATE-ASSOCIATED BACTERIAL DIVERSITY IN<br />

EPISODIC PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOMS IN THE NORTH<br />

PACIFIC OCEAN<br />

17:15 Dammrich, T.; van Beusekom, J. E.; Engel, A.: AGGREGATE<br />

FORMATION AND SINKING VELOCITIES OF NATURAL<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGES DURING SPRING<br />

BLOOM IN A TEMPERATE SHALLOW TIDAL BASIN<br />

17:30 Fettweis, M.; Lee, B. J.; Baeye, M.; Van den Eynde, D.; Chen, P.; Yu,<br />

J. C.: BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS ON FLOCCULATION AND<br />

DEPOSITION OF FINE-GRAINED SEDIMENTS IN A<br />

COASTAL TURBIDITY MAXIMUM<br />

17:45 Azam, F.; Malfatti, F.: AGGREGATION CONTINUUM: A<br />

CONTEXT FOR BACTERIAL STRUCTURING OF PELAGIC<br />

MARINE ECOSYSTEMS*<br />

SS21 OPTICAL SIGNATURES OF THE GLOBAL CARBON CYCLE:<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF THE SOURCES, SINKS AND CHEMISTRY<br />

OF CDOM AND FDOM<br />

Chair(s): Aron Stubbins, aron.stubbins@skio.usg.edu<br />

Natasha McDonald, natasha.mcdonald@bios.edu<br />

Location: Room 355<br />

16:00 Spencer, R. G.; Aiken, G. R.; Mann, P. J.; Holmes, R. M.; Niggemann,<br />

J.; Dittmar, T.; Hernes, P. J.; Stubbins, A.: THE UTILITY<br />

OF CDOM FOR IMPROVING LAND TO OCEAN<br />

TERRIGENOUS DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON<br />

FLUXES*<br />

16:15 Cardille, J. A.; Leguet, J. B.; del Giorgio, P.: SATELLITE IMAGERY<br />

AND LEGACY DATA SETS OF LAKE COLOR: A MODEL<br />

FOR BOREAL LAKES USING THE NEW LANDSAT<br />

PLATFORM<br />

16:30 Lapierre, J. F.; del Giorgio, P. A.: LARGE-SCALE PATTERNS IN<br />

FLUORESCENT DOM IN BOREAL LAKES AND LINKS TO<br />

LANDSCAPE PROPERTIES<br />

16:45 Gonsior, M.; Hertkorn, N.; Schmitt-Kopplin, P.; Cooper, W. J.:<br />

SARGASSUM – A MAJOR SOURCE OF CDOM IN THE<br />

GULF OF MEXICO AND THE SARGASSO SEA<br />

17:00 Andrew, A. A.; Del Vecchio, R.; Blough, N. V.: LINKING THE<br />

OPTICAL PROPERTIES TO THE CHEMICAL STRUCTURE<br />

OF CDOM AND HUMIC SUBSTANCES<br />

17:15 Willoughby, A. S.; Wozniak, A. S.; Abdulla, H. A.; Hatcher, P. G.:<br />

CHEMICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF CHROMOPHORIC<br />

ORGANIC MATTER IN AMBIENT AEROSOLS USING<br />

UV-VIS, NMR, AND ESI-FTICR-MS<br />

53<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

17:30 Stubbins, A.; del Giorgio, P.; Berggren, M.; Lapierre, J. F.; Dittmar,<br />

T.: WHAT’S IN AN EEM? MOLECULAR SIGNATURES<br />

ASSOCIATED WITH DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

FLUOROPHORES<br />

17:45 Stedmon, C. A.; Christensen, J. H.; Kritzberg, E. S.; Nielsen, N. J.;<br />

Reader, H.: COUPLING THE UV-VISIBLE SPECTROSCOPIC<br />

PROPERTIES OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER TO ITS<br />

CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS: EVIDENCE ACROSS<br />

CONTRASTING ENVIRONMENTS.<br />

SS27 SURFACE AND SUBSURFACE FLUXES ACROSS THE<br />

LAND-OCEAN INTERFACE OF LARGE RIVERS<br />

Chair(s): Mead A. Allison, mallison@mail.utexas.edu<br />

Karen H. Johannesson , kjohanne@tulane.edu<br />

Alexander S. Kolker, akolker@lumcon.edu<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

14:00 Palinkas, C. M.: TRANSFER OF TERRESTRIAL SEDIMENT<br />

TO THE AQUATIC ENVIRONMENT: LESSONS<br />

LEARNED FROM A SMALL COASTAL PLAIN RIVER AND<br />

POTENTIAL APPLICATION TO LARGER SYSTEMS<br />

14:15 Allison, M. A.; Meselhe, E. A.; Vosburg, B. M.: IMPACT OF DELTA<br />

PLAIN PROCESSES ON MISSISSIPPI-ATCHAFALAYA<br />

SEDIMENT DISCHARGE TO THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

DURING THE GREAT FLOOD OF 2011<br />

14:30 Roy, E. D.; White, J. R.; Smith, E. A.; Bargu, S.; Li, C.: ESTUARINE<br />

ECOSYSTEM RESPONSE TO THREE LARGE-SCALE<br />

MISSISSIPPI RIVER FLOOD DIVERSION EVENTS<br />

14:45 Joung, D.; Shiller, A. M.: DISSOLVED TRACE ELEMENTS IN<br />

LOUISIANA SHELF WATERS<br />

15:00 Scaroni, A. E.; Nyman, J. A.; DeLaune, R. D.; Lindau, C. W.:<br />

HABITAT CHANGE IN THE ATCHAFALAYA RIVER<br />

BASIN ALTERS NUTRIENT INPUTS TO THE GULF OF<br />

MEXICO<br />

15:15 Shi, J. Z.; Li, X.; Hu, G. D.; Xu, H. D.; Shi, H. Y.: MIXING,<br />

STRATIFICATION AND TIDAL STRAINING WITHIN<br />

THE NORTH PASSAGE OF THE PARTIALLY-MIXED<br />

CHANGJIANG RIVER ESTUARY, EAST CHINA SEA<br />

SS30 BIOLOGICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL RESPONSES TO<br />

HUMAN IMPACTS AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE<br />

Chair(s): Katja Fennel, katja.fennel@dal.ca<br />

Wally Fulweiler, rwf@bu.edu<br />

Roxane Maranger, r.maranger@umontreal.ca<br />

John Lehrter, lehrter.john@epa.gov<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

16:00 Cornwell, J. C.; Owens, M. S.; Kellogg, M. L.; Gao, Y.; Stoecker, D.<br />

K.: ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCES ON NUTRIENT<br />

AND GAS EXCHANGE AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER<br />

INTERFACE T<br />

16:45 Oliver, J. L.: DOES SCIENCE SUPPORT ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

POLICY OR DOES ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY SUPPORT<br />

SCIENCE? SCALING FROM MEASUREMENT TO<br />

MANAGEMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENT (AND BACK)*<br />

17:00 Gardner, W. S.; Lin, X.; McCarthy, M. J.; Cartwright, G.; Fall, K.;<br />

Liu, Z.; Briggs, K.; Friedrichs, C.: HOW IMPORTANT ARE<br />

RESUSPENDED PARTICLES TO NITROGEN DYNAMICS<br />

IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO?<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

17:15 Park, K.; Ha, H.: BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYER SEDIMENT<br />

DYNAMICS USING HIGH-RESOLUTION DATA IN<br />

A SHALLOW, MICRO-TIDAL NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO ESTUARY<br />

17:30 Malmaeus, J. M.; Karlsson, M. O.: MOBILE PHOSPHORUS<br />

CONTENT IN SOFT SEDIMENTS IN TWO SUB-SYSTEMS<br />

OF THE BALTIC SEA WITH DIFFERENT REDOX<br />

CONDITIONS<br />

17:45 Darrow, E. S.; Carmichael, R. H.; Calci, K. R.; Burkhardt, W.:<br />

SEDIMENTARY ORGANIC MATTER SOURCE SHIFTS<br />

DUE TO LAND USE CHANGE IN A NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO ESTUARINE SYSTEM<br />

SS35 CLIMATE EXTREMES – IS THE FUTURE OF ECOSYSTEMS<br />

PREDICTABLE AND MANAGEABLE?<br />

Chair(s): Karin Junker, karin.junker@io-warnemuende.de<br />

Carola Wagner, carola.wagner@io-warnemuende.de<br />

Location: Room 357<br />

10:00 Junker, K.; Dippner, J. W.: POTENTIAL PREDICTABILITY OF<br />

THE SOUTHERN BALTIC SEA PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

10:15 Neuheimer, A. B.; MacKenzie, B. R.: EXPLAINING VARIATION<br />

IN LIFE HISTORY TIMING ACROSS A SPECIES RANGE:<br />

EFFECTS OF CLIMATE ON SPAWNING TIME IN AN<br />

EXPLOITED MARINE FISH<br />

10:30 Lindsay, E. K.; Johnson, A. K.: INFLUENCE OF<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABLES ON MONKFISH<br />

(LOPHIUS AMERICANUS) CATCH AND SPAWNING<br />

DISTRIBUTION IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT (U.S.)<br />

10:45 Gurbisz, C.; Kemp, W. M.: IMPACTS OF EXTREME WEATHER<br />

ON A LARGE SUBMERSED PLANT BED IN CHESAPEAKE<br />

BAY: ANALYSIS OF TIME SERIES DATA<br />

11:00 McEwen, D. C.; Butler, M. G.: FOUR DECADES OF<br />

TEMPERATURE CHANGE IN AN ARCTIC TUNDRA<br />

POND AT BARROW, AK<br />

11:15 Guizien, K.; Belharet,, M.; Moritz, C.; Guarini, J. M.:<br />

METAPOPULATION MODELLING BASED ON LARVAL<br />

DISPERSAL SIMULATIONS TO STUDY BENTHIC<br />

SPECIES RESILIENCE TO EXTREME CLIMATIC AND<br />

ANTHROPOGENIC STRESSES<br />

11:30 Neal, B. P.; Treibitz, A.; Khen, A.; Lin, T. H.; Kreigman , D.; Mitchell,<br />

B. G.; Beijbom, B.; Kline, D. I.: LONG-TERM RESPONSE,<br />

RECOVERY, AND ADAPTATION OF CARIBBEAN CORALS<br />

FOLLOWING THE SEVERE HEAT BLEACHING IN 2005<br />

11:45 Martinez, E.; Menze, M. A.; Torres, J. J.: MITOCHONDRIAL<br />

ENERGETICS OF BENTHIC AND PELAGIC ANTARCTIC<br />

TELEOSTS<br />

14:00 Haig, H. A.; Vogt, R. J.; WISSEL B.; Leavitt , P. R.: WATER<br />

ISOTOPES LINK ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING TO<br />

HYDROLOGICAL VARIABILTY IN A LAKE CHAIN IN<br />

SASKATCHEWAN, CANADA<br />

14:15 Strock, K. E.; Saros, J. E.; Nelson, S. J.; Birkel, S. D.: THE EFFECTS<br />

OF EXTREME CLIMATE EVENTS ON LAKEWATER<br />

CHEMISTRY: IMPLICATIONS FOR DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

CARBON TRENDS IN THE NORTHEAST U.S.<br />

14:30 Crosswell, J. R.; Wetz, M. S.; Hales, B.; Paerl, H. W.: GLOBALLY-<br />

SIGNIFICANT CO2 EMISSIONS FROM COASTAL WATERS<br />

INDUCED BY HURRICANE IRENE (2011)<br />

54<br />

14:45 Mercier-Blais, S.; Beisner, B. E.; Prairie, Y. T.: EFFECTS OF<br />

AN ARTIFICIALLY DEEPENED THERMOCLINE ON<br />

THE TRANSFORMATION OF CARBON IN A LAKE:<br />

THE TIMEX (THERMOCLINE INDUCED MIXING<br />

EXPERIMENT) PROJECT<br />

15:00 Ikenweiwe, N. B.; Valborg, B.; Hensen, S.; Quarty, G.; Ian, R.:<br />

APPLICATION OF REMOTE SENSING TO THE STUDY OF<br />

GULF OF GUINEA ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY<br />

15:15 Grimm, N. B.; Hale, R. L.; Turnbull, L.; Earl, S.; Childers, D. L.:<br />

MODULATION OF STORM-DRIVEN WATER AND<br />

NUTRIENT LOADS BY INFRASTRUCTURE IN AN ARID<br />

URBAN ECOSYSTEM<br />

SS48 GEOCHEMICAL CONSEQUENCES OF ADVECTION IN<br />

AQUATIC SEDIMENTS<br />

Chair(s): Joerg Lewandowski, lewe@igb-berlin.de<br />

Gunnar Nuetzmann, nuetzmann@igb-berlin.de<br />

Christof Meile, cmeile@uga.edu<br />

Andreas Brand, andreas.brand@eawag.ch<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

10:00 Charette, M. A.: THE WAQUOIT BAY SUBTERRANEAN<br />

ESTUARY: AN IDEAL NATURAL LABORATORY<br />

FOR STUDYING BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES<br />

OPERATING IN GROUNDWATER IMPACTED<br />

PERMEABLE SEDIMENTS*<br />

10:15 Huettel, M.; Chipman, L.; Berg, P.: CONTROLS OF OXYGEN<br />

FLUX IN PERMEABLE COASTAL SEDIMENTS*<br />

10:30 Berg, P.; Huettel, M.; Long, M. H.: EFFECTS OF ADVECTIVE<br />

FLOW IN PERMEABLE SEDIMENT MEASURED BY EDDY<br />

CORRELATION<br />

10:45 Bryant, L. D.; Brand, A.; Mejer, K.; Wüest, A.; Engelhardt, C.; Kirillin<br />

, G.: ROCKING SEICHES AND SEDIMENT DANCERS:<br />

EFFECTS ON SEDIMENT OXYGEN UPTAKE AND<br />

POREWATER CHEMISTRY<br />

11:00 Wuest, A.; Bryant, L. D.; Muller, B.: DEEP-WATER OXYGEN<br />

DEPLETION IN LAKES AND RESERVOIRS<br />

11:15 Brand, A.; Lewandowski, J.; Hamann, E.; Nützmann, G.:<br />

CAN ADVECTION BE DISREGARDED IN MUDDY,<br />

BIOIRRIGATED SEDIMENTS? – A MODEL STUDY<br />

11:30 Volkenborn, N.; Polerecky, L.; Chennu, A.; Meile, C.; Wethey, D. S.;<br />

Woodin, S. A.: BIOADVECTION IN MARINE SEDIMENTS:<br />

OXIC-ANOXIC OSCILLATIONS AT DEPTH AND<br />

FERTILIZATION OF MICROPHYTOBENTHOS AT THE<br />

SURFACE<br />

11:45 Ziebis, W.; Madison, M. J.: DOES BIOTURBATION INCREASE<br />

THE FLUX OF NITROUS OXIDE FROM COASTAL<br />

SEDIMENTS?<br />

SS49 MICROBIAL MEDIATED RETENTION/TRANSFORMATION<br />

OF ORGANIC AND INORGANIC MATERIALS IN FRESHWATER AND<br />

MARINE ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer J Mosher, jmosher@stroudcenter.org<br />

Richard Devereux, Devereux.Richard@epamail.epa.gov<br />

Anthony V Palumbo, palumboav@ornl.gov<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

10:00 Baker, B. C.; Scott, J. T.: PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

STOICHIOMETRY, COMPOSITION, AND N2 FIXATION<br />

EFFICIENCY ALONG AN N:P SUPPLY RATIO GRADIENT<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

10:15 Scicluna, T. R.; Cook, P.; Grace, M.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL<br />

CYCLING OF PHOSPHORUS IN THE SEDIMENTS<br />

OF A LAGOONAL ESTUARY: IMPLICATIONS FOR<br />

EUTROPHICATION AND CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS.<br />

10:30 Brin, L. D.; Giblin, A. E.; Rich, J. J.: DENITRIFICATION<br />

AND ANAMMOX HAVE SIMILAR TEMPERATURE<br />

OPTIMA AND SEASONALLY CONSISTENT THERMAL<br />

DEPENDENCES IN COASTAL RHODE ISLAND<br />

SEDIMENTS<br />

10:45 Botrel, M.; Altabet, M. A.; Gregory-Eaves, I.; Maranger, R.:<br />

NITRIFICATION IN SHALLOW LAKES USING NATURAL<br />

STABLE ISOTOPES COMPOSITION OF NITRATE<br />

11:00 Shelley, F. C.; Trimmer, M.; Grey, J.: SEASONAL METHANE<br />

OXIDATION AS A CHEMOSYNTHETC CARBON SOURCE<br />

IN RIVERS<br />

11:15 Tait, Z. S.; Baylor, V. D.; Sipler, R. E.; Roberts, Q. N.; Stubbins, A.;<br />

Bronk, D. A.; Frischer, M. E.: WILL INCREASED TERRESTRIAL<br />

CARBON FLUX FROM MELTING PERMAFROST<br />

STIMULATE INCREASED BACTERIAL NITRATE UPTAKE<br />

IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN?<br />

11:30 Holtgrieve, G. W.; Brett, M. T.; Taipale, S. J.; So, N.; Chheng, P.: THE<br />

IMPORTANCE OF BIOGENIC METHANE FOR FISHERIES<br />

PRODUCTION IN TONLE SAP LAKE, CAMBODIA<br />

11:45 Tyssebotn, I. M.; Kinsey, J. D.; Kieber, D. J.; Kiene, R. P.;<br />

Rellinger, A. N.; Oswald, L.; Motard-Cote, J.: LATE SUMMER<br />

CONCENTRATIONS AND BIOLOGICAL TURNOVER<br />

RATES OF ACRYLATE AND DIMETHYLSULFOXIDE IN<br />

THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

14:00 Wilking, L. E.; Dillon, K. S.: ASSESSING HETEROTROPHIC<br />

BACTERIAL ACTIVITY IN ARTIFICIAL REEF BIOFILMS<br />

14:15 Ogram, A. V.; Bae, H. S.; Huettel, M.; Chanton, J.:<br />

METHANOGENESIS, METHANOGENS, AND NUTRIENT<br />

IMPACTS IN THE FLORIDA EVERGLADES<br />

14:30 Govenar, B.; Hall, J. V.; Schoolcraft, K. S.; Moseman-Valtierra, S.<br />

M.: EXAMINING THE ROLE OF RIBBED MUSSELS IN<br />

GREENHOUSE GAS FLUXES FROM COASTAL SALT<br />

MARSHES<br />

14:45 Grossart, H. P.: MICROBIAL INTERACTIONS: KEY<br />

FOR ORGANIC MATTER AGGREGATION AND<br />

REMINERALIZATION IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

15:00 Xing, P.; Wu, L. Q.; Zheng, J.: MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES<br />

INVOLVED IN ANAEROBIC DEGRADATION OF<br />

MICROCYSTIS BIOMASS<br />

15:15 Devereux, R.; Beddick Jr., D. L.; Lehrter, J. C.; Jarvis, B.; Yates, D. F.;<br />

Mosher, J. J.; Brown, S. D.; Vishnivetskaya, T. A.; Palumbo, A. V.:<br />

REACTIVE IRON AND IRON-REDUCING BACTERIA IN<br />

LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL SHELF SEDIMENTS<br />

SS50 ZOOPLANKTON RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS:<br />

FROM INDIVIDUAL RESPONSES TO LARGER SCALE IMPLICATIONS<br />

Chair(s): Amy E. Maas, amaas@whoi.edu<br />

David T. Elliott, delliott@umces.edu<br />

Location: Room 344<br />

10:00 Nielsen, T. G.; Riisgaard, K.; Swalethorp, R.; Kjellerup, S.; Rysgaard,<br />

S.: IMPORTANCE OF PROTOZOOPLANKTON IN A<br />

FUTURE WARMER ARCTIC<br />

10:15 Ozersky, T.; Nakov, T.; Shchapov, K.; Wright, K.; Moore, M. V.:<br />

NEGATIVE EFFECTS OF ELEVATED TEMPERATURES ON<br />

AN ENDEMIC, KEYSTONE COPEPOD IN LAKE BAIKAL,<br />

RUSSIA.<br />

55<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

10:30 Urban-Rich, J.; Major, C.; Daley, M.: CHANGES IN BIVALVE<br />

LARVAE ABUNDANCE BETWEEN A COLD AND WARM<br />

WINTER<br />

10:45 Cournoyer, B. L.; Dam, H. G.: CAN THE COPEPOD ACARTIA<br />

HUDSONICA ADAPT TO CLIMATIC WARMING?<br />

WITHIN-POPULATION GENETIC VARIATION IN LIFE<br />

HISTORY TRAITS<br />

11:00 St-Gelais, N. F.; Sastri, A. R.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Beisner, B. E.:<br />

CRUSTACEAN ZOOPLANKTON PRODUCTION AND<br />

COMMUNITY SIZE STRUCTURE IN BOREAL LAKES<br />

ALONG LATITUDINAL GRADIENTS.<br />

11:15 Hirst, A. G.; Forster, J.; Atkinson, D.; Woodward, G.: CHANGING<br />

SIZE IN A WARMING WORLD<br />

11:30 Bi, H.; Jo, Y.; Hare, J.: TRANSPORT AND MARINE<br />

ZOOPLANKTON SEASONAL DYNAMICS IN THE MID-<br />

ATLANTIC BIGHT<br />

11:45 Finiguerra, M. B.; Dam, H. G.; Avery, D. E.; Burris, Z.: SEX-<br />

SPECIFIC ADULT STARVATION TOLERANCE IN THE<br />

MARINE COPEPOD ACARTIA TONSA<br />

14:00 du Mais, R. M.; Ignoffo, T.; Slaughter, A.; Kimmerer, W.:<br />

REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS OF THE COPEPOD<br />

PSEUDODIAPTOMUS FORBESI IN THE PRESENCE OF<br />

SUBLETHAL LEVELS OF THE TOXIC CYANOBACTERIA<br />

MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA<br />

14:15 Kelly, P. T.; Creamer, K. P.; Coloso, J. J.; Jones, S. E.:<br />

ZOOPLANKTON FOOD QUALITY AMONG LAKES WITH<br />

VARYING TERRESTRIAL INPUTS: DO ESSENTIAL FATTY<br />

ACIDS OR PHOSPHOROUS LIMIT PRODUCTION?<br />

14:30 Nobili, R.; Robinson, C.; Buitenhuis, E.; Castellani, C.:<br />

QUANTIFYING THE EFFECTS OF VARIABILITY IN<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON STOICHIOMETRY ON COPEPOD<br />

PHYSIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY<br />

14:45 Elser, J. J.; Steger, L.; Kyle, M.; McCrackin, M. L.; Peace, A.: LIVING<br />

ON THE STOICHIOMETRIC KNIFE-EDGE: EFFECTS<br />

OF HIGH AND LOW FOOD C:P RATIO ON GROWTH,<br />

FEEDING, AND RESPIRATION IN MULTIPLE DAPHNIA<br />

SPECIES.<br />

15:00 Baines, S. B.; Chen, X.; Twining, B. S.; Landry, M. L.: POTENTIAL<br />

FOR MINERAL LIMITATION OF ZOOPLANKTON FROM<br />

AN HNLC REGION (THE COSTA RICAN UPWELLING<br />

DOME)<br />

15:15 Hébert, M.; Maranger, R.; Beisner, B.; Guénard, G.; Legendre , P.:<br />

RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF FUNCTIONAL TRAITS<br />

AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS IN CONTROLLING<br />

THE NUTRIENT RECYCLING POTENTIAL BY<br />

CRUSTACEAN ZOOPLANKTON<br />

16:00 Hewson, I.; Li, W.; Ng, G.; LaBarre, B. A.; Greco, A.; Rudstam, L.<br />

G.; Watkins, J. M.; Hairston, N. G.: EUKARYOTIC CIRCULAR<br />

SSDNA VIRUSES IN FRESHWATER ZOOPLANKTON:<br />

METAGENOMIC IDENTIFICATION, SEASONAL<br />

IMPACTS, AND POTENTIAL ROLE IN HOST<br />

EPIDEMIOLOGY<br />

16:15 Anas, M. U.; Scott, K. A.; Cooper, R. N.; Das, B.; Cumming, B.<br />

F.; Wissel, B.: EARLY ACIDIFICATION OF BOREAL SHIELD<br />

LAKES DOWN-WIND OF ATHABASCA OILSAND<br />

OPERATIONS: INFERENCES FROM CRUSTACEAN<br />

ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES<br />

16:30 Bailey, J. L.; Celis-Salgado, M. P.; Heneberry, J.; Yan, N. D.: USING<br />

ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND<br />

DAPHNID BIOASSAYS TO COMPARE RECOVERING<br />

ACIDIFIED AND CONTAMINATED LAKES IN<br />

NORTHERN ONTARIO<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

16:45 Grenvald, J. C.; Nielsen, T. G.; Hjorth, M.; Berge, J.: IMPACT OF<br />

PYRENE AND TEMPERATURE ON EARLY DEVELOPMENT<br />

OF TWO CO-EXISTING ARCTIC COPEPODS<br />

17:00 Almeda, R.; Wambaugh, Z.; Zucheng , W.; Bona, S.; Cammie , H.;<br />

Zhanfei , L.; Buskey, E.: EFFECTS OF CRUDE OIL EXPOSURE ON<br />

ZOOPLANKON SURVIVAL AND BIOACCUMULATION OF<br />

POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS<br />

17:15 Motschman, J. D.; Kunz, K. L.; Nihongi, A.; Chang, W.; Strickler, J. R.:<br />

INCEPTION: ENGINEERING MULTI-LAYER SPHERICAL<br />

MICROFLUIDIC OIL DROPLETS OF DIFFERENT<br />

COMPOSITIONS TO TEST OIL-ZOOPLANKTON<br />

INTERACTIONS<br />

17:30 Herrera, I.; Torreblanca, L.; Yebra, L.; Hernández-León, S.:<br />

ZOOPLANKTON AARS ACTIVITY IN RELATION TO<br />

THE LUNAR CYCLE IN SUBTROPICAL WATERS<br />

17:45 Jungbluth, M.; Lenz, P. H.; Goetze, E.: A NEW QPCR-BASED<br />

APPROACH TO STUDYING COPEPOD NAUPLII IN THE<br />

FIELD<br />

SS54 CARBON FLUXES AT THE LAND-OCEAN INTERFACE: RESEARCH<br />

AND EDUCATION<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Cherrier, jennifercherrier@gmail.com<br />

Bob Chen, bob.chen@umb.edu<br />

Jaye Cable, jecable@email.unc.edu<br />

Christof Meile, cmeile@uga.edu<br />

Location: Room 345<br />

10:00 Schalles, J. F.; Alberts, J. J.; Fichot, C. G.; Urban, L. W.: SOURCES<br />

AND DYNAMICS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON<br />

OUTWELLING ON THE GEORGIA COAST INTO THE<br />

SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT: RESEARCH AND STUDENT<br />

TRAINING<br />

10:15 McIntosh, H. A.; Pondell, C.; Tyler, E.; Canuel, E.: USING<br />

BIOMARKERS TO DETERMINE SOURCES AND<br />

COMPOSITION OF ESTUARINE ORGANIC MATTER:<br />

DELAWARE BAY TO THE CLASSROOM<br />

10:30 Bianchi, T. S.; Allison, M. A.; Cai, W. J.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL<br />

DYNAMICS OF LARGE-RIVER INTERFACES: LINKAGES<br />

WITH GLOBAL CHANGE T<br />

11:00 Stets, E. G.: CAN WE DETECT LONG-TERM TRENDS IN<br />

CARBON EXPORT FROM LARGE RIVER SYSTEMS?<br />

11:15 Fichot, C. G.; Benner, R.: TRANSFORMATIONS AND FATES<br />

OF TERRIGENOUS DOM IN A RIVER-INFLUENCED<br />

OCEAN MARGIN<br />

11:30 Hunt, C. W.; Wollheim, W. M.; Salisbury, J. S.; Stewart, R. J.; Hanley,<br />

K. W.; Aiken, G. R.: MODELING THE EXPORT OF DOC<br />

FROM LARGE WATERSHEDS AND ITS INFLUENCE ON<br />

THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF COASTAL WATERS<br />

11:45 Jearld, Jr., A.; Liles, G.; Gutierrez, B.: ACROSS DISCIPLINARY<br />

BOUNDARIES: DIVERSIFYING A FAMOUS SCIENCE<br />

COMMUNITY ONE COHORT AT A TIME<br />

14:00 Emery, H. E.; Fulweiler, R. W.: ANTHROPOGENIC IMPACTS<br />

ON SALT MARSH GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS<br />

14:15 Cramer, C. B.; Fulweiler, R. W.: VIDEO FLUXES: AN<br />

INTERPRETATION FOR EDUCATION AND OUTREACH<br />

14:30 Pidgeon, E. J.: BLUE CARBON: A TRANSFORMATIONAL<br />

TOOL FOR COASTAL CONSERVATION? T<br />

15:00 Chen, R. F.; Cable, J. E.; Cherrier, J.; Meile, C.; Gardner, G. B.; Wang,<br />

X. C.; Esch, M.; Gray, E.; Lyons, G.; Peri, F.: OUTWELLING OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON FROM SALT MARSHES<br />

56<br />

16:15 Cable, J. E.; Gardner, G. B.; Chen, R. F.: RESPONSE OF CDOM IN<br />

SALT MARSH GROUNDWATER TO WIND AND TIDALLY<br />

DRIVEN INUNDATION PATTERNS<br />

16:30 Seminara, D. N.; Schalles, J. F.; Strange, T. P.; Esch, M.: THE<br />

VEGETATION STRUCTURE OF NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO SALT MARSHES REVEALED BY POLYGON-<br />

TRAINED CLASSIFICATIONS OF HIGH RESOLUTION<br />

IMAGERY<br />

16:45 Cherrier, J.; Kelley, B.; Abazinge, M.; Tunnell, W.; Schalles, J.; Jagoe,<br />

C.; Callender, R.: PROMOTING A BALANCE BETWEEN<br />

SOCIETAL DEMANDS AND COASTAL ECOSYSTEM<br />

SUSTAINABILITY: A MODEL FOR TRAINING THE NEXT<br />

GENERATION OF OCEAN SCIENTISTS<br />

17:00 Nordström, M. C.; Levin, L. A.: SUCCESSION IN STABLE<br />

ISOTOPE SPACE: FOOD-WEB HETEROGENEITY AND<br />

RECOVERY IN RESTORED SALT MARSHES<br />

17:15 Song, H. Z.: CHANGE IN SEA LEVEL AND ITS IMPACTS<br />

ON MARSHES<br />

17:30 Harris, L. A.; Bryan, J.: THE ROLE OF AUTECOLOGY IN<br />

TIDAL WETLAND MODELS<br />

17:45 Jung, Y.; Burd, A. B.: MODELING THE PRODUCTION OF<br />

SALT MARSH GRASSES WITH THE SENSITIVITY<br />

ANALYSIS AND EXAMING THE BALACED GROWTH<br />

MODEL<br />

SS58 OCEAN PROVINCES, FOOD WEB STRUCTURE AND PARTICLE FLUX<br />

Chair(s): Uta Passow, passow@lifesci.ucsb.edu<br />

Adrian Burd, adrianb@uga.edu<br />

Deborah Steinberg, debbies@vims.edu<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

10:00 Neuer, S.; DeMartini, F.; Wilson, S. E.; Shelton, N.; Bachman, B.;<br />

Condon, R. H.; Richardson, T. L.; Lomas, M. W.: OASIS IN THE<br />

DESERT? ENHANCED PRODUCTION, GRAZING AND<br />

CARBON EXPORT ASSOCIATED WITH CORE AND EDGE<br />

OF AN ANTICYCLONIC EDDY IN THE SARGASSO SEA<br />

10:15 Siegel, D. A.; Boyd, P.; Buesseler, K. O.; Doney, S. C.; Sailley, S.: A<br />

MECHANISTIC ASSESSMENT OF GLOBAL CARBON<br />

EXPORT FROM SATELLITE OBSERVATION<br />

10:30 Smith, H. E.; Poulton, A. J.; Sanders, R.; Lampitt, R. S.; Balch, W. M.;<br />

Lam, P. J.: WHAT CONTROLS PARTICLE SINKING SPEED<br />

IN THE OPEN OCEAN?<br />

10:45 Pinckney, J.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Thunell, R.; Muller-Karger,<br />

F.; Lorenzoni, L.; Troccoli, L.; Varela, R.: CLIMATE-DRIVEN<br />

CHANGES IN PHYTOPLANKTON DIVERSITY AND<br />

COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN THE CARIACO BASIN<br />

(1995-2011)<br />

11:00 De La Rocha, C. L.; Gallinari, M.; Moriceau, B.; Iversen, M. H.;<br />

Evertsen, A. J.; Giering, S.; LeGoff, M.; Masson, A.; Lampitt,<br />

R.: HIGHEST SINKING FLUXES IN AN OUTDOOR<br />

MESOCOSM EXPERIMENT ASSOCIATED WITH<br />

DIATOM-BASED FOOD WEBS<br />

11:15 McTigue, N. D.; Bucolo, P.; Liu, Z.; Dunton, K. H.:<br />

SEDIMENTARY CHLOROPIGMENT CONCENTRATIONS<br />

IN THE CHUKCHI SEA, ALASKA: A MICROBIAL LINK TO<br />

BENTHIC FOOD WEBS<br />

11:30 Uchimiya, M.; Fukuda, H.; Nishino, S.; Kikuchi, T.; Ogawa, H.;<br />

Nagata, T.: LOW PRODUCTION AND SLOW TURNOVER OF<br />

HETEROTROPHIC MICROBES IN THE DEEP WATER OF<br />

THE CANADA BASIN, WESTERN ARCTIC<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

11:45 Rohal, M.; Thistle, D.: VARIABILITY OF DEEP-SEA<br />

MEIOFAUNAL MAJOR TAXA ON THE CONTINENTAL<br />

RISE OFF THE WEST COAST OF THE UNITED STATES<br />

SS62 CO2-INDUCED ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE AND THE<br />

OCCURRENCE AND SEVERITY OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS<br />

Chair(s): Charles Trick, cyano@uwo.ca<br />

Mark Wells, mlwells@maine.edu<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

16:00 Morales-Williams, A. M.; Wanamaker, Jr., A. D.; Downing, J. A.:<br />

STABLE ISOTOPIC EVIDENCE OF PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

BICARBONATE UPTAKE DURING PERIODS OF CARBON<br />

DIOXIDE UNDERSATURATION IN EUTROPHIC LAKES<br />

16:15 Shi, X. L.; Kong, F. X.: IMPACTS OF ELEVATED CO2 LEVEL<br />

ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY AND WATER<br />

ECOSYSTEMS IN LAKE TAIHU, CHINA<br />

16:30 Wannicke, N.; Nausch, M.; Nausch, G.; Frindte, K.; Fabian, J.;<br />

Grossart, H. P.; Voss, M.: INTERACTING IMPACT OF<br />

OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND EUTROPHICATION ON<br />

CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS<br />

16:45 Errera, R. M.; Yvon-Lewis, S.; Campbell, L.: RESPONSE OF<br />

THE HARMFUL ALGA KARENIA BREVIS TO PRE-<br />

INDUSTRIAL, CURRENT, AND FUTURE PCO 2 AND SEA<br />

SURFACE TEMPERATURES<br />

17:00 Yuan, J.: MULTIPLE NON-LINEAR REGRESSION OF<br />

CARBON DIOXIDE PARAMETERS ON TEMPERATURE<br />

AND SALINITY IN THE SURFACE OCEANS<br />

17:15 Brown, A. T.; Gerwick, W.: EFFECT OF MODIFIED PH<br />

ENVIRONMENTS ON MOOREA PRODUCENS GROWTH<br />

AND PRODUCTION OF ADAPTIVE SECONDARY<br />

METABOLITES<br />

17:30 Feifel, K. M.; Lessard, E. J.; Fletcher, S. J.:<br />

DEVELOPING A LONG TERM RECORD OF<br />

HISTORICAL ALEXANDRIUM BLOOMS USING<br />

SEDIMENT CORES<br />

17:45 Ambrecht, L. H.; Roughan, M.; Rossi, V.; Schaeffer, A.; Davies,<br />

P. L.; Waite, A. M.; Armand, L. K.: PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

COMPOSITION UNDER CONTRASTING<br />

OCEANOGRAPHIC CONDITIONS IN A BIOLOGICAL<br />

HOTSPOT (EASTERN AUSTRALIA)<br />

SS64 QUASI-LAGRANGIAN APPROACHES IN PELAGIC ECOLOGY<br />

Chair(s): Mark D. Ohman, mohman@ucsd.edu<br />

Michael R. Landry, mlandry@ucsd.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

14:00 Landry, M. R.; Selph, K. E.; Stukel, M. R.; Gutiérrez, A.; Taylor, A.<br />

G.; Wokuluk, J. J.; Baines, S. B.: SPATIALLY HETEROGENEOUS<br />

DYNAMICS OF PICOPHYTOPLANKTON IN<br />

LAGRANGIAN-STUDIED WATER PARCELS IN THE<br />

COSTA RICA DOME<br />

14:15 D’Asaro, E. A.; Perry, M. J.; Lee, C. M.: THE 2008 NORTH<br />

ATLANTIC BLOOM EXPERIMENT- LESSONS FROM<br />

A 3 MONTH, OPEN OCEAN AUTONOMOUS QUASI-<br />

LAGRANGIAN <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

14:30 Archer, S. D.; Kimmance, S. A.; Stephens, J. A.; Yang, M.; Torres,<br />

R.; Nightingale, P. D.: CYCLING OF DIMETHYL SULPHIDE<br />

(DMS) IN THREE CONTRASTING UNPERTURBED SF6-<br />

LAGRANGIAN WATER BODIES.<br />

57<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

14:45 Genin, A.; Koseff, J. R.; Monismith, S. G.; Steinbuck, J. V.; Vaknin,<br />

R.; Holzman, R.: LAGRANGIAN MEASUREMENTS<br />

OF PHYTOPLANKTON GRAZING: PITFALLS AND<br />

SOLUTIONS FOR PRECISE TRACKING OF “WATER<br />

PARCELS”<br />

15:00 Ohman, M. D.; Chekalyuk, A.: SPRAY GLIDER, MOVING<br />

VESSEL PROFILER, AND ADVANCED LASER<br />

FLUOROMETER SITUATE LAGRANGIAN EXPERIMENTS<br />

IN THE CCE-LTER SITE<br />

15:15 de Verneil, A.; Franks, P. J.; Rudnick, D. L.; Ohman, M. D.; Landry,<br />

M. R.: PHYSICAL CONTEXT IN THE CALIFORNIA<br />

CURRENT ECOSYSTEM: FORCING DURING THE<br />

E-FRONT STUDY<br />

16:00 Krause, J. W.; Brzezinski, M. A.; Stukel, M. R.; Landry, M. R.;<br />

Ohman, M. D.: BIOGENIC SILICA CYCLING ACROSS<br />

FRONTAL GRADIENTS IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT<br />

ECOSYSTEM<br />

16:15 Brzezinski, M. A.; Krause, J. W.; Barbeau, K. A.; Bundy, R. M.; Stukel,<br />

M. R.; Landry, M. R.; Ohman, M. D.: VARIABLE INFLUENCE OF<br />

IRON ON SILICEOUS BIOMASS AND PRODUCTION IN A<br />

FRONTAL ZONE WITHIN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT<br />

16:30 Harvey, J. B.; Ryan, J. P.; Zhang, Y.: AUTONOMOUS<br />

DETECTION, LAGRANGIAN TRACKING, AND<br />

SAMPLING OF COASTAL UPWELLING FRONTS FOR<br />

TARGETED STUDIES OF PLANKTON ECOLOGY<br />

16:45 Norton, E. L.; Andrews, K. R.; Powell, B. S.; Goetze, E.: WHAT<br />

MECHANISMS UNDERLIE DISPERSAL BARRIERS FOR<br />

MARINE PLANKTON?<br />

17:00 Kimmerer, W. J.; Gross, E. S.; MacWilliams, M. L.: VERTICAL<br />

MOVEMENTS OF ESTUARINE ZOOPLANKTON CAUSE<br />

RETENTION AS DEMONSTRATED BY A PARTICLE-<br />

TRACKING MODEL<br />

17:15 Kavanaugh, M. T.; Hales, B. R.; Letelier, R. M.; Doney, S.;<br />

Davis, C. O.; Spitz, Y. H.; White, A. E.; Church, M. J.; Saraceno,<br />

M.: DYNAMIC SEASCAPES: AN OBJECTIVE AND<br />

HIERARCHICAL FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING<br />

PELAGIC SPATIOTEMPORAL VARIABILITY<br />

SS73 IMPACT OF SUBMESOSCALE PROCESSES ON UPPER OCEAN<br />

ECOLOGY, BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND CONTAMINANT DISPERSAL<br />

Chair(s): Margaret L. Estapa, mestapa@whoi.edu<br />

David A. Siegel, davey@eri.ucsb.edu<br />

Ken O. Buesseler, kbuesseler@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

16:00 Fields, E.; Siegel, D. A.; Nelson, N. B.; Estapa, M. L.; Lomas, M.<br />

W.; Sudre, J.; Garcon, V.: IMPACT OF SUBMESOSCALE<br />

PROCESSES ON UPPER OCEAN ECOLOGY,<br />

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND CONTAMINANT DISPERSAL<br />

16:15 Buesseler, K. O.; Estapa, M. L.; Siegel, D. A.; Nelson, N.; Lomas,<br />

M.; Stanley, R.: HIGH-RESOLUTION VARIABILITY IN<br />

PARTICLE PROPERTIES AND EXPORT ASSOCIATED<br />

WITH SUBMESOSCALE FRONTS<br />

16:30 Liang, J. H.; Deutsch, C. A.; McWilliams, J. C.; Frenzel, H.;<br />

Uchiyama, Y.: THE MODULATION OF PLANKTON<br />

ECOSYSTEM IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM<br />

BY SUBMESOSCALE PROCESSES<br />

16:45 Matrai, P. A.; Steele, M.; Swift, D.; Riser, S.; Johnson, K.:<br />

AUTONOMOUS OBSERVATIONS OF ARCTIC<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON ACTIVITY: AN ANNUAL CYCLE IN<br />

ICE-COVERED WATERS<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

17:00 Olson, E. M.; McGillicuddy, D. J.; Davis, C. S.; Dyhrman, S.<br />

T.; Waterbury, J. B.: PHYSICAL AGGREGATION OF<br />

BUOYANT TRICHODESMIUM SPP. COLONIES<br />

THROUGH EDDY/WIND INTERACTION:<br />

OBSERVATIONS AND MODELING<br />

17:15 Carlson, C. A.; Nelson, C.; Ewart, C.; Halewood, E. R.:<br />

SUBMESOCALE COMMUNITY DIFFERENTIATION<br />

AND POPULATION ENRICHMENT OF SARGASSO SEA<br />

BACTERIOPLANKTON IN A MODE-WATER EDDY<br />

17:30 Gyory, J.; Nemeth, R. S.; Kadison, E.; Cherubin, L. M.; Paris, C.<br />

B.: FINE-SCALE BIO-PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHIC<br />

PATTERNS AT A YELLOWFIN GROUPER SPAWNING<br />

AGGREGATION SITE<br />

17:45 Cuhel, R. L.; Aguilar, C.: BATHYMETRY-INDUCED<br />

HYDROGRAPHIC ANOMALIES PRODUCE DISTINCT<br />

BIOTIC DOMAINS UPSTREAM, ON, AND OVER A 9-KM<br />

SEAMOUNT-LIKE REEF STRUCTURE<br />

SS75 ROLE AND SIGNIFICANCE OF CHEMOSYNTHESIS IN THE OCEAN<br />

Chair(s): Stefan Sievert, ssievert@whoi.edu<br />

Karen G. Lloyd, klloyd@utk.edu<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

10:00 Stewart, F. J.: CHEMOSYNTHESIS IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN:<br />

EMERGING PERSPECTIVES FROM MARINE OXYGEN<br />

MINIMUM ZONES T<br />

10:30 Orcutt, B. N.; Sylvan, J. B.; Rogers, D. R.; Delaney, J.; Edwards, K. J.;<br />

Girguis, P.: PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN YOUNG AND OXIC<br />

OCEANIC CRUST<br />

10:45 Davis, R. E.; Kießlich, K.; Tebo, B. M.: COMMUNITY<br />

COMPOSITION AND CARBON FIXATION MECHANISMS<br />

IN IRON-CYCLING MICROBIAL MATS FROM<br />

HYDROTHERMAL VENTS AT LOIHI SEAMOUNT, HAWAII<br />

11:00 Sievert, S. M.; Stepanauskas, R.; Woyke, T.; Zhang, Y.; Musat, N.:<br />

SINGLE-CELL VIEW OF EPSILONPROTEOBACTERIA AT<br />

DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENTS<br />

11:15 Le Bris, N.; Contreira Pereira, L.; Yucel, M.; Mullineaux, S.; Sievert,<br />

M.: ABIOTIC CONTROLS ON CHEMOAUTOTROPHIC<br />

PRIMARY PRODUCERS AT DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL<br />

VENT INFERRED FROM IN SITU PHYSICO-CHEMICAL<br />

MONITORING<br />

11:30 Heinzelmann, S. M.; Villanueva, L.; Sinninghe Damsté, J. S.; Schouten,<br />

S.; van der Meer, M. T.: COMPOUND SPECIFIC HYDROGEN<br />

ISOTOPES AS A CULTURE INDEPENDENT METHOD TO<br />

IDENTIFY CORE METABOLISMS OF MICROORGANISMS<br />

IN SITU<br />

11:45 Marzocchi, U.; Revsbech, N. P.; Nielsen, L. P.; Risgaard-Petersen, N.:<br />

DISTANT ELECTRIC COUPLING BETWEEN NITRATE<br />

REDUCTION AND SULFIDE OXIDATION IN MARINE<br />

SEDIMENT<br />

SS81 GETTING A GRIP ON MICROBIAL CHANGE: THE FRESHWATER<br />

EARTH MICROBIOME PROJECT<br />

Chair(s): Stefan Bertilsson, stebe@ebc.uu.se<br />

Hans-Peter Grossart, hgrossart@igb-berlin.de<br />

Katherine McMahon, tmcmahon@engr.wisc.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

10:00 Newton, R. J.; Bootsma, M. J.; Morrison, H. G.; Sogin, M. L.;<br />

McLellan, S. L.: THE MICROBIAL FOOTPRINT OF A CITY:<br />

VIEWS FROM LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

58<br />

10:15 Székely, A. J.; Langenheder, S.: THE EFFECT OF DROUGHT-<br />

REWETTING CYCLES ON BACTERIAL METACOMMUNITIES<br />

10:30 Brown, T. R.; Scott, K. M.: FRESHWATER BENTHIC ALGAL<br />

RESPONSE TO ELEVATED CARBON DIOXIDE<br />

10:45 Muscarella, M. E.; Jones, S. E.; Lennon, J. T.: LIFE IN BROWN<br />

WATERS: AQUATIC BACTERIAL RESPONSES TO<br />

INCREASED TERRESTRIAL CARBON LOADING<br />

11:00 Mutschler, J. P.; Read, E. K.; McMahon, K. D.: BACTERIAL<br />

COMMUNITY DYNAMICS IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC LAKE<br />

BEFORE AND AFTER MANIPULATION OF THE LIGHT<br />

REGIME<br />

11:15 Jones, S. E.; Newton, R. J.; Cadkin, T. A.; McMahon, K. D.: SPATIAL AND<br />

TEMPORAL SCALES OF AQUATIC BACTERIAL BETADIVERSITY<br />

11:30 Button, D. K.; Robertson, B. R.; Gustafson, E.; Zaho, X.:<br />

TEMPERATURE AFFECTS ON BACTERIA IN HARDING<br />

LAKE AK: THEORY, IN SITU AND LABORATORY DATA,<br />

AND A MECHANISM-BASED COMPUTER MODEL<br />

11:45 Simmons, L. J.; Sandgren, C. D.; Berges, J. A.: ESTIMATING<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON TAXONOMIC COMPOSITION<br />

USING PIGMENT-BASED METHODS: ILLUSTRATING<br />

LIMITATIONS USING LAKE MICHIGAN DATASETS<br />

SS82 PROGRESS IN UNDERSTANDING NUTRIENT BUDGETS<br />

IN MARGINAL BASINS AND COASTAL SYSTEMS SUBJECT TO<br />

EUTROPHICATION AND CLIMATE WARMING<br />

Chair(s): Volker Bruchert, volker.bruchert@geo.su.se<br />

Barbara Deutsch, barbara.deutsch@itm.su.se<br />

Location: Room 357<br />

16:00 Murrell, M. C.; Lehrter, J. C.; Hagy, J. D.; Pauer, J.; Feist,<br />

T. F.: A CARBON BUDGET FOR THE LOUISIANA<br />

CONTINENTAL SHELF: ROLE OF WATER COLUMN<br />

PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND RESPIRATION<br />

16:15 Bernard, R. J.; Mortazavi, B.: SEDIMENT NITROGEN<br />

CYCLING ACROSS A SALINITY GRADIENT IN MOBILE<br />

BAY ALABAMA<br />

16:30 Glibert, P. M.; Wilkerson, F.; Dugdale, R.; Parker, A. E.: FOOD WEB<br />

AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL EFFECTS OF EUTROPHICATION<br />

AND CHANGES IN NITROGEN FORM AND<br />

STOICHIOMETRY IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY DELTA<br />

16:45 Sackmann, B. S.; Khangaonkar, T.; Long, W.; Mohamedali, T.; Roberts,<br />

M.: BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF GREATER PUGET SOUND<br />

AND THE SALISH SEA – WHAT DOES THE FUTURE<br />

HOLD: INSIGHTS FROM A COUPLED HYDRODYNAMIC<br />

AND WATER QUALITY MODEL<br />

17:00 Krembs, C.; Bos, J.; Albertson, S.; Sackmann, B.; Keyzers, M.;<br />

Friedenberg, L.; Ruffner, J.; Maloy, C.: INCREASING NUTRIENTS,<br />

A REPOSITIONING OF ALGAL BIOMASS AND<br />

LARGE NOCTILUCA BLOOMS IN PUGET SOUND. IS<br />

EUTROPHICATION FUELING THE MICROBIAL FOOD WEB?<br />

17:15 Dugdale, R.; Wilkerson, F.; Parker, A. E.: PROCESSING OF<br />

ANTHROPOGENIC NUTRIENTS WITHIN ESTUARIES<br />

AFFECTS NUTRIENT EXPORT TO ADJACENT COASTAL<br />

WATERS: A MODELING APPROACH<br />

17:30 Kelly, V. J.; Stets, E. G.: EVALUATING LONG-TERM NITRATE<br />

CONCENTRATIONS IN THE POTOMAC RIVER<br />

17:45 Wilkerson, F.; Glibert, P.; Parker, A. E.; Dugdale, R.;<br />

Blaser, S.; Pimenta, A.; Buck, C.: NUTRIENT RATIOS:<br />

UNDERSTANDING THE IMPORTANCE OF NITROGEN<br />

REDOX STATE AND N:P STOICHIOMETRY IN<br />

ESTUARIES SUBJECT TO CULTURAL EUTROPHICATION<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

TUESDAY, 19 FEBRUARY - POSTERS<br />

GS07 MULTIPLE STRESSOR PROBLEMS IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Rebecca North, rebeccalnorth@gmail.com<br />

Jeff Hudson, jeff.hudson@usask.ca<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

1 Moore, A.; DiBacco, C.: EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND<br />

SALINITY ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF NATIVE VERSUS<br />

TUNICATE-INVADED COMMUNITIES<br />

2 Stadmark, J.; Conley, D. J.: MANAGING MULTIPLE<br />

STRESSORS IN THE BALTIC SEA<br />

GS08A PLANKTON ECOLOGY - PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

Chair(s): Donald Redalje, Donald.Redalje@USM.edu<br />

Daniel Roelke, droelke@tamu.edu<br />

Ed Laws, edlaws@lsu.edu<br />

Chris Filstrup, Filstrup@iastate.edu<br />

Nasseer Idrisi, nidrisi@uvi.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

3 Vaillancourt, R. D.; Marra, J. F.; Lance, V. P.; Hargreaves, B.:<br />

NITROGEN AVAILABILITY AND LIGHT INTENSITY<br />

CONTROL PHOTOSYNTHETIC MAXIMUM QUANTUM<br />

YIELD IN THE STRATIFIED OCEAN<br />

4 Tirado-Alonso, A. E.; Perez, Z.; Laboy, L.; Fuente-Claudio, L.; Harris,<br />

L.: PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY AT BIOLUMINESCENT<br />

LAGOONS IN PUERTO RICO.<br />

5 Carrera Montalvo, A.; Nieves, M.; Vélez, S.; Sastre, M.: SHORT-<br />

TERM CHANGES IN PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY<br />

COMPOSITION IN LAGUNA GRANDE, PUERTO RICO, AT<br />

THE ONSET OF THE RAINY SEASON<br />

6 Kjellerup, S.; Lindeque, P.; Nielsen, T. G.: LIVE<br />

DISCRIMINATION OF CALANUS GLACIALIS AND C.<br />

FINMARCHICUS FEMALES – CAN WE SEPARATE SIBLING<br />

SPECIES?<br />

7 Heard, A. M.; Sickman, J. O.: CORRELATING ATMOSPHERIC<br />

NITROGEN DEPOSITION WITH NITROGEN AFFECTED<br />

LAKES AND NUTRIENT LIMITATION IN THE SIERRA<br />

NEVADA, CALIFORNIA<br />

8 Roncalli, V.; Lenz, P. H.; Christie, A. E.: IDENTIFICATION<br />

AND DEVELOPMENTAL PROFILING OF THE INSECT<br />

DIAPAUSE-ASSOCIATED PROTEIN COUCH POTATO<br />

(CPO) IN THE COPEPOD CALANUS FINMARCHICUS<br />

9 El-Tourky, S.; Hitchcock, G. L.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL<br />

PATTERNS IN MESOZOOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTIONS<br />

IN THE FLORIDA STRAITS<br />

10 Whittaker, K. A.; Rynearson, T. A.: DISTANT COUSINS?<br />

BASIN-SCALE GENETIC CONNECTIVITY AMONG<br />

POPULATIONS OF THE MARINE DIATOM<br />

THALASSIOSIRA ROTULA<br />

11 Walters, T. L.; Frazier, L. M.; Paffenhöfer, G. A.; Frischer, M. E.:<br />

MOLECULAR PROFILING OF ZOOPLANKTON GUT<br />

CONTENT USING PNA-PCR AND DENATURING<br />

HIGH PERFORMANCE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY<br />

(PNA-PCR-DHPLC)<br />

12 Fields, D. M.; Twining, B. S.; Browman, H. I.: COPEPODS<br />

INTESTINES: 10^21 MICROBIOREACTORS OF GLOBAL<br />

OCEAN PROCESSES<br />

59<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

13 Questel, J. M.; Hopcroft, R. R.; Blanco-Bercial, L.; Bucklin, A.:<br />

DISTRIBUTION OF PSEUDOCALANUS SPP. IN THE<br />

PACIFIC-ARCTIC AS REVEALED BY MOLECULAR<br />

MARKERS<br />

14 Cooper, J. T.; Geoff , S.; Wawrik, B.: TRANSCRIPTOMIC<br />

ANALYSIS OF SCRIPPSIELLA TROCHOIDEA UNDER<br />

NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS LIMITING<br />

CONDITIONS<br />

15 Vandenhecke, M. J.; Bastedo, J.; Huot, Y.; Campbell, D.:<br />

STRATEGIES OF PHOTOACCLIMATION OF MARINE<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON : « SIGMA-TYPE » OR « N-TYPE » ?<br />

16 Kordbacheh, A.; Walsh, E. J.: DO DIFFERENT POPULATIONS<br />

OF THE COSMOPOLITAN SPECIES EUCHLANIS<br />

DILATATA INTERBREED?<br />

18 Bayha, K. M.; Hernandez, F. H.; Graham, W. M.: INSIGHTS<br />

INTO SPECIES-SPECIFIC ICHTHYOPLANKTON<br />

DISTRIBUTION IN THE GULF OF MEXICO COASTAL<br />

ZONE EMPLOYING MOLECULAR SPECIES DIAGNOSTIC<br />

TOOLS<br />

19 Perry, E.; Craig, C.; Alves, C.; Miller-Sims, V.; Kimmerer, W.; Cohen,<br />

C. S.: STRIKING RANGE OF GENETIC VARIABILITY IN<br />

INTRODUCED SPECIES OF COPEPODS IN THE SAN<br />

FRANCISCO ESTUARY<br />

20 Wallace, J. R.; Jenkins, B. D.; Chappell, P. D.: PROFILING<br />

NUTRIENT LIMITATION IN THALASSIOSIROID<br />

DIATOMS VIA GLOBAL GENE EXPRESSION ANALYSIS<br />

SS01 ECOSYSTEM-BASED MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING FOR BETTER<br />

MANAGEMENT OF OUR OCEANS<br />

Chair(s): Tundi Agardy, tundiagardy@earthlink.net<br />

Steven Degraer, S.Degraer@MUMM.ac.be<br />

Angel Borja, aborja@azti.es<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

21 Scott, K. R.; Diez, C. E.: MARINE TURTLES NEST IN<br />

DYNAMIC ENVIRONMENTS IMPACTED IN THE<br />

NATURAL RESERVES OF MONA AND CULEBRA<br />

ISLANDS, PUERTO RICO<br />

22 Taylor, C. M.; Jones, B. T.; Grey, E. K.: CONNECTIVITY OF BLUE<br />

CRAB POPULATIONS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO USING GRAPH THEORY AND LAGRANGIAN<br />

PARTICLE-TRACKING<br />

23 Tobosa, L. R.; Waltz, G. T.; Wendt, D. E.; Walker, J.; Starr, R. M.:<br />

A COMPARISON OF ROCKFISH SPECIES DIVERSITY<br />

INSIDE AND OUTSIDE MPAS ALONG A LATITUDINAL<br />

GRADIENT ON THE CENTRAL CALIFORNIA COAST<br />

24 Tewes, E. E.; Stevens, B. G.: MARYLAND OFFSHORE WIND<br />

ENERGY SITING: INVESTIGATING EPIBENTHIC<br />

COMMUNITIES USING UNDERWATER VIDEO<br />

TECHNIQUES<br />

25 Vassilopoulou, V.; Mavrommati, G.; Panayotidis, P.; Kokkali, A.;<br />

Anagnostou, C.: HOW EFFECTIVE ARE MARINE SPATIAL<br />

PLANS? FRAMING KEY ISSUES USING STAKEHOLDERS’<br />

OPINION<br />

26 Warziniack, T.: MEASURING MARKET AND NONMARKET<br />

VALUES OF ECOSYSTEM IMPACTS: PRESENTING A<br />

GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL OF ECOSYSTEM<br />

SERVICES<br />

27 Lumb, L. M.; Gibeaut, J. C.: IDENTIFYING CRITICAL<br />

HABITAT NEEDS OF THE ARANSAS-WOOD BUFFALO<br />

POPULATION OF THE ENDANGERED WHOOPING<br />

CRANE,GRUS AMERICANA<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS02 CATAPULTS, FERRIES, AND BRIDGES: GETTING AQUATIC<br />

SCIENCE RESULTS TO POLICY AND MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Elizabeth Turner, elizabeth.turner@noaa.gov<br />

Dwight Trueblood, dwight.trueblood@noaa.gov<br />

Kalle Matso, kmatso@wildcats.unh.edu<br />

Felix Martinez, felix.martinez@noaa.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

28 Buchalski, C.; Palmer, S.; Buskey, E.; Madden, K.; Peterson, T. R.;<br />

Ragland, C.: BRIDGE ACROSS THE MISSION: USING<br />

A MEDIATED MODELING APPROACH FOR MESS<br />

MANAGEMENT AND MOVING FORWARD<br />

29 Smith, L. K.; Barber, M.; Duguay, L.; Whitley, L.: USING THE<br />

OCEAN LITERACY PRINCIPLES TO CONNECT INLAND<br />

AUDIENCES TO THE GLOBAL OCEAN<br />

30 Venn, C.; Hallen, C. P.: A MODEL FOR INCORPORATING<br />

EMBEDDED RESEARCH AND SERVICE LEARNING<br />

INTO AN UNDERGRADUATE COURSE IN AQUEOUS<br />

GEOCHEMISTRY<br />

SS04 <strong>ASLO</strong> STUDENT SYMPOSIUM<br />

Chair(s): Deidre Gibson, deidre.gibson@hamptonu.edu<br />

Benjamin Cuker, benjamin.cuker@hamptonu.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

31 Lopez, L. M.; Pangle, K. L.; Malinich, T. D.: SPATIAL PATTERNS<br />

IN THE ABUNDANCE OF THE SPINY WATER<br />

FLEA (BYTHOTREPHES LONGIMANUS) IN NORTHERN<br />

LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

32 Mostovaya, A.; Kritzberg, E.: DIFFERENCES IN P H<br />

TOLERANCE IN BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES FROM<br />

ENVIRONMENTS OF DIFFERING ALKALINITY,<br />

SALINITY AND P H<br />

33 Cira, E.; Wetz, M.; Kimmel, D.; Paerl, H.: BOTTOM-UP<br />

AND TOP-DOWN CONTROLS UPON ESTUARINE<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND COMMUNITY<br />

COMPOSITION<br />

34 Dean, H. A.; Smith, S. L.; Ozbay, G.: A STABLE ISOTOPIC AND<br />

FATTY ACID FOODWEB COMPARISON OF ATLANTIC<br />

MENHADEN (BREVOORTIA TYRANNUS) AND GULF<br />

MENHADEN (BREVOORTIA PATRONUS)<br />

35 Laureano-Rosario, A. E.; Olson, M. B.: PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

RESPONSES TO ELEVATED CO 2<br />

36 Conlon, L.; Cherubin, L.; Idrisi, N.: MODELING PASSIVE<br />

TRACER DISPERSAL IN THE UPPER OCEAN UNDER<br />

DIFFERENT HEAT FLUX REGIMES<br />

37 Carmon, B. N.; Benaka, L.; Patrick, W.; Lambert, D.:<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF A LIFE HISTORY DATABASE FOR<br />

NOAA FISHERIES<br />

38 Martinez, S.; Perez, B.; Ortiz, E.: SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF<br />

SHALLOW WATER CRABS (CRUSTACEA: DECAPODA) IN<br />

PUERTO RICO<br />

39 Wright, C. L.; Borde, A. B.; Diefenderfer, H. L.: GIS ANALYSIS OF<br />

HISTORICAL LAND COVER CHANGES IN THE LOWER<br />

COLUMBIA RIVER ESTUARY<br />

40 Gaynus, C. J.; Rubio, G.: HUMAN INTERACTIONS WITH<br />

COASTS AND OCEANS<br />

41 Parekh, A. D.; Graham, E. R.; Sanders, R. W.: TEMPORAL<br />

EFFECTS ON CARBONIC ANHYDRASE ACTIVITY AND<br />

PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN ZOOXANTHELLAE<br />

60<br />

42 Kenny, C. M.; Roumillat, W. A.; de Buron, I.: RED VENT<br />

IN THE AMERICAN EEL: DOES THE PARASITE<br />

ANGUILLICOLOIDES CRASSUS HAVE A ROLE?<br />

43 Caskey, S.; Wohl, E.; Dwire, K.; Merritt, D.; Schnackenberg, L.:<br />

DOWNSTREAM EFFECTS OF DIVERSION DAMS ON<br />

RIPARIAN VEGETATION IN THE ROUTT NATIONAL<br />

FOREST, COLORADO<br />

44 Cottingham, G. A.; Denson, M. R.; Brenkert, K.: FLUORESCEIN<br />

DYE AS A TOOL IN HEALTH ASSESSMENT<br />

45 Sainmont, J.; Andersen, K. H.; Visser, A. W.: OPTIMAL<br />

FORAGING AND DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATION IN A LIFE<br />

HISTORY MODEL<br />

46 Giltz, S. M.; Grey, E. K.; Taylor, C. M.: PELAGIC DISPERSAL OF<br />

THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO BLUE CRAB<br />

47 Ward, E.; Morrill, C.; Wagner, A.; Otto-Bliesner, B.; Rosenbloom, N.:<br />

HOW DID ONE LAKE DRAMATICALLY CHANGE THE<br />

EARTH’S CLIMATE 8,200 YEARS AGO? UNDERSTANDING<br />

THE 8.2KYR EVENT USING THE COMMUNITY CLIMATE<br />

SYSTEM MODEL VERSION 3<br />

48 George, M. C.; Halfman, J. D.; Cornwell, J. C.: A PRELIMINARY<br />

INVESTIGATION OF BACTERIAL RESPIRATION IN THE<br />

FINGER LAKES OF CENTRAL NEW YORK, USA.<br />

49 Appikonda, S. H.; Jangly, G. P.; Singh, G.; Buddhadev, K.; Patel,<br />

D.; Santiago-Vazquez, L. Z.: HOW STRESS AFFECTS THE<br />

TRANSCRIPTOME AND THE MICROBIOME OF THE<br />

OCTOCORAL PLEXAURA HOMOMALLA<br />

50 Jangly, G. P.; Appikonda, S. H.; Tinwala, Z.; Sagare, M.; Hastak, P.; Santiago-<br />

Vazquez, L. Z.: STRESS AND BACTERIAL INVOLVEMENT<br />

IN THE PRODUCTION OF PROSTAGLANDINS BY THE<br />

OCTOCORAL PLEXAURA HOMOMALLA<br />

51 Zinke, L. A.; St. Peter, R. C.; Reese, B. K.; Mills, H. J.; IODP<br />

Expedition 336 Scientists: A QUANTITATIVE RNA<br />

APPROACH TO MARINE DEEP SUBSURFACE MICROBIAL<br />

COMMUNITY CHARACTERIZATION<br />

52 Garza, J. J.; Ignacio, D. P.; McCarthy, A.; Read, B. A.:<br />

CHARACTERIZING THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION<br />

OF CARBONIC ANHYDRASE ISOZYMES IN E. HUXLEYI<br />

53 Villarosa Garcia, M.: MODELING THE EFFECT OF<br />

COCCOLITH SHAPE ON COCCOLITHOPHORE SINKING<br />

RATES, LIGHT ACQUISITION AND PLATE DISSOLUTION<br />

54 Chen, H.; Stubbins, A.; Mopper, K.; Perdue, E. M.; Green, N. W.;<br />

Hatcher, P.: MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION OF DOM<br />

BY ULTRAHIGH RESOLUTION MASS SPECTROMETRY<br />

FROM VARIOUS OCEANIC WATER MASSES ISOLATED<br />

BY REVERSE OSMOSIS-ELECTRODIALYSIS<br />

55 Sarno, A. F.; Zhang, X.; Young, G.; Hadaegh, A.; Gonzalez, K.;<br />

Wang, X.; Moberly, J.; Read, B. A.: CHARACTERIZING<br />

THE SELENOPROTEOME OF THE MARINE<br />

COCOLITHOPHORE EMILIANIA HUXLEYI<br />

SS06 NEW INSIGHTS INTO MICROBIAL ECOLOGY<br />

OF HYPERSALINE HABITATS<br />

Chair(s): Virginia Edgcomb, vedgcomb@whoi.edu<br />

Joan Bernhard, jbernhard@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

56 Nevarez, N.; Corman, J.; Lee, Z.; Souza, V.; Elser, J. J.:<br />

NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT RESPONSE OF MICROBIAL<br />

PHOTOTROPHS AND HETEROTROPHS IN A DESERT<br />

POND IN CUATRO CINNEGAS, MEXICO<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

57 Nicholson, B. E.; Kelley, C. A.; Detweiler, A. M.; Bebout, B. M.;<br />

Mauney, M. T.; Tazaz, A. M.; Chanton, J. P.; Davila, A. F.: STABLE<br />

CARBON ISOTOPES AND RATES OF METHANE<br />

PRODUCED IN THE HYPERSALINE ENVIRONMENTS OF<br />

THE ATACAMA DESERT, CHILE AND BAJA CALIFORNIA<br />

SUR, MEXICO<br />

58 Aiello, I.; Lazar, C. S.; Goldhammer, T.; Schröder, J.; Elvert, M.; Heuer,<br />

V.; Teske, A. P.; Hinrichs, K.: UNTANGLING MICROBIAL<br />

AND GEOCHEMICAL VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION IN<br />

THE URANIA BASIN AND MUD VOLCANO, EASTERN<br />

MEDITERRANEAN SEA<br />

SS10 SHEDDING LIGHT ON THE ‘BLACK BOX’ OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC NITROGEN: INSIGHTS INTO THE SOURCES, SINKS,<br />

CYCLING, AND COMPOSITION OF AQUATIC DON<br />

Chair(s): Katye E. Altieri, kaltieri@princeton.edu<br />

Rachel E. Sipler, sipler@vims.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

59 Altieri, K. E.; Hastings, M. G.; Peters, A.; Sigman, D. M.: SOURCES<br />

AND VARIABILITY OF ORGANIC NITROGEN IN MARINE<br />

RAINWATER INVESTIGATED USING ULTRA-HIGH<br />

RESOLUTION FT-ICR-MS, CLUSTER ANALYSIS, AND N<br />

ISOTOPES<br />

SS11 RESEARCH EXPERIENCES OF UNDERGRADUATES<br />

IN AQUATIC SCIENCES<br />

Chair(s): Russell Cuhel, rcuhel@uwm.edu<br />

Carmen Aguilar, aguilar@uwm.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

60 Benolkin, A.; Dinnel, P.: OUTPLANTING SUCCESS AND<br />

WEANING DIET OF PINTO ABALONE<br />

61 Bienlien, L. M.; Carnegie, R.: MOLECULAR ANALYSIS<br />

OF PERKINSUS MARINUSINFECTION ACQUISITION<br />

IN CRASSOSTREA VIRGINICA<br />

62 Jensen, A.; Chesney, E.: DEVELOPMENT OF FISH TRAPS<br />

FOR THE CAPTURE OF AGE 0 JUVENILE SNAPPERS:<br />

TESTING DESIGN PERFORMANCE AND CAPTURE<br />

EFFICIENCY<br />

63 Knauss, C.; Hiller, K.; Kearns, P.; Feinman, S.; Bowen, J.:<br />

CHARACTERIZING MICROBIAL DENITRIFICATION<br />

AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES UP-GRADIENT,<br />

WITHIN, AND DOWN-GRADIENT FROM A BRACKISH<br />

NITREX PERMEABLE REACTIVE BARRIER<br />

64 Lemanski, B. C.; Penczykowski, R. M.; Sieg, R. D.; Duffy, M.<br />

A.: POOR FOOD QUALITY INCREASES DISEASE<br />

IN ZOOPLANKTON: AN EXPERIMENTAL AND<br />

MECHANISTIC DETERMINATION<br />

65 McLean, E.; Hernandez, F.: JUVENILE FISH FEEDING<br />

DYNAMICS WITHIN PELAGIC SARGASSUM HABITATS<br />

66 Mendez, A. J.; Würsig, B.; Orbach, D.: DOLPHIN MATING<br />

BEHAVIORS: DUSKY DOLPHIN (LAGENORHYCHUS<br />

OBSCURUS) AND BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN (TURSIOPS<br />

TRUNCATUS) COMPARISONS<br />

67 Schoville, J.; Lovko, V.; Kirkpatrick, G.: POTENTIAL<br />

BIOCONTROL OF KARENIA BREVIS BLOOMS<br />

VIA AMOEBOPHYRA SP.<br />

68 Stillman, K.; Schultz, T.: A TRANSCRIPTOMIC APPROACH<br />

TO CIRCATIDAL RHYTHMS<br />

61<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

69 Thompson, K. A.; Curran, M. C.: EFFECT OF PARASITIC<br />

TREMATODESMICROPHALLUS TURGIDUS ON<br />

PREDATION OF GRASS SHRIMP PALAEMONETES<br />

PUGIOBY MUMMICHOGS FUNDULUS HETEROCLITUS<br />

70 Brannon, E. Q.; Kroeger, K.; Ganju, N.; Pohlman, J.; Green,<br />

A.: INVESTIGATING TIME VARIATIONS IN DOC<br />

CONCENTRATIONS FOR SALT MARSH CARBON<br />

BUDGETS: TESTING CONTINUOUS CDOM<br />

MEASUREMENTS AS A PROXY FOR DOC<br />

71 Cherry, M. L.; Guo, L.: VARIATIONS IN THE<br />

CONCENTRATION AND COMPOSITION OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

72 Gagne-Maynard, W.; York, J.; Ullman, W.: DETERMINATION<br />

OF NUTRIENT SOURCES AND SINKS WITHIN THE<br />

MURDERKILL ESTUARY USING IN-SITU CHEMICAL<br />

ANALYSIS AND NITRATE ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION<br />

73 O’Dell, M. J.; Villareal, T.: PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF<br />

CRUDE OIL ON DIATOM-DIAZOTROPH ASSOCIATIONS<br />

74 Poehls, A.; Fields, D.; Balch, B.; Shema, S.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN<br />

ACIDIFICATION ON GROWTH RATE AND BIOMASS OF<br />

THE COCCOLITHOPHORE PLEUROCHRYSIS<br />

75 Warren, J. K.; McDonald, N.: BERMUDA BIO-OPTICS<br />

PROJECT: QUANTIFYING CHROMOPHORIC<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AND LIGNIN<br />

PHENOLS IN THE OPEN OCEAN<br />

76 Rosa, J.; Pennington, P. L.: EVALUATION OF RECENT<br />

MODIFICATIONS TO THE MODULAR ESTUARINE<br />

MESOCOSM<br />

77 Gogan, N.; Abbott, D.; Breger, D.: WERE THE DENSITY<br />

OFFSETS IN HUDSON RIVER SEDIMENT CORES<br />

CAUSED BY TSUNAMI, STORM SURGE, OR RIVER<br />

FLOOD?<br />

78 Green, B.; Palinkas, C.: SEDIMENTATION IN THE LOWER<br />

POTOMAC RIVER AND ITS INFLUENCE ON NITROGEN<br />

BURIAL<br />

79 Danielson, R.; Batchelder, H.; Spitz, Y.: HOW WELL DO<br />

THE ECOLOGICAL VARIABLES OF A BIOPHYSICAL<br />

MODEL OF THE OREGON SHELF AGREE WITH<br />

OBSERVATIONAL DATA?<br />

80 Grimes, D.; Talley, L.: CHARACTERIZING STRATIFICATION<br />

IN THE ARABIAN SEA<br />

81 Vogel, K. S.; Grothues, T.: AUTOMATIC FISH DETECTION BY<br />

AREA DISTRIBUTION AND SYMMETRY IN SIDE SCAN<br />

SONAR IMAGES<br />

82 Schaal, S. M.; Xie, Y.; Yankey, F.; Zeidler, T.; Aguilar, C.; Cuhel,<br />

R.; Lauko, I.; Pinter, G.: CONSEQUENCES OF DREISSENA<br />

BUGENSIS INVASION AND CORRELATION BETWEEN<br />

LIGHT ATTENUATION AND TRANSMISSION IN LAKE<br />

MICHIGAN<br />

83 Akintoye, R.; Wiggin, J.: THE USE OF MODELING TO<br />

PREDICT WATER QUALITY REALTED BEACH CLOSURES<br />

BASED ON ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS<br />

84 Bitterwolf, S. A.; Pineda, J.; Starczak, V.: ABUNDANCE AND<br />

VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF SQUALUS ACANTHIAS,<br />

SPINY DOGFISH, AT STELLWAGEN BANK: DAILY AND<br />

INTERANNUAL PATTERNS FROM 2008 TO 2012<br />

85 Chamberlin, D. W.; Eckert, G. L.; Tamone, S. L.: THE DYNAMICS<br />

OF A HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM AND PARALYTIC<br />

SHELLFISH TOXINS IN JUNEAU, ALASKA<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

86 DeLand, S. E.; Yang, S.: MESOGRAZER ABUNDANCE<br />

AND EPIPHYTIC BIOMASS AND THEIR EFFECTS ON<br />

EELGRASS GROWTH RATES<br />

87 Gesier, H.; de Sieyes, N.; Boehm, A.; Santoro, A.: DISTRIBUTION<br />

OF AMMONIA-OXIDIZING ARCHAEA AND BACTERIA<br />

ALONG PHYSIOCHEMICAL GRADIENTS AT<br />

SUBTERRANEAN ESTUARIES IN CALIFORNIA AND<br />

MARYLAND<br />

88 Kelly, L.; Sneed, J.; Engene, N.; Meickle, T.; Demet, K. L.; Paul, V.:<br />

UNDERSTANDING THE ECOLOGY AND PHYLOGENY<br />

OF BLOOM FORMING CYANOBACTERIA IN THE INDIAN<br />

RIVER LAGOON, FLORIDA<br />

89 Mendez, C.; Liu, K. L.; Pierson, J. J.: EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA<br />

ON COPEPOD PREDATION BY THE CTENOPHORE,<br />

MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI, IN CHEDAPEAKE BAY<br />

90 Morse, M. L.; Shurin, J.; Noto, A.: INFLUENCE OF TIDAL<br />

ELEVATION ON MACROINVERTEBRATE DISTRIBUTION<br />

IN SALT MARSHES OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA<br />

91 Pérez-Pérez, N. M.; Wolfer, H.; Johnson , A. K.: EFFECTS OF<br />

HYPOXIA ON THE IMMUNE SYSTEM OF ATLANTIC<br />

CROAKER (MICROPOGONIAS UNDULATUS) IN THE<br />

CHESAPEAKE BAY, USA<br />

92 Schultz, D. T.; Deheyn, D. D.: FERROUS IRON’S ROLE IN THE<br />

BIOLUMINESCENCE OF CHAETOPTERUS VARIOPEDATUS<br />

93 Sokoly, D. L.; DeWitt, T. H.: IS NUTRIENT UPTAKE BY<br />

PACIFIC NW SALT MARSHES N- OR P- LIMITED?<br />

94 White, J. E.; Arnott, S. A.: AGING AMERICAN EELS<br />

(ANGUILLA ROSTRATA) USING MARGINAL<br />

INCREMENT ANALYSIS<br />

95 Cappio, L.; Carver Dionne, L.; Cummings, E. G.; George, M.; Guay,<br />

K.; Gunn, P. J.; Koehlein, K.; Stewart, M.; Abbott, A. N.; Curtin,<br />

T. M.: HISTORIC CHANGES IN MERCURY FLUXES TO<br />

THREE NEW YORK FINGER LAKES (USA)<br />

96 DePass, C. C.; Lam, P. J.; Auro, M. E.: CONTRASTING<br />

BIOGENIC SILICA CONCENTRATIONS IN THE NORTH<br />

AND SOUTH ATLANTIC<br />

97 Downer, M. M.; Pal, S.; Benitez-Nelson, C.; Bennett, M.:<br />

PHOSPHORUS DISTRIBUTIONS IN THE CHUKCHI SEA<br />

98 Gates, C.; Kustka , A. B.: THE POTENTIAL ROLES OF<br />

TRICHODESMIUM FERRITIN IN FE STORAGE AND<br />

BUFFERING INTRACELLULAR FE DURING DIEL<br />

NITROGENASE CYCLING<br />

99 Marti, A. M.; Marton, J. M.; Roberts, B. J.: EFFECTS OF VARYING<br />

SALINITY ON GREENHOUSE GAS PRODUCTION FROM<br />

OILED AND UNOILED LOUISIANA SALT MARSH SOILS<br />

100 Tapscott, C.; Williams, W.: EVALUATING THE NUTRIENT<br />

AND MAJOR ANION COMPOSITION OF SUBURBAN<br />

AND FORESTED CATCHMENT STREAMS IN THE<br />

COASTAL PLAIN OF CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

101 Walker, M.; Jeremiason, J.: DETERMINATION OF<br />

METHYLMERCURY-DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

BINDING CONSTANTS BY COMPETITIVE LIGAND<br />

EXCHANGE-SOLID PHASE EXTRACTION<br />

102 Economy, L. M.; Colbert, S. L.: SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER<br />

DISCHARGE AND CARBON DIOXIDE DYNAMICS AT<br />

KIHOLO BAY, HI<br />

62<br />

103 Gunn, P. J.; Curtin, T. M.; Finkelstein, D. B.: CALIBRATING<br />

STABLE ISOTOPIC PALEOCLIMATE INDICATORS<br />

THROUGH A HIGH-RESOLUTION INVESTIGATION OF<br />

MODERN SEDIMENTATION IN SENECA LAKE, NEW<br />

YORK, USA<br />

104 DiFalco, S.; Gurbisz, C.; Kemp, M.: EFFECTS OF EXTREME<br />

WEATHER ON A LARGE SUBMERSED PLANT BED IN<br />

CHESAPEAKE BAY: FIELD OBSERVATIONS<br />

SS12 COOPERATION - THE KEY TO SUCCESS: SYMBIOSES<br />

IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Hans-Peter Grossart, hgrossart@igb-berlin.de<br />

Kam W. Tang, kamtang@vims.edu<br />

Claudia Dziallas, cdziallas@bio.ku.dk<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

105 Tang, K. W.; Bickel, S. L.; Grossart, H. P.: CILIATE EPIBIONTS<br />

ASSOCIATED WITH CRUSTACEAN ZOOPLANKTON<br />

IN GERMAN LAKES: DISTRIBUTION, MOTILITY, AND<br />

BACTERIVORY<br />

106 Zavala Lopez , A.; Hogue, C.: THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE<br />

ON THE SURVIVAL AND INFECTIVITY OF THREE<br />

COMMON TREMATODE SPECIES INFECTING THE<br />

CALIFORNIA HORN SNAIL.<br />

107 Shoemaker, K. M.; Moisander, P. H.: MICROBIAL DIVERSITY IN<br />

ASSOCIATION WITH ZOOPLANKTON IN THE NORTH<br />

ATLANTIC SUB -TROPICAL GYRE<br />

SS14 NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVEN RESPONSES OF<br />

MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN THE OCEAN: EFFECTS ON THE<br />

BIOLOGICAL AND MICROBIAL CARBON PUMPS<br />

Chair(s): Louis Legendre, legendre@obs-vlfr.fr<br />

M. Robin Anderson, m.robin.anderson@dfo-mpo.gc.ca<br />

Richard B. Rivkin, rrivkin@mun.ca<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

108 Akinwole, P. O.; Kaplan, L. A.; Kan, J.; Findlay, R. H.: SPATIAL<br />

SCALING OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN<br />

TWO FLUVIAL NETWORKS<br />

109 Ogawa, H.; Uchimiya, M.; Fukuda, H.: DECOMPOSITION<br />

CHARACTERISTICS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

IN SURFACE WATERS OF THE WESTERN NORTH<br />

PACIFIC<br />

110 Staryk, C. J.; Mulholland, M. R.; Bernhardt, P.: SEASONAL<br />

VARIABILITY OF NET COMMUNITY METABOLISM ON<br />

THE EASTERN NORTH AMERICAN CONTINENTAL<br />

SHELF (MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT, GEORGES BANK, AND<br />

GULF OF MAINE)<br />

SS17 PREDICTING DRIVERS AND MANAGEMENT PRACTICES<br />

IN LARGE RIVERS AND DELTAS: THE USGS DELTA RESEARCH<br />

AND GLOBAL OBSERVATION NETWORK (DRAGON)<br />

Chair(s): Matthew E. Andersen, mandersen@usgs.gov<br />

D. Phil Turnipseed, pturnip@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

111 Remple, K. L.; Smythe, W. F.; Baptista, A.: GEOSCIENCE<br />

EDUCATION IN SOUTHEAST ALASKA: COMBINING<br />

WESTERN SCIENCE WITH TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL<br />

KNOWLEDGE PROMOTES INTEREST IN STEM FIELDS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS21 OPTICAL SIGNATURES OF THE GLOBAL CARBON CYCLE:<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF THE SOURCES, SINKS AND CHEMISTRY OF<br />

CDOM AND FDOM<br />

Chair(s): Aron Stubbins, aron.stubbins@skio.usg.edu<br />

Natasha McDonald, natasha.mcdonald@bios.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

112 Huang, Q.; Xiao, Y.; Cai, M.; Wang, F.; Lu, Z.: SPATIAL<br />

VARIABILITY IN COMPOSITION AND SOURCES OF<br />

SEDIMENTARY DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN<br />

ARCTIC KONGSFJORDEN<br />

113 Nezlin, N. P.; Gully , J. R.; Mengel, M. J.; Robertson, G. L.; Steele,<br />

A.; Weisberg, S. B.: CDOM AS A TRACER OF EFFLUENT<br />

PLUMES FOR WATER QUALITY COMPLIANCE<br />

ASSESSMENT AROUND SUBMERGED OCEAN<br />

OUTFALLS<br />

114 Smith, Z. P.; Bowman, M. M.; Raleigh, M.; Coe, J. D.; Hartnett,<br />

H. E.: DISTRIBUTION AND FLUORESCENCE<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

CARBON IN THE COLORADO RIVER<br />

115 Ya, C.; Anderson, W.; Jaffe, R.: APPLICATION OF STABLE<br />

CARBON ISOTOPES AND OPTICAL PROPERTIES IN<br />

THE ASSESSMENT OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

SOURCES IN A SUBTROPICAL ESTUARY<br />

116 Brym, A. J.; Ziervogel, K.; Paerl, H. W.; Montgomery , M. T.; Osburn,<br />

C. L.: CHARACTERIZATION OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC<br />

MATTER IN THREE ESTUARIES USING PARALLEL<br />

FACTOR ANALYSIS (PARAFAC)<br />

117 Bowman, M. M.; Raleigh, L. M.; Smith, Z. P.; Coe, J. D.; Hartnett,<br />

H. E.: PHOTOREACTIVITY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

CARBON IN THE COLORADO RIVER<br />

118 Cao, F.; William, W. L.: A NEW ALGORITHM TO RETRIEVE<br />

COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM)<br />

ABSORBANCE SPECTRA IN THE UV FROM OCEAN<br />

COLOR<br />

119 Wood, C. L.; Frey, K. E.; Mann, J. P.; Spencer, R. G.:<br />

PHOTOREACTIVITY OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER ASSOCIATED WITH SEA ICE MELT<br />

IN THE CHUKCHI AND BEAUFORT SEAS<br />

120 D’Sa, E. J.; Goes, J. I.; Naik, P.; Mouw, C. B.; Gomes, H. R.:<br />

SUMMER CDOM CHARACTERISTICS IN THE<br />

SOUTHEASTERN BERING SEA USING EXCITATION-<br />

EMISSION MATRIX FLUORESCENCE AND PARAFAC<br />

ANALYSIS<br />

SS23 DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER DYNAMICS: TOWARDS A<br />

MOLECULAR-LEVEL UNDERSTANDING<br />

Chair(s): Aron Stubbins, aron.stubbins@skio.usg.edu<br />

Thorsten Dittmar, tdittmar@mpi-bremen.de<br />

Jutta Niggemann, jniggema@mpi-bremen.de<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

121 Sun, L.; Spencer, R. G.; Dyda, R. Y.; Hernes, P. J.; Mopper, K.:<br />

A SIMPLIFIED CUO OXIDATION METHOD FOR<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF LIGNIN PHENOLICS IN<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLES<br />

63<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

122 Mesfioui, R.; Hatcher, P. G.: CHEMICAL<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF ANTHROPOGENIC<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN IN THE YORK RIVER<br />

DETERMINED FROM FOURIER TRANSFORM ION<br />

CYCLOTRON MASS SPECTROMETRY<br />

123 Witt, M.: COMPARISON OF LASER DESORPTION/<br />

IONIZATION AND ELECTROSPRAY IONIZATION OF<br />

NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER<br />

124 Xu, C.; Chen, H.; Sugiyama, Y.; Zhang, S.; LI, H.; Ho, Y.; Kaplan, D.<br />

I.; Schwehr, K. A.; Hatcher, P. G.; Santschi, P. H.: MOLECULAR<br />

LEVEL INVESTIGATION OF THE NATURAL ORGANIC<br />

MATTER AS RADIOIODINE SINK AND SOURCE IN THE<br />

WETLAND AREA OF THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE BY<br />

FT-ICR-MS<br />

125 Becker, J. W.; DeLong, E. F.; Repeta, D. J.; Rappé, M. S.; Grote, J.;<br />

Berube, P. M.; Chisholm, S. W.: RESPONSE OF CULTURED<br />

HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIOPLANKTON STRAINS TO<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON-DERIVED DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER ADDITIONS<br />

126 Ball, G. I.; Goldberg, S. J.; Simpson, S. J.; Masoom, H.; Soong, R.;<br />

Aluwihare, L. I.: CHEMICAL HETEROGENEITY OF CUO-<br />

OXIDIZED LACUSTRINE AND RIVERINE DOM PROBED<br />

BY COMPREHENSIVE GCGGC TIME-OF-FLIGHT MASS<br />

SPECTROMETRY (GCGGC-TOF-MS)<br />

127 Arakawa, N. K.; Aluwihare, L. I.: COMPREHENSIVE REDUCTION<br />

OF OXYGEN-CONTAINING FUNCTIONAL GROUPS TO<br />

IDENTIFY RDOM STRUCTURE<br />

128 Nyarko, A. A.; Chen, N.; Duan, S.: CHARACTERIZATION OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN MARYLAND COASTAL<br />

BAY USING FLUORESCENCE SPECTROSCOPY<br />

SS26 COCCOLITHOPHORES: BIOGEOCHEMICAL IMPACTS AND<br />

RESPONSE TO A CHANGING OCEAN<br />

Chair(s): William M. Balch, bbalch@bigelow.org<br />

Nicholas R. Bates, nick.bates@bios.edu<br />

Phoebe J. Lam, pjlam@whoi.edu<br />

Benjamin S. Twining, btwining@bigelow.org<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

129 Twining, B. S.; Ruacho, A.; Honisch, B.; Rauschenberg, S.: TRENDS<br />

IN METAL LIMITATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON AND<br />

COCCOLITHOPHORES ALONG THE “GREAT CALCITE<br />

BELT” IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

130 Koeve, W.; Oschlies, A.: DETECTING CACO3 DISSOLUTION<br />

IN THE INTERIOR OF THE OCEAN<br />

131 Nielsdóttir, M. C.; Honisch, B. L.; Rauschenberg, S.; Vogt, S.;<br />

Twining, B. S.: DISSOLVED IRON REQUIREMENTS AND<br />

ELEMENTAL QUOTAS OF EMILIANIA HUXLEYISTRAINS<br />

ISOLATED FROM COASTAL AND OCEANIC<br />

ENVIRONMENTS<br />

132 Fredricks, H. F.; Fulton, J. M.; Dyhrman, S. T.; Van Mooy, B. A.:<br />

THE FLEXIBLE LIPIDOME OF EMILIANIA HUXLEYI;<br />

THE CAPACITY TO COPE WITH MULTIPLE NUTRIENT<br />

STRESSES<br />

133 Martinez, E. A.; Robert, M.; Bernard, A.; Bishop, J. K.: IN-SITU<br />

OBSERVATIONS OF PARTICULATE INORGANIC<br />

CARBON IN THE SUBARCTIC NORTH PACIFIC<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS27 SURFACE AND SUBSURFACE FLUXES ACROSS THE LAND-<br />

OCEAN INTERFACE OF LARGE RIVERS<br />

Chair(s): Mead A. Allison, mallison@mail.utexas.edu<br />

Karen H. Johannesson , kjohanne@tulane.edu<br />

Alexander S. Kolker, akolker@lumcon.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

134 Reed, M.; Brock, L.; Keppler, C.; Kacenas, S.; Hogan, S.; Greenfield,<br />

D.: THE INFLUENCE OF NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS<br />

ON SEASONAL PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS AND<br />

COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN FOUR COASTAL<br />

SOUTH CAROLINA SYSTEMS<br />

135 Ramatchandirane, C. G.; Kolker, A. S.; Argow, B. A.; Donnelly, J.<br />

P.; Fagherazzi, S.; Giosan, L.; Priestas, A. M.: CHENIER PLAIN<br />

REACTIVATION IN SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA LEADS<br />

TO RECENT MARSH DEVELOPMENT VIA FLUVIAL AND<br />

COASTAL PROCESSES<br />

136 Beddick, Jr., D. L.; Devereux, R.; Jarvis, B.; Lehrter, J. C.; Yates, D. F.:<br />

MISSISSIPPI AND ATCHAFALAYA RIVER INFLUENCE ON<br />

SEDIMENT POREWATER CHEMISTRY<br />

137 Jarvis, B. M.; Lehrter, J. C.; Devereux, R.; Beddick, D. L.; Yates, D. F.:<br />

SOURCES AND DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANIC MATTER<br />

IN SEDIMENTS OF THE LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL<br />

SHELF<br />

138 Ameen, A.; Kolker, A. S.; Taylor, C. M.: ECOGEOMORPHOLOGY<br />

OF DEVELOPING WETLANDS NEAR A MISSISSIPPI RIVER<br />

SEDIMENT DIVERSION<br />

139 Rich, M. W.; Roberts, B. J.: WATER COLUMN RESPIRATION<br />

AND NUTRIENT UPTAKE LINKAGES ALONG THE<br />

CONTINUUM FROM THE LOWER ATCHAFALAYA RIVER<br />

TO THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

140 Chambers, C. R.; Kolker, A. S.; Roberts, B. J.: SEDIMENT<br />

DYNAMICS AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING IN A<br />

DEVELOPING DELTAIC SYSTEM: UNDERSTANDING<br />

LAND BUILDING AND HABITAT QUALITY IN A RIVER<br />

DIVERSION.<br />

141 Montes-Hugo, M. A.; Mohammadpour, G.: REMOTE SENSING<br />

OF SPM IN THE ST LAWRENCE ESTUARY: BUDGET<br />

UNCERTAINTIES DUE TO OPTICALLY-SHALLOW<br />

WATERS<br />

SS29 OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES OF TEACHING INTRODUC-<br />

TORY OCEANOGRAPHY TO UNDERGRADUATES<br />

Chair(s): Allison Beauregard, beaurega@nwfsc.edu<br />

Jan Hodder, jhodder@uoregon.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

142 Burns, K. P.; Gibson, D. M.: STUDENTS, EDUCATORS,<br />

RESEARCHERS AND THE COMMUNITY UNITE!<br />

143 Wenzel, D. B.: DEVELOPING FIELD STUDIES IN<br />

OCEANOGRAPHY TO ENGAGE THE GEN-ED<br />

COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENT<br />

144 Jones, M. H.; St. John, K. E.; Leckie, R. M.; Krissek, L.:<br />

ENHANCING SCIENTIFIC AND OCEAN LITERACY IN<br />

UNDERGRADUATE OCEANOGRAPHY COURSES: USING<br />

SCIENTIFIC OCEAN DRILLING DATA TO CONVEY<br />

“HOW WE KNOW” WHAT WE KNOW<br />

64<br />

145 Cetrulo, B. B.; Capers, J. W.; Tyler III, W. A.; Cook, S. B.:<br />

MOVING FROM BREADTH TO DEPTH: PEDAGOGICAL<br />

STRATEGIES THAT ENHANCE STUDENT LEARNING<br />

IN UNDERGRADUATE OCEANOGRAPHY COURSES.<br />

146 Heal, K. R.: EMBRACING SOCIAL MEDIA TO TEACH<br />

INTRODUCTORY OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

147 Jaeger, S. A.: ASSESSING OCEAN LITERACY IN<br />

2-YEAR COLLEGES: PROVIDING A BASELINE IN AN<br />

INTRODUCTORY COURSE<br />

148 Cheung, I. S.: A FIRST YEAR EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION:<br />

WEEKEND EXPERIENTIAL COURSES IN MARINE<br />

SCIENCE<br />

149 Kveven, A. L.: THE OCEAN RESEARCH COLLEGE<br />

ACADEMY (ORCA): COMBINING OCEAN SCIENCE<br />

WITH FIELD RESEARCH AS THE INTERDISCIPLINARY<br />

CORNERSTONE FOR A STEM EARLY COLLEGE.<br />

150 Gordon, E. S.: IMPLEMENTATION OF “THE MATH YOU<br />

NEED, WHEN YOU NEED IT” TO SUPPORT STUDENT<br />

LEARNING IN INTRODUCTORY OCEANOGRAPHY<br />

151 Greenaway, A. M.: A SCHOOL RIVER WATCH WATER<br />

QUALITY <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

SS30 BIOLOGICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL RESPONSES TO<br />

HUMAN IMPACTS AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE<br />

Chair(s): Katja Fennel, katja.fennel@dal.ca<br />

Wally Fulweiler, rwf@bu.edu<br />

Roxane Maranger, r.maranger@umontreal.ca<br />

John Lehrter, lehrter.john@epa.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

152 Meléndez, M.; Corredor, J. E.; Nesterenko , P.; Morell, J. M.: DIRECT<br />

CHROMATOGRAPHIC SEPARATION OF CALCIUM AND<br />

MAGNESIUM IN SEDIMENT POREWATERS<br />

153 Estrella-Riollano, A. I.; Santos-Flores, C. J.: ECOLOGY OF THE<br />

ASIAN CLAM, CORBICULA FLUMINEA (MLLLER), AND<br />

ITS IMPACT ON THE BENTHIC INVERTEBRATES IN<br />

GUAJATACA AND LA PLATA RESERVOIRS, PUERTO RICO<br />

154 Gordon, O. S.; Menvielle, E.; Limburg, K.: FISH AS<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL REFLECTIONS OF WATER<br />

QUALITY AND LAND-USE IN THE ONONDAGA CREEK<br />

WATERSHED<br />

155 Och, L. M.; Müller, B.; Schmid, M.: FORMATION AND<br />

BURIAL OF FE/MN ACCUMULATIONS IN LAKE BAIKAL<br />

SEDIMENTS: A MODELLING APPROACH<br />

156 Rao, A. M.; Malkin, S.; Meysman, F. J.: THE IMPACT OF<br />

MACROFAUNA ON CALCIUM CARBONATE CYCLING IN<br />

COASTAL SEDIMENTS<br />

157 Ortiz-González, I. C.; Estrella-Riollano, A. I.; Santos-Flores, C. J.:<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF BENTHIC GASTROPODS<br />

IN TWO SUBTROPICAL MAN-MADE RESERVOIRS<br />

(GUAJATACA AND LA PLATA) IN PUERTO RICO<br />

158 Washburn, T.; Rhodes, A.; Montagna, P.: DEEP SEA<br />

POLYCHAETES AND CRUSTACEANS AND THE<br />

DEEPWATER HORIZON BLOWOUT<br />

159 Duval, T. P.; Ormshaw, H.: FERTILIZER LEGACY EFFECTS ON<br />

WETLAND RESTORATION: INCREASED PHOSPHORUS<br />

EXPORT DUE TO VERTICAL MOVEMENT OF THE<br />

SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS31 BIOLOGY AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF SEA ICE COMMUNITIES<br />

Chair(s): Susanne Neuer, susanne.neuer@asu.edu<br />

Andrew Juhl, andyjuhl@ldeo.columbia.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

160 Kinzler, K. P.; Held, B.; McHugh, C.; Aumack, C.; Juhl, A.; Neuer, S.:<br />

SIMULATED ALGAL BLOOMS IN MELT WATER OF LAND<br />

FAST ARCTIC SEA ICE<br />

161 Smith, J. P.; Lee, P.; DiTullio, G.; Byrum, C.; Janech, M. G.: EFFECTS<br />

OF IRRADIANCE LEVELS ON THE EXPRESSION<br />

OF ICE-BINDING PROTEINS IN THE SEA-ICE<br />

DIATOM, FRAGILARIOPSIS CYLINDRUS<br />

162 Franze, G.; Lavrentyev, P.; Conley, R.; Putland, J.; Young, K.; Williams,<br />

W.; Nelson, J.: MICROZOOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTION<br />

AND TROPHIC INTERACTIONS WITH BACTERIA,<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON, AND PLANKTONIC COPEPODS IN<br />

THE BEAUFORT GYRE<br />

SS35 CLIMATE EXTREMES – IS THE FUTURE OF ECOSYSTEMS<br />

PREDICTABLE AND MANAGEABLE?<br />

Chair(s): Karin Junker, karin.junker@io-warnemuende.de<br />

Carola Wagner, carola.wagner@io-warnemuende.de<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

163 Ewell, C.: MECHANISMS BEHIND COLORATION IN<br />

NUDIBRANCHS<br />

164 Miller, B.; Heinze, A. W.: THERMOTAXIS OF MIXOTROPHIC<br />

PROTIST IN THE GENUS DINOBRYON AS DETERMINED<br />

BY AN INDOOR MESOCOSM<br />

165 Gearhart, T. A.; Stockwell, J. D.; Kraft, J.; Iannucci, F. M.: AN<br />

EVALUATION OF FATTY ACID PROPAGATION<br />

THROUGH MULTIPLE TROPHIC LEVELS AND ITS<br />

APPLICATION TO QUANTIFYING ECOSYSTEM<br />

CHANGE IN LAKE CHAMPLAIN<br />

166 Spanbauer, T. L.; Hefley, T. J.; Stone, J. R.; Fritz, S. C.: USING<br />

PALEOECOLOGICAL DATA TO TEST MODELS AND<br />

INDICATORS OF EXTINCTION<br />

167 Woodin, S. A.; Wethey, D. S.; Volkenborn, N.; Berke, S. K.: CLIMATE<br />

CHANGE, PDO: PATTERNS OF CHANGE IN THE<br />

ARENICOLID POLYCHAETE ABARENICOLA PACIFICA<br />

SS36 PRESENCE AND IMPACTS OF EMERGING CONTAMINANTS IN<br />

AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Karen Kidd, kiddk@unb.ca;<br />

Rebecca Klaper, rklaper@uwm.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

168 Noell, K. M.; Pitula , J. S.: CHARACTERIZATION<br />

OF ENZYMATIC ACTIVITY OF AN ACONITASE<br />

ORTHOLOGUE PERKINSUS MARINUS<br />

169 Knee, K. L.; Encalada, A. C.: LAND USE AND WATER<br />

QUALITY IN A RURAL CLOUD FOREST REGION (INTAG,<br />

ECUADOR)<br />

170 Lewis, M. A.: ANTHROPOGENIC CHEMICALS AS DRIVERS<br />

OF CHANGE FOR COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS: WETLANDS<br />

AND MANGROVE AND SEAGRASS HABITATS<br />

171 Poulin, C.; Bruyant, F.; Laprise, M. H.; Cockshutt, A. M.;<br />

Marie-Rose Vandenhecke, J.; Huot, Y.: THE IMPACT OF<br />

LIGHT POLLUTION ON THE PHOTOPHYSIOLOGY<br />

OF MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA<br />

65<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

172 Bera, G.; Shiller, A. M.; Shim, M.; Yeager, K. M.: ANTHROPOGENIC<br />

STABLE CESIUM IN WATER AND SEDIMENT OF A<br />

SHALLOW ESTUARY (ST LOUIS BAY, MS)<br />

173 Luning Prak, D. J.; O’Sullivan, D. W.: PHOTOLYSIS<br />

OF DINITROBENZYL ALCOHOLS AND OTHER<br />

NITROAROMATIC COMPOUNDS IN SEAWATER,<br />

ESTUARY WATER, AND PURE WATER<br />

174 Bussan, D. D.; Payne, J. T.; Millar, J. J.; Jackson, C. R.; Cizdziel,<br />

J. V.; Ochs, C. A.: METALS AND CHLOROPHYLL<br />

CONCENTRATIONS IN SIX MAJOR RIVERS OF THE<br />

MISSISSIPPI RIVER BASIN<br />

175 Martin, C. W.; Valentine, J. F.; Dindo, J. D.; Scyphers, S. B.; Kauffman,<br />

T. C.: INVESTIGATION OF POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC<br />

HYDROCARBON ACCUMULATION IN COASTAL<br />

ALABAMA WATERFOWL AFTER THE DEEPWATER<br />

HORIZON OIL SPILL<br />

176 Major, C. R.; Urban-Rich, J. L.: INGESTION OF<br />

NANOPARTICLES INHIBITS GROWTH RATE IN<br />

BIVALVE LARVAE<br />

177 Kim, Y.; Powell, E. N.; Wade, T. L.; Brooks, J. M.: THE<br />

STATUS AND LONG-TERM TRENDS OF ORGANIC<br />

CONTAMINANTS IN OYSTERS FROM MISSISSIPPI GULF<br />

COAST<br />

SS45 EMPLOYING RIVERINE ORGANIC MATTER AS AN INTEGRATED<br />

SIGNAL OF CATCHMENT PROCESSES, CLIMATE AND LAND-USE CHANGE<br />

Chair(s): Erin Ellis, ellise@evergreen.edu<br />

Robert Spencer, rspencer@whrc.org<br />

Peter Hernes, pjhernes@ucdavis.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

178 Handsel, L. T.; Paerl, H. W.; Osburn, C. L.: TRACKING AND<br />

IDENTIFYING POTENTIAL SOURCES OF ORGANIC<br />

NITROGEN USING FLUORESCENCE AND STATISTICAL<br />

MODELING IN AN EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA RIVER<br />

BASIN<br />

179 Wolf, M.; Graeber, D.; Gelbrecht, J.; Zwirnmann, E.; Pusch, M.:<br />

DOES AGRICULTURE AFFECT DOM LOADS IN SMALL<br />

HEADWATER STREAMS<br />

180 Drake, T. W.; Spencer, R. G.; Wickland, K. P.; Striegl, R. G.;<br />

McKnight, D. M.; Holmes, R. M.: BIODEGRADABILITY AND<br />

TURNOVER OF PERMAFROST-DERIVED DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC CARBON<br />

181 Deutsch, B.; Ruppenthal, M.; Humborg, C.; Alling, V.; Moerth, C. M.:<br />

STABLE HYDROGEN ISOTOPE RATIOS OF HMW-DOM: A<br />

NEW APPROACH TO TRACE TERRESTRIAL DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER IN MARINE ECOSYSTEMS<br />

182 Dempsey, C. M.; Morris, D. P.; Pazzaglia, F. J.; Osburn, C. L.;<br />

Raymond, P. A.; Peters, S. C.: STUDYING THE AGE AND<br />

BIOLABILITY OF ORGANIC CARBON IN STREAMS AND<br />

SOILS WITHIN THREE HEADWATER CATHMENTS<br />

183 Hemingway, J. D.; Galy, V. V.: ORGANIC CARBON EXPORT<br />

FROM FOUR NEW ENGLAND RIVERS<br />

184 Bianchi, T. S.; Garcia Tigreros, F. G.; Yvon-Lewis, S.; Shields, M. R.;<br />

Mills, H. J.; Butman, D.; Osburn, C.; Raymond, P.; Shank, G. C.;<br />

DiMarco, S. F.: TRANSFER OF TERRESTRIALLY-DERIVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER DURING THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER<br />

FLOOD OF 2011<br />

185 Ramos, J.; Harnett, H. E.: LINKING TERRESTRIAL<br />

LAND-COVER WITH AQUATIC BIOGEOCHEMICAL<br />

PROPERTIES IN THE COLORADO RIVER SYSTEM<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

186 Twiss, M. R.; Sprague, H. M.; Loftus, S. E.; Marshall, N. F.; Skufca,<br />

J. D.: WATER QUALITY ASSESSMENT OF THE ST.<br />

LAWRENCE RIVER USING HIGH RESOLUTION SENSOR<br />

ARRAYS<br />

187 Kraus, T.; Downing, B. D.; Saraceno, J. F.; Pellerin, B. A.; Sauer,<br />

M. J.; Beramaschi, B. A.: DEVELOPMENT OF IN-SITU<br />

FLUOROMETERS TO TRACK DIFFERENT POOLS OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

188 Connelly, T.; McClelland, J. W.; Linn, S.; Khosh, M. S.; Dunton, K.<br />

H.: SEASONAL VARIATIONS IN PARTICULATE ORGANIC<br />

MATTER SOURCES AND COMPOSITION IN ARCTIC<br />

LAGOONS RELATED TO CHANGES IN THE PHYSICO-<br />

CHEMICAL ENVIRONMENT<br />

189 Dubinenkov, I. V.; Flerus, R.; Lechtenfeld, O.; Schmitt-Kopplin, P.;<br />

Kattner, G.; Koch, B. P.: MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION<br />

OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER SOURCES IN THE<br />

ARCTIC LENA RIVER DELTA<br />

190 Hernes, P. J.; Spencer, R. G.; Dyda, R. Y.; O’Geen, A. T.; Dahlgren,<br />

R. A.: COUPLING OF LITTER LEACHATE SOURCES OF<br />

DOM TO OAK WOODLAND CATCHMENT STREAM<br />

CHEMISTRY<br />

SS48 GEOCHEMICAL CONSEQUENCES OF ADVECTION IN<br />

AQUATIC SEDIMENTS<br />

Chair(s): Joerg Lewandowski, lewe@igb-berlin.de<br />

Gunnar Nuetzmann, nuetzmann@igb-berlin.de<br />

Christof Meile, cmeile@uga.edu<br />

Andreas Brand, andreas.brand@eawag.ch<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

191 Dornhoffer, T. M.; Waldbusser, G. G.; Meile, C.: BURROWING<br />

AND IRRIGATION BEHAVIOR IN ARENICOLA: EFFECTS<br />

ON NITROGEN AND OXYGEN DYNAMICS<br />

SS49 MICROBIAL MEDIATED RETENTION/TRANSFORMATION<br />

OF ORGANIC AND INORGANIC MATERIALS IN FRESHWATER AND<br />

MARINE ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer J Mosher, jmosher@stroudcenter.org<br />

Richard Devereux, Devereux.Richard@epamail.epa.gov<br />

Anthony V Palumbo, palumboav@ornl.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

192 Montgomery, M. T.; Coffin, R. B.; Boyd, T. J.; Osburn, C. L.:<br />

DEGRADATION OF AROMATIC ORGANIC COMPOUNDS<br />

BY NATURAL BACTERIAL ASSEMBLAGES AT<br />

ESTUARINE FRONTAL BOUNDARIES.<br />

193 Policicchio, H. M.; Schwartz, M.: ASSESSMENT OF WATER<br />

QUALITY AND CHEMISTRY WITHIN CARPENTERS<br />

CREEK, AN URBAN STREAM<br />

194 Sato, M.; Sakuraba, R.; Hashihama, F.: DISTRIBUTIONS OF<br />

ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE AND DIPHOSPHATASE<br />

ACTIVITIES IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN, WITH<br />

AN EMPHASIS ON PHOSPHORUS CYCLING IN<br />

SUBTROPICAL GYRES<br />

195 Kim, S.; Kim, B.; An, S.; Yoo, M.; Choi, J.; Lee, J.; Hyun, J.: IMPACTS<br />

OF ARTIFICIAL DYKE AND FRESHWATER DISCHARGE<br />

ON THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL AND ECOLOGICAL<br />

PROCESSES IN THE YOUNG-SAN ESTUARY, YELLOW<br />

SEA<br />

66<br />

196 Hyun, J.; Kim, S.; Mok, J.; Kim, B.; Thamdrup, B.: ORGANIC<br />

CARBON OXIDATION DOMINATED BY THE<br />

REDUCTION OF MN(IV) AND FE(III) IN THE<br />

SEDIMENTS OF THE ULLEUNG BASIN IN THE EAST SEA<br />

197 Lampkin, A. L.; Millar, J. J.; Payne, J. T.; Ochs, C. A.; Jackson, C. R.:<br />

PARTICLE-ASSOCIATED AND SOLUBLE PHOSPHATASE<br />

ACTIVITY IN MAJOR RIVERS OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER<br />

BASIN<br />

198 Thompson, S. K.; Cotner, J. B.: THE PRIMING EFFECT AS A<br />

MECHANISM OF TERRESTRIAL CARBON UTILIZATION<br />

IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA LAKES<br />

199 Stegman, M. R.; Cottrell, M. T.; Kirchman, D. L.: SINGLE CELL<br />

ACTIVITY OF AEROBIC ANOXYGENIC PHOTOTROPHIC<br />

BACTERIA IN THE DELAWARE ESTUARY<br />

200 Duff, J. H.; Sheibley, R. W.; Tesoriero, A. J.; Munn, M. D.: LOW<br />

TRANSIENT STORAGE INHIBITS N AND P RETENTION<br />

IN AGRICULTURAL STREAMS ACROSS THE USA<br />

201 Cote, J. M.; Isom, C. E.; Boling, W. B.; Wawrik, B.; Callaghan,<br />

A. V.: ANALYSIS OF ANAEROBIC CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

SEDIMENT MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES FOR THEIR<br />

ABILITY TO UTILIZE ALKANES VIA MOLECULAR<br />

ANALYSIS AND MICROCOSM STUDIES<br />

202 Richardson, J. D.; Kieber, D. J.; Song, G.; Xie, H.; Cottrell, M. T.;<br />

Kirchman, D. L.: CYCLING OF CARBON MONOXIDE IN<br />

THE DELAWARE ESTUARY<br />

203 Motard-Côté, J.; Kieber, D. J.; Rellinger, A.; Oswald,<br />

L.; Kiene, R. P.: MICROBIAL CYCLING OF<br />

DYMETHYLSULFONIOPROPIONATE AND<br />

DYMETHYLSULFIDE PRODUCTION ALONG A SALINITY<br />

GRADIENT IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

204 Abin, C. A.; Hollibaugh, J. T.: DISSIMILATORY SB(V)<br />

REDUCTION: A NOVEL MODE OF ANAEROBIC<br />

MICROBIAL RESPIRATION UBIQUITOUS IN THE<br />

ENVIRONMENT<br />

SS50 ZOOPLANKTON RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

STRESSORS: FROM INDIVIDUAL RESPONSES TO LARGER SCALE<br />

IMPLICATIONS<br />

Chair(s): Amy E. Maas, amaas@whoi.edu<br />

David T. Elliott, delliott@umces.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

205 Hinson, K. I.; Walsh, E. J.: WATER QUALITY AND ITS<br />

IMPACT ON THE GENETIC STRUCTURE OF THE<br />

MODEL INVERTEBRATE BRACHIONUS PLICATILIS<br />

206 Ng, G.; Nidzieko, N. J.: THE EFFECTS OF DIFFERENTIAL<br />

WATER MIXING ON THE ZOOPLANKTON<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

207 Herrera, K. M.; Urban-Rich, J.: ZOOPLANKTON SURVIVAL IN<br />

SALINITY SHOCK EXPERIMENTS<br />

208 Leach, T. H.; Williamson, C. E.; FIscher, J. M.: THE ZONES OF<br />

MAXIMUM DAYTIME AND NIGHTTIME DEPLETION:<br />

NOVEL INDICES FOR ASSESSING STRUTURAL<br />

AND DYNAMIC DRIVERS OF DIEL MIGRATION OF<br />

ZOOPLANKTON.<br />

209 Cabrol, J.; Winkler, G.; Tremblay, R.: ECOPHYSIOLOGICAL<br />

FEATURES OF THE COPEPOD EURYTEMORA AFFINIS<br />

IN RESPONSE TO HABITAT CHANGE IN THE ST.<br />

LAWRENCE ESTUARY: AN EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

210 Ignoffo, T. R.; Slaughter, A. M.; Kimmerer, W. J.: GROWTH AND<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF A COPEPOD IN AN ESTUARY WITH<br />

PERSISTENTLY LOW PRIMARY PRODUCTION.<br />

211 Dutz , J.; Samchyshyna , L.; Sazhin , A. F.; Troedsson , C.; Bouquet , J.<br />

M.; Thompson , E. M.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION<br />

AND TEMPERATURE ON MARINE ZOOPLANKTON: A<br />

MESOCOSM STUDY<br />

212 Strake, S.; Harlinska, A.: POPULATION STRUCTURE AND<br />

REPRODUCTION OF THE COPEPOD ACARTIA BIFILOSA<br />

IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE BALTIC SEA, GULF OF<br />

RIGA<br />

213 Dwyer, A.; Brutemark, A.; De Stasio, B.; Vehmaa, A.; Engström-<br />

Öst, J.: CONSEQUENCES OF FEEDING ON TOXIC<br />

CYANOBACTERIA FOR THE COPEPOD EURYTEMORA<br />

AFFINIS FROM THE GULF OF FINLAND<br />

214 Santos, C. J.; Sanchez, B. I.; Martinez, G. A.: ZOOPLANKTON<br />

FROM SIX RESERVOIRS IN PUERTO RICO: DIVERSITY<br />

ALONG A SUBTROPICAL TROPHIC GRADIENT<br />

215 Evans, E. D.; Chigbu, P.: ABUNDANCE AND DISTRIBUTION<br />

OF BAY ANCHOVY, ANCHOA MITCHILLI, EGGS AND<br />

LARVAE IN THE MARYLAND COASTAL BAYS<br />

216 Loadman, N. L.; Huebner, J. D.; Wuerz, M.; Dandurand, K.;<br />

Wiegand, M. D.; Latimer, J.; Richardson, N.: EFFECTS OF UVR<br />

ON THE DAPHNIA MAGNA-PASTEURIA RAMOSA HOST-<br />

PARASITE SYSTEM<br />

217 Gadbois, N. B.; Hirons, A.; Riegl, B.; Shenker, J.: USING<br />

CHAETOGNATH SPECIES AS INDICATORS OF WATER<br />

MASSES IN THE FLORIDA CURRENT, BROWARD<br />

COUNTY, FLORIDA, USA<br />

218 Slaughter, A. M.; Kimmerer, W. J.: REPRODUCTION AND<br />

MORTALITY OF KEY COPEPODS IN LOW-SALINITY AND<br />

FRESHWATER HABITATS OF THE SAN FRANCISCO<br />

ESTUARY<br />

219 MORALES-NÚÑEZ, A. G.; Evans, E.; Chigbu, P.: THE<br />

ABUNDANCE, BIOVOLUME, AND SIZE DISTRIBUTION OF<br />

MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI IN THE MARYLAND COASTAL BAYS<br />

220 Oghenekaro, E. U.; Chigbu, P.; Tang, K.; Pierson, J.:<br />

MESOZOOPLANKTON ABUNDANCE AND<br />

DISTRIBUTION IN RELATION TO ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

FACTORS IN THE MARYLAND COASTAL BAYS<br />

SS54 CARBON FLUXES AT THE LAND-OCEAN INTERFACE: RESEARCH<br />

AND EDUCATION<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Cherrier, jennifercherrier@gmail.com<br />

Bob Chen, bob.chen@umb.edu<br />

Jaye Cable, jecable@email.unc.edu<br />

Christof Meile, cmeile@uga.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

221 Esch, M.; Cable, J. E.; Peri, F.; Meile, C.: CONSTRAINING CREEK<br />

BANK SEEPAGE FLUXES: MODELING AND DIRECT<br />

MEASUREMENTS<br />

222 Norwood, M. J.; Louchouarn, P.; Armitage, A. R.; White, N.;<br />

Highfield, W. E.; Brody, S.: FLUXES AND INVENTORIES OF<br />

BLUE CARBON IN TEXAS WETLANDS: MEASURING<br />

ECOLOGICAL SHIFTS FROM COASTAL SALT MARSH TO<br />

MANGROVE DOMINATED WETLANDS<br />

223 Arriola, J. M.; Cable, J. E.: ESTIMATING CARBON BURIAL<br />

RATES WITHIN A PRISTINE TIDAL SALT MARSH IN<br />

THE BIG BEND REGION OF FLORIDA<br />

67<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

224 Dunlap, T. M.; McCallister, S. L.: A MULTIPROXY APPROACH<br />

TO ASSESS THE MICROBIAL PROCESSING OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER OF THE YORK RIVER<br />

ESTUARY, VA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE COASTAL<br />

OCEAN<br />

225 Jones, E. B.; Wiggert, J. D.: CHARACTERIZATION OF CROSS-<br />

SHELF BIOPHYSICAL INTERACTION ACROSS THE<br />

MISSISSIPPI-ALABAMA SHELFBREAK USING REMOTE<br />

SENSING DATA<br />

226 Frost, D.; McCallister, S. L.: POLLEN AS A TERRESTRIAL<br />

CARBON SUBSIDY TO RIVERINE AND COASTAL SYSTEMS<br />

SS69 COASTAL AND MARINE ECOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION<br />

STANDARD (CMECS): A COMMON LANGUAGE FOR SCIENCE<br />

AND MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Emily Shumchenia, emily@gso.uri.edu<br />

Rebecca J. Allee, becky.allee@noaa.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

227 Nelson, E. R.; Suryan, R. M.; Horton, C. H.; Gladics, A. J.:<br />

THE HUNGER GAMES: PROVISIONING RATES AND<br />

IMPLICATIONS FOR COMMON MURRE (URIA AALGE)<br />

CHICKS<br />

228 Johnson, S.; Fox, D. A.; Weatherbee, B. M.: CONSERVATION<br />

PLANNING FOR SAND TIGERS (CARCHARIAS TAURUS)<br />

IN DELAWARE BAY<br />

SS73 IMPACT OF SUBMESOSCALE PROCESSES ON UPPER OCEAN<br />

ECOLOGY, BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND CONTAMINANT DISPERSAL<br />

Chair(s): Margaret L. Estapa, mestapa@whoi.edu<br />

David A. Siegel, davey@eri.ucsb.edu<br />

Ken O. Buesseler, kbuesseler@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

229 Aghassi, E. N.; Siegel, D. A.; Nelson, N. B.; Stassinos, E. A.;<br />

Estapa, M.: TRACING OPTICAL METRICS THROUGH<br />

SUBMESOSCALE FEATURES IN THE NORTHERN<br />

ATLANTIC GYRE.<br />

230 Heal, K. R.; Smith, S. R.; Church, M. J.: PHOTOSYNTHETIC<br />

PARAMETERS OVER HOURLY AND DAILY TIMESCALES<br />

SHED LIGHT ON POPULATION STABILITY AT STATION<br />

ALOHA<br />

231 Smith, S. R.; Heal, K. R.; Church, M. J.: HIGH RESOLUTION<br />

SAMPLING REVEALS LIGHT-DRIVEN FLUCTUATIONS<br />

IN MICROBIAL POPULATION SIZE AND ACTIVITIES AT<br />

STATION ALOHA<br />

SS74 TACKLING HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS: SYNERGY BETWEEN<br />

RESEARCH, MANAGEMENT & EDUCATION<br />

Chair(s): Vincent Lovko, vlovko@mote.org<br />

Alina Corcoran, alina.corcoran@myfwc.com<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

232 Liu, P. P.; Chen, Y. W.; Ma, Y. B.: ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION<br />

IN INNER CITY LAKES- AN EXAMPLE FROM CHENGDU<br />

CHINA<br />

233 Ji, J.; Liu, X.; Wu, Z. S.: 6-YEAR CYANOBACTERIA BLOOM<br />

DISTRIBUTION IN EUTROPHIC LAKE TAIHU, CHINA<br />

234 Karlsson, O. M.; Malmaeus, J. M.; Baresel, C.: TOWARDS COST<br />

EFFICIENCY IN MITIGATING EUTROPHICATION OF<br />

THE BALTIC SEA<br />

TUESDAY


TUESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

235 Israel, N. M.; Patino, R.: RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN<br />

SURFACE WATER QUALITY AND GOLDEN ALGAL<br />

BLOOMS IN THE PECOS RIVER BASIN, TEXAS AND<br />

NEW MEXICO, USA<br />

236 Carstens, C.; Baresel, C.; Destouni, G.; Cvetkovic, V.: REDUCING<br />

HYPOXIA IN THE BALTIC SEA THROUGH THE WAVE-<br />

POWERED BALTIC AERATION PUMP (WEBAP)<br />

237 Simoniello, C.; Kirkpatrick, B.; Slimak, N.; Jochens, A.: A FLORIDA<br />

RED TIDE BLOOM COLLABORATIVE RESPONSE<br />

238 Sullivan, J.; Neill, B.: ENGAGING STUDENTS AND<br />

COMMUNITIES IN HAB RESEARCH AND MITIGATION<br />

THROUGH SCIENCE FAIR PROJECTS<br />

239 Polikarpov, I.; Al-Yamani, F.: MICROALGAL AND PROTOZOAN<br />

COMMUNITIES IN HYPERSALINE ENVIRONMENT AT<br />

ARABIAN GULF SHORE, KUWAIT<br />

240 Lenes, J. M.; Kirkpatrick, G. J.; Weisberg, R. H.; Walsh, J. J.; Hu,<br />

C.; Lembke, C.; Lovko, V. J.; Kirkpatrick, B. A.; Corcoran, A. A.:<br />

A FLORIDA RED TIDE BLOOM COLLABORATIVE<br />

RESPONSE – RESEARCH<br />

68<br />

SS75 ROLE AND SIGNIFICANCE OF CHEMOSYNTHESIS<br />

IN THE OCEAN<br />

Chair(s): Stefan Sievert, ssievert@whoi.edu<br />

Karen G. Lloyd, klloyd@utk.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

241 McParland, E. L.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Lorenzoni, L.; Rollings,<br />

A.: UNDERSTANDING THE COMPOSITION OF<br />

PHOSPHORUS IN SUSPENDED PARTICLES OF THE<br />

CARIACO BASIN<br />

242 Thomas, F.; Giblin, A. E.; Cardon, Z. G.; Sievert, S. M.:<br />

SULFUR-OXIDATION IN SALT MARSH SEDIMENTS IS<br />

INFLUENCED BY PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS<br />

243 Larson, B. I.; Meile, C. D.; Houghton, J. L.: HYDROTHERMAL<br />

VENT SUBSURFACE HABITATS AS INFERRED FROM<br />

REACTIVE TRANSPORT MODELING<br />

244 Lloyd, K. G.; May, M.; Steen, A. D.: A META-ANALYSIS OF<br />

METHODS TO QUANTIFY MICROBES IN MARINE<br />

ENVIRONMENTS<br />

SS81 GETTING A GRIP ON MICROBIAL CHANGE: THE FRESHWATER<br />

EARTH MICROBIOME PROJECT<br />

Chair(s): Stefan Bertilsson, stebe@ebc.uu.se<br />

Hans-Peter Grossart, hgrossart@igb-berlin.de<br />

Katherine McMahon, tmcmahon@engr.wisc.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

245 Cottrell, M. T.; Fauteux, L.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Kirchman, D. L.:<br />

BACTERIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN QUEBEC<br />

LAKES AS REVEALED BY TAG PYROSEQUENCING OF<br />

SSU RNA GENES<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20 - ORALS<br />

GS06 RESTORATION ECOLOGY IN AQUATIC SYSTEM<br />

Chair(s): Sandra Clinton, sclinto1@uncc.edu<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

16:00 Ysebaert, T.; Borsje, B.; Walles, B.; de Mesel, I.; Dijkstra, J. T.;<br />

Cronin, K.; Holzhauer, H.; Herman, P. M.: TIDAL FLAT<br />

RESTORATION AND CONSERVATION IN ESTUARINE<br />

ENVIRONMENTS: LESSONS LEARNED BY BUILDING<br />

WITH NATURE<br />

16:15 van Duren, L. A.; van Katwijk, M. M.; Heusinkveld, J.; Reise, K.;<br />

Fens, J.; van Bentum, F.: EELGRASS RESTORATION IN<br />

A DYNAMIC HABITAT – THE BALANCE BETWEEN<br />

ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT AND LARGE-SCALE<br />

GARDENING<br />

16:30 Scharfbillig, A. A.; Reichart, G. J.; Middelburg, J. J.; Liu, Z. W.:<br />

ELUCIDATING THE CARBON AND NITROGEN FLOW<br />

IN LAKE TAIHU A SHALLOW CHINESE LAKE: STABLE<br />

ISOTOPE LABELING EXPERIMENT<br />

16:45 Valdez, I. C.; Martell, E. M.; Lougheed, V. L.: DETERMINING<br />

THE EFFECTS OF LIVESTOCK GRAZING AND<br />

RECREATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ON NUTRIENT<br />

LIMITATION OF STREAM COMMUNITIES IN THE<br />

SACRAMENTO MOUNTAIN FOREST.<br />

17:00 O’Brien, J. M.; Lessard, J. L.; Plew, D.; Graham, S. E.; McIntosh, A. R.:<br />

DO PLANTS MATTER? THE ROLE OF MACROPHYTES IN<br />

NUTRIENT RETENTION BY LOWLAND AGRICULTURAL<br />

STREAMS<br />

17:15 Gonzalez, R.; Dunham, J.: RESPONSES OF JUVENILE COHO<br />

SALMON TO LARGE WOOD RESTORATION IN A<br />

COASTAL PACIFIC NORTHWEST STREAM<br />

17:30 Franck, E. M.; Hackman, A.; Christian, A. D.: THE EFFECTS<br />

OF CRANBERRY BOG RESTORATION ON PHYSICAL<br />

HABITAT, AQUATIC INVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES,<br />

AND ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES AT TIDMARSH FARMS,<br />

PLYMOUTH, MA<br />

17:45 Clinton, S. M.; Osypian, M.; Jefferson, A.: EFFECTS OF URBAN<br />

STREAM RESTORATION ON TRANSIENT STORAGE<br />

AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION<br />

GS08B PLANKTON ECOLOGY - ZOOPLANKTON<br />

Chair(s): Gustav-Adolf Paffenhofer, gustav.paffenhofer@skio.usg.edu<br />

Katherine Richardson, kari@science.ku.dk<br />

Frederic Maps, frederic.maps@gmail.com<br />

Elizaveta Ershova, eershova@alaska.edu<br />

John Dolan, dolan@obs-vlfr.fr<br />

Location: Room 333-334<br />

10:00 Dolan, J. R.; Yang, E. J.; Lee, S.; Kim, S. Y.: TINTINNID CILIATES<br />

OF THE AMUNDSEN SEA (ANTARCTICA) PLANKTON:<br />

ASSEMBLAGES OF COASTAL POLYNYA AND OFFSHORE<br />

DEEP WATER SITES<br />

10:15 Lie, A. A.; Kim, D. Y.; Schnetzer, A.; Caron, D. A.: SMALL-SCALE<br />

TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATIONS IN PROTISTAN<br />

COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AT THE USC MICROBIAL<br />

OBSERVATORY STATION OFF THE COAST OF<br />

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA<br />

11:00 Smith, S. L.; Annan, J. D.; Hargreaves, J. C.: AFFINITY: THE<br />

MEANINGFUL TRAIT-BASED ALTERNATIVE TO THE<br />

HALF-SATURATION ‘CONSTANT’<br />

69<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

11:15 Doubleday, A. J.; Hopcroft, R. R.: SEASONAL AND INTER-<br />

ANNUAL PATTERNS OF PTEROPOD AND LARVACEAN<br />

ESTIMATES IN THE COASTAL GULF OF ALASKA<br />

11:30 Takahashi, K.; Ichikawa, T.; Fukugama, C.; Kakehi, S.; Okazaki, Y.;<br />

Yamane, M.; Furuya, K.: HIGH RESOLUTION VERTICAL<br />

AND HORIZONTAL PROFILES OF DOLIOLID BLOOM<br />

DETERMINED BY THE VISUAL PLANKTON RECORDER<br />

IN THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC<br />

11:45 Lester, C.; Hoskins, A. R.; Mariita, R. M.; Britt, J.; Klinka, M.; Moss,<br />

A. G.: A NEWLY INVASIVE CYDIPPID CTENOPHORE IN<br />

MOBILE BAY AND MISSISSIPPI SOUND.<br />

13:30 Sainmont, J.; Varpe, Ø.; Andersen, K. H.; Visser, A. W.: FEEDING<br />

SEASON DURATION AND THE RELATIVE SUCCESS OF<br />

CAPITAL AND INCOME SPAWNING COPEPODS<br />

13:45 Hirai, J.; Ichikawa, T.; Hidaka, K.; Tsuda, A.: A METAGENETIC<br />

METHOD FOR MARINE PLANKTONIC COPEPODS<br />

USING 454 PYROSEQUENCING OF 28S RDNA GENE<br />

14:00 Burris, Z. P.; Dam, H. G.: COPEPOD SEX-RATIOS MAY BE<br />

FEMALE-BIASED AT BIRTH<br />

14:15 Sichlau, M. H.; Kiørboe, T.; Nielsen, E. E.: SEXUAL SELECTION<br />

IN A PELAGIC COPEPOD, TEMORA LONGICORNIS<br />

14:30 Kjellerup, S.; Swalethorp, R.; Nielsen, T. G.: POPULATION<br />

DYNAMICS AND POPULATION DYNAMICS AND LIFE<br />

STRATEGY OF THE COPEPOD METRIDIA LONGA IN A<br />

GREENLANDIC FJORD<br />

14:45 Rutzen, I.; Hopcroft, R. R.; Nelson, R. J.: ZOOPLANKTON IN<br />

AN ARCTIC UNDER CHANGE: COMMUNITIES OF THE<br />

CANADA BASIN<br />

15:00 Fujioka, H.; Machida, R. J.; Tsuda, A.: EARLY LIFE CYCLE OF<br />

NEOCALANUS COPEPODS IN THE OYASHIO REGION,<br />

WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC<br />

15:15 Andersen Borg, C. M.; Bruno, E.; Kiørboe, T.: THE KINEMATICS<br />

OF RELOCATION JUMPS IN COPEPOD NAUPLII<br />

16:00 Powell, J. R.; Ohman, M. D.: CHANGES IN FINE-SCALE<br />

PATCHINESS OF MESOZOOPLANKTON ACROSS<br />

FRONTAL BOUNDARIES ASSESSED WITH GLIDER-<br />

MOUNTED ACOUSTIC DOPPLER PROFILERS<br />

16:15 Ershova, E. A.; Hopcroft, R.; Kosobokova, K. N.: SPATIAL<br />

PATTERNS OF PSEUDOCALANUS SPECIES<br />

DISTRIBUTION AND EGG PRODUCTION IN THE<br />

PACIFIC ARCTIC<br />

16:30 Kayfetz, K. R.; Slaughter, A. M.; Kimmerer, W. J.: INFLUENCE OF<br />

BIOTIC INTERACTIONS ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF<br />

THE COPEPOD PSEUDODIAPTOMUS FORBESI IN THE<br />

SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY<br />

16:45 Maps, F.; Record, N. R.; Pershing, A. J.: TRADE-OFF BETWEEN<br />

METABOLISM AND DEVELOPMENT EXPLAINS GLOBAL<br />

PATTERNS OF PELAGIC COPEPODS DORMANCY<br />

17:00 Liu, H.; Zhu, F.; Chen, M.: EFFECT OF DIATOM SILICA<br />

CONTENT ON COPEPOD GRAZING, GROWTH AND<br />

REPRODUCTION<br />

17:15 Idrisi, N.; Cherubin, L.; Conlon, L.; Davis, K.; Gyory, J.; Hitchcock, G.;<br />

Wright, V.: ROLE OF SUBSURFACE PLANKTON LAYERS IN<br />

THE BENTHIC-PELAGIC COUPLING OF ENERGY FLOW<br />

WITHIN A TROPICAL CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEM: A<br />

CONCEPTUAL MODEL<br />

17:30 Beyer, J. E.; Remmel, E. J.; Zamor, R. M.; Easton, J. D.; Easton,<br />

A. C.; Glenn, K. L.; Hallidayschult, T. C.; Hambright, K. D.:<br />

EVIDENCE OF COMPETITION AND PREDATION<br />

AFFECTING DAPHNIA LUMHOLTZI ABUNDANCES<br />

AND MORPHOLOGY IN LAKE TEXOMA.<br />

WEDNESDAY


WEDNESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

17:45 Clark, N. A.; Ditchfield, A. K.; Purdy, K. J.; Hart, M. C.; Hatton, A.<br />

D.: COPEPODS AND THEIR FECAL MATTER – MARINE<br />

METHANE SOURCES?<br />

SS04 <strong>ASLO</strong> STUDENT SYMPOSIUM<br />

Chair(s): Deidre Gibson, deidre.gibson@hamptonu.edu<br />

Benjamin Cuker, benjamin.cuker@hamptonu.edu<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

10:00 Peschiera, M.; Taylor, W.; Beard, D.; Staudinger, M. D.; McCright,<br />

A. M.; Melendez, E.: CONNECTING RIVERS AND PEOPLE<br />

FOR ENHANCED WATER QUALITY AND FISHERIES<br />

SUSTAINABILITY IN PUERTO RICO *<br />

10:15 Reyes, D. E.; Walsh, E. J.: LEVELS OF GENETIC<br />

DIFFERENTIATION IN A FRESHWATER<br />

MICROINVERTEBRATE OF THE CHIHUAHUAN DESERT<br />

10:30 Pineda, R. R.; Spivak, A. C.: EUTROPHICATION IN<br />

ESTUARIES CAUSES CHANGES IN THE QUALITY AND<br />

QUANTITY OF FOOD AVAILABLE TO HERBIVOROUS<br />

INVERTEBRATES<br />

10:45 Silver, A. C.: GROWTH TRENDS OF NORTHERN ROCK<br />

SOLE ALONG KODIAK ISLAND, ALASKA<br />

11:00 Zimmerman, T.; Laurel, B.: DISPERSAL OF NEWLY SETTLED<br />

JUVENILE NORTHERN ROCK SOLE.<br />

11:15 Padilla-Crespo, E.; Otero-Morales, E.; Massol-Deya, A.;<br />

Löffler, F. E.: DETECTION OF DEHALOGENATING-<br />

CHLOROFLEXI AND DISTRIBUTION OF A NEW<br />

BIOMARKER LINKED TO 1,2-DICHLOROPROPANE<br />

DECHLORINATION IN SUBSURFACE ENVIRONMENTS<br />

11:30 Colon-Muller, A. N.; Vera-Mecicano, L. W.; Infante-Mendez, G.<br />

A.; Cornwell, J.: HOW DOES THE BENTHIC SYSTEM<br />

AFFECTS AMMONIFICATION AND DENITRIFICATION<br />

PROCESSES IN SEDIMENT’S OVERLYING WATER IN<br />

TWO BIOLUMINESCENT LAGOONS IN PUERTO RICO?<br />

11:45 Lopez, G. T.; Apple, J.: INVESTIGATING CLIMATIC AND<br />

LOCAL FACTORS INFLUENCING WATER QUALITY IN<br />

THE SALISH SEA<br />

13:30 Lopez, E. K.; Henkel, S. K.; Lindholm, J. B.: ASSOCIATIONS<br />

BETWEEN DEMERSAL FISHES AND STRUCTURE-<br />

FORMING INVERTEBRATES IN TEMPERATE WATERS<br />

ON THE CONTINENTAL SHELF OF THE PACIFIC<br />

NORTHWEST<br />

13:45 López-Figueroa, N. B.; Cólon-Rivera, R. J.; West, J. B.; Feagin, R. A.:<br />

ISOTOPIC VARIATIONS OF THE DIFFERENT WATER<br />

SOURCES REACHING THE HUMACAO NATURAL<br />

RESERVE (HNR)<br />

14:00 Christmas, A. F.; Sulkin, S.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN<br />

ACIDIFICATION ON DISPERSAL BEHAVIOR AND FEEDING<br />

RATES IN THE LARVAL STAGE OF THE DUNGENESS CRAB<br />

AND THE PACIFIC GREEN SHORE CRAB<br />

14:15 Price, A. L.; Wheeler, J.; Anderson, E.; Mullineaux, L.: SWIMMING<br />

IN TURBULENCE: TRACKING HELICAL PATTERNS AND<br />

DIVE RESPONSES IN COMPETENT OYSTER LARVAE<br />

14:30 Baca, S. T.; Gomez, D. M.; Walsh, E. J.: TOXICITY<br />

COMPARISON BETWEEN POPULATIONS OF THE<br />

FRESHWATER ROTIFER PLATIONUS PATULUS TO<br />

PHARMACEAUTICALS AND PERSONAL CARE<br />

PRODUCTS (PPCPS)<br />

14:45 DeGree, A. A.: STUDYING THE EFFECTS OF ESTUARINE<br />

PROCESSING ON PHYSICAL AND OPTICAL PROPERTIES<br />

70<br />

15:00 Watkins, J. A.; Arnott, S.; Roumillat, B.; Williams , A.: HEALTH<br />

ASSESSMENT AND SEX RATIO OF THE AMERICAN EEL,<br />

ANGUILLA ROSTRATA, IN THE SOUTH CAROLINA<br />

TRIBUTARIES<br />

15:15 Wolfer, H. M.; Johnson, A. K.: PHYSIOLOGICAL AND<br />

IMMUNE SYSTEM EFFECTS OF SUBLETHAL HYPOXIA<br />

ON ATLANTIC CROAKER, MICROPOGONIAS<br />

UNDULATUS, IN CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

16:00 Staton, B.; Mohan, J.; Walther, B.: SPATIOTEMPORAL<br />

PATTERNS IN THE COUPLING OF OTOLITH AND<br />

SOMATIC GROWTH IN ATLANTIC CROAKER<br />

16:15 Mopper, K.; Abdulla, H.; Sun, L.; Stubbins, A.: DEVELOPMENT<br />

OF A HIGH-PRECISION TOC/DOC ANALYZER WITH A<br />

LOW NANOMOLAR (10^-9 M) DETECTION LIMIT<br />

16:30 Breland, M. S.; Horodysky, A. Z.; Johnson, A. K.; Brill,<br />

R. W.; Bushnell, P. G.; Wolfer, H.: BEHAVIORAL<br />

THERMOREGULATION OF ATLANTIC CROAKER<br />

UNDER HYPOXIC AND NORMOXIC CONDITIONS<br />

16:45 Moore, T. N.; Cuker, B. E.: SEDIMENT OXYGEN DEMAND<br />

AND ORTHOPHOSPHATE RELEASE IN THE HAMPTON<br />

RIVER TRIBUTARY OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

17:00 Panneer Selvam, B.; Natchimuthu, S.; Arunachalam, L.; Bastviken,<br />

D.: FRESHWATERS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSION KEEP<br />

TERRESTRIAL CARBON SINK AT STAKE: THE CASE OF<br />

INDIA<br />

17:15 Honisch, B. L.; Smith, T. B.; Brandt, M. E.: CHRONIC AND<br />

ACUTE IMPACTS OF LAND-BASED SOURCES OF<br />

POLLUTION ON CORAL HEALTH IN THE US VIRGIN<br />

ISLANDS<br />

17:30 Downs, E. E.; Popp, B.; Holl, C. M.: NITROGEN ISOTOPE<br />

FRACTIONATION AND AMINO ACID TURNOVER<br />

RATES IN THE PACIFIC WHITE SHRIMP, LITOPENAEUS<br />

VANNAMEI<br />

SS05 ADVANCES IN COASTAL HYPOXIA MODELING: FROM<br />

PHYSICS TO FISH<br />

Chair(s): Robert Hetland, hetland@tamu.edu<br />

Dubravko Justic, djusti1@lsu.edu<br />

Location: Room 344<br />

10:00 Allahdadi, M.; Li, C.: THE ROLE OF SUMMERTIME<br />

DIURNALL HEATING ON THE WATER COLUMN<br />

STRATIFICATION OVER THE LOUISIANA SHELF<br />

10:15 Hetland, R. D.; Zhang, X. Q.: INTERANUAL VARIATIONS OF<br />

STRATIFICATION OVER THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA SHELF<br />

AND EFFECTS ON SEASONAL HYPOXIA<br />

10:30 Justic, D.; Wang, L.: GULF HYPOXIA MODELING 1994-2012:<br />

PROGRESS, CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS<br />

10:45 Yu, L.; Fennel, K.; Laurent, A.; Hetland, R.; Murrell, M. C.; Lehrter,<br />

J. C.: PRIMARY PROCESSES CONTROLLING OXYGEN<br />

DYNAMICS ON THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA SHELF<br />

11:00 Fennel, K.; Hu, J.; Laurent, A.; Marta-Almeida, M.; Hetland, R.:<br />

SENSITIVITY OF HYPOXIA PREDICTIONS FOR THE<br />

TEXAS-LOUISIANA SHELF TO SEDIMENT OXYGEN<br />

CONSUMPTION AND MODEL NESTING<br />

11:15 Laurent, A.; Fennel, K.; Hetland, R.: EFFECTS OF<br />

PHOSPHORUS LIMITATION ON OXYGEN DYNAMICS IN<br />

THE MISSISSIPPI AND ATCHAFALAYA RIVER PLUMES<br />

11:30 Obenour, D. R.; Michalak, A. M.; Rabalais, N. N.; Scavia, D.: NEW<br />

APPROACHES FOR EXPLORING TRENDS IN GULF<br />

HYPOXIA FORMATION<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

11:45 Siedlecki, S. A.; Banas, N.; Davis , K. A.; Giddings, S.; MacCready, P.;<br />

Connolly, T.; Hickey, B.: SEASONAL OXYGEN DECLINE IN<br />

AN UPWELLING REGIME – A CLOSER LOOK AT SPATIAL<br />

AND TEMPORAL OXYGEN VARIABILITY IN THE<br />

PACIFIC NORTHWEST<br />

13:30 Wiggert, J. D.; Long, W.; Xu, J.; Hood, R. R.; Jones, E. B.; Lanerolle,<br />

L. W.; Brown, C. W.: APPLICATION OF A COUPLED<br />

PHYSICAL-BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODEL TO SIMULATE<br />

AND FORECAST THE ECOLOGICAL VARIABILITY OF<br />

CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

13:45 DePetro, P. A.; Melendez, W.; Anstead, A. M.; Feist, T. J.; Pauer, J. J.;<br />

Schaeffer, B. A.; Hagy, J. D.: DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION<br />

OF AN OBSERVATION-BASED LIGHT ATTENUATION<br />

EQUATION FOR A HIGH-RESOLUTION NORTHERN GULF<br />

OF MEXICO EUTROPHICATION MODEL<br />

14:00 Feist, T. J.; Melendez, W.; Pauer, J. J.; DePetro, P. A.; Anstead, A. M.;<br />

Lehrter, J. C.; Kreis, Jr., R. G.: DEVELOPMENT, CALIBRATION,<br />

AND SENSITIVITY ANALYSES OF A HIGH-RESOLUTION<br />

DISSOLVED OXYGEN MASS BALANCE MODEL FOR THE<br />

NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

14:15 Pauer, J. J.; DePetro, P. A.; Anstead, A. M.; Lehrter, J. C.: LESSONS<br />

LEARNED FROM A ONE-DIMENSIONAL WATER<br />

QUALITY MODEL FOR THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

14:30 Ko, D. S.; Lehrter, J. C.; Murrell, M. C.; Greene, R. M.; Gould, R. W.;<br />

Penta, B.: A HIGH-RESOLUTION 3D HYPOXIA MODEL<br />

FOR THE LOUISIANA SHELF<br />

14:45 Xia, M.; Jiang, L.; Niu, Q.; Schaeffer, B. A.: THE IMPACT OF<br />

WIND FORCING AND RIVER DISCHARGE TO A GULF<br />

ESTUARY HYPOXIA<br />

15:00 Brush, M. J.: MODELING ESTUARINE HYPOXIA IN<br />

NARRAGANSETT BAY, R.I. WITH AN INTERMEDIATE-<br />

COMPLEXITY APPROACH<br />

15:15 Hamidi, S. A.; Bravo, H. R.; Klump, J. V.; Waples, J. T.:<br />

EVIDENCE OF MULTIPLE PHYSICAL DRIVERS ON THE<br />

CIRCULATION AND THERMAL REGIME IN THE GREEN<br />

BAY OF LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

16:00 Lake, S. J.; Brush, M. J.: MODELING THE FORMATION OF<br />

PERIODIC HYPOXIA IN A TRIBUTARY ESTUARY: THE<br />

YORK RIVER, VIRGINIA<br />

16:15 Testa, J. M.; Li, Y.; Lee, Y.; Li, M.; Kemp, W. M.: EXPLORING<br />

PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL CONTROLS ON<br />

CHESAPEAKE BAY HYPOXIA USING A COUPLED<br />

HYDRODYNAMIC-BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODEL<br />

16:30 Vander Woude, A. J.; Mason, D. M.; Zhang, H.; Stow, C. A.;<br />

Adamack, A. T.; de Mutsert, K.; Pierson , J. J.; Roman, M. R.; Brandt,<br />

S. B.; Kolesar and C. Sellinger, S.: THE EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA<br />

ON THE FOOD WEB OF THE NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO: AN ATLANTIS ECOSYSTEM MODELING<br />

APPROACH<br />

16:45 Purcell, K. M.; Craig, J. K.; Nance, J. M.; Smith, M. D.: THE<br />

EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON THE SPATIAL AND<br />

TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF FISHING EFFORT IN THE<br />

NORTHWESTERN GULF OF MEXICO SHRIMP FISHERY<br />

17:00 de Mutsert, K.; Steenbeek, J.; Walters, C. J.; Cowan, J. H.: USING<br />

ECOSPACE TO SIMULATE EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON<br />

LIVING MARINE RESOURCES IN THE NORTHERN GULF<br />

OF MEXICO<br />

17:15 Rose, K. A.; Creekmore, S.; Neilan, R. M.; Craig, J. K.; Thomas,<br />

P.; Rahman, M. S.; Fennel, K.; Hetland, R.; DiMarco, S. F.:<br />

PREDICTING THE POPULATION-LEVEL EFFECTS OF<br />

HYPOXIA ON ATLANTIC CROAKER (MICROPOGONIAS<br />

UNDULATUS) IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

71<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

17:30 Grothues, T. M.; Thomas, P.; Dobarro, J. A.; Rahman, M. S.:<br />

BEHAVIORAL MEDIATION OF EXPOSURE DURATION<br />

TO HYPOXIA FOR IMMATURE ATLANTIC CROAKER IN<br />

THE WILD<br />

17:45 Brady, D. C.; Targett, T. E.; Di Toro, D. M.; Kemp, W. M.:<br />

COUPLING THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL DYNAMICS<br />

OF HYPOXIA WITH JUVENILE ESTUARY DEPENDENT<br />

FISH BEHAVIOR<br />

SS30 BIOLOGICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL RESPONSES TO<br />

HUMAN IMPACTS AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE<br />

Chair(s): Katja Fennel, katja.fennel@dal.ca<br />

Wally Fulweiler, rwf@bu.edu<br />

Roxane Maranger, r.maranger@umontreal.ca<br />

John Lehrter, lehrter.john@epa.gov<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

10:00 Mickey, R. C.; Xu, K.; Libes, S.; Trapp, M.: A STUDY OF<br />

RESUSPENDED MATERIAL ALONG SEDIMENT-<br />

WATER INTERFACE ON THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA<br />

CONTINENTAL SHELF USING GUST EROSION<br />

MICROCOSM SYSTEM<br />

10:15 McCarthy, M. J.; Carini, S. A.; Liu, Z.; Ostrom, N. E.; Gardner, W. S.:<br />

DO SEDIMENTS DRIVE HYPOXIA DEVELOPMENT IN<br />

THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIC ZONE?<br />

10:30 Mortazavi, B.; Bernard, R.; Riggs, A.; Kleinhuizen, A.; Logsdon, M.;<br />

Phipps, S.: THE TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE NITROGEN<br />

CYCLE IN A COASTAL LANDSCAPE: THE PRESENT AND<br />

THE FUTURE<br />

10:45 Hardison, A. K.; Algar, C.; Giblin, A.; Rich, J. J.: ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

CONTROLS ON ANOXIC NITROGEN CYCLING<br />

PATHWAYS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS<br />

11:00 Roberts, B. J.; Marton, J. M.; Bernhard, A. E.; Giblin, A. E.: LOUISIANA<br />

BRACKISH AND SALT MARSH NITRIFICATION<br />

POTENTIAL AND MICROBIAL DIVERSITY FOLLOWING<br />

THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL<br />

11:15 Bernhardt, E. S.; Hassett, B. A.; Lutz, B. D.: TRANSPORTER OR<br />

TRANSFORMER - NITROGEN CYCLING ALONG AN<br />

URBAN TO FOREST TRANSITION<br />

11:30 Fields, L.; Nixon, S. W.; Fulweiler, R. W.: RAPID RESPONSE OF<br />

BENTHIC-PELAGIC COUPLING TO CLIMATE DRIVEN<br />

ECOSYSTEM CHANGES IN A TEMPERATE ESTUARY<br />

11:45 Rogener, M.; Heiss, E. M.; Ireland, T.; Murray, R. W.; Fulweiler, R.<br />

W.: SHORT AND LONG-TERM TEMPORAL VARIATIONS<br />

OF MANGANESE, IRON, AND N 2 FLUXES ACROSS THE<br />

SEDIMENT WATER INTERFACE IN A TEMPERATE<br />

ESTUARY<br />

13:30 Spivak, A. C.: RECOVERING FROM LONG TERM<br />

EUTROPHICATION: WATER QUALITY ALTERS<br />

SEDIMENT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN MESOCOSM AND<br />

FIELD EXPERIMENTS<br />

13:45 Foster, S. Q.; Fulweiler, R. W.: EFFECTS OF INCREASING<br />

EUTROPHICATION ON SEDIMENT N 2 O AND N 2 FLUXES<br />

IN A SHALLOW, COASTAL ECOSYSTEM<br />

14:00 Vieillard, A. M.; Fulweiler, R. W.: HIGH-RESOLUTION<br />

NITROUS OXIDE FLUXES FROM A TEMPERATE<br />

INTERTIDAL MUDFLAT<br />

14:15 Mills, H. J.; Reese, B. K.; St. Peter, C.; Zinke, L.: MOLECULAR<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF<br />

THE LOUISIANA/TEXAS SHELF HYPOXIC ZONE<br />

NEPHELOID LAYER<br />

WEDNESDAY


WEDNESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

14:30 Henry, K. M.; Twilley, R. R.: A CONCEPTUAL MODEL<br />

OF BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING DURING DELTA<br />

DEVELOPMENT IN THE ANTHROPOCENE<br />

14:45 Lehrter, J.; Devereux, R.; Murrell, M.; Beddick, D.; Yates, D.; Jarvis, B.;<br />

Cicchetti, G.; Herchenroder, B.: SEDIMENT-WATER OXYGEN<br />

EXCHANGES AND FEEDBACKS WITH SEDIMENT OXIC,<br />

SUBOXIC, AND ANOXIC PROCESSES<br />

15:00 Paraska, D.; Hipsey, M.; Salmon, S. U.: SEDIMENT DIAGENESIS:<br />

IMPROVING LINKS BETWEEN MEASUREMENT AND<br />

MODELLING<br />

15:15 Harris, C. K.; Fennel, K.; Hetland, R. D.: EFFECTS OF<br />

RESUSPENSION ON SEDIMENT BED OXYGEN<br />

CONSUMPTION: A NUMERICAL MODELING STUDY<br />

16:00 Shelton, A. J.; Richmond, R. H.: RESTORING WATERSHEDS,<br />

CORAL REEFS, AND FISHERIES THROUGH A<br />

COMMUNITY EFFORT IN GUAM, USA<br />

16:15 Sturdivant, S. K.; Diaz, R. J.: ASSESSING THE AFFECTS<br />

OF SEDIMENT-ASSOCIATED HYDROCARBONS<br />

ON BIOTURBATION AND SEDIMENT PROPERTIES<br />

FOLLOWING THE BP OIL SPILL<br />

16:30 Vanaverbeke, J.; Braeckman, U.; Vincx, M.: MACROFAUNAL<br />

FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY AFFECTS COASTAL BENTHIC<br />

ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING: USING BIOTURBATION<br />

POTENTIAL IN PROTECTION MEASURES<br />

16:45 Kim, T. W.; Lovera, C.; Buck, K.; Barry, J. P.: EFFECT OF LOW<br />

OXYGEN AND LOW PH ON THE INTERACTION<br />

BETWEEN MANILA CLAMS AND THEIR PREDATORY<br />

CRABS<br />

17:00 Funkey, C. P.; Conley, D. J.; Reuss, N. S.; Jilbert, T.; Slomp, C.<br />

P.; Humborg, C.: TO BLOOM OR NOT TO BLOOM?<br />

INVESTIGATING CYANOBACTERIA ABUNDANCE IN<br />

THE BALTIC SEA DURING THE HOLOCENE ERA<br />

17:15 Cardenas, M. B.; Gerecht, K. E.; Markowski, M. S.; Nowinski, J. D.;<br />

Sawyer, A. H.; Swanson, T. E.; Guswa, A. J.: HOW THE PULSE OF<br />

A RIVER AFFECTS ITS LIVER<br />

17:30 Easton, E. E.; Thistle, D.; Spears, T.: DEEP-SEA<br />

HARPACTICOIDS: ARE CRYPTIC SPECIES A PROBLEM?<br />

17:45 Smyth, A. R.; Geraldi, N. R.; Piehler, M. F.: LOCATION OF<br />

OYSTER REEF RESTORATION WITHIN AN ESTUARY<br />

AFFECTS SEDIMENT NITROGEN DYNAMICS<br />

SS33 MICROBIAL NITROGEN CYCLING IN MARINE PELAGIC WATERS<br />

Chair(s): Jonathan P. Zehr, zehrj@ucsc.edu<br />

Julie LaRoche, julie.laroche@dal.ca<br />

Lasse Riemann, lriemann@bio.ku.dk<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

10:00 LaRoche, J.: WHO’S WHO IN THE MICROBIAL WORLD OF<br />

NITROGEN CYCLING T<br />

10:30 Luo, Y. W.; Doney, S. C.; Lima, I.: DATA-BASED TESTS OF<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS ON NITROGEN<br />

FIXATION RATES IN GLOBAL OCEAN<br />

10:45 Weber, T. S.; Deutsch, C.: LOCAL VS. BASIN-SCALE<br />

REGULATION OF MARINE N2-FIXATION<br />

11:00 Robidart, J. C.; Church, M. J.; Ryan, J. P.; Wilson, S. T.; Ascani, F.;<br />

Marin III, R.; Richards, K.; Karl, D. M.; Scholin, C. A.; Zehr, J. P.:<br />

APPLICATION OF HIGH RESOLUTION AUTONOMOUS<br />

TIME SERIES TO DETECT PATTERNS OF NITROGEN<br />

FIXING CYANOBACTERIA IN THE NORTH PACIFIC<br />

OCEAN<br />

72<br />

11:15 Hilton, J. A.; Satinsky, B. M.; Crump, B.; Doherty, M.; Foster, R.<br />

A.; Paul, J. H.; Tripp, H. J.; Villareal, T. V.; Zehr, J. P.; Moran,<br />

M. A.: FREE-LIVING AND SYMBIOTIC N 2 -FIXING<br />

CYANOBACTERIA TRANSCRIPTION PROFILES IN THE<br />

AMAZON RIVER PLUME<br />

11:30 Montoya, J. P.; Weber, S. C.; Loick-Wilde, N.; Goes, J. I.; Carpenter,<br />

E. J.; Coles, V. J.: NUTRIENTS, NITROGEN FIXATION,<br />

AND THE PLANKTONIC FOOD WEB IN THE AMAZON<br />

PLUME<br />

11:45 Weber, S. C.; Carpenter, E. J.; Goes, J.; Coles, V. J.; Montoya,<br />

J. P.: SEASONAL AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN<br />

DIAZOTROPHY IN THE AMAZON RIVER PLUME<br />

13:30 White, A.; Bombar, D.; Fong, A.; Karl, D. M.; Zehr, J. P.:<br />

DIAZOTROPHY IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC: RECONCILING<br />

RATES AND METRICS OF CELL ABUNDANCE<br />

13:45 Waite, A. M.; Thompson, P. A.; Tilbrook, B.; Akl, J.; Raes, E. J.;<br />

Feng, M.; Rossi, V.; Roughan, M.; Wyatt, A. S.: FORMATION<br />

OF SHALLOW HIGH-NITRATE LOW-OXYGEN LAYERS<br />

IN THE EASTERN INDIAN OCEAN SUPPORTED BY<br />

SURFACE NITROGEN FIXATION<br />

14:00 Raes, E. J.; Mcinnes, A. S.; Strutton, P. G.; Phillips, H. E.; Waite, A.<br />

M.: NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE EASTERN INDIAN<br />

OCEAN<br />

14:15 McInnes, A. S.; Raes, E. J.; Shepard, A.; Waite, A. M.; Quigg, A.:<br />

CARBON AND NITROGEN FIXATION MEASURED VIA<br />

GENE EXPRESSION IN THE INDIAN OCEAN<br />

14:30 Benavides, M.; Bronk, D. A.; Agawin, N. S.; Pérez-Hernández,<br />

M.; Hernández-Guerra, A.; Arístegui, J.: LONGITUDINAL<br />

VARIABILITY OF SIZE-FRACTIONATED N 2 FIXATION<br />

AND DON RELEASE ALONG 24.5 NN IN THE<br />

SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC<br />

14:45 Riou, V.; Fonseca Batista, D.; Roukaerts, A.; Prakya, S. R.; Loureiro,<br />

C. M.; Santos, M.; Elskens, M.; Martins, A.; Biegala, I.; Dehairs,<br />

F.: IMPACT OF CONTRASTING PHYSICO-CHEMICAL<br />

CONDITIONS AT THE NORTH-WESTERN AZORES<br />

FRONT ON N 2 -,CO 2 -FIXATION AND UCYN ABUNDANCE<br />

15:00 Sargent, E. C.; Snow, J. T.; Pabortsava, K.; Villareal, T. A.; Moore,<br />

C. M.; Bibby, T. S.; Poulton, A. J.: RECONSIDERING THE<br />

FATE OF DIAZOTROPH-DERIVED NEW NITROGEN:<br />

THE PRESENCE OF TRICHODESMIUM IN SINKING<br />

MATERIAL<br />

15:15 Rees, A. P.; Clark, D. R.; Turk-Kubo, K. A.; Zehr, J. P.; Al-Moosawi,<br />

L.: ACIDIFICATION OF THE MARINE NITROGEN CYCLE<br />

16:00 Le Moal, M.; Collin, H.; Biegala, I. C.: INTRIGUING DIVERSITY<br />

AMONG DIAZOTROPHIC PICOPLANKTON ALONG<br />

A MEDITERRANEAN TRANSECT : A DOMINANCE OF<br />

RHIZOBIA<br />

16:15 Voss, M.; Dalsgaard, T.; Fabian, J.; Wannicke, N.; Wasmund,<br />

N.; Montoya, J. P.: NITROGEN FIXATION DURING AN<br />

UNUSUAL SUMMER BALTIC SEA<br />

16:30 Farnelid, H.; Bentzon-Tilia, M.; Andersson, A. F.; Bertilsson, S.; Jost,<br />

G.; Labrenz, M.; Jürgens, K.; Riemann, L.: ACTIVE NITROGEN<br />

FIXING HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA AT AND BELOW<br />

THE OXIC-ANOXIC INTERFACE IN THE BALTIC SEA<br />

16:45 Klawonn, I.; Bonaglia, S.; Edlund, A.; Brüchert, V.; Ploug, H.:<br />

ANAEROBIC PROCESSES IN CYANOBACTERIAL<br />

AGGREGATES IN AERATED SURFACE WATERS<br />

17:00 Landolfi, A.; Dietze, H.; Koeve, W.; Oschlies, A.: IRON<br />

LIMITATION AND DOM PREVENT OCEANIC N LOSS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

17:15 Treibergs, L. A.; Fawcett, S. E.; Lomas, M. W.; Sigman, D. M.:<br />

NITROGEN ISOTOPIC RESPONSE OF PROKARYOTIC<br />

AND EUKARYOTIC PHYTOPLANKTON TO NITRATE<br />

AVAILABILITY IN SARGASSO SEA SURFACE WATER<br />

17:30 Fawcett, S. E.; Ward, B. B.; Lomas, M. W.; Sigman, D. M.:<br />

COUNTERINTUITIVE EFFECT OF FALL MIXED<br />

LAYER DEEPENING ON THE DOMINANT NITROGEN<br />

SOURCE TO EUKARYOTIC PHYTOPLANKTON IN THE<br />

SARGASSO SEA<br />

17:45 Heiss, E. M.; Fulweiler, R. W.: PELAGIC NITRIFICATION IN<br />

VARYING ENVIRONMENTS: HOW RATES CHANGE<br />

ALONG AN ESTUARY-TO-SHELF GRADIENT<br />

SS39 SCIENCE AND POLICY FRAMEWORK FOR FUTURE<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF THE OIL AND GAS RESOURCES OF THE<br />

USA OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF (OCS)<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Culbertson, jennnifer.culbertson@boem.gov<br />

Kelly Hammerle, kelly.hammerle@boem.gov<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

16:00 Froomer, N. L.: OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT ON THE<br />

OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF: REGULATIONS,<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND SCIENCE<br />

16:15 Reddy, C. M.; Haddad, R. I.: INTEGRATING ACADEMIA<br />

INTO OIL-SPILL PLANNING AND RESPONSE<br />

16:30 Lewandowski, J.; Epperson, D.; Skrupky, K.: INTEGRATING<br />

SCIENCE, POLICY AND STAKEHOLDER INPUT TO<br />

MAKE BETTER DECISIONS ON MINIMIZING IMPACTS<br />

OF OFFSHORE ENERGY DEVELOPMENT ON MARINE<br />

PROTECTED SPECIES<br />

16:45 Butterworth, M.; Kaller, A.; Sinclair, J.; Nannen, M.: INVASIVE<br />

SPECIES AND THE OFFSHORE OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY<br />

17:00 Valentine, M. M.; Benfield, M.: CHARACTERIZATION<br />

OF EPIBENTHIC AND DEMERSAL MEGAFAUNA AT<br />

MISSISSIPPI CANYON 252 SHORTLY AFTER THE<br />

DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL<br />

17:15 Culbertson, J. B.; Tripathi, P. B.; Butterworth, M. R.; Martinson, R.<br />

J.; Reddy, C. M.; Peacock, E. E.: REVIEWING THE VARIED<br />

RESPONSES OF COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS TO OIL SPILLS<br />

FOR EVALUATING POTENTIAL IMPACTS IN NEPA<br />

ANALYSES.<br />

17:30 Sharuga, S. M.; Benfield, M. C.: A RADIAL ROV SURVEY<br />

DESIGN FOR INVESTIGATION OF BENTHIC<br />

MEGAFAUNA IN THE VICINITY OF THE DEEPWATER<br />

HORIZON MACONDO WELL. T<br />

SS40 PERSPECTIVES ON RESTORATION:<br />

COASTAL HABITATS TO THE DEEP SEA<br />

Chair(s): Erik E. Cordes, Ph.D., ecordes@temple.edu<br />

Helen K. White, Ph.D., hwhite@haverford.edu<br />

Amanda W.J. Demopoulos, Ph.D., ademopoulos@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

10:00 Cowan, J. L.: RESTORING GULF OF MEXICO<br />

HABITATS AND RESOURCES: CHALLENGES AND<br />

OPPORTUNITIES T<br />

10:30 Armitage, A. R.; Ho, C. K.; Madrid, E. N.; Bell, M. T.; Kinney,<br />

E.; Quigg, A.: DO CONSTRUCTION TECHNIQUES<br />

INFLUENCE ECOSYSTEM-LEVEL RESTORATION<br />

OF EMERGENT AND AQUATIC ASSEMBLAGES IN A<br />

BRACKISH WETLAND?<br />

73<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

10:45 Sharma, S.; Goff, J.; Moody, R.; Byron, D.; Cebrian, J.; Heck, Jr,<br />

K.; Powers, S.: EFFICACY OF WAVE ATTENUATING<br />

STRUCTURES ON RESTORING SHORELINES, SAV &<br />

EMERGENT MARSH GRASSES: A COMPARATIVE STUDY<br />

OF TWO TYPES OF BREAKWATERS<br />

11:00 Caffrey, J. M.; Hester, C. M.; Jarmul, S.; Smith, A. N.; Smith, H. M.:<br />

SEDIMENT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN RESTORED AND<br />

NATIVE SUBTROPICAL SEAGRASS BEDS<br />

11:15 McDonald, A. M.; Christiaen, B.; Cebrian, J.: SUCCESSFUL<br />

RESTORATION OF SHOALGRASS (HALODULE<br />

WRIGHTII) TO AN ALABAMA COASTAL LAGOON<br />

11:30 Sparks, E. L.; Cebrian, J.; Tobias, C. R.: NUTRIENT FILTRATION<br />

CAPABILITY OF SMALL-SCALE SALT MARSH<br />

RESTORATION DESIGNS<br />

11:45 Middleton, B. A.; Roberts, B. J.: HYDROLOGIC REMEDIATION<br />

FOLLOWING THE DEEPWATER HORIZON INCIDENT<br />

IMPACTED ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES REGULATING<br />

ELEVATION IN COASTAL BALDCYPRESS SWAMPS<br />

13:30 Sadovski, A. L.; King, S.; Montagna, P. A.; Turner, E. L.: MODELING<br />

AND VISUALIZATION OF THE MARSHES VEGETATION<br />

13:45 McClenachan, G.; Turner, R. E.: EFFECTS OF OIL ON THE<br />

RATE AND TRAJECTORY OF LOUISIANA MARSH<br />

SHORELINE EROSION<br />

14:00 Forsyth, M. K.; Harris, L. A.: INVESTIGATIONS OF THE<br />

EFFECTS OF OYSTER MORPHOLOGY ON FILTRATION<br />

RATE AND PARTICLE CAPTURE USING A HYBRID<br />

ECOSYSTEM INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL<br />

14:30 Qu, F.; Rowe, G. T.: POLYCHAETE ANNELID (SEGMENTED<br />

WORMS) SPECIES COMPOSITION IN THE DEEP GULF<br />

OF MEXICO FOLLOWING THE DEEP WATER HORIZON<br />

(DWH) OIL SPILL<br />

14:45 Ruiz-Ramos, D. V.; Baums, I. B.: POPULATION GENETIC ANALYSIS<br />

OF LEIOPATHES GLABERRIMA IN THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

15:00 Doughty, C. L.; Quattrini, A. M.; Cordes, E. E.: POPULATION<br />

DYNAMICS OF THE DEEP-SEA CORAL GENUS<br />

PARAMURICEA IN THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

15:15 White, H. K.; Reddy, C. M.: GEOCHEMICAL INSIGHTS INTO<br />

RESTORATION EFFORTS IN THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

SS43 LONG ISLAND SOUND, AMERICA’S URBAN ESTUARY:<br />

SCIENCE, POLICY, AND PUBLIC OUTREACH<br />

Chair(s): James Ammerman, james.ammerman@stonybrook.edu<br />

Christopher Gobler, christopher.gobler@stonybrook.edu<br />

Cornelia Schlenk, cornelia.schlenk@stonybrook.edu<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

10:00 Ammerman, J. W.: LONG ISLAND SOUND: ORGIN,<br />

HISTORY, AND RESEARCH<br />

10:15 Swanson, R. L.; Wilson, R. E.: LONG ISLAND SOUND’S<br />

PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: ANTICIPATING THE<br />

FUTURE BASED ON RECENT DATA AND INFORMATION<br />

10:30 O’Donnell, J.: HYPOXIA IN LONG ISLAND SOUND-<br />

MEASUREMENTS AND MECHANISMS<br />

10:45 Suter, E. A.; Lwiza, K. M.; Rose, J.; Gobler, C.; Taylor, G. T.: REGIME<br />

SHIFTS IN NUTRIENTS, PHYTOPLANKTON, AND<br />

HYDROGRAPHY OVER THE LAST FIFTEEN YEARS IN<br />

LONG ISLAND SOUND<br />

11:00 Latimer, J. S.; Tedesco, M.; Swanson, R. L.; Stacey, P.; Yarish, C.;<br />

Garza, C.: SCIENCE IN SUPPORT OF MANAGEMENT,<br />

MANAGEMENT IN SUPPORT OF SCIENCE – THE LONG<br />

ISLAND SOUND EXPERIENCE T<br />

WEDNESDAY


WEDNESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

11:30 Seligson, N.; Johnson, C.: THE ROLE OF THE CITIZENS<br />

ADVISORY COMMITTEE IN THE LONG ISLAND SOUND<br />

STUDY*<br />

11:45 Graham, L. J.; Burg, R.: GOING BEYOND TRADITIONAL<br />

EDUCATIONAL METHODS TO CHANGE<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL BEHAVIOR<br />

13:30 O’Connell, C. A.; Collier, L. J.; Flood, R. D.: MEASURING THE<br />

EFFECTS OF AN INTERDISCIPLINARY INTRODUCTORY<br />

COURSE ON UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT ATTITUDES<br />

ABOUT LONG ISLAND SOUND<br />

13:45 Graham, L. J.; Marrero, M.: PROMOTING WETLANDS<br />

STEWARDSHIP FROM THE BAYOU TO THE BIG APPLE<br />

14:00 Durand, J. M.; Young, C. R.; Hanson, G. N.; Wong, T.:<br />

COMPARISON OF SEEPAGE PROPERTIES AT TWO<br />

LOCATIONS ALONG THE EAST SHORE OF PORT<br />

JEFFERSON HARBOR, NY<br />

14:15 Young, C.; Rapaglia , J.; Rogers , D.; Grant , C.; Bokuniewicz , H.:<br />

DISTRIBUTION OF SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER<br />

DISCHARGE INTO PORT JEFFERSON HARBOR, LONG<br />

ISLAND SOUND, NY<br />

14:30 Treible, L. M.; Lonsdale, D. J.; Gobler, C. J.: THE ROLE OF<br />

CTENOPHORES IN NUTRIENT REGENERATION IN<br />

LONG ISLAND SOUND<br />

14:45 Rice, E. J.; Stewart, G. M.: SEASONALITY OF LONG-<br />

TERM WARMING IN LONG ISLAND SOUND AND<br />

ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITY CHANGES<br />

15:00 Yarish, C.; Kim, J. K.: SEAWEED AQUACULTURE: AN<br />

OPPORTUNITY FOR NUTRIENT BIOEXTRACTION IN<br />

LONG ISLAND SOUND AND ADJACENT URBANIZED<br />

ESTUARIES<br />

15:15 Rackovan, J. L.; Grothues, T. M.; Able, K. W.: ASSOCIATION OF<br />

PELAGIC FISHES WITH PIERS IN THE LOWER HUDSON<br />

RIVER AS MEASURED WITH DUAL FREQUENCY<br />

IDENTIFICATION SONAR (DIDSON)<br />

SS44 FACTORS PROMOTING THE EXPANSION OF HARMFUL<br />

ALGAL BLOOMS IN MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): James Ammerman, James.Ammerman@stonybrook.edu<br />

Christopher J. Gobler, christopher.gobler@stonybrook.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

10:00 Wurch, L. L.; Gobler, C. J.; Walker, E.; Dyhrman, S. T.:<br />

TRANSCRIPTOME PROFILING IN NATURAL<br />

POPULATIONS OF A. ANOPHAGEFFERENS PROVIDE<br />

INSIGHT INTO NUTRITIONAL DRIVERS OF HARMFUL<br />

BROWN TIDES<br />

10:15 Harke, M. J.; Gobler, C. J.: WHOLE TRANSCRIPTOME<br />

RESPONSE OF THE TOXIC, BLOOM FORMING<br />

CYANOBACTERIUM, MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA, TO<br />

NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY.<br />

10:30 Coyne, K. J.; Bouchard, J. N.; Hennige, S. J.; Warner, M. E.:<br />

REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION BY LIGHT AND<br />

NITROGEN SOURCE IN HETEROSIGMA AKASHIWO<br />

10:45 Eiler, A.; Drakare, S.; Pernthaler, J.; Peura, S.; Simek, K.; Znachor, P.;<br />

Lindström, E. S.: CAN NEXT GENERATION SEQUENCING<br />

BE USEFUL IN PHYTOPLANKTON MONITORING?<br />

11:00 Parker, M. S.; Maumus, F.; Armbrust, E. V.: STRESS ACTIVATED<br />

TRANSPOSONS IN THE DOMOIC ACID PRODUCING<br />

DIATOM PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA MULTISERIES<br />

74<br />

11:15 Guannel, M. L.; Haring, D.; Twiner, M. J.; Wang, Z.; Noble, A.;<br />

Saito, M. A.; Rocap, G.: TOXIGENICITY AND COMMUNITY<br />

COMPOSITION OF THE DIATOM PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA<br />

IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

11:30 Benitez-Nelson, C.; Anderson, C. R.; Thunell R.; Sekula-Wood,<br />

E.; Siegel, D.: INCREASING PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA<br />

ABUNDANCE AND DOMOIC ACID TOXICITY OF<br />

SINKING PARTICLES IN THE SANTA BARBARA BASIN<br />

ASSOCIATED WITH CHANGES IN SOURCE WATERS<br />

11:45 Lubetkin, S. C.; Lessard, E. J.: HABITAT MODELING OF<br />

PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA DISTRIBUTION AND TOXICITY<br />

IN THE COASTAL WATERS OF THE NORTHWEST<br />

PACIFIC USING NON-PARAMETRIC MULTIPLICATIVE<br />

REGRESSION<br />

13:30 Paerl, H. W.; Otten, T. G.; Xu, H.; Qin, B.; Zhu, G.; Wilhelm,<br />

S. W.; Scott, J. T.; Hall, N. S.: CONTROLLING HARMFUL<br />

CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS IN A MORE CROWDED,<br />

WARMER WORLD: RETHINKING NUTRIENT<br />

REDUCTION PARADIGMS AND STRATEGIES<br />

13:45 Otten, T. G.; Paerl, H. W.: PRIMARY DRIVERS OF<br />

SUCCESSION AND TOXIGENICITY OF THE<br />

CYANOHAB MICROCYSTIS SPP.<br />

14:00 White, J. D.; Sarnelle, O.: VARIATION IN ECOLOGICAL<br />

TRAITS OF MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA:<br />

IMPLICATIONS FOR POPULATION DYNAMICS<br />

14:15 Swarbrick, V. J.; Vogt, R. J.; Quiñones-Rivera, Z. J.; Leavitt, P. R.:<br />

SEASONAL SUPPRESSION OF ALGAL GROWTH BY<br />

NITROGEN FERTILIZATION: LANDSCAPE EVIDENCE<br />

FROM 16 YEARS OF ENRICHMENT BIOASSAYS<br />

14:30 Nojavan A., F.; Cassar, N.; Qian, S. S.; Reckhow, K. H.; Paerl, H.<br />

W.: A STUDY OF ANTHROPOGENIC DISTURBANCE OF<br />

THE NEW RIVER ESTUARY USING A BAYESIAN BELIEF<br />

NETWORK APPROACH<br />

14:45 Stanfield, E. R.; Sreenivasan, A.; Los Huertos, M.:<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH<br />

TOXIC CYANOBACTERIA IN PINTO LAKE, A COASTAL<br />

LAKE IN THE MONTEREY BAY AREA<br />

15:00 McLaughlin, J. T.; Creed, I. F.; Trick, C. G.: APPLICATION OF<br />

CYTOTOXICITY ASSAYS TO DETECT POTENTIALLY<br />

HARMFUL BIOACTIVE COMPOUNDS PRODUCED BY<br />

FRESHWATER CYANOBACTERIA AND CHRYSOPHYTES<br />

15:15 Hudon, C.; Lévesque, D.; Cattaneo, A.; Gagnon, P.: FACTORS<br />

CONTROLLING THE PROLIFERATION OF THE<br />

BENTHIC CYANOBACTERIUM LYNGBYA WOLLEI IN<br />

THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER (CANADA)<br />

16:00 Munawar, M.; Fitzpatrick, M. A.: ALGAL BLOOM DYNAMICS:<br />

EXAMINING MICROBIAL AND PLANKTONIC FOOD<br />

WEB INTERACTIONS<br />

16:15 Planas, D.; Pannard, A.; Paquet, S.: PHYSICAL FORCING OF<br />

HARMFUL ALGAE BLOOMS IN LAKES WITH LOW<br />

NUTRIENT LOADING<br />

16:30 Wurtsbaugh, W. A.; Marcarelli, A. M.; Boyer, G. L.: HARMFUL<br />

ALGAL BLOOMS IN THE GREAT SALT LAKE (UTAH):<br />

SALINITY, NUTRIENT AND TOP-DOWN CONTROLS<br />

16:45 Yokota, K.; Bingham-Hill, A. S.: LAWN FERTILIZER<br />

RUNOFFS AND THEIR EFFECTS ON URBAN POND<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON: COMPARISON OF CONVENTIONAL<br />

AND NEW FORMULAE<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

17:00 Lindim, C.; Becker, A.; Fischer, H.: ROLE OF INTERNAL<br />

VS. EXTERNAL LOADS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF A<br />

FLOWING LAKE: A MODELLING STUDY<br />

17:15 Graham, J. L.; Ziegler, A. C.; Loving, B. L.; Loftin, K. A.: FATE<br />

AND TRANSPORT OF CYANOBACTERIA-RELATED<br />

TOXINS AND TASTE-AND-ODOR COMPOUNDS FROM<br />

UPSTREAM RESERVOIR RELEASES IN THE KANSAS<br />

RIVER, KANSAS<br />

17:30 Cha, Y.: CONTROLS ON HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN A<br />

RESERVOIR IN THE EAST ASIAN MONSOON SYSTEM<br />

17:45 Hambright, K. D.; Easton, J. D.; Zamor, R. M.; Easton, A. C.; Glenn,<br />

K. L.; Allison, B.; Remmel, E. J.; Beyer, J. E.: ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

REGULATION OF GROWTH AND TOXICITY OF<br />

PRYMNESIUM PARVUM: IDENTIFICATION OF POSSIBLE<br />

MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES<br />

SS53 SENSOR NETWORKS IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS:<br />

RESEARCH AND EDUCATION<br />

Chair(s): Joe Needoba, needobaj@ebs.ogi.edu<br />

Brian Bergamaschi, bbergama@usgs.gov<br />

Janice McDonnell, mcdonnel@marine.rutgers.edu<br />

Bob Chen, bob.chen@umb.edu<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

10:00 Roehm, C. L.; Powell, H.: THE SENSOR NETWORK OF THE<br />

AQUATIC MEASUREMENT <strong>PROGRAM</strong> WITHIN NEON.<br />

10:15 Newton, J. A.: NANOOS-IOOS OBSERVATION<br />

AND VISUALIZATION OF ESTUARINE OCEAN<br />

ACIDIFICATION: MAKING A DIFFERENCE<br />

10:30 Baptista, A.; Needoba, J.; Roegner, C.; Welle, P.; Spitz, Y.; Llebot,<br />

C.; Li, B.; Evans, W.; Peterson, T.; Herfort, L.: SCIENCE IN<br />

THE ERA OF COLLABORATORIES: UNDERSTANDING<br />

AND PREDICTING UPWELLING-DRIVEN ESTUARINE<br />

HYPOXIA AND ACIDIFICATION<br />

10:45 Chen, R. F.; Uzzo, S.; Cramer, C.; DiBona, P.; Faux, R.: SENSOR<br />

NETWORKS AND SOCIAL NETWORKS: EFFECTIVE<br />

STRATEGIES FOR EDUCATION AND OUTREACH<br />

11:00 Johnson, K. S.; Jannasch, H.; Coletti, L.; Carlson, R.; Brown, G.;<br />

Nohava, T.; Martz, T.; Takeshita, Y.; Swift, D.; Riser, S.: TOWARDS<br />

A GLOBAL OCEAN PH OBSERVING SYSTEM: FIRST<br />

OBSERVATIONS WITH DEEP-SEA DURAFET PH<br />

SENSORS ON PROFILING FLOATS<br />

11:15 Jochens, A. E.: HELPING EDUCATORS TEACH STUDENTS<br />

AND THE PUBLIC ABOUT THE OCEAN AND THE GULF<br />

OF MEXICO<br />

11:30 Simoniello, C.; Kobara, S.; Walker, S.; Howard, M. K.; Jochens, A. E.;<br />

Nowlin, W.; Baumer-Pendergast, D.; Mullins-Perry, R.: MAKING<br />

SENSE OF OCEAN SENSING: TRANSLATING OCEAN<br />

SCIENCE INFORMATION FOR DIVERSE AUDIENCES<br />

11:45 Kindelberger, S. A.; Doremus, D. R.; Libes, S. M.; Trapp, J. M.:<br />

NEW APPROACHES TO TERRESTRIAL-BASED OCEAN<br />

MONITORING PLATFORMS<br />

13:30 Elrod, V. A.; Johnson, K. S.; Plant, J.; Massion, E.; Jannasch, H.;<br />

Coletti, L.; Sakamoto, C.: APPLICATION OF A VERSATILE<br />

IN SITU CHEMICAL ANALYZER BASED ON ARDUINO<br />

TECHNOLOGY: MONITORING PO4 CONCENTRATIONS<br />

IN A DYNAMIC COASTAL WATERSHED<br />

75<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

13:45 Downing, B. D.; Pellerin, B. A.; Bergamaschi, B. A.; Kraus, T.<br />

E.; Saraceno, J. F.; Sauer, M. J.: IMPROVING DOC PROXY<br />

MEASUREMENTS THROUGH CORRECTION OF IN SITU<br />

DOM FLUORESCENCE FOR EFFECTS OF TURBIDITY<br />

AND INNER FILTERING.<br />

14:00 Stauffer, B. A.; Schnetzer, A.; Gellene, A. G.; Seubert, E. L.; Sukhatme,<br />

G. S.; Caron, D. A.: COASTAL SENSOR NETWORKS<br />

ALLOW ELUCIDATION OF CAUSATIVE MECHANISMS<br />

UNDERLYING ALGAL BLOOM AND FISH KILL EVENTS<br />

14:15 Milbrandt, E. C.; Bartleson, R. D.; Martignette, A. J.; Siwicke, J. J.;<br />

Thompson, M.: USING A MULT-NODE SENSOR NETWORK<br />

TO UNDERSTAND DIURNAL, TIDAL, AND SEASONAL<br />

DYNAMICS OF A SOUTHWEST FLORIDA BARRIER<br />

ISLAND ECOSYSTEM *<br />

14:30 Adams, L. G.; Howick, T.: MONITORING THE<br />

CHATTAHOOCHEE RIVER USING THE BASIC<br />

OBSERVATION BUOY, A PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN<br />

A UNIVERSITY, NATURE CENTER, AND AP<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE STUDENTS<br />

14:45 Matsumoto, G. I.; Johnson, K.; Adams, L.: SENSOR NETWORKS<br />

USED FOR BOTH RESEARCH AND EDUCATION - WHAT<br />

IS NEEDED TO MAKE RESEARCH SENSORS SUITABLE<br />

FOR THE CLASSROOM.*<br />

15:00 Pullin, M. J.; Schwingle, R.; Echevarria Roman, Y.; Gabrielsen, P. J.:<br />

A MOBILE WATER ANALYSIS LABORATORY FOR THE<br />

STUDY OF STREAM NUTRIENT AND DOC DYNAMICS<br />

15:15 Escoffier, N.; David, A.; Métivier, F.; Groleau, A.: INTEGRATING<br />

LARGE RIVER TROPHIC FUNCTIONING FROM REAL<br />

TIME SENSORS NETWORK MEASUREMENTS<br />

16:00 Andresen, C. G.; Lougheed, V. L.: INTEGRATION OF NEAR-<br />

SURFACE REMOTE SENSING FOR ESTIMATION OF<br />

PHENOLOGY AND PLANT BIOMASS IN ARCTIC<br />

WETLANDS.<br />

16:15 McNair, J. N.; Gereaux, L. C.; Weinke, A. D.; Sesselmann, M. R.;<br />

Kendall, S. T.; Biddanda, B. A.: USING QUASI-MECHANISTIC<br />

STATISTICAL MODELS AND HIGH-FREQUENCY<br />

SENSOR DATA TO ESTIMATE COMPONENTS OF<br />

LAKE METABOLISM BY THE FREE-WATER DISSOLVED-<br />

OXYGEN METHOD<br />

16:30 Li, C.; da Silva, G.; Hesp, P.: TEACHING AND LEARNING<br />

WITH NEW TECHNOLOGY AND EXCITEMENT: BEACH<br />

EXPERIMENTS OF LAB-MADE GPS DRIFTERS WITH<br />

STUDENTS<br />

16:45 Head, M. J.; Elliott, K. M.: TELEMETERING WATER QUALITY<br />

MEASUREMENTS AT 1-MINUTE RESOLUTION<br />

17:00 Gebrai, Y. A.: USING CYCLOPS 7 SENSORS WITH AN<br />

AUTONOMOUS SURFACE VENHICLE TO DETERMINE<br />

CONCENTRATIONS OF CRUDE OIL AND REFINED<br />

FUELS IN INTER-COASTAL WATERS<br />

17:15 Tiano, L.; Revsbech, N. P.: MEASURING OXYGEN AT<br />

VANISHNGLY LOW OXYGEN CONCENTRATIONS: IN<br />

SITU AND LABORATORY APPLICATIONS OF THE STOX<br />

SENSOR<br />

17:30 Mullins-Perry, R. L.; Jochens, A. E.: BUILDING TOWARD A<br />

SUSTAINABLE, INTEGRATED, AND OPERATIONAL<br />

DATA NETWORK IN THE GULF OF MEXICO<br />

17:45 Peri, F.; Chen, R. F.; Meile, C. D.; Esch, M.; Cable, J. E.; Cato, H.<br />

S.: DEVELOPING SENSORS TO STUDY CREEKBANK<br />

EXCHANGE AND EBB TIDE DRAINAGE OF<br />

CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

(CDOM) IN AN URBAN MACROTIDAL SALT MARSH<br />

WEDNESDAY


WEDNESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS56 CARBON FLUXES IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS AT CATCHMENT,<br />

REGIONAL AND CONTINENTAL SCALES<br />

Chair(s): Sebastian Sobek, sebastian.sobek@ebc.uu.se<br />

Cory McDonald, cmcdonald@usgs.gov<br />

Edward Stets, estets@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Room 345<br />

10:00 Räike, A.; Kortelainen, P.; Mattsson, T.; Thomas, D. N.: TRENDS IN<br />

ORGANIC AND INORGANIC CARBON EXPORT TO THE<br />

BALTIC SEA FROM FINNISH RIVERS<br />

10:15 Campeau, A.; Del Giorgio, P. A.: CURRENT AND PREDICTED<br />

FUTURE CO2 AND CH4 EMISSIONS FROM BOREAL<br />

RIVER NETWORKS IN NORTHERN QUBBEC<br />

10:30 Wallin, M. B.; Grabs, T.; Buffam, I.; Laudon, H.; Ågren, A.; Öquist,<br />

M.; Bishop, K.: EVASION OF CO2 FROM STREAMS – THE<br />

DOMINANT COMPONENT OF THE CARBON EXPORT<br />

THROUGH THE AQUATIC CONDUIT IN A BOREAL<br />

LANDSCAPE<br />

10:45 Cialino, K. T.; Chen, R. F.; Huang, W.; Wang, X.; Peri, F.; Heath, T. D.:<br />

HIGH RESOLUTION MEASUREMENTS OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC CARBON DURING EPISODIC EVENTS IN AN<br />

URBAN NEW ENGLAND RIVER<br />

11:00 Kominoski, J. S.; Benstead, J. P.; Rosemond, A. D.; Manning, D.<br />

P.: BALANCING STREAM METABOLIC DEMANDS<br />

FOR CARBON AND NUTRIENTS: N:P ENRICHMENT<br />

STIMULATES WHOLE-STREAM HETEROTROPHIC<br />

RESPIRATION DESPITE A REDUCED CARBON BASE<br />

11:15 Cai, Y.; Shim, M.; Guo, L.; Shiller, A. M.: FLOODPLAIN<br />

INFLUENCE ON CARBON SPECIATION AND EXPORT<br />

FROM THE LOWER PEARL RIVER, MISSISSIPPI<br />

11:30 Schindler, D. E.; Jankowski, K.; Lisi, P. J.; Holtgrieve, G. W.:<br />

GEOMORPHIC CONTROLS ON THE METABOLISM OF<br />

AUTOCHTHONOUS AND ALLOCHTHONOUS CARBON<br />

IN STREAMS<br />

13:30 Sobek, S.; McDonald, C. P.; Lauerwald, R.; Kortelainen, P.; Hartmann,<br />

J.; Raymond, P. A.: REGIONALLY RESOLVED CO2 EMISSION<br />

OF GLOBAL LAKES AND RESERVOIRS<br />

13:45 McDonald, C. P.; Stets, E. G.; Striegl, R. G.: CARBON DIOXIDE<br />

EMISSIONS FROM LAKES AND RESERVOIRS IN THE<br />

CONTIGUOUS UNITED STATES<br />

14:00 Vachon, D.; del Giorgio, P. A.: ANNUAL CYCLE OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER DEGRADABILITY AND LINKS TO<br />

CO2 DYNAMICS IN BOREAL LAKES<br />

14:15 Natchimuthu, S.; Panneer Selvam, B.; Bastviken, D.: TEMPORAL<br />

VARIATIONS OF AQUATIC FRESHWATER METHANE<br />

AND CARBON DIOXIDE FLUXES – A KEY FOR<br />

ACCURATE UPSCALING<br />

14:30 Boutet, L.; St-Pierre, A.; Prairies, Y. T.; del Giorgio, P. A.:<br />

CONTRIBUTION OF EBULLITION TO TOTAL METHANE<br />

EMISSIONS FROM BOREAL LAKES AND WETLANDS<br />

14:45 Bogard, M. J.; Garcia Chavez, M. C.; Gauthier-Fautaux, S.; Boutet, L.;<br />

del Giorgio, P. A.; Prairie, Y. T.; Derry, A.: PELAGIC METHANE<br />

PRODUCTION IN OXIC WATER COLUMNS OF LAKES<br />

15:00 Soued, C.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Maranger, R. J.: NITROUS OXIDE<br />

(N 2 O) CONCENTRATIONS AND FLUXES ACROSS<br />

BOREAL RIVERS, LAKES, AND WETLANDS<br />

15:15 West, W. E.; Coloso, J. J.; Creamer, K. P.; Jones, S. E.: LANDSCAPE-<br />

INFORMED STRATEGIES FOR ESTIMATING<br />

CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GLOBAL METHANE CYCLE<br />

76<br />

16:00 Abrams, J. F.; Hohn, S.; Merico, A.: THE EFFECTS OF THE<br />

DEGRADATION OF INDONESIAN PEATLANDS ON THE<br />

REGIONAL AND GLOBAL CARBON CYCLE<br />

16:15 Morris, E. P.; Flecha, S.; Figuerola, J.; Costas, E.; Navarro, G.;<br />

Rodriguez, P.; Huertas, I. E.: AIR-WATER CARBON DIOXIDE<br />

FLUXES IN A MEDITERRANEAN WETLAND<br />

16:30 Wilson, B. J.; Mortazavi, B. M.; Kiene, R. K.; Starr, G. S.: COUPLED<br />

METHANE AND CARBON DIOXIDE FLUXES IN COASTAL<br />

MARSHES ALONG A SALINITY GRADIENT<br />

16:45 Moseman-Valtierra, S.; Tang, J.; Morkeski, K.; Govenar, B.; Egan, K.;<br />

Lima, T.; Martin , R.; Garate, M.: CONTRASTING ZONATION<br />

PATTERNS IN GREENHOUSE GAS FLUXES FROM NEW<br />

ENGLAND SALT MARSHES<br />

17:00 Faber, P. A.; Cook, P. L.; Kessler, A. J.; Bull, J. K.; Meysman, F. J.;<br />

McKelvie, I. D.: THE ROLE OF ALKALINITY GENERATION<br />

IN CONTROLLING INORGANIC CARBON FLUXES FROM<br />

INTERTIDAL SEDIMENTS<br />

SS57 TRACE ELEMENTS AND ISOTOPES IN THE OCEAN AND<br />

ATMOSPHERE: THE GEOTRACES <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

Chair(s): Carl Lamborg, clamborg@whoi.edu<br />

Peter Morton, pmorton@fsu.edu<br />

Location: Room 355<br />

10:00 Rijkenberg, M.; Gerringa, L.; Laan, P.; Schoemann, V.; Middag, R.;<br />

van Aken, H.; de Jong, J.; van Haren, H.; de Baar, H.: GEOTRACES:<br />

WHAT WE LEARNT FROM THE DISTRIBUTION OF<br />

DISSOLVED IRON IN THE WESTERN ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

10:15 Dulaquais, G. R.; Boye, M.; Carton, X.: CONTRASTING<br />

FEATURES OF THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLE OF<br />

COBALT IN THE WEST ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

10:30 Casacuberta, N.; Christl, M.; Lachner, J.; Rutgers van der Loeff, M.;<br />

Puigcorbé, V.; Synal, H. A.; Masqué, P.: THE FIRST TRANSECT<br />

OF U-236 IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

10:45 Achterberg, E. P.; Moore, C. M.; Steigenberger, S.; Marsay, C.; Rogan,<br />

N.; Henderson, S.; Sanders, R.: IRON BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN<br />

THE HIGH LATITUDE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

11:00 Fitzsimmons, J. N.; Carrasco, G.; Wu, J.; Boyle, E. A.: DISSOLVED<br />

IRON SIZE PARTITIONING INTO SOLUBLE AND<br />

COLLOIDAL PHASES ALONG THE U.S. GEOTRACES<br />

NORTH ATLANTIC TRANSECT<br />

11:15 Wu, J.; Roshan, S.; Measures, C.; Hatta, M.; Fitzsimmons, J. N.; Morton,<br />

P.: COMPARATIVE DISTRIBUTION OF DISSOLVED FE, MN,<br />

ZN, CU AND CD IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC DURING US<br />

GEOTRACES NORTH ATLANTIC 2010 AND 2011 CRUISES<br />

11:30 Shiller, A. M.: A DISSOLVED GALLIUM SECTION ACROSS<br />

THE NORTH ATLANTIC<br />

11:45 Bowman, K. L.; Hammerschmidt, C. R.; Lamborg, C. H.; Swarr, G.:<br />

NEW INSIGHTS ON MERCURY SPECIATION WITH FULLY<br />

RESOLVED HIGH-RESOLUTION PROFILES ACROSS A<br />

ZONAL SECTION OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

13:30 Shelley, R. U.; Landing, W. M.: THE SOLUBILITY OF TRACE<br />

METALS FROM NORTH ATLANTIC AEROSOLS (US<br />

GEOTRACES)<br />

13:45 Landing, W. M.; Shelley, R. U.: PARTICLE SIZE EFFECTS ON<br />

AEROSOL IRON SOLUBILITY FROM THE U.S. GEOTRACES<br />

NORTH ATLANTIC ZONAL TRANSECT (2010, 2011)<br />

14:00 Ohnemus, D. C.; Lam, P. J.; Shelley, R.; Landing, W. M.:<br />

LITHOGENIC PARTICULATE TRACERS IN THE NORTH<br />

ATLANTIC U.S. GEOTRACES SECTION: INPUTS,<br />

SCAVENGING, BIOLOGICAL UPTAKE<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

14:15 Pöhle, S.; Koschinsky, A.; Moos, S. B.; Sander, S. G.: CHROMIUM<br />

SPECIATION IN THE OCEANIC WATER COLUMN<br />

14:30 Lohan, M.; Wyatt, N.; Milne, A.; Woodward, M.; Schlosser, C.; Klar,<br />

J.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING OF DISSOLVED ZINC<br />

AND COBALT ALONG 40OS GEOTRACES TRANSECT<br />

14:45 Schlosser, C.; Castrillejo, M.; Klar, J.; Klunder, M.; Lohan, M.;<br />

Achterberg, E. P.: REGIONAL SINKS AND SOURCES OF<br />

TRACE METALS IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN<br />

ALONG 40°S<br />

15:00 de Brauwere, A.; Jeandel, C.; Lacan, F.; van Beek, P.; Venchiarutti, C.;<br />

Fripiat, F.: PUTTING THE PIECES TOGETHER: A MULTI-<br />

TRACER MODEL TO QUANTITATIVELY IDENTIFY THE<br />

MAJOR PROCESSES RELATED TO THE FERTILIZED<br />

BLOOM ON THE KERGUELEN PLATEAU<br />

15:15 Aguilar-Islas, A. M.; Rember, R.; Nishino, S.; Kikuchi, T.; Itoh,<br />

M.: LATERAL TRANSPORT OF IRON IN THE CANADA<br />

BASIN<br />

16:00 Munson, K. M.; Lamborg, C. H.; Saito, M. A.: MERCURY<br />

METHYLATION AND DEMETHYLATON RATE<br />

MEASUREMENTS FROM THE OPEN OCEAN WATER<br />

COLUMN<br />

16:15 Buck, C. S.; Landing, A. M.; Bowman, K. L.; Gill, G. A.;<br />

Hammerschmidt, C.; Landing, W. M.: RIVERINE SUPPLY OF<br />

INORGANIC AND METHYL MERCURY TO THE GULF OF<br />

MEXICO<br />

16:30 Jones, P. R.; Maiti, K.; Bargu-Ates, S.; Gambrell, R.:<br />

POLONIUM-210 REMOBILIZATION IN THE GULF OF<br />

MEXICO HYPOXIA<br />

16:45 Kiene, R. P.; Motard-Cote, J.; Oswald, L.; Kieber, D. J.: DISSOLVED<br />

DMSP IN SEAWATER – A DYNAMIC POOL WITH A<br />

REFRACTORY COMPONENT<br />

17:00 Guo, L. D.; Lin, P.; Chen, M.; Cai, Y.: DISTRIBUTIONS,<br />

PARTITIONING AND MIXING BEHAVIOR OF<br />

PHOSPHORUS SPECIES IN THE JIULONG RIVER<br />

ESTUARY<br />

17:15 Ebling, A. M.; Landing, W. M.: TRACE METALS IN THE SEA<br />

SURFACE MICROLAYER<br />

17:30 Kimoto, H.; Yamamoto, K.: THE DISTRIBUTION OF TRACE<br />

METALS IN SUBOXIC WATER IN MIKAWA-BAY, JAPAN<br />

17:45 Duteil, O.; Koeve, W.; Oschlies, A.: OXYGEN UTILIZATION<br />

IN THE OCEAN: IMPROVEMENT OF A CLASSICAL<br />

CONCEPT AND MEASURE OF THE BIOLOGICAL PUMP<br />

SS61 ECOSYSTEM ENGINEERING AS COASTAL PROTECTION –<br />

LESSONS FROM THEORY AND PRACTICE<br />

Chair(s): Jasper Dijkstra, jasper.dijkstra@deltares.nl<br />

Denise Reed, djreed@uno.edu<br />

Luca A. van Duren, luca.vanduren@deltares.nl<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

16:00 de Vriend, H. J.: BUILDING WITH NATURE:<br />

ECO-ENGINEERING AND INFRASTRUCTURE<br />

DEVELOPMENT T<br />

16:30 Dorgan, K. M.: PERISTALTIC BURROWING IN BEACH SANDS<br />

16:45 Cozzoli, F.; Bouma, T. J.; Ysebaert, T.; Herman, P. M.: MODELLING<br />

BIOTA-SEDIMENT INTERACTIONS IN ESTUARINE<br />

ENVIRONMENTS<br />

17:00 Dijkstra, J. T.; van Prooijen, B. C.; Volp, N. C.; Bergsma, E. W.; Walles,<br />

B.; Ysebaert, T.: THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ARTIFICIAL<br />

OYSTER REEFS AS COASTAL PROTECTION<br />

77<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

17:15 Harder, T. M.; David, G. L.; Arienti, T. W.; Gill, S. M.; Tilburg, C.<br />

E.: CHANNEL MORPHOLOGY SHIFTS FOLLOWING<br />

DREDGING, IN A NORTHEASTERN JETTY BOUND<br />

ESTUARY SYSTEM, SACO RIVER, MAINE<br />

17:30 Smaal, A. C.; Walles, B.; Van Sluis, C.; Ysebaert, T.: FARMING<br />

WITH NATURE: COMBINING AQUACULTURE AND<br />

COASTAL PROTECTION<br />

17:45 Reed, D. J.: SAGE (SYSTEMS APPROACH TO GEOMORPHIC<br />

ENGINEERING): MERGING GREEN AND GRAY<br />

SOLUTIONS TO SUPPORT TRANSFORMING COASTAL<br />

LANDSCAPES AND COMMUNITIES<br />

SS76 MICROBIAL INTERACTIONS:<br />

FROM SPECIES SURVIVAL TO BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES<br />

Chair(s): Shady A. Amin, shadyam@uw.edu<br />

Laura R. Hmelo, lhmelo@uw.edu<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

10:00 Rappe, M. S.; Grote, J.; Brucks, E.; Shulse, C.: GENETIC<br />

HETEROGENEITY BETWEEN SYMPATRIC SAR11<br />

STRAINS<br />

10:15 McDaniel, L. D.; Rosario-Cora, K.; Breitbart, M.; Paul, J. H.:<br />

COMPARISON OF LYTIC AND TEMPERATE VIRAL<br />

METAGENOMES FROM TAMPA BAY, FLORIDA<br />

10:30 Nguyen, D.; Maranger, R.; Balagué, V.; Coll, M.; Fernández-Gómez,<br />

B.; Lovejoy, C.; Pedrós-Alió, C.: SEASONAL PATTERNS IN<br />

PROTEORHODOPSIN GENE DYNAMICS IN THE ARCTIC<br />

OCEAN<br />

10:45 Zielinski, B. L.; Sharma, S.; Satinsky, B. M.; Smith, C. B.; Doherty,<br />

M.; Coles, V.; Crump, B.; Yager, P.; Moran, M.; Paul, J. H.:<br />

USING METATRANSCRIPTOMICS TO REVEAL THE<br />

EUKARYOTIC PHYTOPLANTON’S RESPONSE TO<br />

DYNAMIC ENVIRONMENTS WITHIN THE AMAZON<br />

RIVER PLUME<br />

11:15 Nelson, C. E.; Goldberg, S. J.; Kelly, L. W.; Haas, A. F.; Smith, J.<br />

E.; Rohwer, F.; Carlson, C. A.: DIFFERENTIAL BACTERIAL<br />

POPULATION GROWTH AND COMMUNITY<br />

METABOLISM ON ORGANIC EXUDATES OF CORAL AND<br />

MACROALGAE IN A REEF ECOSYSTEM<br />

11:30 Krupke, A.; LaRoche, J.; Mohr, W.; Fuchs, B. M.; Amann, R. I.;<br />

Kuypers, M. M.: PHYSIOLOGICAL INSIGHTS INTO THE<br />

NOVEL ASSOCIATION BETWEEN A UNICELLULAR<br />

PRYMNESIOPHYTE AND THE N2 FIXING<br />

CYANOBACTERIUM UCYN-A<br />

11:45 Liu, Z.; Liu, S.: INTERACTION OF PEPTIDE HYDROLYSIS<br />

AND BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES IN COASTAL WATERS<br />

13:30 Schauer, R.; Larsen, S.; Kjeldsen, K. U.; Bjerg, J. J.; Schreiber,<br />

L.; Risgaard-Petersen, N.; Schramm, A.; Nielsen, L. P.:<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF LONG DISTANCE ELECTRON<br />

TRANSPORT BY MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN MARINE<br />

SEDIMENT<br />

13:45 Mackey, K. R.; Saito, M. A.: PROTEOMIC RESPONSE OF<br />

SYNECHOCOCCUS TO LIGHT AND TEMPERATURE<br />

14:00 Song, B.; Carini, S. A.; Arfken, A.; Lisa, J. A.; Duernberger, K. A.;<br />

Tobias, C. R.: IMPACT OF SEA LEVEL RISE ON ANAMMOX<br />

AND DENITRIFYING COMMUNITIES IN A TIDAL<br />

FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEM<br />

14:15 Lisa, J. A.; Tobias, C. R.; Duernberger, K. A.; Song , B.: TIDAL<br />

INFLUENCES ON MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES<br />

RESPONSIBLE FOR SEDIMENTARY NITROGEN<br />

CYCLING IN THE CAPE FEAR RIVER ESTUARY, USA<br />

WEDNESDAY


WEDNESDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

14:30 Comte, J.; Langenheder, S.; Lindström, E. S.: CONTRIBUTION<br />

OF SEED BANKS AND AIR DEPOSITION TO LAKE<br />

BACTERIOPLAKNTON METABOLIC RESPONSE TO<br />

SALINITY GRADIENT<br />

14:45 Reese, B. K.; Ariza , M.; St. Peter, R. C.; Mills, H. J.: EXPANDING<br />

THE SUBSURFACE BIOSPHERE: DETECTING VIABLE<br />

FUNGAL POPULATIONS IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC GYRE<br />

SS78 ASSESSING VULNERABILITY OF U.S. LAKES AND RESERVOIRS<br />

TO CLIMATE CHANGE<br />

Chair(s): S. Geoffrey Schladow, gschladow@ucdavis.edu<br />

Christopher Clark, clark.christopher@epa.gov<br />

Craig Williamson, craig.williamson@muohio.edu<br />

Daniel Nover, dmnover@gmail.com<br />

Kevin Rose, RoseKC@si.edu<br />

Location: Room 357<br />

13:30 Tranvik, L. J.; Gudasz, C.; Kellerman, A.; Koehler, B.; Kothawala, D.<br />

N.: LAKE METABOLISM, DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER,<br />

AND CLIMATE – A TUTORIAL<br />

14:00 Hook, S.; Schneider, P.; Wilson, C.; Hulley, G.: INLAND WATERS<br />

AND CLIMATE*<br />

14:15 Saros, J. E.; Strock, K. E.; Slemmons, K. E.; Stone, J. R.:<br />

CLIMATE-INDUCED CHANGES IN LAKE THERMAL<br />

STRUCTURE AND PRODUCTIVITY INFERRED FROM<br />

PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL RECONSTRUCTIONS*<br />

14:30 Schladow, S. G.; Forrest, A. L.; Sahoo, G. B.: CLIMATE-DRIVEN<br />

STRATIFICATION CHANGES AT LAKE TAHOE: WATER<br />

QUALITY AND ECOSYSTEM CONSEQUENCES<br />

14:45 Kane, D. D.; Perello, M. M.; Hughes, M. C.; Golnick, P.; Thomas, M.<br />

A.; Conroy, J. D.: LAKE ERIE AS A SENTINEL FOR CLIMATE<br />

CHANGE: WEATHER AFFECTS STRATIFICATION AND<br />

HYPOXIA FORMATION<br />

15:00 Markfort, C. D.; Resseger, E. L.; Porté-Agel, F.; Stefan, H. G.: WIND<br />

SHELTERING EFFECTS ON MEASUREMENTS AND<br />

MODELING OF AIR-WATER INTERFACIAL FLUXES<br />

15:15 Williamson, C. E.; Zhang, J.; Brentrup, J. A.; Knoll, L. B.; Hargreaves,<br />

B.; Renwick, W.; Overholt, E. P.; Rose, K. C.: LAKES AS SENSORS<br />

IN THE LANDSCAPE: OPTICAL SENTINELS OF CLIMATE<br />

CHANGE<br />

16:00 Winston, B. A.; Pollock, E.; Jackson, A.; Scott, J. T.: CAN CO2<br />

LIMIT PRODUCTIVITY OR ALTER PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

STOICHIOMETRY ON AN ECOSYSTEM SCALE?<br />

16:15 Zepp, R. G.; Molina, M.; Cyterski, M.; Fitzgerald, C.;<br />

Williamson, C. E.; Corsi, S. R.: IMPACTS OF CHANGING<br />

PRECIPITATION ON NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER AND<br />

MICROORGANISMS IN LAKES AND RESERVOIRS<br />

16:30 Cattaneo, A.; Hudon, C.; Vis, C.; Gagnon, P.: HYDROLOGICAL<br />

CONTROL OF FILAMENTOUS GREEN ALGAE IN A<br />

LARGE FLUVIAL LAKE OF THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER,<br />

CANADA<br />

78<br />

16:45 Swinton, M. W.; Eichler, L.; Boylen, C. W.: CLIMATE CHANGE<br />

AND LAND-USE HAS CHANGED LAKE GEORGE, NY<br />

OVER THE LAST 30 YEARS<br />

17:00 Johnson, L. B.; HERB, W.: PREDICTING COLD-WATER FISH<br />

HABITAT IN LAKES OF THE GLACIAL LAKES REGION<br />

UNDER CHANGING LAND USE AND CLIMATE REGIMES<br />

17:15 Brooks, M. L.; Hallman, T. A.; Guilford, Z. T.: SYNERGISTIC<br />

EFFECTS OF GLOBAL WARMING ON GROWTH AND<br />

PEJUS TEMPERATURE IN AMPHIBIANS AND FISH<br />

ACROSS MARGINALLY POLLUTED WATERWAYS<br />

17:45 Nover, D. M.; Clark, C. M.; Johnson, T. E.: ASSESSMENT OF<br />

VULNERABILITY OF U.S. LAKES AND RESERVOIRS TO<br />

CLIMATE CHANGE<br />

SS82 PROGRESS IN UNDERSTANDING NUTRIENT BUDGETS<br />

IN MARGINAL BASINS AND COASTAL SYSTEMS SUBJECT TO<br />

EUTROPHICATION AND CLIMATE WARMING<br />

Chair(s): Volker Bruchert, volker.bruchert@geo.su.se<br />

Barbara Deutsch, barbara.deutsch@itm.su.se<br />

Location: Room 357<br />

10:00 Rowe, O. F.; Paczkowska, J.; Lefebure, R.; Brutemark, A.; Traving, S.<br />

J.; Miranda, F.; Deutsch, B.; Båmstedt, U.; Riemann, L.; Andersson,<br />

A.: THE INFLUENCE OF RIVER INFLOW ON COASTAL<br />

COMMUNITIES IN THE BALTIC SEA – A COMPLETE<br />

FOOD WEB STUDY.<br />

10:15 Brüchert , V.; Deutsch, B.; Bonaglia, S.: BENTHIC BOUNDARY<br />

LAYER NUTRIENT AND OXYGEN BIOGEOCHEMISTRY<br />

IN A EUTROPHIED BALTIC SEA ESTUARY<br />

10:30 Aigars, J.; Muller-Karulis, B.; Poikane, R.; Jansons, M.; Lavrinovics,<br />

A.; Eglite, E.: IMPLICATIONS OF SEASONAL NUTRIENT<br />

FLUXES AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE FOR<br />

THE NUTRIENT BUDGET OF THE GULF OF RIGA,<br />

BALTIC SEA<br />

10:45 Marchant, H. K.; Holtappels, M.; Tegetmeyer, H. E.; Strous, M.;<br />

Kuypers, M. M.: N2O EMISSIONS IN COASTAL PERMEABLE<br />

SEDIMENTS SUBJECT TO HIGH ANTHROPOGENIC<br />

FIXED NITROGEN INPUTS<br />

11:00 Kumar, S.; Bhavya, P. S.; Godhe, A.; Ramesh, R.; Chiriboga, F.;<br />

Singh, A.; Gupta, G. V.; Karunasagar, I.: NITROGEN UPTAKE<br />

POTENTIAL UNDER DIFFERENT TEMPERATURE AND<br />

SALINITY CONDITIONS<br />

11:15 Parker, A. E.; Kress, E.; Glibert, P. M.; Wilkerson, F. P.; Dugdale, R.<br />

C.: NUTRIENT RATIOS: NITROGEN FORM AND N:P<br />

INFLUENCES ESTUARINE HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA<br />

11:30 Bartoli, M.: IS MACROFAUNA SUFFICIENTLY<br />

INTEGRATED IN BIOGEOCHEMISTRY?<br />

11:45 Lyngsgaard, M. M.; Markager, S. S.; Richardson, K.: THE<br />

VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF PRIMARY PRODUCTION<br />

MAY CHANGE IN RESPONSE TO REDUCED NUTRIENT<br />

LOADING.<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

THURSDAY, 21 FEBRUARY - ORALS<br />

GS05 FOOD WEB INTERACTIONS AND TROPHIC LINKAGES<br />

Chair(s): Jill Olin, jolin@lsu.edu<br />

Mike Vanni, vannimj@muohio.edu<br />

Maria Gonzalez, gonzalmj@muohio.edu<br />

Just Cebrian, jcebrian@disl.org<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

14:00 Cebrian, J.; Stutes, J.; Christiaen, B.: IMPACTS OF GRAZING<br />

AND FERTILIZATION ON EPIPHYTE GROWTH<br />

DYNAMICS UNDER MODERATELY EUTROPHIC<br />

CONDITIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR GRAZING RATE<br />

ESTIMATES<br />

14:15 Collingsworth, P. D.; Warren, G. J.: IMPACTS OF LOCAL AND<br />

BASIN-SCALE FACTORS ON THE RELATIONSHIP<br />

BETWEEN TOTAL PHOSPHORUS AND CHLOROPHYLL<br />

IN LAKE ERIE<br />

14:30 Rock, A. M.; Hall, M. R.; Gonzalez, M. J.; Vanni, M. J.:<br />

EXPLORING THE INTERACTIVE EFFECTS OF LIGHT,<br />

NUTRIENTS, AND CARNIVORE IDENTITY ON AQUATIC<br />

FOOD CHAIN EFFICIENCY<br />

14:45 Thompson, B. A.; Scott, J. T.: USING CARLSON’S TROPHIC<br />

STATE INDEX TO DETERMINE FERTILIZATION RATES<br />

FOR WHOLE-LAKE MANIPULATIONS<br />

15:00 VanBlaricom, G. R.; Blaud, B. M.; Neuman, M. J.; Friedman, C.<br />

S.: MICROHABITAT-SPECIFIC DENSITY DEPENDENT<br />

RESPONSES OF BLACK ABALONE AFTER PATHOGENIC<br />

MASS MORTALITIES AT SAN NICOLAS ISLAND,<br />

CALIFORNIA USA<br />

15:15 Macanowicz, N.; Boeing, W. J.: UNIQUE HABITATS FOR<br />

UNIQUE COMMUNITIES: WHAT FACTORS DRIVE<br />

BENTHIC MACROINVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES IN<br />

DESERT SINKHOLES?<br />

16:00 Francis, T. B.; Carey, M. P.; Harvey, C. J.: LITTLE FISH, LITTLE<br />

DATA: FORAGE FISH IN PUGET SOUND, WA<br />

16:15 Gonzalez, M. J.; Duncan, J. M.; Lyons, T.; Aman, C.; Bremigan, M. T.;<br />

Bunnel, D.; Conroy, J.; Pollard , A. I.; Renwick, W. H.; Vanni, M. J.:<br />

A 15-YEAR FISHING EXPEDITION: WHAT REGULATES<br />

INTERANNUAL VARIATION IN YOUNG-OF-YEAR<br />

GIZZARD SHAD POPULATION DYNAMICS?<br />

16:30 Charles, F.; Nozais, C.; Pruski, A.; Lantoine, F.; Orignac, J.: TROPHIC<br />

ECOLOGY OF COASTAL SOFT BOTTOMS: A DIVE INTO<br />

THE STEW OF MARINE SEDIMENT<br />

16:45 Demi, L. M.; Benstead, J. P.; Rosemond, A. D.; Maerz, J.<br />

C.: CONSUMER RESPONSE TO EXPERIMENTAL<br />

GRADIENTS IN DISSOLVED N:P ACROSS FIVE<br />

HEADWATER STREAMS<br />

17:00 Macek, M.; Montiel-Hernández, J. R.; Flórez-Márquez, A. E.: WHO<br />

IS WHO IN PICOCYANOBACTERIA STRATIFICATION:<br />

VIRUS VS. CILIATE PREDATION?<br />

17:15 Han, E.; Park, H.; Choy, E.; Choi, K.; Kang, C.: INTERMEDIATE-<br />

TERM EFFECT OF HEBEI SPIRIT OIL SPILL ON<br />

INTERTIDAL MACROFAUNAL COMMUNITY REVEALED<br />

BY CARBON AND NITROGEN STABLE ISOTOPES<br />

17:30 Prins, T. C.; Smaal, A. C.: EFFECTS OF SUSPENSION<br />

FEEDING BIVALVES ON THE FOOD WEB OF AN<br />

ESTUARINE ECOSYSTEM<br />

79<br />

17:45 Wiegand, M. D.; Elsasser, M.; Johnston, T. A.; Porteous, L. R.;<br />

Szmadyla, R. L.; Moles, M. D.; Leggett, W. C.: CHANGES<br />

IN WALLEYE OVA FATTY ACID PROFILES IN LAKE<br />

NIPISSING (ONTARIO, CANADA) FOLLOWING THE<br />

INVASION OF SPINY WATER FLEA<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

GS08B PLANKTON ECOLOGY - ZOOPLANKTON<br />

Chair(s): Gustav-Adolf Paffenhofer, gustav.paffenhofer@skio.usg.edu<br />

Katherine Richardson, kari@science.ku.dk<br />

Frederic Maps, frederic.maps@gmail.com<br />

Elizaveta Ershova, eershova@alaska.edu<br />

John Dolan, dolan@obs-vlfr.fr<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

10:00 Turner, J. T.: ZOOPLANKTON FECAL PELLETS IN MARINE<br />

ECOSYSTEMS: REVIEW AND UPDATE T<br />

10:30 Koester, M.; Meuche, A.; Paffenhofer, G. A.; Schlueter, R.:<br />

WHEN AND WHERE ARE PELAGIC FECAL PELLETS<br />

COLONIZED BY BACTERIA?<br />

10:45 Svensen, C.; Iversen, M. H.: WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE<br />

ATTENUATION OF COPEPOD FAECAL PELLET FLUX?<br />

11:00 Richardson, K.; Bendtsen, J.; Christensen, J. T.; Adjou, M.; Lyngsgaard,<br />

M. M.; Hilligsøe, K. M.; Pedersen, J. B.; Vang, T.; Nielsen, M. H.:<br />

WHY ARE EEL LARVAE FOUND IN FRONTAL REGIONS<br />

OF THE STCZ IN THE SARGASSO SEA?<br />

11:15 Malinich, T. D.; Pangle, K. L.; Zheng, T.: THE IMPACTS OF<br />

ACTIVE MOVEMENT ON PELAGIC LARVAL DISPERSAL<br />

IN A GREAT LAKE<br />

11:30 Pivor, J.; Daniel, J.; Siuda, A. N.; Bucklin, A.; Blanco-Bercial,<br />

L.; Amaral-Zettler, L.; Zettler, E.: SWEEPSTAKES<br />

REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS OF THE CARIBBEAN SPINY<br />

LOBSTER (PANULIRUS ARGUS) IN THE SARGASSO SEA<br />

11:45 Paffenhofer, G. A.: DOLIOLID FECAL PELLETS AND<br />

PLANKTONIC COPEPODS: WHAT HAPPENS?<br />

SS10 SHEDDING LIGHT ON THE ‘BLACK BOX’ OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC NITROGEN: INSIGHTS INTO THE SOURCES, SINKS,<br />

CYCLING, AND COMPOSITION OF AQUATIC DON<br />

Chair(s): Katye E. Altieri, kaltieri@princeton.edu<br />

Rachel E. Sipler, sipler@vims.edu<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

16:00 Letscher, R. T.; Hansell, D. A.; Carlson, C. A.; Lumpkin, R.; Knapp, A.<br />

N.: GLOBAL PATTERNS OF SURFACE OCEAN DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC NITROGEN WITH INVESTIGATION OF ITS<br />

FATE<br />

16:15 Oviedo-Vargas, D.; Royer, T. V.; Johnson, L. T.:<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

NITROGEN IN A STREAM DRAINING A HEAVILY<br />

MODIFIED AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE<br />

16:30 Jackson, K. V.; Duran, D.; Tysor, E. H.; Pullin, M. J.: AMINO ACIDS<br />

IN THE DON POOL: ANALYTICAL METHODOLOGY<br />

AND DYNAMICS IN FRESHWATER STREAMS<br />

16:45 Fiedler, D.; Grossart , H. P.; Zwirnmann, E.; Koehler, J.:<br />

CONCENTRATION AND UTILIZATION OF DON<br />

FRACTIONS IN LIMNIC ECOSYSTEMS<br />

17:00 Vaquer-Sunyer, R.; Conley, D.: EFFECTS OF DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC NITROGEN (DON) INPUTS ON PLANKTONIC<br />

METABOLISM IN THE BALTIC SEA<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

17:15 Sipler, R. E.; Killberg-Thoreson, L.; Bronk, D. A.:<br />

INVESTIGATING THE SOURCES AND BIOAVAILABILITY<br />

OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN TO HARMFUL<br />

ALGAL BLOOMS<br />

17:30 Calleja, M. L.; McCarthy, M. D.: COUPLED COMPOUND-<br />

SPECIFIC 15N AMINO ACID ISOTOPE SIGNATURES<br />

AND D/L RATIOS AS A NEW TRACER FOR MICROBIAL<br />

SOURCE AND ALTERATION IN DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

NITROGEN<br />

17:45 Hoer, D. R.; Martens, C. S.; Lindquist, N. L.: SPONGE<br />

MEDIATED RESPIRATION AND CYCLING OF<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

SS13 INTEGRATIVE APPROACHES TO ECOLOGICAL RISK ASSESS-<br />

MENT OF NONINDIGENOUS AQUATIC SPECIES: FRAMEWORKS<br />

FOR ENHANCING PREDICTION, REDUCING UNCERTAINTY, AND<br />

IMPROVING MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Howeth, jghoweth@as.ua.edu<br />

Marion Wittmann, Marion.E.Wittmann.3@nd.edu<br />

Location: Room 357<br />

10:00 Lodge, D. M.: INVASIVE SPECIES FORECASTING:<br />

BRIDGING THE CULTURES OF SCIENCE, POLICY, AND<br />

MANAGEMENT T<br />

10:30 Mandrak, N. E.; Keller, R. P.: IDENTIFYING CLIMATE MATCH<br />

HOT SPOTS TO FACILITATE RISK SCREENING OF<br />

FRESHWATER FISHES IN TRADE<br />

10:45 Howeth, J. G.; Gantz, C. A.; Frimpong, E. A.; Hoff, M.; Keller, R.<br />

P.; Lodge, D. M.; Mandrak, N. E.; Marchetti, M. P.; Olden, J. D.;<br />

Romagosa, C. M.: TRAIT-BASED RISK ASSESSMENT OF<br />

NON-NATIVE FISHES IN TRADE<br />

11:00 Cudmore, B. C.; Mandrak, N. E.: ASSESSING AQUATIC<br />

INVASIVE SPECIES RISK BY CONSENSUS: PATTERNS,<br />

PROCESSES, AND EMERGENT PROPERTIES<br />

11:15 Wittmann, M. E.; Cooke, R. M.; Rothlisberger, J. D.; Rutherford, E.;<br />

Zhang, H.; Lodge, D. M.; Mason, D.: USING STRUCTURED<br />

EXPERT JUDGMENT TO QUANTIFY THE IMPACT OF<br />

ASIAN CARPS (BIGHEAD AND SILVER) ON THE LAKE<br />

ERIE COMMERCIAL AND RECREATIONAL FISHERY<br />

11:30 Vander Zanden, M. J.; Hansen, G. J.; Latzka, A. W.: AQUATIC<br />

INVASIVE SPECIES IN NORTH-TEMPERATE LAKES:<br />

WIDESPREAD AND RARELY ABUNDANT*<br />

11:45 Jerde, C. L.; Wittmann, M. E.; Lodge, D. M.: MODELING<br />

ALLEE EFFECTS DUE TO STERILE GRASS CARP<br />

INTRODUCITONS: AN UNPLANNED EXPERIEMENT IN<br />

THE LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES<br />

14:00 Havel, J. E.; Bruckerhoff, L. A.; Knight, S.: SECONDARY<br />

SPREAD OF INVASIVE AQUATIC PLANTS DEPENDS ON<br />

SURVIVAL TIME DURING AIR EXPOSURE<br />

14:15 Goldman, C. R.: LAKE TAHOE: A HALF CENTURY<br />

OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE DRIVEN BY<br />

EUTROPHICATION, INVASIVE SPECIES, AND THE<br />

INCREASING IMPACT OF GLOBAL WARMING*<br />

14:30 Chandra, S.; Umek, J.; Henery, R.; Goldman, C.: ECOLOGY AND<br />

MANAGEMENT OF NONNATIVE CRAYFISH IN LARGE<br />

LAKES*<br />

14:45 Nierzwicki-Bauer, S. A.; Farrell, J.; Marelli, D.; Resler, S.:<br />

ENHANCING PREDICTION, REDUCING UNCERTAINTY<br />

AND IMPROVING MANAGEMENT/ERADICATION OF<br />

ASIAN CLAMS IN LAKE GEORGE, NEW YORK<br />

80<br />

15:00 Zhang, H.; Rutherford, E. S.; Mason, D. M.; Ivan, L.; Beletsky, D.;<br />

Adamack, A. T.; Hoff, M.; Fulton, E. A.; Barbiero, R. P.; Gorton,<br />

R. J.: FORECASTING ASIAN CARP IMPACTS ON LAKE<br />

MICHIGAN’S FOOD WEB AND FISHERIES - USING THE<br />

ATLANTIS ECOSYSTEM MODEL<br />

15:15 Ivan, L. N.; Zhang, H.; Rutherford, E. S.; Mason, D. M.; Hoff, M.;<br />

Sable, S.; Adamack, A. T.: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF<br />

ASIAN CARPS IN THE GREAT LAKES: A CASE STUDY IN<br />

NEARSHORE AND OFFSHORE LAKE HURON<br />

16:00 Drake, J. M.: SOME NEW COMPUTATIONAL<br />

METHODS FOR FORECASTING SPECIES POTENTIAL<br />

DISTRIBUTIONS<br />

16:15 Capps, E. M.; Papes, M.: PATTERNS OF AQUATIC<br />

INVASIONS IN UNITED STATES AND RELATIONSHIPS<br />

WITH KEY GEOGRAPHIC VARIABLES<br />

16:30 Sieracki, J. L.; Bossenbroek, J. M.: MODELING THE<br />

SECONDARY SPREAD OF INVASIVE SPECIES BY<br />

BALLAST WATER IN THE LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES<br />

16:45 Briski, E.; Bailey, S.; Casas-Monroy, O.; DiBacco, C.; Kaczmarska,<br />

I.; Levings, C.; MacGillivary, M. L.; McKindsey, C. W.;<br />

Nasmith, L. E.; Parenteau, M.; Piercey, E. G.; Rochon, A.; Roy,<br />

S.; Simard, N.; Villac, M. C.; Weise, A. M.; MacIsaac, H. J.:<br />

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PROPAGULE PRESSURE AND<br />

COLONIZATION PRESSURE IN INVASION ECOLOGY: A<br />

TEST WITH SHIPS’ BALLAST<br />

17:00 Welch, J. B.; Reed, A. J.; Hicks, R. E.: IMPROVED DETECTION<br />

OF POTENTIALLY HARMFUL BACTERIA DISCHARGED<br />

WITH THE BALLAST WATER OF COMMERCIAL SHIPS<br />

USING MULTIPLE MOLECULAR APPROACHES<br />

17:15 Adams, J. K.; Briski, E.; Bailey, S. A.: EVALUATION OF VITAL<br />

FLUORESCENT STAINS FOR ANALYSIS OF VIABLE<br />

ORGANISMS TRANSPORTED BY BALLAST WATER<br />

17:30 Brown, M. E.; Branstrator, D. K.; Shannon, L. J.: POPULATION<br />

REGULATION OF THE SPINY WATER FLEA IN A<br />

RESERVOIR AND IMPLICATIONS FOR INVASION<br />

DYNAMICS<br />

17:45 Hallidayschult, T.; Easton, J.; Easton, A.; Zamor, R. M.; Glenn, K.;<br />

Beyer, J.; Remmel, E.; Hambright, K. D.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS<br />

OF ZEBRA MUSSELS IN A LARGE SUBTROPICAL<br />

RESERVOIR<br />

SS16 OPPORTUNITIES IN THE STUDY OF OCEAN PARTICLE FLUX<br />

Chair(s): Adrian Burd, adrianb@uga.edu<br />

Oscar Schofield, oscar@marine.rutgers.edu<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

10:00 Lampitt, R. S.: DOWNWARD PARTICLE FLUX IN THE<br />

OPEN OCEAN. HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE PAST AND A<br />

VISION OF THE FUTURE. T<br />

10:30 Estapa, M. L.; Buesseler, K. O.; Boss, E.; Gerbi, G. P.: RAPID,<br />

AUTONOMOUS PARTICLE FLUX OBSERVATIONS IN<br />

THE OLIGOTROPHIC OCEAN<br />

10:45 Stemmann, L.; Guidi, L.; Boss, E.; Claustre, H.: FROM SHIP-<br />

TETHERED TO FREE DRIFTING IMAGING SYSTEMS;<br />

WHAT WE OBSERVED IN THE PAST AND WHAT<br />

WE SHALL OBSERVE IN THE FUTURE TO BETTER<br />

UNDERSTAND PARTICLE FLUX<br />

11:00 Bishop, J. K.; Hann, C. H.; Wood, T. J.: ROBOTIC<br />

MEASUREMENT OF PARTICULATE FLUX DYNAMICS IN<br />

THE TWILIGHT ZONE<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

11:15 Lam, P. J.: RELATING PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON<br />

STOCKS TO FLUXES: THE CASE OF VERTIGO<br />

11:30 Giering, S. L.; Sanders, R.; Lampitt, R. S.; Anderson, T. R.; Marsay, C.<br />

M.; Tamburini, C.; Boutrif, M.; Cook, K.; Henson, S. A.; Mayor, D. J.:<br />

BALANCING THE CARBON BUDGET IN THE TWILIGHT<br />

ZONE<br />

11:45 McDonnell, A. M.; Boyd, P. W.; Buesseler, K. O.: THE EFFECTS OF<br />

SINKING VELOCITIES AND MICROBIAL RESPIRATION<br />

RATES ON THE ATTENUATION OF PARTICLE FLUX<br />

THROUGH THE OCEAN’S TWILIGHT ZONE<br />

14:00 Stewart, G. M.: THE ROUGHAGE EFFECT ON<br />

ZOOPLANKTON GRAZERS AND OCEAN PARTICLE<br />

FLUX*<br />

14:15 Van Mooy, B.; Edwards, B. R.; Hmelo, L. R.; May, A. L.;<br />

Campagna, S. R.; Keil, R. G.; Mincer, T. J.; Ossolinski, J. E.; Sofen,<br />

L. E.: INFLUENCE OF BACTERIAL QUORUM SENSING<br />

ON ORGANIC MATTER HYDROLYSIS IN SINKING<br />

PARTICLES.<br />

14:30 Petit, M.; Suroy, M.; Sempété, R.; Vaultier, F.; Rontani, J. F.:<br />

IMPLICATIONS OF THE PHOTOOXIDATION STATE OF<br />

BACTERIA ATTACHED TO PHYTODETRITUS ON THE<br />

PRESERVATION OF ALGAL ORGANIC MATTER IN THE<br />

MARINE ENVIRONMENT<br />

14:45 Baumann, M. S.; Moran, S. B.; Lomas, M. W.; Kelly, R. P.; Bell, D. W.:<br />

SEASONAL DECOUPLING OF PRIMARY PRODUCTION<br />

AND POC EXPORT IN RELATION TO SEA-ICE EXTENT<br />

AT THE SHELF BREAK OF THE EASTERN BERING SEA<br />

15:00 Smith, K. A.; Stock, C. A.; Dunne, J. P.; Sarmiento, J. L.: THE<br />

EFFECTS OF THERMOCLINE CHARACTERISTICS AND<br />

BACTERIAL FLUX ON PARTICLE REMINERALIZATION<br />

IN THE DARK OCEAN<br />

15:15 Tamelander, T.: THE CRITICAL ROLE OF STOICHIOMETRY<br />

IN MODELS OF THE BIOLOGICAL CARBON PUMP<br />

16:00 Kriest, I.; Oschlies, A.: PARTICLE SINKING AND<br />

BURIAL: THEIR REPRESENTATION IN GLOBAL<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS, AND THEIR IMPACT ON<br />

DISTRIBUTIONS OF TRACERS AND FLUXES<br />

16:15 Key, T. A.; Burd, A. B.: MODELING MARINE PARTICLE<br />

COAGULATION USING THE QUADRATURE METHOD<br />

OF MOMENTS<br />

16:30 Pabortsava, K.; Lampitt, R. S.; Poulton, A. J.: NOVEL INSIGHTS<br />

INTO TEMPORAL VARIATIONS IN CARBON<br />

SEQUESTRATION FLUXES IN THE NORTH AND SOUTH<br />

ATLANTIC OLIGOTROPHIC GYRES<br />

16:45 Maiti, K.; Charette, M. A.; Buesseler, K. O.; Kahru, M.:<br />

REVISITING THE RELATION BETWEEN EXPORT AND<br />

PRODUCTION IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

17:00 Adhikari, P. L.; Maiti, K.; Overton, E.: VERTICAL FLUXES OF<br />

POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS IN THE<br />

NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

17:15 Waples, J. T.; Liao, L.; Klump, V.; Bootsma, H.: MEASURING<br />

RAPID PARTICLE FLUX IN COASTAL WATERS<br />

DOMINATED BY BENTHIC FILTER FEEDING.<br />

17:30 Sørensen, N.; Daugbjerg, N.; Richardson, K.: CHOICE OF PORE<br />

SIZE CAN INTRODUCE ARTEFACTS WHEN FILTERING<br />

PLANKTON FOR MOLECULAR BIODIVERSITY STUDIES<br />

17:45 Gallinari, M.; Bucciarelli, E.; Moriceau, B.; Ragueneau, O.:<br />

DISSOLUTION PROPERTIES OF BIOGENIC SILICA<br />

FROM DIATOMS GROWN UNDER FE-REPLETE AND<br />

FE-LIMITED CONDITIONS<br />

81<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

SS28 IN SITU AQUATIC SENSORS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY.<br />

Chair(s): Veronique Garcon, veronique.garcon@legos.obs-mip.fr<br />

Douglas P. Connelly, dpc@noc.soton.ac.uk<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

14:00 Donis, D.; McGinnis, D. F.; Holtappels, M.; Noss, C.; Cathalot,<br />

C.; Wenzhöfer, F.; Hancke, K.; Lorke, A.; Glud, R. N.; Meysman,<br />

F.: IMPROVING PRECISION AND CONFIDENCE OF<br />

AQUATIC EDDY CORRELATION BENTHIC SOLUTE<br />

EXCHANGE MEASUREMENTS - FROM FLUMES TO THE<br />

DEEP SEA<br />

14:15 Holtappels, M.; Glud, R. N.; Donis, D.; Liu, B.; Hume, A. C.;<br />

Wenzhöfer, F.; Kuypers, M. M.: EFFECTS OF TRANSIENT<br />

BOTTOM WATER CURRENTS AND OXYGEN<br />

CONCENTRATIONS ON BENTHIC EXCHANGE RATES<br />

AS ASSESSED BY EDDY COVARIANCE MEASUREMENTS<br />

14:30 Long, M. H.; Berg, P.; Zieman, J. C.: HIGH-RESOLUTION<br />

METABOLIC RATES OF SUBTROPICAL SEAGRASS BEDS<br />

EVALUATED WITH THE IN SITU EDDY CORRELATION<br />

TECHNIQUE<br />

14:45 Richardson, T. L.; Swanstrom, J. A.; Abernathy, E. A.; Tazik, S.<br />

K.; Goldman, E. A.; Shaw, T. J.; Sosik, H. M.; Myrick, M. L.:<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF SENSORS FOR THE IN SITU<br />

CLASSIFICATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON USING<br />

SPECTRAL FLUORESCENCE SIGNATURES AND<br />

IMAGING MULTIVARIATE OPTICAL COMPUTING<br />

15:00 Thompson, C. M.; North, E. W.; Gallager, S. M.; Kennedy, V.<br />

S.; White, S. N.: USING RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY TO<br />

IDENTIFY BIVALVE LARVAE<br />

15:15 Chekalyuk, A.: LASER IN SITU FLUOROSENSING OF<br />

NATURAL AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTS<br />

16:00 Chennu, A.; Volkenborn, N.; Janssen, F.; de Beer, D.; Polerecky, L.:<br />

MAPPING THE DISTRIBUTION AND DYNAMICS OF<br />

CHLOROPHYLL IN COASTAL SEDIMENTS USING IN<br />

SITU HYPERSPECTRAL IMAGING<br />

16:15 Demir-Hilton, E.; Yamahara, K.; Preston, C.; Marin III, R.;<br />

Birch, J.; Pargett, D.; Jensen, S.; Roman, B.; Scholin, C.: REAL-<br />

TIME MONITORING OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA<br />

SPP IN COASTAL SETTINGS USING SANDWICH<br />

HYBRIDIZATION AND QPCR IN PARALLEL ABOARD<br />

THE ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLE PROCESSOR<br />

16:30 Groleau, A.; Escoffier, N.; Darmoul, Y.; Staniszewski, Y.; Agrinier, P.;<br />

Bensoussan, N.; Jézéquel, D.: CARBON BIOGEOCHEMISTRY<br />

IN CONTINENTAL AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS: CAN WE<br />

DECIPHER INORGANIC AND ORGANIC PROCESSES<br />

COMBINING IN-SITU SENSORS AND HIGH<br />

FREQUENCY ?<br />

16:45 Takeshita, Y.; Martz, T. R.; Johnson, K. S.; Jannasch, H. W.; Coletti,<br />

L.: PH PROFILING WITH THE DEEP SEA DURAFET:<br />

RESULTS OF THE FIRST AT-SEA TESTS, AND<br />

AUTONOMOUS MEASUREMENTS ON PROFILING<br />

FLOATS<br />

17:00 Rérolle, V. M.; Floquet, C. F.; Harris, A. J.; Mowlem, M. C.; Bellerby, R.<br />

G.; Achterberg, E. P.: DEVELOPMENT OF A COLORIMETRIC<br />

MICROFLUIDIC SENSOR FOR SEAWATER PH ANALYSIS<br />

17:15 Atamanchuk, D.; Kononets, M.; Thomas, P. J.; Hovdenes, J.; Tengberg,<br />

A.; Apostolodis, A.; Hall, P. O.: A NEWLY DEVELOPED<br />

PCO 2 FLUORESCENCE LIFETIME OPTODE FOR MARINE<br />

STUDIES<br />

17:30 Bastviken, D.; Sundgren, I.; Natchimithu, S.; Reyier, H.; Gålfalk,<br />

M.: A NEW TECHNIQUE TO LOG CO2 IN AQUATIC<br />

ENVIRONMENTS<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

17:45 King, D. W.; Williams, T. L.; Nzamubona, K. F.; Kim, B. S.;<br />

Morotti, J.; Helm, Z.; Wells, M. L.; Gammana, M.; Tripp, C. T.:<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF SOLID-STATE MATERIALS FOR<br />

IRON (III) ANALYSIS IN NATURAL WATERS<br />

SS30 BIOLOGICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL RESPONSES TO<br />

HUMAN IMPACTS AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE<br />

Chair(s): Katja Fennel, katja.fennel@dal.ca<br />

Wally Fulweiler, rwf@bu.edu<br />

Roxane Maranger, r.maranger@umontreal.ca<br />

John Lehrter, lehrter.john@epa.gov<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

10:00 Lee, Z. M.; Steger, L.; Corman, J.; Souza, V.; Elser, J. J.:<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL AND MICROBIAL RESPONSES<br />

TO PHOSPHORUS ENRICHMENT AND N:P<br />

STOICHIOMETRY IN LAGUNITA, A DESERT POND IN<br />

THE CUATRO CIENEGAS BASIN<br />

10:15 Bourque, J. R.; Demopoulos, A. W.; Stamler, K. M.; Frometa, J.: THE<br />

IMPACT OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL ON<br />

COLD-WATER CORAL ASSOCIATED BENTHOS IN THE<br />

GULF OF MEXICO<br />

10:30 White, M. M.; McCorkle, D. C.; Mullineaux, L. S.; Cohen, A. L.:<br />

EARLY EXPOSURE TO HIGH-CO 2 OF BAY SCALLOP<br />

(ARGOPECTEN IRRADIANS) LARVAE HAS LASTING<br />

EFFECTS ON SIZE<br />

10:45 Belyaeva, A. M.; Downing, J. A.: GETTING TO THE BOTTOM<br />

OF EUTROPHIC LAKES: SHIFTING BENTHOS<br />

COMPOSITION ACROSS A SHARP NUTRIENT<br />

GRADIENT<br />

11:00 Govindarajan, A. F.; Manganini, S.; German, C. R.; Shank, T. M.:<br />

EFFECTS OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL ON<br />

BIOGENIC FLUXES AND LARVAL RECRUITMENT<br />

11:15 Christiaen, B.; Stutes, J.; Ortmann, A.; Cebrian, J.: THE RELATIVE<br />

CONTRIBUTION OF BENTHOS AND WATER COLUMN<br />

TO TOTAL PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN SHALLOW<br />

LAGOONS WITH DIFFERENT DEGREES OF HUMAN<br />

DISTURBANCE<br />

11:30 Koehl, M.: BEHAVIOR AND ADHESION OF MARINE<br />

LARVAE SETTLING ON THE SUBSTRATUM IN<br />

TURBULENT WATER FLOW<br />

11:45 Palmer, T. A.; Montagna, P. A.: IMPACTS OF DROUGHTS AND<br />

LOW FLOWS ON HEALTH AND PRODUCTIVITY IN<br />

THREE TEXAS ESTUARIES<br />

SS33 MICROBIAL NITROGEN CYCLING IN MARINE PELAGIC WATERS<br />

Chair(s): Jonathan P. Zehr, zehrj@ucsc.edu<br />

Julie LaRoche, julie.laroche@dal.ca<br />

Lasse Riemann, lriemann@bio.ku.dk<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

10:00 Ward, B. B.; Jayakumar, A.; Peng, X.: PATTERNS IN NITROGEN-<br />

TRANSFORMING MICROBIAL ASSEMBLAGES RELATED<br />

TO HABITAT OR BIOGEOGRAPHY<br />

10:15 Cernadas, S.; Scranton, M. I.; Tong, L. T.; Fanning, K. A.; Astor,<br />

Y.; Taylor, G. T.: AEROBIC AND ANAEROBIC AMMONIA<br />

OXIDIZERS IN THE CARIACO BASIN: IDENTIFICATION,<br />

QUANTIFICATION AND COMMUNITY STRUCTURE<br />

82<br />

10:30 Babbin, A. R.; Ward, B. B.: CONTROLS ON NITROGEN LOSS<br />

IN THE EASTERN TROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC OXYGEN<br />

DEFICIENT ZONE<br />

10:45 Dalsgaard, T.; Stewart, F. J.; De Brabandere, L.; Thamdrup, B.;<br />

Revsbech, N. P.; Canfield, D. E.; Bristow, L.; Ulloa, O.; Young, C.<br />

R.; Delong, E. F.: THE EFFECT OF OXYGEN ON PROCESS<br />

RATES AND THE EXPRESSION OF ANAMMOX AND<br />

DENITRIFICATION GENES IN THE EASTERN SOUTH<br />

PACIFIC OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE<br />

11:00 Villanueva, L.; Bale, N.; Lipsewers, Y.; Buckles L.; Weijers, J.;<br />

Hopmans, E.; Schouten, S.; Sinninghe Damsté, J. S.: INTACT<br />

POLAR LIPIDS AND GENE EXPRESSION TO TRACE<br />

AMMONIA OXIDIZING ARCHAEAL POPULATIONS IN<br />

AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTS<br />

11:15 Bristow, L. A.; Stewart, F. J.; Parris, D. J.; Ganesh, S.; Thamdrup, B.:<br />

HOW DO WE EXPLAIN NITRITE ACCUMULATION IN<br />

THE HYPOXIC BOTTOM WATERS OF THE GULF OF<br />

MEXICO?<br />

11:30 Devol, A.; Fuchsman, C.; Horak, R.; Chang, B.; Ward, B.: EXCESS<br />

N 2 : AND NITRATE DEFICIT IN THE EASTERN TROPICAL<br />

NORTH PACIFIC OXYGEN DEFICIENT ZONE<br />

11:45 Buchwald, C.; Santoro, A. E.; Stanley, R. H.; Casciotti, K.<br />

L.: NITROGEN CYCLING IN THE PRIMARY AND<br />

SECONDARY NITRITE MAXIMA OF THE COSTA RICA<br />

UPWELLING DOME<br />

SS34 BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF RESUSPENDED SEDIMENTS IN<br />

AQUATIC AND COASTAL MARINE ENVIRONMENTS<br />

Chair(s): Stephen Skrabal, skrabals@uncw.edu<br />

G. Brooks Avery, averyg@uncw.edu<br />

Ralph Mead, meadr@uncw.edu<br />

John R. Helms, helmsj@uncw.edu<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

14:00 Lucas, S.; Moulin, F.; Guizien, K.: OSCILLATING GRID<br />

MESOCOSM FOR STUDYING OXYGEN DYNAMICS<br />

DURING UNSTEADY TURBULENT CONDITIONS<br />

14:15 Tengberg, A.; Almroth-Rosell , E.; Atamanchuk , D.; Kononets ,<br />

M.; Viktorsson, L.; Hall, P. O.: IMPORTANCE OF DIFFUSIVE<br />

BOUNDARY LAYER THICKNESS AND SEDIMENT RE-<br />

SUSPENSION FOR BENTHIC RECYCLING: STUDIED BY<br />

USING IN SITU METHODS<br />

14:30 Kalnejais, L. H.; Percuoco, V.; Foster, D.; Wengrove, M. E.:<br />

FIELD AND LABORATORY OBSERVATIONS OF THE<br />

GEOCHEMICAL IMPACT OF SEDIMENT RESUSPENSION<br />

ON THE WATER QUALITY OF THE GREAT BAY<br />

ESTUARY, N.H.<br />

14:45 Smith, E. M.; Buck, T. L.; Willman, A.; Denham, S.: IMPORTANCE<br />

OF SUSPENDED SEDIMENTS IN CONTROLING<br />

HETEROTROPHIC CARBON METABOLISM IN<br />

NEARSHORE COASTAL WATERS OF SOUTH CAROLINA,<br />

USA<br />

15:00 Song, G.; Richardson, J. D.; Werner, J. P.; Kieber, D. J.; Xie, H.:<br />

CARBON MONOXIDE PHOTOPRODUCTION IN THE<br />

DELAWARE ESTUARY *<br />

15:15 Helms, J. R.; Wetterauer, A. M.; Dingess, E. C.; Avery, G. B.;<br />

Kieber, R. J.; Mead, R. N.; Skrabal, S.; Mopper, K.: LIGHT<br />

INDUCED FLOCCULATION AND DISSOLUTION OF<br />

CHROMOPHORIC ORGANIC MATTER IN NATURAL<br />

WATERS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

16:00 Mead, R. N.; Hartrey, L.; Helms, J. R.; Avery, G. B.; Kieber, R.<br />

J.; Skrabal, S. A.: PHOTOCHEMICAL MOBILIZATION<br />

OF SEDIMENT BOUND MICROCYSTINS FROM<br />

RESUSPENDED SEDIMENT<br />

16:15 Kieber, R. J.; Avery, G. B.; Helms, J. R.; Mead, R. N.; Probst, E. E.;<br />

Skrabal, S. A.: PHOTOCHEMICAL TRANSFORMATIONS<br />

OF THE ALGAL TOXIN PBTX 2 ON RESUSPENDED<br />

SEDIMENTS IN COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS<br />

16:30 Paudel, B.; Montagna, P.; Adams, L.: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN<br />

TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS AND INORGANIC<br />

NUTRIENTS IN SOUTH TEXAS GULF COAST ESTUARIES.<br />

16:45 Fan, C.; Shen, Q.; Lu, X.; Feng, Z.: BLACK BLOOM: A SERIOUS<br />

HYPOXIA PROBLEM CAUSED BY ACCUMULATED<br />

ALGAE AND POLLUTED SEDIMENTS IN THE COASTAL<br />

WATERS OF LAKE TAIHU, CHINA<br />

17:00 Orvain, F.; Ubertini, M.; Rakotomalala, C.; Herman, P.:<br />

MODELLING THE IMPACT OF BIOTURBATION ON THE<br />

RESUSPENSION RATES OF BENTHIC DIATOMS<br />

17:15 Ubertini, M.; Orvain, F.; Rakotomalala, C.; Lefebvre, S.;<br />

Lavaud, J.; Duchêne, J. C.: ASSESSMENT OF THE<br />

BIOTURBATOR CERASTODERMA EDULE IMPACT<br />

ON SEDIMENT AND MICROPHYTOBENTHOS<br />

RESUSPENSION: A FLUME STUDY<br />

SS42 COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF MARINE ECOSYSTEM<br />

ORGANIZATION (CAMEO)<br />

Chair(s): Michael Ford, michael.ford@noaa.gov<br />

Lewis S. Incze, lincze@nsf.gov<br />

Linda A. Deegan, ldeegan@mbl.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

14:00 Ford, M. D.: OVERVIEW: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF<br />

MARINE ECOSYSTEM ORGANIZATION<br />

14:15 Gaichas, S.; Link, J. S.; Miller, T. J.; Essington, T. E.; Bundy, A.; Boldt,<br />

J.; Drinkwater, K. F.; Moksness, E.: WHAT DRIVES MARINE<br />

FISHERIES PRODUCTION? EMERGENT FEATURES<br />

FROM COMPARISONS ACROSS 13 NORTHERN<br />

HEMISPHERE ECOSYSTEMS<br />

14:30 Fu, C.; Gaichas, S.; Link, J.; Bundy, A.; Boldt, J.; Cook, A.; Gamble,<br />

R.; Utne, K. R.; Liu, H.; Friedland, K.: QUANTIFYING THE<br />

IMPACTS OF PHYSICAL OCEANIC PROCESSES AND<br />

FISHERY EXPLOITATION ON ECOSYSTEM ATTRIBUTES<br />

ACROSS A SERIES OF MARINE ECOSYSTEMS<br />

14:45 Buchheister, A.; Latour, R. J.; Wilberg, M. J.; Miller, T. J.:<br />

SIMULATED EFFECTS OF SPATIAL CONNECTIVITY<br />

AND BOTTOM UP PROCESSES ON PRODUCTION<br />

OF A MIGRATORY PREDATOR IN THE NORTHWEST<br />

ATLANTIC<br />

15:00 Scheef, L. P.; Hampton, S. E.; Izmest’eva, L. R.: INFERRING<br />

PLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE FROM MARINE<br />

AND FRESHWATER LONG-TERM DATA USING<br />

MULTIVARIATE AUTOREGRESSIVE MODELS<br />

15:15 Curchitser, E. N.; Rose, K.; Fiechter, J.; Hedstrom, K.; Bernal, M.;<br />

Creekmore, S.; Haynie, A.; Checkley, D.; McClatchie, S.; Werner, F.:<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF A CLIMATE-TO-FISH-TO-FISHERS<br />

MODEL: IMPLEMENTATION IN THE EASTERN PACIFIC<br />

SARDINE AND ANCHOVY SYSTEM.<br />

16:00 Sugihara, G.; Ye, H.; Hsieh, C.; Deyle, E.; Rosenberg, A.; Forgarty,<br />

M.; Kaufman, L.; Perrettii, C.; glaser, S.; Altman, I.: HOW MUCH<br />

ECOSYSTEM DO WE NEED FOR ECOSYSTEM-BASED<br />

MANAGEMENT? COMPARING CONNECTIVITY IN<br />

PACIFIC VERUS ATLANTIC FISHERIES.<br />

83<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

16:15 Ye, H.; Deyle, E. R.; Grant, S.; Richards, L. J.; Schnute, J. T.;<br />

Beamish, R. J.; Sugihara, G.: NONLINEAR STATE-SPACE<br />

RECONSTRUCTION TO ELUCIDATE ECOSYSTEM<br />

STRUCTURE OF FRASER RIVER SOCKEYE SALMON<br />

(ONCORHYNCHUS NERKA)<br />

16:30 Baumann, H.; Doherty, O.: DECADAL CHANGES IN THE<br />

WORLD’S COASTAL LATITUDINAL TEMPERATURE<br />

GRADIENTS<br />

16:45 Reisinger, A. S.; Gibeaut, J. C.: SUSPENDED SEDIMENT<br />

DYNAMICS IN TEXAS ESTUARIES<br />

17:00 Santavy, D. L.; Bradley, P.; Gerritsen, J.; Jackson, S. K.; Fisher, W. S.:<br />

DEFINING THE BIOLOGICAL INTEGRITY OF CORAL<br />

REEFS USING A BIOLOGICAL CONDITION GRADIENT<br />

FRAMEWORK<br />

17:15 Woodcock, S. H.; Walther, B. D.: A NON-LETHAL APPROACH<br />

TO ASSESSING MIGRATORY AND TROPHIC PATTERNS<br />

OF ATLANTIC TARPON USING SCALE CHEMISTRY<br />

SS44 FACTORS PROMOTING THE EXPANSION OF HARMFUL<br />

ALGAL BLOOMS IN MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): James Ammerman, James.Ammerman@stonybrook.edu<br />

Christopher J. Gobler, christopher.gobler@stonybrook.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

10:00 Thyng, K. M.; Hetland, R. D.; Zhang, X.; Campbell, L.: ORIGINS<br />

OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS ALONG THE TEXAS<br />

COAST<br />

10:15 Meyer, K. A.; O’Neil, J. M.; Crump, B. C.; Heil, C. A.: CHANGES<br />

IN THE BACTERIAL COMMUNITY SURROUNDING<br />

MULTIPLE STAGES OF BLOOMS OF THE RED TIDE<br />

DINOFLAGELLATE KARENIA BREVIS<br />

10:30 Zhao, Y.; Quigg, A.: NUTRIENT LIMITATION IN<br />

NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO (NGOM): STUDY<br />

OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY AND<br />

PHOTOSYNTHETIC ACTIVITY IN RESPONSE TO<br />

NUTRIENT ADDITIONS.<br />

10:45 Phlips, E. J.; Badylak, S.; Lasi, M.: FROM RED TIDES TO GREEN<br />

AND BROWN TIDES IN THE INDIAN RIVER LAGOON<br />

FLORIDA: A RESPONSE TO SHIFTING CLIMATIC<br />

CONDITIONS?<br />

11:00 Karp-Boss, L.; Thomas, M. A.; Lyczkowski, E. R.; Townsend, D.<br />

W.: BLOOM DYNAMICS OF ALEXANDRIUM IN THE<br />

GULF OF MAINE: INSIGHTS FROM LABORATORY<br />

EXPERIMENTS ON NITRATE UTILIZATION AND<br />

ALLELOPATHIC INTERACTIONS<br />

11:15 Senft-Batoh, C. D.; Dam, H. G.; Shumway, S. E.; Wikfors, G. H.;<br />

Schlichting, C. D.: INDUCTION OF TOXIN PRODUCTION<br />

IN THE DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM<br />

FUNDYENSE DEPENDS UPON PREDATOR-PREY<br />

EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY<br />

11:30 Petitpas, C. M.; Deeds, J. R.; Turner, J. T.: PSP TOXIN LEVELS<br />

AND GRAZER COMPOSITION AND ABUNDANCE IN<br />

PLANKTON SIZE FRACTIONS DURING ALEXANDRIUM<br />

FUNDYENSE BLOOMS IN THE GULF OF MAINE AND ON<br />

GEORGES BANK<br />

11:45 Wall, C. C.; Merlo, L.; Koch, F.; Griffith, A.; Gobler, C. J.: THE ABILITY<br />

OF HARD CLAMS (MERCENARIA MERCENARIA) AND<br />

EASTERN OYSTERS (CRASSOSTREA VIRGINICA) TO<br />

CONTROL THE BROWN TIDE ALGAE, AUREOCOCCUS<br />

ANOPHAGEFFERENS<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS46 GROUNDWATER AND COASTAL ECOLOGY: MICROBIAL<br />

ALTERATIONS AND ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF GROUND-<br />

WATER DISCHARGE<br />

Chair(s): Charles Schutte, cschutte@uga.edu<br />

Justin D. Liefer, jliefer@disl.org<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

10:00 Burnett, W. C.; MacIntyre, H. L.; Liefer, J. D.; Taniguchi, M.:<br />

GROUNDWATER DISCHARGES AND ECOLOGICAL<br />

RESPONSES*<br />

10:15 Schutte, C. A.; Joye, S. B.: HOTSPOTS OF GREENHOUSE GAS<br />

PRODUCTION IN THE SUBTERRANEAN ESTUARY<br />

10:30 Hill, C. L.; Jordan, T. E.; Brenner, D. C.; Snyder, A.; Leviton, V. E.;<br />

Fisher, T. R.; Gustafson, A. B.: THE FATE OF AGRICULTURAL<br />

NITROGEN AND THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL VARIABILITY<br />

OF GROUNDWATER EMERGING FROM AN<br />

AGRICULTURAL WATERSHED<br />

10:45 Couturier, M.; Tommi-Morin, G.; Nozais, C.; Chaillou, G.:<br />

MICROBIAL DYNAMICS OF GROUNDWATERS IN SANDY<br />

SEDIMENTS EXPOSED TO NORTHERN CLIMATE<br />

CONDITIONS<br />

11:00 Lamborg, C. H.; Kent, D. B.; Swarr, G. J.; Munson, K. M.; Kading,<br />

T. J.; O’Connor, A. E.; Fairchild, G. M.; Bothner, M. H.; Wiatrowski,<br />

H. A.: MERCURY SPECIATION AND MOBILIZATION<br />

IN WASTEWATER-CONTAMINATED COASTAL<br />

GROUNDWATER<br />

11:15 Lewandowski, J.; Meinikmann, K.; Nuetzmann, G.; Rosenberry, D. O.:<br />

SHOULD WE CONSIDER GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE<br />

TO LAKES IN THEIR NUTRIENT BUDGETS?<br />

11:30 Zamora, P. B.; Cardenas, M. R.; Senal, M. S.; Jacinto, G. S.;<br />

Rodolfo, R. S.; Cabria, H. B.; Siringan, F. P.; Befus, K. M.:<br />

TRANSFORMATION OF NITROGEN NEAR A DISCRETE<br />

ZONE OF SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE<br />

11:45 Meile, C. D.; Waldbusser, G. G.; Kaza, S.: QUANTIFICATION<br />

OF TWO-DIMENSIONAL SOLUTE AND SOLID PHASE<br />

MOVEMENT IN MARINE SEDIMENTS DRIVEN BY<br />

BIOTURBATION<br />

14:00 Prince, D. M.; Schwartz, M. C.: NUTRIENT<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL TRANSFORMATIONS DURING<br />

SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE TO A<br />

SUBTROPICAL ESTUARY IN NORTHWEST FLORIDA.<br />

14:15 Chappel, S. L.; Peterson, R. N.; Viso, R.; Libes, S.; Peterson, L.;<br />

Hutchins, P.; Gregorcyk, K.: GEOCHEMICAL TRACERS<br />

LINKING SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE<br />

TO HYPOXIA FORMATION IN LONG BAY, SOUTH<br />

CAROLINA, USA<br />

14:30 Waters, C. A.; Dulaiova, H.: UNTWISTING WESTERN<br />

HAWAII’S GROUNDWATER FLUXES: FRESH AND SALINE<br />

DISCHARGE EFFECTS ON PRODUCTIVITY IN KONA<br />

14:45 Paytan, A.; Lecher, A.; Ryan, J.; Kudella, R.; Fisher, A.: SUBMARINE<br />

GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE FUELING ALGAL BLOOMS<br />

IN MONTEREY BAY<br />

15:00 Liefer, J. D.; MacIntyre, H. L.; Burnett, W. C.; Novoveska,<br />

L.: THE ROLES OF SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER<br />

DISCHARGE AND MICROZOOPLANKTON GRAZING IN<br />

PROMOTING A HARMFUL ALGAE HOT-SPOT<br />

15:15 Nigro, O. D.; De Carlo, E. H.; Steward, G. F.: POSSIBLE<br />

GROUNDWATER INFLUENCE ON THE ABUNDANCE<br />

OF THE HUMAN PATHOGEN VIBRIO VULNIFICUS IN A<br />

TROPICAL URBAN ESTUARY<br />

84<br />

SS51 IRON, CARBON CYCLING, AND ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS IN<br />

THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

Chair(s): Stephane Blain, stephane.blain@obs-banyuls.fr<br />

Stephane Blain, stephane.blain@obs-banyuls.fr<br />

Bernard Queguiner, bernard.queguiner@univ-amu.fr<br />

Volker Strass, Volker.strass@awi.de<br />

Dieter Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter.Wolf-Gladrow@awi.de<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

16:00 Klaas, C.; EIFEX and LOHAFEX shipboard Scientific<br />

Party: CONTROLS ON PRODUCTIVITY AND<br />

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN:<br />

INSIGHTS FROM TWO IRON FERTILIZATION<br />

EXPERIMENTS IN THE POLAR FRONT REGION T<br />

16:30 Blain, S.; Queguiner, B.; KEOPS2 Team: SPATIAL AND<br />

TEMPORAL RESPONSES OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

TO LARGE SCALE NATURAL IRON FERTILIZATION<br />

(KERGUELEN REGION)*<br />

16:45 Strass, V. H.; Leach, H.; Prandke, H.; Donnelly, M. S.; Klaas,<br />

C.; Bracher, A.; Cheah, W.; Wolf-Gladrow, D.: PHYSICO-<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL DIFFERENCES ALONG THE ACC IN<br />

THE ATLANTIC SECTOR DURING ONE LATE SUMMER<br />

- FIRST RESULTS OBTAINED FROM EDDY PUMP*<br />

17:00 Mitchell, B. G.; Reynolds, R.; Kahru, M.; Hewes, C.; Schieber,<br />

B.; Wieland, J.; Seegers, B.; Holm-Hansen, O.: A SATELLITE<br />

NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION (NPP) ALGORITHM<br />

FOR THE SOUTHERN OCEAN BASED ON THE VGPM<br />

FRAMEWORK - PERFORMANCE EVALUATION AND<br />

TIME-SERIES APPLICATIONS<br />

17:15 Tagliabue, A.; Sallee, J. B.; Bowie, A. R.; Boyd, P. W.; Levy, M.;<br />

Swart, S.: TOWARDS RECONCILING IRON SUPPLY AND<br />

DEMAND IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

17:30 Jones, E. M.; Hauck, J.; Salt, L. A.; Hoppema, M.; van Heuven, S. M.;<br />

de Baar, H. J.: DO OCEAN EDDIES CREATE HOTSPOTS OF<br />

CARBON UPTAKE IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN?<br />

17:45 Zhou, M.; d’Ovidio, F.; Park, Y. H.; Zhu, Y.; Durand, I.;<br />

Kestenare, E.; Sanial, V.; Van-Beek, P.; Queguiner, B.; Blain, S.:<br />

ESTIMATES OF HORIZONTAL SURFACE CIRCULATION<br />

AND UPWELLING USING SURFACE DRIFTERS IN<br />

KERGUELEN PLATEAU REGIONS DURING THE 2011<br />

AUSTRAL SPRING CRUISE<br />

SS53 SENSOR NETWORKS IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS:<br />

RESEARCH AND EDUCATION<br />

Chair(s): Joe Needoba, needobaj@ebs.ogi.edu<br />

Brian Bergamaschi, bbergama@usgs.gov<br />

Janice McDonnell, mcdonnel@marine.rutgers.edu<br />

Bob Chen, bob.chen@umb.edu<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

10:00 Byars, N. L.; Wetz, M. S.: SPATIAL-TEMPORAL<br />

DISTRIBUTION OF PHYTOPLANKTON IN<br />

APALACHICOLA BAY, FLORIDA<br />

10:15 Gadner, B.; Chen, R. F.; Peri, F.; Wang, X.; Arriola, J.; Meile,<br />

C.; Esch, M.: EXAMINATION OF CHROMOPHORIC<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) DYNAMICS IN<br />

A MICROTIDAL SALT MARSH WITH HIGH TEMPORAL<br />

AND SPATIAL RESOLUTION OBSERVATIONS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

10:30 Thomas, F. I.; Guadayol, O.; Silbiger, N.; Toonen, R. J.; Donahue,<br />

M.: HIGH FREQUENCY DATA REVEAL SMALL-<br />

SCALE TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATIONS IN<br />

MICROHABITATS ACROSS A CORAL REEF<br />

10:45 Guadayol, O.; Silbiger N.; Donahue M.; Thomas, F. I.: THE<br />

TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF SMALL FLUCTUATIONS<br />

IN TEMPERATURE, PH AND O 2 IS DEFINING SPATIAL<br />

HETEROGENEITY IN A TROPICAL CORAL REEF<br />

11:00 Thomas, F. I.; Guadayol, O.; Lemus, J.: PARTNERSHIPS<br />

LINKING EDUCATION AND SCIENCE IN COMMUNITY<br />

BASED MANAGEMENT<br />

11:15 Lee, Z.; Riley, R.; Teng, C.; Ko, D.; Dong, Q.: LINKING BUOY<br />

OBSERVATIONS AND SATELLITE PRODUCTS WITH<br />

DYNAMIC MODELS FOR THE STUDY OF COASTAL<br />

WATERS<br />

11:30 Smith, L. M.; McManus, M. C.; Stoffel, H.; Oviatt, C. A.:<br />

UTILIZING IN SITUMETABOLISM ESTIMATES TO<br />

EXAMINE LONG-TERM IMPACTS OF METABOLISM AS<br />

A FORCING FACTOR OF HYPOXIA IN NARRAGANSETT<br />

BAY, RI<br />

11:45 Amador, A. M.; Canals, M. F.: PROBING THE INTERNAL<br />

STRUCTURE OF PLUNGING WAVES USING<br />

INSTRUMENTED LAGRANGIAN DRIFTERS<br />

SS56 CARBON FLUXES IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS AT CATCHMENT,<br />

REGIONAL AND CONTINENTAL SCALES<br />

Chair(s): Sebastian Sobek, sebastian.sobek@ebc.uu.se<br />

Cory McDonald, cmcdonald@usgs.gov<br />

Edward Stets, estets@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Room 345<br />

10:00 Pace, M. L.; Cole, J. J.; Carpenter, S. R.; Wilkinson, G. M.: ARE<br />

INPUTS OF TERRESTRIAL ORGANIC CARBON TO<br />

LAKES LARGE OR SMALL RELATIVE TO PRIMARY<br />

PRODUCTION?<br />

10:15 Wilkinson, G. M.; Pace, M. L.; Cole, J. J.: TERRESTRIAL<br />

DOMINANCE OF ORGANIC MATTER IN NORTH<br />

TEMPERATE LAKES<br />

10:30 Zwart, J. A.; Godwin, S.; Solomon, C. T.; Weidel, B. C.;<br />

Sebestyen, S. D.; Coloso, J. J.; Jones, S. E.: MAGNITUDE AND<br />

COMPOSITION OF BASAL CARBON SUPPLIES IN<br />

LAKE ECOSYSTEMS ACROSS A DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

CARBON GRADIENT<br />

10:45 Koren, L. M.; Minor, E. C.; McCallister, S. L.: TEMPORAL<br />

VARIABILITY IN LAKE SUPERIOR METABOLISM:<br />

COUPLING IN-SITU PCO 2 , DI 13 C AND OXYGEN-18<br />

ISOTOPIC MEASUREMENTS<br />

11:00 Vidal, L.; Abril, G.; Artigas, F.; Lobão, L.; Melo, M. L.; Bernardes,<br />

M. C.; Roland, F.: BACTERIAL CARBON DEMAND AND<br />

EFFICIENCY IN CONTRASTING FRESHWATER<br />

AMAZONIAN ECOSYSTEMS<br />

11:15 Bateson, D. E.; Wissel, B.: METABOLIC PROCESSES OF<br />

WINTER PRAIRIE LAKES<br />

11:30 McCallister, S. L.; del Giorgio, P. A.: EVIDENCE FOR THE<br />

RESPIRATION OF ANCIENT TERRESTRIAL ORGANIC<br />

C IN NORTHERN TEMPERATE LAKES: IMPLICATIONS<br />

FOR THE TERRESTRIAL C BUDGET<br />

85<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

14:00 Mendonça, R.; Kosten, S.; Sobek, S.; Bastos, A.; Cole, J. J.; Barros,<br />

N.; Tranvik, L.; Scheffer, M.; Cardoso, S.; Roland, F.: ORGANIC<br />

CARBON BURIAL IN HYDROELECTRIC RESERVOIRS: AN<br />

INTEGRATIVE APPROACH USING A SEISMIC SURVEY<br />

14:15 Roland, F.; Barros, N.; Cimbleris, A.; Assireu, A.; Cole, A.; Mendonça,<br />

R.; Huszar, V.: AMBIGUOUS EFFECT OF TROPICAL<br />

HYDROELECTRIC RESERVOIRS ON THE CARBON<br />

CYCLE BASED ON AN ECOSYSTEM MASS BALANCE<br />

14:30 Biddanda, B. A.; Kendall, S. T.; Strickler, E. A.; Weinert, M. E.; Defore,<br />

A. L.; Driza, K. M.; Coveney, K. E.; Deborah, D. K.; Weinke, A. C.;<br />

Gereaux, L. C.: LAND-LAKE LINKAGES IN A GREAT LAKE<br />

WATERSHED: PRODUCTION AND RESPIRATION OF<br />

CARBON IN LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

14:45 Winslow, L. A.; Read, J. S.; Hanson, P. C.; Stanley, E. H.:<br />

THE DISTRIBUTION OF AQUATIC-TERRESTRIAL<br />

INTERFACES IN THE CONTINENTAL U.S. AND ITS<br />

IMPLICATIONS FOR TERRESTRIAL-AQUATIC ORGANIC<br />

CARBON FLUX<br />

15:00 Köhler, J.; Brothers, S. M.; Hilt, S.: SHIFTS FROM TURBID TO<br />

CLEAR-WATER REGIME INCREASE THE PRODUCTIVITY<br />

OF SHALLOW LAKES AND LOWLAND RIVERS<br />

15:15 Premke, K.; Moreano, M.; Weisse, L.; Gessler, A.; Kayler, Z.; Ulrich,<br />

A.: IMPACT OF WATER LEVEL FLUCTUATION ON<br />

ORGANIC CARBON TRANSFORMATION IN SEDIMENTS<br />

SS63 LONG-TERM PERSPECTIVES ON LAKE RESEARCH<br />

AND MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Stephanie Hampton, hampton@nceas.ucsb.edu<br />

Paul Hanson, pchanson@wisc.edu<br />

Emily Stanley, ehstanley@wisc.edu<br />

Location: Room 344<br />

16:00 Jeppesen, E.; Søndergaard, M.; Lauridsen, T. L.; Trolle, D.; Bjerring,<br />

R.; Johansson, L. S.: USE OF MONITORING DATA IN<br />

FRESHWATER RESEARCH: DENMARK AS AN EXAMPLE.<br />

16:15 Hampton, S. E.; O’Reilly, C. M.; Sharma, S.; Gray, D. K.; Read, J. S.;<br />

Lenters, J. D.; Hook, S. J.: GLOBAL LAKE WARMING TRENDS<br />

AND REGIONAL HOTSPOTS<br />

16:30 Kraemer, B. M.; McIntyre, P. B.; Hook, S.; Huttula, T.; Kotilainen, P.;<br />

O’reilly, C. B.; Peltonen, A.; Plisnier, P. D.; Sarvala , J.; Vadeboncoeur,<br />

Y.; Wehrli, B.: CLIMATE CHANGE IN LAKE TANGANYIKA:<br />

A LITTLE BIT GOES A LONG WAY IN THE TROPICS<br />

16:45 Moore, M. V.; Hampton, S. E.; Izmest’eva, L. R.: BOTTOM-UP<br />

EFFECTS OPERATING IN LAKE BAIKAL, SIBERIA<br />

17:00 Gray, D. K.; Hampton, S. E.; Izmest’eva, L. R.: LONG-TERM<br />

CHANGES IN THE DEPTH DISTRIBUTION OF LAKE<br />

BAIKAL ZOOPLANKTON: A CONSEQUENCE OF<br />

WARMING?<br />

17:15 Gaiser, E. E.; Quillen, A.; Swain, H. M.: COMBINING LONG-<br />

TERM OBSERVATIONAL AND PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL<br />

RECORDS TO DISTINGUISH CLIMATE FROM LOCAL<br />

LAND USE SIGNALS IN A REFERENCE WATERSHED<br />

17:30 Stanley, E. H.; Lottig, N. R.; Soranno, P. A.; Cheruvilil, K. S.:<br />

ILLUMINATING DARK DATA: THE SEARCH FOR AND<br />

USE OF LONG-TERM LAKE DATA SETS<br />

17:45 Hanson, P. C.; Solomon, C.; Read, J.; Muraoka, K.: DATA<br />

FROM GLEON PROVIDE NEW UNDERSTANDING OF<br />

PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL CONTROL IN LAKES<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS65 THE ROLE OF ARABIA’S SEAS IN PROJECTING MARINE<br />

ECOSYSTEM RESILIENCE AND ADAPTATION TO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE<br />

Chair(s): Cornelia Roder, cornelia.roder@kaust.edu.sa<br />

Christian R Voolstra, christian.voolstra@kaust.edu.sa<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

14:00 Riegl, B.; Purkis, S.; Al-Cibahy , A.: CLIMATE CHANGE<br />

DISRUPTS LONG-TERM COMMUNITY STABILITY AND<br />

ADAPTATION IN PERSIAN/ARABIAN GULF*<br />

14:30 Voolstra, C. R.; Roder, C.; Roik, A.; Rothig, T.: CORAL REEF<br />

ECOSYSTEMS MONITORING IN THE CENTRAL RED<br />

SEA<br />

14:45 Ziegler, M.; Roder, C.; Roelke, D. L.; Büchel, C.; Voolstra, C.<br />

R.: FUNCTIONAL RESPONSES OF THE CORAL-<br />

DINOFLAGELLATE SYMBIOSIS TO ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

CHANGE ALONG A CROSS-SHELF AND DEPTH<br />

TRANSECT IN THE CENTRAL RED SEA<br />

15:00 Sawall, Y.; Al-Sofyani, A.: CORAL ACCLIMATIZATION:<br />

PHOTOSYNTHESIS, CALCIFICATION AND MUCUS<br />

RELEASE OF THE CORAL POCILLOPORA VERRUCOSA<br />

ALONG THE NUTRIENT AND SST GRADIENT OF THE<br />

RED SEA<br />

15:15 Davis, K. A.; Pineda, J.; Lentz, S.; Farrar, J. T.; Starczak, V.: DID<br />

ANOMALOUS 2010 WINDS CONTRIBUTE TO A MAJOR<br />

CORAL BLEACHING EVENT IN THE RED SEA?<br />

16:00 Wiedenmann, J.; D’Angelo, C.; Hume, B.; Burt, J.: HEAT<br />

TOLERANCE OF GULF CORALS: A RESULT OF THE<br />

PHYSICOCHEMICAL ENVIRONMENT?*<br />

16:30 Roder, C.; Voolstra, C. R.: DEEP-SEA CORALS FROM THE<br />

CENTRAL RED SEA – A CRYSTAL BALL FOR COLD-<br />

WATER REEFS?<br />

16:45 Withrow, F. G.; Roelke, D. L.; Walton, J.; Zieler, M.; Roder, C.;<br />

Voolstra, C. R.: POTENTIAL CHANGES IN SPECTRAL<br />

QUALITY OF LIGHT IN THE RED SEA WITH SHIFTS IN<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS AND COMPSOSITION<br />

17:00 Quigg, A.; Al-Ansi, M.; Nour Al Din, N.; Wei, C. L.; Nunnally,<br />

C. C.; Al-Ansari, I. S.; Rowe, G.; Soliman, Y.; Al-Maslamani, I.;<br />

Mahmoud, I.: PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS ON THE<br />

COASTAL SHELF OF AN OLIGOTROPHIC HYPER SALINE<br />

PENINSULA IN A SEMI-ENCLOSED MARGINAL SEA<br />

17:15 Polikarpov, G. G.; Al-Yamani, F.; Nezlin, N.: CLIMATIC FACTORS<br />

REGULATING PHYTOPLANKTON VARIABILITY IN THE<br />

ARABIAN GULF<br />

17:30 El-Sammak, A.: MARINE AND COASTAL<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY OPTIONS FOR WEST ASIA<br />

SS67 ROLE OF THE METALIMNION AND OTHER INTERNAL<br />

TRANSITION ZONES IN LAKES<br />

Chair(s): Tom Shatwell, shatwell@igb-berlin.de<br />

Bertram Boehrer, bertram.boehrer@ufz.de<br />

Klaus Jöhnk, Klaus.Joehnk@csiro.au<br />

Location: Room 344<br />

10:00 Eckert, W.: THE ROLE OF PHYSICAL FORCING FOR<br />

THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL EVOLUTION IN THE WATER<br />

COLUMN OF A WARM MONOMICTIC LAKE*<br />

10:15 Castendyk, D. N.; Gallagher, H. A.; Priscu, J. C.; Lyons, W.<br />

B.: EFFECTS OF INTERFLOW ON A SHALLOW<br />

TRANSITION ZONE WITHIN A PERMANENTLY ICE-<br />

COVERED, MEROMICTIC LAKE IN THE MCMURDO DRY<br />

VALLEYS, ANTARCTICA<br />

86<br />

10:30 Boehrer, B.; Kiwel, U.; Rahn, K.; Schultze, M.: CHEMOCLINE<br />

EROSION IN TWO MEROMICTIC SALT LAKES<br />

10:45 Downing, J. A.; Jones, J. R.: THE ROLE OF STRATIFICATION,<br />

FETCH, AND SEDIMENT-WATER INTERACTIONS IN<br />

THE “IMPAIRMENT” OF UNDEVELOPED LAKES<br />

11:00 Frindte, K.; Eckert, W.; Allgaier, M.; Attermeyer, K.; Grossart,<br />

H. P.: SHIFTS IN MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES AND<br />

FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY IN RELATION TO REDOX<br />

CHANGES AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER-INTERFACE<br />

11:15 Grantz, E. M.; Haggard, B. E.; Scott, J. T.: HYDROLOGICALLY-<br />

DYNAMIC IN-LAKE HABITATS DETERMINE<br />

VARIABILITY IN NITROGEN REMOVAL THROUGH<br />

DENITRIFICATION AS A PROPORTION OF WHOLE-<br />

RESERVOIR RETENTION<br />

11:30 Arafat, S.; Cook, P.; Grace, M.; Western, A.: FACTORS<br />

AFFECTING NITROUS OXIDE AND METHANE<br />

EMISSION FROM A TEMPERATE AGRICULTURAL FARM<br />

DAM IN SOUTH-EASTERN AUSTRALIA<br />

14:00 Baustian, M. M.; Stevenson, R. J.: IMPACTS OF NUTRIENT<br />

ENRICHMENT TO THE BENTHIC-PELAGIC COUPLING<br />

MECHANISMS IN THE NATIONS FRESHWATER LAKES<br />

14:15 Ackerman, J. D.; Bouffard, D.; Boegman, L.: THE<br />

DEVELOPMENT AND DYNAMICS OF HYPOXIA IN LAKE<br />

ERIE AND OTHER LARGE SHALLOW LAKES<br />

14:30 Shatwell, T. A.; Padisák, J.; Hupfer, M.; Kasprzak, P.:<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON INTERACTIONS WITH OXYGEN<br />

AND PHOSPHORUS DYNAMICS IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC<br />

LAKE<br />

14:45 Aguilar, C.; Cuhel, R. L.: UNICELLULAR CYANOBACTERIAL<br />

DOMINANCE IN THE METALIMNION: RELATION TO<br />

EPISODIC CLIMATE EVENTS IN LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

SS71 WATERSHEDS OF THE CARIBBEAN: GLOBAL CHANGE,<br />

SCIENCE, POLICY AND SECURITY<br />

Chair(s): Robyn E. Hannigan, robyn.hannigan@umb.edu<br />

Alonso Ramirez, aramirez@ramirezlab.net<br />

Alex Eisen-Cuadra, alexeisencuadra@gmail.com<br />

Helenmary Hotz, Helenmary.Hotz@umb.edu<br />

Alan D. Christian, alan.christian@umb.edu<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

10:00 Bowen, R. E.; Kress, M.: INTEGRATING APPROACHES<br />

TO INTEGRATIVE INDICATORS RELATING GLOBAL<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, HUMAN HEALTH<br />

AND SOCIAL WELL-BEING: AN ARCHITECTURE FOR<br />

COMPLEX SYSTEMS*<br />

10:30 Wagner, K.; Ramirez, A.; Rosas, K.; Seguinot-Barbosa, J.; Mendez-<br />

Lazaro, P.; Lugo, A. E.: THE RIO PIEDRAS WATERSHED,<br />

PUERTO RICO – A HIGHLY URBANIZED AND DIVERSE<br />

NOVEL ECOSYSTEM<br />

10:45 Ramirez, A.; Vazquez, G.; Novelo-Gutiérrez, R.: LAND USE<br />

EFFECTS ON BIODIVERSITY AND WATER QUALITY AT<br />

LA ANTIGUA WATERSHED, MEXICO<br />

11:00 Hotz, H. M.; Christian, A. D.: EVIDENCE OF RECENT<br />

GLOBAL CHANGE EFFECTS ON LAKE AND LAKE BASIN<br />

CHARACTERISTICS OF TTANGE SAUMTTRE, HAITI<br />

11:15 Christian, A. D.; Hotz, H.; Eisen-Cuadra, A.; Dorval, E.; Hannigan,<br />

R. E.: PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL ANALYSIS AND<br />

PRODUCTIVITY CLASSIFICATION OF A GLOBAL<br />

CHANGE INFLUENCED BRACKISH CARIBBEAN LAKE: 2<br />

YEARS OF DATA ON TTANG SAUMTTRE, HAITI<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

11:30 Eisen-Cuadra, A.; Christian, A.; Dorval, E.; Dorval, E.; Hannigan,<br />

R.: HISTORICAL TRENDS IN PRODUCTIVITY AND<br />

THE ROLE OF GLOBAL CHANGE IN LAKE SEDIMENT<br />

GEOCHEMISTRY: A CASE STUDY OF A BRACKISH<br />

CLOSED LAKE<br />

11:45 Jessen, B. J.; Oviatt, C. A.; Johnson, D. S.; Nixon, S. W.: BENTHIC<br />

METABOLISM RESPONSE TO TWO NUTRIENT-<br />

ENRICHMENT SCENARIOS IN A COASTAL FRINGE<br />

MANGROVE<br />

SS77 TRANSMISSION OF TERRESTRIAL SIGNALS TO THE COASTAL<br />

OCEAN BY (LARGE) RIVERS<br />

Chair(s): Robert Max Holmes, rmholmes@whrc.org<br />

Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink, behrenbrink@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Room 355<br />

10:00 Carey, J. C.; Fulweiler, R. W.: LAND USE CHANGE DIRECTLY<br />

ALTERS RIVERINE DISSOLVED SILICA FLUXES<br />

10:15 Schultz, G. E.; Kovatch, J.: THE BACTERIAL DIVERSITY<br />

OF THE OHIO RIVER AS DETERMINED BY<br />

PYROSEQUENCING<br />

10:30 Teodoru, C. R.; del Giorgio, P. A.: CARBON TRANSPORT,<br />

EMISSION AND PROCESSING IN THE LARGE BOREAL<br />

RIVERS OF QUBBEC<br />

10:45 Griffin, C. G.; McClelland, J. W.: NITROGEN AND ORGANIC<br />

CARBON EXPORT UNDER VARYING PRECIPITATION<br />

REGIMES ALONG THE TEXAS COAST: THE<br />

IMPORTANCE OF DAMS, DROUGHTS AND STORMS<br />

11:00 McCrackin, M. L.; Harrison, J. A.; Compton, J. E.: PATTERNS<br />

AND CONTROLS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

EXPORT BY MAJOR RIVERS: A NEW SEASONAL,<br />

SPATIALLY EXPLICIT, GLOBAL MODEL<br />

11:15 Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B.; Holmes, R. M.; Eglinton, T. I.; Spencer, R.;<br />

Galy, V.; Wang, Z. A.; Coolen, M.; Mann, P.; Voss, B.; Vonk, J. E.:<br />

BUILDING THE GLOBAL RIVERS OBSERVATORY<br />

11:30 Carmichael, R. H.; Crim, R. N.; Dzwonkowski, B.; Park, K.; Taylor,<br />

M. N.; Patterson, H. K.: THE TROPHIC IMPORTANCE OF<br />

LAND-DERIVED ORGANIC MATTER IN A FRESHWATER<br />

DOMINATED NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO ESTUARY<br />

11:45 Dzwonkowski, B.; Park, K.; Lee, J.; Webb, B.; Valle-Levinson, A.:<br />

SPRING SEASON VELOCITY STRUCTURE ON A RIVER-<br />

INFLUENCED INNER SHELF: WHERE IS THE COASTAL<br />

CURRENT?<br />

87<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

SS79 PHYTOPLANKTON INTERACTIONS IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Suzanne Strom, Suzanne.Strom@wwu.edu<br />

Brian Palenik, bpalenik@ucsd.edu<br />

Location: Room 355<br />

14:00 Fuhrman, J. A.; Needham, D.; Cram, J.; Chow, C.: MICROBIAL<br />

INTERACTIONS AND NETWORKS T<br />

14:30 van Tol, H. M.; Amin, S. A.; Armbrust, E. V.: COMPARATIVE<br />

GENOMICS REVEAL POTENTIAL NICHE-SPECIFIC<br />

ADAPTATIONS OF CROCEIBACTER ATLANTICUS TO<br />

DIATOM CELL SURFACE<br />

14:45 Hmelo, L. R.; Amin, S.; Armbrust, V.; Parsek, M.:<br />

INVESTIGATION OF THE ROLE OF BACTERIAL<br />

COMMUNICATION IN THE SYNERGISTIC<br />

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SULFITOBACTER STRAIN<br />

SA11 AND PSEUDO-NITZCHIA MULTISERIES<br />

15:00 Foster, R. A.; Franzke, D.; Littmann, S.; Hilton, J. A.; Tripp, H. J.;<br />

Villareal, T. A.; Zehr, J. P.: METABOLIC INTERACTIONS<br />

IN FIELD-COLLECTED HEMIAULUS-RICHELIA<br />

SYMBIOSES REVEALED BY NANOSIMS IMAGING,<br />

GENOME SEQUENCES AND QUANTITATIVE MRNA<br />

TRANSCRIPTION<br />

15:15 Paz-Yepes, J.; Brahamsha, B.; Palenik, B.: MICROCIN-C-<br />

LIKE BIOSYNTHESIS GENES ARE INVOLVED IN<br />

ALLELOPATHIC INTERACTIONS IN SYNECHOCOCCUS<br />

16:00 Berges, J. A.; Sandgren, C. D.; Kozik, C. R.; Hellweger, F.: DIVERSE<br />

CAUSES OF CELL DEATH IN PHYTOPLANKTON IN<br />

SMALL FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS<br />

16:15 Liu, X.; Wu, Z. C.; Xu, C. P.; Chen, Y. W.: PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE LAKE POYANG-A<br />

WATER-LEVEL VARIABLE LAKE IN CHINA<br />

16:30 Paver, S. F.; Kent, A. D.: INTERACTIONS WITH<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON AFFECT BACTERIAL COMMUNITY<br />

RESPONSE TO CHANGES IN TEMPERATURE AND<br />

LIGHT AVAILABILITY<br />

16:45 Li, H.; Xing, P.; Wu, Q. L.: THE HIGH RESILIENCE OF THE<br />

BACTERIOPLANKTON COMMUNITY IN THE FACE<br />

OF A CATASTROPHIC DISTURBANCE BY A HEAVY<br />

MICROCYSTIS BLOOM<br />

17:00 Mincer, T. J.; Aicher, A. C.: PRODUCTION OF METHANOL BY<br />

A WIDE PHYLOGENETIC ARRAY OF PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

AND IMPLICATIONS FOR EPIBIONT INTERACTIONS<br />

17:15 Vernet, M.; Whitehead, K.; Glé, C.; Coesel, S.; Kozlowski, W.:<br />

AUTOINDUCTION OF GROWTH IN THE MARINE<br />

DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA<br />

17:30 Paerl, R. W.; Palenik, B.; Azam, F.: EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE<br />

OF THIAMINE AUXOTROPHY IN THE ALGAE O.<br />

LUCIMARINUS AND THE SEARCH FOR MICROBIAL<br />

‘ALLEVIATORS’ OF O.LUCIMARINUS THIAMINE<br />

GROWTH LIMITATION<br />

17:45 Koch, F.; Sañudo-Wilhelmy, S.; Fisher, N. S.; Gobler, C. J.: THE<br />

ROLE OF VITAMIN B1 AND B12 IN CONTROLLING<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS, DIVERSITY AND<br />

DYNAMICS<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

THURSDAY, 21 FEBRUARY - POSTERS<br />

GS05 FOOD WEB INTERACTIONS AND TROPHIC LINKAGES<br />

Chair(s): Jill Olin, jolin@lsu.edu<br />

Mike Vanni, vannimj@muohio.edu<br />

Maria Gonzalez, gonzalmj@muohio.edu<br />

Just Cebrian, jcebrian@disl.org<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

246 Mitchell, C. J.; Lini, A.; Stockwell, J. D.: DIVERGENT BEHAVIOR<br />

IN DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATION OF MYSIS DILUVIANA:<br />

IS IT PLASTIC OR FIXED?<br />

247 Brown, J. M.; Hewson, I.: INVESTIGATION OF MUTATION<br />

AND MIGRATION AS FACTORS INFLUENCING<br />

CYANOPHAGE DIVERSITY WITHIN TWO<br />

NEIGHBORING MEROMICTIC LAKES<br />

248 Ball, S. C.; Mihuc, T. B.; Stockwell, J. D.: CHANGES IN<br />

OPOSSUM SHRIMP (MYSIS DILUVIANA) POPULATION<br />

DEMOGRAPHICS IN LAKE CHAMPLAIN, VERMONT,<br />

BETWEEN 1975 AND 2012<br />

249 Olin, J. A.; Arts, M. T.; Fisk, A. T.: FATTY ACIDS QUANTIFY<br />

SEASONAL CHANGES IN PRODUCTION RESOURCES<br />

USED BY ESTUARINE CONSUMERS<br />

250 Craig, C.; Kimmerer, W.; Cohen, C. S.: A MOLECULAR<br />

APPROACH TO DIET ANALYSIS OF LARVAL AND ADULT<br />

COPEPODS<br />

GS06 RESTORATION ECOLOGY IN AQUATIC SYSTEM<br />

Chair(s): Sandra Clinton, sclinto1@uncc.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

251 Padilla-Rivera, D. J.: COULD THE WATER LILIES REMOVAL<br />

BE BENEFICIAL?<br />

252 Cruz-Marrero, W.; Meléndez , J.: WHAT COMES WITH<br />

THE ASIAN TIGER SHRIMP (PENAEUS MONODON)<br />

INVASION IN PUERTO RICO?<br />

253 Crawford, M. K.; Phelps, J. H.; Graham, B. P.; Young, M. M.:<br />

PATTERNS OF SUBMERGED AQUATIC VEGETATION<br />

BIOMASS IN CURRITUCK SOUND, NC<br />

GS09 COMMUNITY ECOLOGY<br />

Chair(s): Markus Weitere, markus.weitere@ufz.de<br />

Dina Leech, dinaleech@depauw.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

254 Cothias , G. E.; Christian, A. D.; Eisen-Cuadra, A.; Hannigan, R.:<br />

CHANGES IN PRODUCTIVITY OF TTANG SAUMTTRE,<br />

HATTI OBSERVED IN A SEDIMENT CORE: EVIDENCE<br />

OF SUCCESSION AND GLOBAL CHANGE?<br />

255 Burke, S. M.; Persaud, A. D.; Dillon, P. J.: A REGIONAL<br />

COMPARISON OF BENTHIC MACROINVERTEBRATE<br />

COMMUNITY FUNCTION IN PRECAMBRIAN SHIELD<br />

AND ST. LAWRENCE LOWLAND LAKES: A STABLE<br />

ISOTOPE APPROACH<br />

256 Maldonado, E. M.; Gárate, M.; Starczak, V.; Pineda, J.:<br />

RECRUITMENT PATTERNS DEPEND ON SETTLEMENT<br />

PREFERENCE FOR MACRO-HABITAT RATHER THAN<br />

MICRO-HABITAT IN THE BARNACLE SEMIBALANUS<br />

BALANOIDES<br />

88<br />

257 Izaguirre, I.; Saad, J.; Schiaffino, M. R.; Unrein, F.; Allende, L.;<br />

Sinistro, R.; Sánchez, M. L.; Vinocur, A.; Tell, G.: INFLUENCE<br />

OF SPATIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS ON<br />

NANOPLANKTON IN LAKES: A LATITUDINAL STUDY<br />

BASED ON MORPHOLOGICAL SPECIES, FUNCTIONAL<br />

AND MOLECULAR DIVERSITY<br />

258 De Palma-Dow, A. A.; Cheruvelil , K. S.: THE ROLES OF<br />

CONNECTIVITY AND ABIOTIC LAKE AND LANDSCAPE<br />

FEATURES FOR UNDERSTANDING VARIATION IN<br />

MACROPHYTE RICHNESS AMONG LAKES<br />

259 Kiser, R. F.; Pineda, J.; Starczak, V. R.: RECRUITMENT<br />

AND SURVIVAL OF THE BARNACLE SEMIBALANUS<br />

BALANOIDES IN WOODS HOLE, MASSACHUSETTS,<br />

FROM 2004 TO 2012<br />

260 Coblentz, K. E.; Sigel, B. J.; Henkel, J. R.; Taylor, C. M.: SEDIMENT<br />

CHARACTERISTICS AND DIVERSITY IN THE SOFT-<br />

SEDIMENT INTERTIDAL OF THE NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO<br />

261 Demopoulos, A. W.; Bourque, J. R.; Phillips, R.: WRECKS AS<br />

REEFS: THE ROLE OF SHIPWRECKS IN SUPPORTING<br />

DEEP-WATER CORAL BENTHIC COMMUNITIES<br />

262 Riedinger-Whitmore, M. A.; Whitmore, T. J.; Hoare, A.; Price,<br />

R. A.; Lauterman, F. M.: INTER-ANNUAL, SUBSTRATE,<br />

AND SEASONAL VARIATION IN PERIPHYTON<br />

COMMUNITIES IN A SUBTROPICAL, SPRING-FED<br />

FLORIDA STREAM<br />

263 Nelson, D.; Benstead, J. P.; Cross, W. F.; Huryn, A. D.; Hood,<br />

J. M.; Johnson, P. W.; Junker, J. R.; Gislason, G. M.; Olafsson, J.<br />

S.: EXPERIMENTAL WHOLE-STREAM WARMING<br />

INCREASES ALGAL STANDING CROP AND REDUCES<br />

INVERTEBRATE BIOMASS<br />

264 Keasberry, A. M.; Nelson, D.; Benstead, J. P.; Cross, W. F.; Huryn,<br />

A. D.: A COMPARISON OF RESPIRATION RATES OF<br />

A FRESHWATER SNAIL FROM TWO ICELANDIC<br />

GEOTHERMAL STREAMS: A TEST OF THE METABOLIC<br />

COLD ADAPTATION HYPOTHESIS<br />

265 Farrell, J.; Boylen, C. W.; Sutherland, J. W.; Nierzwicki-Bauer, S. A.:<br />

ECOSYSTEM RESPONSES TO FISH RE-INTRODUCTION<br />

FOLLOWING THE RECOVERY OF AN ADIRONDACK<br />

LAKE FROM ACID DEPOSITION<br />

SS05 ADVANCES IN COASTAL HYPOXIA MODELING: FROM<br />

PHYSICS TO FISH<br />

Chair(s): Robert Hetland, hetland@tamu.edu<br />

Dubravko Justic, djusti1@lsu.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

266 Klump, J. V.; Bravo, H. R.; Waples, J. T.; LaBuhn, S. L.; Anderson,<br />

P. D.; Grunert, B. R.; Valenta, T.; Zorn, M.: DRIVERS OF<br />

SEASONAL HYPOXIA IN GREEN BAY, LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

267 Hagy, J. D.; Beddick, D. L.; Jarvis, B.; Murrell, M. C.; Plis, Y. M.:<br />

PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL CONTROLS ON HYPOXIA<br />

IN PENSACOLA BAY, FLORIDA USA<br />

268 Welle, P. M.; Llebot, C.; Lopez, J. E.; Roegner, G. C.; Needoba, J. A.;<br />

Spitz, Y.; Baptista, A. M.: DATA-SUPPORTED MODELING<br />

OF OXYGEN DEPLETION IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER<br />

ESTUARY<br />

269 Brandt, S. B.; Sellinger, C.; Kolesar, S.; Jensen, D.: HYPOXIC<br />

IMPACT ON FISH HABITAT QUALITY: WINNERS AND<br />

LOSERS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS08 BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF METAL-BINDING ORGANIC LIGANDS<br />

IN THE OCEAN: SOURCES, COMPOSITION AND IMPACTS ON<br />

TRACE METAL CYCLING<br />

Chair(s): Maeve C. Lohan, maeve.lohan@plymouth.ac.uk<br />

Sylvia G. Sander, sylvias@chemistry.otago.ac.nz<br />

Kristen N. Buck, kristen.buck@bios.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

270 Hawkes, J. A.; Gledhill, M.; Achterberg, E. P.; Connelly, D. P.:<br />

STABILISATION OF IRON BY LIGANDS IN HIGH<br />

TEMPERATURE HYDROTHERMAL VENT PLUMES<br />

271 Chuang, C.; Ho, Y.; Santschi, P. H.: IS BIOGENIC SILICA<br />

RESPONSIBLE FOR SCAVENGING OF RADIONUCLIDES,<br />

234TH, 233PA, 210PB, 210PO, 7BE, IN THE OCEAN? A CASE<br />

STUDY WITH PHAEODACTYLUM TRICORNUTUM<br />

272 Burdige, D. J.; Komada, T.: LINKAGES BETWEEN FE REDOX<br />

CYCLING AND DOC ADSORPTION-DESORPTION IN<br />

SURFACE MARINE SEDIMENTS<br />

273 Sander, S. G.: INTERACTIONS OF METALS WITH<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN MARINE AND<br />

FRESHWATER SYSTEMS<br />

274 Takeda, S.; Ishimaru, A.: ORGANIC COMPLEXATION OF<br />

IRON IN THE INDIAN OCEAN DURING NE MONSOON<br />

275 Hirose, K.; Saito, T.: SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF<br />

PARTICULATE ORGANIC LIGAND IN THE PACIFIC<br />

OCEAN<br />

276 Powell, Z. D.; Koschinsky, A.; Sander, S.: STABILISATION OF<br />

DISSOLVED COPPER AT HYDROTHERMAL VENT SITES<br />

NEAR 5SS ON THE MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE<br />

SS13 INTEGRATIVE APPROACHES TO ECOLOGICAL RISK<br />

ASSESSMENT OF NONINDIGENOUS AQUATIC SPECIES:<br />

FRAMEWORKS FOR ENHANCING PREDICTION, REDUCING<br />

UNCERTAINTY, AND IMPROVING MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Howeth, jghoweth@as.ua.edu<br />

Marion Wittmann, Marion.E.Wittmann.3@nd.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

277 Woodcock, S. H.; Grieshaber, C. A.; Walther, B. D.: CAN AN<br />

ENRICHED STABLE ISOTOPE DIET BE USED TO MARK<br />

FISH?<br />

278 Novoa, A.; Sinicrope Talley, T.; Talley, D.: DEFINING HABITAT<br />

PREFERENCE OF A NATIVE MOLLUSK IN SOUTHERN<br />

CALIFORNIA<br />

279 Simmons, K. R.; Kerstetter, D. W.; Blanar, C. A.: THE<br />

ENDOPARASITE FAUNA OF THE INVASIVE LIONFISH<br />

COMPLEX (PTEROIS VOLITANS AND PTEROIS MILES)<br />

IN THE WESTERN ATLANTIC AND CARIBBEAN<br />

280 Gitonga, K.; Ganju, N.: FACTORS AFFECTING LIGHT<br />

ATTENUATION IN SEAGRASS BEDS<br />

281 Choi, K.: PREDICTING THE INVASION PATHWAY<br />

OF BALANUS PERFORATUS IN KOREAN SEAWATERS<br />

282 Schwieterman, G. D.; Copeman, L.; Ryer, C.: THE EFFECT OF<br />

DIETARY LIPIDS AND FATTY ACIDS ON GROWTH<br />

RATES OF JUVENILE TANNER CRABS (CHIONOECETES<br />

BAIRDI)<br />

89<br />

SS16 OPPORTUNITIES IN THE STUDY OF OCEAN PARTICLE FLUX<br />

Chair(s): Adrian Burd, adrianb@uga.edu<br />

Oscar Schofield, oscar@marine.rutgers.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

283 Brown, C. W.; Schollaert Uz, S.; Corliss, B. H.: SEASONALITY<br />

OF OCEANIC PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND ITS<br />

INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY<br />

284 Hayashi, K.; Pilskaln, C. H.: PARTICLE FLUX DYNAMICS IN<br />

THE GULF OF MAINE BENTHIC NEPHELOID LAYER<br />

AND IMPLICATIONS FOR CARBON CYCLING ON THE<br />

MARGIN<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

SS18 OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONES AND CLIMATE CHANGE: IMPACTS<br />

ON HIGHER TROPHIC LEVELS<br />

Chair(s): Brad Seibel, seibel@uri.edu<br />

Karen Wishner, kwishner@gso.uri.edu<br />

Lisa Levin, llevin@ucsd.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

285 Malvezzi, A. J.; Chapman, D.; O’Leary, S.; Baumann, H.: IS<br />

RESISTANCE AGAINST ELEVATED CO2 LEVELS A<br />

HERITABLE TRAIT IN THE ATLANTIC SILVERSIDE,<br />

MENIDIA MENIDIA?<br />

286 Baumann, H.; DePasquale, E. L.; Gobler, C.: IMPACTS OF<br />

OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND ESTUARINE STRESSORS<br />

ON EARLY LIFE GROWTH AND SURVIVAL OF MENIDIA<br />

BERYLLINA<br />

SS20 LET IT SNOW! AQUATIC EXOPOLYMERS, SUSPENDED<br />

PARTICLES, AND ORGANIC AGGREGATES<br />

Chair(s): Karen Shapiro , kshapiro@ucdavis.edu<br />

Fred C. Dobbs, fdobbs@odu.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

287 Chen, J.; Thornton, D. C.: EFFECT OF GROWTH RATE<br />

ON EXOPOLYMER PARTICLE PRODUCTION AND<br />

AGGREGATE FORMATION BY A PLANKTONIC DIATOM<br />

288 Deng, W.; Monks, L.; Neuer, S.:<br />

MARINE SYNECHOCOCCUS AGGREGATION<br />

289 Ortega-Retuerta, E.; Joux, F.; Jeffrey, W. H.; Ghiglione, J. F.: SPATIAL<br />

VARIABILITY IN PARTICLE ATTACHED AND FREE<br />

LIVING BACTERIAL DIVERSITY IN SURFACE WATERS<br />

FROM THE MACKENZIE RIVER TO THE BEAUFORT SEA<br />

(CANADIAN ARCTIC)<br />

290 Li, W.; Williamson, K. E.; Dobbs, F. C.: WHAT IS THE<br />

ABUNDANCE AND DIVERSITY OF VIRUSES<br />

ASSOCIATED WITH MARINE AGGREGATES?<br />

291 Cisternas-Novoa, C.; Lee, C.; Engel, A.; Dammrich, T.; De Jesus, R.:<br />

GEL PARTICLES AND AGGREGATION UNDER HIGH<br />

CO2 AND TEMPERATURE CONDITIONS DURING<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM: RESULTS FROM A<br />

MESOCOSM STUDY<br />

292 Ganesh, S.; Parris, D. J.; DeLong, E. F.; Stewart, F. J.:<br />

METAGENOMIC ANALYSIS OF SIZE-FRACTIONATED<br />

PICOPLANKTON IN A MARINE OXYGEN MINIMUM<br />

ZONE<br />

293 Smith, C. J.; Hoskins, D. L.: AN ASSESSMENT OF MICROBIAL<br />

EXTRACELLULAR POLYMERIC SUBSTANCE (EPS) IN<br />

COASTAL GEORGIA SEDIMENTS<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS22 VANISHING GLACIERS: CONSEQUENCES FOR<br />

AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Ruben Sommaruga, ruben.sommaruga@uibk.ac.at<br />

Tom Battin, tom.battin@univie.ac.at<br />

Eran Hood, ewhood@uas.alaska.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

294 Dimova, N. T.; Paytan, A.: ARCTIC HYDROLOGICAL<br />

DYNAMICS NEAR THE PERMAFROST ACTIVE<br />

LAYER REVEALED BY RADON-222 AND ELECTRICAL<br />

RESISTIVITY MEASUREMENTS<br />

SS24 MONITORING AND FORECASTING OF SURFACE<br />

CURRENT-AFFECTED PHENOMENA IN COASTAL REGIONS<br />

Chair(s): Jeffrey Paduan , paduan@nps.edu<br />

Alexei Sentchev, Alexei.Sentchev@univ-littoral.fr<br />

Yves Barbin, yves.barbin@univ-tln.fr<br />

Max Yaremchuk, max.yaremchuk@nrlssc.navy.mil<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

295 Suursaar, U.; Kullas, T.: INFLUENCE OF CHANGES IN WIND<br />

CLIMATE ON WATER EXCHANGE BETWEEN THE SEMI-<br />

ENCLOSED SUB-BASINS OF THE BALTIC SEA<br />

296 Dykes, J. D.; Keen, T. R.: USING LAGRANGIAN DRIFTERS TO<br />

STUDY THE GREAT PACIFIC GARBAGE PATCH<br />

297 Ha, H. K.; Lee, H. J.: MEASUREMENT OF SUSPENDED<br />

PARTICULATE MATTER BENEATH THE SEA ICE<br />

DURING RAPIDLY-MELTING SUMMER SEASON<br />

298 Spencer, L. J.; DiMarco, S. F.; Guinasso, Jr., N. L.: PHYSICAL<br />

OCEANOGRAPHIC CONDITIONS ON THE<br />

CONTINENTAL SHELF AND SLOPE OF THE NORTH<br />

CENTRAL GULF OF MEXICO NEAR THE DEEPWATER<br />

HORIZON SITE IN SUMMER 2012<br />

299 Turner, E. L.; Paudel, B.; Sokoly, D.; Gu, Y.; Adams, L.; Montagna,<br />

P. A.: WEEKLY NUTRIENT DYNAMICS IN CORPUS<br />

CHRISTI BAY, TEXAS<br />

300 Zimmerle, H. M.; DiMarco, S. F.; Guinasso, Jr., N. L.:<br />

INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF THE TEXAS COASTAL<br />

CURRENT IN THE NORTHWESTERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

FROM 21 YEARS OF OBSERVATIONS<br />

301 DiMarco, S. F.; Mullins-Perry, R. E.; Zhang, X.; Chapman, P.;<br />

Howard, M. K.: FLOOD VERSUS DROUGHT: COMPARING<br />

STABILITY AND DISSOLVED OXYGEN VARIABILITY ON<br />

THE LOUISIANA SHELF DURING THE SUMMERS OF<br />

2011 AND 2012<br />

SS25 EVOLUTION OF COASTAL CHANGE IN THE NORTHERN GULF<br />

OF MEXICO<br />

Chair(s): Lisa Osterman, osterman@usgs.gov<br />

Christopher G. Smith, cgsmith@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

302 Rodriguez, C. M.; O’Neil, J. M.: IDENTIFYING NITROGEN<br />

AND MICROBIAL CONTAMINANT HOTSPOTS IN<br />

TRIBUTARIES OF JOHNSON BAY, MARYLAND COASTAL<br />

BAYS<br />

303 Logsdon, M. G.; Kleinhuizen, A.; Mortazavi, B.: EVOLUTION OF<br />

THE NITROGEN CYCLE OVER THE FORMATION OF A<br />

SALTWATER MARSH ECOSYSTEM<br />

90<br />

305 Wee, J. L.; Patters0n, J.; Cattolico, R. A.; Paul, J. H.; Millie, D. F.:<br />

EFFECTS OF LIGHT SLOP CRUDE OIL ON THE GROWTH<br />

OF A SKELETONEMA COSTATUM STRAIN ISOLATED<br />

FROM THE LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN BASIN ESTUARY<br />

306 Johns, A. E.; Condon, R. H.; Darrow, E. S.; McCallister, S. L.;<br />

Carmichael, R. H.: A COMPARISON BETWEEN MEASURES<br />

OF ECOSYSTEM AND MICROBIAL METABOLISM IN A<br />

SUBTROPICAL ESTUARINE SYSTEM<br />

307 Hoch, M. P.; Nelson, M. M.; Shrift, A.; Rice, L. S.; Tipparaju, S.<br />

M.: SEASONAL AND SPATIAL VARIATION IN SULFATE<br />

REDUCING PROKARYOTE COMMUNITIES IN SALT<br />

MARSH SEDIMENTS ALONG THE SOUTHEAST TEXAS<br />

COAST<br />

SS28 IN SITU AQUATIC SENSORS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY.<br />

Chair(s): Veronique Garcon, veronique.garcon@legos.obs-mip.fr<br />

Douglas P. Connelly, dpc@noc.soton.ac.uk<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

308 Kolomijeca, A.; Ahmad, H.; Kronfeldt, H. D.: COMBINATION OF<br />

SERS AND SHIFTED EXCITATION RAMAN DIFFERENCE<br />

SPECTROSCOPY (SERDS) FOR IDENTIFICATION<br />

OF CHEMICALS IN SEA WATER FROM THREE<br />

CONTINENTS<br />

309 Chipman, L. E.; McCutchan, J. H.; Lewis, W. M.: APPLICATION<br />

OF THE EDDY CORRELATION TECHNIQUE TO<br />

SHALLOW RUNNING WATERS<br />

310 Meier, A.; Tsaloglou, M. N.; Connelly, D. P.; Keevil, C. W.; Mowlem,<br />

M. C.: BIOFOULING ON ARTIFICIAL SURFACES AFTER<br />

LONG-TERM DEPLOYMENT IN THE DEEP-SEA<br />

311 Milani, A.; Statham, P. J.; Connelly, D.; Mowlem, M.:<br />

DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATIONS OF<br />

AN AUTONOMOUS ANALYSER FOR IN-SITU<br />

DETERMINATION OF IRON AND MANGANESE IN<br />

NATURAL AQUATIC SYSTEMS<br />

312 Spaulding, R. S.; DeGrandpre, M. D.: SAMI-ALK, AN<br />

AUTONOMOUS IN-SITU SENSOR FOR TOTAL<br />

ALKALINITY MEASUREMENTS<br />

313 Ahmad, H.; Fernandez Lopez, M.; Kronfeldt, H. D.: NEW<br />

SEAWATER-RESISTANT SUBSTRATES FOR IN-SITU<br />

SURFACE ENHANCED RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY<br />

314 Marcon, Y.; Sahling, H.; Bohrmann, G.: A MATLAB TOOLBOX<br />

FOR LARGE-AREA PHOTOMOSAICKING<br />

315 Twardowski, M. S.; Zhang, X.; Sullivan, J. M.: INVERSION OF IN<br />

SITU OPTICAL SCATTERING AS AN EMERGING TOOL<br />

FOR PARTICLE CHARACTERIZATION<br />

316 Needoba, J. A.; Haddock, T.; Peterson, T. D.; Baptista, A. M.; Bado, P.:<br />

A MICROFLUIDIC INSTRUMENT FOR QUANTITATIVE<br />

PARTICLE DETECTION ON AUTONOMOUS PLATFORMS<br />

317 Soto Neira, J. P.; Zhu, Q.; Aller, R. C.: A NEW PLANAR<br />

OPTICAL SENSOR FOR MEASURING 2-D MANGANESE<br />

DISTRIBUTIONS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS<br />

318 McManus, M. C.; Smith, L. M.; Krumholz, J. S.; Oviatt, C. A.:<br />

USING IN SITUMETABOLISM ESTIMATES TO IDENTIFY<br />

ECOSYSTEM RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

CHANGE IN NARRAGANSETT BAY, RI<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS33 MICROBIAL NITROGEN CYCLING IN MARINE PELAGIC WATERS<br />

Chair(s): Jonathan P. Zehr, zehrj@ucsc.edu<br />

Julie LaRoche, julie.laroche@dal.ca<br />

Lasse Riemann, lriemann@bio.ku.dk<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

319 Hamza, I. S.; Le Moal , M.; Periot , M.; Ridame, C.; Tanaka,<br />

T.; Biegala, I. C.: NUTRIENTS AND SAHARAN DUST<br />

EVENTS CONTROL UNICELLULAR DIAZOTROPHIC<br />

CYANOBACTERIA DEVLOPMENT IN OLIGOTROPHIC<br />

MEDITERRANEAN SEA<br />

320 Bentzon-Tilia, M.; Farnelid, H.; Jürgens, K.; Riemann, L.: ISOLATION<br />

OF HETEROTROPHIC N2-FIXING BACTERIA FROM AN<br />

OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE IN THE BALTIC SEA<br />

321 Liu, Q.; Lu, X.; Clevinger, C.; Mou, X.; Hollibaugh, J. T.: THE<br />

CONTRIBUTION OF POLYAMINES TO N AND C<br />

CYCLING IN THE TRANSECTS OF THE SOUTH<br />

ATLANTIC BIGHT, GEORGIA<br />

322 Rouco, M.; Heithoff, A.; McGillicuddy, D.; Davis, C.; Waterbury,<br />

J.; Olson, E.; Joy-Warren, H.; Dyhrman, S. T.: NITROGEN<br />

FIXATION RATES AND ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE<br />

ACTIVITIES IN TRICHODESMIUM SP. POPULATIONS<br />

ALONG A CRUISE TRANSECT IN THE SUBTROPICAL<br />

NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN.<br />

323 Wawrik, B.; Cooper, J. T.; Bear, S. T.; Connelly, T.; Bronk, D. A.:<br />

CARBON AND NITROGEN STABLE ISOTOPE PROBING<br />

OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN ARCTIC COASTAL<br />

MARINE ENVIRONMENTS<br />

324 Shiozaki, T.; Kodama, T.; Furuya, K.: LOCAL ACTIVE<br />

NITROGEN FIXATION ENHANCES LARGE-SCALE<br />

PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE WESTERN SOUTH<br />

PACIFIC OCEAN<br />

325 Moisander, P. H.; Valery, C.; Parris, D. J.; Stewart, F. J.; Montoya, J.<br />

P.; Subramaniam, A.: DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION OF<br />

DIAZOTROPHS IN THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER PLUME<br />

326 Chang, B. X.; Babbin, A. R.; Jayakumar, A.; Revsbech, N. P.; Devol,<br />

A. H.; Ward, B. B.: EFFECT OF O 2 CONTAMINATION ON<br />

FIXED NITROGEN LOSS IN THE EASTERN TROPICAL<br />

NORTH PACIFIC AND ARABIAN SEA OXYGEN<br />

DEFICIENT ZONES<br />

327 Widner, B.; Mopper, K.; Mulholland, M. R.: DISTRIBUTION<br />

AND UPTAKE OF CYANATE IN THE EASTERN<br />

TROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC<br />

328 Dabundo, R. C.; Granger, J.: THE MARINE HETEROTROPHIC<br />

BACTERIUM VIBRIO NATRIEGENS FIXES NITROGEN IN<br />

THE PRESENCE OF NITRATE AND AMMONIUM<br />

329 Zhang, X.; Gamarra, J.; Castro, S.; Hernandez, A.; Hadaegh, A.;<br />

Read, B.: GENOME-WIDE ANALYSIS OF MICRORNAS AND<br />

THEIR CORRESPONDING PRECURSOR SEQUENCES<br />

PRESENT IN THE MARINE COCCOLITHOPHORID,<br />

EMILIANIA HUXLEYI<br />

330 Mulholland, M. R.; Chang, B.; Jayakumar, A.; Ward, B. B.; Widner,<br />

B.; Bernhardt, P. W.: DINITROGEN FIXATION IN THE<br />

EASTERN TROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC IN AND ABOVE<br />

THE OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE<br />

331 Ortell, N.; Ortmann, A. C.: NOT ALL THAUMARCHAEOTA<br />

ARE INVOLVED IN AMMONIUM OXIDATION<br />

332 Gillard, J.; Kustka, A. B.; Allen, A. E.: EFFECTS OF DISSOLVED<br />

IRON CONCENTRATIONS AND DIEL CYCLING ON<br />

GLOBAL TRANSCRIPT PROFILES OF THE PENNATE<br />

MARINE DIATOM PHAEODACTYLUM TRICORNUTUM<br />

91<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

SS34 BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF RESUSPENDED SEDIMENTS IN<br />

AQUATIC AND COASTAL MARINE ENVIRONMENTS<br />

Chair(s): Stephen Skrabal, skrabals@uncw.edu<br />

G. Brooks Avery, averyg@uncw.edu<br />

Ralph Mead, meadr@uncw.edu<br />

John R. Helms, helmsj@uncw.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

333 He, D.; Mead, R.; Belicka, L.; Jaffé, R.: ASSESSING<br />

PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTER DYNAMICS IN A<br />

SUBTROPICAL ESTUARY: A BIOMARKER APPROACH<br />

334 Statham, P. J.; Cuceiro, F.; Fones, G. R.; Thompson, C. E.; Parker, E.<br />

R.; Sivyer, D.: IMPACT OF RESUSPENSION OF COHESIVE<br />

SEDIMENTS IN COASTAL SEAS ON NUTRIENT<br />

EXCHANGE ACROSS THE SEDIMENT-WATER<br />

INTERFACE<br />

335 Nguyen, J. C.; Avery, G. B.; Helms, J. R.; Mead, R. N.; Skrabal, S.<br />

A.; Kieber, R. J.: PHOTOCHEMICAL RELEASE OF AMINO<br />

ACIDS FROM RESUSPENDED SEDIMENTS<br />

SS39 SCIENCE AND POLICY FRAMEWORK FOR FUTURE<br />

DEVELOPMENT OF THE OIL AND GAS RESOURCES OF THE<br />

USA OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF (OCS)<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Culbertson, jennnifer.culbertson@boem.gov<br />

Kelly Hammerle, kelly.hammerle@boem.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

336 DeGrasse, S.; Vanegas, C.; Conrad, S.: PARALYTIC SHELLFISH<br />

TOXINS IN THE SEA SCALLOP PLACOPECTEN<br />

MAGELLANICUS ON GEORGES BANK: IMPLICATIONS<br />

FOR AN OFFSHORE ROE-ON AND WHOLE SCALLOP<br />

FISHERY<br />

337 Baker, K.; Epperson, D.; Goldstein, H.; Skrupky, K.; Lewandowski,<br />

J.; Smith, B.; Gitschlag, G.; Turk, T.: IMPROVING PROTECTED<br />

SPECIES MANAGEMENT THROUGH STANDARDIZED<br />

OBSERVER <strong>PROGRAM</strong>S IN THE U.S.A.<br />

SS40 PERSPECTIVES ON RESTORATION: COASTAL HABITATS TO<br />

THE DEEP SEA<br />

Chair(s): Erik E. Cordes, Ph.D., ecordes@temple.edu<br />

Helen K. White, Ph.D., hwhite@haverford.edu<br />

Amanda W.J. Demopoulos, Ph.D., ademopoulos@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

339 Malizzi, L. D.; Carrere, L.; Marshall, P. J.; Marshall, M.; Parsons,<br />

A.; Domangue, S.; Moss, M.: GULF SAVERS3 BAG: AN<br />

INNOVATIVE APPROACH FOR MARSH RESTORATION<br />

AT POPCORN BEACH, PASS A LOUTRE WMA, VENICE,<br />

LA<br />

340 DeSanti, B.; MacDonald, I.; Chanton, J.: SPATIAL ECOLOGY<br />

OF LOPHELIA PERTUSA REEFS IN THE NE GULF OF<br />

MEXICO<br />

341 Milton, N. B.; Schulz, C. J.; Childers, G. W.: EFFECTS OF LAND<br />

USE AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS ON THE<br />

PRESENCE OF ESCHERICHIA COLI PATHOGENICITY<br />

GENES ACROSS MULTIPLE WATERSHEDS IN<br />

SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS43 LONG ISLAND SOUND, AMERICA’S URBAN ESTUARY:<br />

SCIENCE, POLICY, AND PUBLIC OUTREACH<br />

Chair(s): James Ammerman, james.ammerman@stonybrook.edu<br />

Christopher Gobler, christopher.gobler@stonybrook.edu<br />

Cornelia Schlenk, cornelia.schlenk@stonybrook.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

342 Cole, K. M.; Johnson, C.: THE POTENTIAL OF WATER<br />

COLUMN SUSPENSION IN MINIMIZING THE<br />

ACCUMULATION OF POTENTIALLY PATHOGENIC<br />

VIBRIOS IN THE EASTERN OYSTER CRASSOSTREA<br />

VIRGINICA<br />

343 Gregorcyk, K. L.; Hill, J. C.: BENTHIC HABITAT MAPPING OF<br />

PORT JEFFERSON HARBOR IN LONG ISLAND SOUND,<br />

NY<br />

SS44 FACTORS PROMOTING THE EXPANSION OF HARMFUL<br />

ALGAL BLOOMS IN MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): James Ammerman, James.Ammerman@stonybrook.edu<br />

Christopher J. Gobler, christopher.gobler@stonybrook.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

344 Hickcox, R.; Harvey, E.; Menden-Deuer, S.: ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

PARAMETERS AFFECTING THE HALO-TOLERANCE<br />

OF THE TOXIC RAPHIDOPHYTE HETEROSIGMA<br />

AKASHIWO<br />

345 Dapremont, A. M.; Goodson, A. M.; Brock, L. M.; Greenfield, D.<br />

I.: THE GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF PSEUDO-<br />

NITZSCHIA SPP. ACROSS THE SOUTHEASTERN U.S.<br />

COAST.<br />

346 Viggiano, M. V.; Martínez, G.; Sotomayor, D.: USE OF ARTIFICIAL<br />

SUBSTRATA TO ESTIMATE PERIPHYTON GROWTH<br />

RATE IN TROPICAL STREAMS<br />

347 VanLandeghem, M. M.; Patiño, R.: PREDICTING THE RISK OF<br />

TOXIC GOLDEN ALGA BLOOMS FROM CELL DENSITY<br />

AND ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABLES<br />

348 Isles, P. D.; Giles, C. D.; Schroth, A. W.; Schuett, E.; Gearhart,<br />

T. A.; Druschel, G.: HIGH-TEMPORAL-RESOLUTION<br />

MONITORING OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM DYNAMICS<br />

IN A HIGHLY EUTROPHIC SHALLOW BAY OF LAKE<br />

CHAMPLAIN<br />

349 Lacey, C. N.; Schwartz, M. C.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL<br />

VARIABILITY OFKARENIA BREVIS WITHIN THE<br />

CHOCTAWHATCHEE BAY SYSTEM<br />

350 Tedesco, L. P.; Graham, J. L.; Clercin, N.; Stouder, M.:<br />

CYANOBACTERIAL ASSEMBLAGES AND<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABLES ASSOCIATED WITH<br />

CO-OCCURRENCE OF CYANOTOXINS AND T&O<br />

351 Davis, S. L.; Roelke, D. L.; Lundgren, V. M.; Grover, J. P.; Brooks, B. W.:<br />

SPREAD OF P. PARVUM BLOOMS IN THE SOUTHCENTRAL<br />

USA: POTENTIAL INTERPLAY BETWEEN SALNITY,<br />

GRAZING AND BLOOM INITIATION<br />

352 Dixon, L. K.; Kirkpatrick, G. J.; Nissanka, A.: MULTIPLE<br />

KARENIA SPP. BLOOMS: PATTERNS OF<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY WITH SELECTED<br />

NUTRIENTS (AND LACK THEREOF).<br />

353 Harred, L. B.; Jackson, G. A.; Campbell, L.: INTERACTIONS<br />

BETWEENDINOPHYSIS OVUM AND MYRIONECTA<br />

RUBRA: INVESTIGATING BLOOM VERSUS NON-<br />

BLOOM YEARS<br />

92<br />

354 Jayroe, D. S.; McLean, T. I.: PRELIMINARY STUDIES OF A<br />

KARENIA BREVIS ENDOSYMBIONT/ PARASITE<br />

355 Hayes, N. M.; Rock, A. M.; Gonzalez, M. J.; Vanni, M.<br />

J.: COMPARING NUTRIENT LIMITATION OF<br />

CHLOROPHYTES AND CYANOBACTERIA UNDER<br />

CONTRASTING CONDITIONS OF NUTRIENT SUPPLY,<br />

NUTRIENT RATIOS, AND LIGHT<br />

356 Lee, J.; Parker, A. E.; Wilkerson, F. P.: NITROGEN UPTAKE<br />

KINETICS OF MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA IN THE SAN<br />

FRANCISCO ESTUARY DELTA<br />

357 Johnson, A. N.; Parker, A. E.; Wilkerson, F.: CLIMATE CHANGE<br />

EFFECTS ON CYANOBACTERIA BLOOMS IN ESTUARIES:<br />

RESULTS FROM THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY DELTA<br />

358 Blanco, S.; Sreenivasan, A.: ISOLATION AND CULTURE<br />

OF TOXIC MICROCYSTISFOR MOLECULAR<br />

CHARACTERIZATION OF TOXICITY IN PINTO LAKE<br />

(WATSONVILLE, CA)<br />

SS46 GROUNDWATER AND COASTAL ECOLOGY: MICROBIAL<br />

ALTERATIONS AND ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF GROUND-<br />

WATER DISCHARGE<br />

Chair(s): Charles Schutte, cschutte@uga.edu<br />

Justin D. Liefer, jliefer@disl.org<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

359 Befus, K. M.; Cardenas, M. B.; Swanson, T. E.; Tait, D.; Santos,<br />

I. R.; Erler, D.: THERMAL DYNAMICS OF INTERTIDAL<br />

SEDIMENT AFFECTED BY DIFFUSE GROUNDWATER<br />

DISCHARGE<br />

360 Smythe, W. F.; McAllister, S. M.; Kadake, M.; Lee, S. W.; Davis, R. E.;<br />

Moyer, C.; Tebo, B. M.: IRON & MANGANESE DEPOSITING<br />

COLD-SEEPS: A LOTIC TO MARINE ECOSYSTEM<br />

SS51 IRON, CARBON CYCLING, AND ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS IN<br />

THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

Chair(s): Stephane Blain, stephane.blain@obs-banyuls.fr<br />

Bernard Queguiner, bernard.queguiner@univ-amu.fr<br />

Volker Strass, Volker.strass@awi.de<br />

Dieter Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter.Wolf-Gladrow@awi.de<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

361 Jacquet, S. H.; Dehairs, F.; Cavagna, A. J.; Planchon, F.; Closset, I.;<br />

Cardinal, D.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF MESOPELAGIC<br />

ORGANIC CARBON REMINERALIZATION IN THE<br />

NATURALLY IRON-FERTILIZED KERGUELEN AREA<br />

(SOUTHERN OCEAN)<br />

362 Mosby, A. F.; Smith, W. O.; Delizo, L. M.; Doan, N. H.:<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH RATES IN THE ROSS SEA,<br />

ANTARCTICA<br />

363 Kruse, S.; Pakhomov, E. A.; Hunt, B. P.: TROPHIC<br />

INTERACTIONS BETWEENTHEMISTO<br />

GAUDICHAUDII AND SALPA THOMPSONI IN THE<br />

ANTARCTIC POLAR FRONTAL ZONE<br />

364 González, M. L.; Oriol, L.; Dehairs, F.; Cavagna, A. J.; Fernandez,<br />

C.: MOLECULAR NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE<br />

SOUTHERN OCEAN: CASE OF STUDY OF THE FE-<br />

FERTILIZED KERGUELEN REGION (KEOPSII CRUISE)<br />

365 Ardelan, M. V.; Olsen, L. M.; Bizsel, N.; Bizsel, K. C.: CO-<br />

LIMITATION BY IRON AND LIGHT AT DEEP CHL A<br />

MAXIMUM IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

366 Olsen, L. M.; Ardelan, M. V.; Holm-Hansen, O.; Bizsel, N.;<br />

Hewes, C.; Reiss, C.; Sakshaug, E.; Vadstein, O.: MICROBIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES IN THE SURFACE WATER MASSES<br />

SURROUNDING THE SOUTH SHETLAND ISLANDS,<br />

ANTARCTICA<br />

367 Carlotti, F.; Nowaczyk , A.; Jouandet, M. P.; Lefèvre , D.;<br />

Harmelin, M.: MESOZOOPLANKTON STRUCTURE<br />

AND FUNCTIONING DURING THE ONSET OF THE<br />

KERGUELEN SPRING BLOOM: FIRST RESULTS OF THE<br />

KEOPS2 SURVEY.<br />

SS52 POPULATIONS AND ACTIVITY OF AMMONIA-OXIDIZING<br />

AND DENITRIFYING ORGANISMS IN COASTAL WATERS<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Bowen, jennifer.bowen@umb.edu<br />

Chris Francis, caf@stanford.edu<br />

Bradley Tolar, btolar1@uga.edu<br />

James Hollibaugh, aquadoc@uga.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

368 Smith, J. M.; Preston, C. M.; Roman, B.; Scholin, C. A.; Francis, C.<br />

A.: USING ADAPTIVE, AUTONOMOUS SAMPLING TO<br />

UNRAVEL THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN UPWELLING<br />

INTENSITY AND THE ABUNDANCE AND ACTIVITY OF<br />

AMMONIA-OXIDIZING ARCHAEA<br />

369 Feinman, S. G.; Bowen, J. L.: THE ROLE OF URBANIZATION<br />

IN STRUCTURING AMMONIA OXIDIZING<br />

COMMUNITIES IN ESTUARINE SEDIMENTS AND<br />

WATER COLUMNS<br />

370 Milinic, T.; Madison, M. J.; Ziebis, W.: A STUDY OF NITROUS<br />

OXIDE PRODUCING MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES<br />

IN COASTAL SEDIMENTS UNDER CHANGING<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS<br />

371 Damashek, J.; Francis, C. A.: NITROGEN CYCLING IN THE<br />

MUD: FUNCTIONAL GENE AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL<br />

ANALYSES OF NITRIFICATION IN A LARGE URBAN<br />

ESTUARY.<br />

SS53 SENSOR NETWORKS IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS:<br />

RESEARCH AND EDUCATION<br />

Chair(s): Joe Needoba, needobaj@ebs.ogi.edu<br />

Brian Bergamaschi, bbergama@usgs.gov<br />

Janice McDonnell, mcdonnel@marine.rutgers.edu<br />

Bob Chen, bob.chen@umb.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

372 Wright, V. M.; Conlon, L.; Gyory, J.; Idrisi, N.: OCEANOGRAPHIC<br />

AND METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS OF<br />

THE UNITED STATES VIRGIN ISLANDS: A<br />

CLIMATOLOGICAL HISTORY FROM WEATHER<br />

STATION AND DATA BUOY MEASUREMENTS<br />

373 Ramos-Chavez, J. C.; Lougheed, V. L.; Tweedie, C. E.; Sowards,<br />

S.; Syaifudin, Y.: ADDRESSING TROPICAL MANGROVE<br />

FOREST CONSERVATION THROUGH COMMUNITY-<br />

BASED AND REMOTE MONITORING OF PHENOLOGY<br />

374 Buskey, E. J.; Scheef, L. P.; Ward, G.: MONITORING CURRENT<br />

PATTERNS WITHIN THE MISSION-ARANSAS ESTUARY,<br />

TEXAS, WITH TILT CURRENT METERS<br />

375 Martignette, A. J.; Milbrandt, E. C.; Siwicke, J. J.; Thompson, M. A.:<br />

EPISODIC EVENTS: DEMONSTRATING THE NEED FOR<br />

CONTINUOUS WATER-QUALITY SENSOR NETWORKS.<br />

93<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

376 Siwicke, J. J.; Martignette, A. J.; Milbrandt, E. M.: PROMOTING<br />

A MULTI NODE SENSOR NETWORK TO SCIENTISTS,<br />

POLICY MAKERS, AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC IN A WAY<br />

TO BENEFIT ALL USERS.<br />

377 Sharp, J. H.: CAPTURING VARIABLE WATERSHED AND<br />

COASTAL INFLUENCES ON DELAWARE BAY WITH<br />

FERRY MONITORING<br />

378 Wetherill, B. R.; Wood, J. D.; Chen, R. F.; Peri, F.: REAL-TIME<br />

PREDICTIONS OF MICROBIAL PATHOGENS IN THE<br />

CHARLES RIVER, MA USING ON-LINE WEATHER<br />

STATIONS AND RIVER FLOW GAUGES<br />

379 Bergamaschi, B. A.; Pellerin, B. A.; Fleck, J. A.; Downing,<br />

B. D.; Saraceno, J. F.; Sauer, M. J.; Kraus, T. E.; Fujii, R.:<br />

QUANTIFICATION OF NITRATE DYNAMICS IN TIDAL<br />

WETLAND SYSTEMS USING IN SITU CONTINUOUS<br />

MEASUREMENTS<br />

380 Lerner, P.; Bishop, J. K.; Strabhar, W. D.; Bernard, A.; Moore, C.:<br />

TRANSMISSOMETER MEASUREMENT OF PARTICLE<br />

BEAM ATTENUATION COEFFICIENT<br />

SS56 CARBON FLUXES IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS AT CATCHMENT,<br />

REGIONAL AND CONTINENTAL SCALES<br />

Chair(s): Sebastian Sobek, sebastian.sobek@ebc.uu.se<br />

Cory McDonald, cmcdonald@usgs.gov<br />

Edward Stets, estets@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

381 Pedersen, T. M.; Markager, S.; Rasmussen, E. K.; Sand-Jensen,<br />

K.; Nielsen, S. L.: DYNAMICS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER IN A SHALLOW DANISH ESTUARY<br />

382 Duffy, A. E.; Schaeffer, B. A.; Conmy, R.; Aukamp, J.; Yates, D.: AN<br />

ANALYSIS OF MODIS ALGORITHMS FOR COLORED<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AND DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC CARBON IN NORTHWEST FLORIDA ESTUARIES.<br />

383 Williams, C. J.; Xenopoulos, M. A.: POINT-SCALE CARBON<br />

CYCLING AND WATERSHED-SCALE LANDSCAPE<br />

INFLUENCES ON STREAM DISSOLVED ORGANIC<br />

MATTER POOLS<br />

384 Attermeyer, K.; Tittel, J.; Kamjunke, N.; Hilt, S.; Grossart, H.<br />

P.: CONTRASTING EFFECTS OF LIGHT EXPOSURE<br />

AND ALGAE LYSATES ON BACTERIAL GROWTH<br />

EFFICIENCIES WITH TERRESTRIAL SUBSIDIES<br />

385 Lammers, J. M.; Schubert, C. J.; Middelburg, J. J.; Scharfbillig, A.<br />

A.; Reichart, G. J.: CARBON CYCLING IN LACUSTRINE<br />

FOOD WEBS, AN IN SITU PULSE-CHASE 13C-LABELING<br />

EXPERIMENT<br />

386 Kokic, J.; Chmiel, H.; Wallin, M.; Denfeld, B.; Sobek, S.:<br />

RELEVANCE OF FLUVIAL CARBON FLUXES FOR THE<br />

CARBON BUDGET OF A SMALL BOREAL LAKE<br />

387 Seekell, D. A.; Pace, M. L.; Tranvik, L. J.; Verpoorter, C.: LAKE<br />

SIZE-DISTRIBUTIONS: THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL<br />

RESULTS<br />

388 Cardoso, S. J.; Enrich-Prast, A.; Pace, M. L.; Roland, F.: DOES<br />

HOTTER MEAN HIGHER ORGANIC CARBON<br />

MINERALIZATION IN TROPICAL SEDIMENTS?<br />

389 Chmiel, H.; Kokic, J.; Denfeld, B.; Wallin, M.; Sobek, S.: THE<br />

RELEVANCE OF SEDIMENTS FOR THE CARBON<br />

BUDGET OF A SMALL HUMIC LAKE<br />

390 Gray, S. E.; Adams, E. J.; Furgueson, C. E.: SPATIAL AND<br />

TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF INORGANIC CARBON IN<br />

SUB-BASINS OF THE LOWER CONNECTICUT RIVER<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

391 DeGrandpre, M. D.; Beatty, C. M.; Peterson, B.; Krishfield, R. A.;<br />

Toole, J. M.: AN ARCTIC OCEAN OBSERVING NETWORK<br />

FOR SEA SURFACE PCO2 AND PH<br />

392 Cato, H. S.; Chen, R. F.; Wang, X.; Gardner, G. B.; Peri, F.:<br />

SEASONAL CHANGES IN DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER<br />

OUTWELLING IN AN URBAN SALT MARSH SYSTEM<br />

393 Eiermann, E. E.; Schulz, C. J.; Olivier, H.; Childers, G. W.:<br />

AVAILABILITY OF CARBON FOR RESPIRATION<br />

DIFFERS BY SEASON AND WATERSHED IN THE LAKE<br />

PONTCHARTRAIN BASIN AND IS DEPENDENT ON<br />

TOC, NOT MICROBIAL COMPOSITION<br />

SS57 TRACE ELEMENTS AND ISOTOPES IN THE OCEAN AND<br />

ATMOSPHERE: THE GEOTRACES <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

Chair(s): Carl Lamborg, clamborg@whoi.edu<br />

Peter Morton, pmorton@fsu.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

394 Martell, L.; Love, B.: ACIDIFIED SEAWATER AT THE<br />

SHANNON POINT MARINE CENTER, ANACORTES, WA<br />

395 Swarr, G.; Kading, T.; Lamborg, C.; Hammerschmidt, C.: PROFILES<br />

OF CYSTEINE AND GLUTATHIONE FROM THE U.S.<br />

NORTH ATLANTIC GEOTRACES ZONAL TRANSECT<br />

396 Amrani, A.; Said-Ahamed, W.; Shaked, Y.; Kiene, R. P.: THE<br />

SULFUR ISOTOPE COMPOSITION OF DMS AND DMSP<br />

IN MARINE WATER<br />

397 Labatut, M.; Radic, A.; Lacan, F.; Poitrasson, F.; MURRAY, J.:<br />

STORY OF FE IN THE WESTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC,<br />

INSIGHTS FROM ITS ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION IN<br />

THE DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE FRACTIONS OF<br />

SEAWATER AND ITS SOURCES<br />

398 Yamaguchi, H.; Katahira, R.; Ichimi, K.; Tada, K.: OPTICALLY<br />

ACTIVE COMPONENTS AND LIGHT ATTENUATION IN<br />

AN OFFSHORE STATION OF HARIMA SOUND, EASTERN<br />

SETO INLAND SEA, JAPAN<br />

399 Vokhshoori, N. L.; McCarthy, M. D.: ENSO-DRIVEN<br />

TEMPORAL VARIATION IN D13C AND D15N BASELINES<br />

OF THE CALIFORNIA UPWELLING SYSTEM RECORDED<br />

BY CALIFORNIA MUSSELS (MYTILUS CALIFORNIANUS)<br />

400 Gao, S.; Völker, C.; Wolf-Gladrow, D. A.: FRACTIONATION<br />

DURING BIOGENIC SILICON DISSOLUTION:<br />

CONSEQUENCES FOR GLOBAL MARINE SILICON<br />

ISOTOPES DISTRIBUTIONS--A MODELING STUDY<br />

401 Woodward, E. M.; Bouman, H.; Sabadel, A.; Reynolds, S.;<br />

Browning, T.: NUTRIENT DYNAMICS AND BIOLOGICAL<br />

IMPLICATIONS DURING THE UK GEOTRACES CRUISE<br />

IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN AT 40 DEGREES SOUTH<br />

402 Harper, A. R.; Chanton, J.; Landing, W.: STABLE ISOTOPE<br />

δ34S, δ13C, AND δ15N TRACING OF METHYLMERCURY<br />

PRODUCTION AND BIOACCUMULATION IN FLORIDA<br />

BIG BEND SEA-GRASS BEDS<br />

SS58 OCEAN PROVINCES, FOOD WEB STRUCTURE AND PARTICLE FLUX<br />

Chair(s): Uta Passow, passow@lifesci.ucsb.edu<br />

Adrian Burd, adrianb@uga.edu<br />

Deborah Steinberg, debbies@vims.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

405 De Martini, F.; Neuer, S.; Hamill, D.; Lomas, M. W.: GROWTH<br />

AND GRAZING RATES OF NANO AND PICO-<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON IN THE SARGASSO SEA USING QPCR<br />

IN COMBINATION WITH DILUTION EXPERIMENTS<br />

94<br />

406 Frank, A. H.; Reinthaler, T. H.; Garcia, A. J.; Herndl, G.<br />

J.: CHANGES IN PROKARYOTIC COMMUNITY<br />

COMPOSITION IN BIOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCES OF<br />

THE MESO-& BATHYPELAGIC NORTH ATLANTIC<br />

407 Macdonald, I.; Howarth, E.; Lazaravich , P.: DEEP-C PROJECT<br />

PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF PHOTOGRAPHIC SURVEY<br />

OF DESOTO CANYON<br />

408 Chakraborty, S.; Lohrenz, S. E.; Shiller, A. M.; Lojek, A.:<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY DYNAMICS IN<br />

THE DIFFERENT BIO-OPTICAL PROVINCES IN THE<br />

NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO.<br />

409 Chandler, C. L.; Allison, M. D.; Groman, R. C.; Gegg, S. R.;<br />

Wiebe, P. H.; Glover, D. M.: BCO-DMO: AN OCEAN<br />

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY DATA RESOURCE<br />

410 Loick-Wilde, N.; Gehre, M.; Miltner, A.; Conroy, B. O.; Steinberg,<br />

D. K.; Montoya, J. P.: DIURNAL VARIATION IN AMINO<br />

ACID CONCENTRATIONS AND NITROGEN STABLE<br />

ISOTOPES REVEAL TROPHIC STRUCTURE AND<br />

NITROGEN DYNAMICS IN EPI- AND MESOPELAGIC<br />

ZOOPLANKTON<br />

411 Brown, C. A.; Huot, Y.; Cullen, J. J.; Claustre, H.: TOWARDS<br />

REMOTE SENSING OF PHYTOPLANKTON TYPES IN<br />

THE BERING SEA<br />

SS59 ATMOSPHERIC FORCING OF MARINE MICROBIAL<br />

DIVERSITY AND ACTIVITY<br />

Chair(s): Xavier Mari, xavier.mari@ird.fr<br />

Markus Weinbauer, wein@obs-vlfr.fr<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

412 Naoe, R.; Yamada, M.; Tamura, K.; Takeda, S.: THE<br />

SIGNIFICANCE OF ATMOSPHERIC NITROGEN INPUTS<br />

TO THE EASTERN EAST CHINA SEA SURFACE WATERS<br />

413 Chien, C.; Paytan, A.: ATMOSPHERIC DRY DEPOSITION A SOURCE<br />

OF NUTRIENTS AND TRACE METALS TO LAKE TAHOE<br />

414 Wang, X.; Gonzalez, K.; Moberly, J.; Sarno, A.; Young, G.; Hadaegh,<br />

A.; Zhang, X.; Read, B.: IDENTIFYING AND VALIDATING<br />

NOVEL SELENOPROTEINS IN THE MARINE<br />

COCOLITHOPHORE EMILIANIA HUXLEYI<br />

SS61 ECOSYSTEM ENGINEERING AS COASTAL PROTECTION –<br />

LESSONS FROM THEORY AND PRACTICE<br />

Chair(s): Jasper Dijkstra, jasper.dijkstra@deltares.nl<br />

Denise Reed, djreed@uno.edu<br />

Luca A. van Duren, luca.vanduren@deltares.nl<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

415 Li, J.; Li, J.; Terlizzi, D. E.: A SIMPLE CULTIVATION METHOD<br />

OF CHESAPEAKE BAY ENTEROMORPHA SPP. FOR<br />

ALGAL SEED STOCK AND MASSIVE AQUACULTURE<br />

SS62 CO2-INDUCED ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE AND THE<br />

OCCURRENCE AND SEVERITY OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS<br />

Chair(s): Charles Trick, cyano@uwo.ca<br />

Mark Wells, mlwells@maine.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

416 Henry, J. E.; Tarrant, A. M.; dePutron, S. J.; McCorkle, D. C.; Church,<br />

C.; Cohen, A. L.: MATERNAL EFFECTS ON SKELETAL SIZE<br />

AND SENSITIVITY TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION IN<br />

JUVENILE CORALS<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

417 Leinweber, A.; Shipe, R. F.; Gruber, N.: DOES OCEAN<br />

ACIDIFICATION PLAY A ROLE IN SUMMER<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN<br />

SANTA MONICA BAY, CA ?<br />

SS63 LONG-TERM PERSPECTIVES ON LAKE RESEARCH AND MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Stephanie Hampton, hampton@nceas.ucsb.edu<br />

Paul Hanson, pchanson@wisc.edu<br />

Emily Stanley, ehstanley@wisc.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

418 Martinez, G.: ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS OF WATER SAMPLES<br />

FROM SIX RESERVOIRS OF PUERTO RICO<br />

419 Halfman, J. D.: CENTURY- AND DECADE-SCALE MAJOR<br />

ION AND WATER CLARITY FLUCTUATIONS IN SENECA<br />

LAKE, THE LARGEST FINGER LAKE OF CENTRAL NEW<br />

YORK, USA.<br />

420 Julich, H. M.; Downing, J. A.: USE OF PALYNOLOGICAL<br />

TECHNIQUES TO RECONSTRUCT MACROPHYTE LOSS<br />

AND MULTIPLE STABLE STATES IN A EUTROPHIC LAKE<br />

421 Cáceres-Charneco, R. I.; Ortiz-Zayas, J. R.: LIMNOLOGICAL<br />

ASPECTS OF THE TEMPORARY PONDS USED FOR<br />

REPRODUCTION BY THE PUERTO RICAN CRESTED<br />

TOAD<br />

SS64 QUASI-LAGRANGIAN APPROACHES IN PELAGIC ECOLOGY<br />

Chair(s): Mark D. Ohman, mohman@ucsd.edu<br />

Michael R. Landry, mlandry@ucsd.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

479 Nickels, C. F.; Ohman, M. D.: CHANGES IN COPEPOD EGG<br />

PRODUCTION RATES ACROSS MICROPLANKTON<br />

CONCENTRATIONS AND SPATIAL GRADIENTS IN THE<br />

CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM<br />

SS71 WATERSHEDS OF THE CARIBBEAN: GLOBAL CHANGE,<br />

SCIENCE, POLICY AND SECURITY<br />

Chair(s): Robyn E. Hannigan, robyn.hannigan@umb.edu<br />

Alonso Ramirez, aramirez@ramirezlab.net<br />

Alex Eisen-Cuadra, alexeisencuadra@gmail.com<br />

Helenmary Hotz, Helenmary.Hotz@umb.edu<br />

Alan D. Christian, alan.christian@umb.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

422 Flanders, K. L.; Eisen-Cuadra, A. M.; Christian, A. D.; Hannigan,<br />

R. E.: THE PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL RECONSTRUCTION<br />

OF ETANG SAUMATRE: A FATTY ACID BIOMARKER<br />

ANALYSIS OF HAITI SEDIMENTS<br />

423 Ortiz-Hernandez, G. L.; Garcia-Romero, A.: COMPARISON OF<br />

THE OVERALL WIDTH AND WATER QUALITY OF THE<br />

RIPARIAN ZONE HABITAT BETWEEN SITES<br />

424 McGill, C. J.; Barron , M. G.; Randall-Speaks, C.: SETTLEMENT<br />

SUCCESS OF FAVIA FRAGUM PLANULAE EXPOSED TO<br />

DIFFERENT SEDIMENT SOURCES FROM PUERTO RICO<br />

425 Demopoulos, A. J.; Cormier, N.: USE OF STABLE ISOTOPES<br />

TO DISCERN TROPHIC LINKAGES AND HABITAT<br />

CONNECTIVITY AMONG BENTHIC INVERTEBRATE<br />

COMMUNITIES OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS NATIONAL<br />

PARK<br />

95<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

SS72 STUDIES F ZOOPLANKTON AND OTHER PARTICLES USING<br />

OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS<br />

Chair(s): David M. Checkley, Jr., dcheckley@ucsd.edu<br />

George A. Jackson, gjackson@tamu.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

426 Garrison, H. S.; Tang, K. W.: A SIMPLE STAINING PROTOCOL<br />

TO ASSESS MORTALITY IN MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

427 Sauer, M. J.; Bergamaschi, B.; Downing, B.; O’Donnell, K.; von<br />

Dessonneck, T.; Saraceno, J.: INFLUENCE OF PARTICLE<br />

PROPERTIES ON HABITAT QUALITY IN THE SAN<br />

FRANCISCO ESTUARY (SFE)<br />

SS76 MICROBIAL INTERACTIONS: FROM SPECIES SURVIVAL TO<br />

BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES<br />

Chair(s): Shady A. Amin, shadyam@uw.edu<br />

Laura R. Hmelo, lhmelo@uw.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

428 Shibazaki, A.; Enomoto, N.; Kurihara, M.; Hashimoto, S.:<br />

VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUND PRODUCTION FROM<br />

CULTURES OF THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA<br />

429 Ichikawa, K.; Yoneyama, Y.; Kurihara, M.; Tamegai, H.; Hashimoto, S.:<br />

PRODUCTION OF VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS IN<br />

THE CULTURE OF MARINE BACTERIA<br />

430 Abe, M.; Kurihara, M.; Hashimoto, S.: SURVEY OF<br />

VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS IN CULTURES<br />

OF CHLAMYDOMONAS SP.<br />

431 Nishi, H.; Kurihara, M.; Hashimoto, S.: PRODUCTION<br />

OF METHYL CHLORIDE AND METHYL BROMIDE<br />

BY CHAETOCEROS SP.<br />

432 Pinto, F.; Casper, P.: VIRIOBENTHOS IN AQUATIC<br />

SEDIMENTS: VARIABILITY IN ABUNDANCE AND<br />

PRODUCTION AND IMPACT ON C-CYCLE.<br />

433 Jones, A. K.; Spinette, R.; Brown, S. M.; Jenkins, B. D.: ISOLATING<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL ANAEROBES THAT DRIVE<br />

NITROGEN FIXATION IN ESTUARINE SEDIMENTS<br />

434 Naruse, H.; Nagaosa, K.; Aoki, K.; Yoshikawa, H.; Kato, K.:<br />

VIRAL AND PROTOZOAN CONTROL OF DEEP<br />

GROUNDWATER PROKARYOTES<br />

435 Shepard, A. K.; McInnes, A.; Jiang, Y.; Quigg, A.:<br />

UNDERSTANDING INTERACTIONS BETWEEN<br />

COEXISTING MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES AND<br />

THEIR RESPONSES TO NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT IN<br />

GALVESTON BAY, TEXAS<br />

436 Madinger, H. L.; Bernot, M. J.; Wilson, K. P.; Goldstein, J. A.:<br />

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF MICROBIAL BIOFILMS IN A<br />

DESERT LIMNOCRENE, DEVILS HOLE, NV<br />

437 Arfken, A.; Song, B.; Tobias, C.: SALINITY EFFECTS ON<br />

BACTERIAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN A TIDAL<br />

FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEM<br />

438 Millar, J. J.; Payne, J. T.; Ochs, C. A.; Jackson, C. R.: MICROBIAL<br />

EXTRACELLULAR ENZYME ACTIVITY IN MAJOR<br />

TRIBUTARIES OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER<br />

439 Bae, H. S.; Ogram, A. V.: ANAEROBIC NITROGEN FIXATION<br />

AS A CONTROLLING FACTOR OF METHANOGENIC<br />

ASSEMBLAGE COMPOSITION IN THE FLORIDA<br />

EVERGLADES<br />

THURSDAY


THURSDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

SS77 TRANSMISSION OF TERRESTRIAL SIGNALS TO THE COASTAL<br />

OCEAN BY (LARGE) RIVERS<br />

Chair(s): Robert Max Holmes, rmholmes@whrc.org<br />

Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink, behrenbrink@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

440 Mayfield, K. K.; Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B.; Calabro, R.; Cole Ekberg, M.;<br />

Prescott, D.: THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF SMALL PASSIVE<br />

MARGIN RIVERS ALONG THE NORTHERN U.S. EAST<br />

COAST<br />

441 Ficek, D.; Meler, J.; Cieslucinski, M.; Pawlik M.; Zapadka, T.;<br />

Majchrowski R.: SPECTRAL ABSORPTION PROPERTIES OF<br />

DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE MATTER IN VARIOUS<br />

NATURAL WATER IN POLAND<br />

SS78 ASSESSING VULNERABILITY OF U.S. LAKES AND RESERVOIRS<br />

TO CLIMATE CHANGE<br />

Chair(s): S. Geoffrey Schladow, gschladow@ucdavis.edu<br />

Christopher Clark, clark.christopher@epa.gov<br />

Craig Williamson, craig.williamson@muohio.edu<br />

Daniel Nover, dmnover@gmail.com<br />

Kevin Rose, RoseKC@si.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

442 Jackson, A. D.; Winston, B. A.; Scott, J. T.: THE EFFECT<br />

OF INCREASED ATMOSPHERIC CO2 ON<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON ACROSS AN EXPERIMENTAL<br />

PHOSPHORUS GRADIENT<br />

443 Bélanger, C.; Huard, D.; Jeong, D. I.; Mingelbier, M.; Auclair,<br />

J. C.; Laurion, I.; Legault, M.; St-Hilaire, A.; Gratton, Y.: AN<br />

ESTIMATION OF FUTURE TEMPERATURES IN LAKES<br />

OF NORTHERN QUEBEC<br />

444 Kim, Y.; Roulet, N. T.; Tremblay , A.: MODELLING OF CARBON<br />

DIOXIDE FLUX FROM BOREAL AND TEMPERATE LAKES<br />

445 Tolotti, M.; Thies, H.; Nickus, U.; Psenner, R.: TEMPERATURE<br />

MODULATED EFFECTS OF NUTRIENTS ON<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON CHANGES IN A MOUNTAIN LAKE<br />

446 Brentrup, J. A.; Williamson, C. E.; Fischer, J. M.; Olson, M. H.; Rose,<br />

K. C.: RAPID INCREASES IN TRANSPARENCY IN AN<br />

ALPINE LAKE FOLLOWING ICE-OUT<br />

SS79 PHYTOPLANKTON INTERACTIONS IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Suzanne Strom, Suzanne.Strom@wwu.edu<br />

Brian Palenik, bpalenik@ucsd.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

447 Thibodeau, P. S.; Roesler, C. S.; Goes, J. I.; Gomes, H. D.; Matondkar,<br />

P.: WHERE IS NOCTILUCA IN THE ARABIAN SEA:<br />

AN EVALUATION OF IN SITU MULTISPECTRAL<br />

FLUORESCENT SIGNATURES<br />

448 Lycett, K. A.; Bahkt, H. B.; Chen, F.; Pitula, J. S.:<br />

PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF HEMATODINIUM,<br />

AN EARLY BRANCHING MEMBER OF THE PHYLUM<br />

DINOFLAGELLATA<br />

449 Esparra Escalera, H. J.; Rodríguez Santiago, M. A.; Sánchez Santana,<br />

B. I.; Santos Flores, C. J.: NET-PHYTOPLANKTON SURVEY<br />

IN GUAJATACA RESERVOIR, A MESOTROPHIC LAKE IN<br />

PUERTO RICO<br />

96<br />

450 Acevedo-Correa, S. M.; Rivera-García, L. G.; Pierson, J.;<br />

Gómez-Garzon, D.: PUERTO RICO’S BIOLUMINESCENT<br />

LAGOONS: ECOLOGICAL ROLE OF SECONDARY<br />

PRODUCTION<br />

451 Bargu, S.; Beyhan, S.; Fong, J.; Steele, B.; Yildiz, F.: ECOLOGICAL<br />

RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN FREE-LIVING STATES OF<br />

PATHOGENIC VIBRIOS IN THE WATER COLUMN AND<br />

ASSOCIATED ALGAL COMMUNITY<br />

452 Diaz-Negron, E. M.; Aguilar-Diaz, C.: SIZE SELECTIVE<br />

ANALYSIS OF GROWTH LIMITATION OF<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON IN LAKE MICHIGAN<br />

453 Román Morales, C. D.; Tirado Polo, F.; Raymond Biaggi,<br />

C. M.; Sánchez Santana, B. I.; Santos Flores, C. J.: NET-<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON SURVEY IN PATILLAS RESERVOIR, A<br />

HYPEREUTROPHIC LAKE IN PUERTO RICO<br />

454 Roldan Irizarry, D.; Algarin Millan, A. P.; Santos Flores, C. J.; Sanchez<br />

Santana, B. I.: NET-PHYTOPLANKTON SURVEY AT THE<br />

CERRILLOS RESERVOIR IN PUERTO RICO<br />

455 Bandyopadhyay , D.; Biswas, H.: AN EXPERIMENTAL<br />

APPROACH TO UNDERSTAND WHETHER IN THE<br />

MARINE ENVIRONMENT CHLA CAN BE USED AS A<br />

RELIABLE PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS INDICATOR?<br />

456 Marra, J. F.; Lance, V. P.; Vaillancourt, R. D.; Hargreaves, B. R.:<br />

RESOLVING THE DEPTH OF THE OCEAN’S EUPHOTIC<br />

ZONE<br />

457 Majchrowski, R.; Ston-Egiert, J.; Ficek, D.: PRELIMINARY<br />

COMPARISON OF THE INFLUENCE OF PHOTO- AND<br />

CHROMATIC ACCLIMATION ON PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

COMMUNITIES IN THE BALTIC AND IN THE OCEAN<br />

WATERS<br />

458 Kurtz, J. C.; Murrell, M. C.; Lehrter, J. C.; Schaeffer, B. A.:<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE,<br />

BIOMASS AND DIVERSITY ON THE LOUISIANA<br />

CONTINENTAL SHELF<br />

459 Taub, F. B.; McLaskey, A. K.: CARBON LIMITATION EFFECTS<br />

ON OXYGEN DYNAMICS IN ALGAL-GRAZER FOOD<br />

CHAINS IN CLOSED ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS<br />

460 Muhl, R. M.; Roelke, D. L.; Grover, J. P.: INTERFERENCE<br />

COMPETITION IN PHYTOPLANKTON: AN<br />

ASSESSMENT OF ALLELOPATHY EFFECTS ON<br />

NEUTRALITY, LUMPY COEXISTENCE AND THE “ROCK-<br />

PAPER-SCISSORS” GAME<br />

461 McKie-Krisberg, Z. M.; Sanders, R. W.: MIXOTROPHY IN THE<br />

ARCTIC PICOEUKARYOTE, MICROMONAS<br />

462 Johnson, T. L.; Palenik, B.; Paz-Yepes, J.; Brahamsha, B.: EXPOSURE<br />

TO PHYSICAL STRESS AND HETEROTROPHIC<br />

BACTERIA INDUCES A VANADIUM-DEPENDENT<br />

BROMOPEROXIDASE IN MARINE SYNECHOCOCCUS<br />

463 Thamatrakoln, K.; Bailleul, B.; Laber, C.; Bidle, K. D.: SHEDDING<br />

LIGHT ON VIRAL INFECTION OF DIATOMS AND<br />

COCCOLITHOPHORES: ASSESSING THE INTERPLAY<br />

BETWEEN PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND HOST-VIRUS<br />

INTERACTIONS<br />

464 Kent, A. D.; Paver, S. F.; Youngblut, N. D.; Whitaker, R. J.:<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON SHAPE THE COMPOSITION<br />

OF POLYNUCLEOBACTER<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS80 ILLUMINATING THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL ROLES OF<br />

MICROBES WITH COMBINED SECTIONAL GENOMIC, BIOMO-<br />

LECULAR, AND GEOCHEMICAL DATASETS<br />

Chair(s): Robert M. Morris, morrisrm@uw.edu<br />

Benjamin Van Mooy, bvanmooy@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

465 Eggleston, E. M.; Lee, D. Y.; Doherty, M.; Crump, B. C.;<br />

Cornwell, J. C.; Owens, M.; Barbosa, J. G.; Hewson, I.:<br />

METATRANSCRIPTOMIC INSIGHTS INTO MICROBIAL<br />

COMMUNITY RESPIRATION IN SEASONALLY ANOXIC<br />

CHESAPEAKE BAY<br />

466 Alstad, T.; Stabb, E.; Mann, E.: GENE EXPRESSION IN IRON<br />

LIMITED VIBRIO FISCHERI: INVESTIGATING THE<br />

RYHB REGULON<br />

467 Whitney, L. P.; Chappell, P. D.; Jenkins, B. D.: USING<br />

MOLECULAR TOOLS TO ASSESS THE RESPONSE TO<br />

FE AVAILABITY IN THE DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA<br />

OCEANICA FROM THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC<br />

468 Chiang, T.; Parker, M.; Koester, J.; Berthiaume, C.; Iverson, V.;<br />

Ruzzo, W.; Armbrust, E.: WHOLE GENOME STATISTICAL<br />

ANALYSIS OF SEVEN STRAINS OFTHALASSIOSIRA<br />

PSEUDONANA REVEAL HIGHLY STRUCTURED<br />

NATURAL GENETIC VARIATIONS<br />

SS82 PROGRESS IN UNDERSTANDING NUTRIENT BUDGETS IN<br />

MARGINAL BASINS AND COASTAL SYSTEMS SUBJECT TO EUTRO-<br />

PHICATION AND CLIMATE WARMING<br />

Chair(s): Volker Bruchert, volker.bruchert@geo.su.se<br />

Barbara Deutsch, barbara.deutsch@itm.su.se<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

469 Price, L. M.; Fisher, K.; Wetz, M. S.: CAUSES AND SYMPTOMS<br />

OF EUTROPHICATION IN AN URBANIZING ESTUARY<br />

(OSO BAY, CORPUS CHRISTI, TEXAS)<br />

97<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

470 Villazan, B.; Pedersen, M. F.; Brun, F. G.; Vergara, J. J.: ADVERSE<br />

EFFECTS OF AMMONIUM ENRICHMENT AND LIGHT<br />

REDUCTION IN EMMARINA (EELGRASS)<br />

471 Rogers, J.; Russell, M.: TIDAL MIXING BOX SUBMODEL<br />

FOR TAMPA BAY: CALIBRATION OF TIDAL EXCHANGE<br />

FLOWS WITH THE PARAMETER ESTIMATION TOOL<br />

(PEST)<br />

472 Leichter, J. J.: LONGTERM AND ALONGSHORE<br />

COHERENCE OF INTERNAL WAVE ACTIVITY ALONG<br />

THE FLORIDA KEYS REEF TRACT<br />

473 Bonaglia, S.; Nascimento, F.; Bartoli, M.; Klawonn, I.; Brüchert,<br />

V.: EFFECT OF MEIOFAUNA ON BENTHIC ELEMENT<br />

CYCLING IN A BALTIC SEA COASTAL AREA<br />

474 Chen, N.; Chigbu, P.; Ishaque, A. B.; May, E. B.: DISSOLVED<br />

BARIUM IN MARYLAND COASTAL BAYS AND ITS USE AS<br />

INDICATOR OF GROUNDWATER INPUT<br />

475 Serramalera, L.; Wesselmann, M.; Von Dassow, P.; Fernandez, M.;<br />

Beltran, J.; Flores, V.: FIRST DESCRIPTION OF A NOXIOUS<br />

MACROALGAL BLOOM OF THE CHLOROPHYTA ULVA<br />

SPP. IN CENTRAL CHILE: EVIDENCE OF BOTTOM-UP<br />

AND TOP-DOWN CONTROL<br />

476 Ribeiro, R. B.; Gianesella, S. M.; Harari, J.: NUMERICAL<br />

MODELING OF THE INFLUENCE OF NUTRIENTS LOAD<br />

ON SANTOS ESTUARY WATER QUALITY<br />

SS85 ROBERT WHARTON TRIBUTE SESSION<br />

Chair(s): Diane McKnight, Diane.Mcknight@colorado.edu<br />

Peter Doran, pdoran@uic.edu<br />

Location: Exhibit Hall E<br />

477 Edwardson, C. F.; Hollibaugh, J. T.: PHYLOGENETIC AND<br />

METATRANSCRIPTOMIC INSIGHTS INTO THE<br />

MICROBIAL DIVERSITY OF MONO LAKE, CA<br />

478 Khan, A. L.; Ding, Y.; Jaffe, R.; McKnight, D. M.: USING BLACK<br />

CARBON AS A TRACER OF HUMAN IMPACT IN THE<br />

MCMURDO DRY VALLEYS, ANTARCTICA<br />

THURSDAY


FRIDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

FRIDAY 22, FEBRUARY - ORALS<br />

GS05 FOOD WEB INTERACTIONS AND TROPHIC LINKAGES<br />

Chair(s): Jill Olin, jolin@lsu.edu<br />

Mike Vanni, vannimj@muohio.edu<br />

Maria Gonzalez, gonzalmj@muohio.edu<br />

Just Cebrian, jcebrian@disl.org<br />

Location: Room 354<br />

10:00 Craig, N.; Solomon, C. T.; Sumner, A.; Jones, S. E.; Weidel, B. C.:<br />

DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON (DOC) DECREASES<br />

BENTHIC INVERTEBRATE PRODUCTION IN A CROSS-<br />

LAKE SURVEY.<br />

10:15 Fugère, V.; Chapman, L. J.: EFFECTS OF DEFORESTATION ON<br />

STREAM FOOD WEB STRUCTURE AND ECOSYSTEM<br />

FUNCTIONING IN AND AROUND KIBALE NATIONAL<br />

PARK, UGANDA.<br />

10:30 Moderan, J. M.; Kimmerer, W. J.; Stewart, R. A.: STABLE ISOTOPE<br />

ANALYSIS OF HISTORICAL ZOOPLANKTON SAMPLES<br />

TO DOCUMENT FOOD WEB AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL<br />

CHANGES IN THE URBANIZED SAN FRANCISCO<br />

ESTUARY<br />

10:45 Nanayakkara, L.; Cooper, R.; Starks, E.; Wissel, B.: BENTHIC<br />

SUBSIDIES IN LAKES: NEW INSIGHTS FROM<br />

HARDWATER LAKES<br />

11:00 Solomon, C. T.; Jones, S. E.; Weidel, B. C.; Craig, N.; Kelly, P.; Zwart,<br />

J.; Coloso, J. J.: TERRESTRIAL DOC EFFECTS ON AQUATIC<br />

FOOD WEBS - SUBSIDY OR SUBTRACTION? EVIDENCE<br />

FROM WHOLE-LAKE EXPERIMENTS, SURVEYS, AND<br />

MODELS<br />

11:15 Vanni, M. J.; Boros, G.; McIntyre, P. B.: WHEN ARE FISH<br />

AND OTHER ANIMALS SOURCES VERSUS SINKS OF<br />

NUTRIENTS IN ECOSYSTEMS?<br />

11:30 Broek, T. A.; Kamath, T. P.; McCarthy, M. D.: NEW METHOD<br />

FOR DETERMINING NITROGEN ISOTOPIC VALUES OF<br />

GLUTAMIC ACID AND PHENYLALANINE FOR PRECISE<br />

ESTIMATION OF TROPHIC POSITION IN FOOD WEB<br />

STUDIES<br />

11:45 Bucolo, P.; Dunton, K. H.: DOES THE<br />

MICROPHYTOBENTHOS OF HANNA SHOAL (CHUKCHI<br />

SEA, AK) EXHIBIT NET IN SITU PHOTOSYNTHETIC<br />

PRODUCTION?<br />

13:30 Agersted, M. D.; Nielsen, T. G.: KRILL - NOT A FUSSY EATER<br />

13:45 Frischer, M. E.; Costa Leal, M.; Thompson, M. E.; Calado,<br />

R.; Nejstgaard, J. C.: MOLECULAR ASSESSMENT OF<br />

HETEROTROPHY AND PREY DIGESTION IN SYMBIOTIC<br />

CORALS<br />

14:00 Johnson, A. D.; Kimmerer, W. J.; Bennett, W. A.: DIETARY SHIFTS<br />

IN AN ENDANGERED ESTUARINE FISH DURING THE<br />

SEASONAL FIRST FLUSH OF TURBIDITY<br />

14:15 Vogt, R. A.; Kimmerer, W. J.; Ignoffo, T. R.; Herndon, J.; Stillman,<br />

J.: USING EPIFLUORESCENCE MICROSCOPY AND A<br />

MICROPLATE READER TO INVESTIGATE FEEDING BY<br />

COPEPOD NAUPLII, THE NEGLECTED LIFE HISTORY<br />

STAGE<br />

14:30 Cleary, A. C.; Durbin, E. G.; Rynearson, T. A.: FEEDING BY<br />

THREE PSEUDOCALANUS CONGENERS IN THE<br />

BERING SEA: NEW TROPHIC LINKAGES AND A<br />

POTENTIAL MECHANISM FOR NICHE PARTITIONING<br />

98<br />

14:45 Kline, T. C.: HIGH-LATITUDE PELAGIC FOOD WEB<br />

SHIFTS INFERRED FROM STABLE ISOTOPE ANALYSIS<br />

AT SEASONAL, INTER-ANNUAL, AND INTER-DECADAL<br />

TIME SCALES<br />

15:00 Stockwell, J. D.; Yule, D. L.; Hrabik, T. R.; Sierszen, M. E.; Isaac,<br />

E. J.: NATIVE FISH COMMUNITIES AND HABITAT<br />

COUPLING: DELIVERY OF A NEARSHORE ENERGY<br />

SUBSIDY BY AN OFFSHORE PLANKTIVORE<br />

15:15 Collier, J. L.; Fitzgerald, S. P.; Hice, L. A.; Frisk, M. G.; McElroy,<br />

A. E.: BLUE CRAB PREDATION ON JUVENILE WINTER<br />

FLOUNDER DEMONSTRATED BY A NEW PCR METHOD<br />

GS09 COMMUNITY ECOLOGY<br />

Chair(s): Markus Weitere, markus.weitere@ufz.de<br />

Dina Leech, dinaleech@depauw.edu<br />

Location: Room 355<br />

10:00 Galindo-Estronza, A. M.; Alfaro, M.; Schizas, N. V.: DIVERSITY<br />

OF BENTHIC OSTRACODS FROM CARIBBEAN<br />

MESOPHOTIC REEFS<br />

10:15 Gamble, R. B.; Cebrian, J.; Heck, K. L.: RELATIONSHIP<br />

BETWEEN SEAGRASS COVER AND<br />

MACROINVERTEBRATE AND FINFISH POPULATIONS<br />

IN SHALLOW COASTAL EMBAYMENTS<br />

10:30 Rodriguez , G. E.: A MULTI-FACETED INVESTIGATION OF<br />

FOLIAGE TURNOVER IN GIANT KELP<br />

10:45 Gallo, N. D.; Levin, L. A.; Cameron, J. F.; Bartlett, D. H.:<br />

SUBMERSIBLE EXPLORATION OF SW PACIFIC TRENCHES:<br />

BIODIVERSITY TRENDS FROM 1000 TO 10,900 M<br />

11:00 Johnston, M. K.; Leibold, M. A.: META-ECOSYSTEMS:<br />

WATERFOWL MEDIATED MOVEMENT OF MATERIALS<br />

AND ORGANISMS IN PRAIRIE POTHOLE WETLANDS<br />

11:15 Livermore, J. A.; Emrich, S. J.; Tan, J. F.; Jones, S. E.: FRESHWATER<br />

BACTERIAL LIFESTYLES INFERRED FROM<br />

COMPARATIVE GENOMICS<br />

11:30 Leech, D. M.; May, M.; Metternich, A.; Rominger, R.; Pistoia, A.;<br />

Fortino, K.; Bedard, L.: TEMPORAL DIVERISTY DYNAMICS<br />

IN FRESHWATER BACTERIA<br />

11:45 Weitere, M.; Wey, J. K.; Marcus, H.; Norf, H.: EFFECTS OF<br />

WARMING ON COMMUNITIES: LESSONS FROM<br />

EXPERIMENTS WITH BIOFILM-DWELLING CILIATES<br />

13:30 Leon Soon, S.; Thomas, F.; Ward, B. B.: INVESTIGATING<br />

COMMUNITY RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

FLUCTUATIONS USING MICROARRAY ANALYSIS<br />

13:45 Voss, K. A.; King, R. S.; Bernhardt, E. S.: BAYESIAN<br />

HIERARCHICAL MODELING: A FLEXIBLE TEMPLATE<br />

FOR SETTING CONDUCTIVITY BENCHMARKS FOR<br />

AQUATIC LIFE IN APPALACHIAN STREAMS<br />

14:00 Larsen, S.; Ormerod S.: ANTHROPOGENIC MODIFICATION<br />

DISRUPTS SPECIES CO-OCCURRENCE PATTERNS IN<br />

STREAM INVERTEBRATES<br />

14:15 Michelena, T. M.; Nierzwicki-Bauer, S. A.; Boylen, C. W.: WATER<br />

QUALITY IMPACTS OF HURRICANE IRENE ON<br />

ECOSYSTEMS AT THE CONFLUENCE OF TRIBUTARIES<br />

TO THE HUDSON RIVER ESTUARY<br />

14:30 Zamor, R. M.; Hambright, K. D.: EFFECTS OF PROPAGULE<br />

PRESSURE AND INVASION RESISTANCE ON<br />

ESTABLISHMENT SUCCESS OF THE TOXIC GOLDEN<br />

ALGA,PRYMNESIUM PARVUM.<br />

14:45 Norton Henry, E. N.; Cheruvelil, K. S.: LAKE SHORELINE<br />

DEVELOPMENT AFFECTS TURTLE IN-LAKE HABITAT USE<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

15:00 LaBuhn, S. L.; Maas, M. G.; Klump, J. V.; Kaster, J. L.:<br />

HYDROCHEMICAL PARAMETERS OF LAGUNA<br />

BACALAR, QUINTANA ROO, MEXICO<br />

SS24 MONITORING AND FORECASTING OF SURFACE CURRENT-<br />

AFFECTED PHENOMENA IN COASTAL REGIONS<br />

Chair(s): Jeffrey Paduan , paduan@nps.edu<br />

Alexei Sentchev, Alexei.Sentchev@univ-littoral.fr<br />

Yves Barbin, yves.barbin@univ-tln.fr<br />

Max Yaremchuk, max.yaremchuk@nrlssc.navy.mil<br />

Location: Room 345<br />

10:00 Yaremchuk, M.; Wei, M.; Spence, P.; Jacobs, G.: MONITORING<br />

SURFACE TRANSPORT IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO WITH COASTAL RADARS<br />

10:15 Marmain, J.; Molcard, A.; Forget, P.; Barth, A.: OPTIMIZATION<br />

OF BOUNDARY CONDITIONS OF A NORTH WESTERN<br />

MEDITERRANEAN COASTAL ZONE USING HF RADAR<br />

MEASUREMENTS<br />

10:30 Jouanneau, N.; Sentchev, A.; Dumas, F.: ASSESSMENT OF<br />

CIRCULATION AND DISPERSION PROCESSES ALONG<br />

THE FRENCH COAST IN THE EASTERN ENGLISH<br />

CHANNEL<br />

10:45 Mitarai, S.; Uchiyama, Y.; Sakagami, T.; Siegel, D. A.; McWilliams, J.<br />

C.: TYPHOONS ALTER DISPERSAL PATTERNS IN THE<br />

KUROSHIO CURRENT SYSTEM<br />

11:00 Wakamatsu, T.; Foreman, M.; Masson, D.; Fine, I.; Hickey, B.:<br />

COASTAL EDDY FIELDS AND THEIR IMPACTS ON<br />

TRAJECTORIES OF THE BLOOM OF TOXIC PSEUDO-<br />

NITZSCHIA ALONG THE WASHINGTON/OREGON<br />

COAST.<br />

11:15 Bockelmann, F. D.; Callies, U.; van Bernem, K. H.: ASSMANT<br />

MODELING OF CHEMICAL DISPERSANT OPERATION<br />

ISING LAGRANGIAN PARTICLE TRACKING WITHIN A<br />

GIS-FRAMEWORK<br />

11:30 Cambazoglu, M. K.; Blain, C. A.: IMPACT OF ATMOSPHERIC<br />

FORCING RESOLUTION ON SEA SURFACE<br />

CIRCULATION IN A SHALLOW, SEMI-ENCLOSED SEA<br />

11:45 Warn-Varnas, A. C.; Gangopadhyay, A.; Schmidt, A.; Jensen, J. K.:<br />

NONLINEAR STUDIES OF NORWEGIAN COASTAL<br />

CURRENT FROM EULERIAN AND LAGRANGIAN POINT<br />

OF VIEWS.<br />

13:30 McKay, P.; Blain, C. A.: MODELING THE SURFACE CURRENT<br />

EXPRESSION OF SUBMERGED BATHYMETRY IN RIVERS<br />

13:45 Chardón, P.; Canals, M. F.: HYDROGRAPHIC SURVEYS USING<br />

A JETSKI-BASED BATHYMETRIC SURVEYING SYSTEM<br />

FOR MONITORING MORPHOLOGICAL CHANGES IN<br />

RINCNN, PUERTO RICO<br />

14:00 Wilkerson, C. N.; Brubaker, J. M.: STORM TIDES IN THE<br />

LOWER CHESAPEAKE BAY: THE INFLUENCE OF PRE-<br />

STORM WATER LEVEL ANOMALIES<br />

14:15 Smith, J. N.; Smethie Jr., W. M.: 129 I TRANSPORT BETWEEN<br />

THE LABRADOR SEA AND LINE W IN THE DEEP<br />

WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT (DWBC) IN THE<br />

NORTH ATLANTIC<br />

14:30 Calbat, K. A.; DiMarco, S. F.: INVESTIGATING THE<br />

HORIZONTAL DISTRIBUTION OF HYDROGRAPHIC<br />

PROPERTIES OF THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA SHELF USING<br />

AN UNDULATING TOWED VEHICLE<br />

99<br />

14:45 Murgulet, D.; Bighash, P.; Scotch , C. G.: EVALUATION OF<br />

GROUNDWATER INFLOWS TO A SEMIARID COASTAL<br />

BAY IN SOUTH TEXAS<br />

15:00 Mullins-Perry, R. L.; DiMarco, S. D.: A TALE OF TWO YEARS:<br />

A FLOOD AND A DROUGHT AND THE IMPACTS ON<br />

HYPOXIA FORMATION ON THE TEXAS SHELF<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

SS25 EVOLUTION OF COASTAL CHANGE IN THE NORTHERN GULF<br />

OF MEXICO<br />

Chair(s): Lisa Osterman, osterman@usgs.gov<br />

Christopher G. Smith, cgsmith@usgs.gov<br />

Location: Room 353<br />

10:00 Anderson, J. B.; Simms, A.: UNPRECEDENTED RESPONSE OF<br />

GULF COAST BARRIERS AND BAYS TO ACCELERATED<br />

SEA-LEVEL RISE AND DIMINISHED SEDIMENT SUPPLY*<br />

10:15 Blain, C. A.; McKay, P.; Graham, W.: ASSESSMENT OF<br />

CLIMATE CHANGE INFLUENCES ON INLAND SURGE<br />

AND INUNDATION ALONG COASTAL REGIONS OF THE<br />

NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO<br />

10:30 Flocks, J.; Twichell, D.; Pendleton, E.: COAST-WIDE GEOLOGIC-<br />

ASSESSMENT PROJECTS: UNRAVELING REGIONAL<br />

COASTAL EVOLUTION<br />

10:45 Miselis, J. L.; Kindinger, J. L.; Buster, N. A.: REFINING THE<br />

LINK BETWEEN THE HOLOCENE DEVELOPMENT OF<br />

THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER DELTA AND THE GEOLOGIC<br />

EVOLUTION OF CAT ISLAND, MS<br />

11:00 Carlin, J. A.; Dellapenna, T. M.: DEVOLPMENT OF THE<br />

MODERN BRAZOS RIVER DELTA: A DELTAIC RESPONSE<br />

TO NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC CHANGES IN<br />

THE COASTAL ZONE AND THE WATERSHED<br />

11:15 Clark, R.; Georgiou, I.; FitzGerald, D.: AN EVOLUTIONARY<br />

MODEL OF A RETROGRADING SUBDELTAIC<br />

DISTRIBUTARY OF A RIVER-DOMINATED SYSTEM<br />

11:30 Kindinger, J. L.; Lee, D. M.; Kulp, M. A.; Khalil, S. M.; Buster, N. A.;<br />

Flocks, J. G.; Bernier, J. C.; Raynie, R.: LOUISIANA BARRIER-<br />

ISLAND COMPREHENSIVE MONITORING (BICM)<br />

<strong>PROGRAM</strong> 2006-2010: BEGINNINGS OF A LARGE-SCALE<br />

COASTAL-SYSTEM-MONITORING <strong>PROGRAM</strong><br />

11:45 Smith, C. G.; Marot, M. E.: PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS<br />

OF BACK-BARRIER SEDIMENTATION ON THE<br />

CHANDELEUR ISLANDS, LOUISIANA, FOLLOWING THE<br />

CONSTRUCTION OF THE OIL-MITIGATION SAND BERM.<br />

13:30 Johnson, K. W.; Dellapenna, T. M.; Sugla, R.; Webster, R.: EPISODIC<br />

EVENT CONTROLS ON BARRIER ISLAND SYSTEM<br />

MORPHODYNAMICS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF<br />

MEXICO: IMPACT OF HURRICANE IKE ON GALVESTON<br />

ISLAND SHELF<br />

13:45 Osterman, L. E.; Smith, C. G.: A CENTURY OF<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION IN MOBILE BAY,<br />

ALABAMA, USA, RECORDED BY FORAMINIFERS<br />

14:00 Spear, K. A.; Handley, L.; Thatcher, C.; Wilson, S.: EMERGENT<br />

WETLANDS STATUS AND TRENDS IN THE NORTHERN<br />

GULF OF MEXICO: 1950-2010<br />

14:15 Cherry, J. A.; McKee, K. L.; Ramsey, R. C.: BUYING TIME:<br />

HURRICANE SEDIMENT INPUTS AS ELEVATION<br />

CAPITAL FOR COASTAL WETLANDS<br />

14:30 White, D. A.; Visser, J. M.: EFFECTS OF THE MISSISSIPPI<br />

RIVER WATER ON WETLAND PLANT ECOLOGY<br />

WITHIN ITS BIRD-FOOT DELTA OVER A 2.5 DECADE<br />

STUDY PERIOD.<br />

FRIDAY


FRIDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

14:45 Turner, R. E.; Bodker, J. E.; Tweel, A. W.: CONSEQUENCES<br />

OF INCREASED NUTRIENT LOADING TO MARSHES<br />

BELOWGROUND<br />

15:00 Armitage, A. R.; Highfield, W. E.; Norwood, M. J.; White, N.; Brody,<br />

S. D.; Louchouarn, P.: GEOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL<br />

SHIFTS IN BLUE CARBON SEQUESTRATION IN TEXAS<br />

WETLANDS<br />

15:15 Mayo, M.; Smoak, J. M.; Smith, C.; Fanning, K.; Smith, T. J.: A<br />

COMPARISON OF URANIUM BUDGETS FOR ESTUARINE<br />

WETLANDS OF THE EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK,<br />

FLORIDA AND MOBILE BAY, ALABAMA<br />

SS28 IN SITU AQUATIC SENSORS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY.<br />

Chair(s): Veronique Garcon, veronique.garcon@legos.obs-mip.fr<br />

Douglas P. Connelly, dpc@noc.soton.ac.uk<br />

Location: Room 346-347<br />

10:00 Cooray, A. T.; Schwingle, R.; Pullin, M. J.: DEVELOPMENT OF A<br />

COMPACT, AUTOMATED IN-SITU SENSOR BASED ON<br />

FERROZINE COLORIMETRY TO STUDY IRON REDOX<br />

DYNAMICS IN FRESHWATER SYSTEMS<br />

10:15 Helm, Z.; Tripp, C.; Whitney King, D.; Gammana, M.; Williams,<br />

T.; Nzamubona, K.; Kim, B.; Morotti, J.; Wells, M. L.: OPTICAL<br />

DETECTION OF SUB-NANOMOLAR CONCENTRATIONS<br />

OF DISSOLVED FE IN SEAWATER ON A MEMBRANE<br />

INTERFACE<br />

10:45 Garcon, V.; Barus, C.; Giraud, W.; Jonca, J.; Comtat, M.; Armengaud,<br />

M.; Striebig, N.; Temple, P.; Lacroix, P.: ELECTROCHEMICAL<br />

MICROSENSOR FOR IN SITU MEASUREMENTS OF<br />

DISSOLVED SILICATE IN MARINE SYSTEMS<br />

11:00 Legiret, F.; Woodward, M.; Kaed-Bey, S.; Rérolle, V.; Mowlem, M.;<br />

Connelly, D.; Achterberg, E.: MICROFLUIDIC PHOSPHATE<br />

ANALYSERS FOR THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT.<br />

11:15 Jonca, J.; Giraud, M.; Paulmier, A.; Comtat, M.; Stramma, L.; Garçon,<br />

V.: REAGENTLESS AND SILICATE INTERFERENCE<br />

FREE ELECTROCHEMICAL METHOD FOR PHOSPHATE<br />

DETECTION IN SEAWATER IN THE OXYGEN MINIMUM<br />

ZONE OFFSHORE PERU<br />

11:30 Contreira Pereira, L.; Brulport, J. P.; Omanovic, D.; Le Bris, N.:<br />

SILVER-BASED ELECTROCHEMICAL SENSORS FOR<br />

AUTONOMOUS MONITORING OF SULFIDE IN MARINE<br />

ENVIRONMENTS<br />

11:45 Klimant, I.; Borisov, S. M.: NEW OPTICAL CHEMOSENSORS<br />

FOR MARINE RESEARCH<br />

13:30 Gibson, P. J.; Elrod, V.; Massion, G.; Coletti, L.; Jannasch, H.; Plant,<br />

J.; Sakamoto, C.; Johnson, K. S.: MAKER OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

DIY DEVELOPMENT OF PRECISE AND AFFORDABLE IN<br />

SITU CHEMICAL SENSORS WITH EMBEDDED<br />

ELECTRONICS<br />

13:45 Tomczyk, M.; Sahling, H.; Berges, B. J.; Ferreira, C.:<br />

HYDROACOSTIC METHODS FOR QUANTIFICATION<br />

OF GAS BUBBLE EMISSIONS FROM THE SEAFLOOR OF<br />

SHELF AREAS IN THE ARCTIC REGION<br />

14:00 Sullivan, J. M.; Twardowski, M. S.; Katz, J.; Donaghay, P.; McFarland,<br />

M.: PARTICLE CHARACTERIZATION USING IN-SITU<br />

HOLOGRAPHIC MICROSCOPY<br />

14:15 Buermans, J.; Lemon, D.: PRESSURE EFFECTS ON THE<br />

ACOUSTIC CALBRATION OF A MULTIPLE-FREQUENCY<br />

BOTTOM-MOORED SCIENTIFIC ECHOSOUNDER FOR<br />

OBSERVATIONS OF ZOOPLANKTON<br />

100<br />

14:30 Miles, T. N.; Schofield, O.; Glenn, S.; Kohut, J.; Stammerjohn, S.;<br />

Martinson, D.: COASTAL OCEAN MIXING NEAR PALMER<br />

STATION ANTARCTICA: OBSERVATIONS FROM A<br />

GLIDER MOUNTED ADCP<br />

14:45 Vidoudez, C.; Marcon, Y.; Bach, W.; Lebris, N.; Dubilier,<br />

N.; Girguis, P. R.: MAPPING OF HYDROTHERMAL<br />

VENT CHEMOSYNTHESIS USING IN SITU MASS<br />

SPECTROMETRY<br />

15:00 Batt, R. D.; Carpenter, S. R.; Cole, J. J.; Pace, M. L.; Johnson, R. A.:<br />

AUTOMATED MEASURES OF ECOSYSTEM METABOLISM<br />

PROVIDE EARLY WARNING OF REGIME SHIFT<br />

15:15 Collins, J. R.; Ossolinski, J. E.; Keil, R. G.; Van Mooy, B. A.:<br />

COMMUNITY RESPIRATION AND PRODUCTIVITY<br />

ESTIMATES FROM OPEN-OCEAN DEPLOYMENTS<br />

OF THE PHORCYS, AN AUTONOMOUS, DUAL-<br />

CHAMBER IN SITU INCUBATOR<br />

SS51 IRON, CARBON CYCLING, AND ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS IN<br />

THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

Chair(s): Stephane Blain, stephane.blain@obs-banyuls.fr<br />

Bernard Queguiner, bernard.queguiner@univ-amu.fr<br />

Volker Strass, Volker.strass@awi.de<br />

Dieter Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter.Wolf-Gladrow@awi.de<br />

Location: Room 343<br />

10:00 Bowie, A. R.; Quéroué, F.; Sarthou, G.; Chever, F.; van der Merwe,<br />

P.; Bucciarelli, E.; Townsend, A. T.; Blain, S.: DISSOLVED AND<br />

PARTICULATE TRACE METALS IN THE VICINITY OF<br />

THE KERGUELEN ISLANDS, SOUTHERN OCEAN,<br />

DURING THE KEOPS 2 EXPERIMENT<br />

10:15 Sanial, V.; van Beek, P.; Lansard, B.; Zhou, M.; Kestenare, E.;<br />

Souhaut, M.: USE OF THE RADIUM QUARTET (223RA,<br />

224RA, 226RA, 228RA) TO STUDY THE NATURAL IRON<br />

FERTILIZATION OFF CROZET AND KERGUELEN<br />

ISLANDS (SOUTHERN OCEAN)<br />

10:30 Sedwick, P. N.; McGillicuddy, D. J.; Dinniman, M. S.; Bibby, T. S.;<br />

Greenan, B. J.; Hofmann, E. E.; Klinck, J. S.; Marsay, C. M.; Smith,<br />

W. O.; Sohst, B. M.: AN ASSESSMENT OF IRON SOURCES<br />

ON THE ROSS SEA CONTINENTAL SHELF: INITIAL<br />

RESULTS FROM THE PRISM PROJECT<br />

10:45 Laglera, L. M.; Santos-Echeandía, J.; Klaas, C.; Wolf-Gadrow, D. A.:<br />

IRON PARTITION IN SURFACE WATERS OF A LARGE-<br />

SCALE SUMMER BLOOM SOUTH OF THE ANTARCTIC<br />

POLAR FRONT<br />

11:00 Lasbleiz, M.; Closset, I.; Quéguiner, B.; Leblanc, K.; Cardinal, D.; Navez,<br />

J.: SPECIES–SPECIFIC CONTRIBUTION OF DIATOMS TO<br />

SI PRODUCTION IN THE FE-FERTILIZED KERGUELEN<br />

REGION OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN (KEOPS2)<br />

11:15 Dinasquet, J.; Swalethorp, R.; Kjellerup, S.; Bertilsson, S.;<br />

Nielsen, T. G.; Riemann, L.: PARTICULATE MATTER<br />

AND PROTOZOANS AFFECT BACTERIOPLANKTON<br />

COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE PRODUCTIVE<br />

AMUNDSEN SEA POLYNYA, ANTARCTICA<br />

11:30 Cavagna, A.; Quéguiner, B.; Planchon, F.; Jacquet, S.; Closset, I.;<br />

Dehairs, F.: PRODUCTION REGIME AND POTENTIAL<br />

FOR CARBON EXPORT IN THE NATURALLY IRON<br />

FERTILIZED KERGUELEN AREA (SOUTHERN OCEAN)<br />

11:45 Closset, I.; Lasbleiz, M.; Leblanc, K.; Quéguiner, B.; Navez, J.; Cardinal,<br />

D.: COMPARISON OF SI BIOGEOCHEMICAL BUDGET<br />

IN CONTRASTED SOUTHERN OCEAN REGIONS<br />

THROUGH SILICA PRODUCTION-DISSOLUTION<br />

MEASUREMENTS (KEOPS-2)<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

13:30 Dehairs, F.; Trull, T. W.; Fernandez, C.; Davies, D.; Cavagna, A. J.;<br />

Piniella, A. E.: NITRATE ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION IN<br />

THE KERGUELEN AREA (SOUTHERN OCEAN) DURING<br />

KEOPS 2<br />

13:45 Roca-Martí, M.; Puigcorbé, V.; Masqué, P.; Rutgers van der Loeff,<br />

M.; Stimac, I.; Iversen, M.; Strass, V.; Klass, C.; Wolf-Gladrow, D.:<br />

IMPACT OF EDDY STRUCTURES AND THE POLAR<br />

FRONT REGION ON CARBON EXPORT FLUXES IN THE<br />

WATER COLUMN OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

14:00 Jouandet, M.; guidi, L.; carlotti, F.; Stemmann, L.; Picheral, M.; Zhou,<br />

M.; Trull, T.; Blain, S.: PARTICLE SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS<br />

IN RESPONSE TO NATURAL IRON FERTILISATION<br />

IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN (KERGUELEN ISLAND)-<br />

IMPLICATION FOR CARBON EXPORT.<br />

14:15 Zhu, Y.; Zhou , M.; Queguiner, B.; Leblanc, K.; Carlotti, F.; Armand,<br />

L.; Jouandet, M. P.; Kestenare, E.; Trull, T.; Blain, S.: ESTIMATES<br />

OF PARTICLE SETTLING AND SCAVENGING USING<br />

LISST-LOPC IN KERGUELEN PLATEAU REGIONS<br />

DURING THE 2011 AUSTRAL SPRING KEOPS II CRUISE<br />

14:30 Trimborn, S.; Hoppe, C. J.; Brenneis, T.; Norman, L.; Santos-<br />

Echeandía, J.; Laglera, L.; Hassler, C.: ROLE OF DIFFERENT<br />

IRON SOURCES ON PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH<br />

AND SPECIES COMPOSITION OF THE ANTARCTIC<br />

CIRCUMPOLAR CURRENT UNDER OCEAN<br />

ACIDIFICATION.<br />

14:45 Jones, B. M.; Sahin, M. S.; New, A. M.; Kustka, A. B.:<br />

INTEGRATING PHYSIOLOGY AND 3RD GENERATION<br />

DNA SEQUENCING TO CHARACTERIZE THE EFFECT<br />

OF MCDW, IRON AND LIGANDS ON ROSS SEA<br />

EUKARYOTIC PHYTOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGES<br />

15:00 Bennett, J. M.; Sedwick, P. N.; DiTullio, G. R.: IMPACT<br />

OF IRRADIANCE AND IRON ON THE GROWTH<br />

AND PHYSIOLOGY OF THE ANTARCTIC<br />

DIATOMFRAGILARIOPSIS CYLINDRUS<br />

15:15 Boutorh, J.; Moriceau, B.; Ragueneau, O.; Bucciarelli, E.: IMPACT OF<br />

COPPER STARVATION AND OF IRON LIMITATION ON<br />

THE FRUSTULE COMPOSITION AND DISSOLUTION OF<br />

THE PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA DIATOM<br />

SS52 POPULATIONS AND ACTIVITY OF AMMONIA-OXIDIZING<br />

AND DENITRIFYING ORGANISMS IN COASTAL WATERS<br />

Chair(s): Jennifer Bowen, jennifer.bowen@umb.edu<br />

Chris Francis, caf@stanford.edu<br />

Bradley Tolar, btolar1@uga.edu<br />

James Hollibaugh, aquadoc@uga.edu<br />

Location: Room 350-351<br />

10:00 Wang, L.; Bernard, R. J.; Mortazavi, B.; Ortmann, A. C.: A JUNCUS<br />

ROEMARIANUS MARSH OVERCOMES SULFIDE<br />

ACCUMULATION THAT INHIBITS NITRIFICATION<br />

AND DENITRIFICATION IN OTHER VEGETATED<br />

COASTAL HABITATS<br />

10:15 Peng, X.; Angell, J.; Babbin, A. R.; Ji, Q.; Kearns, P. J.; Bowen, J. L.;<br />

Ward, B. B.: EFFECT OF LONG-TERM FERTILIZATION<br />

ON NITROGEN REMOVAL FROM A SALT MARSH<br />

ECOSYSTEM<br />

10:30 Lipsewers, Y. A.; Bale, N.; Hopmans, E. C.; Schouten, S.; Sinninghe<br />

Damsté, J. S.; Villanueva, L.: DIVERSITY AND ACTIVITY OF<br />

AEROBIC AND ANAEROBIC AMMONIA OXIDIZERS<br />

IN THE OXYGEN TRANSITION ZONE OF MARINE<br />

SEDIMENTS BY A COMBINED DNA, RNA AND LIPID<br />

APPROACH<br />

101<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

10:45 Newell, S. E.; Eveillard, D.; McCarthy, M. J.; Gardner,<br />

W. S.; Liu, Z.; Ward, B. B.: AMMONIA OXIDIZING<br />

ARCHAEAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN GULF<br />

OF MEXICO SEDIMENTS INVESTIGATED WITH<br />

AN AMOA FUNCTIONAL GENE MICROARRAY<br />

11:00 Horak, R. E.; Devol, A.; Qin, W.; Armbrust, V.; Ingalls, A.; Moffett, J.;<br />

Stahl, D.: ARCHAEAL AMMONIA OXIDATION IN A PUGET<br />

SOUND FJORD: VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION, KINETICS,<br />

AND TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCY<br />

11:15 Smith, J. M.; Casciotti, K. L.; Chavez, F. P.; Francis, C. A.:<br />

RELATING FUNCTIONAL GENE MARKERS FOR<br />

AMMONIA-OXIDIZING ARCHAEA TO RATES OF<br />

NITRIFICATION ACROSS OCEAN GRADIENTS<br />

11:30 Hollibaugh, J. T.; Gifford, S. M.; Moran, M. A.; Ross, M.;<br />

Sharma , S.; Tolar, B. B.: SEASONAL VARIATION OF THE<br />

THAUMARCHAEOTA METRATRANSCRIPTOME IN SE<br />

USA COASTAL WATERS<br />

11:45 Tolar, B. B.; Powers, L. C.; Miller, W. L.; Popp, B. N.; Hollibaugh,<br />

J. T.: RESPONSE OF MARINE THAUMARCHAEOTA TO<br />

REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES<br />

13:30 Baer, S. E.; Connelly, T. L.; Yager, P. L.; Bronk, D. A.: AMMONIUM<br />

UPTAKE AND NITRIFICATION IN A WARMING ARCTIC<br />

13:45 Madison, M. J.; Ziebis, W.: NITROUS OXIDE PRODUCTION<br />

IN COASTAL SEDIMENTS IN RESPONSE TO<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES<br />

14:00 Trimmer, M.; Purdy, K. J.: ANAMMOX AS A SYMBIONT TO<br />

DENITRIFICATION, DRIVING NITRITE LOSS UNDER<br />

CARBON LIMITATION<br />

14:15 Pritchard, W. J.; Trimmer, M.: SEASONAL VARIATION OF<br />

ANAMMOX IN A TEMPERATE ESTUARY<br />

14:30 Munoz Ucros, J.; Reed, A. J.; Hicks, R. E.: PLANKTONIC<br />

ARCHAEAL DIVERSITY AND AMMONIA OXIDIZER<br />

ABUNDANCE CHANGE WITH DEPTH IN EAST<br />

AFRICAN GREAT LAKES MALAWI AND KIVU<br />

14:45 Massé, S.; Walsh, D.; Maranger, R.: SEASONAL CHANGES OF<br />

NITRIFICATION RATES AND AMMONIA OXIDIZING<br />

MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC LAKE<br />

15:00 Bade, D. L.; Clevinger, C. C.; Heath, R. T.; Ndinga Muniania, C.:<br />

NITRIFICATION CONTRIBUTES SIGNIFICANTLY TO<br />

OXYGEN CONSUMPTION IN LAKE ERIE<br />

15:15 Bollmann, A.; McKay, R. M.; Bullerjahn, G. S.: ABUNDANCE<br />

AND DIVERSITY OF AMMONIA-OXIDIZING ARCHAEA<br />

AND BACTERIA IN LAKE SUPERIOR AND LAKE ERIE<br />

SS63 LONG-TERM PERSPECTIVES ON LAKE RESEARCH<br />

AND MANAGEMENT<br />

Chair(s): Stephanie Hampton, hampton@nceas.ucsb.edu<br />

Paul Hanson, pchanson@wisc.edu<br />

Emily Stanley, ehstanley@wisc.edu<br />

Location: Room 344<br />

10:00 Zohary, T.; Gal, G.; Hambright, K. D.: THE FOOD WEB OF<br />

LAKE KINNERET: A FOUR-DECADAL RETROSPECTIVE<br />

10:15 Luecke, C.; Budy, P.; Giblin, A. E.; Kling, G. W.: RESPONSE<br />

OF SHALLOW AND DEEP LAKES TO LOW LEVEL<br />

NUTRIENT ADDITION IN THE SUB-ARCTIC REGION OF<br />

NORTHERN ALASKA.<br />

10:30 Deutsch, E. S.; Alameddine, I.: CHALLENGES AND<br />

OPPORTUNITIES FOR LONG-TERM LIMNOLOGICAL<br />

RESEARCH IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE<br />

STUDY FOR LEBANON<br />

FRIDAY


FRIDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

10:45 Maki, R. P.: PROVIDING SCIENCE TO DECISION-MAKERS:<br />

MULTI-DISCIPLINARY PREPARATION FOR A REVIEW<br />

OF RULES GOVERNING DAM OPERATION, RAINY AND<br />

NAMAKAN LAKES, MINNESOTA-ONTARIO<br />

11:00 Kopacek, J.; Hejzlar, J.; Posch, M.: LONG-TERM MONITORING<br />

OF WATER CHEMISTRY – A CHRONICLE OF SOCIO-<br />

ECONOMICAL CHANGES<br />

11:15 Heathcote, A. J.; Filstrup, C. T.; Downing, J. A.: LAKE SEDIMENTS<br />

SHOW ACCELERATION OF AGRICULTURAL SOIL<br />

EROSION, DESPITE SUBSIDIES<br />

11:30 Whitmore, T. J.; Brenner, M.; Curtis, J. H.; Riedinger-Whitmore,<br />

M. A.; Zimmerman, A. R.; Kenney, W. F.; Lauterman, F. M.:<br />

PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF LAKE<br />

LOCHLOOSA: EVIDENCE OF LONG-TERM EUTROPHIC<br />

CONDITIONS AND CYANOBACTERIAL PRESENCE IN A<br />

LARGE CENTRAL-FLORIDA LAKE<br />

11:45 Vogt, R. J.; Sharma, S.; Leavitt, P. R.: EFFECTS OF CLIMATE,<br />

HYDROLOGY, AND LAKE PHYSICO-CHEMISTRY ON<br />

WATER QUALITY IN THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS<br />

(QU’APPELLE LTER)<br />

13:30 Allison, M. D.; Groman, R. C.; Gegg, S. R.; Chandler, C. L.; Sterner,<br />

R. W.; Brovold, S.; Galvarino, C. R.; Wiebe, P. H.; Glover, D. M.:<br />

MANAGING DATA FOR THE LONG HAUL: THE BCO-<br />

DMO PERSPECTIVE<br />

13:45 Bennington, V.; Cline, T.; Kitchell, J.: SPATIAL PATTERNS,<br />

TRENDS, AND IMPLICATIONS OF CHANGING<br />

TEMPERATURES IN LAKES SUPERIOR AND MICHIGAN<br />

14:00 Reavie, E. D.; Chraïbi, V.; Allinger, L. E.; Kireta, A. R.:<br />

NEW PROBLEMS, NEW TOOLS: UPDATING THE<br />

PALEOLIMNOLOGY OF THE LAURENTIAN GREAT<br />

LAKES<br />

14:15 Paterson, G.; Hebert, C. E.; Drouillard, K. G.; Haffner, G. D.:<br />

LAKE HURON: A GREAT LAKE IN A STATE OF GREAT<br />

DECLINE<br />

14:30 Chraibi, V. L.; Kireta, A. R.; Reavie, E. D.; Cai, M.; Brown, T. N.: AN<br />

UPDATED PALEOLIMNOLOGY OF LAKE SUPERIOR<br />

14:45 Li, Y.: EXPLORING DYNAMIC CAUSAL LINKAGE<br />

BETWEEN LAKE NUTRIENTS AND CHLOROPHYLL-A:<br />

AN INTEGRATED GRANGER CAUSALITY TEST AND<br />

NEURAL NETWORK APPROACH<br />

15:00 Mansfield, R.; Hendry, K.; White, K. N.: MANCHESTER DOCKS<br />

TO SALFORD QUAYS: LESSONS FOR FRESHWATER<br />

ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT<br />

15:15 Smith, V. H.: ALGAL BIOFUELS RESEARCH: WHERE ARE<br />

THE AQUATIC ECOLOGISTS?<br />

SS72 STUDIES OF ZOOPLANKTON AND OTHER PARTICLES USING<br />

OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS<br />

Chair(s): David M. Checkley, Jr., dcheckley@ucsd.edu<br />

George A. Jackson, gjackson@tamu.edu<br />

Location: Room 356<br />

10:00 Checkey, D. M.: SEEING IN THE SEA<br />

10:15 Yen, J.; Murphy, D. W.; Webster, D. E.: TIME-RESOLVED<br />

TOMOGRAPHIC PIV MEASUREMENTS OF<br />

ZOOPLANKTON: LINKS BETWEEN LAB AND FIELD<br />

OBSERVATIONS<br />

102<br />

10:30 Heath, T. D.; Whipple, T. C.; Neve, R.; Hall, N. S.; Leuttich, R.<br />

A.: EVALUATION AND INTERPRETATION OF LASER<br />

SCATTERING IN THE NEUSE RIVER ESTUARY<br />

10:45 Briseño-Avena, C.; Jaffe, J. S.; Franks, P. J.; Roberts, P. L.:<br />

EXPLORING PHYTOPLANKTON AGGREGATIONS-<br />

ZOOPLANKTON INTERACTIONS USING TWO<br />

CAMERA SYSTEMS: FIDO-F AND O-CAM<br />

11:00 Wenczel, A. A.; Bushek, D.: DOES SINGLE SPECIES<br />

RESTORATION ALTER THE INTERACTIONS OF NATIVE<br />

BIVALVE MOLLUSKS?:USING AQUACULTURE METHODS<br />

AND IMAGING TECHNOLOGY TO QUANTIFY BIVALVE<br />

FEEDING<br />

11:15 Currie, W. J.; Linley, R. D.; Bailey, S. A.; Koops, M. A.:<br />

SHRIMP: SPATIALLY HI-RES INTENSIVE MAPPING<br />

OF PLANKTON DISTRIBUTIONS IN A COASTAL<br />

ECOSYSTEM<br />

11:30 Marcolin, C. R.; Lopes, R. M.: TEMPORAL VARIATION OF<br />

PLANKTON BIOMASS SIZE SPECTRA AND PARTICLE<br />

SIZE DISTRIBUTION OFF UBATUBA, BRAZIL<br />

11:45 Mines, C. H.; Ghadouani, A.; Ivey, G. N.: THE USE OF<br />

LOPC IN FRESHWATER SYSTEMS – EXPLORING<br />

THE METHODOLOGY, IN SITU AND LABORATORY<br />

DEPLOYMENT IN THE CONTEXT OF HARP LAKE,<br />

ONTARIO<br />

13:30 Trudnowska, E.; Blachowiak-Samolyk, K.; Szczucka, J.;<br />

Wichorowski, M.: PROMISING PROSPECTS OF OPTICAL<br />

ZOOPLANKTON INVESTIGATIONS IN THE EUROPEAN<br />

ARCTIC<br />

13:45 Basedow, S. L.; Möller, K. O.; Giering, S. L.: CALANUS AND<br />

MARINE SNOW IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC AS SEEN BY<br />

LASER OPTICAL PLANKTON COUNTER (LOPC), VIDEO<br />

PLANKTON RECORDER (VPR) AND MARINE SNOW<br />

CATCHER (MSC)<br />

14:00 Romagnan, J. B.; Roullier, F.; Guidi, L.; Forest, A.; Vandromme,<br />

P.; Picheral, M.; Jackson, G.; Checkley, D.; Stemmann, L.:<br />

VARIABILITY IN PLANKTON AND PARTICLE SIZE<br />

DISTRIBUTIONS (PSDS) IN DIFFERENT OCEAN BASINS<br />

14:15 Marin, F. D.; Sutor, M. M.: VERTICAL PATTERNS OF THE<br />

BIOMASS AND COMMUNITY COMPOSITION OF<br />

PLANKTON RELATIVE TO PHYSICAL PARAMETERS IN<br />

THE GULF OF MEXICO SPRING 2011 AS MEASURED BY<br />

THE VPR<br />

14:30 Norrbin, F.: PATTERNS OF ZOOPLANKTON DIVERSITY<br />

AND DISTRIBUTION IN SUBARCTIC FJORDS<br />

DETERMINED USING AN AUTONOMOUS VPR<br />

14:45 Haraldsson, M.; Båmstedt, U.; Tiselius, P.; Aksnes, D. L.;<br />

Titelman, J.: FINE SCALE VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION<br />

AND DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATION OF THE<br />

CTENOPHORE MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI<br />

15:00 Benfield, M. C.; Cook, S.; Strickler, J. R.; DiMauro, R.; Bi, H.; Sutor,<br />

M. M.: ZOOVIS-DEEP: A SELF-CONTAINED, HIGH-<br />

RESOLUTION ZOOPLANKTON IMAGING SYSTEM<br />

WITH APPLICATIONS FROM ESTUARIES TO THE THE<br />

DEEP SEA<br />

15:15 Cowen, R. K.; Guigand, C. M.; Greer, A. T.; Luo, J. Y.: IN SITU<br />

ICHTHYOPLANKTON IMAGING SYSTEM (ISIIS):<br />

DESIGN, CAPABILITIES, AND RESULTS FROM FOUR<br />

CASE STUDIES<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

SS79 PHYTOPLANKTON INTERACTIONS IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS<br />

Chair(s): Suzanne Strom, Suzanne.Strom@wwu.edu<br />

Brian Palenik, bpalenik@ucsd.edu<br />

Location: Room 357<br />

10:00 Sosik, H. M.; Peacock, E. E.; Olson, R. J.: AUTOMATED<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON IMAGING PROVIDES A UNIQUE<br />

PERSPECTIVE ON INTERACTIONS IN NATURAL<br />

COMMUNITIES<br />

10:15 Ortmann, A. C.; Christiaen, B.; Condon, R. H.: INTERACTONS<br />

BETWEEN MEMBERS OF THE MICROBIAL LOOP IN AN<br />

ESTUARY DOMINATED BY MICROZOOPLANKTON<br />

GRAZING<br />

10:30 Peace, A. L.; Zhao, Y.; Loladze, I.; Elser, J. J.; Kuang, Y.: A<br />

STOICHIOMETRIC PRODUCER-GRAZER MODEL<br />

INCORPORATING THE EFFECTS OF EXCESS FOOD-<br />

NUTRIENT CONTENT ON CONSUMER DYNAMICS.<br />

10:45 Brahamsha, B. M.; Strom, S. L.; Daniels, E. F.; Simkovsky, R.;<br />

Golden, S.: GRAZING AND THE CYANOBACTERIAL CELL<br />

SURFACE*<br />

11:00 Strom, S. L.; Bright, K. J.; Brahamsha, B.: ROLE OF CELL<br />

PROTEIN COATINGS IN THE TROPHIC ECOLOGY OF<br />

MARINE SYNECHOCOCCUS<br />

11:15 Palenik, B.; Paz-Yepes, J.; Daniels, E.; Brahamsha, B.:<br />

MARINESYNECHOCOCCUS AGGREGATE FORMATION<br />

11:30 Ryan, D. E.; Campbell, L.: KARENIA BREVIS REFERENCE<br />

TRANSCRIPOME ASSEMBLY AND GENE EXPRESSION<br />

ANALYSIS IN RESPONSE TO OSMOTIC STRESS<br />

11:45 Corcoran, A. A.; Flewelling, L. J.; Richardson, B.: THE EFFECTS<br />

OF NUTRIENT LIMITATION ON BREVETOXIN<br />

PRODUCTION IN CONTINUOUS CULTURES OF<br />

KARENIA BREVIS<br />

13:30 Mausz, M. A.; Rosenwasser, S.; Schatz, D.; Sheyn, U.; Weinstock,<br />

E.; Segovia, M.; Vardi, A.; Pohnert, G.: METABOLOMIC<br />

INVESTIGATION OF THE MICROALGAEMILIANIA<br />

HUXLEYI UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF DIFFERENT<br />

MANIPULATIONS IN LAB AND MESOCOSM<br />

EXPERIMENTS<br />

13:45 Mueller, J. A.; Culley, A. I.; Schvarcz, C. R.; Steward, G.<br />

F.: DYNAMICS AND DIVERSITY OF NOVEL<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON-INFECTING RNA VIRUSES IN THE<br />

WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENNINSULA THROUGHOUT<br />

A SUMMER BLOOM<br />

14:00 Hawco, N. J.; McIlvin, M. R.; Waterbury, J. B.; Saito,<br />

M. A.: PROTEOMIC ANALYSIS OF PHAGE-<br />

INFECTED SYNECHOCOCCUS WH8102 REVEALS<br />

FLUCTUATIONS IN IRON METALLOENZYMES.<br />

14:15 Wang, P.; Burd, A. B.; Hood, R. R.; Coles, V. J.; Moran, M.<br />

A.; Yager, P. L.: INCORPORATING GENOMIC AND<br />

TRANSCRIPTOMIC INFORMATION INTO A SIMPLIFIED<br />

MARINE BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODEL<br />

14:30 Wallace, R. B.; Gobler, C. J.: FACTORS CONTROLLING<br />

AND PROMOTING BLOOMS OF MICROALGAE<br />

(THALASSIOSIRA SPP.) AND MACROALGAE (ULVA SP.)<br />

IN A HYPEREUTROPHIC, URBAN ESTUARY, JAMAICA<br />

BAY, NY, USA<br />

14:45 OSEJI, O. F.; CHEN, N.; CHIGBU, P.; WAGUESPACK, Y. Y.:<br />

CHROMATOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS OF PHYTOPLANKTON<br />

PIGMENTS FROM THE MARYLAND COASTAL BAYS<br />

103<br />

( * ) represents Invited presentations<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

15:00 Bizsel, K. C.; Inanan, B. E.; Bizsel, N.; Adalioglu, S.; Tumer, T.;<br />

Kankus, J.; Erguden, C.; Sonmez, R.: STATE OF NUTRIENT<br />

COMPOSITION AND ITS CONSEQUENCES<br />

ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY AT AN<br />

AQUACULTURE SITE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN<br />

15:15 Jahan, R.; Choi, J. K.: PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY<br />

REORGANIZATION IN THE MACROTIDAL GYEONGGI<br />

BAY FOLLOWING OCEAN CLIMATE REGIME SHIFT<br />

SS80 ILLUMINATING THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL ROLES OF<br />

MICROBES WITH COMBINED SECTIONAL GENOMIC, BIOMO-<br />

LECULAR, AND GEOCHEMICAL DATASETS<br />

Chair(s): Robert M. Morris, morrisrm@uw.edu<br />

Benjamin Van Mooy, bvanmooy@whoi.edu<br />

Location: Room 352<br />

10:00 Armbrust, E. V.: “GEOMICS:” A GEOCHEMICAL AND<br />

MOLECULAR STUDY OF MARINE TRANSITION ZONES T<br />

10:30 Kujawinski, E. B.; Johnson, W.: SHIFTS IN DISSOLVED<br />

ORGANIC MATTER COMPOSITION ACROSS A<br />

COASTAL-OPEN OCEAN GRADIENT IN THE EASTERN<br />

PACIFIC OCEAN<br />

10:45 Bender, S. J.; Durkin, C. A.; Durham, B. P.; Berthiaume, C.;<br />

Armbrust, E. V.: NITROGEN TRANSPORTERS IN<br />

LABORATORY TRANSCRIPTOMES AND FIELD<br />

METATRANSCRIPTOMES REVEAL SPECIES-SPECIFIC<br />

METABOLIC RESPONSES OF DIATOMS TO NITROGEN<br />

AVAILABILITY<br />

11:00 Barbeau, K. A.; King, A. L.; Hogle, S. L.; Hopkinson, B. M.; Dupont,<br />

C. L.; Mann, E. L.; Johnson, Z. I.; Allen, A. E.: EVIDENCE<br />

FOR A SPECTRUM OF IRON LIMITATION EFFECTS<br />

ALONG A TRANSECT OF SUB-SURFACE OCEANIC<br />

PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES<br />

11:15 Chappell, P. D.; Whitney, L. P.; Maness, S. L.; Vedamati, J.;<br />

Moffett, J. W.; Jenkins, B. D.: PROFILING THALASSIOSIRA<br />

COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND IRON STATUS ON<br />

THE GEOMICS CRUISE USING MOLECULAR METHODS<br />

11:30 Saito, M. A.; Moran, D. M.; McIlvin, M. R.; Santoro, A.;<br />

Lamborg, C. H.; Goepfert, T. J.; Waterbury, J. W.: DETECTION<br />

AND DISTRIBUTION OF METALLOENZYMES BY<br />

METAPROTEOMIC ANALYSIS IN PACIFIC OCEAN<br />

ENVIRONMENTS<br />

11:45 Martin, P.; Van Mooy, B.; Bender, S.; Armbrust, G.: OCEAN<br />

SECTIONS OF POLYPHOSPHATE AND MEMBRANE<br />

LIPIDS SHOW DISTINCT MICROBIAL RESPONSES TO<br />

PHOSPHORUS STRESS AND RESUPPLY<br />

13:30 Dyhrman, S. T.; Haley, S. T.: TRACING MARINE MICROBIAL<br />

PHOSPHORUS BIOGEOCHEMISTRY: INSIGHTS<br />

FROM SECTIONAL SURVEYS AND PROCESS STUDIES<br />

FOCUSED ON ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE ACTIVITY.<br />

13:45 Saunders, J. K.; Rocap, G.: BASIN SCALE DIFFERENCES IN<br />

PROCHLOROCOCCUS ARSENIC DETOXIFICATION<br />

MECHANISMS: CONNECTING BIOCHEMICAL<br />

PATHWAYS WITH THEIR BIOGEOCHEMICALLY<br />

RELEVANT END PRODUCTS<br />

14:00 Popendorf, K. J.; Tanaka, T.; Pujo-Pay, M.; Lagaria, A.; Courties,<br />

C.; Conan, P.; Oriol, L.; Sofen, L. E.; Moutin, T.; Van Mooy, B. A.:<br />

SHIFTS IN THE RATIOS OF PHOSPHOLIPIDS TO NON-<br />

PHOSPHORUS LIPIDS ACROSS THE MEDITERRANEAN<br />

SEA: INDICATORS OF MICROBIAL RESPONSE TO<br />

NUTRIENT CONDITIONS<br />

FRIDAY


FRIDAY<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

14:15 Dupont, C. L.; McCrow, J. P.; Valas, R.; Walworth, N.; Hogel, S.;<br />

Palenik, B.; Johnson, Z.; Barbeau, K.; Allen, A. E.: MICROBIAL<br />

COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND GENE EXPRESSION<br />

ACROSS THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT<br />

14:30 Wear, E. K.; Carlson, C. A.; Brzezinski, M. A.; Siegel, D.; Guillocheau,<br />

N.; Windecker, L.: PATTERNS OF BACTERIOPLANKTON<br />

COMPOSITION ALONG BIOGEOCHEMICAL AND<br />

PRODUCTIVITY GRADIENTS IN THE SANTA BARBARA<br />

CHANNEL, USA<br />

14:45 Ekman, M.; Celepli, N.; Larsson, J.; Ininbergs, K.; Brindefalk, B.;<br />

Dupont, C. L.; Yooseph, S.; Goll, J.; Thiagarajan, M.; Bergman, B.:<br />

METAGENOMIC ANALYSIS OF MICROBIAL PRIMARY<br />

PRODUCERS IN THE BALTIC SEA: COMMUNITY<br />

COMPOSITION AND FUNCTIONAL ADAPTATIONS<br />

15:00 Alexander, H.; Jenkins, B. D.; Rynearson, T. A.; Saito, M. A.;<br />

Mercier, M. L.; Dyhrman, S. T.: IDENTIFYING REFERENCE<br />

GENES WITH STABLE EXPRESSION FROM HIGH<br />

THROUHGPUT SEQUENCE DATA<br />

15:15 Kustka , A. B.; Reinfelder, J. R.; Gates, C.; New, A. M.; Bidle,<br />

K. D.; Milligan, A. J.: THE METABOLIC RESPONSE<br />

OF DIATOMS TO LOW CO2 INCLUDES C4-<br />

ASSISTED PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND RECOVERY OF<br />

PHOTORESPIRATORY PRODUCTS: IMPLICATIONS FOR<br />

BLOOM SUSTENANCE<br />

SS85 ROBERT WHARTON TRIBUTE SESSION<br />

Chair(s): Diane McKnight, Diane.Mcknight@colorado.edu<br />

Peter Doran, pdoran@uic.edu<br />

Location: Room 348-349<br />

10:00 Doran, P. T.: INTRODUCTION TO SS85 ROBERT<br />

WHARTON TRIBUTE SESSION<br />

10:15 Rummel, J. D.: FROM EXOBIOLOGY TO ASTROBIOLOGY IN<br />

THE DRY VALLEYS (ASAP, TOO!): NASA, BOB, ET AL.*<br />

10:30 Meyer, M. A.: LIFE AQUATIC*<br />

10:45 McKnight, D. M.; Doran, P. T.; Fountain, A. G.; Lyons, W.<br />

B.; Priscu, J. C.; Virginia, R. A.; Wall, D. H.: WHARTON<br />

TRIBUTE: LONG-TERM MONITORING OF TWENTY<br />

YEARS OF ECOSYSTEM CHANGE IN TAYLOR VALLEY,<br />

ANTARCTICA<br />

11:00 Head, J. W.; Marchant, D.; Fassett, C.; Mustard, J. F.; Goudge, T.;<br />

Aureli, K.: WHARTON TRIBUTE - LESSONS FROM THE<br />

MCMURDO DRY VALLEY LAKES FOR CLOSED AND<br />

OPEN-BASIN LAKES ON NOACHIAN MARS: “WARM<br />

AND WET” OR “COLD AND ICY”?*<br />

11:15 Cabrol, N. A.; The High Lakes Project Team: RELEVANCE OF<br />

HIGH ALTITUDE LAKES IN THE ANDES TO EARLY<br />

MARS *<br />

11:30 Doran, P. T.; Obryk, M. K.; Priscu, J. C.: WHARTON TRIBUTE:<br />

ROBOTIC 3D BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN AN ICY WORLD<br />

ANALOG LAKE OF EAST ANTARCTICA<br />

11:45 Andersen, D. T.; McKay, C. P.; Galchenko, V. F.: LIFE UNDER ICE:<br />

EXPLORING LAKE UNTERSEE IN QUEEN MAUD LAND,<br />

ANTARCTICA*<br />

104<br />

13:30 Yang, N.; Welch, K. A.; Telfeyan, K.; Mohajerin, T. J.; Chevis, D.<br />

A.; Lyons, W. B.; Johannesson, K. H.: WHARTON TRIBUTE:<br />

ARSENIC CONCENTRATIONS AND SPECIATION IN<br />

TAYLOR VALLEY LAKE WATERS, MCMURDO DRY<br />

VALLEYS, ANTARCTICA<br />

13:45 Lyons, W. B.; Welch, K. A.; McKnight, D. M.; Doran, P. T.; Priscu, J.<br />

C.; Fountain, A. G.: GEOCHEMICAL DYNAMICS OF LAKE<br />

HOARE, ANTARCTICA: SENSITIVITY TO CLIMATE<br />

VARIATION: WHARTON TRIBUTE*<br />

14:00 Morgan-Kiss, R. M.; Bollmann, A.; Owens, S.; Gilbert, J.:<br />

WHARTON TRIBUTE: DIFFERENTIAL ENRICHMENT<br />

OF ALGAE-BACTERIA CONSORTIA FROM CHEMICALLY<br />

STRATIFIED ANTARCTIC LAKES*<br />

14:15 Howard-Williams, C.; Hawes, I.: WHARTON TRIBUTE:<br />

SEASONAL FLUCTUATIONS IN ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

CONDITIONS MAKE ANTARCTIC PONDS PLACE<br />

EXTREME DEMANDS ON MIRCOBIAL POPULATIONS*<br />

14:30 Hawes, I.; Howard-Williams, C.; Jungblutt, A.; Doran, P.:<br />

WHARTON TRIBUTE:LAMINATED PHOTOSYNTHETIC<br />

MICROBIAL MATS IN LAKE HOARE, ANTARCTICA*<br />

14:45 Kohler, T. J.; Stanish, L. F.; McKnight, D. M.: MICROBIAL MAT<br />

PERISTENCE AND CHANGE FROM TWO LONG-TERM<br />

EXPERIMENTS IN THE MCMURDO DRY VALLEY<br />

STREAMS OF ANTARCTICA<br />

15:00 Stanish, L. F.; Kohler, T. J.; Nemergut, D. R.; McKnight, D. M.:<br />

THE LEGACY CONTINUES: PROBING THE BACTERIAL<br />

COMMUNITIES IN MICROBIAL MATS ACROSS AN<br />

EXPERIMENTALLY REACTIVATED STREAM CHANNEL<br />

15:15 MacIntyre, S.; Vidal, J.: UNUSUAL PATTERNS OF<br />

STRATIFICATION IN ICE-COVERED ARCTIC LAKES*<br />

16:00 Tazaz, A. M.; Detweiler, A. M.; Bebout, B. M.; Nicholson, B.<br />

E.; Mauney, M. T.; Kelley, C. A.; Chanton, J. P.: METHANE<br />

PRODUCTION AND ISOTOPIC ANALYSIS FROM<br />

HYPERSALINE MICROBIAL MAT INCUBATIONS WHEN<br />

SULFATE REDUCTION IS INHIBITED.<br />

16:15 Mauney, M. T.; Tazaz, A. M.; Bebout, B. M.; Chanton, J. P.; Kelley,<br />

C. A.; Nicholson, B. E.; Detweiler, A. M.; Davia, A. F.: ISOTOPIC<br />

ANALYSIS OF METHANE BUBBLES OBTAINED FROM<br />

MARS ANALOGUE HYPERSALINE ENVRIONMENTS.<br />

16:30 Virginia, R. A.; Wall, D. H.: WHARTON TRIBUTE: THE<br />

LEGACY OF ANTARCTIC LAKES ON SOIL HABITATS:<br />

FROM ECOLS TO LTER*<br />

16:45 Barrett, J. E.; Virginia, R. A.; Wall, D. H.; Gooseff, M. N.;<br />

Takacs-Vesbach, C.: WHARTON TRIBUTE: THE LEGACY<br />

OF AQUEOUS ENVIRONMENTS ON SOILS OF THE<br />

MCMURDO DRY VALLEYS *<br />

17:00 Wall, D. H.; Virginia, R. A.: WHARTON TRIBUTE: THE<br />

LEGACY OF ANTARCTIC LAKES ON SOIL BIODIVERSITY<br />

AND THE LTER*<br />

17:15 Adams, B. J.; Adhikari, B. N.; Wall, D. H.; Virginia, R. A.:<br />

WHARTON TRIBUTE: THE RELEVANCE OF BOB’S DRY<br />

VALLEYS TO ASTROBIOLOGY - IF MULTICELLULAR<br />

ANIMALS LIVE(D) ON MARS, THIS IS HOW THEY<br />

COULD DO IT *<br />

(T) represents Tutorial presentations


Meeting Program<br />

AUTHOR INDEX<br />

Abazinge, M. 56<br />

Abbott, A. N. 62<br />

Abbott, D. 61<br />

Abdulla, H. 43, 46, 51, 53, 70<br />

Abdulla, H. A. 43, 46, 51, 53<br />

Abe, M. 95<br />

Abernathy, E. A. 81<br />

Abin, C. A. 66<br />

Abirhire, O. 40<br />

Able, K. W. 74<br />

Abrams, J. F. 76<br />

Abril, G. 85<br />

Accorsi, E. K. 48<br />

Acevedo-Correa, S. M. 96<br />

Achterberg, E. 50, 76, 77, 81,<br />

89, 100<br />

Achterberg, E. P. 50, 76, 77, 81, 89<br />

Ackerman, J. D. 86<br />

Adalioglu, S. 103<br />

Adamack, A. T. 71, 80<br />

Adams, B. J. 104<br />

Adams, E. J. 93<br />

Adams, J. K. 80<br />

Adams, L. 75, 83, 90<br />

Adams, L. G. 75<br />

Adhikari, B. N. 104<br />

Adhikari, P. L. 81<br />

Adjou, M. 79<br />

Agawin, N. S. 72<br />

Agersted, M. D. 98<br />

Aghassi, E. N. 67<br />

Ågren, A. 76<br />

Agrinier, P. 81<br />

Aguilar, C. 58, 61, 86<br />

Aguilar-Diaz, C. 96<br />

Aguilar-Islas, A. M. 77<br />

Ahmad, H. 90<br />

Ahsan, M. 40<br />

Aicher, A. C. 87<br />

Aiello, I. 61<br />

Aigars, J. 78<br />

Aiken, G. R. 43, 46, 53, 56<br />

Ainsley, S. M. 42<br />

Akintoye, R. 61<br />

Akinwole, P. O. 62<br />

Akl, J. 72<br />

Aksnes, D. L. 102<br />

Alameddine, I. 101<br />

Al-Ansari, I. S. 86<br />

Al-Ansi, M. 86<br />

Alberts, J. J. 56<br />

Albertson, S. 58<br />

Al-Cibahy , A. 86<br />

Alexander, H. 104<br />

Alfaro, M. 98<br />

Algar, C. 71<br />

Algarin Millan, A. P. 96<br />

Allahdadi, M. 70<br />

Allee, R. J. 48<br />

Allen, A. E. 44, 91, 103, 104<br />

Allen, B. 43<br />

Allende, L. 88<br />

Allen, M. J. 41<br />

Aller, R. C. 90<br />

Allgaier, M. 86<br />

Allinger, L. E. 102<br />

Alling, V. 65<br />

Allison, B. 75<br />

Allison, M. A. 44, 46, 52, 53, 56<br />

Allison, M. D. 94, 102<br />

Al-Maslamani, I. 86<br />

Al-Moosawi, L. 72<br />

Almroth-Rosell , E. 82<br />

Al-Sofyani, A. 86<br />

Alstad, T. 97<br />

Altabet, M. A. 55<br />

Altieri, K. E. 61<br />

Altman, I. 83<br />

Aluwihare, L. I. 43, 63<br />

Alvarez-Valdez , G. 41<br />

Alves, C. 59<br />

Al-Yamani, F. 68, 86<br />

Amador, A. M. 85<br />

Aman, C. 79<br />

Amann, R. I. 77<br />

Amaral-Zettler, L. 79<br />

Ambrecht, L. H. 57<br />

Ameen, A. 64<br />

Amin, S. 41, 87<br />

Amin, S. A. 41, 87<br />

Ammerman, J. W. 73<br />

Amon, R. 46<br />

Amrani, A. 94<br />

Anagnostou, C. 59<br />

Anas, M. U. 55<br />

Anaya, J. M. 45<br />

Andersen Borg, C. M. 69<br />

Andersen, D. T. 104<br />

Andersen, K. H. 60, 69<br />

Andersen, M. E. 42<br />

Anderson, C. R. 74<br />

Anderson, E. 70<br />

Anderson, J. B. 99<br />

Anderson, P. D. 88<br />

Anderson, T. R. 81<br />

Anderson, W. 63<br />

Andersson, A. 42, 72, 78<br />

Andersson, A. F. 72<br />

Andresen, C. G. 75<br />

Andrew, A. A. 53<br />

Andrews, K. R. 57<br />

Angell, J. 101<br />

Anger, C. T. 45<br />

Angles, E. 51<br />

Annan, J. D. 69<br />

An, S. 66<br />

Anstead, A. M. 71<br />

Aoki, K. 95<br />

Apostolodis, A. 81<br />

Appikonda, S. H. 60<br />

Apple, J. 70<br />

Appling, A. P. 47<br />

Arafat, S. 86<br />

Arakawa, N. K. 63<br />

Aranda, M. 50<br />

Archer, F. I. 41<br />

Archer, S. D. 57<br />

Ardelan, M. V. 92, 93<br />

Arfken, A. 77, 95<br />

Argow, B. A. 64<br />

Arienti, T. W. 77<br />

105<br />

Arístegui, J. 72<br />

Ariza , M. 78<br />

Arkoosh , M. 46<br />

Armand, L. 57, 101<br />

Armand, L. K. 57<br />

Armbrust, E. 41, 42, 74, 87, 97, 103<br />

Armbrust, E. V. 41, 42, 74, 87, 103<br />

Armbrust, G. 103<br />

Armbrust, V. 87, 101<br />

Armitage, A. R. 67, 73, 100<br />

Arnold, W. A. 45<br />

Arnosti , C. 53<br />

Arnott, S. 62, 70<br />

Arnott, S. A. 62<br />

Arora, V. 47<br />

Arriola, J. 67, 84<br />

Arriola, J. M. 67<br />

Arthur, J. M. 47<br />

Artigas, F. 85<br />

Arts, M. T. 88<br />

Arunachalam, L. 70<br />

Ascani, F. 72<br />

Asmala, E. 46, 47<br />

Asper, V. L. 53<br />

Assireu, A. 85<br />

Assmy, P. 45<br />

Astor, Y. 82<br />

Atamanchuk , D. 82<br />

Atamanchuk, D. 81<br />

Atkinson, D. 55<br />

Attermeyer, K. 86, 93<br />

Auclair, J. C. 96<br />

Aukamp, J. 93<br />

Aumack, C. 45, 65<br />

Aumack, C. F. 45<br />

Aureli, K. 104<br />

Auro, M. E. 44, 62<br />

Autio, R. 46, 47<br />

Avery, D. E. 55<br />

Avery, G. B. 82, 83, 91<br />

Azam, F. 41, 53, 87<br />

B<br />

Baars, O. 51<br />

Babbin, A. R. 82, 91, 101<br />

Baca, S. T. 70<br />

Bachman, B. 40, 56<br />

Bachman, B. E. 40<br />

Bach, W. 100<br />

Bade, D. L. 101<br />

Bado, P. 90<br />

Badylak, S. 83<br />

Bae, H. S. 55, 95<br />

Baer, S. E. 101<br />

Baeye, M. 53<br />

Bahkt, H. B. 96<br />

Bailey, J. L. 55<br />

Bailey, S. 80, 102<br />

Bailey, S. A. 80, 102<br />

Bailleul, B. 96<br />

Baines, S. B. 50, 55, 57<br />

Baker, B. C. 54<br />

Baker, K. 91<br />

Baker, L. J. 41<br />

Bakker, D. C. 44<br />

Balagué, V. 77<br />

Balch, B. 61<br />

Balch, W. M. 44, 56<br />

Bale, N. 82, 101<br />

Ball, G. 43, 63<br />

Ball, G. I. 63<br />

Ball, S. C. 88<br />

Båmstedt, U. 78, 102<br />

Banas, N. 71<br />

Bandyopadhyay , D. 96<br />

Baptista, A. 62, 75, 88, 90<br />

Baptista, A. M. 88, 90<br />

Barba, A. 52<br />

Barbeau, K. 51, 57, 103, 104<br />

Barbeau, K. A. 51, 57, 103<br />

Barber, M. 60<br />

Barbosa, J. G. 97<br />

Baresel, C. 67, 68<br />

Bargu-Ates, S. 77<br />

Bargu, S. 45, 49, 53, 96<br />

Barlow, J. 48<br />

Barrett, J. E. 104<br />

Barron , M. G. 95<br />

Barron, R. K. 42<br />

Barros, N. 85<br />

Barry, J. P. 52, 72<br />

Bartleson, R. D. 75<br />

Bartlett, D. H. 98<br />

Bartley, M. 50<br />

Bartoli, M. 78, 97<br />

Basedow, S. L. 102<br />

Bastedo, J. 59<br />

Bastos, A. 85<br />

Bastviken, D. 70, 76, 81<br />

Basu, S. 52<br />

Batchelder, H. 61<br />

Bates, N. R. 44<br />

Bateson, D. E. 85<br />

Battin, T. J. 43<br />

Batt, R. D. 100<br />

Baumann, H. 40, 47, 52, 83, 89<br />

Baumann, M. S. 81<br />

Baumer-Pendergast, D. 75<br />

Baums, I. B. 73<br />

Baustian, M. M. 86<br />

Bayha, K. M. 59<br />

Baylor, V. D. 55<br />

Beall, B. F. 45<br />

Beamish, R. J. 83<br />

Beard, D. 70<br />

Beare, D. 50<br />

Bear, S. T. 91<br />

Beatty, C. M. 94<br />

Beaudoin, D. J. 41<br />

Beauregard, A. Y. 45<br />

Bebout, B. M. 61, 104<br />

Becker, A. 75<br />

Becker, J. W. 63<br />

Beck, M. 51<br />

Bedard, L. 98<br />

Beddick, D. 64, 72, 88<br />

Beddick, D. L. 64, 88<br />

Beddick Jr., D. L. 55<br />

Beeman, J. W. 42<br />

Befus, K. M. 84, 92<br />

Beijbom, B. 54<br />

Beisner, B. E. 54, 55<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Bélanger, C. 96<br />

Belharet,, M. 54<br />

Belicka, L. 91<br />

Bell, D. W. 81<br />

Bellerby, R. G. 81<br />

Bell, M. T. 73<br />

Beltran, J. 97<br />

Belyaeva, A. M. 82<br />

Benaka, L. 60<br />

Benavides, M. 72<br />

Bender, S. 103<br />

Bender, S. J. 103<br />

Bendif, E. 44<br />

Bendtsen, J. 79<br />

Benfield, M. 73, 102<br />

Benfield, M. C. 73, 102<br />

Benitez-Nelson, C. 56, 62, 68, 74<br />

Benitez-Nelson, C. R. 56, 68<br />

Benner, R. 41, 43, 56<br />

Bennett, J. M. 101<br />

Bennett, M. 62<br />

Bennett, W. A. 98<br />

Bennington, V. 102<br />

Benolkin, A. 61<br />

Bensoussan, N. 81<br />

Benstead, J. P. 76, 79, 88<br />

Bentzon-Tilia, M. 72, 91<br />

Beramaschi, B. A. 66<br />

Berelson, W. M. 48<br />

Bergamaschi, B. 75, 93, 95<br />

Bergamaschi, B. A. 75, 93<br />

Berge, J. 56<br />

Berges, B. J. 100<br />

Berges, J. A. 50, 58, 87<br />

Berggren, M. 46, 53<br />

Bergman, B. 104<br />

Berg, P. 54, 81<br />

Bergsma, E. W. 77<br />

Berke, S. K. 65<br />

Bernal, M. 83<br />

Bernard, A. 63, 93<br />

Bernardes, M. C. 85<br />

Bernard, R. 58, 71, 101<br />

Bernard, R. J. 58, 101<br />

Bernhard, A. E. 71<br />

Bernhard, J. M. 41<br />

Bernhardt, E. S. 71, 98<br />

Bernhardt, P. 62, 91<br />

Bernhardt, P. W. 91<br />

Bernier, J. C. 99<br />

Bernot, M. J. 95<br />

Berthiaume, C. 97, 103<br />

Bertilsson, S. 72, 100<br />

Berube, P. M. 63<br />

Besemer, K. 43<br />

Beyer, J. 69, 75, 80<br />

Beyer, J. E. 69, 75<br />

Beyhan, S. 96<br />

Bhattarai, D. 42<br />

Bhavya, P. S. 78<br />

Bianchi, T. S. 56, 65<br />

Bianco, C. 48<br />

Bibby, T. S. 50, 72, 100<br />

Bickel, S. L. 41, 62<br />

Biddanda, B. A. 75, 85<br />

Bidigare, R. R. 45, 53<br />

Bidle, K. D. 44, 96, 104<br />

Bidner, R. J. 40<br />

Biegala, I. 72<br />

Biegala, I. C. 72<br />

Bienfang, P. 50<br />

Bienlien, L. M. 61<br />

Bighash, P. 99<br />

Bi, H. 55, 102<br />

Biller, D. V. 51<br />

Bingham, B. L. 41<br />

Bingham-Hill, A. S. 74<br />

Birch, J. 81<br />

Birkel, S. D. 54<br />

Birsa, L. M. 47<br />

Bishop, J. K. 63, 80, 93<br />

Bishop, K. 76<br />

Biswas, H. 96<br />

Bitterwolf, S. A. 61<br />

Bizsel, K. C. 92, 103<br />

Bizsel, N. 92, 93, 103<br />

Bjerg, J. J. 77<br />

Bjerring, R. 85<br />

Blachowiak-Samolyk, K. 102<br />

Blain, C. A. 99<br />

Blain, S. 84, 100, 101<br />

Blakelock, G. C. 46<br />

Blanar, C. A. 89<br />

Blanchard, P. 49<br />

Blanco-Ameijeiras, S. 44<br />

Blanco-Bercial, L. 59, 79<br />

Blanco, S. 92<br />

Blaser, S. 58<br />

Blasius, B. 44<br />

Blaud, B. M. 79<br />

Blough, N. V. 53<br />

Bluhm, K. 45<br />

Blumentritt, D. 45<br />

Bockelmann, F. D. 99<br />

Bodker, J. E. 100<br />

Boegman, L. 86<br />

Boehm, A. 62<br />

Boehrer, B. 86<br />

Boeing, W. J. 50, 79<br />

Bogard, M. B. 45<br />

Bogard, M. J. 76<br />

Bohrmann, G. 90<br />

Boiteau, R. 51<br />

Bokuniewicz , H. 74<br />

Boldt, J. 83<br />

Boling, W. B. 66<br />

Bollmann, A. 101, 104<br />

Bombar, D. 72<br />

Bonaglia, S. 72, 78, 97<br />

Bona, S. 56<br />

Bootsma, H. 81<br />

Bootsma, M. J. 58<br />

Borde, A. B. 60<br />

Borisov, S. M. 100<br />

Borja, A. 50<br />

Borkman, D. G. 42<br />

Boros, G. 98<br />

Borsay Horowitz, D. 47<br />

Borsje, B. 69<br />

Bos, J. 58<br />

Boss, E. 80<br />

Bossenbroek, J. M. 80<br />

Bothner, M. H. 84<br />

Botrel, M. 55<br />

106<br />

Böttjer, D. 41<br />

Bouchard, J. N. 74<br />

Bouffard, D. 86<br />

Bouman, H. 94<br />

Bouma, T. J. 77<br />

Bouquet , J. M. 67<br />

Bourque, J. R. 82, 88<br />

Boutet, L. 76<br />

Boutorh, J. 101<br />

Boutrif, M. 81<br />

Bowen, J. 61, 93, 101<br />

Bowen, J. L. 93, 101<br />

Bowen, R. E. 86<br />

Bowie, A. 51, 84, 100<br />

Bowie, A. R. 84, 100<br />

Bowler, B. C. 44<br />

Bowman, K. L. 76, 77<br />

Bowman, M. M. 46, 63<br />

Boyd, P. 56, 81, 84<br />

Boyd, P. W. 81, 84<br />

Boyd, T. J. 66<br />

Boye, M. 76<br />

Boyer, G. L. 48, 74<br />

Boyle, E. A. 51, 76<br />

Boylen, C. W. 78, 88, 98<br />

Bracher, A. 84<br />

Bradley, P. 83<br />

Brady, D. C. 50, 71<br />

Braeckman, U. 72<br />

Brahamsha, B. 87, 96, 103<br />

Brahamsha, B. M. 103<br />

Brand, A. 54<br />

Brandt, M. E. 70<br />

Brandt, S. B. 71, 88<br />

Brannon, E. Q. 61<br />

Branstrator, D. K. 80<br />

Bravo, H. R. 71, 88<br />

Breed, C. 45<br />

Breger, D. 61<br />

Breitbart, M. 77<br />

Breland, M. S. 70<br />

Bremigan, M. T. 79<br />

Brenkert, K. 60<br />

Brenneis, T. 101<br />

Brenner, D. C. 84<br />

Brenner, M. 102<br />

Brentrup, J. A. 78, 96<br />

Brett, M. T. 55<br />

Brey, J. A. 44<br />

Briggs, C. J. 41<br />

Briggs, K. 53<br />

Bright, K. J. 103<br />

Brill, R. W. 70<br />

Brindefalk, B. 104<br />

Brin, L. D. 55<br />

Briseño-Avena, C. 102<br />

Briski, E. 80<br />

Bristow, L. 82<br />

Bristow, L. A. 82<br />

Britt, J. 69<br />

Brock, L. 64, 92<br />

Brock, L. M. 92<br />

Brody, S. 67, 100<br />

Brody, S. D. 100<br />

Broek, T. A. 98<br />

Bronk, D. A. 55, 72, 80, 91, 101<br />

Brooks, B. W. 45, 48, 92<br />

Brooks, J. M. 65<br />

Brooks, M. L. 78<br />

Brothers, S. M. 85<br />

Brovold, S. 102<br />

Browman, H. I. 59<br />

Brown, A. T. 57<br />

Brown, C. A. 94<br />

Brown, C. W. 71, 89<br />

Brown, G. 75<br />

Browning, T. 94<br />

Brown, J. M. 88<br />

Brown, M. E. 80<br />

Brown, S. D. 55<br />

Brown, S. M. 95<br />

Brown, T. N. 102<br />

Brown, T. R. 58<br />

Brubaker, J. M. 99<br />

Brüchert , V. 78<br />

Brüchert, V. 72, 97<br />

Bruckerhoff, L. A. 80<br />

Brucks, E. 77<br />

Brulport, J. P. 100<br />

Brumsack, H. 51<br />

Brun, F. G. 97<br />

Bruno, E. 69<br />

Brush, M. J. 71<br />

Brutemark, A. 67, 78<br />

Bruyant, F. 65<br />

Bryan, J. 56<br />

Bryant, L. D. 54<br />

Brym, A. J. 63<br />

Brzezinski, M. A. 50, 57, 104<br />

Bucciarelli, E. 81, 100, 101<br />

Buchalski, C. 60<br />

Büchel, C. 86<br />

Buchheister, A. 83<br />

Buchwald, C. 82<br />

Buck, C. 58, 77<br />

Buck, C. S. 77<br />

Buck, K. 51, 52, 72<br />

Buck, K. N. 51<br />

Buck, K. R. 52<br />

Bucklin, A. 59, 79<br />

Buck, T. L. 82<br />

Bucolo, P. 56, 98<br />

Buddhadev, K. 60<br />

Budy, P. 101<br />

Buermans, J. 100<br />

Buesseler, K. O. 48, 56, 57, 80, 81<br />

Buffam, I. 76<br />

Buitenhuis, E. 55<br />

Bullerjahn, G. S. 45, 101<br />

Bull, J. K. 76<br />

Bundy, A. 83<br />

Bundy, R. M. 51, 57<br />

Bunnel, D. 79<br />

Bunting, L. 45<br />

Burd, A. B. 56, 81, 103<br />

Burdige, D. J. 89<br />

Burg, R. 74<br />

Burke, S. M. 88<br />

Burkhardt, W. 54<br />

Burnett, W. C. 84<br />

Burns, K. P. 64<br />

Burris, Z. 55, 69<br />

Burris, Z. P. 69<br />

Burt, J. 86


Meeting Program<br />

Bush, C. H. 45<br />

Bushek, D. 102<br />

Bushnell, P. G. 70<br />

Buskey, E. 51, 52, 56, 60, 93<br />

Buskey, E. J. 51, 52, 93<br />

Bussan, D. D. 65<br />

Buster, N. A. 99<br />

Butler, M. G. 54<br />

Butman, D. 46, 65<br />

Butterworth, M. 73<br />

Butterworth, M. R. 73<br />

Button, D. K. 58<br />

Byars, B. W. 45<br />

Byars, N. L. 84<br />

Byron, D. 73<br />

Byrum, C. 65<br />

C<br />

Cabaniss, S. E. 51<br />

Cable, J. E. 44, 56, 67, 75<br />

Cabria, H. B. 84<br />

Cabrol, J. 66<br />

Cabrol, N. A. 104<br />

Cáceres-Charneco, R. I. 95<br />

Cadkin, T. A. 58<br />

Caffrey, J. M. 73<br />

Cai, M. 63, 102<br />

Cai, W. J. 44, 56<br />

Cai, Y. 76, 77<br />

Calabro, R. 96<br />

Calado, R. 98<br />

Calbat, K. A. 99<br />

Calci, K. R. 54<br />

Caldwell, M. 44<br />

Callaghan, A. V. 66<br />

Calleja, M. L. 80<br />

Callender, R. 56<br />

Callies, U. 99<br />

Cambazoglu, M. K. 99<br />

Cameron, J. F. 98<br />

Cammie , H. 56<br />

Campagna, S. R. 53, 81<br />

Campbell, B. A. 47<br />

Campbell, D. 59<br />

Campbell, J. 46<br />

Campbell, L. 57, 83, 92, 103<br />

Campeau, A. 76<br />

Canals, M. F. 85, 99<br />

Canfield, D. E. 82<br />

Canuel, E. 56<br />

Cao, F. 63<br />

Cao, X. 43<br />

Capers, J. W. 64<br />

Cappio, L. 62<br />

Capps, E. M. 80<br />

Cardenas, M. B. 72, 92<br />

Cardenas, M. R. 84<br />

Cardille, J. A. 53<br />

Cardinal, D. 92, 100<br />

Cardon, Z. G. 68<br />

Cardoso, S. 85, 93<br />

Cardoso, S. J. 93<br />

Carey, A. E. 44<br />

Carey, J. C. 87<br />

Carey, M. P. 79<br />

Carini, S. A. 71, 77<br />

Carlin, J. A. 99<br />

carlotti, F. 101<br />

Carlotti, F. 93, 101<br />

Carlson, C. A. 50, 58, 77, 79, 104<br />

Carlson, R. 75<br />

Carmichael, R. H. 54, 87, 90<br />

Carmon, B. N. 60<br />

Carnegie, R. 61<br />

Caron, D. A. 48, 69, 75<br />

Carpenter, E. J. 44, 72<br />

Carpenter, S. R. 85, 100<br />

Carrasco, G. 51, 76<br />

Carrasco, G. G. 51<br />

Carrera Montalvo, A. 59<br />

Carrere, L. 91<br />

Carstens, C. 68<br />

Carter, M. L. 48<br />

Carton, X. 76<br />

Cartwright, G. 53<br />

Carver Dionne, L. 62<br />

Casacuberta, N. 76<br />

Casas-Monroy, O. 80<br />

Casciotti, K. L. 82, 101<br />

Caskey, S. 60<br />

Casper, P. 95<br />

Cassar, N. 74<br />

Castellani, C. 55<br />

Castendyk, D. 51, 86<br />

Castendyk, D. N. 86<br />

Castrillejo, M. 77<br />

Castro, S. 91<br />

Cataldo, D. 46<br />

Cathalot, C. 81<br />

Cato, H. S. 75, 94<br />

Cattaneo, A. 74, 78<br />

Cattolico, R. A. 90<br />

Cavagna, A. 92, 100, 101<br />

Cavagna, A. J. 92, 101<br />

Cawley, K. 42, 46<br />

Cawley, K. M. 46<br />

Cebrian, J. 73, 79, 82, 98<br />

Celepli, N. 104<br />

Celis-Salgado, M. P. 55<br />

Cernadas, S. 82<br />

Cerrato, R. M. 47<br />

Cetrulo, B. B. 64<br />

Chadderton, W. L. 50<br />

Chaillou, G. 84<br />

Chakraborty, S. 94<br />

Chamberlin, D. W. 61<br />

Chambers, C. R. 64<br />

Chambliss, C. K. 45<br />

Chandler, C. L. 94, 102<br />

Chandra, S. 80<br />

Chang, B. 82, 91<br />

Chang, B. X. 91<br />

Chang, W. 56<br />

Chanton, J. 55, 61, 91, 94, 104<br />

Chanton, J. P. 61, 104<br />

Chapman, D. 89<br />

Chapman, L. J. 98<br />

Chapman, P. 90<br />

Chappell, P. D. 59, 97, 103<br />

Chappel, S. L. 84<br />

Chardón, P. 99<br />

Charette, M. A. 54, 81<br />

107<br />

Charles, F. 79<br />

Chavez, F. P. 101<br />

Cha, Y. 75<br />

Cheah, W. 84<br />

Checkey, D. M. 102<br />

Checkley, D. 48, 83, 102<br />

Checkley, D. M. 48<br />

Cheever, B. M. 45, 46<br />

Chekalyuk, A. 57, 81<br />

Chen, C. S. 45<br />

Chen, F. 96<br />

Chen, G. 50<br />

Chen, H. 43, 51, 60, 63<br />

Chen, M. 69, 77<br />

Chen , N. 46<br />

Chen, N. 63, 97<br />

CHEN, N. 103<br />

Chennu, A. 54, 81<br />

Chen, P. 53<br />

Chen, R. F. 56, 75, 76, 84, 93, 94<br />

Chen, X. 50, 55<br />

Chen, Y. W. 87<br />

Cherrier, J. 56<br />

Cherry, J. A. 99<br />

Cherry, M. L. 61<br />

Cherubin, L. 58, 60, 69<br />

Cherubin, L. M. 58<br />

Cheruvelil , K. S. 88<br />

Cheruvelil, K. S. 44, 98<br />

Cheruvilil, K. S. 85<br />

Chesney, E. 61<br />

Cheung, I. S. 64<br />

Chever, F. 100<br />

Chevis, D. A. 104<br />

Chheng, P. 55<br />

Chiang, T. 97<br />

Chien, C. 94<br />

Chigbu, P. 50, 67, 97<br />

CHIGBU, P. 103<br />

Childers, D. L. 54<br />

Childers, G. W. 91, 94<br />

Chilton, L. 48, 49<br />

Chin, W. C. 45<br />

Chipman, L. 54, 90<br />

Chipman, L. E. 90<br />

Chiriboga, F. 78<br />

Chisholm, S. 51, 63<br />

Chisholm, S. W. 63<br />

Chmiel, H. 93<br />

Choi, H. Y. 48<br />

Choi, J. 66, 103<br />

Choi, J. K. 103<br />

Choi, K. 79, 89<br />

Chow, C. 87<br />

Choy, E. 79<br />

Chraïbi, V. 102<br />

Chraibi, V. L. 102<br />

Christensen, J. H. 53<br />

Christensen, J. T. 79<br />

Christensen, S. J. 45<br />

Christenson, E. A. 51<br />

Christiaen, B. 73, 79, 82, 103<br />

Christian, A. 52, 69, 86, 87, 88, 95<br />

Christian, A. D. 52, 69, 86, 88, 95<br />

Christie, A. E. 59<br />

Christl, M. 76<br />

Christmas, A. F. 70<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Christoffers, J. 44<br />

Chuang, C. Y. 45<br />

Church, C. 94<br />

Church, M. J. 41, 57, 67, 72<br />

Chu, S. N. 52<br />

Cialino, K. T. 76<br />

Cicchetti, G. 48, 72<br />

Cieslucinski, M. 96<br />

Cimbleris, A. 85<br />

Cira, E. 60<br />

Cisternas-Novoa, C. 89<br />

Cizdziel, J. V. 65<br />

Clark, C. M. 78<br />

Clark, D. R. 72<br />

Clark, N. A. 70<br />

Clark, R. 99<br />

Claustre, H. 80, 94<br />

Clayton, S. A. 40<br />

Cleary, A. C. 98<br />

Clercin, N. 92<br />

Clevinger, C. 91, 101<br />

Clevinger, C. C. 101<br />

Cline, T. 102<br />

Clinton, S. M. 69<br />

Close, H. G. 48<br />

Closset, I. 92, 100<br />

Coblentz, K. E. 88<br />

Cochlan, W. p. 48<br />

Cockshutt, A. M. 65<br />

Coe, A. 51<br />

Coe, J. D. 46, 63<br />

Coesel, S. 87<br />

Coffin, R. B. 66<br />

Coffroth, M. A. 41<br />

Cohen, A. L. 82, 94<br />

Cohen, C. S. 59, 88<br />

Colbert, S. L. 62<br />

Cole, A. 85<br />

Cole Ekberg, M. 96<br />

Cole, J. J. 85, 100<br />

Cole, K. M. 92<br />

Coles, V. 72, 77, 103<br />

Coles, V. J. 72, 103<br />

Coletti, L. 75, 81, 100<br />

Collier, J. L. 98<br />

Collier, L. J. 74<br />

Collingsworth, P. D. 79<br />

Collin, H. 72<br />

Collins, J. R. 100<br />

Coll, M. 77<br />

Colon-Muller, A. N. 70<br />

Cólon-Rivera, R. J. 70<br />

Coloso, J. J. 55, 76, 85, 98<br />

Compton, J. E. 87<br />

Comtat, M. 100<br />

Comte, J. 78<br />

Conan, P. 103<br />

Condon, N. E. 52<br />

Condon, R. H. 47, 48, 56, 90, 103<br />

Conley, D. 59, 72, 79<br />

Conley, D. J. 59, 72<br />

Conley, R. 45, 65<br />

Conlon, L. 60, 69, 93<br />

Conmy, R. 93<br />

Connelly, D. 89, 90, 100<br />

Connelly, D. P. 89, 90<br />

Connelly, T. 46, 66, 91, 101


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Connelly, T. L. 46, 101<br />

Connolly, T. 71<br />

Connors, K. A. 45<br />

Conrad, P. 52<br />

Conrad, S. 44, 91<br />

Conrad, S. H. 44<br />

Conroy, B. J. 48<br />

Conroy, B. O. 94<br />

Conroy, J. 78, 79<br />

Conroy, J. D. 78<br />

Contreira Pereira, L. 58, 100<br />

Cook, A. 83<br />

Cooke, R. M. 80<br />

Cook, K. 81<br />

Cook, P. 55, 76, 86<br />

Cook, P. L. 76<br />

Cook, S. 64, 102<br />

Cook, S. B. 64<br />

Coolen, M. 87<br />

Cooper, J. T. 59, 91<br />

Cooper, R. 55, 98<br />

Cooper, R. N. 55<br />

Cooper, W. J. 53<br />

Cooray, A. T. 43, 100<br />

Copeman, L. 89<br />

Corcoran, A. A. 48, 68, 103<br />

Cordes, E. E. 73<br />

Corliss, B. H. 89<br />

Corman, J. 47, 60, 82<br />

Corman, J. R. 47<br />

Cormier, N. 95<br />

Corno, G. 41<br />

Cornwell, J. 45, 47, 53, 60, 70, 97<br />

Cornwell, J. C. 47, 53, 60, 97<br />

Corredor, J. E. 64<br />

Corsi, S. R. 78<br />

Cory, R. M. 43<br />

Costa Leal, M. 98<br />

Costas, E. 76<br />

Costea, G. 52<br />

Cote, J. M. 66<br />

Cothias , G. E. 88<br />

Cotner, J. B. 47, 66<br />

Cottingham, G. A. 60<br />

Cottrell, M. T. 47, 66, 68<br />

Cournoyer, B. L. 55<br />

Courties, C. 103<br />

Couturier, M. 84<br />

Coveney, K. E. 85<br />

Cowan, J. H. 71<br />

Cowan, J. L. 73<br />

Cowen, R. K. 102<br />

Coyne, K. J. 48, 74<br />

Cozzoli, F. 77<br />

Craft, C. B. 40<br />

Craig, C. 59, 88<br />

Craig, J. K. 71<br />

Craig, N. 98<br />

Cramer, C. 56, 75<br />

Cramer, C. B. 56<br />

Cram, J. 87<br />

Crandall, J. B. 41<br />

Crawford, M. K. 88<br />

Creach, V. 41<br />

Creamer, K. P. 55, 76<br />

Creed, I. F. 74<br />

Creekmore, S. 71, 83<br />

Crim, R. N. 87<br />

Cronin, K. 50, 69<br />

Crosswell, J. R. 54<br />

Cross, W. F. 88<br />

Crump, B. 46, 47, 72, 77, 83, 97<br />

Crump, B. C. 46, 47, 83, 97<br />

Cruz-Marrero, W. 88<br />

Cuceiro, F. 91<br />

Cudmore, B. C. 80<br />

Cuhel, R. 58, 61, 86<br />

Cuhel, R. L. 58, 86<br />

Cuker, B. E. 70<br />

Culbertson, J. B. 73<br />

Cullen, J. J. 94<br />

Culley, A. I. 103<br />

Cumming, B. F. 55<br />

Cummings, E. G. 62<br />

Curchitser, E. 40, 83<br />

Curchitser, E. N. 83<br />

Curran, M. C. 61<br />

Currier, R. D. 48<br />

Currie, W. J. 102<br />

Curtin, T. M. 62<br />

Curtis, J. H. 102<br />

Cvetkovic, V. 68<br />

Cyterski, M. 78<br />

D<br />

Daase, M. 45<br />

Dabundo, R. C. 91<br />

Dahlgren, R. A. 66<br />

Dainard, P. G. 42<br />

Dale, G. 48<br />

Daley, M. 43, 55<br />

Daley, M. C. 43<br />

Dalsgaard, T. 72, 82<br />

Damashek, J. 93<br />

Dam, H. G. 55, 69, 83<br />

Dammrich, T. 53, 89<br />

Dandurand, K. 67<br />

D’Angelo, C. 86<br />

Daniel, J. 79<br />

daniels, C. A. 41<br />

Daniels, E. 103<br />

Daniels, E. F. 103<br />

Danielson, R. 61<br />

Dapremont, A. M. 92<br />

Darmoul, Y. 81<br />

Darrow, E. S. 54, 90<br />

D’Asaro, E. A. 57<br />

Das, B. 55<br />

da Silva, G. 75<br />

Daugbjerg, N. 81<br />

Davia, A. F. 104<br />

David, A. 75<br />

David, G. L. 77<br />

Davies, D. 101<br />

Davies, J. 40<br />

Davies, P. L. 57<br />

Davila, A. F. 61<br />

Davis, C. 57, 58, 91<br />

Davis, C. O. 57<br />

Davis, C. S. 58<br />

Davis, K. 69, 86<br />

Davis , K. A. 71<br />

108<br />

Davis, K. A. 86<br />

Davis, M. E. 42<br />

Davison, I. R. 40<br />

Davison, P. C. 48<br />

Davis, R. E. 58, 92<br />

Davis, S. L. 92<br />

Dean, H. A. 60<br />

de Baar, H. 76, 84<br />

de Baar, H. J. 84<br />

de Beer, D. 81<br />

Deborah, D. K. 85<br />

De Brabandere, L. 82<br />

de Brauwere, A. 77<br />

de Buron, I. 60<br />

De Carlo, E. H. 84<br />

Decker, M. B. 47, 52<br />

Deeds, J. R. 83<br />

Defore, A. L. 85<br />

Degraer, S. 40, 50, 59<br />

DeGrandpre, M. D. 90, 94<br />

DeGrasse, S. 91<br />

DeGree, A. A. 70<br />

Dehairs, F. 72, 92, 100, 101<br />

Deheyn, D. D. 62<br />

Deibel, D. 51<br />

De Jesus, R. 89<br />

de Jong, J. 76<br />

DeLand, S. E. 62<br />

Delaney, J. 58<br />

De La Rocha, C. L. 56<br />

DeLaune, R. D. 53<br />

del Giorgio, P. A. 46, 53, 55, 68, 76,<br />

85, 87<br />

Del Giorgio, P. A. 76<br />

Delizo, L. M. 92<br />

Dellapenna, T. M. 99<br />

Delong, E. F. 82<br />

DeLong, E. F. 63, 89<br />

Del Vecchio, R. 53<br />

De Martini, F. 94<br />

DeMartini, F. 56<br />

de Mesel, I. 69<br />

Demet, K. L. 62<br />

Demi, L. M. 79<br />

Demir-Hilton, E. 81<br />

Demopoulos, A. J. 95<br />

Demopoulos, A. W. 82, 88<br />

Dempsey, C. M. 65<br />

de Mutsert, K. 71<br />

Denfeld, B. 93<br />

Deng, W. 89<br />

Denham, S. 82<br />

Densmore, B. K. 42<br />

Denson, M. R. 60<br />

De Palma-Dow, A. A. 88<br />

Depasquale, E. 52<br />

DePasquale, E. L. 89<br />

DePass, C. C. 62<br />

DePetro, P. A. 71<br />

DePinto, J. 50, 51<br />

DePinto, J. V. 51<br />

dePutron, S. J. 94<br />

Derry, A. 76<br />

DeSanti, B. 91<br />

de Sieyes, N. 62<br />

De Stasio, B. 67<br />

Destouni, G. 68<br />

Detweiler, A. M. 61, 104<br />

Deutsch, B. 65, 78<br />

Deutsch, C. 57, 72<br />

Deutsch, C. A. 57<br />

Deutsch, E. S. 101<br />

Devereux, R. 55, 64, 72<br />

de Verneil, A. 57<br />

Devol, A. 82, 91, 101<br />

Devol, A. H. 91<br />

de Vriend, H. J. 77<br />

DeWitt, T. H. 62<br />

Deyle, E. 40, 83<br />

Deyle, E. R. 40, 83<br />

Diaz, L. 45<br />

Diaz-Negron, E. M. 96<br />

Diaz, R. J. 72<br />

DiBacco, C. 59, 80<br />

DiBona, P. 75<br />

DiDomenico, G. 40<br />

Diefenderfer, H. L. 60<br />

Diercks, A. R. 53<br />

Dietrich, J. 46<br />

Dietsch, B. J. 42<br />

Dietze, H. 72<br />

Diez, C. E. 59<br />

DiFalco, S. 62<br />

di Fiori, E. 46<br />

Dijkstra, J. T. 69, 77<br />

Dike, C. 53<br />

Dillon, K. S. 55<br />

Dillon, P. J. 88<br />

DiMarco, S. D. 99<br />

DiMarco, S. F. 65, 71, 90, 99<br />

DiMauro, R. 102<br />

Dimond, J. L. 41<br />

Dimova, N. T. 90<br />

Dinasquet, J. 100<br />

Dindo, J. D. 65<br />

Dingess, E. C. 82<br />

Ding, Y. 97<br />

Dinnel, P. 61<br />

Dinniman, M. S. 100<br />

Dippner, J. W. 54<br />

Ditchfield, A. K. 70<br />

Di Toro, D. M. 50, 71<br />

Dittmar, T. 43, 44, 47, 51, 53<br />

DiTullio, G. 44, 65, 101<br />

DiTullio, G. R. 44, 101<br />

Dixon, L. K. 92<br />

Doan, N. H. 92<br />

Dobarro, J. A. 71<br />

Dobbs, F. C. 52, 89<br />

Doblin, M. 51<br />

Dobson, C. 40<br />

Doherty, M. 47, 72, 77, 97<br />

Doherty, O. 83<br />

Dolan, J. R. 69<br />

Doll, C. R. 48<br />

Domangue, S. 91<br />

Donaghay, P. 100<br />

Donahue, M. 85<br />

Donald, D. B. 45<br />

Donat, J. R. 51<br />

Doney, S. 56, 57, 72<br />

Doney, S. C. 56, 72<br />

Dong, Q. 85<br />

Dong, Y. 41


Meeting Program<br />

Donis, D. 81<br />

Donnelly, J. P. 64<br />

Donnelly, M. S. 84<br />

Doran, P. 104<br />

Doran, P. T. 104<br />

Doremus, D. R. 75<br />

Dorgan, K. M. 77<br />

Dornhoffer, T. M. 66<br />

Dorval, E. 86, 87<br />

do Santos Afonso, M. 46<br />

Doubleday, A. J. 47, 69<br />

Doughty, C. L. 73<br />

d’Ovidio, F. 84<br />

Downer, M. M. 62<br />

Downing, B. 66, 75, 93, 95<br />

Downing, B. D. 66, 75, 93<br />

Downing, J. A.<br />

50, 57, 82, 86, 95, 102<br />

Downs, E. E. 70<br />

Doyle, J. J. 52<br />

Doyle, T. W. 42<br />

Drakare, S. 74<br />

Drake, J. M. 52, 80<br />

Drake, T. W. 65<br />

Drapeau, D. T. 44<br />

Drazen, J. C. 52<br />

Drinkwater, K. F. 83<br />

Driza, K. M. 85<br />

Drouillard, K. G. 102<br />

Druffel, E. 43, 44, 46<br />

Druffel, E. R. 44, 46<br />

Druschel, G. 92<br />

D’Sa, E. J. 63<br />

Duan, S. 63<br />

Duarte, C. M. 47<br />

Du, B. 45<br />

Dubilier, N. 100<br />

Dubinenkov, I. V. 66<br />

Duchêne, J. C. 83<br />

Duernberger, K. A. 77<br />

Duff, J. H. 66<br />

Duffy, A. E. 93<br />

Duffy, M. A. 61<br />

Dugdale, R. 58, 78<br />

Dugdale, R. C. 78<br />

Duguay, L. 60<br />

Dulaiova, H. 84<br />

Dulaquais, G. R. 76<br />

du Mais, R. M. 55<br />

Dumas, F. 99<br />

Duncan, J. M. 79<br />

Dunham, J. 69<br />

Dunlap, T. M. 67<br />

Dunne, J. P. 42, 48, 81<br />

Dunton, K. H. 46, 56, 66, 98<br />

Dupont, c. L. 44<br />

Dupont, C. L. 103, 104<br />

Duran, D. 79<br />

Durand, I. 84<br />

Durand, J. M. 74<br />

Durbin, E. G. 98<br />

Durham, B. P. 103<br />

Durkin, C. A. 103<br />

Duteil, O. 77<br />

Dutkiewicz, S. 40<br />

Dutz , J. 67<br />

Duval, T. P. 64<br />

Dwire, K. 60<br />

Dwyer, A. 67<br />

Dyda, R. Y. 63, 66<br />

Dyer, F. 51<br />

Dyhrman, S. T.<br />

58, 63, 74, 91, 103, 104<br />

Dykes, J. D. 90<br />

Dziallas, C. 41<br />

Dzwonkowski, B. 87<br />

E<br />

Earl, S. 54<br />

Easton, A. 69, 75, 80<br />

Easton, A. C. 69, 75<br />

Easton, E. E. 72<br />

Easton, J. 69, 75, 80<br />

Easton, J. D. 69, 75<br />

Ebling, A. M. 77<br />

Echevarria Roman, Y. 75<br />

Echevarría Román, Y. A. 43<br />

Eckert, G. L. 61<br />

Eckert, W. 86<br />

Economy, L. M. 62<br />

Edgcomb, V. P. 41<br />

Edlund, A. 72<br />

Edwards, B. R. 53, 81<br />

Edwards, K. J. 58<br />

Edwardson, C. F. 97<br />

Egan, K. 76<br />

Eggleston, E. M. 97<br />

Eglinton, T. 45, 46, 87<br />

Eglinton, T. I. 45, 46, 87<br />

Eglite, E. 78<br />

Ehn, J. E. 45<br />

Eichler, L. 78<br />

Eiermann, E. E. 94<br />

Eiler, A. 74<br />

Eisen-Cuadra, A. 86, 87, 88, 95<br />

Eisen-Cuadra, A. M. 95<br />

Ekman, M. 104<br />

Elfadul, R. A. 46<br />

Ellegaard, M. 41<br />

Elliott, D. 47, 52<br />

Elliott, D. T. 47<br />

Elliott, K. M. 75<br />

Ellis, E. E. 46<br />

Elrod, V. 75, 100<br />

Elrod, V. A. 75<br />

El-Sammak, A. 86<br />

Elsasser, M. 79<br />

ElSawah, S. 51<br />

Elser, J. J. 47, 55, 60, 82, 103<br />

Elskens, M. 72<br />

El-Tourky, S. 59<br />

Elvert, M. 61<br />

Emery, H. E. 56<br />

Emrich, S. J. 98<br />

Encalada, A. C. 65<br />

Endres, S. 42<br />

Engel, A. 42, 53, 89<br />

Engelhardt, C. 54<br />

Engene, N. 62<br />

Engstrom, D. R. 45<br />

Engström-Öst, J. 67<br />

Enomoto, N. 95<br />

109<br />

Enrich-Prast, A. 93<br />

Epperson, D. 73, 91<br />

Erdner, D. L. 41<br />

Erguden, C. 103<br />

Erler, D. 92<br />

Errera, R. M. 57<br />

Ershova, E. A. 69<br />

Esch, M. 56, 67, 75, 84<br />

Escoffier, N. 75, 81<br />

Esparra Escalera, H. J. 96<br />

Essid, M. 50<br />

Essington, T. E. 83<br />

Estapa, M. 57, 67, 80<br />

Estapa, M. L. 57, 80<br />

Estrella-Riollano, A. I. 64<br />

Evans, A. 41<br />

Evans, E. 67<br />

Evans, E. D. 67<br />

Evans, W. 75<br />

Evans-White, M. A. 47<br />

Eveillard, D. 101<br />

Evertsen, A. J. 56<br />

Ewart, C. 58<br />

Ewell, C. 65<br />

F<br />

Faber, P. A. 76<br />

Fabian, J. 57, 72<br />

Fagherazzi, S. 64<br />

Fairchild, G. M. 84<br />

Falk Petersen, S. 43<br />

Fall, K. 53<br />

Fan, C. 83<br />

Fanning, K. 82, 100<br />

Fanning, K. A. 82<br />

Farnelid, H. 72, 91<br />

Farrar, J. T. 86<br />

Farrell, J. 80, 88<br />

Farst, C. M. 51<br />

Fasching , C. 43<br />

Fassett, C. 104<br />

Fauteux, L. 68<br />

Faux, R. 75<br />

Fawcett, S. E. 42, 73<br />

Feagin, R. A. 70<br />

Febria, C. M. 46<br />

Feenders, C. 44<br />

Feifel, K. M. 57<br />

Feinman, S. 61, 93<br />

Feinman, S. G. 93<br />

Feist, T. F. 58<br />

Feist, T. J. 71<br />

Fellman, J. 43, 46<br />

Fellman, J. B. 43<br />

Feng, M. 72<br />

Feng, S. 42<br />

Feng, X. 46<br />

Feng, Z. 83<br />

Fennel, K. 44, 70, 71, 72<br />

Fens, J. 69<br />

Fernandez, C. 92, 101<br />

Fernández-Gómez, B. 77<br />

Fernandez Lopez, M. 90<br />

Fernandez, M. 97<br />

Ferran, K. G. 40<br />

Ferreira, C. 100<br />

Fettweis, M. 53<br />

Ficek, D. 96<br />

Fichot, C. G. 43, 56<br />

Fiechter, J. 83<br />

Fiedler, D. 79<br />

Fields, D. 59, 61<br />

Fields, D. M. 59<br />

Fields, E. 57<br />

Fields, L. 71<br />

Figuerola, J. 76<br />

Filstrup, C. T. 50, 102<br />

Findlay, R. H. 47, 62<br />

Fine, I. 99<br />

Finiguerra, M. B. 55<br />

Finkbeiner, M. 48<br />

Finkbeiner, M. A. 48<br />

Finkelstein, D. B. 62<br />

Fiore, C. L. 41<br />

Fischer, G. 48<br />

Fischer, H. 75<br />

Fischer, J. M. 96<br />

FIscher, J. M. 66<br />

Fisher, A. 84<br />

Fisher, K. 97<br />

Fisher, N. S. 87<br />

Fisher, T. R. 84<br />

Fisher, W. S. 83<br />

Fisk, A. T. 88<br />

Fitzgerald, C. 78<br />

FitzGerald, D. 99<br />

Fitzgerald, S. P. 98<br />

Fitzpatrick, J. 45, 50<br />

Fitzpatrick, M. A. 74<br />

Fitzsimmons, J. N. 51, 76<br />

Flanders, K. L. 95<br />

Flecha, S. 76<br />

Fleck, J. A. 93<br />

Fleming, L. E. 48<br />

Flerus, R. 42, 43, 66<br />

Fletcher, S. J. 57<br />

Flewelling, L. J. 48, 103<br />

Flocks, J. 99<br />

Flocks, J. G. 99<br />

Flood, R. D. 74<br />

Floquet, C. F. 81<br />

Flores, V. 97<br />

Flórez-Márquez, A. E. 79<br />

Fogarty, M. J. 40, 47<br />

Follett, C. L. 44<br />

Follows, M. J. 40<br />

Fones, G. R. 91<br />

Fong, A. 53, 72<br />

Fong, A. A. 53<br />

Fong, J. 96<br />

Fonseca Batista, D. 72<br />

Forbes, V. E. 45<br />

Ford, M. D. 83<br />

Foreman, M. 99<br />

Forest, A. 102<br />

Forgarty, M. 83<br />

Forrest, A. L. 78<br />

Forschner, S. 41<br />

Forster, J. 55<br />

Forsyth, M. K. 73<br />

Fortino, K. 98<br />

Foster, D. 82<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Foster, R. A. 72, 87<br />

Foster, S. Q. 71<br />

Fountain, A. G. 104<br />

Fox, D. A. 67<br />

Francis, C. A. 93, 101<br />

Francis, L. 41<br />

Francis, T. B. 79<br />

Franck, E. M. 69<br />

Frank, A. H. 94<br />

Franks, P. J. 57, 102<br />

Franze, G. 45, 65<br />

Franzke, D. 87<br />

Frashure, K. M. 44<br />

Frazier, L. M. 59<br />

Fredrick, N. D. 50<br />

Fredricks, H. F. 44, 53, 63<br />

Frejlachova, K. 51<br />

Frenzel, H. 57<br />

Frey, K. E. 63<br />

Friedenberg, L. 58<br />

Friedland, K. 83<br />

Friedman, C. S. 79<br />

Friedman, J. R. 52<br />

Friedrichs, C. 53<br />

Frimpong, E. A. 80<br />

Frindte, K. 57, 86<br />

Fripiat, F. 77<br />

Frischer, M. E. 55, 59, 98<br />

Frisk, M. G. 98<br />

Fritz, S. C. 65<br />

Frometa, J. 82<br />

Froomer, N. L. 73<br />

Frost, D. 67<br />

Frost, P. C. 45, 46<br />

Fu, C. 83<br />

Fuchs, B. M. 77<br />

Fuchsman, C. 82<br />

Fuente-Claudio, L. 59<br />

Fuentes-Claudio, L. 45<br />

Fugère, V. 98<br />

Fuhrman, J. A. 87<br />

Fujii, R. 93<br />

Fujiki, T. 40<br />

Fujioka, H. 69<br />

Fukuda, H. 62<br />

Fukugama, C. 69<br />

Fulton, J. M. 44, 63<br />

Fulweiler, R. W. 56, 71, 73, 87<br />

Funkey, C. P. 72<br />

Furgueson, C. E. 93<br />

Furukawa, Y. 44<br />

Furuya, K. 69, 91<br />

G<br />

Gabrielsen, P. J. 75<br />

Gadbois, N. B. 67<br />

Gadner, B. 84<br />

Gagne-Maynard, W. 61<br />

Gagnon, P. 74, 78<br />

Gaichas, S. 83<br />

Gainer, P. J. 43<br />

Gaiser, E. E. 85<br />

Galchenko, V. F. 104<br />

Gålfalk, M. 81<br />

Gal, G. 101<br />

Galgani, L. 42<br />

Galindo-Estronza, A. M. 98<br />

Gallager, S. M. 81<br />

Gallagher, H. A. 86<br />

Gallinari, M. 56, 81<br />

Gallo, N. D. 98<br />

Galparsoro, I. 50<br />

Galvarino, C. R. 102<br />

Galy, V. 46, 65, 87<br />

Galy, V. V. 65<br />

Gamarra, J. 91<br />

Gamble, R. 83, 98<br />

Gamble, R. B. 98<br />

Gambrell, R. 77<br />

Gammana, M. 82, 100<br />

Ganesh, S. 82, 89<br />

Gangopadhyay, A. 99<br />

Ganju, N. 61, 89<br />

Gantz, C. A. 80<br />

Gao, S. 94<br />

Gao, Y. 53<br />

Garate, M. 76<br />

Gárate, M. 88<br />

Garcia, A. J. 94<br />

Garcia Chavez, M. C. 76<br />

Garcia-Romero, A. 95<br />

Garcia Tigreros, F. G. 65<br />

Garcon, V. 57<br />

Garçon, V. 100<br />

Gardner, C. B. 44<br />

Gardner, G. B. 56, 94<br />

Gardner, M. W. 51<br />

Gardner, W. S. 53, 71, 101<br />

Garley, R. 44<br />

Garrison, H. S. 95<br />

Garza, C. 73<br />

Garza, J. J. 60<br />

Gates, C. 62, 104<br />

Gauthier-Fautaux, S. 76<br />

Gaweesh, A. M. 52<br />

Gaynus, C. J. 60<br />

Gearhart, T. A. 65, 92<br />

Gebrai, Y. A. 75<br />

Geer, I. W. 44<br />

Gegg, S. R. 94, 102<br />

Gehre, M. 94<br />

Gelbrecht, J. 65<br />

Gellene, A. G. 48, 75<br />

Genin, A. 57<br />

Geoff , S. 59<br />

George, M. 60, 62<br />

George, M. C. 60<br />

Georgiou, I. 52, 99<br />

Georgiou, I. Y. 52<br />

Geraldi, N. R. 72<br />

Gerbi, G. P. 80<br />

Gerdts, G. 43<br />

Gereaux, L. C. 75, 85<br />

Gerecht, K. E. 72<br />

German, C. R. 82<br />

Gerringa, L. 76<br />

Gerritsen, J. 83<br />

Gervais, G. 40<br />

Gerwick, W. 57<br />

Gesier, H. 62<br />

Gessler, A. 85<br />

Ghadouani, A. 102<br />

110<br />

Ghiglione, J. F. 89<br />

Gianesella, S. M. 97<br />

Gibeaut, J. C. 59, 83<br />

Giblin, A. 55, 68, 71, 101<br />

Giblin, A. E. 55, 68, 71, 101<br />

Gibson, D. 47, 64<br />

Gibson, D. M. 64<br />

Gibson, P. J. 100<br />

Giddings, S. 71<br />

Giering, S. 56, 81, 102<br />

Giering, S. L. 81, 102<br />

Gifford, S. M. 101<br />

Gilbert, J. 104<br />

Giles, C. D. 92<br />

Gillard, J. 91<br />

Gill, G. A. 77<br />

Gillocheau, N. 42<br />

Gill, S. M. 77<br />

Giltz, S. M. 60<br />

Giosan, L. 64<br />

Giraud, M. 100<br />

Girguis, P. 43, 58, 100<br />

Girguis, P. R. 43, 100<br />

Gislason, G. M. 88<br />

Gitonga, K. 89<br />

Gitschlag, G. 91<br />

Gladics, A. J. 67<br />

glaser, S. 83<br />

Glaser, S. M. 40, 47<br />

Glé, C. 87<br />

Gledhill, M. 89<br />

Gleiber, M. R. 48<br />

Glenn, K. 69, 75, 80<br />

Glenn, K. L. 69, 75<br />

Glenn, S. 100<br />

Glibert, P. 58, 78<br />

Glibert, P. M. 58, 78<br />

Glover, D. M. 94, 102<br />

Gluchowska, M. 43<br />

Glud, R. N. 81<br />

Gobler, C. 47, 52, 73, 74, 83, 87,<br />

89, 103<br />

Gobler, C. J. 52, 74, 83, 87, 103<br />

Godhe, A. 78<br />

Godwin, C. M. 47<br />

Godwin, S. 85<br />

Goepfert, T. J. 103<br />

Goes, J. 52, 63, 72, 96<br />

Goes, J. I. 52, 63, 72, 96<br />

Goetze, E. 56, 57<br />

Goff, J. 73<br />

Gogan, N. 61<br />

Goldberg, S. J. 43, 63, 77<br />

Golden, S. 103<br />

Goldhammer, T. 61<br />

Goldman, C. 80<br />

Goldman, C. R. 80<br />

Goldman, E. A. 40, 81<br />

Goldstein, H. 91<br />

Goldstein, J. A. 95<br />

Golik, I. A. 42<br />

Goll, J. 104<br />

Golnick, P. 78<br />

Gomes, H. D. 96<br />

Gomes, H. R. 52, 63<br />

Gomez, D. M. 70<br />

Gomez-Garzón, D. 45<br />

Gómez-Garzon, D. 96<br />

Gomez-Pereira, P. 42<br />

Gong, L. 45<br />

Gonsior, M. 53<br />

Gonzalez, A. J. 46<br />

Gonzalez, K. 60, 94<br />

Gonzalez, M. J. 79, 92<br />

González, M. L. 92<br />

Gonzalez, R. 69<br />

Goodin, K. 48<br />

Goodson, A. M. 92<br />

Gooseff, M. N. 104<br />

Gordon, E. S. 64<br />

Gordon, O. S. 64<br />

Goto, D. 45<br />

Goudge, T. 104<br />

Gould, R. W. 48, 71<br />

Govenar, B. 55, 76<br />

Govindarajan, A. F. 82<br />

Grabs, T. 76<br />

Grace, M. 55, 86<br />

Graeber, D. 65<br />

Graff, J. R. 41<br />

Graham, B. P. 88<br />

Graham, E. R. 60<br />

Graham, J. L. 75, 92<br />

Graham, L. J. 74<br />

Graham, S. E. 69<br />

Graham, W. 59, 99<br />

Graham, W. M. 59<br />

Granger, J. 91<br />

Granskog, M. A. 45<br />

Grant , C. 74<br />

Grant, S. 83<br />

Grantz, E. M. 44, 86<br />

Gratton, Y. 96<br />

Gravinese, P. M. 47<br />

Gray, D. K. 85<br />

Gray, E. 56<br />

Gray, S. E. 93<br />

Grear, J. S. 47<br />

Greco, A. 55<br />

Green, A. 61<br />

Greenan, B. J. 100<br />

Greenaway, A. M. 64<br />

Green, B. 61<br />

Greene, R. M. 51, 71<br />

Greenfield, D. 48, 64, 92<br />

Greenfield, D. I. 48, 92<br />

Green, N. W. 60<br />

Green, S. R. 47<br />

Greer, A. T. 102<br />

Gregorcyk, K. 84, 92<br />

Gregorcyk, K. L. 92<br />

Gregory-Eaves, I. 55<br />

Grenvald, J. C. 56<br />

Grey, E. K. 59, 60<br />

Grey, J. 55<br />

Grieshaber, C. A. 89<br />

Griffin, C. G. 87<br />

Griffith, A. 52, 83<br />

Griffith, D. R. 45<br />

Grilli, A. R. 50<br />

Grimes, D. 61<br />

Grimm, N. B. 54<br />

Grob, M. C. 42<br />

Groleau, A. 75, 81


Meeting Program<br />

Groman, R. C. 94, 102<br />

Grossart , H. P. 79<br />

Grossart, H. P. 41, 55, 57, 62, 86, 93<br />

Gross, E. S. 57<br />

Grote, J. 63, 77<br />

Grothues, T. 61, 71, 74<br />

Grothues, T. M. 71, 74<br />

Grover, J. P. 48, 92, 96<br />

Gruber, N. 95<br />

Grunert, B. R. 88<br />

Gschwend, P. M. 45<br />

Guadayol, O. 85<br />

Guannel, M. L. 74<br />

Guarini, J. M. 54<br />

Guay, K. 62<br />

Gudasz, C. 78<br />

Gueguen, C. 42<br />

guidi, L. 101<br />

Guidi, L. 42, 48, 80, 102<br />

Guigand, C. M. 102<br />

Guilford, Z. T. 78<br />

Guillocheau, N. 104<br />

Guinasso, Jr., N. L. 90<br />

Guizien, K. 54, 82<br />

Gulland, F. 48<br />

Gully , J. R. 63<br />

Gunn, P. J. 62<br />

Guo, L. 61, 76, 77<br />

Guo, L. D. 77<br />

Guo, X. 40<br />

Gupta, G. V. 78<br />

Gurbisz, C. 54, 62<br />

Gurganus, S. C. 51<br />

Gustafson, A. B. 84<br />

Gustafson, E. 58<br />

Guswa, A. J. 72<br />

Gutiérrez, A. 57<br />

Gutierrez, B. 56<br />

Gu, Y. 90<br />

Gyory, J. 58, 69, 93<br />

H<br />

Haas, A. F. 77<br />

Habicht, K. 41<br />

Hackman, A. 69<br />

Hadaegh, A. 60, 91, 94<br />

Haddad, R. I. 73<br />

Haddock, T. 90<br />

Haffner, G. D. 102<br />

Haggard, B. E. 44, 86<br />

Hagy, J. D. 51, 58, 71, 88<br />

Ha, H. 54, 90<br />

Ha, H. K. 90<br />

Haig, H. A. 54<br />

Hairston, N. G. 55<br />

Hale, R. L. 54<br />

Hales, B. 54, 57<br />

Hales, B. R. 57<br />

Halewood, E. R. 58<br />

Haley, S. T. 103<br />

Halfman, J. D. 60, 95<br />

Hall, C. M. 50<br />

Hallen, C. P. 60<br />

Hallidayschult, T. 69, 80<br />

Hallidayschult, T. C. 69<br />

Hall, J. V. 55<br />

Hallman, T. A. 78<br />

Hall, M. R. 79<br />

Hall, N. S. 74, 102<br />

Hall, P. O. 81, 82<br />

Hamann, E. 54<br />

Hambright, K. D. 69, 75, 80, 98, 101<br />

Hamel, M. 45<br />

Hamidi, S. A. 71<br />

Hamill, D. 94<br />

Hammen, J. 45<br />

Hammerschmidt, C. 76, 77, 94<br />

Hammerschmidt, C. R. 76<br />

Hampton, S. E. 83, 85<br />

Hancke, K. 81<br />

Handley, L. 99<br />

Handsel, L. T. 42, 65<br />

Han, E. 79<br />

Hanley, K. 46, 56<br />

Hanley, K. W. 56<br />

Hann, C. H. 80<br />

Hannigan, R. 52, 86, 87, 88, 95<br />

Hannigan, R. E. 52, 86, 95<br />

Hansell, D. A. 79<br />

Hansen, G. J. 80<br />

Hanson, G. N. 74<br />

Hanson, P. C. 85<br />

Haraldsson, M. 102<br />

Harari, J. 97<br />

Harder, T. M. 77<br />

Hardison, A. K. 71<br />

Hare, J. 47, 55<br />

Hargreaves, B. 59, 78, 96<br />

Hargreaves, B. R. 96<br />

Hargreaves, J. C. 69<br />

Haring, D. 74<br />

Harke, M. J. 74<br />

Harlinska, A. 67<br />

Harmelin, M. 93<br />

Harnett, H. E. 65<br />

Harper, A. R. 94<br />

Harred, L. B. 92<br />

Harris, A. J. 81<br />

Harris, C. K. 72<br />

Harris, L. 45, 50, 56, 59, 73<br />

Harris, L. A. 50, 56, 73<br />

Harrison, E. T. 51<br />

Harrison, J. A. 87<br />

Hartmann, J. 76<br />

Hartmann, M. 42<br />

Hart, M. C. 70<br />

Hartnett, H. E. 46, 63<br />

Hartrey, L. 83<br />

Harvey, C. J. 79<br />

Harvey, E. 92<br />

Harvey, J. B. 57<br />

Hasan, M. M. 40<br />

Hashihama, F. 66<br />

Hashimoto, S. 95<br />

Hassett, B. A. 71<br />

Hassler, C. 51, 101<br />

Hassler, C. S. 51<br />

Hastak, P. 60<br />

Hastings, M. G. 61<br />

Hatcher, P. 43, 44, 46, 51, 53,<br />

60, 63<br />

Hatcher, P. G. 43, 46, 51, 53, 63<br />

111<br />

Hatta, M. 76<br />

Hatton, A. D. 70<br />

Hauck, J. 84<br />

Havel, J. E. 80<br />

Hawco, N. J. 103<br />

Hawes, I. 104<br />

Hawkes, J. A. 89<br />

Hayashi, K. 89<br />

Hayes, N. M. 92<br />

Haynie, A. 83<br />

Head, K. 40<br />

Head, M. J. 75<br />

Heal, K. R. 64, 67<br />

Heard, A. M. 59<br />

Heathcote, A. J. 102<br />

Heath, R. T. 101<br />

Heath, T. D. 76, 102<br />

Hebert, C. E. 102<br />

Heck, Jr, K. 73<br />

Heck, K. L. 98<br />

Hedstrom, K. 83<br />

Heffernan, J. B. 47<br />

Hefley, T. J. 65<br />

Heil, C. A. 83<br />

Heinze, A. W. 65<br />

Heinzelmann, S. M. 58<br />

Heiss, E. M. 71, 73<br />

Heithoff, A. 91<br />

Hejzlar, J. 102<br />

Held, B. 65<br />

Hellweger, F. 50, 87<br />

Hellweger, F. L. 50<br />

Helms, J. 42, 51, 82, 83, 91<br />

Helms, J. R. 42, 82, 83, 91<br />

Helm, Z. 82, 100<br />

Hemingway, J. D. 65<br />

Henderson, N. D. 52<br />

Henderson, S. 76<br />

Hendrix, C. S. 40<br />

Hendry, K. 102<br />

Heneberry, J. 55<br />

Henery, R. 80<br />

Henkel, J. R. 88<br />

Henkel, S. K. 70<br />

Hennige, S. J. 74<br />

Hennon, G. M. 42<br />

Henry, J. E. 94<br />

Henry, K. M. 72<br />

Henschen, K. 48<br />

Henson, S. A. 81<br />

He, R. 44<br />

Herbert, E. R. 40<br />

HERB, W. 78<br />

Herchenroder, B. 72<br />

Herfort, L. 75<br />

Herlien, R. 52<br />

Herman, P. 69, 77, 83<br />

Herman, P. M. 69, 77<br />

Hernandez, A. 91<br />

Hernandez, F. 59, 61<br />

Hernandez, F. H. 59<br />

Hernández-Guerra, A. 72<br />

Hernández-León, S. 56<br />

Herndl, G. J. 94<br />

Herndon, J. 98<br />

Hernes, P. J. 53, 63, 66<br />

Herrera, I. 56<br />

Herrera, K. M. 66<br />

Herrera, Y. 44<br />

Hertkorn, N. 53<br />

Hesp, P. 75<br />

Hester, C. M. 73<br />

Hetland, R. 70, 71, 72, 83<br />

Hetland, R. D. 70, 72, 83<br />

Heuer, V. 61<br />

Heusinkveld, J. 69<br />

Hewes, C. 84, 93<br />

Hewitt, D. A. 42<br />

Hewson, I. 55, 88, 97<br />

Hice, L. A. 98<br />

Hickcox, R. 92<br />

Hickey, B. 71, 99<br />

Hicks, R. E. 80, 101<br />

Hidaka, K. 69<br />

Higgins, S. N. 45<br />

Highfield, W. E. 67, 100<br />

Hill, C. L. 84<br />

Hiller, K. 61<br />

Hilligsøe, K. M. 79<br />

Hill, J. C. 92<br />

Hilton, J. A. 72, 87<br />

Hilt, S. 85, 93<br />

Hinrichs, K. 41, 61<br />

Hinrichs, K. U. 41<br />

Hinson, K. I. 66<br />

Hipsey, M. 72<br />

Hirai, J. 69<br />

Hirons, A. 67<br />

Hirose, K. 89<br />

Hirst, A. G. 55<br />

Hitchcock, G. 59, 69<br />

Hitchcock, G. L. 59<br />

Hjorth, M. 56<br />

Hmelo, L. R. 41, 81, 87<br />

Hoare, A. 88<br />

Hoch, M. P. 90<br />

Ho, C. K. 73<br />

Hock, R. M. 43<br />

Hodson, A. J. 43<br />

Hoer, D. R. 80<br />

Hoering, K. H. 52<br />

Hoff, M. 80<br />

Hofmann, E. E. 100<br />

Hogan, S. 64<br />

Hogel, S. 104<br />

Hogle, S. L. 51, 103<br />

Hogue, C. 62<br />

Hohn, S. 76<br />

Holland, R. 44<br />

Holl, C. M. 70<br />

Hollibaugh, J. T. 66, 91, 97, 101<br />

Hollyhead, C. 47<br />

Holmes, R. M. 46, 53, 65, 87<br />

Holm-Hansen, O. 84, 93<br />

Holtappels, M. 78, 81<br />

Holt, B. 48<br />

Holtgrieve, G. W. 55, 76<br />

Holzhauer, H. 69<br />

Holzman, R. 57<br />

Hommes, S. 50<br />

Honda, M. 40<br />

Honisch, B. 63, 70<br />

Honisch, B. L. 63, 70<br />

Hood, E. 42, 43, 46<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Hood, E. W. 43<br />

Hood, J. M. 88<br />

Hood, R. R. 71, 103<br />

Hooker, S. B. 42<br />

Hook, S. 78, 85<br />

Hook, S. J. 85<br />

Hook, T. O. 51<br />

Hopcroft, R. 47, 59, 69<br />

Hopcroft, R. R. 47, 59, 69<br />

Hop, H. 43, 45<br />

Hopkinson, B. M. 103<br />

Hopkinson, C. S. 44<br />

Hopmans, E. 82, 101<br />

Hopmans, E. C. 101<br />

Hoppe, C. J. 101<br />

Hoppema, M. 84<br />

Horak, R. 82, 101<br />

Horak, R. E. 101<br />

Horodysky, A. Z. 70<br />

Horton, C. H. 67<br />

Hosen, J. D. 46<br />

Hoskins, A. R. 69<br />

Hoskins, D. L. 89<br />

Hotz, H. 86<br />

Hotz, H. M. 86<br />

Houde, E. 52<br />

Houghton, J. L. 68<br />

Hovdenes, J. 81<br />

Howard-Åkerfeldt, I. 43<br />

Howard, M. 48, 75, 90<br />

Howard, M. D. 48<br />

Howard, M. K. 75, 90<br />

Howard-Williams, C. 104<br />

Howarth, E. 94<br />

Howden, S. D. 44<br />

Howeth, J. G. 80<br />

Howick, T. 75<br />

Ho, Y. 63, 89<br />

Hrabik, T. R. 98<br />

Hsieh, C. 40, 47, 83<br />

Hsieh, C. H. 40, 47<br />

Huang, Q. 63<br />

Huang, W. 76<br />

Huard, D. 96<br />

Huber, D. R. 44<br />

Hu, C. 48, 68<br />

Hudon, C. 74, 78<br />

Hudson, J. 40<br />

Hudson, J. J. 40<br />

Huebner, J. D. 67<br />

Huertas, I. E. 76<br />

Huettel, M. 54, 55<br />

Hu, G. D. 53<br />

Hughes, M. C. 78<br />

Hu, J. 70<br />

Hulatt, C. J. 42<br />

Hulley, G. 78<br />

Humborg, C. 65, 72<br />

Hume, A. C. 81<br />

Hume, B. 86<br />

Hunt, B. P. 47, 92<br />

Hunt, C. W. 56<br />

Hunter-Cevera, K. R. 50<br />

Hunter, K. 40<br />

Huot, Y. 59, 65, 94<br />

Hupfer, M. 86<br />

Hurley, S. J. 48<br />

Huryn, A. D. 46, 88<br />

Huszar, V. 85<br />

Hutchins, P. 84<br />

Huttula, T. 85<br />

Hyde, K. 42<br />

Hyun, J. 66<br />

I<br />

Iannucci, F. M. 65<br />

Ichikawa, K. 95<br />

Ichikawa, T. 69<br />

Ichimi, K. 94<br />

Idrisi, N. 60, 69, 93<br />

Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D. 44<br />

Ignacio, D. P. 60<br />

Ignoffo, T. 55, 67, 98<br />

Ignoffo, T. R. 67, 98<br />

Inanan, B. E. 103<br />

Infante-Mendez, G. 45, 70<br />

Infante-Mendez, G. A. 70<br />

Ingalls, A. 46, 101<br />

Ingalls, A. E. 46<br />

Ininbergs, K. 104<br />

Ireland, T. 71<br />

Irvine, K. 52<br />

Isaac, E. J. 98<br />

Ishaque, A. B. 46, 97<br />

Ishaque, A. I. 45<br />

Ishimaru, A. 89<br />

Isles, P. D. 92<br />

Isom, C. E. 66<br />

Israel, N. M. 68<br />

Itoh, M. 77<br />

Ivan, L. N. 80<br />

Iversen, M. 48, 56, 79, 101<br />

Iversen, M. H. 48, 56, 79<br />

Iverson, V. 97<br />

Ivey, G. N. 102<br />

Izaguirre, I. 88<br />

Izmest’eva, L. R. 83, 85<br />

J<br />

Jacinto, G. S. 84<br />

Jack, L. C. 40<br />

Jackson, A. 78, 96<br />

Jackson, A. D. 96<br />

Jackson, C. R. 65, 66, 95<br />

Jackson, G. 48, 92, 102<br />

Jackson, G. A. 48, 92<br />

Jackson, K. J. 43<br />

Jackson, K. V. 79<br />

Jackson, S. K. 83<br />

Jacobsen, D. 42<br />

Jacobs, G. 99<br />

Jacquet, S. 92, 100<br />

Jacquet, S. H. 92<br />

Jaeger, S. A. 64<br />

Jaekel, U. 43<br />

Jaffe, J. S. 102<br />

Jaffe, R. 42, 46, 63, 97<br />

Jaffé, R. 91<br />

Jagoe, C. 56<br />

112<br />

Jahan, R. 103<br />

Jahn, O. 40<br />

Jakobsen, H. H. 47<br />

Janech, M. G. 65<br />

Jangly, G. P. 60<br />

Jani, A. J. 41<br />

Jankowski, K. 76<br />

Jannasch, H. 75, 81, 100<br />

Jannasch, H. W. 81<br />

Jansons, M. 78<br />

Janssen, F. 81<br />

Jarmul, S. 73<br />

Jarrod, K. 51<br />

Jarvie, H. P. 44<br />

Jarvis, B. 55, 64, 72, 88<br />

Jarvis, B. M. 64<br />

Jauzein, C. 41<br />

Jayakumar, A. 82, 91<br />

Jayroe, D. S. 92<br />

Jeandel, C. 77<br />

Jearld, Jr., A. 56<br />

Jefferson, A. 69<br />

Jeffrey, W. H. 89<br />

Jenkins, B. D. 59, 95, 97, 103, 104<br />

Jensen, A. 61<br />

Jensen, D. 88<br />

Jensen, J. K. 99<br />

Jensen, S. 81<br />

Jeong, D. I. 96<br />

Jeppesen, E. 85<br />

Jerde, C. L. 80<br />

Jeremiason, J. 62<br />

Jessen, B. J. 87<br />

Jester, R. J. 45<br />

Jézéquel, D. 81<br />

Jiang, L. 71<br />

Jiang, Y. 95<br />

Jiao, N. 41<br />

Jilbert, T. 72<br />

Ji, Q. 101<br />

Jobling, S. 46<br />

Jochens, A. 48, 68, 75<br />

Jochens, A. E. 48, 75<br />

Johannesson, K. H. 44, 104<br />

Johansson, J. 40<br />

Johansson, L. S. 85<br />

John, J. 48<br />

Johns, A. E. 90<br />

Johnson, A. D. 98<br />

Johnson , A. K. 62<br />

Johnson, A. K. 54, 70<br />

Johnson, A. N. 92<br />

Johnson, C. 74, 92<br />

Johnson, D. S. 87<br />

Johnson, K. 57, 75, 81, 99, 100<br />

Johnson, K. S. 75, 81, 100<br />

Johnson, K. W. 99<br />

Johnson, L. B. 78<br />

Johnson, L. T. 40, 79<br />

Johnson, P. W. 88<br />

Johnson, R. A. 100<br />

Johnson, S. 67<br />

Johnson, T. E. 78<br />

Johnson, T. L. 96<br />

Johnson, W. 43, 103<br />

Johnson, W. M. 43<br />

Johnson, Z. 103, 104<br />

Johnson, Z. I. 103<br />

Johnston, M. K. 98<br />

Johnston, T. A. 79<br />

Jonca, J. 100<br />

Jones, A. 48, 95<br />

Jones, A. K. 95<br />

Jones, B. H. 48<br />

Jones, B. M. 44, 101<br />

Jones, B. T. 59<br />

Jones, E. B. 67, 71<br />

Jones, E. M. 84<br />

Jones, J. L. 50<br />

Jones, J. R. 86<br />

Jones, L. B. 44<br />

Jones, M. H. 64<br />

Jones, P. J. 50<br />

Jones, P. R. 77<br />

Jones, S. E. 47, 55, 58, 76, 85, 98<br />

Jordan, T. E. 84<br />

Jost, G. 72<br />

Jouandet, M. 93, 101<br />

Jouandet, M. P. 93, 101<br />

Jouanneau, N. 99<br />

Joux, F. 89<br />

Jo, Y. 55<br />

Joye, S. B. 41, 84<br />

Joy-Warren, H. 91<br />

Juhl, A. 45, 65<br />

Juhl, A. R. 45<br />

Julich, H. M. 95<br />

Jungbluth, M. 56<br />

Jungblutt, A. 104<br />

Jung, Y. 56<br />

Junker, J. R. 88<br />

Junker, K. 54<br />

Jürgens, K. 72, 91<br />

Justic, D. 70<br />

K<br />

Kaartokallio, H. 42, 46, 47<br />

Kaartokallio, H. K. 42<br />

Kacenas, S. 64<br />

Kaczmarska, I. 80<br />

Kadake, M. 92<br />

Kading, T. 84, 94<br />

Kading, T. J. 84<br />

Kadison, E. 58<br />

Kaed-Bey, S. 100<br />

Kahru, M. 81, 84<br />

Kaiser, K. 43<br />

Kakehi, S. 69<br />

Kaller, A. 73<br />

Kalnejais, L. H. 82<br />

Kamath, T. P. 98<br />

Kamjunke, N. 93<br />

Kammerlander, B. 43<br />

Kandolf, G. 43<br />

Kane, D. D. 78<br />

Kaneko, G. 40<br />

Kang, C. 79<br />

Kang, D. 40<br />

Kan, J. 47, 62<br />

Kankus, J. 103<br />

Kaplan, D. I. 63<br />

Kaplan, L. A. 43, 47, 62


Meeting Program<br />

Karl, D. M. 72<br />

Karlsson, M. O. 54<br />

Karlsson, O. M. 67<br />

Karp-Boss, L. 83<br />

Karunasagar, I. 78<br />

Kashian, D. R. 51<br />

Kasprzak, P. 86<br />

Kaster, J. L. 99<br />

Katahira, R. 94<br />

Kato, K. 95<br />

Katsanevakis, S. 50<br />

Kattner, G. 43, 66<br />

Katz, J. 100<br />

Kauffman, T. C. 65<br />

Kaufman, L. 40, 83<br />

Kavanaugh, M. T. 57<br />

Kawakami, H. 40<br />

Kayfetz, K. R. 69<br />

Kayler, Z. 85<br />

Kaza, S. 84<br />

Kearns, P. 61, 101<br />

Kearns, P. J. 101<br />

Keasberry, A. M. 88<br />

Keen, T. R. 90<br />

Keevil, C. W. 90<br />

Keil, R. G. 46, 81, 100<br />

Keister, J. E. 47<br />

Kellerman, A. 43, 78<br />

Kellerman, A. M. 43<br />

Keller, R. P. 80<br />

Kelley, B. 56<br />

Kelley, C. A. 61, 104<br />

Kellogg, C. 46<br />

Kellogg, M. L. 53<br />

Kelly, L. 62, 77<br />

Kelly, L. W. 77<br />

Kelly, P. 55, 98<br />

Kelly, P. T. 55<br />

Kelly, R. P. 81<br />

Kelly, V. J. 58<br />

Kemp, M. 62<br />

Kemp, P. F. 41, 53<br />

Kemp, W. M. 50, 54, 71<br />

Kendall, S. T. 75, 85<br />

Kendrick, M. R. 46<br />

Kendricks, B. J. 44<br />

Kennedy, V. 50, 81<br />

Kennedy, V. S. 81<br />

Kenney, W. F. 102<br />

Kennison, R. 49<br />

Kenny, C. M. 60<br />

Kent, A. D. 87, 96<br />

Kent, D. B. 84<br />

Keppler, C. 64<br />

Kerstetter, D. W. 89<br />

Kessler, A. J. 76<br />

Kestenare, E. 84, 100, 101<br />

Key, T. A. 81<br />

Keyzers, M. 58<br />

Khalil, S. M. 99<br />

Khan, A. L. 97<br />

Khangaonkar, T. 58<br />

Khan, N. H. 40<br />

Khen, A. 54<br />

Khosh, M. S. 46, 66<br />

Kidd, K. A. 46<br />

Kido Soule, M. 43, 45<br />

Kido Soule, M. C. 45<br />

Kieber, D. J. 45, 55, 66, 77, 82<br />

Kieber, R. J. 82, 83, 91<br />

Kiene, R. K. 76<br />

Kiene, R. P. 45, 55, 66, 77, 94<br />

Kießlich, K. 58<br />

Kikuchi, T. 77<br />

Killberg-Thoreson, L. 80<br />

Kim, B. 66, 82, 100<br />

Kim, B. S. 82<br />

Kim, D. Y. 69<br />

Kim, J. K. 74<br />

Kimmance, S. A. 41, 57<br />

Kimmel, D. 60<br />

Kimmerer, W. 55, 57, 59, 67, 69,<br />

88, 98<br />

Kimmerer, W. J. 57, 67, 69, 98<br />

Kimoto, H. 77<br />

Kim, S. 66, 69<br />

Kim, S. Y. 69<br />

Kim, T. W. 72<br />

Kim, Y. 96<br />

Kindelberger, S. A. 75<br />

Kinder, T. 50<br />

Kindinger, J. L. 99<br />

King, A. L. 103<br />

King, D. W. 82<br />

King, E. L. 47<br />

King, J. 48<br />

King, R. S. 98<br />

King, S. 73<br />

Kinney, E. 73<br />

Kinsey, J. D. 45, 55<br />

Kinzler, K. P. 65<br />

Kiørboe, T. 69<br />

Kirchman, D. L. 47, 66, 68<br />

Kireta, A. R. 102<br />

Kirillin , G. 54<br />

Kirkpatrick, B. 48, 68<br />

Kirkpatrick, B. A. 48, 68<br />

Kirkpatrick, G. 48, 61, 68, 92<br />

Kirkpatrick, G. J. 48, 68, 92<br />

Kiser, R. F. 88<br />

Kishbaugh, S. 48<br />

Kitchell, J. 102<br />

Kiwel, U. 86<br />

Kjeldsen, K. U. 77<br />

Kjellerup, S. 55, 59, 69, 100<br />

Klaas, C. 84, 100<br />

Klaper, R. D. 45<br />

Klar, J. 77<br />

Klass, C. 101<br />

Klawonn, I. 48, 72, 97<br />

Kleinhuizen, A. 71, 90<br />

Kleint, C. 51<br />

Klimant, I. 100<br />

Klinck, J. S. 100<br />

Kline, D. I. 54<br />

Kline, T. C. 98<br />

Kling, G. W. 101<br />

Klinka, M. 69<br />

Klueter, A. 41<br />

Klump, J. V. 71, 88, 99<br />

Klump, V. 81<br />

Klunder, M. 77<br />

Knapp, A. N. 79<br />

Knauss, C. 61<br />

113<br />

Knee, K. L. 65<br />

Knight, S. 80<br />

Knoll, L. B. 78<br />

Kobara, S. 75<br />

Koch, B. P. 43, 66<br />

Koch, F. 83, 87<br />

Ko, D. 48, 71, 85<br />

Kodama, T. 91<br />

Ko, D. S. 48, 71<br />

Koehlein, K. 62<br />

Koehler, B. 78<br />

Koehler, J. 79<br />

Koehl, M. 47, 82<br />

Koehl, M. A. 47<br />

Koester, J. 97<br />

Koester, M. 79<br />

Koeve, W. 63, 72, 77<br />

Köhler, J. 85<br />

Kohler, K. 48<br />

Köhler, S. J. 43<br />

Kohler, T. J. 104<br />

Kohut, J. 40, 100<br />

Kokic, J. 93<br />

Kokkali, A. 59<br />

Kolesar and C. Sellinger, S. 71<br />

Kolesar, S. 88<br />

Kolker, A. S. 44, 64<br />

Kolomijeca, A. 90<br />

Komada, T. 89<br />

Kominoski, J. S. 76<br />

Kong, F. X. 57<br />

Kononets , M. 82<br />

Kononets, M. 81<br />

Koops, M. A. 102<br />

Kopacek, J. 51, 102<br />

Korber, D. R. 40<br />

Kordbacheh, A. 59<br />

Koren, L. M. 85<br />

Kortelainen, P. 76<br />

Koschinsky, A. 51, 77, 89<br />

Koseff, J. R. 57<br />

Koski, M. 47<br />

Koslow, J. A. 48, 52<br />

Kosobokova, K. N. 69<br />

Kosten, S. 85<br />

Kothawala, D. N. 43, 78<br />

Kotilainen, P. 85<br />

Kovatch, J. 87<br />

Kozik, C. R. 87<br />

Koziol, K. A. 43<br />

Kozlowski, W. 87<br />

Kraemer, B. M. 85<br />

Kraft, J. 65<br />

Kramer, A. M. 52<br />

Kramer, C. 43<br />

Krause, J. W. 50, 57<br />

Kraus, T. 66, 75, 93<br />

Kraus, T. E. 75, 93<br />

Kreigman , D. 54<br />

Kreis, Jr., R. G. 71<br />

Krembs, C. 45, 58<br />

Kress, E. 78<br />

Kress, M. 86<br />

Kriest, I. 81<br />

Krikun, K. A. 42<br />

Krishfield, R. A. 94<br />

Krissek, L. 64<br />

Kristiansen, S. 45<br />

Kristofco, L. A. 45<br />

Kritzberg, E. 53, 60<br />

Kritzberg, E. S. 53<br />

Kroeger, K. 61<br />

Kronfeldt, H. D. 90<br />

Krumholz, J. S. 90<br />

Krupke, A. 77<br />

Krupkin, A. 46<br />

Kruse, S. 92<br />

Kuang, Y. 103<br />

Kudela, R. 48<br />

Kudela, R. M. 48<br />

Kudella, R. 84<br />

Kuhnz, L. 52<br />

Kujawinski, E. 43, 44, 45, 103<br />

Kujawinski, E. B. 44, 45, 103<br />

Kullas, T. 90<br />

Kulp, M. A. 99<br />

Kumar, S. 78<br />

Kunz, K. L. 56<br />

Kurihara, M. 95<br />

Kurtz, J. 48, 96<br />

Kurtz, J. C. 96<br />

Kustka , A. B. 62, 104<br />

Kustka, A. B. 91, 101<br />

Kuypers, M. M. 77, 78, 81<br />

Kveven, A. L. 45, 64<br />

Kyle, M. 55<br />

Kyriazi, Z. 50<br />

L<br />

Laan, P. 76<br />

LaBarre, B. A. 55<br />

Labatut, M. 94<br />

Laber, C. 96<br />

Laboy, L. 59<br />

Labrenz, M. 72<br />

LaBuhn, S. L. 88, 99<br />

Lacan, F. 77, 94<br />

Lacey, C. N. 92<br />

Lachenmyer, E. 40<br />

Lachenmyer, E. M. 40<br />

Lachner, J. 76<br />

LaFrance, M. 48<br />

Lagaria, A. 103<br />

Laglera, L. 100, 101<br />

Laglera, L. M. 100<br />

Lake, S. J. 71<br />

Lambert, D. 60<br />

Lamborg, C. 76, 77, 84, 94, 103<br />

Lamborg, C. H. 76, 77, 84, 103<br />

Lammers, J. M. 93<br />

Lammers, P. 50<br />

Lampitt, R. 56, 80, 81<br />

Lampitt, R. S. 56, 80, 81<br />

Lam, P. J. 44, 56, 62, 76, 81<br />

Lampkin, A. L. 66<br />

Lance, V. P. 59, 96<br />

Landing, A. M. 77<br />

Landing, W. 51, 76, 77, 94<br />

Landing, W. M. 51, 76, 77<br />

Landolfi, A. 72<br />

Landry, M. L. 55<br />

Landry, M. R. 57<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Lanerolle, L. W. 71<br />

Langenheder, S. 58, 78<br />

Langlois, G. 48<br />

Lansard, B. 100<br />

Lantoine, F. 79<br />

Lapierre, J. F. 53<br />

Laprise, M. H. 65<br />

Largier, J. 52<br />

LaRoche, J. 72, 77<br />

Larsen, S. 77, 98<br />

Larson, B. I. 68<br />

Larsson, J. 104<br />

Lasbleiz, M. 100<br />

Lasi, M. 83<br />

Latimer, J. 67, 73<br />

Latimer, J. S. 73<br />

Latour, R. J. 83<br />

Latzka, A. W. 80<br />

Laudon, H. 46, 76<br />

Lauerwald, R. 76<br />

Lauko, I. 61<br />

Laureano-Rosario, A. E. 60<br />

Laurel, B. 70<br />

Laurent, A. 70<br />

Lauridsen, T. L. 85<br />

Laurion, I. 96<br />

Lauterman, F. M. 88, 102<br />

Lavaud, J. 83<br />

Lavrentyev, P. 45, 65<br />

Lavrinovics, A. 78<br />

Lawrence, J. R. 40<br />

Laws, C. A. 48<br />

Laws, E. A. 50<br />

Lawson, G. L. 47<br />

Lazaravich , P. 94<br />

Lazar, C. S. 61<br />

Leach, H. 84<br />

Leach, T. H. 66<br />

Leavitt , P. R. 54<br />

Leavitt, P. R. 45, 74, 102<br />

Leblanc, K. 100, 101<br />

Lebrato, M. 44<br />

Lebris, N. 100<br />

Le Bris, N. 58, 100<br />

Lecher, A. 84<br />

Lechtenfeld, O. 43, 66<br />

Lechtenfeld, O. J. 43<br />

Leckie, R. M. 64<br />

Lee, B. J. 53<br />

Lee, C. 57, 89<br />

Leech, D. M. 98<br />

Lee, C. M. 57<br />

Lee, D. M. 99<br />

Lee, D. Y. 47, 97<br />

Lee, G. A. 44<br />

Lee, H. J. 90<br />

Lee, J. 66, 87, 92<br />

Lee, P. 65<br />

Lee, S. 69, 92<br />

Lee, S. W. 92<br />

Lee, Y. 71<br />

Lee, Z. 60, 82, 85<br />

Lee, Z. M. 82<br />

Lefebure, R. 78<br />

Lefebvre, S. 44, 83<br />

Lefebvre, S. C. 44<br />

Lefèvre , D. 93<br />

Legault, M. 96<br />

Legendre, L. 42, 48<br />

Leggett, W. C. 79<br />

Legiret, F. 100<br />

LeGoff, M. 56<br />

Leguet, J. B. 53<br />

Lehrter, J. 55, 58, 64, 70, 71, 72, 96<br />

Lehrter, J. C. 55, 58, 64, 70, 71, 96<br />

Leibold, M. A. 98<br />

Leichter, J. J. 97<br />

Leinweber, A. 95<br />

Lemanski, B. C. 61<br />

Lembke, C. 68<br />

Le Moal, M. 72<br />

Lemon, D. 100<br />

Lemus, J. 51, 85<br />

Lenes, J. M. 48, 68<br />

Lennon, J. T. 47, 58<br />

Lenters, J. D. 85<br />

Lentz, S. 86<br />

Lenz, P. H. 56, 59<br />

Leon Soon, S. 51, 98<br />

Lerner, P. 93<br />

Lessard, E. J. 57, 74<br />

Lessard, J. L. 69<br />

Lesser, M. P. 41<br />

Lester, C. 69<br />

Letelier, R. M. 57<br />

Letscher, R. T. 79<br />

Leuttich, R. A. 102<br />

Lévesque, D. 74<br />

Levings, C. 80<br />

Levin, L. 52, 56, 98<br />

Levin, L. A. 56, 98<br />

Leviton, V. E. 84<br />

Levy, M. 84<br />

Lewandowski, J. 54, 73, 84, 91<br />

Lewis, M. A. 65<br />

Lewis, W. M. 90<br />

Liao, L. 81<br />

Li, B. 75<br />

Libes, S. 71, 75, 84<br />

Libes, S. M. 75<br />

Li, C. 53, 70, 75<br />

Lie, A. A. 69<br />

Liefer, J. D. 84<br />

Li, H. 87<br />

LI, H. 63<br />

Li, J. 94<br />

Liles, G. 56<br />

Li, M. 71<br />

Lima, I. 72<br />

Lima, T. 76<br />

Limburg, K. 64<br />

Lindau, C. W. 53<br />

Lindeque, P. 59<br />

Lindholm, J. B. 70<br />

Lindim, C. 75<br />

Lindquist, N. L. 80<br />

Lindsay, E. K. 54<br />

Lindström, E. S. 74, 78<br />

Lini, A. 88<br />

Link, J. 83<br />

Link, J. S. 83<br />

Linley, R. D. 102<br />

Linn, S. 46, 66<br />

Linn, S. E. 46<br />

114<br />

Lin, P. 77<br />

Lin, T. H. 54<br />

Lin, X. 53<br />

Lipsewers, Y. 82, 101<br />

Lipsewers, Y. A. 101<br />

Lisa, J. A. 77<br />

Lisi, P. J. 76<br />

Littmann, S. 87<br />

Liu, B. 81<br />

Liu, H. 47, 69, 83<br />

Liu, K. 52, 62<br />

Liu, K. L. 62<br />

Liu, Q. 91<br />

Liu, S. 77<br />

Liu, W. 52<br />

Liu, X. 87<br />

Liu, Z. 53, 56, 69, 71, 77, 101<br />

Liu, Z. W. 69<br />

Livermore, J. A. 98<br />

Li, W. 55, 89<br />

Li, X. 53<br />

Li, Y. 71, 102<br />

Llebot, C. 75, 88<br />

Lloyd, K. G. 68<br />

Loadman, N. L. 67<br />

Lobão, L. 85<br />

Lodge, D. M. 50, 80<br />

Löffler, F. E. 70<br />

Loftin, K. A. 75<br />

Loftus, S. E. 66<br />

Logsdon, M. 71, 90<br />

Logsdon, M. G. 90<br />

Lohan, M. 51, 77<br />

Lohrenz, S. E. 44, 94<br />

Loick-Wilde, N. 72, 94<br />

Lojek, A. 94<br />

Loladze, I. 103<br />

Lomas, M. W. 40, 48, 56, 57, 73,<br />

81, 94<br />

Long, M. H. 54, 81<br />

Longnecker, K. 43, 44<br />

Long, R. A. 41<br />

Long, W. 58, 71<br />

Lonsdale, D. J. 47, 74<br />

Lopes, R. M. 102<br />

Lopez, E. K. 70<br />

López-Figueroa, N. B. 70<br />

Lopez, G. T. 70<br />

Lopez, J. E. 88<br />

Lopez, L. M. 60<br />

Lorenzoni, L. 56, 68<br />

Lorke, A. 81<br />

Los Huertos, M. 74<br />

Lottig, N. R. 85<br />

Louchouarn, P. 46, 67, 100<br />

Lougheed, V. L. 69, 75, 93<br />

Loureiro, C. M. 72<br />

Love, B. 94<br />

Lovejoy, C. 77<br />

Lovera, C. 52, 72<br />

Loving, B. L. 75<br />

Lovko, V. 48, 61, 68<br />

Lovko, V. J. 48, 68<br />

Lowen, J. B. 51<br />

Lubelczyk, L. C. 44<br />

Lubetkin, S. C. 74<br />

Lucas, C. H. 47<br />

Lucas, M. I. 50<br />

Lucas, S. 82<br />

Lucena-Moya, P. 51<br />

Luecke, C. 101<br />

Lugo, A. E. 86<br />

Lumb, L. M. 59<br />

Lumpkin, R. 79<br />

Lundgren, V. M. 48, 92<br />

Luning Prak, D. J. 65<br />

Luo, J. Y. 102<br />

Luo, Y. W. 72<br />

Lutz, B. D. 71<br />

Lu, X. 83, 91<br />

Lu, Z. 63<br />

Lwiza, K. M. 73<br />

Lycett, K. A. 96<br />

Lyczkowski, E. R. 83<br />

Lydersen, C. 43<br />

Lyngsgaard, M. M. 78, 79<br />

Lyons, G. 56<br />

Lyons, M. M. 52<br />

Lyons, T. 79<br />

Lyons, W. B. 44, 86, 104<br />

M<br />

Maas, A. E. 47<br />

Maas, M. G. 99<br />

Macanowicz, N. 79<br />

MacCall, A. D. 40<br />

MacCready, P. 71<br />

MacDonald, I. 41, 91<br />

MacDonald, I. R. 41<br />

Macek, M. 79<br />

Macey, A. I. 50<br />

MacGillivary, M. L. 80<br />

MacGregor, B. 41<br />

Machida, R. J. 69<br />

MacIntyre, H. L. 84<br />

MacIntyre, S. 104<br />

MacIsaac, H. J. 80<br />

MacKenzie, B. R. 54<br />

Mackey, K. R. 77<br />

MacWilliams, M. L. 57<br />

Madden, K. 51, 60<br />

Madden, K. M. 51<br />

Madinger, H. L. 95<br />

Madison, M. J. 54, 93, 101<br />

Madrid, E. N. 73<br />

Maerz, J. C. 79<br />

Maes, F. 50<br />

Mahaffey, C. 41<br />

Mahmoud, I. 86<br />

Main, C. 48<br />

Maiti, K. 77, 81<br />

Majchrowski, R. 96<br />

Major, C. 55, 65<br />

Major, C. R. 65<br />

Ma, K. C. 51<br />

Maki, R. P. 102<br />

Maldonado, E. M. 88<br />

Maldonado-Rivera, P. 45<br />

Malfatti, F. 53<br />

Malin, G. 41<br />

Malinich, T. D. 60, 79<br />

Malizzi, L. D. 91


Meeting Program<br />

Malkin, S. 64<br />

Malmaeus, J. M. 54, 67<br />

Maloy, C. 58<br />

Malvezzi, A. J. 89<br />

Mancuso Nichols, C. 51<br />

Manderson, J. 40<br />

Mandrak, N. E. 80<br />

Maness, S. L. 103<br />

Manganini, S. 82<br />

Mann, E. 97, 103<br />

Mann, E. L. 103<br />

Manning, D. P. 76<br />

Mannino, A. 42<br />

Mann, J. P. 63<br />

Mann, P. 46, 53, 87<br />

Mann, P. J. 46, 53<br />

Mansfield, R. 102<br />

Mao, J. 43<br />

Maps, F. 69<br />

Maranger, R. 55, 76, 77, 101<br />

Maranger, R. J. 76<br />

Marcarelli, A. M. 74<br />

Marchant, D. 104<br />

Marchant, H. K. 78<br />

Marchetti, M. P. 80<br />

Marcolin, C. R. 102<br />

Marcon, Y. 90, 100<br />

Marcus, H. 98<br />

Marelli, D. 80<br />

Marie-Rose Vandenhecke, J. 65<br />

Mariita, R. M. 69<br />

Marin, F. D. 102<br />

Marin III, R. 72, 81<br />

Markager, S. 78, 93<br />

Markager, S. S. 78<br />

Markfort, C. D. 78<br />

Markowski, M. S. 72<br />

Marot, M. E. 99<br />

Marquez, I. A. 50<br />

Marra, J. F. 59, 96<br />

Marrero, M. 74<br />

Marsay, C. 76, 81, 100<br />

Marsay, C. M. 81, 100<br />

Marshall, M. 91<br />

Marshall, N. F. 66<br />

Marshall, P. J. 91<br />

Marta-Almeida, M. 70<br />

Martell, E. M. 69<br />

Martell, L. 94<br />

Martens, C. S. 80<br />

Marti, A. M. 62<br />

Martignette, A. J. 75, 93<br />

Martin, A. P. 42<br />

Martin, C. W. 65<br />

Martinez, E. 54, 63<br />

Martinez, E. A. 63<br />

Martinez, F. A. 50<br />

Martinez, G. 67, 95<br />

Martínez, G. 92<br />

Martinez, G. A. 67<br />

Martinez, S. 60<br />

Martin, M. S. 47<br />

Martin, P. 103<br />

Martin , R. 76<br />

Martins, A. 72<br />

Martinson, D. 100<br />

Martinson, R. J. 73<br />

Marton, J. M. 40, 62, 71<br />

Martz, T. 75, 81<br />

Martz, T. R. 81<br />

Marzocchi, U. 58<br />

Mason, D. 71, 80<br />

Mason, D. M. 71, 80<br />

Mason, R. P. 52<br />

Masoom, H. 43, 63<br />

Masqué, P. 76, 101<br />

Massé, S. 101<br />

Massion, E. 75<br />

Massion, G. 100<br />

Massol-Deya, A. 70<br />

Masson, A. 56<br />

Masson, D. 99<br />

Matondkar, P. 96<br />

Matondkar, S. P. 52<br />

Matrai, P. A. 57<br />

Matsufuji, H. 45<br />

Matsumoto, G. I. 75<br />

Matsumoto, K. 40<br />

Mattsson, T. 76<br />

Maumus, F. 74<br />

Mauney, M. T. 61, 104<br />

Mausz, M. A. 103<br />

Mavrommati, G. 59<br />

May, A. L. 53, 81<br />

May, E. B. 46, 97<br />

Mayfield, K. K. 96<br />

May, M. 68, 98<br />

Mayo, M. 100<br />

Mayor, D. J. 81<br />

Mayor, E. 50<br />

Mazet, J. 52<br />

Mazzillo, F. 52<br />

McAfee, S. 48, 50<br />

McAfee, S. T. 50<br />

McAllister, S. M. 92<br />

McCallister, S. L. 43, 46, 67, 85, 90<br />

McCarthy, A. 60<br />

McCarthy, M. D. 43, 80, 94, 98<br />

McCarthy, M. J. 53, 71, 101<br />

McClatchie, S. 83<br />

McClelland, J. M. 46<br />

McClelland, J. W. 46, 66, 87<br />

McClenachan, G. 73<br />

McCorkle, D. C. 82, 94<br />

McCorquodale, J. A. 52<br />

McCrackin, M. L. 55, 87<br />

McCright, A. M. 70<br />

McCrow, J. P. 104<br />

McCutchan, J. H. 90<br />

McDaniel, L. D. 41, 77<br />

McDonald, A. M. 73<br />

McDonald, C. P. 76<br />

McDonald, N. 61<br />

McDonnell, A. M. 81<br />

McDonough, O. T. 46<br />

McElroy, A. E. 98<br />

McEwen, D. C. 54<br />

McFarland, M. 100<br />

McGill, C. J. 95<br />

McGillicuddy, D. 58, 91, 100<br />

McGillicuddy, D. J. 58, 100<br />

McGinnis, D. F. 81<br />

McHugh, C. 65<br />

McIlvin, M. R. 103<br />

115<br />

McInnes, A. 72, 95<br />

Mcinnes, A. S. 72<br />

McInnes, A. S. 72<br />

McIntosh, A. R. 69<br />

McIntosh, H. A. 56<br />

McIntyre, C. 46<br />

McIntyre, P. B. 85, 98<br />

McKay, C. P. 104<br />

McKay, P. 99<br />

McKay, R. M. 45, 101<br />

McKee, K. L. 99<br />

McKelvie, I. D. 76<br />

McKenzie, C. H. 51<br />

McKie-Krisberg, Z. M. 96<br />

McKindsey, C. W. 80<br />

McKinney, R. 52<br />

McKnight, D. M. 65, 97, 104<br />

McLaskey, A. 47, 96<br />

McLaskey, A. K. 96<br />

McLaughlin, J. T. 74<br />

McLean, E. 61<br />

McLean, T. I. 92<br />

McLellan, S. L. 58<br />

McMahon, K. D. 58<br />

McManus, M. C. 85, 90<br />

McNair, J. N. 75<br />

McNamara, M. E. 47<br />

McNeill, K. 45<br />

McParland, E. L. 68<br />

McTigue, N. D. 56<br />

McWilliams, J. C. 57, 99<br />

Mead, R. 82, 83, 91<br />

Mead, R. N. 82, 83, 91<br />

Measures, C. 76<br />

Medrano, M. R. 50<br />

Meickle, T. 62<br />

Meier, A. 90<br />

Meile, C. 47, 54, 56, 66, 67, 68,<br />

75, 84<br />

Meile, C. D. 68, 75, 84<br />

Meinikmann, K. 84<br />

Mejer, K. 54<br />

Melendez-Diaz, J. 40<br />

Melendez, E. 70<br />

Meléndez , J. 88<br />

Meléndez, M. 64<br />

Melendez, W. 71<br />

Meler, J. 96<br />

Mella-Flores, D. 44<br />

Melo, M. L. 85<br />

Menchaca, I. 50<br />

Menden-Deuer, S. 41, 92<br />

Mendez, A. J. 61<br />

Mendez, C. 62<br />

Mendez-Lazaro, P. 86<br />

Mendonça, R. 85<br />

Mengel, M. 48, 63<br />

Mengel, M. J. 63<br />

Menvielle, E. 64<br />

Menze, M. A. 54<br />

Mercier-Blais, S. 54<br />

Mercier, M. L. 104<br />

Merico, A. 76<br />

Merlo, L. 83<br />

Merritt, D. 60<br />

Meselhe , E. A. 52<br />

Meselhe, E. A. 53<br />

Mesfioui, R. 63<br />

Mesner, N. O. 50<br />

Métivier, F. 75<br />

Metternich, A. 98<br />

Meuche, A. 79<br />

Meyer, K. A. 83<br />

Meyer, M. A. 104<br />

Meyer, R. M. 50<br />

Meysman, F. 64, 76, 81<br />

Meysman, F. J. 64, 76<br />

Miao, A. J. 45<br />

Michalak, A. M. 70<br />

Michelena, T. M. 98<br />

Mickey, R. C. 71<br />

Middag, R. 76<br />

Middelburg, J. J. 69, 93<br />

Middleton, B. A. 42, 73<br />

Mihuc, T. B. 88<br />

Milani, A. 90<br />

Milbrandt, E. C. 45, 75, 93<br />

Milbrandt, E. M. 93<br />

Miles, S. M. 45<br />

Miles, T. N. 100<br />

Milinic, T. 93<br />

Millar, J. J. 65, 66, 95<br />

Miller, B. 65<br />

Miller, M. 45<br />

Miller, R. 44<br />

Miller-Sims, V. 59<br />

Miller, T. J. 83<br />

Miller, W. L. 42, 43, 101<br />

Millie, D. F. 90<br />

Milligan, A. J. 104<br />

Mills, E. W. 44<br />

Mills, H. J. 60, 65, 71, 78<br />

Milne, A. 77<br />

Miltner, A. 94<br />

Milton, N. B. 91<br />

Mincer, T. J. 81, 87<br />

Mines, C. H. 102<br />

Mingelbier, M. 96<br />

Minor, E. C. 85<br />

Mino, Y. 40<br />

Miranda, F. 78<br />

Miselis, J. L. 99<br />

Mitarai, S. 99<br />

Mitchell, B. G. 54, 84<br />

Mitchell, C. J. 88<br />

Mitra, S. 44<br />

Moberly, J. 60, 94<br />

Moderan, J. M. 98<br />

Moerth, C. M. 65<br />

Moffett, J. 101, 103<br />

Moffett, J. W. 103<br />

Moggridge, H. L. 43<br />

Mohajerin, T. J. 104<br />

Mohamedali, T. 58<br />

Mohammadpour, G. 64<br />

Mohan, J. 70<br />

Mohr, W. 77<br />

Moisander, P. 43, 62, 91<br />

Moisander, P. H. 62, 91<br />

Mok, J. 66<br />

Moksness, E. 83<br />

Moles, M. D. 79<br />

Molina, M. 78<br />

Möller, K. O. 102<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Monismith, S. G. 57<br />

Monks, L. 89<br />

Montagna, P. 64, 73, 82, 83, 90<br />

Montagna, P. A. 73, 82, 90<br />

Montes-Hugo, M. A. 64<br />

Montgomery , M. T. 63<br />

Montgomery, M. T. 66<br />

Montiel-Hernández, J. R. 79<br />

Montoya, J. P. 72, 91, 94<br />

Montoya-Ospina, R. 45<br />

Moody, E. 47<br />

Moody, R. 73<br />

Moore, A. 59<br />

Moore, C. 50, 72, 76, 93<br />

Moore, C. M. 50, 72, 76<br />

Moore, K. 51<br />

Moore, M. V. 55, 85<br />

Moore, T. N. 70<br />

Moos, S. B. 77<br />

Mopper, K. 42, 43, 51, 60, 63, 70,<br />

82, 91<br />

Morales-Núñez, A. G. 67<br />

Morales-Williams, A. M. 57<br />

Moran, D. M. 45, 103<br />

Moran, J. M. 44<br />

Moran, M. 72, 77, 101, 103<br />

Moran, M. A. 72, 101, 103<br />

Moran, S. B. 48, 81<br />

Moreano, M. 85<br />

Morel, F. M. 51<br />

Morell, J. M. 64<br />

Morgan-Kiss, R. M. 104<br />

Moriceau, B. 56, 81, 101<br />

Moritz, C. 54<br />

Morkeski, K. 76<br />

Morotti, J. 82, 100<br />

Morrill, C. 60<br />

Morris, D. P. 65<br />

Morris, E. P. 76<br />

Morrison, C. 41<br />

Morrison, H. G. 58<br />

Morris, P. 45<br />

Morse, M. L. 62<br />

Mortazavi, B. 58, 71, 76, 90, 101<br />

Mortazavi, B. M. 76<br />

Morton, P. 76<br />

Mosby, A. F. 92<br />

Moseman-Valtierra, S. 55, 76<br />

Moseman-Valtierra, S. M. 55<br />

Moser, F. 45<br />

Moses, M. N. 44<br />

Mosher, J. J. 47, 55<br />

Moss, A. G. 45, 69<br />

Moss, M. 91<br />

Mostovaya, A. 60<br />

Motard-Cote, J. 55, 77<br />

Motard-Côté, J. 66<br />

Motschman, J. D. 56<br />

Moulin, F. 82<br />

Mousing, E. A. 41<br />

Moutin, T. 103<br />

Mouw, C. B. 63<br />

Mou, X. 91<br />

Mowlem, M. 81, 90, 100<br />

Mowlem, M. C. 81, 90<br />

Moyer, C. 92<br />

Mueller, J. A. 103<br />

Mueller, N. 48<br />

Muhl, R. M. 96<br />

Mulholland, M. R. 62, 91<br />

Müllenmeister, S. 43<br />

Muller, B. 54<br />

Müller, B. 64<br />

Muller-Karger, F. 56<br />

Muller-Karulis, B. 78<br />

Muller-Parker, G. 41<br />

Müller, R. A. 43<br />

Mullineaux, L. 70, 82<br />

Mullineaux, L. S. 82<br />

Mullineaux, S. 58<br />

Mullins-Perry, R. 75, 90, 99<br />

Mullins-Perry, R. E. 90<br />

Mullins-Perry, R. L. 75, 99<br />

Munawar, M. 74<br />

Munn, M. D. 66<br />

Munoz Ucros, J. 101<br />

Munson, K. M. 77, 84<br />

Muraoka, K. 85<br />

Murgulet, D. 99<br />

Murphy, D. W. 102<br />

Murray, C. S. 47<br />

Murray, J. 94<br />

Murray, R. W. 71<br />

Murrell, M. 58, 70, 71, 72, 88, 96<br />

Murrell, M. C. 58, 70, 71, 88, 96<br />

Musat, N. 58<br />

Muscarella, M. E. 47, 58<br />

Mustard, J. F. 104<br />

Mutschler, J. P. 58<br />

Mutz, M. 47<br />

Myers-Pigg, A. N. 46<br />

Myrick, M. L. 81<br />

N<br />

Nagaosa, K. 95<br />

Naik, P. 63<br />

Nakov, T. 55<br />

Nanayakkara, L. 98<br />

Nance, J. M. 71<br />

Nannen, M. 73<br />

Naoe, R. 94<br />

Napier, J. A. 41<br />

Naruse, H. 95<br />

Nascimento, F. 97<br />

Nasmith, L. E. 80<br />

Natchimithu, S. 81<br />

Natchimuthu, S. 70, 76<br />

Nausch, G. 57<br />

Nausch, M. 57<br />

Navarro, G. 76<br />

Navez, J. 100<br />

Ndinga Muniania, C. 101<br />

Neal, B. P. 54<br />

Needham, D. 87<br />

Needoba, J. 75, 88, 90<br />

Needoba, J. A. 88, 90<br />

Neilan, R. M. 71<br />

Neill, B. 48, 68<br />

Nejstgaard, J. C. 47, 98<br />

Nelson, C. 58, 77<br />

Nelson, C. E. 77<br />

Nelson, D. 88<br />

116<br />

Nelson, E. R. 67<br />

Nelson, J. 65<br />

Nelson, M. M. 90<br />

Nelson, N. 42, 57, 67<br />

Nelson, N. B. 42, 57, 67<br />

Nelson, R. J. 69<br />

Nelson, S. J. 54<br />

Nemergut, D. R. 104<br />

Nemeth, R. S. 58<br />

Nesterenko , P. 64<br />

Netburn, A. N. 52<br />

Neubert, M. G. 50<br />

Neuer, S. 45, 48, 56, 65, 89, 94<br />

Neuheimer, A. B. 54<br />

Neuman, M. J. 79<br />

Nevarez, N. 47, 60<br />

Neve, R. 102<br />

New, A. M. 101, 104<br />

Newcomb, T. 50<br />

Newell, S. E. 101<br />

Newton, J. A. 75<br />

Newton, R. J. 58<br />

Nezlin, N. 63, 86<br />

Nezlin, N. P. 63<br />

Ng, G. 55, 66<br />

Nguyen, D. 77<br />

Nguyen, J. C. 91<br />

Nicholson, B. E. 61, 104<br />

Nickels, C. F. 95<br />

Nickus, U. 96<br />

Nidzieko, N. J. 66<br />

Nielsdottir, M. C. 50<br />

Nielsdóttir, M. C. 63<br />

Nielsen, E. E. 69<br />

Nielsen, L. P. 58, 77<br />

Nielsen, M. H. 79<br />

Nielsen, N. J. 53<br />

Nielsen, S. L. 93<br />

Nielsen, T. G. 55, 56, 59, 69,<br />

98, 100<br />

Nierzwicki-Bauer, S. A. 80, 88, 98<br />

Niesen, M. 50<br />

Nieves, M. 59<br />

Niggemann, J. 43, 44, 47, 53<br />

Nightingale, P. D. 57<br />

Nigro, O. D. 84<br />

Nihongi, A. 56<br />

Nishi, H. 95<br />

Nishino, S. 77<br />

Nissanka, A. 92<br />

Nissimov, J. I. 41<br />

Niu, Q. 71<br />

Nixon, S. W. 71, 87<br />

Nobili, R. 55<br />

Noble, A. 45, 74<br />

Noble, A. E. 45<br />

Noell, K. M. 65<br />

Nohava, T. 75<br />

Nojavan A., F. 74<br />

Nordström, M. C. 56<br />

Norf, H. 98<br />

Norman, L. 51, 101<br />

Norrbin, F. 102<br />

North, E. W. 81<br />

North, R. 40<br />

North, R. L. 40<br />

Norton, E. L. 57<br />

Norton Henry, E. N. 44, 98<br />

Norwood, M. J. 67, 100<br />

Nosaka, Y. 42<br />

Noss, C. 81<br />

Noto, A. 62<br />

Nour Al Din, N. 86<br />

Novak, M. G. 42<br />

Novelo-Gutiérrez, R. 86<br />

Nover, D. M. 78<br />

Novoa, A. 89<br />

Novoveska, L. 84<br />

Nowaczyk , A. 93<br />

Nowald, N. 48<br />

Nowinski, J. D. 72<br />

Nowlin, W. 75<br />

Nozais, C. 79, 84<br />

Nuetzmann, G. 84<br />

Nugnes, K. A. 44<br />

Nuñez-Milland, D. 50<br />

Nunnally, C. C. 86<br />

Nützmann, G. 54<br />

Nyarko, A. A. 63<br />

Nyman, J. A. 53<br />

Nzamubona, K. 82, 100<br />

Nzamubona, K. F. 82<br />

O<br />

Obenour, D. R. 70<br />

O’Brien, J. M. 69<br />

Obryk, M. K. 104<br />

Ochiai, Y. 40<br />

Och, L. M. 64<br />

Ochs, C. A. 65, 66, 95<br />

O’Connell, C. A. 40, 74<br />

O’Connor, A. E. 84<br />

O’Dell, M. J. 61<br />

O’Donnell, J. 73<br />

O’Donnell, K. 95<br />

Ogawa, H. 42, 62<br />

O’Geen, A. T. 66<br />

Oghenekaro, E. U. 67<br />

Ogram, A. V. 55, 95<br />

Ohman, M. D. 57, 69, 95<br />

Ohnemus, D. C. 76<br />

Oinonen, M. 42<br />

Ojima, M. 45<br />

Okazaki, Y. 69<br />

Olafsson, J. S. 88<br />

Olden, J. D. 80<br />

O’Leary, S. 89<br />

Olin, J. A. 88<br />

Oliver, J. L. 53<br />

Oliver, M. J. 40<br />

Olivier, H. 94<br />

Olli, K. 48<br />

Olney, J. L. 44<br />

Olsen, L. M. 92, 93<br />

Olson, E. 58, 91<br />

Olson, E. M. 58<br />

Olson, M. B. 60<br />

Olson, M. H. 96<br />

Olson, R. J. 50, 103<br />

Omanovic, D. 100<br />

O’Neil, J. M. 83, 90<br />

Öquist, M. 76


Meeting Program<br />

Orbach, D. 61<br />

Orcutt, B. N. 58<br />

O’reilly, C. B. 85<br />

O’Reilly, C. M. 85<br />

Oremland, R. S. 41<br />

Orignac, J. 79<br />

Oriol, L. 92, 103<br />

Ormshaw, H. 64<br />

Orsi, W. 41<br />

Ortega-Retuerta, E. 89<br />

Ortell, N. 91<br />

Ortiz, E. 60<br />

Ortiz-González, I. C. 64<br />

Ortiz-Hernandez, G. L. 95<br />

Ortiz, V. L. 52<br />

Ortiz-Zayas, J. R. 95<br />

Ortmann, A. 82, 91, 101, 103<br />

Ortmann, A. C. 91, 101, 103<br />

Orvain, F. 83<br />

Osburn, C. 42, 63, 65, 66<br />

Osburn, C. L. 42, 63, 65, 66<br />

Oschlies, A. 63, 72, 77, 81<br />

OSEJI, O. F. 103<br />

Osrtowski, M. 42<br />

Ossolinski, J. E. 53, 81, 100<br />

Osterholz, H. 43<br />

Osterman, L. E. 99<br />

Ostrom, N. E. 71<br />

O’Sullivan, D. W. 65<br />

Oswald, L. 55, 66, 77<br />

Osypian, M. 69<br />

Otero-Morales, E. 70<br />

Otten, T. G. 74<br />

Otto-Bliesner, B. 60<br />

Overholt, E. P. 78<br />

Overton, E. 81<br />

Oviatt, C. A. 85, 87, 90<br />

Oviedo-Vargas, D. 79<br />

Owen, K. R. 41<br />

Owens, M. 47, 53, 97<br />

Owens, M. S. 47, 53<br />

Owens, S. 104<br />

Ozbay, G. 60<br />

Ozersky, T. 55<br />

Ozhan, K. 45<br />

P<br />

Pabortsava, K. 72, 81<br />

Pace, M. L. 85, 93, 100<br />

Paczkowska, J. 78<br />

Padilla-Crespo, E. 70<br />

Padilla-Rivera, D. J. 88<br />

Padisák, J. 86<br />

Paerl, H. 42, 54, 60, 63, 65, 74<br />

Paerl, H. W. 42, 54, 63, 65, 74<br />

Paerl, R. W. 87<br />

Paffenhofer, G. A. 79<br />

Paffenhöfer, G. A. 59<br />

Pakhomov, E. A. 47, 92<br />

Palacios, S. L. 48<br />

Palamara, L. 40<br />

Palenik, B. 87, 96, 103, 104<br />

Palinkas, C. 53, 61<br />

Palinkas, C. M. 53<br />

Palmer, M. A. 46<br />

Palmer, S. 51, 60<br />

Palmer, S. M. 51<br />

Palmer, T. A. 82<br />

Pal, S. 62<br />

Palumbo, A. V. 55<br />

Panayotidis, P. 59<br />

Pangle, K. L. 60, 79<br />

Pannard, A. 74<br />

Panneer Selvam, B. 46, 70, 76<br />

Papes, M. 80<br />

Paquet, S. 74<br />

Parab, S. G. 52<br />

Paraska, D. 72<br />

Parekh, A. D. 60<br />

Parenteau, M. 80<br />

Pargett, D. 81<br />

Paris, C. B. 58<br />

Parker, A. E. 58, 78, 92<br />

Parker, E. R. 91<br />

Parker, M. 41, 74, 97<br />

Parker, M. S. 41, 74<br />

Park, H. 79<br />

Park, K. 54, 87<br />

Park, Y. H. 84<br />

Parris, A. 50<br />

Parris, D. J. 82, 89, 91<br />

Parsek, M. 41, 87<br />

Parsons, A. 91<br />

Pascual, M. 50<br />

Passow, U. 53<br />

Pastoors, M. 50<br />

Patel, D. 60<br />

Paterson, G. 102<br />

Patino, R. 68<br />

Patiño, R. 92<br />

Patricio, H. C. 42<br />

Patrick, W. 60<br />

Patters0n, J. 90<br />

Patterson, H. K. 87<br />

Paudel, B. 83, 90<br />

Pauer, J. 58, 71<br />

Pauer, J. J. 71<br />

Paul, J. H. 41, 72, 77, 90<br />

Paulmier, A. 100<br />

Paul, V. 62<br />

Paver, S. F. 87, 96<br />

Payne, J. T. 65, 66, 95<br />

Paytan, A. 84, 90, 94<br />

Paz-Yepes, J. 87, 96, 103<br />

Pazzaglia, F. J. 65<br />

Peace, A. 55, 103<br />

Peace, A. L. 103<br />

Peacock, E. E. 73, 103<br />

Peacor, S. D. 51<br />

Pearson, A. 48<br />

Pedersen, J. B. 79<br />

Pedersen, M. F. 97<br />

Pedersen, T. M. 93<br />

Pedrós-Alió, C. 77<br />

Pegg, M. A. 45<br />

Peirce, K. 46<br />

Pei, S. 50<br />

Pellerin, B. A. 66, 75, 93<br />

Peltonen, A. 85<br />

Penczykowski, R. M. 61<br />

Pendleton, E. 99<br />

Peng, X. 82, 101<br />

117<br />

Pennington, P. L. 61<br />

Penta, B. 71<br />

Percuoco, V. 82<br />

Perdue, E. M. 60<br />

Pereira, J. F. 52<br />

Perello, M. M. 78<br />

Perez, B. 60<br />

Pérez-Hernández, M. 72<br />

Pérez-Pérez, N. M. 62<br />

Perez, X. G. 45<br />

Perez, Z. 59<br />

Peri, F. 56, 67, 75, 76, 84, 93, 94<br />

Perkins, M. 48<br />

Perlman, D. H. 51<br />

Pernthaler, J. 74<br />

Perretti, C. T. 40<br />

Perrettii, C. 83<br />

Perry, E. 59<br />

Perry, M. J. 57<br />

Perry, T. 40<br />

Persaud, A. D. 88<br />

Pershing, A. J. 69<br />

Peschiera, M. 70<br />

Peters, A. 61<br />

Peterse, F. 46<br />

Peterson, B. 94<br />

Peterson, L. 84<br />

Peterson, R. N. 84<br />

Peterson, T. 51, 60, 75, 90<br />

Peterson, T. D. 90<br />

Peterson, T. R. 51, 60<br />

Peters, S. C. 65<br />

Petit, M. 81<br />

Petitpas, C. M. 42, 83<br />

Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B. 46, 87, 96<br />

Peura, S. 74<br />

Phelps, J. H. 88<br />

Phillips, H. E. 72<br />

Phillips, R. 88<br />

Phipps, S. 71<br />

Phlips, E. J. 83<br />

Picheral, M. 101, 102<br />

Pidgeon, E. J. 56<br />

Piehler, M. F. 72<br />

Pierce, M. 52<br />

Piercey, E. G. 80<br />

Pierson, J. 45, 47, 50, 52, 62, 67, 96<br />

Pierson , J. J. 71<br />

Pierson, J. J. 47, 52, 62<br />

Pike, S. M. 44<br />

Pilgrim, B. 51<br />

Pilskaln, C. H. 89<br />

Pimenta, A. 58<br />

Pinckney, J. 56<br />

Pineda, J. 61, 86, 88<br />

Pineda, R. R. 70<br />

Piniella, A. E. 101<br />

Pinter, G. 61<br />

Pinto, F. 95<br />

Pistoia, A. 98<br />

Pitkänen, L. M. 46<br />

Pitt, K. A. 47<br />

Pitula , J. S. 65<br />

Pitula, J. S. 96<br />

Pivor, J. 79<br />

Pizarro, H. N. 46<br />

Planas, D. 74<br />

Planchon, F. 92, 100<br />

Plant, J. 75, 100<br />

Plew, D. 69<br />

Plisnier, P. D. 85<br />

Plis, Y. M. 88<br />

Ploug, H. 48, 72<br />

Podeswa, Y. 47<br />

Poehls, A. 61<br />

Pöhle, S. 77<br />

Pohlman, J. 61<br />

Pohnert, G. 103<br />

Poikane, R. 78<br />

Poitrasson, F. 94<br />

Polerecky, L. 54, 81<br />

Policicchio, H. M. 66<br />

Polikarpov, G. G. 86<br />

Polikarpov, I. 68<br />

Pollard , A. I. 79<br />

Pollard, P. C. 43<br />

Pollock, E. 78<br />

Pollock, M. 40<br />

Pondell, C. 56<br />

Popendorf, K. J. 103<br />

Popp, B. 70, 101<br />

Popp, B. N. 101<br />

Porcal, P. 51<br />

Porté-Agel, F. 78<br />

Porteous, L. R. 79<br />

Porter-Goff, E. 46<br />

Posch, M. 102<br />

Potter, K. J. 51<br />

Poulin, C. 65<br />

Poulton, A. J. 44, 56, 72, 81<br />

Powell, B. S. 57<br />

Powell, E. N. 65<br />

Powell, H. 75<br />

Powell, J. R. 69<br />

Powell, Z. 51, 89<br />

Powell, Z. D. 89<br />

Powers, L. C. 42, 43, 101<br />

Powers, S. 73<br />

Prairies, Y. T. 76<br />

Prairie, Y. T. 54, 76<br />

Prakya, S. R. 72<br />

Prandke, H. 84<br />

Premke, K. 85<br />

Prescott, D. 96<br />

Prestie, C. 40<br />

Prestie, C. C. 40<br />

Preston, C. 81, 93<br />

Preston, C. M. 93<br />

Price, A. L. 70<br />

Price, L. M. 97<br />

Price, R. A. 88<br />

Priestas, A. M. 64<br />

Prince, D. M. 84<br />

Prins, T. C. 79<br />

Priscu, J. C. 86, 104<br />

Pritchard, W. J. 101<br />

Probst, E. E. 83<br />

Probst, W. N. 50<br />

Prokushkin, A. 46<br />

Prosser, K. N. 48<br />

Pruski, A. 79<br />

Psenner, R. 96<br />

Puigcorbé, V. 76, 101<br />

Pujo-Pay, M. 103<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Pullin, M. J. 43, 75, 79, 100<br />

Purcell, K. M. 71<br />

Purdy, K. J. 70, 101<br />

Purkis, S. 86<br />

Pusch, M. 52, 65<br />

Pusch, M. T. 52<br />

Putland, J. 45, 65<br />

Q<br />

Qian, S. S. 74<br />

Qin, B. 74<br />

Qin, W. 101<br />

Qiu, W. 50<br />

Quattrini, A. M. 73<br />

Queguiner, B. 84, 101<br />

Quéguiner, B. 100<br />

Quéroué, F. 100<br />

Questel, J. M. 59<br />

Qu, F. 73<br />

Quigg, A. 45, 72, 73, 83, 86, 95<br />

Quillen, A. 85<br />

Quiñones-Rivera, Z. J. 74<br />

Quiñones-Vilches, N. 40<br />

R<br />

Raatikainen, L. 47<br />

Rabalais, N. N. 70<br />

Rabaut, M. 50<br />

Rackovan, J. L. 74<br />

Radic, A. 94<br />

Raes, E. J. 72<br />

Ragland, C. 60<br />

Ragueneau, O. 81, 101<br />

Rahman, M. S. 52, 71<br />

Rahn, K. 86<br />

Räike, A. 76<br />

Rakotomalala, C. 83<br />

Raleigh, L. M. 63<br />

Raleigh, M. 46, 63<br />

Raleigh, M. L. 46<br />

Ramatchandirane, C. G. 64<br />

Ramesh, R. 78<br />

Ramirez, A. 44, 86<br />

Ramirez, M. 46<br />

Ramos-Chavez, J. C. 93<br />

Ramos, J. 65<br />

Ramsey, R. C. 99<br />

Randall-Speaks, C. 95<br />

Rao, A. M. 64<br />

Rapaglia , J. 74<br />

Rappe, M. S. 77<br />

Rappé, M. S. 63<br />

Rasmussen, E. K. 93<br />

Rauschenberg, S. 63<br />

Raymond Biaggi, C. M. 96<br />

Raymond, P. 43, 46, 65, 76<br />

Raymond, P. A. 65, 76<br />

Raynie, R. 99<br />

Read, B. 60, 91, 94<br />

Read, B. A. 60<br />

Read, E. K. 58<br />

Reader, H. 53<br />

Read, J. 85<br />

Read, J. S. 85<br />

Reavie, E. D. 102<br />

Reckhow, K. H. 74<br />

Record, N. R. 69<br />

Redalje, D. G. 50<br />

Reddy, C. M. 73<br />

Reed, A. H. 44<br />

Reed, A. J. 80, 101<br />

Reed, D. J. 77<br />

Reed, M. 64<br />

Rees, A. P. 72<br />

Reese, B. K. 60, 71, 78<br />

Reichart, G. J. 69, 93<br />

Reigstad, M. 47, 48<br />

Reinfelder, J. R. 104<br />

Reinthaler, T. H. 94<br />

Reise, K. 69<br />

Reisenbichler, K. R. 52<br />

Reisinger, A. S. 83<br />

Reiss, C. 93<br />

Rellinger, A. 45, 55, 66<br />

Rellinger, A. N. 45, 55<br />

Rember, R. 77<br />

Remmel, E. 69, 75, 80<br />

Remmel, E. J. 69, 75<br />

Remple, K. L. 62<br />

Renwick, W. 78, 79<br />

Renwick, W. H. 79<br />

Repeta, D. J. 44, 51, 63<br />

Rérolle, V. 81, 100<br />

Rérolle, V. M. 81<br />

Resler, S. 80<br />

Resseger, E. L. 78<br />

Reuss, N. S. 72<br />

Reuter, H. 51<br />

Revsbech, N. P. 58, 75, 82, 91<br />

Reyes, D. E. 70<br />

Reyier, H. 81<br />

Reynolds, R. 84<br />

Reynolds, S. 94<br />

Rhodes, A. 64<br />

Ribeiro, R. B. 97<br />

Rice, E. J. 74<br />

Rice, L. S. 90<br />

Richards, K. 72<br />

Richards, L. J. 83<br />

Richardson, B. 103<br />

Richardson, J. D. 66, 82<br />

Richardson, K. 41, 78, 79, 81<br />

Richardson, N. 67<br />

Richardson, T. L. 40, 56, 81<br />

Richey, J. E. 46<br />

Richier, S. 44<br />

Rich, J. J. 55, 71<br />

Richmond, R. H. 72<br />

Rich, M. W. 64<br />

Riedinger-Whitmore, M. A. 88, 102<br />

Riegl, B. 67, 86<br />

Riemann, L. 41, 72, 78, 91, 100<br />

Riggs, A. 71<br />

Riisgaard, K. 55<br />

Rijkenberg, M. 76<br />

Riley, R. 85<br />

Riou, V. 72<br />

Riser, S. 57, 75<br />

Risgaard-Petersen, N. 58, 77<br />

118<br />

Risse-Buhl, U. 47<br />

Ritchie, K. B. 41<br />

Rivera-García, L. G. 96<br />

Rivera, P. 45<br />

Rivkin, R. B. 42<br />

Roa, J. 42<br />

Roberson, L. 40, 45<br />

Roberson, L. M. 45<br />

Robert, M. 63<br />

Roberts, B. J. 40, 46, 62, 64, 71, 73<br />

Roberts, M. 58<br />

Robertson, B. R. 58<br />

Robertson, G. 48, 63<br />

Robertson, G. L. 63<br />

Roberts, P. L. 102<br />

Roberts, Q. N. 55<br />

Robidart, J. C. 72<br />

Robinson, C. 48, 51, 55<br />

Robinson, H. E. 47<br />

Robison, B. H. 52<br />

Roca-Martí, M. 101<br />

Rocap, G. 74, 103<br />

Rochon, A. 80<br />

Rock, A. M. 79, 92<br />

Roder, C. 86<br />

Rodolfo, R. S. 84<br />

Rodriguez, A. 40, 44<br />

Rodriguez, A. M. 44<br />

Rodriguez, C. M. 90<br />

Rodriguez , G. E. 98<br />

Rodriguez, P. 46, 76<br />

Rodríguez Santiago, M. A. 96<br />

Roegner, C. 75<br />

Roegner, G. C. 88<br />

Roehm, C. L. 46, 75<br />

Roe, K. L. 51<br />

Roelke, D. L. 48, 50, 86, 92, 96<br />

Roesler, C. S. 96<br />

Rogan, N. 76<br />

Rogener, M. 71<br />

Rogers , D. 74<br />

Rogers, D. R. 58<br />

Rogers, J. 97<br />

Rogers, T. M. 51<br />

Rohal, M. 57<br />

Rohwer, F. 77<br />

Roik, A. 86<br />

Roland, F. 85, 93<br />

Roldan Irizarry, D. 96<br />

Rollings, A. 68<br />

Romagnan, J. B. 102<br />

Romagosa, C. M. 80<br />

Roman, B. 81, 93<br />

Roman, M. 47, 52, 71<br />

Román Morales, C. D. 96<br />

Roman, M. R. 47, 52, 71<br />

Rominger, R. 98<br />

Roncalli, V. 59<br />

Rontani, J. F. 81<br />

Rosa, J. 61<br />

Rosario-Cora, K. 77<br />

Rosas, K. 86<br />

Rose, J. 73<br />

Rose, K. 71, 78, 83, 96<br />

Rose, K. A. 71<br />

Rose, K. C. 78, 96<br />

Rosemond, A. D. 76, 79<br />

Rosenberg, A. 40, 83<br />

Rosenberry, D. O. 84<br />

Rosenbloom, N. 60<br />

Rosengard, S. Z. 44<br />

Rosenheim, B. E. 46<br />

Rosenwasser, S. 103<br />

Roshan, S. 76<br />

Rossi, V. 57, 72<br />

Ross, M. 101<br />

Rothig, T. 86<br />

Rothlisberger, J. D. 80<br />

Rothman, D. H. 44<br />

Rouco, M. 91<br />

Roughan, M. 57, 72<br />

Roukaerts, A. 72<br />

Roulet, N. T. 96<br />

Roullier, F. 102<br />

Roumillat, B. 70<br />

Roumillat, W. A. 60<br />

Rowe, G. 73, 86<br />

Rowe, G. T. 73<br />

Rowe, O. F. 78<br />

Rowley, D. C. 41<br />

Roy, E. D. 53<br />

Royer, T. V. 79<br />

Roy, S. 80<br />

Ruacho, A. 63<br />

Rubio, G. 60<br />

Rudnick, D. L. 57<br />

Rudstam, L. G. 55<br />

Ruffner, J. 58<br />

Rugg, M. 45<br />

Ruiz Chancho, M. J. 51<br />

Ruiz-Ramos, D. V. 73<br />

Rummel, J. D. 104<br />

Ruppenthal, M. 65<br />

Russell, M. 97<br />

Rutgers van der Loeff, M. 76, 101<br />

Rutherford, E. 80<br />

Rutherford, E. S. 80<br />

Rutzen, I. 69<br />

Ruzzo, W. 97<br />

Ryan, D. E. 103<br />

Ryan, J. 48, 57, 72, 84<br />

Ryan, J. P. 57, 72<br />

Ryan-Keogh, T. J. 50<br />

Ryer, C. 89<br />

Rynearson, T. 50, 59, 98, 104<br />

Rynearson, T. A. 59, 98, 104<br />

Rysgaard, S. 55<br />

S<br />

Saad, J. 88<br />

Sabadel, A. 94<br />

Sable, S. 80<br />

Sackmann, B. 58<br />

Sackmann, B. S. 58<br />

Sadid, K. M. 52<br />

Sadovski, A. L. 73<br />

Sagare, M. 60<br />

Sahin, M. S. 101<br />

Sahling, H. 90, 100<br />

Sahoo, G. B. 78<br />

Said-Ahamed, W. 94<br />

Sailley, S. 56


Meeting Program<br />

Sainmont, J. 60, 69<br />

Saino, T. 40<br />

Saito, H. 42<br />

Saito, M. A. 45, 74, 77, 103, 104<br />

Saito, T. 89<br />

Sakagami, T. 99<br />

Sakamoto, C. 75, 100<br />

Sakshaug, E. 93<br />

Sakuraba, R. 66<br />

Salisbury, J. S. 56<br />

Salka, I. 41<br />

Sallee, J. B. 84<br />

Salmon, S. U. 72<br />

Salt, L. A. 84<br />

Salyuk, P. A. 42<br />

Samchyshyna , L. 67<br />

Sanchez, B. I. 67<br />

Sánchez, M. L. 88<br />

Sanchez Santana, B. I. 96<br />

Sánchez Santana, B. I. 96<br />

Sander, S. 51, 77, 89<br />

Sander, S. G. 51, 77, 89<br />

Sanders, R. 56, 60, 76, 81, 96<br />

Sanders, R. W. 60, 96<br />

Sandgren, C. D. 58, 87<br />

Sand-Jensen, K. 93<br />

Sanial, V. 84, 100<br />

Santavy, D. L. 83<br />

Santiago-Vazquez, L. Z. 60<br />

Santoro, A. 62, 82, 103<br />

Santoro, A. E. 82<br />

Santos, C. J. 67<br />

Santos-Echeandía, J. 100, 101<br />

Santos Flores, C. J. 96<br />

Santos-Flores, C. J. 64<br />

Santos, G. M. 46<br />

Santos, I. R. 92<br />

Santos, M. 72<br />

Santschi, P. H. 45, 63, 89<br />

Sañudo-Wilhelmy, S. 87<br />

Saraceno, J. 66, 75, 93, 95<br />

Saraceno, J. F. 66, 75, 93<br />

Saraceno, M. 57<br />

Sargent, E. C. 72<br />

Sarmiento, J. L. 81<br />

Sarnelle, O. 74<br />

Sarno, A. 60, 94<br />

Sarno, A. F. 60<br />

Saros, J. E. 43, 54, 78<br />

Sarthou, G. 100<br />

Sarvala , J. 85<br />

Sasaoka, K. 40<br />

Sastre, M. 59<br />

Sastri, A. R. 55<br />

Satinsky, B. M. 72, 77<br />

Sato, M. 66<br />

Sauer, M. J. 66, 75, 93, 95<br />

Saul, N. 43<br />

Saunders, J. K. 103<br />

Savrdova, T. 51<br />

Sawall, Y. 86<br />

Sawyer, A. H. 72<br />

Sazhin , A. F. 67<br />

Scanlan, D. J. 42<br />

Scaroni, A. E. 53<br />

Scavia, D. 50, 70<br />

Schaal, S. M. 61<br />

Schaeffer, A. 57<br />

Schaeffer, B. A. 71, 93, 96<br />

Schalles, J. 56<br />

Schalles, J. F. 56<br />

Scharfbillig, A. A. 69, 93<br />

Schatz, D. 103<br />

Schauer, R. 77<br />

Scheef, L. P. 83, 93<br />

Scheffer, M. 85<br />

Schiaffino, M. R. 88<br />

Schieber, B. 84<br />

Schijf, J. 51<br />

Schindler, D. E. 76<br />

Schizas, N. V. 98<br />

Schladow, G. 43<br />

Schladow, S. G. 78<br />

Schlichting, C. D. 83<br />

Schlief, J. 47<br />

Schlosser, C. 77<br />

Schlueter, R. 79<br />

Schmid, M. 64<br />

Schmidt, A. 99<br />

Schmidt-Rohr, K. 43<br />

Schmitt-Kopplin, P. 43, 53, 66<br />

Schnackenberg, L. 60<br />

Schneider, P. 78<br />

Schnetzer, A. 69, 75<br />

Schnute, J. T. 83<br />

Schoemann, V. 76<br />

Schofield, O. 100<br />

Scholin, C. 48, 72, 81, 93<br />

Scholin, C. A. 72, 93<br />

Schollaert Uz, S. 89<br />

Schoolcraft, K. S. 55<br />

Schouten, S. 58, 82, 101<br />

Schoville, J. 61<br />

Schramm, A. 77<br />

Schreiber, L. 77<br />

Schröder, J. 61<br />

Schroth, A. 42, 43, 92<br />

Schroth, A. W. 43, 92<br />

Schubert, C. J. 93<br />

Schuett, E. 92<br />

Schultz, D. T. 62<br />

Schultze, M. 86<br />

Schultz, G. E. 87<br />

Schultz, T. 61<br />

Schulz, C. J. 91, 94<br />

Schulze, T. 50<br />

Schutte, C. A. 84<br />

Schvarcz, C. R. 103<br />

Schwartz, M. 45, 66, 84, 92<br />

Schwartz, M. C. 45, 84, 92<br />

Schwehr, K. A. 63<br />

Schwieterman, G. D. 89<br />

Schwingle, R. 75, 100<br />

Scicluna, T. R. 55<br />

Scotch , C. G. 99<br />

Scott, D. 42, 43<br />

Scott, D. T. 42, 43<br />

Scott, E. E. 47<br />

Scott, J. T.<br />

44, 47, 54, 74, 78, 79, 86, 96<br />

Scott, K. A. 55<br />

Scott, K. M. 58<br />

Scott, K. R. 59<br />

Scott, W. C. 45, 48<br />

119<br />

Scranton, M. I. 82<br />

Scyphers, S. B. 65<br />

Sebestyen, S. D. 85<br />

Sedwick, P. N. 100, 101<br />

Seegers, B. 48, 84<br />

Seekell, D. A. 93<br />

Segovia, M. 103<br />

Seguinot-Barbosa, J. 86<br />

Seibel, B. A. 52<br />

Seidel, M. 51<br />

Sekula-Wood, E. 74<br />

Seligson, N. 74<br />

Sellinger, C. 88<br />

Selph, K. E. 57<br />

Seminara, D. N. 56<br />

Sempété, R. 81<br />

Senal, M. S. 84<br />

Senft-Batoh, C. D. 83<br />

Sentchev, A. 99<br />

Sereda, J. 40<br />

Sereda, J. M. 40<br />

Serramalera, L. 97<br />

Sesselmann, M. R. 75<br />

Seubert, E. L. 48, 75<br />

Seuront, L. 47<br />

Shaked, Y. 94<br />

Shalapyonok, A. 50<br />

Shank, G. C. 65<br />

Shank, T. M. 82<br />

Shannon, L. J. 80<br />

Shapiro, K. 52<br />

Sharma , S. 101<br />

Sharma, S. 73, 77, 85, 102<br />

Sharp, J. H. 93<br />

Sharples, J. 41<br />

Sharpley, A. N. 44<br />

Sharuga, S. M. 73<br />

Shatwell, T. A. 86<br />

Shaw, T. J. 81<br />

Shchapov, K. 55<br />

Sheibley, R. W. 66<br />

Shelley, F. C. 55<br />

Shelley, R. 51, 76<br />

Shelley, R. U. 51, 76<br />

Shelton, A. J. 72<br />

Shelton, N. 48, 56<br />

Shelton, N. L. 48<br />

Shema, S. 61<br />

Shenker, J. 67<br />

Shen, Q. 83<br />

Shen, Y. 43<br />

Shepard, A. 72, 95<br />

Shepard, A. K. 95<br />

Sherlock, R. E. 52<br />

Sherman, E. M. 51<br />

Sheyn, U. 103<br />

Shibazaki, A. 95<br />

Shields, M. R. 65<br />

Shi, H. Y. 53<br />

Shi, J. Z. 53<br />

Shiller, A. M. 53, 76, 94<br />

Shim, M. 76<br />

Shiozaki, T. 91<br />

Shipe, R. F. 95<br />

Shi, X. L. 57<br />

Shoemaker, K. M. 62<br />

Shrift, A. 90<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong><br />

Shulse, C. 77<br />

Shumchenia, E. J. 48, 50<br />

Shumway, S. E. 83<br />

Shurin, J. 62<br />

Sichlau, M. H. 69<br />

Sickman, J. O. 59<br />

Siedlecki, S. A. 71<br />

Siegel, D. 42, 56, 57, 67, 74, 99, 104<br />

Siegel, D. A. 42, 56, 57, 67, 99<br />

Sieg, R. D. 61<br />

Sieracki, J. L. 80<br />

Sierszen, M. E. 98<br />

Sievert, M. 58<br />

Sievert, S. M. 58, 68<br />

Sigel, B. J. 88<br />

Sigman, D. M. 61, 73<br />

Silbiger, N. 85<br />

Silver, A. C. 70<br />

Silver, M. 52<br />

Simard, N. 80<br />

Simek, K. 74<br />

Simkovsky, R. 103<br />

Simmons, K. R. 89<br />

Simmons, L. J. 58<br />

Simms, A. 99<br />

Simon, H. 51<br />

Simoniello, C. 68, 75<br />

Simon, K. S. 43<br />

Simon, M. 43, 44<br />

Simpson, A. 43<br />

Simpson, C. 50<br />

Simpson, S. J. 63<br />

Sinclair, J. 73<br />

Singer, G. A. 43<br />

Singh, A. 78<br />

Singh, G. 60<br />

Sinicrope Talley, T. 89<br />

Sinistro, R. 88<br />

Sinninghe Damsté, J. S. 58, 82, 101<br />

Sipler, R. E. 55, 80<br />

Siringan, F. P. 84<br />

Siuda, A. N. 79<br />

Sivyer, D. 91<br />

Siwicke, J. J. 75, 93<br />

Skovgaard, A. 41<br />

Skrabal, S. 82, 83, 91<br />

Skrabal, S. A. 83, 91<br />

Skrupky, K. 73, 91<br />

Skufca, J. D. 66<br />

Slaughter, A. 55, 67, 69<br />

Slaughter, A. M. 67, 69<br />

Sleighter, R. L. 43, 46, 51<br />

Slemmons, K. E. 43, 78<br />

Slimak, N. 68<br />

Slomp, C. P. 72<br />

Smaal, A. C. 79<br />

Smayda, T. J. 42<br />

Smethie Jr., W. M. 99<br />

Smith, A. N. 73<br />

Smith, B. 91<br />

Smith, C. 77, 89, 99, 100<br />

Smith, C. B. 77<br />

Smith, C. G. 99<br />

Smith, C. J. 89<br />

Smith, E. A. 49, 53<br />

Smith, E. M. 82<br />

Smith, H. E. 44, 56


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Smith, H. M. 73<br />

Smith, J. E. 77<br />

Smith, J. M. 93, 101<br />

Smith, J. N. 99<br />

Smith, J. P. 65<br />

Smith, K. A. 81<br />

Smith, L. K. 60<br />

Smith, L. M. 85, 90<br />

Smith, M. D. 71<br />

Smith, S. L. 60, 69<br />

Smith, S. R. 67<br />

Smith, T. B. 70<br />

Smith, T. J. 100<br />

Smith, V. H. 102<br />

Smith, W. O. 92, 100<br />

Smith, Z. P. 46, 63<br />

Smoak, J. M. 100<br />

Smyth, A. R. 72<br />

Smythe, W. F. 62, 92<br />

Sneed, J. 62<br />

Snow, A. 40<br />

Snow, J. T. 72<br />

Snyder, A. 84<br />

Sobek, S. 76, 85, 93<br />

Sofen, L. E. 81, 103<br />

Sogin, M. L. 58<br />

Sohst, B. M. 100<br />

Sokoly, D. 62, 90<br />

Sokoly, D. L. 62<br />

Soliman, Y. 86<br />

Solimini, A. 52<br />

Solomon, C. 85, 98<br />

Solomon, C. T. 85, 98<br />

Solovyev, K. 45<br />

Solow, A. R. 50<br />

Sommaruga, R. 43<br />

So, N. 55<br />

Søndergaard, M. 85<br />

Song , B. 77<br />

Song, B. 77, 95<br />

Song, G. 66, 82<br />

Song, H. Z. 56<br />

Sonmez, R. 103<br />

Sonninen, E. 42<br />

Sonntag, B. 43<br />

Soong, R. 43, 63<br />

Soranno, P. A. 50, 85<br />

Sørensen, N. 81<br />

Sorensen, T. K. 50<br />

Sornborger, A. 47<br />

Sosik, H. M. 50, 81, 103<br />

Sotomayor, D. 92<br />

Soto Neira, J. P. 90<br />

Soued, C. 76<br />

Souhaut, M. 100<br />

Souza, V. 60, 82<br />

Sowards, S. 93<br />

Spanbauer, T. L. 65<br />

Sparks, E. L. 73<br />

Spatharis, S. 50<br />

Spaulding, R. S. 90<br />

Spear, K. A. 99<br />

Spears, T. 72<br />

Spence, P. 99<br />

Spencer, L. J. 90<br />

Spencer, R.<br />

43, 46, 53, 63, 65, 66, 87<br />

Spencer, R. G. 46, 53, 63, 65, 66<br />

Spinette, R. 95<br />

Spitz, Y. 57, 61, 75, 88<br />

Spitz, Y. H. 57<br />

Spivak, A. C. 70, 71<br />

Spooner, D. E. 46<br />

Sprague, H. M. 66<br />

Spurgin, J. 45<br />

Sreenivasan, A. 74, 92<br />

Stabb, E. 97<br />

Stacey, P. 73<br />

Stadmark, J. 59<br />

Stahl, D. 101<br />

Stamford, T. 50<br />

Stamler, K. M. 82<br />

Stammerjohn, S. 100<br />

Stanfield, E. R. 74<br />

Stanish, L. F. 104<br />

Staniszewski, Y. 81<br />

Stanley, E. H. 50, 85<br />

Stanley, H. E. 47<br />

Stanley, R. 57, 82<br />

Stanley, R. H. 82<br />

Starczak, V. 61, 86, 88<br />

Starczak, V. R. 88<br />

Starks, E. 98<br />

Starr, G. S. 76<br />

Starr, R. M. 59<br />

Staryk, C. J. 62<br />

Stassinos, E. A. 67<br />

Statham, P. J. 90, 91<br />

Staton, B. 70<br />

Staudinger, M. D. 70<br />

Stauffer, B. A. 48, 75<br />

Stedmon, C. A. 42, 43, 46, 53<br />

Steele, A. 63<br />

Steele, B. 96<br />

Steele, M. 57<br />

Steen, A. D. 43, 68<br />

Steenbeek, J. 71<br />

Steen, H. 43<br />

Stefan, H. G. 78<br />

Steger, L. 55, 82<br />

Stegman, M. R. 66<br />

Steigenberger, S. 50, 76<br />

Steigenberger, S. S. 50<br />

Steinberg, C. E. 43<br />

Steinberg, D. K. 48, 94<br />

Steinbrink, C. 44<br />

Steinbuck, J. V. 57<br />

Stelzenmüller, V. 50<br />

Stemmann, L. 48, 80, 101, 102<br />

Stempniewicz, L. 43<br />

Stenson, A. 51<br />

Stepanauskas, R. 58<br />

Stephens, J. A. 57<br />

Sterner, R. W. 102<br />

Stets, E. G. 56, 58, 76<br />

Stevens, B. G. 59<br />

Stevenson, R. J. 86<br />

Steward, G. F. 84, 103<br />

Stewart, F. J. 58, 82, 89, 91<br />

Stewart, G. M. 48, 74, 81<br />

Stewart, M. 62<br />

Stewart, R. A. 98<br />

Stewart, R. J. 56<br />

St-Gelais, N. F. 55<br />

120<br />

St-Hilaire, A. 96<br />

Stillman, J. 44, 98<br />

Stillman, J. H. 44<br />

Stillman, K. 61<br />

Stimac, I. 101<br />

Stinchcombe, M. C. 44, 50<br />

St. John, K. E. 64<br />

Stock, C. A. 48, 81<br />

Stockwell, J. D. 65, 88, 98<br />

Stoecker, D. 52, 53<br />

Stoecker, D. K. 53<br />

Stoffel, H. 85<br />

Ston-Egiert, J. 96<br />

Stone, J. R. 65, 78<br />

Stone, M. 50<br />

Stouder, M. 92<br />

Stow, C. A. 50, 51, 71<br />

St. Peter, C. 71<br />

St. Peter, R. C. 60, 78<br />

St-Pierre, A. 76<br />

Strabhar, W. D. 93<br />

Strake, S. 67<br />

Stramma, L. 100<br />

Strange, T. P. 56<br />

Strass, V. 84, 101<br />

Strass, V. H. 84<br />

Strickler, E. A. 85<br />

Strickler, J. R. 56, 102<br />

Striegl, R. G. 65, 76<br />

Strock, K. E. 54, 78<br />

Strom, S. L. 103<br />

Strous, M. 78<br />

Strutton, P. G. 72<br />

Stubbins, A. 42, 43, 44, 46, 53, 55,<br />

60, 70<br />

Stukel, M. R. 57<br />

Stumm, M. 44<br />

Stumpf, R. 48<br />

Sturdivant, S. K. 72<br />

Stutes, J. 79, 82<br />

Subramaniam, A. 91<br />

Sudre, J. 57<br />

Sueper, C. 45<br />

Suggett, D. J. 44<br />

Sugihara, G. 40, 47, 83<br />

Sugiyama, Y. 63<br />

Sugla, R. 99<br />

Sukhatme, G. S. 75<br />

Sulkin, S. 70<br />

Sullivan, J. 68, 90, 100<br />

Sullivan, J. M. 90, 100<br />

Sulzberger, B. 51<br />

Summons, R. E. 41<br />

Sumner, A. 98<br />

Sundfjord, A. 45<br />

Sundgren, I. 81<br />

Sun, L. 43, 51, 70<br />

Suroy, M. 81<br />

Suryan, R. M. 67<br />

Suter, E. A. 73<br />

Sutherland, J. W. 88<br />

Sutor, M. M. 102<br />

Sutton, G. 50<br />

Suursaar, U. 90<br />

Suzuki, K. 42<br />

Svensen, C. 45, 47, 79<br />

Swain, H. M. 85<br />

Swalethorp, R. 55, 69, 100<br />

Swanson, R. L. 73<br />

Swanson, T. E. 72, 92<br />

Swanstrom, J. A. 81<br />

Swarbrick, V. J. 74<br />

Swarr, G. 76, 84, 94<br />

Swarr, G. J. 84<br />

Swart, S. 84<br />

Sweet, J. 53<br />

Swift, D. 57, 75<br />

Swinton, M. W. 78<br />

Syaifudin, Y. 93<br />

Sylvan, J. B. 58<br />

Synal, H. A. 76<br />

Szczucka, J. 102<br />

Székely, A. J. 58<br />

Szmadyla, R. L. 79<br />

T<br />

Tada, K. 94<br />

Tagliabue, A. 51, 84<br />

Taipale, S. J. 55<br />

Tait, D. 92<br />

Tait, Z. S. 55<br />

Takacs-Vesbach, C. 104<br />

Takahashi, K. 42, 69<br />

Takeda, S. 89, 94<br />

Takeshita, Y. 75, 81<br />

Talley, D. 89<br />

Talley, L. 61<br />

Tamburini, C. 81<br />

Tamegai, H. 95<br />

Tamelander, T. 81<br />

Tamone, S. L. 61<br />

Tamura, K. 94<br />

Tanaka, T. 103<br />

Tang, J. 76<br />

Tang, K. 41, 62, 67, 95<br />

Tang, K. W. 41, 62, 95<br />

Taniguchi, M. 84<br />

Tan, J. F. 98<br />

Tankersley, R. A. 47<br />

Tapscott, C. 62<br />

Tarasenko, A. 45<br />

Targett, T. E. 71<br />

Tarran, G. A. 42<br />

Tarrant, A. M. 94<br />

Tartarotti, B. 43<br />

Tatarek, A. 45<br />

Taub, F. B. 96<br />

Taylor, A. G. 57<br />

Taylor, C. M. 59, 60, 64, 88<br />

Taylor, G. T. 73, 82<br />

Taylor, J. R. 52<br />

Taylor, M. N. 87<br />

Taylor, W. 70<br />

Tazaz, A. M. 61, 104<br />

Tazik, S. K. 81<br />

Tebo, B. M. 58, 92<br />

Tedesco, L. P. 92<br />

Tedesco, M. 73<br />

Teece, M. A. 41<br />

Tegetmeyer, H. E. 78<br />

Telfeyan, K. 104<br />

Tellez, E. 40


Meeting Program<br />

Tell, G. 88<br />

Tengberg, A. 81, 82<br />

Teng, C. 85<br />

Teodoru, C. R. 87<br />

ter Hofstede, R. 50<br />

Terlizzi, D. E. 94<br />

Terrill, E. 48<br />

Teske, A. P. 41, 61<br />

Tesoriero, A. J. 66<br />

Testa, J. M. 71<br />

Tewes, E. E. 59<br />

Thamatrakoln, K. 96<br />

Thamdrup, B. 66, 82<br />

Thatcher, C. 42, 99<br />

Thatcher, C. A. 42<br />

Thiagarajan, M. 104<br />

Thibodeau, P. S. 96<br />

Thies, H. 96<br />

Thistle, D. 57, 72<br />

Thomas, D. N. 42, 46, 47, 76<br />

Thomas, F. 51, 68, 85, 98<br />

Thomas, F. I. 85<br />

Thomas, J. 48<br />

Thomas, M. A. 78, 83<br />

Thomas, P. 52, 71, 81<br />

Thomas, P. J. 81<br />

Thompson, B. A. 79<br />

Thompson, C. E. 91<br />

Thompson, C. M. 81<br />

Thompson , E. M. 67<br />

Thompson, K. A. 61<br />

Thompson, M. 75, 93, 98<br />

Thompson, M. A. 93<br />

Thompson, M. E. 98<br />

Thompson, P. A. 72<br />

Thompson, S. K. 66<br />

Thoppil, P. 52<br />

Thornton, D. C. 89<br />

Thunell, R. 56<br />

Thyng, K. M. 83<br />

Tian, H. 44<br />

Tiano, L. 75<br />

Tilbrook, B. 72<br />

Tilburg, C. E. 77<br />

Tinwala, Z. 60<br />

Tipparaju, S. M. 90<br />

Tirado-Alonso, A. E. 59<br />

Tirado Polo, F. 96<br />

Tiselius, P. 102<br />

Titelman, J. 102<br />

Tittel, J. 93<br />

Tobias, C. 73, 77, 95<br />

Tobias, C. R. 73, 77<br />

Tobosa, L. R. 59<br />

Tolar, B. B. 101<br />

Tol, H. V. 41<br />

Tolotti, M. 96<br />

Tomczyk, M. 100<br />

Tommi-Morin, G. 84<br />

Tong, L. T. 82<br />

Toole, J. M. 94<br />

Toonen, R. J. 85<br />

Torreblanca, L. 56<br />

Torres, J. J. 54<br />

Torres, R. 44, 57<br />

Townsend, A. T. 100<br />

Townsend, D. W. 83<br />

Tranvik, L. 43, 78, 85, 93<br />

Tranvik, L. J. 43, 78, 93<br />

Trapp, J. M. 75<br />

Trapp, M. 71<br />

Traving, S. J. 78<br />

Treibergs, L. A. 73<br />

Treibitz, A. 54<br />

Treible, L. M. 74<br />

Tremblay , A. 96<br />

Tremblay, R. 66<br />

Trick, C. G. 74<br />

Trimborn, S. 101<br />

Trimmer, M. 55, 101<br />

Tripathi, P. B. 73<br />

Tripp, C. 82, 100<br />

Tripp, C. T. 82<br />

Tripp, H. J. 72, 87<br />

Troccoli, L. 56<br />

Troedsson , C. 67<br />

Trolle, D. 85<br />

Trudnowska, E. 102<br />

True, M. B. 44<br />

Trujillo, A. P. 44<br />

Trull, T. 101<br />

Trull, T. W. 101<br />

Tsaloglou, M. N. 90<br />

Tschierschke, A. 51<br />

Tsuda, A. 69<br />

Tucker, A. N. 46<br />

Tumer, T. 103<br />

Tunnell, W. 56<br />

Turk-Kubo, K. A. 72<br />

Turk, T. 91<br />

Turnbull, L. 54<br />

Turner, E. L. 73, 90<br />

Turner, J. T. 42, 79, 83<br />

Turner, R. E. 73, 100<br />

Turnipseed, D. P. 42<br />

Tuttle, L. B. 47<br />

Twardowski, M. S. 90, 100<br />

Tweedie, C. E. 93<br />

Tweel, A. W. 100<br />

Twichell, D. 99<br />

Twilley, R. R. 72<br />

Twiner, M. J. 74<br />

Twining, B. S. 44, 50, 55, 59, 63<br />

Twiss, M. R. 45, 66<br />

Tyler, E. 56<br />

Tyler III, W. A. 64<br />

Tysor, E. H. 79<br />

Tyssebotn, I. M. 45, 55<br />

U<br />

Ubertini, M. 83<br />

Uchimiya, M. 62<br />

Uchiyama, Y. 57, 99<br />

Uitz, J. 42, 48<br />

Ullman, W. 61<br />

Ulloa, O. 82<br />

Ulrich, A. 85<br />

Ulrich, S. 47<br />

Umek, J. 80<br />

Umphres, G. D. 48<br />

Unrein, F. 88<br />

Urban, L. W. 56<br />

121<br />

Urban-Rich, J. 43, 55, 65, 66<br />

Urban-Rich, J. L. 65<br />

Ushio, H. 40<br />

Utne, K. R. 83<br />

Uyarra, M. C. 50<br />

Uzzo, S. 75<br />

V<br />

Vachon, D. 76<br />

Vadeboncoeur, Y. 85<br />

Vadstein, O. 93<br />

Vaillancourt, R. D. 59, 96<br />

Vaknin, R. 57<br />

Valas, R. 44, 104<br />

Valdez, I. C. 69<br />

Valenta, T. 88<br />

Valentine, J. F. 65<br />

Valentine, M. M. 73<br />

Valery, C. 91<br />

Valle-Levinson, A. 87<br />

van Aken, H. 76<br />

Vanaverbeke, J. 50, 72<br />

van Beek, P. 77, 100<br />

Van-Beek, P. 84<br />

van Bentum, F. 69<br />

van Bernem, K. H. 99<br />

van Beusekom, J. E. 53<br />

VanBlaricom, G. R. 79<br />

van Dalfsen, J. 50<br />

Van den Eynde, D. 53<br />

Vandenhecke, M. J. 59<br />

Vandergucht, D. 40<br />

Vandergucht, D. M. 40<br />

van der Meer, M. T. 58<br />

van der Merwe, P. 100<br />

Vander Woude, A. J. 71<br />

Vander Zanden, M. J. 80<br />

Vandromme, P. 102<br />

van Duren, L. A. 69<br />

Vanegas, C. 91<br />

Vang, T. 79<br />

van Haren, H. 76<br />

van Heuven, S. M. 84<br />

van Hoof, L. 50<br />

van Katwijk, M. M. 69<br />

VanLandeghem, M. M. 92<br />

Van Mooy, B. 44, 53, 63, 81,<br />

100, 103<br />

Van Mooy, B. A. 53, 63, 100, 103<br />

Vanni, M. J. 79, 92, 98<br />

Van Oostende, N. 42<br />

van Prooijen, B. C. 77<br />

van Tol, H. M. 87<br />

Van Voorhies, W. 50<br />

Vaquer-Sunyer, R. 79<br />

Vardi, A. 44, 103<br />

Varela, R. 56<br />

Varpe, Ø. 69<br />

Vassilopoulou, V. 50, 59<br />

Vaultier, F. 81<br />

Vazin, J. P. 43<br />

Vazquez, G. 86<br />

Vedamati, J. 103<br />

Vehmaa, A. 67<br />

Vélez, S. 59<br />

Venchiarutti, C. 77<br />

Venn, C. 60<br />

Vera-Mecicano, L. W. 70<br />

Vergara, J. J. 97<br />

Vermilyea, A. 42, 43<br />

Vermilyea, A. W. 43<br />

Vernet, M. 87<br />

Verpoorter, C. 93<br />

Vesman, A. 45<br />

Vidal, J. 104<br />

Vidal, L. 85<br />

Vidoudez, C. 100<br />

Vieillard, A. M. 71<br />

Viggiano, M. V. 92<br />

Viktorsson, L. 82<br />

Villac, M. C. 80<br />

Villanueva, L. 58, 82, 101<br />

Villareal, T. 61, 72, 87<br />

Villareal, T. A. 72, 87<br />

Villareal, T. V. 72<br />

Villarosa Garcia, M. 60<br />

Villazan, B. 97<br />

Vincent, J. L. 46<br />

Vincx, M. 50, 72<br />

Vinocur, A. 88<br />

Virginia, R. A. 104<br />

Vis, C. 78<br />

Vishnivetskaya, T. A. 55<br />

Viso, R. 84<br />

Visscher, P. T. 41<br />

Visser, A. W. 60, 69<br />

Visser, J. M. 99<br />

Viviani, D. A. 41<br />

Voelker, C. 51<br />

Vogel, K. S. 61<br />

Vogt, R. A. 98<br />

Vogt, R. J. 45, 54, 74, 102<br />

Vogt, S. 63<br />

Vokhshoori, N. L. 94<br />

Volkenborn, N. 54, 65, 81<br />

Völker, C. 94<br />

Volp, N. C. 77<br />

von Dassow, P. 44<br />

Von Dassow, P. 97<br />

von Dessonneck, T. 95<br />

Vonk, J. E. 46, 87<br />

Voolstra, c. 41<br />

Voolstra, C. R. 86<br />

Vosburg, B. M. 52, 53<br />

Voss, B. 46, 87<br />

Voss, B. M. 46<br />

Voss, K. A. 98<br />

Voss, M. 57, 72<br />

W<br />

Wacker, L. 46<br />

Wade, T. L. 65<br />

Waggett, R. J. 44<br />

Wagner, A. 60<br />

Wagner, K. 86<br />

Wagner, T. 50<br />

Waguespack, Y. Y. 103<br />

Waite, A. M. 57, 72<br />

Wakamatsu, T. 99<br />

Wakeham, S. 52<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

Wakita, M. 40<br />

Walczowski, W. 43<br />

Waldbusser, G. G. 66, 84<br />

Walker, A. 50<br />

Walker, B. D. 43<br />

Walker, E. 74<br />

Walker, J. 59<br />

Walker, M. 62<br />

Walker, S. 75<br />

Wallace, J. R. 59<br />

Wallace, R. B. 52, 103<br />

Wall, C. C. 83<br />

Wall, D. H. 104<br />

Walles, B. 69, 77<br />

Wallin, M. 76, 93<br />

Wallin, M. B. 76<br />

Walsh, D. 101<br />

Walsh, E. J. 59, 66, 70<br />

Walsh, J. J. 68<br />

Walters, C. J. 71<br />

Walters, T. L. 59<br />

Walther, B. 70, 83, 89<br />

Walther, B. D. 83, 89<br />

Walton, J. 86<br />

Waltz, G. T. 59<br />

Walworth, N. 104<br />

Walz, K. R. 52<br />

Wambaugh, Z. 56<br />

Wanamaker, Jr., A. D. 57<br />

Wang, F. 51, 63<br />

Wang, J. 41<br />

Wang, L. 70, 101<br />

Wang, P. 103<br />

Wang, X. 56, 60, 76, 84, 94<br />

Wang, X. C. 56<br />

Wang, Z. 52, 74, 87<br />

Wang, Z. A. 52, 87<br />

Wannicke, N. 57, 72<br />

Waples, J. T. 71, 81, 88<br />

Ward, B. 42, 73, 82, 91, 98, 101<br />

Ward, B. B. 42, 73, 82, 91, 98, 101<br />

Ward, E. 60<br />

Ward, G. 51, 93<br />

Ward, G. H. 51<br />

Ward, J. E. 52<br />

Warner, K. A. 43<br />

Warner, M. E. 74<br />

Warn-Varnas, A. C. 99<br />

Warren, G. J. 79<br />

Warren, J. K. 61<br />

Warziniack, T. 59<br />

Washburn, T. 64<br />

Waska, H. 51<br />

Wasmund, N. 72<br />

Wassmann, P. 47, 48<br />

Wassmann, P. F. 48<br />

Watabe, S. 40<br />

Waterbury, J. 58, 91, 103<br />

Waterbury, J. B. 58, 103<br />

Waterbury, J. W. 103<br />

Waters, C. A. 84<br />

Watkins, J. A. 70<br />

Watkins, J. M. 55<br />

Wawrik, B. 59, 66, 91<br />

Wear, E. K. 50, 104<br />

Weatherbee, B. M. 67<br />

Webb, B. 87<br />

Webber, A. T. 43<br />

Weber, S. C. 72<br />

Weber, T. S. 72<br />

Webster, D. E. 102<br />

Webster, K. E. 50<br />

Webster, R. 99<br />

Wee, J. L. 90<br />

Wehrli, B. 85<br />

Wei, C. L. 86<br />

Weidel, B. C. 85, 98<br />

Weijers, J. 82<br />

Wei, M. 99<br />

Weinert, M. E. 85<br />

Weinke, A. C. 85<br />

Weinke, A. D. 75<br />

Weinstock, E. 103<br />

Weisberg, R. H. 68<br />

Weisberg, S. B. 63<br />

Weisburg, R. H. 48<br />

Weise, A. M. 80<br />

Weisse, L. 85<br />

Weitere, M. 98<br />

Welch, J. B. 80<br />

Welch, K. A. 104<br />

Welle, P. 75, 88<br />

Welle, P. M. 88<br />

Wells, M. L. 82, 100<br />

Wenczel, A. A. 102<br />

Wendt, D. E. 59<br />

Wengrove, M. E. 82<br />

Wenzel, D. B. 64<br />

Wenzhöfer, F. 81<br />

Werner, F. 83<br />

Werner, J. P. 82<br />

Weslawski , J. M. 43<br />

Wesselmann, M. 97<br />

Western, A. 86<br />

West, J. B. 70<br />

West, W. E. 76<br />

Wetherill, B. R. 93<br />

Wethey, D. S. 54, 65<br />

Wetterauer, A. M. 82<br />

Wetz, M. 54, 60, 84, 97<br />

Wetz, M. S. 54, 84, 97<br />

Wexels Riser, C. 47<br />

Weyhenmeyer, G. A. 43<br />

Wey, J. K. 98<br />

Whaling, P. J. 52<br />

Wheater, H. 40<br />

Wheeler, J. 70<br />

Whipple, T. C. 102<br />

Whitaker, R. J. 96<br />

White, A. 57, 72<br />

White, A. E. 57<br />

White, D. A. 99<br />

Whitehead, K. 87<br />

White, H. K. 73<br />

White, J. D. 74<br />

White, J. E. 62<br />

White, J. R. 53<br />

White, K. N. 102<br />

Whiteman, E. 50<br />

White, M. M. 82<br />

White, N. 67, 100<br />

White, S. N. 81<br />

Whitley, L. 60<br />

Whitmore, T. J. 88, 102<br />

122<br />

Whitney King, D. 100<br />

Whitney, L. P. 97, 103<br />

Whittaker, K. A. 59<br />

Wiatrowski, H. A. 84<br />

Wichorowski, M. 102<br />

Wickland, K. P. 65<br />

Widner, B. 91<br />

Wiebe, P. H. 94, 102<br />

Wiedenmann, J. 86<br />

Wiegand, M. D. 67, 79<br />

Wieland, J. 84<br />

Wiggert, J. D. 67, 71<br />

Wiggin, J. 61<br />

Wikfors, G. H. 83<br />

Wiktor, J. 45<br />

Wilberg, M. J. 83<br />

Wilhelm, L. 43<br />

Wilhelm, S. W. 43, 74<br />

Wilkerson, C. N. 99<br />

Wilkerson, F. 58, 78, 92<br />

Wilkerson, F. P. 78, 92<br />

Wilkes, E. 48<br />

Wilking, L. E. 55<br />

Wilkinson, G. M. 85<br />

Williams , A. 70<br />

Williams, C. A. 41<br />

Williams, C. J. 46, 93<br />

Williams, E. K. 46<br />

Williams, M. R. 46<br />

Williamson, C. E. 66, 78, 96<br />

Williamson, K. E. 89<br />

Williams, R. L. 52<br />

Williams, T. 82, 100<br />

Williams, T. L. 82<br />

Williams, W. 62, 65<br />

William, W. L. 63<br />

Willman, A. 82<br />

Willoughby, A. S. 51, 53<br />

Wilson, B. J. 76<br />

Wilson, C. 78<br />

Wilson, H. F. 46<br />

Wilson, K. P. 95<br />

Wilson, R. C. 42<br />

Wilson, R. E. 73<br />

Wilson, S. 42, 48, 56, 72, 99<br />

Wilson, S. A. 42<br />

Wilson, S. E. 48, 56<br />

Wilson, S. T. 72<br />

Winans, A. K. 47<br />

Windecker, L. 50, 104<br />

Windecker, L. A. 50<br />

Wing, S. R. 40<br />

Winkler, G. 66<br />

Winslow, L. A. 85<br />

Winston, B. A. 78, 96<br />

Wishner, K. F. 52<br />

Wissel, B. 55, 85, 98<br />

Withrow, F. G. 86<br />

Witt, M. 63<br />

Wittman, M. E. 50<br />

Wittmann, M. E. 80<br />

Wohl, E. 60<br />

Wokuluk, J. J. 57<br />

Wolfer, H. 62, 70<br />

Wolfer, H. M. 70<br />

Wolfe, S. H. 48<br />

Wolf-Gadrow, D. A. 100<br />

Wolf-Gladrow, D. 84, 94, 101<br />

Wolf-Gladrow, D. A. 94<br />

Wolf, M. 65<br />

Wollheim, W. M. 56<br />

Wolny, J. 48<br />

Wong, T. 74<br />

Wood, C. L. 63<br />

Woodcock, S. H. 83, 89<br />

Woodin, S. A. 54, 65<br />

Wood, J. D. 93<br />

Woodke, R. L. 40<br />

Wood, T. J. 80<br />

Woodward, E. M. 94<br />

Woodward, M. 77, 100<br />

Woyke, T. 58<br />

Wozniak, A. S. 44, 51, 53<br />

Wright, C. L. 60<br />

Wright, K. 55<br />

Wright, V. 69, 93<br />

Wright, V. M. 93<br />

Wuerz, M. 67<br />

Wuest, A. 54<br />

Wüest, A. 54<br />

Wu, J. 76<br />

Wu, L. Q. 55<br />

Wu, Q. 41, 87<br />

Wu, Q. L. 87<br />

Wurch, L. L. 74<br />

Würsig, B. 61<br />

Wurtsbaugh, W. A. 74<br />

Wu, Z. C. 87<br />

Wyatt, A. S. 72<br />

Wyatt, K. H. 40<br />

Wyatt, N. 77<br />

X<br />

Xenopoulos, M. A. 45, 46, 93<br />

Xia, M. 71<br />

Xiao, Y. 63<br />

Xie, H. 66, 82<br />

Xie, Y. 61<br />

Xing, P. 55, 87<br />

Xu, C. 45, 63, 87<br />

Xu, C. P. 87<br />

Xue, Z. 44<br />

Xu, H. 53, 74<br />

Xu, H. D. 53<br />

Xu, J. 71<br />

Xu, K. 71<br />

Xu, L. 44<br />

Xu, Y. 50<br />

Y<br />

Ya, C. 63<br />

Yager, P. 77, 101, 103<br />

Yager, P. L. 101, 103<br />

Yamada, M. 94<br />

Yamaguchi, H. 94<br />

Yamahara, K. 81<br />

Yamamoto, K. 77<br />

Yamane, M. 69<br />

Yamashita, Y. 42


Meeting Program<br />

Yang, E. J. 69<br />

Yang, M. 57<br />

Yang, N. 104<br />

Yang, P. G. 41<br />

Yang, S. 62<br />

Yankey, F. 61<br />

Yan, N. D. 55<br />

Yaremchuk, M. 99<br />

Yarish, C. 73, 74<br />

Yates, D. 55, 64, 72, 93<br />

Yates, D. F. 55, 64<br />

Yebra, L. 56<br />

Ye, H. 40, 83<br />

Yen, J. 102<br />

Ye, Y. 51<br />

Yildiz, F. 96<br />

Yip, H. 40<br />

Yokota, K. 74<br />

Yoneyama, Y. 95<br />

Yoo, M. 66<br />

Yooseph, S. 104<br />

York, J. 61<br />

Yoshikawa, H. 95<br />

Youngblut, N. D. 96<br />

Young, C. 74, 82<br />

Young, C. R. 74, 82<br />

Young, E. C. 41<br />

Young, G. 60, 94<br />

Young, J. R. 44<br />

Young, K. 45, 65<br />

Young, M. M. 88<br />

Ysebaert, T. 69, 77<br />

Yuan, J. 57<br />

Yucel, M. 58<br />

Yu, J. C. 53<br />

Yu, L. 70<br />

Yule, D. L. 98<br />

Yvon-Lewis, S. 57, 65<br />

Z<br />

Zaho, X. 58<br />

Zajaczkowski, M. 43<br />

Zamora, P. B. 84<br />

123<br />

Zamor, R. M. 69, 75, 80, 98<br />

Zapadka, T. 96<br />

Zavala Lopez , A. 62<br />

Zehr, J. P. 72, 87<br />

Zeidler, T. 61<br />

Zepp, R. G. 78<br />

Zettler, E. 79<br />

Zhanfei , L. 56<br />

Zhang, G. 44<br />

Zhang, H. 71, 80<br />

Zhang, J. 43, 78<br />

Zhang, S. 45, 63<br />

Zhang, X. 60, 70, 83, 90, 91, 94<br />

Zhang, X. Q. 70<br />

Zhang, Y. 57, 58<br />

Zhao, Y. 83, 103<br />

Zheng, J. 55<br />

Zheng, T. 79<br />

Zhou , M. 101<br />

Zhou, M. 84, 100, 101<br />

Zhu, F. 69<br />

Zhu, G. 74<br />

Zhu, Q. 90<br />

Zhu, Y. 84, 101<br />

Ziebis, W. 54, 93, 101<br />

Ziegler, A. C. 75<br />

Ziegler, M. 86<br />

Zieler, M. 86<br />

Zielinski, B. L. 77<br />

Zieman, J. C. 81<br />

Ziervogel, K. 53, 63<br />

Zimmerle, H. M. 90<br />

Zimmerman, A. R. 102<br />

Zimmerman, T. 70<br />

Zinke, L. 60, 71<br />

Zinke, L. A. 60<br />

Znachor, P. 74<br />

Zohary, T. 101<br />

Zorn, M. 88<br />

Zubkov, M. V. 42, 44<br />

Zucheng , W. 56<br />

Zwart, J. 85, 98<br />

Zwart, J. A. 85<br />

Zwilling, M. 46<br />

Zwirnmann, E. 65, 79<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong>


<strong>ASLO</strong> 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

124


UPCOMING <strong>ASLO</strong> MEETINGS<br />

2014 Ocean Sciences Meeting<br />

(with AGU and TOS)<br />

23-28 February 2014<br />

Honolulu, Hawaii, USA<br />

2014 Joint Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

(with SFS, PSA, SWS)<br />

18-23 May 2014<br />

Portland, Oregon, USA<br />

2015 International Aquatic Sciences Meeting<br />

22-27 February 2015<br />

Granada, Spain<br />

For more information on the 2013 <strong>ASLO</strong> Aquatic Sciences Meeting,<br />

address all correspondence and questions regarding registration,<br />

conference logistics, and hotel accommodations to:<br />

<strong>ASLO</strong> Business Office<br />

5400 Bosque Boulevard, Suite 680<br />

Waco, Texas 76710-4446<br />

business@aslo.org E-mail<br />

http://www.aslo.org/neworleans2013 Web<br />

800-929-<strong>ASLO</strong> (Within the U.S., Canada, and the Caribbean) · 254-399-9635 (All other countries) Phone<br />

254-776-3767 Fax

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!