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First IGBP-SCOR FTI Workshop on "Ocean Acidification - modern observations and past experiences"

Location
Palisades, NY, United States
Dates
-
Workshop report
https://doi.org/10.22498/pages.14.3.29
Working groups
Meeting Category

langdon b2 resultsThis is the first meeting in the IGBP-SCOR Fast Track Initiative entitled "Atmospheric CO2 and Ocean Biogeochemistry: Modern Observations and Past Experiences".

The PAGES Paleo-Ocean Acidification Working Group emerged out of this initiative.

Objectives

This workshop, held at  Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, aimed to address specific questions that break down the overarching general question on the consequences of ongoing ocean acidification into manageable tasks. The objective is to define state-of-the-art answers to these questions, to work out recommendations for the communities, to define deliverables for this particular Fast-Track Initiative (FTI) within the following year, and to outline group papers.

Scientific themes and questions

(1) What are the predicted changes (and uncertainties) in marine geochemistry (pH, seawater chemistry, CCD etc.) for various future CO2 emission scenarios?

(2) What were the amounts and rates of change in ocean geochemistry in response to changes in atmospheric CO2 as inferred from the geological record?

(3) What processes were responsible for past changes in ocean acidification?

(4) What do present-day studies tell us about the response of biota to changes in ocean chemistry (biomineralization and other biological processes)?

(5) What does the fossil record reveal about the adaptation of marine biota to changes in ocean acidification?

Workshop structure

Days 1 and 2

(A) Overview presentations: State of the art related to the above questions.

(B) Breakout into two specialist working groups (according to key questions) consisting of a mix of present-day and paleoresearchers, observationalists and modelers. Groups will try to answer the questions, identify the knowledge gaps limiting the answers, and work out what kind of synergistic research could produce better answers.

Day 3

Presentation and discussion of group results in plenary; synthesis; strategy for publishing, and planning of follow-up activities and a second workshop in 2007.

Meeting material

> Programme (pdf)

> Abstract book

> 2nd circular

> Workshop report

> Workshop report

> Posters

> Presentations

> The Darkening sea: piece by a journalist

coccoliths forams

Themes

A: What were amounts and rates of change in ocean geochemistry in response to changes in atmospheric CO2 as inferred from the geological record?

B: What are the predicted changes (and uncertainties) in marine geochemistry (pH, seawater chemistry, CCD, etc.) for various future CO2 emission scenarios?

C: What processes were responsible for past changes in ocean acidification?

D: What do present-day studies tell us about the response of biota to changes in ocean chemistry (biomineralisation and other biological processes)?

E: What does the fossil record reveal about the adaptation of marine biota to changes in ocean acidification?

 

Funding

Funding has been granted from IGBP, SCOR and PAGES.

Participants

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The workshop was attended by about 65 participants working in a range of disciplines (e.g. paleoclimatology, ocean chemistry, carbon system modeling, physiology, environmental and evolutionary biology, biogeochemistry) and timescales. Below is a list of the attendees:

Eleni Anagnostou, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

Bob Anderson, LDEO, Palisades, USA

Dave Anderson, NOAA, Boulder, USA

David Archer, University of Chicago, USA

Franck Bassinot, LSCE, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

Richard Bellerby, University of Bergen and BCCR, Norway

Jelle Bijma, AWI, Bremerhaven, Germany

Jerry Blackford, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK

Wally Broecker, LDEO, Palisades, USA

Robert Buddemeier, University of Kansas, Lawrence, USA

Ken Caldeira, Carnegie Institute, Stanford, USA

Tzu-Chien (Clara) Chiu, LDEO, Palisades, USA

Marina Chong, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

Emily Clinch, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

Anne Cohen, WHOI, Woods Hole, USA

Hans de Moel, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands

Harry Elderfield, University of Cambridge, UK

Jonathan Erez, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel

Victoria Fabry, Cal State San Marcos, USA

Richard Feely, NOAA, Seattle, USA

Kunshan Gao, Shantou University, Guangdong, China

Jean-Pierre Gattuso, CNRS-Villefranche, France

John Guinotte, MCBI, USA

Frank Hall, National Research Council, USA

Christoph Heinze, University of Bergen and BCCR, Norway

Jorijntje Henderiks, Stockholm University, Sweden

Bärbel Hönisch, LDEO, Palisades, USA

Kuo Fang Huang, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

Kate Jordan, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

Lee Kitack, POSTECH, S. Korea

Joan Kleypas, NCAR, Boulder, USA

Chris Langdon, University of Miami, USA

Michèlle LaVigne, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

Kitack Lee, POSTECH, Pohang, Korea

Manfredi Manizza, MIT, USA

Bradley Opdyke, ANU, Canberra, Australia

Jim Orr, MEL-IAEA, Monaco

Mark Pagani, Yale University, New Haven, USA

Frank Peeters, Amsterdam, NL

Don Potts, U.C. Santa Cruz, USA

John Raven, University of Dundee, UK

Ramesh Rengaswamy, PRL, Ahmedabad, India

Ros Rickaby, University of Oxford, UK

Andy Ridgwell, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

Ulf Riebesell, Leibniz Institute, Kiel, Germany

Torres Rodrigo, Uni. of Concepcion, Chile

Yair Rosenthal, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, USA

Daniela Schmidt, University of Bristol, UK

Rob Sherrell, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

Jacob Silverman, Weizmann Institute, Israel

Sindia Sosdian, Rutgers University, IMCS, New Jersey, USA

George Stanley, University of Montana, USA

Eric Sundquist, USGS, Woods Hole, USA

Taro Takahashi, LDEO, Palisades, USA

Helmuth Thomas, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada

Rodrigo Torres, University of Concepción, Chile

Carol Turley, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK

Pinxian Wang, Tongji University, Shanghai, China

Rik Wanninkhof, NOAA, Miami, USA

Steve Widdicombe, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK

Gisela Winckler, LDEO, Palisades, USA

Oliver Wingenter, New Mexico Tech, Socorro, USA

Jim Zachos, U.C. Santa Cruz, USA

Richard Zeebe, University of Hawaii, Manoa, USA

Patrizia Ziveri, UAB, Spain and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands

Ed Urban, SCOR, Baltimore, USA

Thorsten Kiefer, PAGES, Bern, Switzerland

Post-meeting publications

See the products section on the Ocean Acidification Working Group page here.

Breakout Groups

1: Ocean chemistry past and future (How well do we know past ocean chemistry and how well can we predict future ocean chemistry?

What are the prospects for improving our knowledge of ocean chemistry changes and the dynamics that control them?)"

2: Species extinction and changes in species composition/diversity 

3: Comunicating issues of ocean acidification to the public, policymakers, and funders.

Breakout Groups (up to 3 parallel): Complete the collection of big questions, challenges, requirements, etc; all groups address the same questions; random grouping.

> Download goals and reports here