Thursday 23 December 2010

Amazon functioning at EGU 2011 General Assembly

"Amazon functioning and responses to environmental change" at the EGU General Assembly 2011, Vienna, Austria, 03-08 April 2011.

I would like to encourage community participation!

Deadline for submission of abstracts is 10 Jan 2011 (please follow the link below for registration and abstract submission).

BG2.1
Amazon Forest Functioning and Responses to Environmental Change
Convener: Lina Mercado, Co-Conveners: Luiz Aragao, Oliver Phillips


Sumary
Changes in climate and the environment are likely to have profound impacts on the diversity, nutrient and water cycles of the Amazon forest. To better understand these processes and its responses to the changing environment, there is a need for interdisciplinary studies focusing on the long-term biology, ecology, physiology and climatology of this ecosystem from local to regional spatial scales.
The Amazon forest is highly heterogeneous in species composition, biomass and productivity, physical and chemical soil properties, and precipitation, as well as natural and anthropogenic disturbance regimes, such as blowdowns, fires and deforestation. Therefore, to understand the interaction between forest functioning and environmental change and to diagnose the future of the Amazon biome and the feedbacks to global climate, it is important to build an integrative view of these processes that explicitly accounts for this spatial variability.
To advance this debate, we aim to gather an overview of recent research carried out in Amazonia, focusing on two main topics: (i) heterogeneity of environmental variables and its influence on ecosystem functioning, and (ii), responses of ecosystem processes to environmental changes across the Amazon rainforest. We welcome empirical, remote sensing- and GIS-based, and modelling studies on carbon, nutrients (in particular, N and P)and water cycle, ecophysiological processes and responses to high temperature, drought and CO2, forest dynamics including productivity and species turnover, nutrient dynamics, disturbance impacts and rates, and detection of large-scale forest processes and environmental changes using remote sensing.

Sunday 17 October 2010

The ExCO initiative


The ExCO is a open-air ecosystem laboratory, designed by researchers from the School of Life and Environmental Sciences at the University of Exeter, and funded by the University of Exeter's Annual Fund. This initiative aims to allow students, academics and wider society to explore and learn about the role that terrestrial ecosystems play in removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and the effects of climate change on the stability of carbon uptake and storage in these systems.

We are in our implementation phase and will soon become an active community focusing on quantifying, learning and communicating the feedbacks between our natural ecosystems and environmental changes.

For more details on our initiative please visit our website at:


https://sites.google.com/site/exetercarbonobservatory/