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2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting March 2-7, 2008 · Orlando, Florida · www.aslo.org/orlando2008 From the Watershed to the Global Ocean Meeting Program Co-sponsored by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, the American Geophysical Union, The Oceanography Society, and the Estuarine Research Federation Schedule Overview Monday, March 3, 2008 Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 W304 A/B W304 C/D W304 E/F W108 W101 W102 W205 B/C W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B W109 A W103 119 022 021 025 179 192 120 028 183 088 157 058 052 068 059 042 119 022 142 025 180 196 120 134 005 154 200 058 052 182 059 077 119 022 102 025 198 056 120 165 060 098 089 105 052 068 cont from AM 059 077 W304 A/B W304 C/D W304 E/F W108 W101 W102 W205 B/C W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B W109 A W103 139 079 197 110 094 011 084 028 173 040 003 032 034 067 059 001 200 014 003 017 057 117 152 020 Break, Plenary, Lunch Break Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Tuesday, March 4, 2008 Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 cont from Monday Break, Plenary, Lunch 139 079 197 168 094 104 084 072 002 096 164 051 135 104 107 165 cont from Monday 174 014 003 017 057 117 012 001 cont from AM Break Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Wednesday, March 5, 2008 Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 W304 A/B W304 C/D W304 E/F W108 W101 W102 W205 B/C W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B W109 A W103 046 162 038 141 171 029 030 028 189 173 024 137 172 019 151 181 cont from Tuesday cont from Tuesday cont from Tuesday Break, Plenary, Lunch 100 162 116 006 171 029 013 124 031 159 024 036 172 019 151 125 100 101 044 196 cont from Monday 039 128 186 165 cont from Tuesday 070 159 024 036 172 117 193 125 W304 A/B W304 C/D W304 E/F W108 W101 W102 106 092 037 108 021 188 W205 B/C W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B W109 A W103 054 028 074 008 173 143 050 169 019 033 Break Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Thursday, March 6, 2008 Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 cont from Monday cont from Wednesday cont from Wednesday Break, Plenary, Lunch 191 092 037 108 018 188 054 097 129 091 200 133 178 169 019 114 191 092 037 108 061 194 078 165 cont from Wednesday 053 091 064 133 085 169 117 045 W304 A/B W304 C/D W304 E/F W108 W101 W102 149 153 073 158 123 055 W205 B/C W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B W109 A W103 065 144 187 090 085 176 086 081 010 056 Break Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Friday, March 7, 2008 Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 cont from Thur Break, Plenary, Lunch 023 153 073 158 146 071 065 144 148 153 066 049 021 cont from Thur 071 065 076 194 041 085 062 086 016 015 093 194 112 047 145 086 016 010 cont from AM 076 Break Room 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 10:30-13:30 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 15:30-16:00 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Meeting Program Contents Welcome to the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting.................................... 4 Meeting Sponsors.................................................................................. 4 Past Ocean Science Meetings................................................................ 5 Organizing Committee......................................................................... 6 Meeting Venue ...................................................................................... 6 About the Conference Meeting Site.......................................................................6 About Orlando..........................................................................................................6 Environmental Efforts ......................................................................... 6 The Scientific Program......................................................................... 7 Plenary Lectures.................................................................................... 7 Special Meeting Events........................................................................12 AGU – Sverdrup Award Lecture...........................................................................12 Evening Science Communication Forum: “Does Science Really Matter?”.....12 Special Opportunities for Students.....................................................13 Travel Awards..........................................................................................................13 Outstanding Student Presentation Awards.........................................................13 Student Development Workshops........................................................................13 Student Career Center............................................................................................13 ASLO Multicultural Program ..............................................................................13 Workshops............................................................................................13 LOCO – Data Workshop.......................................................................................13 C6 Multi Sensor Platform & PhytoFlash Workshop..........................................13 Metadata Tutorials for Ocean Scientists Workshop...........................................14 Understanding Climate Impacts in Sub-arctic Seas: Ecological Issues and Comparative Approaches Workshop.............................14 GHRSST-PP Diurnal Variability 4th Workshop................................................14 Charting the Course for an Ocean Research Priorities Plan & Implementation Strategy.........................................................14 Ocean Acidification: Towards an Interagency Approach.................................14 Education & Outreach Workshop........................................................................14 ASLO Public Policy Workshop Effective Communication with Lawmakers ... 15 MISST Project Team Meeting...............................................................................15 From Ship to Shore to the Media: A Workshop on Science Journalism.........15 MPOWIR - Panel Discussion on Dual Career Couples....................................15 Computed Tomography & Marine Geosciences................................................15 Discussion on the Current & Future Needs of the Ocean Science, Technology & Operations Workforce...........................15 Society Meetings..................................................................................16 CoOP Meeting – Coastal Ocean Processes.........................................................16 NFRA Retreat..........................................................................................................16 TOS Anniversary Reception.................................................................................16 TOS Council Meeting............................................................................................16 TOS Business Meeting ..........................................................................................16 Town Hall Meetings.............................................................................16 DIMES Town Hall...................................................................................................16 IMBER Town Hall...................................................................................................16 NOAA Town Hall: Ecosystems-Based Ocean Research...................................16 Open Access Town Hall.........................................................................................17 UM RSMAS Town Hall..........................................................................................17 Consortium for Ocean Leadership Town Hall...................................................17 NOPP Community Sediment-Transport Model Town Hall............................17 UM RSMAS Reception..........................................................................................17 NOAA Tides and Currents Town Hall................................................................17 Ocean Observatories Initiative.............................................................................17 ASLO EU-US Funding Panel Discussion:...........................................................17 Ocean Carbon & Biogeochemistry Program......................................................18 Ecological Forecasts: Barriers to Transition and Operations Town Hall........18 Future Challenges in Marine Organic Geochemistry Town Hall....................18 Ocean Time Series Town Hall...............................................................................18 Social Events.........................................................................................18 Opening Welcome Mixer Reception....................................................................18 Evening Social - Ocean Sciences Discovers Disney...........................................18 Stony Brook Alumni Reception............................................................................18 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Participant & Attendee Information...................................................19 Non-U.S. Attendees................................................................................................19 Special Needs...........................................................................................................19 Child Care Information.........................................................................................19 Concierge Service...................................................................................................19 Parking......................................................................................................................19 E-mail & Wireless Service.....................................................................................19 On-Site Business Center-FedEx Kinko’s..............................................................19 ATMs & Money Changing Machines .................................................................20 Registration..............................................................................................................20 Refreshments...........................................................................................................20 Concession Services................................................................................................20 First Aid & Security for Attendees.......................................................................20 Messages...................................................................................................................20 Your Presentation.................................................................................20 Oral Presentations .................................................................................................20 Preparing Your Presentation.................................................................................20 How to Submit Your Presentation........................................................................21 Contact Information...............................................................................................21 Rental of Additional Audio-Visual Equipment . ...............................................21 Speaker Ready Room..............................................................................................21 During Your Oral Presentation.............................................................................21 Poster Presentations................................................................................................22 Registration Information.....................................................................22 Substitutions or Cancellations...............................................................................22 Registration Fees.....................................................................................................23 Travel Information...............................................................................23 Airlines & Air Travel .............................................................................................23 Orlando Airport......................................................................................................23 Shuttle Service From Orlando Airport................................................................23 I-Ride........................................................................................................................23 Special Car Rental Rates........................................................................................23 Restaurants, Parks & Local Attractions..............................................24 Restaurants...............................................................................................................24 Downtown Disney..................................................................................................24 Nightlife....................................................................................................................24 Additional Activities/Locations of Special Interest............................................24 Exhibits & Sponsors.............................................................................25 Hotel and Accommodation Information............................................27 Downtown Orlando Map.....................................................................31 Convention Center Maps.....................................................................32 Saturday & Sunday At A Glance..........................................................33 Monday At A Glance............................................................................34 Tuesday At A Glance............................................................................35 Wednesday At A Glance.......................................................................36 Thursday At A Glance..........................................................................37 Friday At A Glance...............................................................................38 Monday Oral Sessions..........................................................................39 Monday Posters....................................................................................52 Tuesday Oral Sessions..........................................................................65 Tuesday Posters....................................................................................78 Wednesday Oral Sessions....................................................................91 Wednesday Posters.............................................................................104 Thursday Oral Sessions......................................................................118 Thursday Posters................................................................................131 Friday Oral Sessions...........................................................................144 TOS Announcements.........................................................................185 TOS Nils Gunnar Jerlov Award.........................................................186 TOS Membership Application...........................................................187 ASLO Board, Staff & Information.....................................................188 ASLO Membership Application........................................................190 Convention Center Campus Map......................................................191  ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Welcome to the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting (non-profit) corporation in the State of Wisconsin. Membership in the society is presently more than 3,800 members. Members are drawn from 63 countries including the United States, and more than a quarter of the members reside outside the U.S. On behalf of the program committee, we welcome you to the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting. With a theme of “from the watershed to the global ocean”, this meeting adds a land-margin flavor to the traditional ocean emphasis. Web site: http://www.aslo.org Membership application: https://www.sgmeet.com/aslo/ membership/newmember.asp About 3,500 oral and poster presentations are included in topical sessions built around 14 session categories. At 11:00 each morning, we will convene in plenary sessions for five exciting presentations, all oriented around human influences to our ocean world. At 17:30 Monday through Thursday, the meeting moves to the large exhibition hall for exclusive poster sessions. “Committee Choice” sessions on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday afternoons will feature diverse collections of talks aimed at broader audience interest. American Geophysical Union (AGU) For over three quarters of a century, AGU has supplied an organizational framework within which geophysicists have created the programs and products needed to advance their science. From its beginnings as the representative of American geophysicists in the international scientific community, AGU has evolved beyond parochial boundaries of nation and discipline into an active community of over 45,000 scientists from 140 countries. AGU now stands as a leader in the increasingly interdisciplinary global endeavor that encompasses the Earth and space sciences. On Wednesday evening, there will be a special forum “environmental outreach to the public” consisting of a panel discussion with research scientists plus aquarium, media, and film professionals. We hope that you find the meeting exciting, informative and relevant. AGU, a non-profit scientific organization, was established in 1919, by the National Research Council and for more than 50 years operated as an unincorporated affiliate of the National Academy of Sciences. In 1972, AGU was incorporated in the District of Columbia and membership was opened to scientists and students worldwide. Meeting Co-Chairs, Jon Sharp, Chris Sherwood and Paul Bissett Meeting Sponsors AGU’s mission is to: • Promote the scientific study of Earth and its environment in space and to disseminate the results to the public, American Society of Limnology & Oceanography (ASLO) The purpose of ASLO is to foster a diverse, international scientific community that creates, integrates and communicates knowledge across the full spectrum of aquatic sciences, advances public awareness and education about aquatic resources and research, and promotes scientific stewardship of aquatic resources for the public interest. Its products and activities are directed toward these ends. • Promote cooperation among scientific organizations involved in geophysics and related disciplines, • Initiate and participate in geophysical research programs, • Advance the various geophysical disciplines through scientific discussion, publication, and dissemination of information. For more than 50 years, ASLO has been the leading professional organization for researchers and educators in the field of aquatic science. ASLO traces its roots to the Limnological Society of America (LSA), which was established in 1936 to further interest and research in limnological science. While the LSA had members working in both freshwater and marine systems, the name did not reflect this diversity until 1948 when the Oceanographic Society of the Pacific merged with the LSA to become the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography. ASLO is incorporated as a nonstock AGU’s activities are focused on the organization and dissemination of scientific information in the interdisciplinary and international field of geophysics. The geophysical sciences involve four fundamental areas: atmospheric and ocean sciences; solid-Earth sciences; hydrologic sciences; and space sciences. Web site: http://www.agu.org Membership application: https://www.aip.org/ecomm/agu/login.jsp  Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF The Oceanography Society (TOS) Its mission is to: The Oceanography Society was founded in 1988 to disseminate knowledge of oceanography and its application through research and education, to promote communication among oceanographers, and to provide a constituency for consensus-building across all the disciplines of the field. To accomplish these goals we: • Promote research in estuarine and coastal ecosystems • Support education of scientists, decision-makers and the public • Facilitate communication among these groups • Publish Oceanography, a magazine that promotes and chronicles all aspects of ocean science and its applications; Membership in the Federation is open to all who support these goals. The Federation currently has approximately 1,650 members, and approximately 1,000 more who are members of the Affiliate Societies. • Hold meetings to disseminate knowledge and promote communication among oceanographers; and Web site: http://www.erf.org Membership application: https://www.sgmeet.com/erf/ membership/newmember.asp • Give awards in recognition of distinguished research in and contributions to oceanography. • The Oceanography Society is a non-profit, tax-exempt organization incorporated in the District of Columbia. Past Ocean Science Meetings Oceanography magazine contains peer-reviewed articles that chronicle all aspects of ocean science and its applications. In addition, Oceanography solicits and publishes news and information, meeting reports, book reviews, and shorter, editor-reviewed articles that address public policy and education and how they are affected by science and technology. We encourage submission of short papers to the “Breaking Waves” section that describe novel approaches to multidisciplinary problems in ocean science. Oceanography is published in March, June, September, and December in online and paper format. This is the 14th Ocean Sciences Meeting and is a joint meeting of AGU, ASLO, TOS, and ERF. Past meetings include: The 13th Ocean Sciences Meeting, a joint meeting of ASLO, ERF, TOS and AGU, was held 20-24 February 2006, at the Hawaii Convention Center located in Honolulu, Hawaii. The 12th Ocean Sciences Meeting was held for the first time in Portland, Oregon, 26-30 January 2004, at the Oregon Convention Center and was sponsored by AGU. An alternate Ocean Sciences Conference was held in Honolulu, Hawaii, 13-20 February 2004, and was jointly sponsored by ASLO and TOS. Web site: http://www.tos.org Membership application: http://www.tos.org/join_tos.html Estuarine Research Federation (ERF) The 11th Ocean Sciences Meeting, a joint meeting of ASLO and AGU, was held 11-15 February 2002 at the Hawaii Convention Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Federation’s members are dedicated to advancing human understanding and appreciation of the Earth’s estuaries and coasts, to the wise use and management of these environments and to making the results of their research and management actions available to their colleagues and to the public. Members of the Federation include academic researchers, public sector managers, teachers, consultants, students and others who are interested in estuaries. The 10th Ocean Sciences Meeting, a joint meeting of ASLO and AGU, was held 24-28 January 2000 in San Antonio, Texas. The 9th Ocean Sciences Meeting, a joint meeting of ASLO and AGU, was held 9-13 February 1998 in San Diego, California. The Estuarine Research Federation is a private, non-profit non-partisan organization. The Federation was created in 1971, when the members of two older, regionally-based estuarine research societies (AERS and NEERS) decided that a national organization was needed to address estuarine and coastal issues more broadly. The regionally-based Affiliate Societies now number seven and encompass all of the coastal regions that border the United States, Canada and Mexico. The 8th Ocean Sciences Meeting, a joint meeting of ASLO and AGU took place 12-16 February 1996 in San Diego, California. The 7th Ocean Sciences Meeting, a joint meeting of ASLO and AGU was held 21-23 February 1994 in San Diego, California. The 6th Ocean Sciences Meeting, a joint meeting of ASLO and AGU, was held 12-16 February 1992 in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Federation advances understanding and wise stewardship of estuarine and coastal ecosystems worldwide.  ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Organizing Committee Meeting Venue Meeting Co-Chairs About the Conference Meeting Site Jon Sharp University of Delaware [email protected] All scheduled meeting activities will be held at the Orange County Convention Center (OCCC) in the West Building. This includes registration, all oral and poster sessions, exhibits, town hall meetings & workshops (except those held Saturday and Sunday) and the plenary lectures that will be held in the Chapin Theater, also in the West Building. The entrance to the West Building is on International Drive. Using the main entrance (middle of the building), our activities will all be in the left wing, all three levels. Registration is on level one. Diagrams will be available to assist you on-site. Chris Sherwood U.S. Geological Survey, Woods Hole [email protected] Paul Bissett Florida Environmental Research Institute [email protected] The OCCC is the nation’s second largest convention center.  Located at 9860 Universal Boulevard, Orlando, Florida, 12 miles from the Orlando International Airport, the OCCC is situated in the heart of Downtown Orange County, the area’s tourism core. Meeting Organizers Jim Bellingham [email protected] Herve Claustre [email protected] The convention center hosts a food court located on level one in the center of the West Building with a wide variety of options. A FedEx Kinko’s also is located in this area if you should need “business services” or shipping. See the Meeting Services section for more information. Russell Cuhel [email protected] Ed Dever [email protected] About Orlando Heidi Dierssen [email protected] While we know there will be great science presented at this meeting, as well as the opportunity to get together with colleagues from AGU, ASLO and TOS, you may not know about the many additional opportunities Orlando has to offer.  There are art schools and galleries; performing arts, including theater, ballet, opera, and symphony performances year round; historic homes and museums; parks, zoo and gardens; eco tours; and many more outdoor activities.  Orlando has a history of breaking attendance records for all types of meetings; it’s easy to get to from most anywhere in the world and hosts more than 50 million visitors each year. John Farrington [email protected] Ellen Kappel [email protected] Anne Lightbody [email protected] Chris Madden [email protected] An information desk will be available at the convention center to assist you with questions about Orlando. Alex Poulain [email protected] Environmental Efforts Helen Schneider Lemay American Society of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO) [email protected] The city of Orlando, the convention center, many of the hotels, and the meeting organizers are very conscious of the negative impact that meetings have on our environment. Efforts have been made to reduce the environmental impact of this meeting and below are some of the ways that we are working to do so. We urge all conference attendees to do the same and to check with your hotel on their recycling and environmental impacts. Brenda Weaver American Geophysical Union (AGU) [email protected] Jenny Ramarui The Oceanography Society (TOS) [email protected] The convention center is ISO:14001:2004 certified for its Environmental Management System including their recy Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Presentation: In 1963, Glen Canyon Dam blocked the transport of sand down the Colorado River, causing erosion of downstream sand bars, an essential component of the Colorado River ecosystem.  Sand bars provide backwater habitat for endangered native fish, terrestrial habitat for riparian vegetation and associated fauna, and campsites for recreational users.  They also help preserve archaeological features along the river margins.  Because of their importance to the ecosystem, restoration of sand resources is a key management objective of the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program. cling efforts. There are trash receptacles throughout the center for recycling of waste. Other efforts include pilot testing of touch-free air blowing hand dryers, waterless, touch-free urinals, touch-free soap and hand sanitizer dispensers, and recycled tissues and hand towels. The convention center also uses “green certified” cleaning products. The meeting web site has been used as much as possible to reduce printing, including the posting of the Call for Papers and abstracts. We encourage participants to walk to the convention center from the area hotels and will not be running shuttle buses. For more than two decades, sedimentologists, hydrologists, and biologists have worked in the field, lab, and with models to understand how sand bars and native fish populations respond to releases from Glen Canyon Dam.  In 1996 and 2004, flood experiments were implemented to rejuvenate the sand bars using geologic quantities of water and sand.  The 2004 flood released almost a cubic kilometer of water from Glen Canyon Dam and redistributed nearly one million metric tons of sand that had been delivered to the mainstem Colorado River by tributaries downstream from the dam.  Biological experiments removed non-native fish from key spawning areas of the river. The Scientific Program From the Watershed to the Global Ocean Water connects and binds us all.  It moves from the top of the highest mountain to the depths of the deepest oceans.  As limnologists, oceanographers, and educators, water is the lifeblood of our endeavors.  Now, as never before, we recognize the interconnections between land and sea, and at the 2008 biennial Ocean Sciences Meeting, we are going to recognize the important nature of these connections. The meeting includes oral and plenary sessions plus poster sessions scheduled at times when there are no conflicts from oral sessions or scheduled workshops, field trips, or town meetings. The poster sessions also include receptions to provide opportunities to make professional connections in a social setting. Workshops and town hall meetings are scheduled during the lunch break or evenings after the poster sessions. This presentation provides an overview of Grand Canyon ecosystem-restoration work including results of flood experiments, insights into sediment transport, new digitalimaging technology for in-situ measurements of bed-sediment, and recent observations of native fish populations. Biography: David M. Rubin completed his Ph.D. studies on Cambrian-Ordovician marine carbonates at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1975.  Since then, he has worked at the USGS Coastal and Marine program (Santa Cruz, California).  He has worked in Grand Canyon for 22 years, where he has been a lead designer of restoration flood experiments. Abstracts of papers presented during the meeting are published on the meeting web site (www.aslo.org/orlando2008) and are searchable both by subject and by author. Abstracts will be archived on the societies’ web sites following the meeting. As we work toward a more “green and environmentally friendly” meeting format, an abstract book will be published, but not printed. Dr. Rubin has studied sediment transport and sedimentary structures in the lab and in modern and ancient oceans, estuaries, rivers, and deserts.  In the 1980’s he introduced the use of three-dimensional modeling to relate sediment bedforms to stratification.  His work on sedimentary structures (including a book, computer code, and interactive animated DVD) has been applied to sedimentology, geomorphology, paleoclimatology, mine detection, petroleum exploration, and to ripples and dunes on Mars and Saturn’s moon Titan.  He has served as PI on projects supported by the USGS, Bureau of Reclamation, NOAA, NASA, Office of Naval Research, CALFED, and the United Nations. Plenary Lectures Plenary lectures will be held each day from 11:00-12:00, following the morning group of oral sessions in the Chapin Theater, third level of the OCCC. Monday, 3 March 2008 David M. Rubin US Geological Survey, Pacific Science Center, Santa Cruz, CA Grand Canyon’s Tides, Waves, Currents, and Beaches, and the World’s Largest Sediment-transport Restoration Experiment Dr. Rubin has played a major role in the development of underwater instruments.  These include a seafloor-deployed rotating sonar (1983), an automatic dilution laser  ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting particle size analyzer, and an underwater microscope with image-processing software for in-situ digital grainsize analysis of bed sediment (patented by the USGS).  This underwater microscope has led to new understanding of sediment transport and storage in the Colorado River and is to be featured in an interactive display at the San Jose Tech Museum of Innovation. system is engineered, so we can understand what it takes to trigger mode switches. Until we do, we cannot make good predictions about future climate change. Broecker’s research is directed toward the role of the oceans in climate change. Over the last several hundred thousand years, climate change has come mainly in discrete jumps that appear to be related to changes in the mode of thermohaline circulation. We place strong emphasis on using isotopes as a means to understand physical mixing and chemical cycling in the ocean, and the climate history as recorded in marine sediments. Tuesday, 4 March 2008 The recipient of the AGU Sverdrup Award will be announced during this plenary session with the award lecture following the lunch break at 13:30 in Room W110. Broecker’s career has included numerous honors and awards. Among his most recent awards are the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement from the University of Southern California and the Arthur L. Day Prize and Lectureship from the National Academy of Sciences in 2002. The Don J. Easterbrook Distinguished Scientist Award from the Geological Society of America was awarded him in 2000, and he received the Desert Research Institute’s 1999 Nevada Medal. In 1996, Broecker received the National Medal of Science. His honors include the DOCS Distinguished Lecturer (Louisiana State University), 1997; Zucker Fellow (Yale University), 1997; Silver Lecturer (University of New Mexico), 1997; Fellow, American Geophysical Union; Fellow, European Geophysical Union, 1992; National Academy of Science, 1979; and American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1976. Wallace S. Broecker Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, NY What Insights can be Gleaned from the Paleoclimate Record Regarding the Approaching Greenhouse World? Presentation: Based on the record kept in Greenland ice, we first became aware the Earth’s climate system was capable of jumping from one way of operating to another. Records from other places made clear that the consequences of these reorganizations were large and widespread. This discovery raised the question as to whether the ongoing greenhouse warming might trigger yet another of these changes. Concern has been focused on deep water formation in the northern Atlantic. While certainly legitimate, of late we have reason to believe that the likelihood of an abrupt shutdown of the “conveyor” is unlikely. Rather if a hit is to come, I suspect that it will more likely be associated with the hydrologic cycle. So an alternate title for my talk might be “Water in a Warmer World.” Wednesday, 5 March 2008 Paul Falkowski Institute of Marine and Coastal Science, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ Biography: Wallace S. “Wally” Broecker is the Newberry Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, New York. He received his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1958 and became an assistant professor there in 1959. Broecker was made associate professor in 1961 and became professor in 1964. He has been the Newberry Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences since 1977. Broecker became a member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1979. His research interests include paleoclimatology, ocean chemistry, isotope dating and environmental science. The Ocean and the Evolution of Biogeochemical Cycles on Earth Presentation: The first half of Earth’s history was one of “biological innovation”, in which metabolic processes evolved in marine microbes that ultimately came to couple the biogeochemical cycles of H, C, N, O via biologically catalyzed electron transfer (redox) reactions. The reaction pathways led to a “core” metabolism of Earth, sustained to the present time with very few modifications. Oxygenic photosynthesis was one of the last major metabolic processes to emerge. This process allowed a virtually endless supply of reductant (the water in the ocean) to be used in conjunction with a virtually endless supply of energy (the Sun) to produce organic matter. Yet, remarkably, the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis in cyanobacteria did not lead to large scale accumulation of O2 in the Earth’s atmosphere but, rather In his work, he explores the clear evidence that different parts of the earth’s climate system are linked in very subtle yet dramatic ways and that the climate system has jumped from one mode of operation to another in the past. He is trying to understand how the earth’s climate  Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF was coupled to the carbon cycle through the tectonically controlled burial efficiency of organic matter in the lithosphere. Oxygenic photosynthesis fundamentally altered the nitrogen cycle, allowing ammonium to be oxidized to nitrate and subsequently denitrified. The interaction between the oxygen cycle and the nitrogen cycle in particular produced a negative feedback, in which increased production of oxygen led to decreased fixed inorganic nitrogen in the oceans. This feedback, which is supported by isotopic analyses of fixed nitrogen in sedimentary rocks from the late Archean, continues to the present and controls primary production throughout much of the modern ocean. However, once sufficient oxygen accumulated in Earth’s atmosphere to allow nitrification to out-compete with denitrification, a new, stable electron “market” emerged and ultimately spread via lateral gene transfer to eukaryotic host cells, allowing the evolution of “complex” (i.e., animal) life forms. Thus, the presence of oceans on Earth allowed microbes to develop a network of electron transfer processes that ultimately permanently altered the gas composition of Earth’s atmosphere. The gas composition of Earth is an “emergent” property that is derived from oceanic microbial life, and can be used as a guide to search for the presence of life on terrestrial planets outside of our solar system. to the National Academy of Sciences. He has authored or coauthored over 250 papers in peer-reviewed journals and books. Together with John Raven, he is co-author of Aquatic Photosynthesis (Princeton University Press), and has co-invented and patented a fluorosensing system which is capable of measuring phytoplankton photosynthetic rates nondestructively and in real time. He is an advisor to the National Science Foundation and NASA and serves on the Mars Architecture Mission team, the Earth System Science and Applications Advisory Committee, the Astrobiology Oversight Committee, is co-chair of the IGBP Carbon Cycle Working Group, and a member of the Carbon Cycle Science Steering Committee. He is on the Board of Reviewing Editors for Science and an associate editor of five other journals. Thursday, 6 March 2008 Richard W. Spinrad National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Silver Spring, MD The Future of Ocean Sciences Presentation: In the coming decade we can expect a vast array of technical, political, and societal drivers of change to impact our oceanographic community. Similar to the changes we’ve seen since 1995, the effect on our ability to observe, analyze and forecast the nature of the marine environment will be profound. Sensors, platforms and computational capabilities will enhance dramatically our characterization of the state and the dynamics of the ocean. Policies, treaties, and global agreements will develop whole new forums for our collaboration and coordination among coastal nations. Society’s recognition of and demand for new products and services (to support safety, environmental stewardship and economic development, in a balanced manner) will pull our research into new and exciting areas of applicability. In sum, this decade will surely be one of the most productive and fulfilling for this generation of ocean scientists. Biography: Paul G. Falkowski is Board of Governors’ Professor in the Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences and the Department of Geology at Rutgers University. His research interests include evolution, paleoecology, photosynthesis, biophysics, biogeochemical cycles, and symbiosis. Born in 1951 and raised in New York City, Falkowski earned his B.S. and M.Sc. degrees from the City College of the City University of New York and his Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia. After a Post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Rhode Island, he joined Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1976 as a scientist in the newly formed Oceanographic Sciences Division. He received tenure in 1984, and served as head of the division from 1986 to 1991. From 1991 to 1995, he was Deputy Chair in the Department of Applied Science, responsible for the development and oversight of all environmental science programs. In 1998 he moved to Rutgers University. His research efforts are directed towards understanding the co-evolution of biological and physical systems. In 1992, he received a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship. In 1996, he was appointed as the Cecil and Ida Green Distinguished Professor at the University of British Columbia. In 1998 he was awarded the Huntsman Medal. In 2000 he was awarded the Hutchinson Prize. In 2001 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union. In 2002 he was elected as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2005 he received the Vernadsky medal from the European Geosciences Union. In 2007 he was elected Biography: Dr. Spinrad is the Assistant Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR). He is a native of New York City, and a graduate of the Johns Hopkins University (B.A.). Dr. Spinrad has broad experience in marine science, technology, operations and policy. During his career he has worked in a wide range of positions in government, academia, industry and non-governmental organizations. Spinrad earned an M.S. in physical oceanography and a Ph.D. in marine geology from Oregon State University. As a research scientist at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean  ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Presentation: The world’s aquatic ecosystems are threatened by pollution and the exploitation of natural resources, amplified by the over-arching impacts of climate change. In many regions the thresholds for maintaining sustainable ecosystem functioning have been exceeded, leading to declining fisheries, lack of clean water for human use and recreation, and loss of biodiversity and genetic resources of the aquatic ecosystems. Acknowledging these problems, and the lack of holistic legislative instruments for knowledge-based adaptive management in the European Union, a new comprehensive regulation in the field of water policy was adopted in 2000. The EU Water Framework Directive (WFD; 2000/60/EC) creates the legislative framework to manage, protect, and restore surface water ecosystems and groundwater resources within river basins and in transitional (lagoons and estuaries) and coastal waters in the European Union. It follows the implementation of a number of previous water quality directives and aims to protect aquatic ecosystems as a whole being supplemented by Daughter Directives (for ground waters and priority hazardous substances) to complement and elaborate some areas where necessary. The WFD has ambitious objectives aiming to reach good ecological and chemical status by 2015, while preventing further deterioration of surface waters and groundwater, and to ensure sustainable functioning of aquatic ecosystems (and dependent wetlands and terrestrial systems). Since the start of the implementation of the directive, 12 new Member States have joined the EU, thus extending the geographical scope and the diversity of natural, social and economic conditions beyond the original extent of the directive. It was recognized that the overall complexity of the WFD, multitude of national and local conditions, and a very tight implementation timetable required the development of a novel participatory governance approach to find a common understanding and practical solutions for the various technical issues. Since 2001 a number of guidance documents have been jointly prepared by the Commission, Member States, and several EU-wide sectoral stakeholder organisations and NGOs, as a result of the Common Implementation Strategy of the WFD. Sciences he developed and published concepts critical to our understanding of the relationship between water clarity and marine biological productivity. Spinrad served as President of Sea Tech, Incorporated during that company’s development of several now-standard oceanographic sensors. He went on to manage oceanographic research at the Office of Naval Research (including serving as the Navy’s first manager of its ocean optics program), eventually becoming the Division Director for all of the Navy’s basic and applied research in ocean, atmosphere and space modeling and prediction. In 1994 Dr. Spinrad became the Executive Director of the Consortium for Oceanographic Research and Education (CORE) where he led the development of the National Ocean Sciences Bowl for High School Students, and he co-authored, with Admiral James D. Watkins, “Oceans 2000: Bridging the Millennia”, which served as the guiding document for the establishment of the National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP). In 1999 Spinrad became the Technical Director to the Oceanographer of the Navy. In this position he provided leadership and guidance for the development of the U.S. Navy’s oceanographic and meteorological operational support to Naval forces. Currently, Spinrad serves as the United States’ permanent representative to the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO, and co-chairs the White House Joint Subcommittee on Ocean Science and Technology. Rick Spinrad is the President of The Oceanography Society, and served as Editor in Chief of Oceanography magazine; he has served on numerous professional committees of organizations including the National Academy of Sciences and the American Meteorological Society. Spinrad also served on the faculties of the U.S. Naval Academy and George Mason University. He has spent over 300 days at sea conducting research, and has published more than 50 scientific articles. Spinrad is the editor of a textbook on ocean optics and several special issues of marine science journals. In 2003, Spinrad was awarded the Department of Navy Distinguished Civilian Service Award, the highest civilian award that can be given by the Navy Department, and he has received a Presidential Rank Award. The setting of environmental objectives to be incorporated into river basin management plans followed a series of steps starting with the characterisation of river basins, identification of surface water bodies and types, evaluation of significant anthropogenic pressures and impacts, and identification of water bodies that are at risk of failing to achieve good quality standards. The first report of the implementation of the WFD in the EU Member States suggests that approximately 40% of surface waters are at risk of failing to achieve environmental objectives, while there was insufficient data available to evaluate the preliminary status of 30% of the water bodies. The lack of such data was particularly apparent for coastal and transitional waters. Friday, 7 March 2008 Anna-Stiina Heiskanen European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Institute for Environment and Sustainability, Ispra, Italy Towards Sustainable Management of Aquatic Ecosystems in the European Union - From the River Basins to the Open Ocean 10 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF The first EU-wide evaluation of the ecological quality status of surface waters will be carried out as a result of surveillance monitoring starting in 2007. The WFD monitoring requirements include a number of biological parameters such as phytoplankton, macrophytes, benthic invertebrates, and fish which were not previously required by the other water quality directives (such as Nitrates and Urban Waste Water Treatment Directives), nor have those been traditionally monitored in many EU countries. During the last decade, a lot of research into the development of new biological indicators and metrics to assess the status of the structure and functioning of aquatic ecosystems has been carried out at EU and national level. However, many Member States still lack biological classification tools as required by the WFD. The ecological status class boundaries of the national monitoring systems have been compared through an intercalibration exercise. This process aimed to ensure a common understanding of criteria for ‘good ecological quality’, and to have an equal level of ambition in achieving good surface waters status across the EU. The first round of intercalibration is now complete for several river, lake, and coastal water types across the EU’s ecoregions. Many of the assessment systems are consistent with WFD requirements and generally provide quite comparable results between the Member States that share similar types of waters. For instance, the intercalibration results for the marine ecoregions: Baltic Sea, Black Sea, Mediterranean, and the North-East Atlantic, include agreement on reference conditions and good status classification boundaries of phytoplankton biomass (based on chlorophyll-a metrics) for a number of common coastal types in these ecoregions. Further, intercalibration of boundaries for metrics based on other biological groups: benthic invertebrate fauna, macroalgae, and angiosperms was also addressed. These results define the first set of ecological quality criteria for the assessment of European coastal waters, linking to the development of ecological quality objectives in regional Marine Conventions (OSPAR, HELCOM, BARCELONA, and the Bucharest-Black Sea Conventions). hazardous substances, and minimizing eutrophication, marine dumping and oil pollution problems, and aims to set a legal objective to achieve ‘good environmental status (GES) of the marine waters’ in the EU by 2021. Common principles, generic descriptors, criteria, and methodological standards for GES will be developed at EU level, while the determination of these as well as the definition of management measures will take place on a regional level, requiring coordination and cooperation with marine regional conventions and with non-EU countries. Together these two legislative frameworks aim to ensure the protection of water ecosystems across the river basin - open ocean continuum, and to provide sustainable aquatic ecosystems for the future of Europe. Further information on the status of the EU’s aquatic systems and development in policies can be found at: http://water.europa.eu. Biography: Anna-Stiina Heiskanen is a Scientific Officer at the Joint Research Centre’s Institute for Environment and Sustainability in Ispra, Italy. She received her Ph.D. in 1998, in hydrobiology from the Helsinki University, Finland, where she holds an external professorship (a docent position) in the field of marine biology. For a number of years, she has carried out research on carbon cycling and nutrient dynamics of the Baltic Sea pelagic ecosystem, first as an assistant and junior researcher at the Finnish Marine Research Institute, and later as a scientist at the Tvärminne Zoological Station of the Helsinki University, and as a Senior Scientist at the Finnish Environment Institute. Her research work has focused on phytoplankton dynamics, planktonic food web interactions, and the role of sedimentation as a loss process from the pelagic system. She has participated in several national and international research projects studying the eutrophication process and functioning of the pelagic ecosystems of the Baltic Sea. Since 2000, she has worked as a scientific officer at the Joint Research Centre, which is a Directorate-General of the European Commission. Currently, she is leading a research team focusing on the development of bioindicators and metrics for surface water ecological quality assessment, and the application of molecular tools for development of biomarkers for risk assessment of toxic substances. Her team is also providing scientific and technical support to the EU Member States and to other Commission directorates such as the Directorate-General Environment, on issues concerning eutrophication and ecological status assessment of inland and marine coastal waters in Europe in the context of the EU Water Framework Directive. Most recently, her team has been focusing on the coordination of the EU-wide intercalibration process aiming to harmonize ecological water quality assessment systems between EU Member States as part of the implementation of the Water Framework Directive. Currently, institutional negotiations for the political agreement of the new Marine Directive based on the European Marine Strategy are underway. The Marine Strategy has introduced an ecosystem-based approach for the management of marine resources and protection of marine ecosystems, aiming to “promote sustainable use of the seas and conserve marine ecosystems,” representing the environmental pillar of EU Maritime Policy, and extending beyond the scope of the WFD (which covers only the first nautical mile of the coastline, including estuaries and lagoons). The marine strategy sets a number of objectives and actions to prevent the loss of biodiversity and destruction of habitats, reducing discharges and levels of 11 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Special Meeting Events for broader environmental science outreach. A key part of the effort is the special evening forum. Two impressions that underlie the perceived failure at better communication to the public are: “scientists tend to bore audiences with sterile recitations of facts” and “environmental advocates tend to entertain and emotionally present information that is not necessarily accurate.” AGU – Sverdrup Award Lecture Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 13:30 Room W110 In 1951, Harald Ulrik Sverdrup received AGU’s highest honor, the William Bowie Medal. Sverdrup was an honest, unassuming, pious, hard-working, humorous, and humane investigator of the atmosphere and the oceans as evident through his research, teaching, and public service.  His lasting reputation and the continued influence of his publications attest to his success. The evening forum will be a frank and open discussion with a panel including leaders from the scientific, aquarium, media, and film communities. These panel members have been selected for their considerable experience and strong opinions about environmental outreach. We congratulate this year’s winner: It is anticipated that a number of issues will be discussed including: Victoria Fabry California State University, San Marco • how to make issues compelling to the public while still fact-based and accurate, Ocean Acidification: Humankind’s Global Geochemical Experiment with Uncertain Ecological Consequences • how to convey information rather than advocate action, and • how to minimize “cultural” bias that may inhibit active research scientists from participating in outreach activities. Abstract: Oceanic uptake of anthropogenic CO2 is altering the seawater chemistry and can have significant impacts on marine biota and ecological processes. The average pH of surface oceans has dropped by 0.1 units since the industrial revolution and, if carbon dioxide emissions continue unabated, will drop another 0.2 to 0.4 units by 2100. Elevated pCO2 is driving the shoaling of the CaCO3 saturation horizon in many regions, particularly in high latitudes and areas that intersect with pronounced hypoxic zones. As the seawater chemistry changes, many calcifying organisms will be adversely impacted, which could lead to decreased biodiversity and cascading effects through marine systems. Few data on the consequences of ocean acidification are available for many organisms, processes other than calcification, and for coastal regions, which generally are not well-represented in global models. The small number of studies at climate-relevant pCO2 values presently provides poor predictive ability to quantify future impacts to food webs and other ecosystem processes. Suggestions for future research will be presented, based on regions, taxa, and processes believed to be most vulnerable to ocean acidification over seasonal to centennial timescales. Format: A group of facilitators who have assisted in planning the forum will also assist in formulating questions and most will be present at the forum. The evening will start with a brief introduction through excerpts from recent newspaper articles/editorials, films, etc. The panel discussion will include prepared questions to panelists, questions among panelists, and questions from the audience. The intent is not to discuss specific environmental subjects, but instead to address challenges relating to effective outreach of technical information about environmental issues in general. Facilitators: • Jon Sharp – College of Marine and Earth Studies, University of Delaware. OSM2008 Meeting Co-chair and Moderator for Forum • Sharon Franks – Director, Center for Educational Outreach Connections, Scripps Institution of Oceanography • Christophe Tulou - Director, Program on Sustainable Oceans, Coasts and Waterways ,The H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics and the Environment Special Evening Science Communication Forum: “Does Science Really Matter?” Wednesday, 5 March 2008, 20:00-22:00 Chapin Theater • Adrienne Sponberg – Director of Public Policy, American Society for Limnology and Oceanography There have been discussions within our marine sciences community and at recent meetings that the outreach from environmental research scientists to the general public is not meeting societal needs. At this March 2008 meeting, there will be a major effort to address the needs • Rick Spinrad – Assistant Administrator of NOAA Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Panelists: • Jerry Schubel – President of the Aquarium of the Pacific 12 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF • Jeremy Jackson – Coral Reef Ecologist, Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute own lunch. Flyers will be provided at the Registration Desk and Student Career Center with more information about the workshop speakers and topics. • Charles Hall – Ecologist, College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York at Syracuse Student Career Center The ASLO Student Board Members are launching a new initiative to foster communication among students and provide information about career opportunities. A small section of the poster session room will be reserved for a Student Lounge/ Career Center, where students can meet each other and the Student Board Members in a fun, relaxed setting. This center will host the Career Bulletin Board, where prospective employers are invited to post job announcements and students are invited to post a one-page CV. At appointed times, senior scientists of varied backgrounds (different disciplines, academic and non-academic, etc.) will be available to meet with students and answer their questions. Lunch tickets for the student workshops will be available for pick-up on Monday and Wednesday during the poster sessions. • Randy Olson – Filmmaker, Prairie Starfish Productions and University of Southern California • Juliet Eilperin - Science writer for Washington Post Special Opportunities for Students Travel Awards Student Travel Awards are a major resource enabling students to attend and present at scientific meetings. Fifty-six travel awards ranging from $250-$1000 ($17,000 total) were provided to students attending the Ocean Sciences Meeting to help defray their registration and/or travel costs. These awards were co-sponsored by ASLO, AGU, and TOS. If you would like to contribute a donation towards student travel awards at future meetings, please contact the business office of your society. ASLO Multicultural Program The ASLO Multicultural Program (http://www.hamptonu. edu/science/ASLO.htm) is an NSF-supported program devoted to increasing the diversity of students choosing careers in the aquatic sciences. Approximately 560 underrepresented minority students have participated since the program began in 1990, and many have gone on to earn advanced degrees and become professionals in the field. Special events, workshops, and a Student Symposium will be held for Multicultural Program participants at the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting. The Student Symposium is open to all meeting registrants, and we encourage you to attend and demonstrate your support for this program. If you would be interested in serving as a mentor at future meetings, please contact Dr. Ben Cuker (e-mail: Benjamin. [email protected]; phone: 757-727-5884; address: Department of Marine Science, Hampton University, Hampton, VA 23668). Outstanding Student Presentation Awards ASLO, AGU, TOS, and SAML are co-sponsoring monetary awards that will be given to the most outstanding posters and talks presented by students at the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting. To be eligible, a student must be a member of one of the sponsoring societies and first author on research that has not been presented previously at other scientific meetings. Presentations will be judged on the basis of innovation/scientific insight, quality of experimental design/methods, and clarity/effectiveness of presentation. There is no need to apply; all eligible presentations will be evaluated in consideration for the awards. Student Development Workshops Workshops Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, & Thursday, 6 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W311 E,F,G Events are listed by date, from Saturday 1 March to Friday 7 March, 2008. Student workshops on a variety of topics related to career development will be held on Tuesday and Thursday over lunch. These workshops will be informal in nature, providing an ice-breaker for students to mingle with senior scientists. A limited number of lunches will be provided to students who pre-register for the workshops at the Student Career Center during the Monday and Wednesday poster sessions. If you are unable to get a lunch ticket, we encourage you to attend and bring your LOCO – Data Workshop Date/Time: Saturday & Sunday, 1-2 March 2008, all day, each day C6 Multi Sensor Platform & PhytoFlash Workshop Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W102 Hands-on training and presentation for optical equipment. 13 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Metadata Tutorials for Ocean Scientists Workshop Ocean Acidification: Towards an Interagency Approach Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, & Wednesday, 5 March 2008, 12:00-13:30; Thursday, 6 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W105 (Tues/Wed); W102 (Thur) Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W108 Ocean Acidification, or the reduction in global oceanic pH caused by rising dissolved CO2 concentrations, is a rapidly emerging issue that has garnered considerable interest from Congress, the scientific community, and coastal managers. Over the next century, ocean acidification is expected to reduce surface ocean pH by 0.3-0.5 units, negatively impacting shell formation for a number of marine organisms and ultimately affecting some of the most fundamental biological and geochemical processes of the sea. In response, a number of US federal agencies (e.g., NOAA, NSF, USGS, NASA) are developing programs to address this critical issue. This town hall forum will be an opportunity for representatives of agencies that support marine research and academic researchers to discuss a vision for a national interagency program on ocean acidification. MMI proposes to hold free metadata tutorials that are divided into three or four two-hour sessions, each session with four 30-minute modules. All sessions will be the same to allow participants to catch a session (or even just a 30-minute module) at different times of the day. The modules will be: Introduction to Metadata; Introduction to Controlled Vocabularies, Taxonomies and Ontologies; Submitting Metadata to a Clearinghouse; and Metadata Best Practices. Understanding Climate Impacts in Sub-arctic Seas: Ecological Issues and Comparative Approaches Workshop Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W203 Advancing the ocean acidification state-of-knowledge demands a broad range of research, monitoring, and modeling capabilities. Some of these capabilities may be better suited to the mission areas of different agencies. Through cross-agency and international coordination, we can achieve greater efficiency, leverage funding, avoid duplicative efforts, and allow for large-scale joint funding initiatives. Key topics of discussion will be the recent interagency workshop report titled, “Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Coral Reefs and Other Marine Calcifiers: A Guide for Future Research” and emerging international ocean acidification programs with the European Union (EU), Japan, and Korea. Organized by Libby Jewett, Dwight Gledhill and Dick Feely. The Workshop will be a combination of panel presentations and open discussion of on-going programs, the approaches being taken in either field work or synthesis activities, and the expected goals of these programs.  Four panelists will present on the following programs: the Bering Ecosystem Study (BEST), the Bering Sea Integrated Ecosystem Research Program (BSIERP), the Norwegian ESSAS program (NESSAS), and the Marine Ecosystems of Norway and the US (MENU) program.  There will be time for presentations from additional programs if there is interest.  The last half hour of the workshop will be devoted to discussions of sampling design, approaches to program synthesis, how to maximize results from comparative studies and other topics of interest to the participants. Education & Outreach Workshop GHRSST-PP Diurnal Variability 4th Workshop Date/Time: Wednesday, 5 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W102 Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W101 Scientists are regularly asked to communicate about their research through various media to a variety of audiences. Each audience has particular interests and communication practices must be adapted to effectively reach them. Collaboration between scientists and those who specialize in education and outreach enables researchers to more efficiently and successfully plan, propose and implement outreach activities. In partnership with the Centers for Ocean Sciences Education Excellence (COSEE) and The Oceanography Society (TOS), we have developed a Guide to Engaging Scientists in Education & Public Outreach (EPO).   Please join us for lunch and discussion on this guide including presentations and demonstrations of resources as well as a discussion on opportunities for scientists to contribute to the future development of these materials. The GODAE High Resolution Sea Surface Temperature pilot project has a working group on understanding diurnal variability in SST observed from satellites. The Diurnal Variability Working Group has had three previous working group meetings, always with local participation in addition to its core membership. This open session of the 4th working group meeting will include presentations from working group members on current diurnal SST research which may be of wider interest. Charting the Course for an Ocean Research Priorities Plan & Implementation Strategy Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W103 14 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO Public Policy Workshop Effective Communication with Lawmakers stories. Did these articles attract readers? If so, what’s the secret to their success? Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W101 Cost: $10.00 (Beverage and dessert provided), registration required Participants in this workshop will learn how to present science in an interesting way while retaining factual accuracy--the key to good science communication and science journalism. Science journalism aims to transmute scientific concepts and results from jargon-based language often understandable only by scientists, to news relevant to the lives of the general reader (listener/viewer). • Low proposal success rates getting you down? • Frustrated with the dismal amount of funding available for aquatic research? This workshop will explore science writing for a nonscientific audience. Participants will review examples of good science writing from newspapers like the New York Times and Washington Post, and news magazines like Science News and New Scientist; “dissect” the structure of science news and feature articles; discuss how popular coverage of science has changed in recent years; and learn the basics of science journalism. • Have you talked to your representatives in D.C. about it lately? If you answered yes to the first two questions, but no to the last, then this workshop is for you. Public policy decisions that impact scientists’ ability to do their work (research funding, education policies and rules regarding international collaboration) are debated and acted upon on a continual basis in Washington, D.C. Few scientists are aware of these decisions, let alone do they make their voice heard. In this workshop, ASLO Director of Public Affairs, Adrienne Sponberg, will explain the various mechanisms available to scientists to participate in the policy arena.   Sponberg will offer tips for effective communication with policymakers based on her experience working on and with Capitol Hill. Participants will put these tips to use in the second half of the workshop by formulating a strategy for communicating their concerns to Congress and drafting talking points that will form the basis of a letter they will send to their own congressional delegation.   Grab a quick lunch in the food court and join this workshop for your beverage and dessert.  Pre-registration is required. Cost is $10 and attendance is limited to 40, so register early. Participants will have the opportunity to write a generalaudience science article about research presented at the conference, and individual critiques will be offered to those interested. The workshop is free, but pre-registration is appreciated. Please contact: Cheryl Lyn Dybas, National Science Foundation, [email protected], 703/292-7734. MPOWIR - Panel Discussion on Dual Career Couples Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W101 MPOWIR (Mentoring Physical Oceanography Women to Increase Retention) will hold a presentation/panel discussion on dual career couples in ocean sciences. The event will also include a reception before the discussion. MISST Project Team Meeting Computed Tomography & Marine Geosciences Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W102 Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W105 The Multi-sensor Improved Sea Surface Temperatures (MISST) for the Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE) project team meeting. Discussion on the Current & Future Needs of the Ocean Science, Technology & Operations Workforce Date/Time: Friday, 7 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W103 From Ship to Shore to the Media: A Workshop on Science Journalism Come join us for lunch and a lively workshop on the ocean science, technology, and operations workforce with an emphasis on the workforce that supports ocean observing, analysis, and forecast systems. Workshop participants will address a range of questions, including: Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W105 “Gulf of Mexico Double-Whammy.” “MethaneDevourer Discovered in Arctic Seas.” “Antique Whale Oil and the Origin of Industrial Chemicals.” These headlines introduced recent marine science news • What type of workforce is and will be needed to build, operate, and sustain ocean observing systems? 15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Society Meetings • What knowledge and skill sets are hardest to find or develop in present and prospective employees? • What are the obstacles to attracting and retaining qualified employees? Events are listed by date, from Saturday 1 March to Friday 7 March, 2008. • What are the major factors that affect worker supply and demand? CoOP Meeting – Coastal Ocean Processes Date/Time: Sunday, 2 March 2008, all day • What other kinds of employers do ocean observing system employers compete with for workers? • Is the higher education system producing the oceanrelated graduates needed for the present and future workplace? National Federation of Regional Associates for Ocean & Coastal Observing Retreat • Would a certification program for oceanographic professionals help employers identify, hire, and evaluate new employees? Full-day board retreat for NFRA. If you have an interest in, or information to share, about these issues, please join us for this workshop and the closely-related program session, Ocean Science, Technology, and Operations Workforce session (session 093). Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W311B Date/Time: Sunday, 2 March 2008, all day TOS Anniversary Reception TOS Council Meeting Date/Time: Wednesday, 5 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W311A We are looking for workshop participants who are involved in the science, technology, and/or operations of ocean observing systems (OOS), or in closely related endeavors. This includes, for example, the design and operation of ocean observing sensor packages, development and production of operational oceanographic products, applications of ocean observation-based products (e.g., in industry, environmental management, national defense), and education and professional development of OOS workers. Workshop participants are encouraged to sign up on the web site before 1 February 2008. Space is limited. You will have the opportunity on the web site to indicate whether you would like us to provide lunch for you at a cost of $10. TOS Business Meeting Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W311A Town Hall Meetings Events are listed by date, from Saturday 1 March to Friday 7 March, 2008. DIMES Town Hall Date/Time: Sunday, 2 March 2008, all day Visit the following URL to Sign Up http://www.surveymonkey.com/ s.aspx?sm=N9n588ktTfy9v0V9NZGHwA_3d_3d Diapycnal and Isopycnal Mixing Experiment in the Southern Ocean Workshop Organizers: IMBER Town Hall Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W101 • Tom Murphree, Naval Postgraduate School, [email protected]; Status report on the IGBP/SCOR project IMBER (Integrated Marine Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Research). Q&A to follow the presentation. • Deidre Sullivan, Marine Advanced Technology Education Center, [email protected]; • Leslie Rosenfeld, Naval Postgraduate School, [email protected]; NOAA Town Hall: Ecosystems-Based Ocean Research • Melbourne Briscoe, The Oceanography Society, [email protected] Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W105 Join Richard Spinrad, Director of NOAA Research, to discuss overarching research challenges identified in the Draft 5-year 16 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF NOAA Research Plan including: What factors influence marine ecosystem processes & impact our ability to manage them & forecast their future state? And, what is the current state of biodiversity in the oceans & how will external forces impact this diversity & how we use our oceans & coasts? The Community Sediment-Transport Model project (CSTM), established through the National Oceanographic Partnership Program, is nearly midway through a three-year funding cycle. This project has used a community-modeling approach to build and distribute an open-source numerical model for ocean circulation, sediment transport, and morphologic evolution. The Town Hall Meeting will introduce the project, and its products, to Ocean Sciences attendees. Project leaders will provide an update on the goals and accomplishments of the project and entertain questions. Project participants will be on hand to showcase aspects of the project and answer questions. Open Access Town Hall Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W102 As governments begin to mandate grant recipients publish in open access journals, societies are deliberating a transition to open access. Early estimates show that moving L&O to open access could result in author charges of roughly $2500 per paper. How much more are you willing to pay to publish your next paper in an open access journal? UM RSMAS Reception Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 21:30 (following Town Hall) Location: W103 Come to this roundtable discussion to hear about developments in open access and how they affect the activities of non-profit scientific societies like ASLO. Topics include alternative business models for funding various levels of access and their advantages and disadvantages. Please plan to attend this important session to get your questions answered and provide feedback to your societies. NOAA Tides and Currents Town Hall Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W101 A short training presentation highlighting new/enhanced tide and current products, followed by Q&A to gather feedback so NOAA can best meet ocean researchers’ needs. UM RSMAS Town Hall Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W103 Ocean Observatories Initiative Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W105 Consortium for Ocean Leadership Town Hall Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W105 The National Science Foundation’s Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) continues to gather momentum. The OOI Network team is now in place, with UC San Diego, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and the University of Washington leading groups of academic and industry partners. This town meeting will update attendees on the status of the planning process, gather feedback, and answer questions about future steps in the development of this important new research capability. The Joint Oceanographic Institutions (JOI) and the Consortium for Oceanographic Research and Education (CORE) have merged to form the Consortium for Ocean Leadership. Representing 95 of the leading public and private ocean research education institutions, aquaria and industry, Ocean Leadership is a unified voice for the ocean research and education community and serves as a prime point of contact between the ocean science community and the federal government in Washington, DC. ASLO EU-US Funding Panel Discussion: Bridging the Transatlantic Funding Gap This meeting will introduce Ocean Leadership’s new President, Bob Gagosian, who will discuss how the organization will manage ocean research and education programs while advocating for sound marine policies and federal investment in ocean research and education. Date/Time: Wednesday, 5 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W101 The ASLO Public Policy Committee invites you to a panel discussion regarding opportunities for EU-US collaboration in aquatic research. The discussion will begin with a presentation summarizing the status of EU-US programs and opportunities. Following the overview, the Committee plans to have a brief presentation from program officers from both the US and EU. Following these presentations, there will be open discussion with the audience. NOPP Community Sediment-Transport Model Town Hall Date/Time: Monday, 3 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W108 17 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Ocean Carbon & Biogeochemistry Program Ocean Time Series Town Hall Date/Time: Friday, 7 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W108 Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W103 The Ocean Carbon and Biogeochemistry Scientific Steering Committee constituted the Ocean Time Series (OTSAC) Advisory Committee to assess the future needs of the oceanographic community for TS observations. The committee seeks input on issues including: Do we need additional TS sites? How should we fund TS? How should the TS sites interact with ocean observatories? This town hall will immediately follow four talks that describe the assessment and summarize work at HOT, BATS, & CARIACO. The Ocean Carbon and Biogeochemistry (OCB) program brings together geochemistry, ocean physics, and ecology research that advances our understanding of ocean biogeochemistry. OCB’s goal is to promote, plan, and coordinate collaborative, multidisciplinary research opportunities within the U.S. and with international partners. A townhall meeting will be held to present recent OCB activities, discuss current research plans and solicit new science directions. Social Events Ecological Forecasts: Barriers to Transition and Operations Town Hall Opening Welcome Mixer Reception Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 12:00-13:30 Location: W108 Date/Time: Sunday, 2 March 2008, 19:00-21:00 An opening welcome mixer reception will be held on Sunday, 2 March 2008.  Conference registration also will be open at that time to allow you to pick up your conference materials. The opening mixer is open to all attendees and their guests. As environmental issues grow in complexity, resource managers must increasingly use an ecosystem approach to management. Ecological forecasts integrating scientific information, technology and tools, can assist managers being more proactive by predicting the impacts of various stressors on ecosystems. However, transition into operation is not always easy. The meeting will explore the challenges and ways to better transition ecological forecasts to appropriate users. Evening Social Ocean Sciences Discovers Disney Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008 Cost:  $55.00 Join other Ocean Sciences participants and explore EPCOT on Thursday, March 6th following the conclusion of the scientific program.  We will begin with a “Team Fact Finding Mission” where you can explore EPCOT in teams and work to win prizes.  Working in “self directed” groups, guests will be whisked away to the far off lands in the World Showcase as well as experience tomorrow’s life in Future World. Future Challenges in Marine Organic Geochemistry Town Hall Date/Time: Thursday, 6 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W102 This town hall meeting is being held to provide the research community with an opportunity to assess recent advances in marine organic geochemistry (MOG), discuss new and continuing research challenges, and to identify research needs for the next decade. In January, 1990 marine organic geochemists from the US, Europe and Japan met in Honolulu for an NSF/ONR sponsored workshop to review progress in marine organic geochemistry (MOG). Proceedings of the workshop were published in Marine Chemistry 39, 1-3 (1992), and these deliberations served to advance several important research programs between 1990-2008. Marine organic geochemistry continues to expand in new directions, and incorporate new techniques and approaches. We plan to give a brief presentation of the Honolulu MOG workshop then open the floor to a discussion of the field and what can be done to further advance MOG in the coming decade. You will have time to explore EPCOT on your own and then at 21:00, come to the promenade to experience “Illuminations-Reflections of Earth,” Disney’s spectacular fireworks and music display. Buses will depart from the front of the West Building of the Orange County Convention Center at 19:00 and will return to the same location around 23:00. Cost includes transportation via motor coach to EPCOT, Discover Disney Guide Books, Discover Disney Answer Key and admission fee. Minimum of 300 required for this event. This is an optional activity. A Disney representative will be on-site to sell additional tickets during registration hours on Sunday and Monday. Stony Brook Alumni Reception Date/Time: Tuesday, 4 March 2008, 19:30-21:30 Location: W311B 18 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Participant & Attendee Information sured, CPR certified, and have had background checks. Arrangements must be made on an individual basis. Contact: Laurie by phone: 407-812-9300 or e-mail: [email protected]. ASLO and the other societies assume no responsibility or liability for services rendered. Non-U.S. Attendees In preparation for attendance at this meeting, you may be required to acquire a visa. Citizens of 27 countries in Europe and the Far East may visit for up to 90 days without a visa. This is only possible if the attendee has a passport with a computer-readable bar code. These countries are: Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brunei, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. If you are a citizen of any of these countries, we strongly encourage you to attain an updated passport that contains the barcode in order to avoid the visa process. Concierge Service The Orange County Convention Center and Orlando/ Orange County Visitors Bureau maintain on-site guest services and an information desk to answers questions about the area. The desk is located in the West Building lobby and offers the following: • Discounted Orlando area attraction tickets • Airport and other transportation information • Directions, maps and parking information • I-Ride Trolley Passes and information • Restaurant reservations and recommendations An in-person interview at the American Consulate in your home country, extensive documentation, and an application fee may be required to process a visa request. For security reasons, letters of invitation are provided only for registrants who have already registered and paid the appropriate fees. Parking Parking is $10 for exhibitors and attendees.  ONLY Exhibitors will have “in and out” privileges in the parking lot with their exhibitor badge; however they must pay the parking fee once a day.  Attendees will have to pay each time they enter the parking lot.  Overnight parking is not permitted.  There is a map online indicating parking lot locations at http://www.occc.net/global/Transportation.asp. Be sure to plan well in advance and apply early if a visa will be required. For questions regarding passports, visas or travel requirements, please refer to the U.S. Department of State visa web site at: http://travel.state.gov/visa/visa_ 1750.html or contact your local American Consulate. E-mail & Wireless Service Special Needs An e-mail room with limited stations and time restraints will be available during regular conference hours MondayFriday in Room W303C. The room will be open: Monday, 08:00-17:00, then 07:00-17:00 Tuesday-Friday. If you have a disability or limitation that may require special consideration in order to fully participate, please contact ASLO to see how we can accommodate your needs. Call 800-929-3756 (USA, Canada & Caribbean) or 254-399-9635 (All other countries) or contact via email at [email protected]. Complimentary wireless service will be available beginning at 12:00 noon on Sunday and running 24-hours through the conclusion of the meeting on Friday. This service will be limited in the number of users and will be located outside the exhibit/poster hall, WA1-WA2 in the convention center. The speed is 512k and signs with login information will be available in this area. Child Care Information On site childcare will not be provided for this meeting. Below is information about a childcare service. You might also check with your hotel to see if they are able to provide names of additional services. Internet service may also be purchased from Smart City, at the convention center. The cost is $4.95 per hour at 64k and $24.95 per day at 128k. There will be a “family room”, Room W303A at the Orange County Convention Center. This is a room where you may go to relax with your children if you bring them to the convention center. However, there will NOT be any service offered in this room and you will not be able to leave ANY children unattended. On-Site Business Center-FedEx Kinko’s FedEx Kinko’s has several centers in the area including one in the Orange County Convention Center, West Building near the food court. Available services include faxing, packaging, shipping and receiving, computer rentals, e-mail and internet browsers, office supplies, photocopying, signs/ posters/banners, business cards, and mail drop. All About Kids is a childcare service located in Orlando. Professionals in childcare since 1991, providing private in-room childcare by individuals who are bonded, in- 19 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Your Presentation For convenience, laminated posters can be ordered through FedEx Kinko’s, but they are not done at the convention location. Normal service takes 24 to 48 hours and costs vary. Materials need to be submitted in PDF form. Phone: 407-363-2831 for information. Please use the following guidelines and information to be as prepared as possible for the meeting. Oral Presentations ATMs & Money Changing Machines Talks are scheduled in 15-minute time slots. We strongly encourage a presentation of no more than 12 minutes to allow three minutes for discussion and to entertain questions from those in the audience. In special cases, and at the discretion of the session organizers, invited presenters may be given two consecutive slots to provide a tutorial talk at the beginning of the session. The time limit will be strictly enforced to facilitate movement between sessions. Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs) and Money Changing Machines are located in every lobby of the West Building. Registration Registration opens on Sunday at 13:00 and runs until 21:00. It will open again Monday-Friday from 07:0017:00 daily and is located in the West Building registration area on level one. Each presenter can easily upload presentation files, including all multimedia content (ex: linked video, flash, sound files), online prior to the event or on-site. All presentations can be previewed and edited by authors up to four hours prior to their session at the Presentation Room, Room W205A, before they are automatically downloaded to the respective computers in the session rooms. Refreshments Breaks with coffee service will be available MondayFriday from 10:30-11:00 and 15:30-16:00. All morning breaks will be outside the Chapin Theater on level 3 of the convention center. Monday and Friday afternoon breaks will be outside WA1 & WA2 with the other afternoon breaks inside the hall. The computers in the session rooms will be Windows XPbased PC with Microsoft PowerPoint 2003. Verification of proper performance in the Presentation Room is essential, particularly if video and animation is included in the presentation. Please note that Internet access will not be available during your presentation. Concession Services Various concession areas will be available within the OCCC during the meeting to grab lunch or a snack between presentations. Preparing Your Presentation Speakers are provided a link and individual login credentials via e-mail to submit presentations online prior to the start of the meeting. First Aid & Security for Attendees Uniformed security are on patrol 24 hours a day/seven days a week in addition to the maintenance of closed circuit TV monitoring of the convention center and parking lots. The following phone numbers will assist you, should you have a need: Acceptable formats** for presentations: • PowerPoint (.ppt) • Adobe Acrobat (.pdf ) • Non-Emergency-407.685.9828 • Flash (.swf ) • Emergency-407.685.1119 **Apple Macintosh Users Please make sure that all inserted pictures are either JPEG or PNG file-types. Quicktime (.mov) files are also an accepted video format. Individuals using Apple Keynote will need to bring their files directly to the Presentation Room to have them correctly transferred to the system. First aid stations are located in the West Building, level 1 lobby (below WA1). Media/Press A media/press room will be located in room W307D during conference hours, Monday-Friday. We ask that you check in with registration to receive your credentials. Video Formats The recommended video format for Windows-based presentations is Windows Media (.wmv). For more detailed information regarding fonts, sound, video, and general compatibility, refer to http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ powerpoint/FX100648971033.aspx. Messages Message boards will be located outside the exhibit/poster hall. Feel free to post messages as well as to check these boards if you are expecting a message. 20 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF IF THE PRESENTATION DOES NOT PLAY PROPERLY IN THE PRESENTATION ROOM, IT WILL NOT PLAY PROPERLY IN THE MEETING ROOM. Laptops Personal laptops cannot be used in the session rooms. You must load your files via the online system or in the Presentation Room, W205A. However, support is available in the Presentation Room for file transfers from your laptop. You also should bring a backup of the presentation on alternate media (see list of acceptable presentation formats above). Please make sure you have all power, video, and networking adapters with you. You may edit your presentation up to four hours prior to the session start time. When you are finished reviewing and/or making changes to your presentation, you must notify PSAV personnel that you have viewed your presentation file before you leave the Presentation Room. They will then transfer the updated file to the meeting room. How to Submit Your Presentation Advance Submission: Presenters will be able to submit their files via the web and will receive their login credentials via e-mail. Online submission of your presentation files via Internet is not required, but is strongly encouraged. Presenters who send in their presentation files via the Web site will have faster check-in at the Presentation Room. Please make sure to upload all media files required for your presentation. Any videos, sounds, or fonts not included in your online upload folder will cause your presentation to fail in the meeting room. Security On-site Submission Check-in at the Presentation Room at least 24 hours before your session to submit your files and to preview your presentation. If checking in on the day prior to your session is not possible, you must check in at least four hours prior to the start of your session (note: this refers to the session start time, not the presentation start time). PSAV technicians will assist with the upload of your files and provide the opportunity to preview and/or edit the presentation as necessary. Contact Information • Presenters are required to provide identification in order to submit their presentation, as well as to access it in the Presentation Room. • Cameras and video equipment are not permitted in the Presentation Room. • All files are deleted at the end of the conference, unless permission has been granted to the conference association to retain the presentation files. For questions regarding the online submission Web site or other technical issues, please contact Brian Reynolds via e-mail at [email protected] or by phone 214.210.8037. Rental of Additional Audio-Visual Equipment Rental of a VCR, monitor, slide projector, audio systems, provision of extra power outlets, extra tables, stands, etc. can be handled for an additional cost. Costs for additional equipment will be billed to the presenting author. Please contact David Fuller at PSAV ([email protected]), the conference audio-visual company, if you have questions about purchasing additional equipment. Bring a Backup Be sure to bring a backup copy of your presentation with you to the meeting. If you plan to upload files on-site, bring two copies. Presentation Room Checking in at the Presentation Room, W205A, is the most important step you will take to ensure a successful presentation. Speaker Ready Room A speaker ready or preparation room for you to practice your presentation or review prior to uploading will be available in room W106. It will be open during all hours of the meeting including Sunday from 13:00-21:00, then again Monday-Friday, 07:00-19:00 (closing at 17:00 on Friday). All presenters are required to check-in to the Presentation Room, preferably the day before. If you are unavoidably delayed, you must still go directly to the Presentation Room. Do not bring a laptop or other media device to the session room. During Your Oral Presentation Each session room will be staffed with an AV technician to assist in starting each presentation. Once the presentation is launched, the presenter will control the program from the podium using a computer mouse or the up/ down/right/left keys on a keyboard. When reviewing your presentation make sure all fonts, images, and animations appear as expected and that all audio or video clips are working properly. The computers in the session rooms are the same as the computers in the Presentation Room, therefore: 21 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Poster Presentations Every attempt has been made to allow secure transmissions of your credit card information and transaction, but ASLO and the Ocean Sciences Meeting assume no liability for your credit card information when it is released electronically. All credit card transactions will be processed through the conference web site. Transactions are protected and encrypted using a secure socket layer (SSL) certificate provided by Verisign, Inc. SSL technology is the industry-standard method for protecting web communications. The SSL security protocol provides data encryption, server authentication, message integrity, and optional client authentication for a TCP/IP (internet) connection. Credit card verification and debit services will be provided by Authorize.net, a leading provider of Internet-based transaction services with thousands of online and traditional business customers around the world. Posters will be up from Monday afternoon until Thursday evening in Exhibit Hall, WA1-WA2. All posters will be up for viewing during this time with specific poster sessions from 17:30-19:30, Monday-Thursday, depending upon the topic. Large topical groups are organized in contiguous blocks in the poster hall. A detailed map of the groupings and poster presentations will be provided. The overall size of the poster boards is 48”x 94”. Two posters are housed on each side of the board with the useable space of 45”x 45.5”. Size requirements must be strictly adhered to so posters fit within the space assigned. If your poster exceeds these specifications, it may be subject to removal. Posters are presented depending upon the poster session to which you are assigned. You are expected to be available to present your poster during your designated poster session. Poster presenters are asked to adhere to designated set-up and tear-down instructions and times. Pushpins will be provided. Registering by Mail or Fax If you are not prepared to pay the registration fee with a credit card you may not register via the online system. Fees to attend the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting must be paid in advance. Due to the limited numbers, registrations are not considered guaranteed until a check, money order, purchase order, or charge card information is received. All fax registrations must include complete credit card information, including number, expiration date, and cardholder name. VISA, MasterCard, and American Express are accepted. Organizations can be billed only if a purchase order accompanies the registration either by fax or by mail. Important note regarding poster presentations: the convention decorator may discard posters if the presenting author does not dismantle them according to tear-down instructions and times. To assist you, FedEx Kinko’s has business centers in the area, including one inside the OCCC. For convenience, laminated posters can be ordered through FedEx Kinko’s. Normally, this service takes 24 to 48 hours and costs vary. However, they are not open weekends, so be sure to plan accordingly. Materials need to be submitted in PDF format. Phone: 407-363-2831. Substitutions or Cancellations We understand that occasionally other responsibilities and personal obligations prevent you from attending a program for which you have registered. If you find that you will not be able to attend the meeting, we encourage you to send a substitute. Substitutions can be made at any time, even on-site at the conference. Registration Information ASLO serves as the lead organization for this year’s Ocean Sciences Meeting. If you find it necessary to cancel after you have already paid, we can refund your conference fee (less an $80 USD processing fee) if we receive notice in writing on or before 1 February 2008. Due to the limited number of enrollments available, registrants who cancel on or after 2 February 2008, will be not be eligible for any part of a refund. Abstract submission fees are non-refundable. To provide cancellation notice and request a refund, please send a letter to: Helen Schneider Lemay, ASLO Business Office, 5400 Bosque Boulevard, Suite 680, Waco, Texas 76710-4446, fax your request to 254-776-3767, or via e-mail to [email protected]. The full registration fee includes admission to all sessions, exhibits, evening Town Halls and workshops (unless otherwise specified), Sunday welcome reception and poster receptions, coffee breaks, and printed program book. Optional events such as any special organized activities, are not included. Abstracts are available online at www. aslo.org/orlando2008, and a printed abstract book will not be provided. Online registration is preferred and highly recommended. Electronic registrations must include complete credit card information. 22 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Registration Fees Other Registration Rates: • Non-Developed Country Registration: $100.00 USD Fees are stated in U.S. dollars and must be paid in U.S. dollars. • High School Student or High School Teacher: $100.00 USD In order to register at the ASLO, AGU, TOS, or ERF member rates, you must be a current member of at least one society at the time that you submit your abstract. Due to the substantial savings on registration that members enjoy, please consider joining a sponsoring society (at the addresses below) before registering and submitting your abstract. • Guest/Social: $100.00 USD Spouse and guest fees cover only the conference social events such as the Sunday welcome reception, coffee services, and the poster receptions. Optional events such as any special activities are not included. However, spouses and guests are encouraged to register for the special activities. Spouses and guests cannot be admitted to the sessions without paying the appropriate full registration fee. • ASLO: https://www.sgmeet.com/aslo/membership/ newmember.asp • AGU: https://www.aip.org/ecomm/agu/login.jsp • TOS: http://www.tos.org/join_tos.html • ERF: https://www.sgmeet.com/erf/membership/ newmember.asp Travel Information Registration fee refunds will not be issued to those who register as a non-member and then later join one of the societies. Unfortunately, the major airlines are not offering discount fares off their regular pricing as they have in the past. Please make your reservations on an individual basis by contacting the airlines direct or using your travel agent. Airlines & Air Travel Member Rates: • $350.00 USD on or before 1 February 2008 Orlando Airport • $400.00 USD 2 February – 1 March 2008 The fourth largest airport in the U.S. provides non-stop service to most major U.S. cities with over 850 flights per day and more than 50 carriers.  It is rated as the #1 airport in the nation and #2 in the world for passenger service by J.D. Powers and Associates. • $450.00 USD On-site Non-Member Rates: • $450.00 USD on or before 1 February 2008 • $500.00 USD 2 February – 1 March 2008 Shuttle Service From Orlando Airport • $550.00 USD On-site Mears Shuttle, located at the Orlando Airport on the baggage claim level. Round trip fares for OSM attendees are $23 (Regular fare is $27). Tickets can be purchased in advance via their Internet address: https://secure.mearstransportation.com/default. asp?referrer=305917011. You may contact them by phone for additional information at 407-839-1570. Student Member Rates: • $250.00 USD on or before 1 February 2008 • $300.00 USD 2 February – 1 March 2008 • $350.00 USD On-site Non-Member Student Rates: • $350.00 USD on or before 1 February 2008 I-Ride The I-Ride travels along International Drive with stops close to most hotels and the Orange County Convention Center.  The cost is $1 per person per trip and runs from 08:00-20:30. Be sure to check the specific hours that this trolley runs. • $400.00 USD 2 February – 1 March 2008 • $450.00 USD On-site One-day Registration Rates: • $300.00 USD Member • $400.00 USD Non-Member Special Car Rental Rates • $200.00 USD Student Member Avis has been designated the official car rental company for the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting. Special meeting rates and discounts are available on a wide selection of GM and other fine cars at any Florida airport. To re- • $300.00 USD Student Non-Member 23 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting ceive these special rates, be sure to mention your Avis Worldwide Discount (AWD) number, D130903, when you call. Call Avis direct at 1-800-331-1600 to receive the best car rental rates available. The discount will be effective 25 February - 15 March 2008. being a leader in the world’s natural sponge market. The community has a strong Mediterranean heritage with shops, restaurants and cruises on the Gulf. www.tarponsprings.com Black Hammock Adventures Black Hammock Adventures offers airboat rides on Lake Jessup and Bird Island. Call 407-977-8235 or Captain Stu’s, 352-302-9207, along the Homosassa River on the Nature Coast of Central Florida. http://www.blackhammock.com Restaurants, Parks & Local Attractions Restaurants Orlando is a great place to eat! There are more than 5,100 restaurants in Orlando including 50 “upscale” dining spots within 10 miles of the convention center. This translates into more than 16,000 fine dining seats in and around the convention center as well as all of the major “fast food” and inexpensive chains. Many are within walking distance, 40 are listed in Zagat’s. There’s restaurant row, Pointe Orlando, Universal’s City Walk and Disney’s Downtown as places with lots of options. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission programs and information - www.floridaconservation.org or 850-488-4676 Kayaking and Canoeing http:// www.kayakguide.com Manatee Snorkeling Tours Manatee Snorkeling Tours with an ecotourism, [email protected] Pointe Orlando is just across the street from the convention center and is an Orlando landmark with high-quality restaurants, brand-name retail stores and evening entertainment spots. Scuba Diving and Snorkeling Scuba Diving and snorkeling with Fun-2-Dive: online at http://www.fun2dive.com, phone 888-588-3483, or email: [email protected] Downtown Disney Big-city fun with blocks and blocks of restaurants, clubs and theaters including Cirque du Soleil La Nouba, House of Blues, 8TRAX (dancing to 70s & 80s music), and Rock ‘n’ Roll Beach Club. Eustis Fisheries Laboratory Visit the Eustis Fisheries Laboratory where they do statewide research for species, Ocklawaha River Basin Project, Central Florida Aquatic Plant Management and Bass Research Coordination as well as limnology studies. Phone: 352-742-6438 or e-mail: William.coleman@ myfwc.com Nightlife There are comedy clubs, concerts and a large variety of clubs and bars. Everything from jazz to the latest in alternative sounds. Many clubs have live music nightly. Biking or Hiking the Everglades Biking or Hiking around the 15-mile round-trip Shark Valley Tram Road in the Everglades through http://www. vacationsmadeeasy.com Additional Activities/Locations of Special Interest The Nature Conservancy at the Disney Wilderness Reserve 12,000-acre wetlands preserve, complete with a threemile hiking trail encircling a lake. Located 15 miles from the Disney theme parks, its inhabitants include bald eagles, herons, bobcats, gopher tortoises, alligators, gray foxes, deer, coyotes, wild pigs and an assortment of snakes, turtles and birds. http://www.nature.org/ wherewework...preserves/art5523.html Convention Attraction Tickets The Orlando CVB offers specially discounted attraction tickets specifically for convention delegates. Arrive early or extend your stay to enjoy the many exciting attractions Orlando has to offer. Special convention delegate ticket pricing is available at http://aslo.orlandomeetinginfo. com/tickets/ Tarpon Springs - The Sponge Capital Of The World Contaminated and destroyed by bacteria in the 1940s, the industry was revived in the 1980s and is now back to 24 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Hydro-Bios/Sea & Sun Technology Am Jaegersberg 5-7 Altenholz, Germany 24161 http://www.hydrobios.de Exhibits & Sponsors Academia Book Exhibits 3512 Willow Green Court Oakton, VA 22124 http://www.acadbkex.com Imaging Science Research, Inc. 6103A Virgo Court Burke, VA 22015-3249 http://www.isr-sensing.com Alec Electronics Co., Ltd. 7-2-3 Ibukidai-Higashi, Nishi-Ku Kobe, Hyogo Prefecture Japan 651-2242 http://www.alec-electronics.co.jp Institute of Marine Engineering Science & Technology (IMarEST) 80 Colema London, United Kingdom EC2R 5BJ http://www.imarest.org American Meteorological Society 1120 G Street, NW, Ste.800 Washington, DC 20005 http://www.ametsoc.org Island Press 1718 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Suite 300 Washington DC 20009 http://www.islandpress.org Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole MA 02543 http://www.bco-dmo.org LI-COR Biosciences 4421 Superior St. Lincoln, NE 68504 http://www.licor.com Cambridge University Press 32 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10013-2473 http://www.cambridge.org/us/ NASA Earth System Science - Data and Services NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD 20771 http://www.science.hq.nasa.gov CODAR Ocean Sensors 1914 Plymouth Street Mountain View, CA 94043 http://www.codaros.com National Ocean Sciences, AMS Facility Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Mail Stop #8 Woods Hole, MA 02543 http://www.nosams.whoi.edu  Consortium for Ocean Leadership 1201 New York Ave NW 4th Floor Washington DC 20005 http://oceanleadership.org National Oceanographic Data Center Dept. OC1 1315 East West Highway Room 4825 Silver Spring, MD 20910 http://www.nodc.noaa.gov CRC Press-Taylor & Francis Group, LLC 6000 Broken Sound Pkwy, NW, Ste. 300 Boca Raton, FL 33487 http://www.taylorandfrancis.com Estuarine Research Federation: Booth #42 P.O. Box 510 Port Republic MD 20676 http://www.erf.org National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP) 1201 New York Avenue, NW Suite 400 Washington, D.C. 20005 http://www.nopp.org Fluid Imaging Technologies, Inc. 65 Forrest Falls Drive Yarmouth, ME 04096 http://www.fluidimaging.com 25 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting National Science Foundation 4201 Wilson Bouldevard, #725 Arlington VA 22230 http://www.nsf.gov Sequoia Scientific, Inc. 2700 Richards Road, Ste. 107 Bellevue, WA 98005 http://www.sequoiasci.com Naval Research Laboratory Stennis Space Center 1005 Balch Blvd., Room A-14 Stennis Space Center, MS 39529-5004 http://www.nrlssc.navy.mil Southeastern Universities Research Association Coastal Research Dept. 1201 New York Avenue, NW, Ste. 430 Washington, DC 20005 http://www1.sura.org/programs/coastal.html NortekUSA 222 Severn Avenue Suite 17, Building 7 Annapolis, MD 21403 http://www.nortekusa.com Springer Science and Business Media B.V. Geosciences Department P.O. Box 17 Dordrecht  3300 AA Netherlands http://www.springer-sbm.com Oceanscience 110 Copperwood Way, Suite E Oceanside, CA 92058 http://www.oceanscience.com SubChem Systems, Inc. 65 Pier Road Narragansett, RI 02882 http://www.subchem.com Odim Brooke Ocean 11-50 Thornhill Drive. Dartmouth NS B3B 1S1 Canada http://www.brooke-ocean.com Teledyne RD Instruments 14020 Stowe Drive San Diego, CA 92064 http://www.rdinstruments.com Oxford University Press 2001 Evans Road Cary, NC 27513 http://www.oxfordjournals.org Thermo Scientific 3210 Manor Drive Golden Valley, MN 55422 http://www.thermo.com Rockland Scientific International, Inc. 520 Dupplin Road Victoria, BC Canada, V8Z 1C1 http://www.rocklandscientific.com Turner Designs, Inc. 845 W. Maude Avenue Sunnyvale, CA 94085 http://www.turnerdesigns.com Satlantic, Inc. 3481 North Marginal Road Halifax, NS Canada, B3K 5X8 http://www.satlantic.com University of Delaware College of Marine & Earth Studies 111 Robinson Hall Newark, DE 19716-3501 http://www.ocean.udel.edu Sea Sciences, Inc. 619 Indian Avenue Middletown, RI 02842 http://www.seasciences.com University of Florida Civil & Coastal Engineering Dept. 365 Weil Hall P.O. Box 116580 Gainsville, FL 32611-6580 http://www.ce.ufl.edu Sea-Bird Electronics, Inc. 1808 136th Place, NE Bellevue, WA 98005 http://www.seabird.com 26 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF University of Rhode Island Graduate School of Oceanography South Ferry Road, NBAY Campus Narrangansett, RI 02882 http://www.gso.uri.edu Student Lounge (co-sponsors joint area) ASLO Student Board Members: Alex Poulain and Lynn Abramson ASLO Business Office 5400 Bosque Blvd., Suite 680 Waco, TX 76710 http://www.aslo.org WET Labs Angela Gellatly PO Box 518 620 Applegate St Philomath, OR 97370 http://www.wetlabs.com Special Thanks Special thanks to Annual Reviews (www.annualreviews. org) for their assistance with funding for the Tuesday afternoon coffee break in the exhibit hall and to Satlantic, Inc. for supplying the lanyards for the attendee badges. Wiley-Blackwell 350 Main Street Malden, MA 02148 http://www.wiley.com Hotel and Accommodation Information Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 360 Woods Hole Road MS#31 Woods Hole, MA 02543 http://www.whoi.edu Ten (10) hotels have been selected, all within walking distance or a short drive to the Orange County Convention Center, location for all events at the 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting.  There is also a trolley service (I-Ride) that runs from nearby the hotels to the convention center for $1.00 per day. Be sure to check the time of this trolley since it may not run during the hours of the meeting. These hotels provide a range of sleeping room rates. (Refer to the map for the location of these hotels.)  Please make your hotel reservations by contacting the hotel directly via phone, fax, or e-mail and specify that you are entitled to the Ocean Sciences Room Block rate.  The cut-off date for each hotel is shown on the hotel listing.  It is important that you make your reservations early since March is a busy time in Orlando and availability and rates will be affected after the cut-off date.  We hope you will support these hotels. Please be aware that some hotels may be sold out at the time of publication. World Precision Instruments 175 Sarasota Center Blvd Sarasota, FL 34240 http://www.wpiinc.com YSI, Inc./Son Tek 1725 Brannum Lane Yellow Springs, OH 45387 http://www.sontek.com Co-sponsor Booths AGU Director, Meetings: Brenda Weaver 2000 Florida Ave. NW Washington DC 20009 http://www.agu.org Rosen Plaza Hotel – Headquarters Hotel 9700 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Phone:  (407) 996-9700 or 800-627-8258 Fax: 407-996-9119 Room Rate:  $161.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 TOS Executive Director: Jenny Ramarui PO Box 1931 Rockville, MD 20849-1931 http://www.tos.org Online Reservations: https://reservations.ihotelier.com/ crs/g_reservation.cfm?groupID=40555&hotelID=2019 ASLO Business Manager: Helen Schneider Lemay ASLO Business Office 5400 Bosque Blvd., Suite 680 Waco, TX 76710 http://www.aslo.org This hotel is headquarters for the meeting and is adjacent to attractions, including the Convention Center.  Airport shuttle services are available.  The Rosen Plaza is a short walk away from the Convention Center and a Trolley Stop is directly in front of the hotel.  27 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Guests at The Rosen Plaza enjoy award-winning hospitality.  Amenities include fitness facilities, valet parking, and a business center.  The hotel provides deluxe guest rooms featuring high-speed Internet access, in-room safes, coffee makers, computerized card key locks, voice mail and data ports.  “Hot Spots” can be found throughout common areas of the hotel for guests using wireless Internet connections. Four on-site restaurants provide a variety of dining experiences.  Hotel amenities include in-room safes, coffee makers and expanded cable.  Select rooms have refrigerators and microwaves.  The complimentary business center offers Internet access and printers. Web Site: http://www.daysinnorlandohotel.com. Doubletree Castle Hotel 8629 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Web Site: http://www.rosenplaza.com. Phone:  407-345-1511 or 800-222-8733 Fax: 407-248-8181 Room Rate:  $129.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Courtyard by Marriott International Drive/ Convention Center 8600 Austrian Court Orlando, FL 32819 Online Registrations: http://www.doubletreecastle.com Phone:  407-351-2244 or 800-321-2211 Fax: 407-351-3306 Room Rate:  $116.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Located approximately 12 miles from the airport and about one-half mile from the Convention Center, the hotel is convenient to shopping, dining and entertainment.  A Trolley Stop is just across the street and complimentary transportation is available to most major attractions. Online Reservations: http://www.internationaldrivecourtyard.com Accommodations include complimentary self-parking, pillow-top mattresses and stereo systems.  High-speed Internet access is available for a daily charge.  The Courtyard’s location provides the best of all worlds, equally convenient to the Convention Center and Orlando’s exciting theme parks.  Restaurants and shopping are within walking distance.  This hotel is less than one mile from the Convention Center. A Trolley Stop is adjacent to the hotel for transportation to other popular destinations. Web Site: http://www.doubletreecastle.com. Hampton Inn Convention Center 8900 Universal Boulevard Orlando, FL 32819 This newly-renovated hotel offers luxurious accommodations, Wireless Internet Access in the business center and complimentary parking.  Complete a workout in the fitness center with a swim in the outdoor pool. Phone:  407-354-4447 or 800-426-7866 Fax: 407-354-3031 Room Rate:  $119.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Web Site: http://www.internationaldrivecourtyard.com. Days Inn Convention Center/ International Drive Online Reservations: http://www.hamptoninn.com Located in the resort district of International Drive, Hampton Inn Orlando-Convention Center is less than one-half mile from the Convention Center.  Also within walking distance is Pointe Orlando Mall which features dining, shopping and entertainment.  Scheduled transportation to Universal Orlando, SeaWorld, and Wet n’Wild is provided by the hotel.  A Trolley Stop is just across the street. 9990 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Phone:  407-352-8700 or 800-224-5055 Fax: 407-363-3965 Room Rate: $87.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Online Reservations: http://www.daysinnorlandohotel.com Hampton Inn provides quality, value-priced accommodations.  Each clean, fresh, comfortable room is furnished with a coffee maker.  Enjoy complimentary local calls and no surcharge for using a calling card.  Complimentary amenities include a hot breakfast and wireless high-speed Internet access in each guest room.  Hotel room service is provided by TGI Fridays. Newly renovated, the Days Inn Orlando has updated guest rooms.   Located near the Convention Center, free scheduled transportation is available to Universal Studios, Sea World and Walt Disney World attractions.  The immediate area is filled with shopping, gardens, zoos and entertainment.  The Convention Center is within walking distance and a Trolley Stop is about one block away. Web Site: http://www.hamptoninn.com. 28 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Homewood Suites – International Drive LaQuinta Inn & Suites Convention Center  8745 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 8504 Universal Boulevard Orlando, FL 32819 Phone:  407-248-2232 or 888-697-8745 Fax: 407-248-6552 Room Rate:  $139.00 (King Suite single/double occupancy) and $169.00 (Double Suite single/double occupancy) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Phone:  407-345-1365 Fax: 407-345-5586 Room Rate:  $102.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Online Registrations: http://www.lq.com Online Reservations: http://www.homewoodsuitesorlando.com Enter dates, then LAO in Group/Convention Code section at bottom of page. Enjoy quality and convenience at the La Quinta Inn and Suites Orlando Convention Center. The property sits close to the heart of all popular attractions and approximately one-half mile from the Convention Center.  A Trolley Stop is in front of the hotel. Located only one-quarter of a mile from the Convention Center, Homewood Suites – International Drive offers access to nearby restaurants and shopping.  Complimentary transportation is provided to the Convention Center, which is within walking distance, and a Trolley Stop is across the street.  The La Quinta Inn and Suites Orlando Convention Center provides spacious rooms with free high-speed Internet access. The suites and select rooms include a microwave and refrigerator.  Each day begins with the complimentary Continental Breakfast.  The well-equipped fitness center and swimming pool are ideal for relaxation. This all-suite hotel offers complimentary wireless Highspeed Internet access for all guests.  A daily hot breakfast buffet is provided each morning.  Relax in the pool or spa after a workout at the state-of-the-art fitness center.  Additional amenities include safe deposit boxes, guest laundry facilities and complimentary parking.  Web Site: http://www.lq.com. Quality Inn Plaza 9000 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Web Site: http://www.homewoodsuitesorlando.com. Phone:  407-996-8585 or 800-999-8585 Fax:  407-996-6839 Room Rate:  $79.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Howard Johnson Plaza Hotel & Suites Convention Center 9956 Hawaiian Court Orlando, FL 32819 Online Registrations: https://reservations.ihotelier.com/ crs/g_reservation.cfm?groupID=40313&hotelID=2022 Phone:  407-351-5100 or 800-446-4656 Fax 407-352-7188 Room Rate:  $89.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 The Quality Inn Plaza provides easy access to attractions in Orlando, whether within walking distance or a comfortable ride away.  Walk to the Convention Center, a variety of restaurants, shops and entertainment.  The Pointe Orlando entertainment complex is located directly across the street.  Free transportation to Universal Studios Orlando, Islands of Adventure, Sea World Orlando and Wet ‘n Wild Orlando is available.  A Trolley Stop is just outside the Plaza. Online Reservations: http://www.hojo.com The Howard Johnson Plaza Hotel - Orlando offers affordable accommodations for budget-conscious travelers. The hotel is located approximately 12 miles from the Orlando airport.  Free scheduled shuttle to Universal Studios and Walt Disney World® Resort is available.  The Convention Center is within walking distance and a Trolley Stop is a block away. Enjoy three attractive pool areas within the lush gardens.  A Guest Services Desk offers day trips, transportation arrangements and attraction tickets.  A children’s playground area is also on-site. Standard amenities include cable television, coffeemaker, dataport, in-room safes, and a telephone. For on-site recreation, enjoy the outdoor pool and hot tub situated in the courtyard. Guests receive a complimentary continental breakfast. All spacious rooms include refrigerators, microwaves, coffee makers and hair dryers. Pets are welcome for a small nightly fee. An on-site business center provides highspeed Internet access, fax services, and copy machines. Web Site: http://www.hojo.com. For additional information, please visit http://www.qualityinnplaza.com. 29 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting The Peabody Orlando Single/Double Rates: Single/Double Deluxe Studio Suites $99.00 or Single/Double 2 Bdrm/2 Bath Suites $139.00 Cut-off Date: February 8, 2008 8745 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Web Site: http://www.enclavesuites.com Phone:  407-352-4000 or 800-423-8257 Fax: 407-345-4553 Room Rate:  $199.00 (single/double) Reservation Cut-off Date: 04 February 2008 Holiday Inn International Drive Resort 6515 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Online Registrations: http://www.peabodyorlando.com Enter Reservations Section, then Group Code 883858 in Group Reservation Section.   Phone: 407-351-3500 Fax: 407-354-3491 Single/Double Rates: $121.00 Cut-off Date: February 8, 2008 The Peabody Orlando is located directly across the street from the Convention Center’s main entrance.  Walt Disney World, Sea World, Universal Orlando and the Dixie Stampede are a short distance away and Orlando International Airport is a 15-minute drive.  The hotel is convenient to shopping, dining and entertainment.  A Trolley Stop is located just outside the hotel’s entrance. Web Site: http://www.hi-idrive.com Extended Stay Deluxe - Westwood Blvd 6443 Westwood Blvd Orlando, FL 32821 On-site fitness facilities include state-of-the-art exercise equipment, swimming pools and lighted tennis courts. Wireless Internet Access is available in guest rooms, as well as the Executive Business Center.  The highlight of staying at the Peabody Orlando is enjoying the whimsy of the Peabody Ducks and their world-famous march on the red carpet.   Phone: 407-239-4300 Fax: 407-465-0352 Reservation E-mail Address: [email protected] Single/Double Rates: $119.00 Cut-off Date: February 1, 2008 Web Site: http://www.peabodyorlando.com. Travelodge International Drive 5859 American Way Orlando, FL 32819 Web Site: http://www.extendedstay.com Alternate Hotel Options If the above hotels are full or you would like an alternate choice, below are additional hotels in the area of the convention center. Phone: 800-327-0750 or 407-345-8880 Ext. 508, 509 Fax: 407-363-9366 Single/Double Rates: $89.00 Cut-off Date: February 7, 2008 Hawthorn Suites 7601 Canada Avenue Orlando, FL 32819 Web Site: http://www.travelodgeidrive.com Ramada Convention Center / I-Drive 8342 Jamaican Court Orlando, FL 32819 Phone: 407-956-6101, Toll Free: 800-228-2027 Fax: 407-581-2152 Reservation E-mail Address: [email protected] Single/Double Rates: 1 Bedroom Suites $125.00 Cut-off Date: February 8, 2008 Phone: 407-363-1944 Fax: 407-363-4844 Single/Double Rates: $99.00 Cut-off Date: February 11, 2008 Web Site: http://www.ramada-idrive.com Web Site: http://www.hawthornsuitesuniversal.com The Enclave Hotel & Suites 6165 Carrier Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Phone: 407-956-6107, Toll Free: 800-457-0077 Fax: 407-351-2001 Reservation E-mail Address: [email protected] 30 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Downtown Orlando Map 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting March 2 - 7, 2008 Walkable to Convention Center 1 1. Days Inn Convention Center 9990 International Drive 407-352-8700 or 800-486-7866 Rate: $87.00 (single/double) 2. Howard Johnson Hotel & Suites 9956 Hawaiian Court 407-351-5100 or 800-446-4656 Rate: $89.00 (single/double) 3. Peabody Orlando 8745 International Drive 407-352-4000 or 800-423-8257 Rate: $199.00 (single/double) 10 7 6 4. Quality Inn Plaza 9000 International Drive 407-996-8585 or 800-999-8585 Rate: $79.00 (single/double) 9 8 4 5 5. Rosen Plaza - Headquarter Hotel 9700 International Drive 407-996-9700 or 800-627-8258 Rate: $161.00 (single/double) 3 2 1 6. Courtyard Int'l Drive (1 mile) 8600 Austrian 407-351-2244 or 800-321-2211 Rate: $116.00 (single/double) 7. Doubletree Castle Hotel (0.8miles) 8629 International Drive 407-345-1511 or 800-222-8733 Rate: $129.00 (single/double) 8. Hampton Inn Convention Ctr. (0.5 miles) 8900 Universal Boulevard 407-354-4447 or 800-486-7866 Rate: $119.00 (single/double) 9. Homewood Suites Orlando (0.6 miles) 8745 International Drive 407-248-2232 or 888-697-8745 Rate: $139.00 (King Suite single/double) $169.00 Double Suite single/double) 31 10. La Quinta Inn Hotel & Suites (1.5 miles) 8504 Universal Boulevard 407-345-1365 or 407-345-5586 Rate: $102.00 (single/double) 1-W340) rts DR I V E LEVEL I LEVEL II AY SW ES PR EX LEVEL IV E BE NE LI S E Meeting Room (W414), Valencia (W415) Theater Balcony Level DR IVE Registration/Me eting Rooms W N AL DR IVE ION AT RN TE IN Lecture Hall (W300), Meeting Rooms (W301-W340) Chapin Theater, Osprey Café ENTRAN C E /Meeting Room s Exhibition Halls Exhibition Halls alls tion H Exhibi s g Room tin n/Mee s g Room ratio Regist Meetin LEVEL III WEST re Hall Meeting Rooms/ Lectu dge L III LEVE L II LEVE LI LEVE LEVEL II PARKING Ramp to Level II LEVEL III SA SA1 SB PARKING Exhibition Halls (A, B, C, D, E and F) Meeting Rooms (W201-W240), Food Courts s NB alls tion H Exhibi 2 SA s Registration, Meeting Rooms (W101-W110) Food Courts /Meeting Room LEVEL IV Chapin Thea Balcony Leveter l and Valencia NA NA2 LEVEL I Exhibition Halls Exhibition Halls pin Theater Meeting Rooms/Cha I NTER NAT IONAL g Room s g Room eetin Reg/M Meetin Bri cting e Conn NA1 L III LEVE L II LEVE Stairs Stairs E Lecture Theater W300 Elevator W301 301 302 Open To Below Open To Below A Stairs C Elevator Entry + WEST A LOBBY Stairs Stairs E E Entry LEVEL I PARKING Level II ENTRANCE/ LEVEL II Ramp EXIT to s ALTERNATE LEVEL III A D B 307 C Open To Below Elevator Open To Below A D B 308 C W308 A 309 B A 310 B Stairs Open To Below Stairs W311 RR RR Stairs A RR RR Stairs Atrium Open To Below C 312B W108 E Stairs Elevator RRRR WEST A/B LOBBY Stairs WEST Stairs EE Stairs DR IVE Registration/Me eting Rooms /Meeting Room s Exhibition Halls E s Entry Elevator RR Open To Below Elevator RR RR RR RR Elevator Elevator Open To Below Open To Below 320 W320 Elevator Elevator W420 LI p m Ra re Hall to wo lT ve Le E BE NE LI W E AY SW ES PR EX S N AL DR IVE ION AT RN TE IN LEVE CHAPIN THEATER CHAPIN THEATER You Are Here FedEx Kinko’s Business Center Elevator P A R K I N G B NExit Elevator B 314 A B 315 A 316 W316 OSPREY CAFÉ Exhibition Halls Below Elevator/Stairs to Surface Parking at Ground Level Open To Below Elevator W414 Entry W415 Entry Balcony alls tion H Exhibition Hall B Exhibi 2+ FirstSAid SA Guest Services / Information SA Meeting Room ting Rooms ee oms OCCC II Offices I M ting Ro L Administration SA1 LEVE Court gistration/Mee Food Re RR Restroom ls L II on Hal LEVE ti bi Exhi ridge NA NA2 g Room s g Room Meeting Rooms/ RR Lectu Stairs REGISTRATION CONCOURSE Stairs Covered Bus Loading ENTRAN C E E Stairs Meetin eetin Reg/M gB ectin Conn Exhibition Halls Food Court ENTRANCE/ EXIT Food Court Valencia Stairs Chapin Thea Balcony Levelter and W103 W104 R R W110 NA1 L III LEVE L II LEVE ARD LEV BOU SAL VER U N I 313 Open To Below O V E R V I E W A 305 B A 306 B RR RR Stairs LEVEL IV Stairs REGISTRATION CONCOURSE /Meeting Room EE Exhibition Halls EE W105 R R W109 pin Theater RR Stairs MeetEEing Rooms/Cha EE Stairs Exhibition Halls E EE Stairs D R I VW101 W102 E 303B Open To Below W304 RRRR Stairs Atrium Open To Below Exhibition Halls Below Atrium Open To Below I NTER NAT IONAL LECTURE HALL 300 RR RR W302 ) W306 ARD LEV BOU SAL VER U N I W307 O V E R V I E W W303 Exhibition Halls Below W309 W310 Auditorium VALENCIA Auditorium Convention Center Maps Entry W106 RR RR Concourse W313 32 W312 RR RR W314 W315 RR RR W107 Stairs Open To Below RR Open To Below Open To Below LEVEL I West Concourse LEVEL III West Concourse Open To Below RR W330 Gallery Rm. W333 LEVEL IV West Concourse RR 331 W331 332 W332 W340 340 A B C D Open Ceiling Hall F ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting E Stairs E Stairs W A1 A1 RR E RR Stairs C RR Stairs RR RR RR A Stairs Stairs W A3 E RR RR RR Open To Below E Stairs RR W A4 W202 W203 W204 RR Stairs Open To Below Elevator RR WEST HALL W A2 E C RR RR Elevator C BRIDGE TO NORTH/SOUTH BUILDING E RR RR Stairs RR W B1 E E Open To Below RR B E RR Stairs RR Stairs RR Open To Below E W B4 W207 W208 W209 Stairs W W B2 B3 WEST HALL RR W102 W205 B/C W202 W105 E W105 W D1 EE W304 G/H DIMES Town Hall National Federation of Regional Associates for Ocean & Coastal Observing Retreat Opening Welcome Mixer Reception All Day All Day 19:00 - 21:00 C RR W110 W110 RR W204 W204 C C E W225 E W203 W203 W E1 + E RR Stairs W109 B W109 B EE + E N Stairs RR E EE RR W103 Room All Day W109 A W103 19:00 - 21:00 All Day All Day All Day All Day Room Sunday, March 2, 2008 W109 A Saturday, March 1, 2008 240 W240 WF2 RR A B C D WF1 F E WEST HALL WF5 W E2 ENTRANCE/ ENTRANCE/ EXIT EXIT Food Court RRRR WEST E/F LOBBY S RR LEVEL II WEST HALL RR W231 W232 E RRRR Elevator Covered Bus Loading W224 RR RR W D2 Elevator E WEST D LOBBY E ENTRANCE/ ENTRANCE/ EXIT EXIT RR W223 W222 C D WEST HALL E ENTRANCE/ ENTRANCE/ EXIT EXIT W304 G/H CoOP Meeting - Coastal Ocean Processes W101 W205 B/C All Day W108 W102 LOCO - Data Workshop (con't from Saturday) W304 E/F W101 All Day W304 C/D W108 E Room W220 Convention Center Admin. Offices RR RR Elevator ENTRANCE/ ENTRANCE/ EXIT EXIT E Elevator RR West Concourse E Elevator WEST C LOBBY Elevator + W202 W304 A/B W304 E/F lO ve Le ne Food Court RR Room W304 C/D to RR RR RR C WEST HALL E LOCO - Data Workshop W304 A/B p m Ra C RR All Day Room 2008 OSM Schedule at a Glance Saturday & Sunday At A Glance RR 42'x18'H E W221 Concessions RR Loading Dock W230 West Concourse WF3 Loading Dock W205 WF4 RR RR RR W201 33 Stairs RR W206 Business Center Stairs Business Center Concessions E E EE Concessions Stairs WEST ENTRANCE Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 34 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 21:30 NOPP Community Sediment-Transport Model Town Hall - W108 TOS Anniversary Reception - W311B UM RSMAS Reception (Following Town Hall) - W103 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 UM RSMAS Town Hall - W103 197: New Perspectives in Silicon Cycling; from Rivers to Seas and Sediments 084: Harmful Algal Blooms: Interactive Influence of Nutrient Competition, Differential Grazing, and Other Causative Consortium for Ocean Leadership Town Hall - W105 196: Impacts of Everglades Restoration on the South Florida Coastal Marine Environment 079: Photobiogeochemistry: Shedding Light on Biogeochemical Cycles from Rivers to the Sea 19:30 - 21:30 192: Human Impact in Large Connected Ecosystems: Watershed-Coastal Coupling 068: Oceanic Overflows and Dense Gravity Currents: Observations, Modeling and Parameterization 19:30 - 21:30 184: Enhance Our Vision in Underwater Environments 187: Mercury Pollution: Towards a Holistic Appraisal of Sources, Environmental Cycling, Biotic Exposure, Consequences, & Management 059: Eddies, Fronts and Sub-Mesoscale Processes In The Upper Ocean 066: Linking Ecosystem Health to Marine Animal Health 172: The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and Decadal Predictability 058: Oceanic Observations and Geophysical Fluid Dynamics 065: Advances in the Application of Chemical Biomarkers in Aquatic Ecosystems 151: Hurricane-generated Waves, Currents and Storm Surge 168: Small Mountainous Rivers: From the Watershed to the Global Ocean 057: Ocean-atmosphere Exchanges and Meridional Transports in Global Water and Energy Cycles 139: Applications of Remote Sensing Data for Assessing and Monitoring Coastal and Inland Water Quality 147: In, Around, and Out: Autochthonous Production, Allochthonous Inputs, and Downstream Transport of Riverine 032: Oceanic Flows Past Sea Mountains and Islands and Their Marine Environmental Impacts 052: Synthesis of Coupled Physical-ecosystem Dynamics and Linkages to Environmental Forcing On Event to Climate 137: Oceanic and Meteorological Measurements From Voluntary Observing Ships and Other Platforms of Opportunity 030: Environmental Records of Anthropogenic Impacts On Coastal Ecosystems 141: Hydrodynamics and Morphodynamics of Marshes and Shallow Coastal Environments 120: Oceans and Human Health: Identifying and Understanding Ocean Health Benefits and Threats 025: Taxon-specific Biogeochemistry in Aquatic Systems - Who does what? 051: Watersheds, Lakes, Rivers, Estuaries: General 119: Operational Oceanography: Assimilation, Modeling, and Applications in Coastal/Estuarine Ecosystems and Living Marine Resources 022: Trace Metal Biogeochemistry - Interactions Between Atmosphere and Ocean 046: Operational Oceanography: Assimilation, Modeling, and Applications in the Global Ocean 107: Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms: Regional and Comparative Studies of the GEOHAB and ECOHAB Programs 108: Controls on Carbon Biogeochemistry and Fluxes and Their Associated Scales of Variability in Ocean Margins 110: Transport and Mixing in Flows Through Aquatic Vegetation 013: Ridge-To-Reef: Impacts of Watershed Change on Tropical Coastal Ecosystems 104: Coastal Sensor Networks and Ocean Microbial Fuel Cell Technology 17:30 - 19:30 15:30 - 16:00 077: Education 16:00 - 17:30 and Outreach Using Ocean Observing Systems. 12:00 - 13:30 077: Education 13:30 - 15:30 and Outreach Using Ocean Observing Systems. 012: Implicit and Adjoint Techniques and Their Application to Ocean Circulation and Biogeochemical Problems 010: Physical Oceanography and Limnology: General 052: Synthesis of 068: Oceanic 105: Diurnal 059: Eddies, Variability in the Coupled Physical- Overflows and Fronts and Subecosystem Surface Ocean Mesoscale Dense Gravity Dynamics and and in Air-Sea Processes In The Currents: Linkages to Interaction Upper Ocean Observations, Environmental Modeling and Forcing On Event Parameterization (continued from to Climate morning) 100: Operational Oceanography: Observing System Design & Implementation 089: Groundwater Inputs to the Ocean 006: Watersheds to the Global Ocean: Spaceborne Measurements of Water Surfaces and Modeling Flows Monday Poster Sessions - West Exhibit Hall A1 & A2 Coffee Break 196: Impacts of 120: Oceans and 165: Advances in 056: Ecosystem 098: Contribution of Data Research Coastal Human Health: Everglades Assimilation to Informing Identifying and Morphodynamics: Restoration on Ocean Modeling Management From Estuaries the South Florida Understanding Decisions and Beaches to Ocean Health Coastal Marine Deltas and Benefits and Environment Shelves Threats 059: Eddies, 182: Variability Fronts and Suband Trends in Mesoscale Oceanic Oxygen: From a Tracer of Processes In The Upper Ocean Biological Production to a Bellwether of Climate 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 11:00 - 12:00 10:30 - 11:00 W103 Room 042: Outreach in 8:00 - 10:30 Ocean Sciences Taking the Ocean to the Classroom OACOM - Open Access Town Hall - W102 17:30 - 19:30 15:30 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:30 119: Operational 022: Trace Metal 102: The Gulf of 025: Taxon198: Impacts and Oceanography: Biogeochemistry specific Interactions of Maine: Assimilation, Soft-bottom Biogeochemical & Biogeochemistry Interactions Modeling, and Benthic Systems Between Ecosystem in Aquatic Applications in Atmosphere and Dynamics, Land- Systems – Who Coastal/Estuarine Water Interface does what? Ocean Ecosystems and Exchanges, Living Marine Physical and Resources Biological Coupling, & Human Induced Change 12:00 - 13:30 025: Taxon13:30 - 15:30 119: Operational 022: Trace Metal 142: Nutrient specific Oceanography: Biogeochemistry - Cycling at the Sediment-water Biogeochemistry Interactions Assimilation, Interface Between in Aquatic Modeling, and Systems – Who Applications in Atmosphere and does what? Ocean Coastal/Estuarine Ecosystems and Living ;Marine Resources NOAA Town Hall: Ecosystems Based Ocean Research - W105 005: Role of the 154: Forecast, 200: Committee's 058: Oceanic 052: Synthesis of 134: Toward 180: Long-term 196: Impacts of 120: Oceans and Choice Observations and Coupled PhysicalPredictability and Oceans in Integrating Human Health: Everglades Ecological ecosystem Geophysical Fluid Data Assimilation Climate Source-to-Sink Identifying and Research in the Restoration on Dynamics and Dynamics Field Studies of Variability Over the South Florida Understanding Deep Sea Linkages to the Americas Sediment Ocean Health Coastal Marine Environmental Dispersal Benefits and Environment Forcing On Event Systems Threats to Climate Lunch - On Your Own IMBER Project - W101 11:00 - 12:00 12:00 - 13:30 W102 W205 B/C W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B W109 A 157: Arctic Sea 088: 120: Oceans and 028: Nearshore 183: Interannual 059: Eddies, 192: Human 058: Oceanic 052: Synthesis of 068: Oceanic Ice Variability Observations and Coupled Physical- Overflows and Fronts and SubCharacterization Processes Trends in Impact in Large Human Health: Phytoplankton and Modeling of Interacted with Geophysical Fluid Identifying and Mesoscale Connected ecosystem Dense Gravity Ocean Features Atmospheric and Dynamics in Understanding Processes In The Ecosystems: Dynamics and Dynamics Currents: Coastal Ocean Health Upper Ocean WatershedLinkages to Observations, Ocean Circulation Ecosystems Benefits and Coastal Coupling Environmental Modeling and Patterns Threats Forcing On Event Parameterization to Climate 12:00 - 13:30 W101 179: Marine Predator Hot Spots Coffee Break Plenary: David M. Rubin W108 025: Taxonspecific Biogeochemistry in Aquatic Systems – Who does what? Monday, March 3, 2008 Withdrawals are not reflected on this schedule. All cancellations will be noted on the addendum. If you have previously contacted us to cancel your participation at the meeting, we have your request and will note all cancellations on the program addendum. 10:30 - 11:00 Room W304 A/B W304 C/D W304 E/F 8:00 - 10:30 119: Operational 022: Trace Metal 021: Biological Bio Oceanography: geochemistry - Oceanography, Marine Biology: Assimilation, Interactions General Modeling, and Between Applications in Atmosphere and Coastal/Estuarine Ocean Ecosystems and Living Marine Resources 2008 OSM Schedule at a Glance Monday At A Glance ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting W108 110: Transport and Mixing in Flows Through Aquatic Vegetation W101 W102 011: River094: Coastal Ocean Modeling dominated Ocean Margins in the and Prediction Context of Climate Change W205 B/C 084: Harmful Algal Blooms: Interactive Influence of Nutrient Competition, Differential Grazing, and Other Causative Student Development Workshops - W311 E,F,G 12:00 - 13:30 35 Coffee Break 057: Ocean017: Biophysical 165: Advances in 174: Sharing 014: Polar 003: Ocean Scientific Ocean Biogeochemistry atmosphere Interactions at Coastal Acidification: Exchanges and Inertial and Morphodynamics: Drilling's Greatest Causes and Meridional Dissipation From Estuaries Impacts on Hits with Transports in Scales and Beaches to Biogeochemical Educators Global Water and Deltas and Processes, Biota Energy Cycles Shelves and Climate (continued from Monday) 12:00 - 13:30 13:30 - 15:30 020: Underrepresente d But Not Forgotten: How to Increase Student Diversity in Marine Scienc 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 Ocean Acidification: Towards an Interagency Approach - W108 Stony Brook Alumni Reception - W311B 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 199: Other 072: Nearshore and Coastal Regions: General Ocean Observatories Initiative - W105 183: Interannual Trends in Phytoplankton Dynamics in Coastal Ecosystems 067: Variability and Mixing Near Topography 19:30 - 21:30 181: Novel Approaches for Improving Ocean Science Literacy in K-12 Classrooms 053: Arctic Marine Communities and Biodiversity GHRSST-PP Diurnal Variability 4th Workshop - W101 174: Sharing Scientific Ocean Drilling's Greatest Hits with Educators 042: Outreach in Ocean Sciences - Taking the Ocean to the Classroom Charting the Course for an Ocean Research Priorities Plan & Implementation Strategy - W103 173: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Larval Dispersion and Connectivity 17:30 - 19:30 19:30 - 21:30 160: Reconstruction of Global Paleoceanic Environments 164: Improving Geosciences Education and Public Outreach: Sharing Strategic and Rewarding Approaches 041: Juvenile Copepods in Planktonic Communities 157: Arctic Sea Ice Variability Interacted with Atmospheric and Ocean Circulation Patterns 040: Ecosystem in Sea Ice Influenced Areas 154: Forecast, Predictability and Data Assimilation 031: Global Ocean Holozooplankton Diversity: Assessment, Analysis, and Prediction 034: Climate Impacts on Sub-polar Seas: Mechanisms of Change and Evidence of Response 029: Ecology and Oceanography of Thin Plankton Layers 112: Natural Iron Fertilization in the Southern Ocean, and Implications for the Biological Carbon Pump 019: Mixing in the Ocean 125: Collaborative Partnerships in Ocean Science Education 111: Environmental Change: General 017: Biophysical Interactions at Inertial and Dissipation Scales 152: Lateral Mixing in the Ocean from Meters to Mesoscale 098: Contribution of Data Assimilation to Ocean Modeling 014: Polar Biogeochemistry 129: The Ecosystem of the Beaufort Sea 094: Coastal Ocean Modeling and Prediction 011: River-dominated Ocean Margins in the Context of Climate Change 028: Nearshore Processes 088: Characterization and Modeling of Ocean Features 007: Geology and Geophysics: General 026: Research Experiences of Undergraduates in Aquatic Sciences 077: Education and Outreach Using Ocean Observing Systems. 085: The Nordic Seas and the North Atlantic's Subpolar Gyre: Similarities, Differences, and Interconnection 005: Role of the Oceans in Climate Variability Over the Americas 024: Coastal Ocean Processes: Integration and Synthesis of Interdisciplinary Shelf Studies 152: Lateral Mixing in the Ocean from Meters to Mesoscale 15:30 - 16:00 117: Turbulence, 012: Implicit and 001: ASLO 16:00 - 17:30 Mixing, and MultiMulticultural Adjoint scale Interactions Techniques and Program Student in Estuaries and Their Application Symposium to Ocean Nearshore (continued from Circulation and Environments morning) Biogeochemical Problems 003: Ocean Acidification: Causes and Impacts on Biogeochemical Processes, Biota and Climate 074: Influence of Recent Changes in the Arctic Tuesday Poster Sessions - West Exhibit Hall A1 & A2 107: Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms: Regional and Comparative Studies of the GEOHAB and ECOHAB Programs 001: ASLO Multicultural Program Student Symposium 104: Coastal 164: Improving 051: Watersheds, 135: What is Being Done in Sensor Networks Geosciences Lakes, Rivers, and Ocean the Caribbean? Education and Estuaries: Microbial Fuel Who, How and Public Outreach: General Why, Should We Cell Technology Sharing Strategic Be Partners? and Rewarding Approaches 117: Turbulence, Mixing, and Multiscale Interactions in Estuaries and Nearshore Environments 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 11:00 - 12:00 19:30 - 21:30 17:30 - 19:30 15:30 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:30 096: Trace Metal Cycling Along the Ocean-continent Boundary: Benthic-pelagic Coupling Metadata Tutorials for Ocean Scientists Workshop - W105 12:00 - 13:30 Understanding Climate Impacts in Sub-arctic Seas: Ecological Issues and Comparative Approaches Workshop - W203 057: Ocean014: Polar Sverdrup Lecture 017: Biophysical 072: Nearshore 200: Committee's 084: Harmful 104: Coastal 094: Coastal 168: Small 197: New atmosphere Interactions at Choice Biogeochemistry (13:00) and Coastal Ocean Modeling Sensor Networks Algal Blooms: Mountainous Perspectives in Exchanges and Inertial and ---------Regions: General Interactive and Ocean Silicon Cycling; Rivers: From the and Prediction Meridional Dissipation 003: Ocean Influence of Microbial Fuel from Rivers to Watershed to the Transports in Scales Acidification: Nutrient Cell Technology Global Ocean Seas and Global Water and Causes and Competition, Sediments Energy Cycles Impacts on Differential Biogeochemical Grazing, and Processes, Biota Other Causative and Climate C6 Multi Sensor Platform & PhytoFlash Workshop - W102 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 13:30 - 15:30 139: Applications of Remote Sensing Data for Assessing and Monitoring Coastal and Inland Water Quality Lunch - On Your Own NOAA Tides and Currents Town Hall - W101 12:00 - 13:30 10:30 - 11:00 W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B W109 A W103 Room 001: ASLO 059: Eddies, 067: Variability 034: Climate 032: Oceanic 003: Ocean 040: Ecosystem 173: 028: Nearshore 8:00 - 10:30 Multicultural Flows Past Sea Impacts on Sub- and Mixing Near Fronts and SubAcidification: in Sea Ice Multidisciplinary Processes Program Student Mesoscale Topography polar Seas: Mountains and Causes and (continued from Approaches to Influenced Areas Processes In The Islands and Their Mechanisms of Impacts on Larval Dispersion Monday) Symposium Upper Ocean Change and Marine Biogeochemical and Connectivity Evidence of Processes, Biota Environmental Response Impacts and Climate 12:00 - 13:30 11:00 - 12:00 079: Photobiogeoche mistry: Shedding Light on Biogeochemical Cycles from Rivers to the Se W304 E/F 197: New Perspectives in Silicon Cycling; from Rivers to Seas and Sediments Coffee Break Plenary: Wallace S. Broecker W304 C/D 079: Photobiogeoche mistry: Shedding Light on Biogeochemical Cycles from Rivers to the Se Tuesday, March 4, 2008 Withdrawals are not reflected on this schedule. All cancellations will be noted on the addendum. If you have previously contacted us to cancel your participation at the meeting, we have your request and will note all cancellations on the program addendum. 10:30 - 11:00 Room W304 A/B 8:00 - 10:30 139: Applications of Remote Sensing Data for Assessing and Monitoring Coastal and Inland Water Quality 2008 OSM Schedule at a Glance Tuesday At A Glance Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF W101 W102 029: Ecology and 171: U.S. GODAE: Ocean Oceanography of Prediction with Thin Plankton the HYbrid Layers Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) W205 B/C 030: Environmental Records of Anthropogenic Impacts On Coastal Ecosystems W202 W105 028: Nearshore 189: The Census of Marine Life: Processes Discoveries of (continued from Diversity, Tuesday) Abundance, and Distribution in the World's Oceans Coffee Break Plenary: Paul G. Falkowski Education & Outreach Workshop - W102 12:00 - 13:30 36 20:00-22:00 17:30 - 19:30 Special Evening Science Communication Forum, “Does Science Really Matter?” 189: The Census of Marine Life: Discoveries of Diversity, Abundance, and Distribution in the World's Oceans 194: Hypoxia in Estuaries and the Coastal Ocean: Commonalities, Comparisons, Contradictions, Climate Change 105: Diurnal Variability in the Surface Ocean and in Air-Sea Interaction 101: Towards Improved Predictive Modeling of DOM Cycling: From the Watershed to the Coastal Ocean 092: Nitrogen Supply in the Oligotrophic Ocean 102: The Gulf of Maine: Biogeochemical and Ecosystem Dynamics, Land-Water Interface Exchanges, Physical and Biological Coupling, and Human Induced Change 182: Variability and Trends in Oceanic Oxygen: From a Tracer of Biological Production to a Bellwether of Climate 186: Science at Aquarius: Multidisciplinary Studies of a Tropical Reef 188: Estuarine Impacts, Resilience and Recovery 090: UV Effects on Aquatic Ecosystems: Integration at Multiple Trophic Levels 180: Long-term Ecological Research in the Deep Sea 086: Nonlinear Internal Wave Observations, Dynamics, and Acoustic Impacts 169: Global Mode and Intermediate Waters: Their Physics, Biogeochemistry, and Variability 171: U.S. GODAE: Ocean Prediction with the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM ) 081: Ocean Salinity in Climate and Ocean Dynamics 062: Interaction of Riverine-Marine Systems 078: Northern Gulf of Mexico Landscape Change and Natural Hazards 166: Potential for Atmospheric CO2 Sequestration in the Ocean 055: Fidelity and Metrics of Ocean Models in Climate Simulations 064: Linkages Between Climate, Upwelling and Anoxia: The Cariaco Basin and Similar Systems 162: Dynamics of Colored Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM) in the Global Ocean 165: Advances in Coastal Morphodynamics: From Estuaries and Beaches to Deltas and Shelves 049: Open Ocean Time-series Data: A Tool to Observe Temporal Variability of Biogeochemical Processes 145: Ocean Circulation Using Satellite Gravimetry and Altimetry 039: Real-Time Forecasting of Winds, Waves, and Storm Tides: From the Deep Ocean to the Watershed 159: Estuarine and Coastal Hydrodynamics: Advancement in Observational Technology and Modeling Development 143: Meso- and Smaller-Scale Processes in the Coastal Ocean: Challenges for Monitoring and Prediction 038: Progress in Mechanistic Modelling of the Ocean Carbon Cycle 158: Time-series Observations of Biogeochemical Processes and Their Long Term Trends 133: Ocean Modeling in the Eddying Regime 036: Scientific Results from Global and Regional Ocean Syntheses 048: Chemical Oceanography, Marine Chemistry: General 128: Comparing Aquatic Ecosystems 033: Unresolved Problems of ENSO Dynamics: Past, Present, Future 047: Ocean Processes in the Western Tropical Pacific 117: Turbulence, Mixing, and Multi-scale Interactions in Estuaries and Nearshore Environments 124: Influence of Tropical Rivers on Oceanic Biogeochemical Cycles 018: The Aquatic Gel Phase, Its Role in Biogeochemical Cycles 20:00-22:00 17:30 - 19:30 15:30 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:30 125: Collaborative Partnerships in Ocean Science Education 118: Ecological Forecasts for the Ecological Observing Needs of the Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS): Tracking Factors that Influence Living Marine 044: Interrelations Among the Chemistry, Geology and Biology of Hydrocarbon Seep Communities in the Deep Gulf of Mexico 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 13:30 - 15:30 125: Collaborative Partnerships in Ocean Science Education 016: How Does the Subtropical North Atlantic Transfer Heat, Cycle Nutrients and Uptake Carbon? 116: Confronting Marine Biogeochemical Models With Data: Approaches to Quantitative Evaluation and Calibration 117: Turbulence, 193: Seismic Mixing, and Multi- Oceanography scale Interactions in Estuaries and Nearshore Environments (continued from Tuesday) 015: Interactions Between the Kuroshio and Marginal Seas of China and Their Environmental Impact Wednesday Poster Sessions - West Exhibit Hall A1 & A2 Coffee Break 186: Science at 165: Advances in 070: Microbial 036: Scientific 172: The Atlantic 024: Coastal 159: Estuarine Coastal Aquarius: Meridional Ocean Processes: Results from and Coastal Associations With Multidisciplinary Morphodynamics: Overturning Global and Hydrodynamics: Integration and Marine From Estuaries Studies of a Regional Ocean Circulation and Synthesis of Advancement in Invertebrates and Beaches to Tropical Reef Decadal Syntheses Interdisciplinary Observational Deltas and Predictability Shelf Studies Technology and Shelves Modeling (continued from Development Tuesday) 151: Hurricanegenerated Waves, Currents and Storm Surge 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 11:00 - 12:00 10:30 - 11:00 W109 A W103 Room 181: Novel 151: Hurricane8:00 - 10:30 Approaches for generated Waves, Currents Improving Ocean and Storm Surge Science Literacy in K-12 Classrooms 113: Ecosystems: General 006: Watersheds 039: Real-Time 128: Comparing 044: Aquatic Forecasting of to the Global Interrelations Ecosystems Winds, Waves, Ocean: Among the and Storm Tides: Spaceborne Chemistry, Measurements of From the Deep Geology and Ocean to the Water Surfaces Biology of Watershed and Modeling Hydrocarbon Flows Seep Communities in the Deep Gulf of Mexico 019: Mixing in the Ocean W109 B 019: Mixing in the Ocean 009: Hydrogeological Systems, Natural Gas Flux in Dissolved and Gas Phases, and Formation of Oceanic Hydrate 15:30 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:30 100: Operational 101: Towards Oceanography: Improved Observing Predictive System Design & Modeling of DOM Implementation Cycling: From the Watershed to the Coastal Ocean Metadata Tutorials for Ocean Scientists Workshop (con't from Tuesday) - W105 12:00 - 13:30 TOS Council Meeting - W311A 036: Scientific 172: The Atlantic 024: Coastal 029: Ecology and 013: Ridge-To- 124: Influence of 159: Estuarine 171: U.S. 031: Global 13:30 - 15:30 100: Operational 162: Dynamics of 116: Confronting 006: Watersheds Meridional Ocean Processes: Results from and Coastal GODAE: Ocean Oceanography of Reef: Impacts of Tropical Rivers Ocean to the Global Colored Marine Oceanography: Overturning Global and Prediction with Holozooplankton Hydrodynamics: Integration and Ocean: on Oceanic Dissolved Watershed Biogeochemical Thin Plankton Observing Regional Ocean Circulation and Synthesis of Advancement in the HYbrid Diversity: Spaceborne Biogeochemical Change on Models With Layers System Design & Organic Matter Decadal Syntheses Interdisciplinary Observational Coordinate Assessment, Measurements of Cycles Tropical Coastal Data: Implementation (CDOM) in the Predictability Shelf Studies Technology and Ocean Model Analysis, and Water Surfaces Global Ocean Ecosystems Approaches to Modeling (HYCOM) Prediction and Modeling Quantitative Development Flows Evaluation and Calibration 12:00 - 13:30 Lunch - On Your Own ASLO EU-US Funding Panel - W101 12:00 - 13:30 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 024: Coastal 137: Oceanic and 172: The Atlantic 173: Meridional Multidisciplinary Ocean Processes: Meteorological Overturning Integration and Measurements Approaches to From Voluntary Circulation and Synthesis of Larval Dispersion Decadal and Connectivity Interdisciplinary Observing Ships Predictability and Other Shelf Studies (continued from Platforms of Tuesday) Opportunity 12:00 - 13:30 11:00 - 12:00 Wednesday, March 5, 2008 Withdrawals are not reflected on this schedule. All cancellations will be noted on the addendum. If you have previously contacted us to cancel your participation at the meeting, we have your request and will note all cancellations on the program addendum. 10:30 - 11:00 Room W304 A/B W304 C/D W304 E/F W108 141: 8:00 - 10:30 046: Operational 162: Dynamics of 038: Progress in Hydrodynamics Mechanistic Colored Oceanography: and Modelling of the Dissolved Assimilation, Ocean Carbon Morphodynamics Organic Matter Modeling, and of Marshes and Cycle (CDOM) in the Applications in Shallow Coastal the Global Ocean Global Ocean Environments 2008 OSM Schedule at a Glance Wednesday At A Glance ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 108: Controls on 018: The Aquatic Gel Phase, Its Carbon Role in Biogeochemistry and Fluxes and Biogeochemical Cycles Their Associated Scales of Variability in Ocean Margins 188: Estuarine Impacts, Resilience and Recovery 37 Coffee Break 133: Ocean 085: The Nordic 169: Global Mode 117: Turbulence, 064: Linkages 053: Arctic 091: California 078: Northern 165: Advances in 194: Hypoxia in 108: Controls on 061: From 045: Marine Seas and the and Intermediate Mixing, and Multi- Aquaculture Between Climate, Modeling in the Current Marine Coastal Carbon Transcripts to Estuaries and the Gulf of Mexico Waters: Their scale Interactions What are the Upwelling and Eddying Regime North Atlantic's Ecosystem Morphodynamics: Communities and Landscape Biogeochemistry Transcriptomes: Coastal Ocean: Physics, Subpolar Gyre: Anoxia: The Dynamics – The Biodiversity From Estuaries Change and Burning and Fluxes and RNA Abundance, Commonalities, in Estuaries and Biogeochemistry, Similarities, Cariaco Basin Role of Climate Natural Hazards and Beaches to Comparisons, Environmental Their Associated Persistence and Nearshore Differences, and and Variability and Similar Variability Deltas and Contradictions, Degradation in Issues and Scales of Environments Interconnection Systems Shelves Climate Change the Marine Solutions? Variability in (continued from (continued from Environment Ocean Margins Wednesday) Wednesday) 19:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 20:00 - 21:00 M POWIR - W101 Metadata Tutorials for Ocean Scientists Workshop (con't from Wednesday) - W102 Future Challenges in Marine Organic Geochemistry - W103 Computed Tomography & Marine Geosciences - W105 Evening Discussion with Hollywood Filmmaker, Randy Olson, “True Confessions: I am an Impaired Mass Communicator” 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 19:30 - 21:30 20:00 - 21:00 198: Impacts and Interactions of Soft-bottom Benthic Systems Special Evening at EPCOT (optional) 103: Physical and Biological Research Efforts to Evaluate the Use of Offshore Sand for Louisiana Coastal and Barrier Island Restoration 17:30 - 19:30 15:30 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:30 19:30 191: In Situ Optical Properties for the Investigation of Particle Dynamics 193: Seismic Oceanography 097: Tsunami and Storm Inundation and Sediment Transport 178: Structure and Function of River Plumes in Coastal Margins 179: Marine Predator Hot Spots 096: Trace Metal Cycling Along the Ocean-continent Boundary: Benthic-pelagic Coupling 093: The Ocean Science, Technology, and Operations Workforce 176: The Inner Shelf: Connecting the Shore to the Coastal Ocean 089: Groundwater Inputs to the Ocean 091: California Current Ecosystem Dynamics – The Role of Climate Variability 150: Terrestrial Impacts on Coastal Water Quality 153: Research Ocean Observatories: Progress and Emerging Technologies 076: Watersheds and Coral Reefs: Science, Policy and Implementation 149: The Absolute Accuracy of Space-borne Sea Surface Temperature 071: Predicting the Impact of Climate Change on Marine Population Connectivity 073: Applications and Technological Developments of High Frequency Radar for Coastal Oceanography 146: Changing Chemistry of Estuaries, Coasts, and the Ocean 148: Multi-Sensor Sea Surface Temperature Analyses 070: Microbial Associations With Marine Invertebrates 142: Nutrient Cycling at the Sediment-water Interface 144: Coral Reefs: Impacts of Environmental Alterations & Climate Change on Coral Biology & Biogeochemistry, & Links Between Dissolved Organic Matter 056: Ecosystem Research Informing Management Decisions 061: From Transcripts to Transcriptomes: RNA Abundance, Persistence and Degradation in the Marine Environment 054: Sediment Transport in Lakes, Estuaries, and Shallow Shelves 135: What is Being Done in the Caribbean? Who, How and Why, Should We Be Partners? 136: Past as Key to the Future: Using Late Holocene History to Predict the Future Response of Coastal Environments to Global Warming & Sea-level Rise 134: Toward Integrating Source-to-Sink Field Studies of Sediment Dispersal Systems 037: Transport, Biogeochemistry, and Ecology in Permeable Sediments 050: Dynamics of Estuarine Circulations and River Plumes: From Process Studies to Predictive Models 126: Coastal Region Dynamical Variability and Effects on Acoustics 023: Space-Based Measurements of Ocean Climate Change 045: Marine Aquaculture - What are the Burning Environmental Issues and Solutions? 123: Molecular Approaches to Study Interactions Between Organisms in Aquatic Environments: Current Progress and Future Directions Thursday Poster Sessions - West Exhibit Hall A1 & A2 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 13:30 - 15:30 114: New Directions for Funding and the Future of US Oceanographic Institutions 106: Operational Applications of Ocean Satellite Observations 037: Transport, Biogeochemistry, and Ecology in Permeable Sediments 019: Mixing in the Ocean 008: Decadal Variations in Ocean Interior Circulation, Water Masses, & Biogeochemistry - Results From The CLIVAR/CO2 Repeat Hydrography Program 092: Nitrogen Supply in the Oligotrophic Ocean 178: Structure 169: Global Mode and Function of and Intermediate River Plumes in Waters: Their Coastal Margins Physics, Biogeochemistry, and Variability 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 11:00 - 12:00 10:30 - 11:00 W103 Room 033: Unresolved 8:00 - 10:30 Problems of ENSO Dynamics: Past, Present, Future 021: Biological Oceanography, Marine Biology: General 191: In Situ Optical Properties for the Investigation of Particle Dynamics TOS Business Meeting - W311A 133: Ocean 129: The 091: California 200: Committee's 097: Tsunami Choice Modeling in the Ecosystem of the Current and Storm Eddying Regime Beaufort Sea Ecosystem Inundation and Dynamics – The Sediment Role of Climate Transport Variability W109 A 019: Mixing in the Ocean 19:30 - 21:30 17:30 - 19:30 15:30 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:30 054: Sediment Transport in Lakes, Estuaries, and Shallow Shelves 12:00 - 13:30 037: Transport, Biogeochemistry, and Ecology in Permeable Sediments Student Development Workshops - W311 E,F,G 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 13:30 - 15:30 From Ship to Shore to the Media: A Workshop on Science Journalism - W105 Ecological Forecasts: Barriers to Transition and Operations Town Hall - W108 12:00 - 13:30 092: Nitrogen Supply in the Oligotrophic Ocean Ocean Carbon & Biogeochemistry Program - W103 12:00 - 13:30 191: In Situ Optical Properties for the Investigation of Particle Dynamics Remote Sensing Systems - W102 11:00 - 12:00 ASLO Public Policy Workshop - W101 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B 008: Decadal 143: Meso- and 050: Dynamics of 169: Global Mode 173: and Intermediate Variations in Estuarine Smaller-Scale Multidisciplinary Waters: Their Ocean Interior Approaches to Processes in the Circulations and Physics, Circulation, River Plumes: Larval Dispersion Coastal Ocean: Water Masses, and Connectivity Challenges for From Process Biogeochemistry, and Studies to (continued from Monitoring and and Variability Biogeochemistry - Wednesday) Predictive Models Prediction Results From The CLIVAR/CO2 Repeat Hydrography Program 12:00 - 13:30 W205 B/C W202 W105 054: Sediment 028: Nearshore 074: Influence of Recent Changes Processes Transport in in the Arctic Lakes, Estuaries, (continued from Wednesday) and Shallow Shelves Lunch - On Your Own W102 188: Estuarine Impacts, Resilience and Recovery 12:00 - 13:30 W108 W101 108: Controls on 021: Biological Oceanography, Carbon Biogeochemistry Marine Biology: General and Fluxes and Their Associated (continued from Monday) Scales of Variability in Ocean Margins 12:00 - 13:30 W304 E/F 037: Transport, Biogeochemistry, and Ecology in Permeable Sediments Coffee Break Plenary: Richard W. Spinrad W304 C/D 092: Nitrogen Supply in the Oligotrophic Ocean Thursday, March 6, 2008 Withdrawals are not reflected on this schedule. All cancellations will be noted on the addendum. If you have previously contacted us to cancel your participation at the meeting, we have your request and will note all cancellations on the program addendum. 10:30 - 11:00 Room W304 A/B 8:00 - 10:30 106: Operational Applications of Ocean Satellite Observations 2008 OSM Schedule at a Glance Thursday At A Glance Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 15:30 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:30 148: Multi-Sensor Sea Surface Temperature Analyses 12:00 - 13:30 13:30 - 15:30 11:00 - 12:00 023: SpaceBased Measurements of Ocean Climate Change 073: Applications and Technological Developments of High Frequency Radar for Coastal Oceanography 158: Time-series Observations of Biogeochemical Processes and Their Long Term Trends 049: Open Ocean 066: Linking 153: Research Ecosystem Health Time-series Data: Ocean A Tool to Observatories: to Marine Animal Observe Health Progress and Temporal Emerging Variability of Technologies Biogeochemical Processes 153: Research Ocean Observatories: Progress and Emerging Technologies W202 W105 W304 G/H W110 W204 W203 W109 B 090: UV Effects 085: The Nordic 176: The Inner 144: Coral Reefs: 187: Mercury 081: Ocean 086: Nonlinear Seas and the Shelf: Connecting Internal Wave on Aquatic Impacts of Salinity in Pollution: North Atlantic's the Shore to the Observations, Ecosystems: Environmental Climate and Towards a Subpolar Gyre: Alterations & Holistic Appraisal Integration at Dynamics, and Ocean Dynamics Coastal Ocean Similarities, Multiple Trophic Climate Change of Sources, Acoustic Impacts Differences, and Levels on Coral Biology Environmental Interconnection & Cycling, Biotic (continued from Biogeochemistry, Exposure, Thursday) & Links Between Consequences, and Management Dissolved Organic Matter 021: Biological Oceanography, Marine Biology: General (continued from Thursday) 071: Predicting 065: Advances in the Impact of the Application of Chemical Climate Change Biomarkers in on Marine Aquatic Population Ecosystems Connectivity Coffee Break 194: Hypoxia in 112: Natural Iron Estuaries and the Fertilization in the Southern Coastal Ocean: Ocean, and Commonalities, Implications for Comparisons, the Biological Contradictions, Carbon Pum Climate Change Ocean Time Series Town Hall - W108 041: Juvenile 071: Predicting 065: Advances in 144: Coral Reefs: 194: Hypoxia in 146: Changing Impacts of Copepods in Estuaries and the the Impact of the Application of Chemistry of Environmental Planktonic Chemical Coastal Ocean: Estuaries, Coasts, Climate Change Alterations & Communities Biomarkers in Commonalities, on Marine and the Ocean Climate Change Aquatic Comparisons, Population on Coral Biology Contradictions, Ecosystems Connectivity & Climate Change Biogeochemistry, & Links Between Dissolved Organic Matter W109 A 010: Physical Oceanography and Limnology: General W103 056: Ecosystem Research Informing Management Decisions 12:00 - 13:30 12:00 - 13:30 11:00 - 12:00 10:30 - 11:00 Room 8:00 - 10:30 145: Ocean 086: Nonlinear 016: How Does Circulation Using Internal Wave the Subtropical North Atlantic Observations, Satellite Transfer Heat, Gravimetry and Dynamics, and Acoustic Impacts Cycle Nutrients Altimetry and Uptake Carbon? 15:30 - 16:00 010: Physical 076: Watersheds 16:00 - 17:30 Oceanography and Coral Reefs: and Limnology: Science, Policy and General (continued from Implementation morning) 12:00 - 13:30 085: The Nordic 062: Interaction 086: Nonlinear 016: How Does 015: Interactions 093: The Ocean 13:30 - 15:30 Between the the Subtropical Internal Wave of RiverineSeas and the Science, Kuroshio and North Atlantic Observations, North Atlantic's Marine Systems Technology, and Transfer Heat, Marginal Seas of Dynamics, and Subpolar Gyre: Operations Acoustic Impacts Cycle Nutrients China and Their Similarities, Workforce and Uptake Differences, and Environmental Carbon? Interconnection Impact Lunch - On Your Own W101 W102 W205 B/C 123: Molecular 055: Fidelity and 065: Advances in Approaches to Metrics of Ocean the Application of Chemical Models in Climate Study Biomarkers in Simulations Interactions Aquatic Between Ecosystems Organisms in Aquatic Environments: Current Progress and Future Directions Discussion on the Current & Future Needs of the Ocean Science, Technology & Operations Workforce - W103 W108 158: Time-series Observations of Biogeochemical Processes and Their Long Term Trends 12:00 - 13:30 W304 E/F 073: Applications and Technological Developments of High Frequency Radar for Coastal Oceanography 12:00 - 13:30 W304 C/D 153: Research Ocean Observatories: Progress and Emerging Technologies Coffee Break Plenary: Anna-Stiina Heiskanen W304 A/B 149: The Absolute Accuracy of Space-borne Sea Surface Temperature Friday, March 7, 2008 Withdrawals are not reflected on this schedule. All cancellations will be noted on the addendum. If you have previously contacted us to cancel your participation at the meeting, we have your request and will note all cancellations on the program addendum. 10:30 - 11:00 Room 8:00 - 10:30 2008 OSM Schedule at a Glance Friday At A Glance ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 38 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday Oral Sessions 09:45 10:15 Chair(s): Chunzai Wang, [email protected]; Gabriel A. Vecchi, [email protected] Location: W105 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:45 15:00 15:15 Zhang, R.; Delworth, T. L.: IMPACT OF THE ATLANTIC MULTIDECADAL OSCILLATION ON NORTH PACIFIC CLIMATE VARIABILITY* Xie, S. P.; Richter, I.; Okumura, Y.; Miyama, T.; Timmermann, A.: NORTH ATLANTIC INFLUENCES ON TROPICAL AMERICAS: RAINFALL AND CROSSCENTRAL AMERICAN MOISTURE TRANSPORT* SUTTON, R. T.; HODSON, D.; CASSOU, C.; Keenlyside, N.; Zhou, T.; Okumura, Y.: IMPACTS ON THE AMERICAS OF MULTIDECADAL VARIABILITY IN ATLANTIC AND INDIAN OCEAN SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES: A MULTIMODEL COMPARISON Wang, C.; Lee, S. K.; Enfield, D. B.: IMPACT OF THE ATLANTIC WARM POOL ON CLIMATE AND HURRICANES Kwon, Y.; Deser, C.: COUPLED ATMOSPHERE - MIXED LAYER OCEAN RESPONSE TO THE KUROSHIO EXTENSION OCEAN HEAT TRANSPORT VARIATION Munoz, E.; Busalacchi, A. J.: INTER-DECADAL CHANGES OF THE SUMMER CARIBBEAN LOW-LEVEL JET Liu, H.; Carton, J.; Grodsky, S.: NORTHERN HEMISPHERE MIXED LAYER VARIABILITY AND ITS RELATION TO CLIMATE 022: Trace Metal Biogeochemistry Interactions Between Atmosphere and Ocean Chair(s): Philip W. Boyd, [email protected]; Mark L. Wells, [email protected]; Peter Sedwick, [email protected]; Benjamin S. Twining, [email protected] Location: W304 C/D 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 021: Biological Oceanography, Marine Biology: General Chair(s): John Reinfelder, [email protected] Location: W304 E/F 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:30 Jones, B. M.; Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D.; O’Connor, D.; Skipp, P. J.: SHOTGUN PROTEOMIC ANALYSIS OF THE MARINE COCCOLITHOPHORID EMILIANIA HUXLEYI (PRYMNESIOPHYCEAE) Miranda, L. N.; Lin, S.: CDNA MICROARRAY ANALYSIS OF DIFFERENTIAL GENE EXPRESSION IN ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE CELL CYCLE Hou, Y.; Lin, S.: SUCCESSIVE LARGE SCALE GENOME DUPLICATIONS IN DINOFLAGELLATE EVOLUTION: NEW INSIGHTS FROM PCNA AND SSU RRNA GENE EVOLUTION Lin, S.; Zhang, H.; Hou, Y.; Miranda, L. N.: ASSESSING MITOCHONDRIAL CYTOCHROME B FOR DNA BARCODING IN DINOFLAGELLATES Moisan, T. A.; Ellisman, M. H.; Buitenhuys, C. W.; Sosinsky, G. E.: DIFFERENCES IN CHLOROPLAST ULTRASTRUCTURE OF PHAEOCYSTIS ANTARCTICA IN LOW AND HIGH LIGHT Jiang, Y. L.; Yin, K. D.; Harrison, P. J.: PHOTOSYNTHETIC EFFICIENCY AND CELL MORTALITY OF SILICATESTARVED THALASSIOSIRA WEISSFLOGII: RESPONSE TO SILICATE RESUPPLY AND DARKNESS Smith, S. R.; Welschmeyer, N. A.: QUANTITATIVE VERIFICATION OF VIABILITY STAIN PERFORMANCE AND PHOTOSYNTHETIC ACTIVITY IN PHYTOPLANKTON 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 Parekh, P.: OCEANIC BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELING OF TRACE METALS: PROGRESS, UNCERTAINTIES AND OUTLOOK blain, S.; bonnet, S.; guieu, C.: APPLICATION OF THE TRACER FE* TO A FIELD DATA SET FROM THE SOUTH EAST PACIFIC: INTEREST AND LIMIT OF THE CONCEPT Roy, E. G.; Wells, M. L.: THE ROLE OF LARGE EDDIES IN IRON TRANSPORT TO THE EASTERN SUBARCTIC PACIFIC OCEAN Ellwood, M. J.; Boyd, P. W.: TRACE METAL CYCLING DURING WINTER IN THE SUBANTARCTIC ZONE FROM 40-52S; 155-160E Nielsdóttir, M. C.; Moore, C. M.; Sanders, R.; Fones, G.; Achterberg, E. P.: IRON LIMITATION OF RESIDUAL PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN THE ICELAND BASIN Moffett, J. W.; Naqvi, S. W.; Gauns, M.; Valavala, D.: IRON LIMITATION IN THE ARABIAN SEA DURING THE SOUTHWEST MONSOON Pickell, L. D.; Wells, M. L.; Trick, C. G.: EFFECTS OF CONTINUOUS IRON, COPPER AND DOMOIC ACID SUPPLY ON SHAPING THE TRAJECTORY OF PHYTOPLANTKON ASSEMBLAGES IN NEAR AND OFFSHORE SUBARCTIC PACIFIC WATERS Twining, B. S.; Baines, S. B.; Vogt, S.: ROLE OF DIATOMS IN NICKEL BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN Schultz, P.; Behrenfeld, M. J.; Dunne, J. P.; Hiscock, M. R.; Maritorena, S.; Sarmiento, J. L.; Siegel, D. A.; Westberry, T. K.: IRON LIMITATION OBSCURES SIMILARITIES BETWEEN SEASONAL PLANKTON CYCLES IN THE SUBARCTIC ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC Boyle, E. A.: VARIABILITY OF IRON IN THE UPPER OCEAN: A BARRIER TO EVALUATING THE ROLE OF FE IN NITROGEN FIXING BLOOMS Marsay, C. M.; Sedwick, P. N.; Johnson, R. J.; Lohan, M. C.; McGillicuddy, D. J.; Church, T. M.; FeAST Science Team: PRONOUNCED TEMPORAL AND MESOSCALE VARIABILITY OF DISSOLVED IRON IN THE SARGASSO SEA (BATS REGION) Buck, C. S.; Landing, W. M.; Resing, J. A.: AEROSOL IRON SOLUBILITY IN SIZE-FRACTIONATED SAMPLES COLLECTED OVER THE NORTH ATLANTIC AND NORTH PACIFIC DURING THREE CO2/CLIVAR REPEAT HYDROGRAPHY SECTIONS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 39 Monday 10:00 005: Role of the Oceans in Climate Variability Over the Americas Echeveste, P.; Agusti, S.; Dachs, J.: LETHALITY OF PAH’S TO MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON Rodriguez, G. E.; Lonhart, S. I.: GROWTH AND REPRODUCTION OF INVASIVE KELP SPOROPHYTES (UNDARIA PINNATIFIDA), MONTEREY HARBOR Moore, L. R.; Rocap, G.; Krumhardt, K.; Jackson, L.; Robinson, D.; Roache-Johnson, K.; Hardy, D.: PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF PROCHLOROCOCCUS IN P-LIMITED CHEMOSTATS AND ON-DECK NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT EXPERIMENTS ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 09:15 Aguilar-Islas, A. M.; Rember, R. D.; Wu, J.: PHYSICAL AND CHEMICHAL CONTROLS ON THE DISSOLUTION OF AEROSOL IRON IN SEAWATER Sholkovitz, E. R.; Sedwick, P. N.; Church, T. M.: IMPACT OF ANTHROPOGENIC COMBUSTION EMISSIONS ON THE INPUT OF SOLUBLE IRON TO THE SURFACE OCEAN: ESTIMATES FOR THE NORTH ATLANTIC BASIN Ho, T.; Wang, B.; Huang, C.: THE TRACE METAL FLUXES IN THE WATER COLUMN OF THE SOUTH CHINA SEA: BIOTIC VERSUS ABIOTIC SOURCES Morton, P. L.; Carrasco, G. G.; Donat, J. R.; Milne, A.; Landing, W. M.: ATMOSPHERIC VERSUS MARGIN SOURCES OF TRACE METALS TO THE NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN Moore, J. K.; Krishnamurthy, A.; Doney, S. C.; Mahowald, N.: THE INFLUENCE OF EXTERNAL IRON INPUTS ON MARINE ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES Wells, M. L.; Trick, C. G.; Cochlan, W. P.: FE(III) COMPLEXING ORGANIC LIGANDS STRONGLY RESTRICT ECOSYSTEM RESPONSES TO ATMOSPHERIC IRON ENRICHMENT IN HIGH NITRATE LOW CHLOROPHYLL WATERS Boyd, P. W.; Jackson, G.; Ibisanmi, E.; Sander, S.; Hunter, K. A.: RELATIVE ROLES OF RECYCLING AND REMINERALIZATION OF UPPER OCEAN BIOGENIC PARTICLES FOR IRON BIOGEOCHEMISTRY Wu, J.; Li, C.; Jin, M.: IRON-BINDING ORGANIC LIGANDS IN THE BERING SEA VAN DEN BERG, C. M.; LAGLERA, L. M.: FIRST EVIDENCE FOR HUMIC SUBSTANCES AS IMPORTANT LIGAND FOR IRON IN COASTAL AND DEEP OCEAN WATERS Gledhill, M.; Mawji, E.; Worsfold, P. J.; Achterberg, E. P.: PRODUCTION AND OCCURRENCE OF SPECIFIC ORGANIC IRON COMPLEXES (SIDEROPHORES AND HEME B) IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN. ALSAID, T. T.; Schroeder , D.; TAYLOR, A.; ACHTERBERG, E.: THE ROLE OF EMILIANIA HUXLEYI SPECIFIC VIRUSES ON COPPER CYCLING 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 025: Taxon-specific Biogeochemistry in Aquatic Systems – Who does what? 14:30 Chair(s): Michael W. Lomas, [email protected]; Margaret R. Mulholland, [email protected]; Deborah A. Bronk, [email protected] 14:45 Location: W108 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 Stocker, R.; Seymour, J. R.: PATCHINESS IN THE MICROBIAL WORLD: INSIGHTS FROM MICROFLUIDIC STUDIES Longnecker, K.; Kujawinski, E. B.: EFFECT OF INTERACTIONS BETWEEN GRAZERS AND BACTERIA ON ORGANIC CARBON CYCLING IN GROUNDWATER Bertics, V. J.; Sohm, J. A.; Treude, T.; Chow, C. T.; Fuhrman, J. A.; Capone, D. G.; Ziebis, W.: LINKED NITROGEN FIXATION AND SULFATE REDUCTION IN A BENTHIC SYSTEM HEAVILY INFLUENCED BY BIOTURBATION Jenkins, B. D.; Fulweiler, R. W.; Fogarty, C.; Nixon, S. W.: ELUCIDATING CONTROLS ON ESTUARINE SEDIMENT NITROGEN CYCLING PROCESSES USING GENE ACTIVITY AND FLUX MEASUREMENTS Williams, C. J.; Jaffé, R.; Jochem, F. J.: SPATIOTEMPORAL PATTERNS IN MICROBIAL FATTY ACID COMPOSITION AND CARBON CYCLING IN A SEAGRASS ESTUARY 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 Mills, H. J.; Humphrys, M.; Akob, D. M.; Gihring, T.; Delgardio, J. D.; Chin, K. J.; Kostka, J. E.: QUANTIFICATION OF FUNCTIONAL GENE EXPRESSION OF FE(III) AND SULFATE REDUCING PROKARYOTES IN SALT MARSH SEDIMENTS Francis, C. A.; Mosier, A. C.; Santoro, A. E.; Boehm, A. B.: SHIFTS IN THE ABUNDANCE OF AMMONIAOXIDIZING ARCHAEA AND BACTERIA ACROSS ESTUARINE PHYSICAL/CHEMICAL GRADIENTS Beman, J. M.; Fuhrman, J. A.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL DYNAMICS OF NITRIFYING ARCHAEA AND BACTERIA IN THE SAN PEDRO CHANNEL, CALIFORNIA Thompson, J. B.; Zielinski, B.; Trienekens, J. A.; Hollander, D. J.; Paul, J. H.: THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF MODERN OOIDS: ASSESSING THE ROLE OF MICROBES IN OOID FORMATION Boneillo, G. E.; Lomas, M. W.; Bernhardt, P. W.; Mulholland, M. R.: INTERANNUAL DIFFERENCES IN NUTRIENT DYNAMICS DURING BLOOMS OF AUREOCOCCUS ANOPHAGEFFERENS, A FLOW CYTOMETRY APPROACH Barbeau, K.; Hopkinson, B. M.; Roe, K. L.; Mann, E.; Haygood, M. G.; Podell, S.; Anderson, C. M.: IRON CYCLING IN MARINE SYSTEMS: THE ROLE OF PARTICLE-ASSOCIATED BACTERIA West, N. J.; Obernosterer, I.; Zemb, O.; Lebaron, P.: MAJOR DIFFERENCES OF BACTERIAL DIVERSITY AND ACTIVITY INSIDE AND OUTSIDE OF A NATURAL IRON-FERTILIZED PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN Van Mooy, B. A.; Fredricks, H. F.; Pedler, B. E.; Longnecker, K.; Popendorf, K.; Moutin, T.; Van Wambeke, F.; Koblížek, M.; Prášil, O.: REEXAMINING GROWTH RATES OF HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA IN THE OPEN OCEAN BY USING A NEW MEMBRANE-PHOSPHOLIPID TRACING METHOD. Richardson, T. L.; Ranhofer, M. L.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.: TAXON-SPECIFIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS UTILIZATION BY ESTUARINE PHYTOPLANKTON DETERMINED USING AN ENZYME-LABELED FLUORESCENCE APPROACH Zubkov, M. V.; Mary, I.; Woodward, E. M.; Warwick, P. E.; Fuchs, B. M.; Scanlan, D. J.; Burkill, P. H.: MICROBIAL CONTROL OF PHOSPHATE IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE Mann, E. L.; Riedel, G. F.; Sanders, J. G.; Fox, J.; Wakeham, C.: SPECIES SPECIFIC RESPONSES TO ARSENIC TOXICITY AND PHOSPHATE LIMITATION Leblanc, K.; Cornet-Barthaux, V.; Quéguiner, B.; Armand, L.; Fripiat, F.; Cardinal, D.: SPECIES-SPECIFIC SILICIFICATION RATES USING A NEW FLUORESCENT PROBE (PDMPO) IN THE SUB-ANTARCTIC AND POLAR FRONT ZONES (OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN) Durkin, C. A.; Mock, T.; Marohl, R. L.; Armbrust, E. V.: CHITIN AS A COMPONENT OF THE DIATOM CELL WALL Stepanauskas, R.; Woyke, T.; Copoeland, A. C.; Xie, G.; Han, C. S.; Martin, J.; Heywood, J.; Poulton, N.; Sieracki, M. E.: TAXON-SPECIFIC BIOGEOCHEMISTRY - THE SINGLE CELL APPROACH Mohler, J. A.; Massana, R.; Anderson, I. J.; Neuer, S.: MOLECULAR APPROACH TO DETERMINE CONTRIBUTIONS OF EUKARYOTIC PROTISTS TO DOWNWARD PARTICLE FLUX (~) 40 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:30 17:00 17:15 Hynes, A. M.; Webb, E. A.; Waterbury, J. B.; Doney, S. C.: IDENTIFICATION AND QUANTIFICATION OF THE NITROGEN FIXER TRICHODESMIUM: PHYLOGENY AND QPCR Paerl, R. W.; Foster, R. A.; Zehr, J. P.: PATTERNS OF CYANOBACTERIAL NITRATE REDUCTASE GENE (NARB) DIVERSITY ACROSS OCEANIC HABITATS Rynearson, T. A.: NUTRIENT-DRIVEN SELECTION AND GENETIC CONNECTIVITY OF COASTAL AND ESTUARINE DIATOM POPULATIONS Brown, K. L.; Winant, B.; Munoz Chesler, V.; Foley , J.; Robertson, D. L.: WHO, WHAT AND WHEN? USING MOLECULAR TOOLS TO EXAMINE TEMPORAL CHANGES IN DIATOM GENE EXPRESSION IN RESPONSE TO NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 028: Nearshore Processes 09:45 Chair(s): Jack Puleo, [email protected]; Q. Jim Chen, [email protected] Location: W202 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 Holman, R. A.: THE FUTURE OF NEARSHORE PROCESSES RESEARCH* Nelson, J.; Ting, F. C.: MOTION OF DISCRETE PARTICLES ON A PLANE SLOPE UNDER REGULAR BREAKING WAVES Calantoni, J.; Holland, K. T.: DISCRETE PARTICLE MODEL FOR MEDIUM AND FINE GRAIN SIZE SEDIMENTS Penko, A. M.; Slinn, D. N.; Foster, D. L.: MODEL-DATA COMPARISON OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT OVER EVOLVING RIPPLED BEDS Chou, Y. J.; Fringer, O. B.: NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SEDIMENT SUSPENSION OVER DYNAMIC SAND RIPPLES Scott, N. V.; Hsu, T.; Cox, D.: WAVELET APPROACH TO THE ANALYSIS OF SEDIMENT SUSPENSION AND HYDRODYNAMIC DATA IN THE SURF ZONE Webb, B. M.; Slinn, D. N.: MODELING SMALL-SCALE SEDIMENT TRANSPORT AND MORPHOLOGY Torres-Freyermuth, A.; Hsu, T.; Losada, I. J.; Lara, J. L.: MODELING NEARSHORE HYDRODYNAMICS AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT USING COBRAS-UC Stanton, T. P.: FIELD OBSERVATIONS OF A WAVEFORCED, SUSPENDED MUD LUTOCLINE ON THE INNER SHELF Bandet-Chavanne, M. D.; Pawlak, G.: WAVEINDUCED BOUNDARY LAYERS DYNAMICS OVER INHOMOGENEOUS BATHYMETRY 052: Synthesis of Coupled Physical-ecosystem Dynamics and Linkages to Environmental Forcing On Event to Climate Scales Chair(s): Enrique Curchitser, [email protected]; Hal Batchelder, [email protected]; Eileen E. Hofmann, [email protected]; Cabell Davis, [email protected] Location: W203 08:00 08:15 08:45 09:00 09:30 042: Outreach in Ocean Sciences Taking the Ocean to the Classroom 09:45 Chair(s): Joachim Dengg, [email protected]; Teresa Greely, [email protected] Location: W103 08:00 08:15 Ingram, E. L.; Miller, P. L.; Robinson, M. A.: INCREASING IMPACT AND REDUCING CHALLENGES OF AQUATIC SCIENCE EDUCATION AT THE UNDERGRADUATE LEVEL. Hodder, J.; Shanks, A.; Mace, P.; Beghetto, R.: THE GK12 “LEARNING ABOUT WHERE WE LIVE” PROJECT: ENGAGING WHOLE SCHOOL DISTRICTS TO TEACH MARINE SCIENCE FOR K - 6TH GRADE. Lodge, A.; Greely, T.: SCIENTISTS BRINGING A WAVE OF OCEAN LEARNING TO K-12 CLASSROOMS* Vandehey, A. K.; Collay, R.; Strub, P. T.: OUTREACH AT THE COOPERATIVE INSTITUTE FOR OCEANOGRAPHIC SATELLITE STUDIES (CIOSS): SUPPORTING THE SMILE PROGRAM Dengg, J.; Knickmeier, K.; Neuhaus, R.: ATTRACTING STUDENTS TO SCIENCE: NAT-WORKING ‘MARINE RESEARCH’ FROM A SCIENTIST’S POINT OF VIEW Greely, T.; Lodge, A.: ENGAGING TEENAGE GIRLS IN THE OCEAN SCIENCES VIA THE OCEANOGRAPHY CAMP FOR GIRLS: BARRIERS, SOLUTIONS, AND SUCCESSES 10:00 Schenck, R.: THE MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS OCEANOGRAPHIC SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM, A MULTI-DISCIPLINARY, MULTI-METHOD APPROACH Goehring, E.; Larsen, J. L.; Smith, M. C.; Fisher, C. R.; Carlsen, W. S.; Simms, E.: FROM LOCAL TO EXTREME ENVIRONMENTS (FLEXE) - BRINGING THE DEEP-SEA TO THE GLOBE NETWORK 10:15 13:30 Loeb, V. J.; Hofmann, E. E.; Klinck, J. M.; Holm-Hansen, O.; White, W. B.: ENSO DRIVES INTERANNUAL AND DECADAL-SCALE VARIABILITY OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA PELAGIC MARINE ECOSYSTEM Dinniman, M. S.; Klinck, J. M.: A HIGH RESOLUTION COUPLED SEA-ICE/OCEAN MODEL FOR THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA REGION Dave, A.; Lozier, M. S.: ON THE MECHANISMS AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF HIGH-LATITUDE CHLOROPHYLL CONCENTRATIONS Davis, C. S.; Ji, R.; Chen, C.; Beardsley, R. C.: GLOBEC SYNTHESIS AND MODEL EXAMINATION OF PROCESSES CONTROLLING COPEPOD POPULATIONS ON GEORGES BANK~ Kristiansen, T.; Vikebø¸, F.; Werner, F. E.; Lough, R. G.; Sundby, S.; Durbin, E. G.: FACTORS DETERMINING GROWTH AND SURVIVAL IN EARLY LIFE STAGES OF NORTH ATLANTIC COD: A COMPARATIVE STUDY BETWEEN THE NW ATLANTIC AND NORWEGIAN SEA ECOSYSTEMS Hansen, C.; Samuelsen, A.: INTERANNUAL DIFFERENCES IN SIMULATED PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE NORWEGIAN SEA CONNECTED TO VARIATIONS IN NAO Wood, R. W.; Kelsey, R. H.; Zhang, X.: CLIMATE DRIVEN HABITAT BOUNDARIES: TRANSLATING COUPLED PHYSICAL-ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS TO THE MIDATLANTIC FISHERIES COMPLEX Cermeno, P.; Schofield, O.; Harris, R. P.; Falkowski, P. G.: NUTRICLINE DEPTH, MIXED LAYER DYNAMICS, AND THE BALANCE BETWEEN DIATOMS AND COCCOLITHOPHORIDS IN THE OCEAN Murtugudde, R.: INCREDIBLE SHRINKING IGUANA: GAIA ON GALAPAGOS* * represents Invited presentations ( ) 41 Monday 16:45 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Fiechter, J.; Moore, A. M.; Edwards, C. A.; Bruland, K. W.; Di Lorenzo, E.; Lewis, C. V.; Powell, T. M.; Curchitser, E. N.; Hedstrom, K.; Arango, H. G.: MODELING ECOSYSTEM COMPLEXITY IN THE COASTAL GULF OF ALASKA: FROM NPZD TO NEMURO Bi, H.; Peterson, W. T.; Lamb, J.; Casillas, E.: DEFINING OCEAN HABITAT FOR JUVENILE SALMONID USING SATELLITE CHLOROPHYLL AND IN SITU ZOOPLANKTON DATA Allan, K. M.; McGowan, J. A.: PELAGIC ECOSYSTEM CHANGES IN THE NORTH PACIFIC Janout, M. A.; Danielson, S. L.; Weingartner, T. J.; Royer, T. C.: ON THE NATURE OF THE 2006-07 WINTER COOLING ON THE NORTHERN GULF OF ALASKA SHELF Banas, N. S.; Lessard, E. J.; Kudela, R. M.; MacCready, P.: MODELING PLANKTONIC GROWTH AND GRAZING IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER PLUME REGION Hermann, A. J.; Cheng, W.; Hinckley, S.; Coyle, K.; Fiechter, J.; Powell, T. M.; Curchitser, E. N.; Haidvogel, D. B.: A COMPARISON OF LOWER TROPHIC LEVEL MODELS FOR THE COASTAL GULF OF ALASKA Allen, S. E.; Collins, A. K.; Jang, K.; Wolfe, M.: PHYSICAL CONTROLS ON THE TIMING OF THE SPRING BLOOM IN THE STRAIT OF GEORGIA Levy, M.: THE MODULATION OF BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTION BY OCEANIC SUBMESOSCALE TURBULENCE* Verdy, A.; Flierl, G. R.: COLLECTIVE MOTION OF ANTARCTIC KRILL IN A TURBULENT MIXED LAYER Renner, A. H.; Thorpe, S. E.; Heywood, K. J.; Thompson, A. F.: VARIABILITY OF NEAR-SURFACE CURRENTS NEAR THE TIP OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THE TRANSPORT OF NUTRIENTS AND ANTARCTIC KRILL Sinha, B.; Anderson, T. R.: COMPARISON OF THE PERFORMANCE OF A COMPLEX OCEAN ECOSYSTEM MODEL WHEN COUPLED TO TWO DIFFERENT GENERAL CIRCULATION MODELS Fritsen, C. H.; Taylor, B.; Quetin, L. B.; Ross, R. M.; Vernet, M.: THE INTERACTION BETWEEN PHYTOPLANKTON, ICE, ICE ALGAE AND KRILL (PIIAK): MODELING WINTER ICE ALGAL BIOMASS IN RELATION TO SEA ICE AND PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS Oguz, T.; Salihoglu, B.; Fach, B.: A COUPLED PLANKTONANCHOVY POPULATION DYNAMICS MODEL 17:00 17:15 058: Oceanic Observations and Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Chair(s): Robert Bruce Scott, [email protected]; Joseph Henry LaCasce, [email protected] Location: W204 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 056: Ecosystem Research Informing Management Decisions 14:15 Chair(s): Felix A. Martinez, [email protected]; Elizabeth Turner, [email protected]; Mike Dowgiallo, [email protected] 14:30 Location: W105 16:00 16:30 16:45 Incze, L. S.; Auster, P. J.: THE ECOSYSTEM APPROACH AND THE SCIENTIFIC ENTERPRISE Lawson, P. W.; Ciannelli, L.; Ireland, B.: SPATIAL PATTERNS IN FISHERIES: NEW TECHNIQUES, NEW OPPORTUNITIES FOR ECOSYSTEM-BASED MANAGEMENT Rabalais, N. N.: ECOSYSTEM KNOWLEDGE LEADS TO SOUND POLICY, OR DOES IT? Ammerman, J. W.; Sylvan, J. B.; Gaas, B. M.: IMPACTS OF RECENT NUTRIENT STUDIES ON THE GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIA ACTION PLAN Keteles, K.; McCreedy, C.: A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO ASSESSING CONDITIONS IN COASTAL NATIONAL PARKS 14:45 15:00 15:15 Marshall, J.: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE STUDY OF EDDY STIRRING AND MIXING IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN~ Smith, K. S.; Marshall, J.: THE VERTICAL STRUCTURE OF PV MIXING ACROSS THE ACC Capet, X.; Lapeyre, G.; Klein, P.; McWilliams, J. C.: ROLE OF FRONTOGENESIS IN ENERGY TRANSFERS AT OCEAN SURFACE Holland, C. L.; Scott, R. B.; Arbic, B. K.; Sen, A.: VERTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF HORIZONTAL KINETIC ENERGY Scott, R. B.; Qiu, B.; Chen, S.: LARGE-SCALE OCEANIC TURBULENCE EXPLORED WITH SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS AND NUMERICAL MODELS Jayne, S. R.; Hogg, N. G.; Rainville, L.; Waterman, S. N.; Donohue, K. A.; Watts, D. R.; McClean, J. L.; Maltrud, M. E.; Qiu, B.; Hacker, P.: RECIRCULATION IN THE KUROSHIO EXTENSION Waterman, S. N.; Jayne, S. R.; Hogg, N. G.: EDDY-MEAN FLOW INTERACTIONS IN WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT JETS Li, J.; Mitchum, G. T.: MEAN FLOW EFFECTS ON THE PROPAGATION PATHWAYS OF EDDIES Flierl, G. R.: ENHANCEMENT OF LARGE-SCALE BAROCLINIC INSTABILITY BY SST RELAXATION* Thompson, A. F.; Heywood, K. J.; Thorpe, S. E.; Renner, A. H.; Trasvina Castro, A.: SURFACE DRIFTERS AND TOPOGRAPHY AT THE TIP OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA* HUA, B. L.; MENESGUEN, C.; SCHOPP, R.: DYNAMICS OF EXTRA-EQUATORIAL JETS, EQUATORIAL DEEP JETS AND POTENTIAL VORITICITY HOMOGENIZATION Ascani, F.; Firing, E.; McCreary, J. P.; Dutrieux, P.: DEEP MEAN ZONAL EQUATORIAL CURRENTS GENERATED BY A YANAI WAVE BEAM Farrar, J. T.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE DISPERSION RELATION AND MERIDIONAL SEA-LEVEL STRUCTURE OF PACIFIC EQUATORIAL WAVES Nycander, J.; Nilsson, J.; Doos, K.; Brostrom, G.; Ferrow, A.: THERMODYNAMIC ANALYSIS OF OCEAN CIRCULATION Melnichenko, O.; Maximenko, N.; Niiler, P.: VALIDATION AND PHYSICS OF QUASI-STATIONARY OCEANIC JETLIKE STRUCTURES Elipot, S.; Lumpkin, R.: GLOBAL OBSERVATIONS OF INERTIAL WAVES FROM LAGRANGIAN DRIFTERS Holloway, G.: DO CURRENT METERS REVEAL THE ‘ARROW OF TIME’ IN OCEAN CIRCULATION? (~) 42 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 059: Eddies, Fronts and Sub-Mesoscale Processes In The Upper Ocean 16:30 16:45 Location: W109 A 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 17:00 D’Asaro, E. A.; Lee, C. M.; Harcourt, R.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE UPPER OCEAN BOUNDARY LAYER IN FRONTS* Griffa, A.; Lumpkin, R.; Veneziani, M.: CYCLONIC AND ANTICYCLONIC MOTION IN THE UPPER OCEAN: FROM LARGE EDDIES TO SUBMESOSCALE Lilly, J. M.; Olhede, S. C.: IMPACT OF COHERENT EDDIES ON LAGRANGIAN CHARACTERISTICS OF OCEANIC TURBULENCE Chavanne, C. P.; Flament, P.; Klein, P.; Gurgel, K. W.: OBSERVATIONS OF STRONG SUBMESOSCALE ANTICYCLONE AND ASSOCIATED FRONTOGENESIS NEAR AN ISLAND Shuckburgh, E. F.; Marshall, J. C.; Jones, H.: NEARSURFACE EDDY DIFFUSIVITIES IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN speer, g.; sallee, j. b.; Morrow, r.: THE UPPER CELL OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN Lenn, Y. D.; Chereskin, T. K.; Sprintall, J.; McClean, J.: SURFACE-LAYER EDDY FLUXES IN DRAKE PASSAGE ESTIMATED FROM OBSERVATIONS AND MODELS Borlace, S.; Tomczak, M.; Kaempf, J.: MIXING PROCESSES IN THE SUBTROPICAL FRONT Cronin, M. F.; Kessler, W. S.: NEAR-SURFACE SHEARFLOW IN THE POLEWARD BRANCH OF THE TROPICAL PACIFIC MERIDIONAL-OVERTURNING CELL Perez, R. C.; Kessler, W. S.: THE THREE-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURE OF THE TROPICAL CIRCULATION CELL IN THE CENTRAL EQUATORIAL PACIFIC OCEAN McWilliams, J. C.: DYNAMICS OF OCEANIC SURFACE FRONTS: DEFORMATION AND INSTABILITY* Ferrari, R.; Flierl, G.; Fox-Kemper, B.: RESTRATIFICATION OF THE OCEAN SURFACE MIXED LAYER BY FRONTAL INSTABILITIES Fox-Kemper, B.; Danabasoglu, G.; Hallberg, R. W.; Ferrari, R.: PARAMETERIZATION OF SUBMESOSCALE EDDIES: IMPLEMENTATION AND IMPACT Thomas, L. N.; Ferrari, R.: FRICTION, FRONTOGENESIS AND THE STRATIFICATION OF THE OCEAN SURFACE MIXED LAYER Molemaker, M. J.; McWilliams, J. C.: FORWARD ENERGY CASCADES OF SUB-MESOSCALE FRONTAL INSTABILITIES Tulloch, R. T.; Smith, K. S.; Flierl, G. R.: SHALLOW SPECTRA AND BAROCLINIC INSTABILITIES AT THE OCEAN SURFACE Badin, G.; Williams, R. G.: THE ROLE OF MECHANICAL VERSUS BUOYANCY FORCING IN DETERMINING THE RESIDUAL CIRCULATION IN THE OCEAN Cessi, P.: AN ENERGY-CONSTRAINED PARAMETRIZATION OF EDDY BUOYANCY FLUX Yamazaki, H.; Takano, A.; Olson, D. B.: RING AND WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT INTERACTIONS - TWO SCENARIOS Jaimes, B.; Shay, L. K.: MODULATION OF HURRICANEINDUCED MIXED LAYER COOLING IN GULF OF MEXICO’S MESOSCALE OCEANIC EDDIES. 17:15 068: Oceanic Overflows and Dense Gravity Currents: Observations, Modeling and Parameterization Chair(s): Sonya Legg, [email protected]; Arnold Gordon, [email protected]; Tamay Ozgokmen, [email protected] Location: W109 B 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 Thurnherr, A. M.: OVERFLOW OBSERVATIONS ON THE MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE* Riemenschneider, U.; Price, J.; Pratt, L.; Legg, S.; Helfrich, K.: THE FAROE BANK CHANNEL OVERFLOW: COMPARISON BETWEEN SIMULATIONS, SIMPLIFIED OVERFLOW REPRESENTATIONS, AND HYDRAULIC JUMP THEORY.* Jackson, L. C.; Hallberg, R. W.: TIDAL EFFECTS ON THE MEDITERRANEAN OVERFLOW. Biton, E.; Gildor, H.; Silverman, J.: SHELF CONVECTION IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF AQABA, NORTHERN RED SEA Sherwin, T. J.; Griffiths, C. R.: EKMAN DRIVEN VELOCITY PROFILES AND MIXING IN A FAST FLOWING DEEP WATER CASCADE IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC Haine, T.: HIGH-FREQUENCY FLUCTUATIONS IN DENMARK STRAIT OVERFLOW TRANSPORT Chang, Y. S.; Özgökmen, T.; Garraffo, Z. D.; Peters, H.: NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS OF NORTH ATLANTIC OVERFLOWS IN THREE DIFFERENT HORIZONTAL GRID RESOLUTIONS Pickart, R. S.; Pratt, L. J.; Whitledge, T. E.: FLOW OF DENSE PACIFIC WATER INTO THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN THROUGH HERALD CANYON Large, W. G.; Danabasoglu, G.; Briegleb, B. P.: NORDIC SEA OVERFLOWS AND MODELED CLIMATE klinck, J. M.; Husrevoglu, J. S.; Dinniman, M. S.: CONTINENTAL SHELF WATER MASS DISTRIBUTION, TRANSFORMATIONS AND OFF-SHELF TRANSPORT IN A SEA ICE-OCEAN MODEL OF THE ROSS SEA, ANTARCTICA Ozgokmen, T. M.; Fischer, P. F.: ON THE ROLE OF BOTTOM ROUGHNESS IN OVERFLOWS Chen, J.; Odier, P.; Rivera, M.; Ecke, R.: TURBULENT MIXING IN STABLY-STRATIFIED GRAVITY CURRENTS: LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS AND OCEANIC OVERFLOW IMPLICATIONS Cenedese, C.; Adduce, C.: MIXING INDUCED IN OCEANIC OVERFLOWS AND DENSE GRAVITY CURRENTS: A NEW ENTRAINMENT PARAMETERIZATION. * represents Invited presentations ( ) 43 Monday Chair(s): Raffaele Ferrari, [email protected]; Amala Mahadevan, [email protected]; Amit Tandon, [email protected]; Leif Thomas, [email protected] Henson, S. A.; Thomas, A. C.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF MESOSCALE EDDY ACTIVITY IN THE GULF OF ALASKA Orvik, K. A.; Jaccard, P.: THE EDDY FIELD OF THE POLAR FRONT IN THE SOUTHERN NORWEGIAN SEA FROM SEASOAR-CTD AND VM-ADCP OBSERVATIONS Chaudhuri, A. H.; Bisagni, J. J.; Gangopadhyay, A.: INTER-ANNUAL VARIABILITY AND SHELF WATER ENTRAINMENT OF GULF STREAM WARM-CORE RINGS Lelong, P.; Kunze, E.: INTERNAL TIDE GENERATION BY SURFACE-TIDE/EDDY INTERACTIONS ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 17:15 Wahlin, A. K.; Darelius, E.; Cenedese, C.; Lane-Serff, G. F.: LABORATORY OBSERVATIONS OF ENHANCED PLUME ENTRAINMENT IN THE PRESENCE OF SUBMARINE CANYONS AND RIDGES Pratt, L. J.; Spall, M. A.: CIRCULATION AND EXCHANGE IN CHOKED MARGINAL SEAS Wells, M. G.; Nadarajah, P.: THE INTRUSION DEPTH OF A DENSITY CURRENT IN A STRATIFIED WATER BODY 088: Characterization and Modeling of Ocean Features Chair(s): Avijit Gangopadhyay, [email protected]; Alex Warn-Varnas, [email protected]; Pierre Lermusiaux, [email protected]; Lou Goodman, [email protected] 077: Education and Outreach Using Ocean Observing Systems Location: W304 G/H Chair(s): J. A. Yoder, [email protected]; E. L. Rom, [email protected]; J. McDonnell, [email protected] 08:00 Location: W103 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 Sautter, L. R.; Sancho, G.; Fuqua, L. M.; Harris, M. S.: SEAGOING AND LABORATORY RESEARCH EXPERIENCES FOR UNDERGRADUATES COUPLED WITH OCEAN OBSERVATORY SEA-TRUTHING AND DATA INTEGRATION 08:15 Willis, Z. S.: NOAA AND IOOS* Rom, E. L.; Elthon, D.: COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: A CRITICAL ROLE IN OCEAN OBSERVATORIES Schofield, O. M.; Glenn, S. M.; McDonnell, J.: EDUCATION AND OUTREACH IN A NETWORK OCEAN WORLD* Golan Duncan, R.; McDonnell, J. D.; Glenn, S. M.: DEVELOPING INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS IN MARINE SCIENCE THAT BRING REAL-TIME DATA INTO THE SCIENCE CLASSROOM: A COLLABORATIVE MODEL FOR DESIGN Osowski, J. V.; McDonnell, J. D.; Glenn, S. M.: ENGAGING OBSERVATORY SCIENTISTS WITH THE PUBLIC AT LIBERTY SCIENCE CENTER Lichtenwalner, C. S.; McDonnell, J. D.; Kohut, J. T.; Glenn, S. M.: TRANSLATING REAL-TIME OCEAN DATA FROM THE RUTGERS COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVATION LAB TO ENGAGE FORMAL AND INFORMAL AUDIENCES McDougall, C. A.; Ibanez, A.; Martin, M.; Casey, K. S.; Steffen, P.: NOAA’S EFFORTS IN SUPPORTING FORMAL AND INFORMAL EDUCATION USE OF STREAMING DATA: CHALLENGES IN ADDRESSING THE NEEDS OF THESE AUDIENCES WITH EVER-CHANGING DATA Mikulak, S. E.; Orrico, C.; Rowe, S.; Hunter, N.: RHYTHMS OF THE SEA: CREATING AN EXHIBIT FOR THE PUBLIC TO INTERACT WITH LOCAL REAL-TIME DATA FROM YAQUINA BAY AT HATFIELD MARINE SCIENCE CENTER, NEWPORT, OR. Hudon, A. L.; Moulton, E. L.; Luther, M. E.; Gilbert, S.; Scudder, J.; Merz, C. R.: THE WATERSHED WATCHERS PROGRAM: A COLLABORATIVE EFFORT TO INTEGRATE OCEAN OBSERVING DATA INTO A K-5 MARINE SCIENCE CURRICULUM Collier, R. W.; Peach, C.; Robigou, V.; Thorrold, A.; Boa, S.: BUILDING EDUCATION AND OUTREACH INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE NSF-OCEAN OBSERVATORIES INITIATIVE Mariano, A. J.; Ryan, E. H.: AN EDUCATIONAL WEBBASED OCEAN CURRENT REFERENCE SITE Snyder, H. D.; Tweedie, M. S.: SATELLITE OCEAN DATA VISUALIZATION AND MODELS FOR CLASSROOM EXPLORATION Simoniello, C.; Thigpen, J.; Spranger, M.; Spence, L.; Bacon, R.; Eslinger, S.; Greganti, K.; Davis, B. C.; Dorton, J.: BUILDING COOS EXTENSION AND EDUCATION PROGRAM CAPACITY: LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE SOUTHEAST ATLANTIC COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM (SEACOOS) PROJECT 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 Ide, K.: LAGRANGIAN DATA ASSIMILATION: METHOD, APPLICATION AND STRATEGY* Zhang, F.: COOPERATIVE KALMAN FILTER FOR OCEAN FEATURE TRACKING USING AUTONOMOUS UNDERWATER VEHICLES Martinez Avellaneda, N.; Stammer, D.: IMPACT OF SAHARAN DUST ON THE CIRCULATION OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC Cheng, W.; Hu, C.; Soto, I. M.; Muller-Karger, F. E.; Hall, L. O.; Goldgof, D. B.: DETECTION OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS FROM SPACE: A METHOD USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND MODERN REMOTE SENSING Nieves, V.; Gille, S. T.; Turiel, A.: SCALE ANALYSIS OF NON-GAUSSIAN PROPERTIES OF ALTIMETERDERIVED VARIABLES Fedele, F.: ROGUE WAVES IN OCEANIC TURBULENCE Shen, C. Y.; Evans, T. E.; Oba, R. M.; Finette, S. I.: THREEDIMENSIONAL MODELING OF INTERNAL SOLITON PROPAGATION IN THE ASIAEX AREA Aretxabaleta, A. L.; McGillicuddy, D. J.; Smith, K. W.; Lynch, D. R.: MODEL SIMULATIONS OF THE BAY OF FUNDY GYRE Robinson, A. R.: ADVANCED SYSTEMS FOR PREDICTING COMPLEX FEATURES OF REGIONAL OCEAN CIRCULATION~ 089: Groundwater Inputs to the Ocean Chair(s): Evgeny A. Kontar, [email protected]; Giovanni Barrocu, [email protected]; Georges L. Weatherley, [email protected] Location: W110 16:00 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Kontar, Y. A.: ESSESSMENT OF GROUNDWATER - SURFACE WATER INTERACTION IN TSUNAMI AFFECTED AREAS ~ Stalker, J. C.; Price, R. M.; Swart, P. K.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL INPUTS OF FRESHWATER AND SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE TO A SUBTROPICAL ESTUARY USING GEOCHEMICAL TRACERS, BISCAYNE BAY, SOUTH FLORIDA * ollivier, p. r.; claude, c.; radakovitch, o.; hamelin, b.: SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER INPUTS TO GULF OF LION (FRANCE) REVEALED BY 226RA AND 228RA ENRICHMENTS.* Hougham, A. L.; Wilson, A. M.: SALT MARSH GROUNDWATER DYNAMICS DELINEATED USING GROUNDWATER TEMPERATURE AS A TRACER Garcia-solsona, E.; Masqué, P.; Garcia-Orellana, J.; Radakovitch, O.; Mayer, A.; Estradé, S.: EVALUATION OF GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE INTO A KARSTIC COVE IN THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEA BY USING RA ISOTOPES (~) 44 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 105: Diurnal Variability in the Surface Ocean and in Air-Sea Interaction 098: Contribution of Data Assimilation to Ocean Modeling Chair(s): Chris Merchant, [email protected]; Carol Anne Clayson, [email protected] Location: W304 G/H 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Location: W204 Kaplan, A.; Arnold, N. P.: OCEAN MODEL ERRORS IN SEA SURFACE HEIGHTS AND A GLOBAL PATTERN OF MESOSCALE VARIABILITY* Terwisscha van Scheltinga, A. D.; Van Leeuwen, P. J.: IMPROVING SEA-ICE-OCEAN DYNAMICS USING A LOCAL SIR FILTER Cosme, E.; Krysta, M.; Brankart, J. M.; Verron, J.; Brasseur, P.: A DATA ASSIMILATION METHOD FOR REANALYSES OF THE OCEAN CIRCULATION: THE SEEK SMOOTHER Kurapov, A. L.; Egbert, G. D.; Allen, J. S.: REPRESENTER ANALYSIS IN THE COASTAL OCEAN Fang, F.; Pain, C. C.; Navon, I. M.; Piggott, M. D.; Gorman, G. J.; Allison, P. A.; Goddard, A. J.: A DUAL-WEIGHTED POD APPROACH FOR 4D-VAR ADAPTIVE MESH OCEAN MODELLING Ngodock, H. E.; Smith, S. R.; Jacobs, G. A.: 4DVAR ASSIMILATION USING THE NAVY COASTAL OCEAN MODEL IN THE MONTEREY BAY 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 102: The Gulf of Maine: Biogeochemical and Ecosystem Dynamics, Land-Water Interface Exchanges, Physical and Biological Coupling, and Human Induced Change 119: Operational Oceanography: Assimilation, Modeling, and Applications in Coastal/Estuarine Ecosystems and Living Marine Resources Chair(s): Cynthia H. Pilskaln, [email protected]; David W. Townsend, [email protected]; James Manning, [email protected] Chair(s): Frank Aikman, [email protected]; Robert Arnone, [email protected]; ;ittorio Brando, [email protected]; Guoqi Han, [email protected]; John Pereira, [email protected]; Woody Turner, [email protected]; Cara Wilson, [email protected] Location: W304 E/F 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Weller, R. A.; Farrar, J. T.: BUOY-BASED OBSERVATIONS OF THE DIURNAL CYCLE IN UPPER-OCEAN AND SURFACE METEOROLOGICAL PROPERTIES Kettle, H. R.; Filipiak, M. K.; Jeffery, C. D.; Merchant, C. J.: THE IMPACT OF DIURNAL WARMING ON THE ATLANTIC AIR-SEA CO2 FLUX Gille, S. T.: DIURNAL SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY FROM SATELLITE COMBINED WITH ARGO Gentemann, C. L.; Minnett, P. J.; Ward, B.: PROFILES OF OCEAN HEATING (POSH): A NEW MODEL OF UPPER OCEAN DIURNAL THERMAL VARIABILITY Edwards, C. R.; Seim, H. E.: NEAR-RESONANT FORCING OF THE COASTAL OCEAN BY SEA BREEZE/LAND BREEZE NEAR THE CRITICAL LATITUDE IN THE GEORGIA BIGHT Roberts, J. B.; Clayson, C. A.: INVESTIGATING THE GEOSPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF DIURNAL WARMING EVENTS USING REMOTE SENSING AND MODELLING Manning, J. P.; McGillicuddy, D. J.; Churchill, J. H.; Pettigrew, N. R.; Incze, L. S.: OBSERVATIONS OF GULF OF MAINE’S COASTAL CURRENT Vandemark, D.; Salisbury, J.; Hunt, C.; Shellito, S.; McGillis, W. R.; Sabine, C. L.: A MULTI-YEAR SURVEY OF SURFACE LAYER CARBON DIOXIDE DYNAMICS IN THE GULF OF MAINE Runge, J. A.; Jones, R. J.; Manning, C. A.: POPULATION DYNAMICS OF CALANUS FINMARCHICUS IN RELATION TO TROPHIC TRANSFER IN THE WESTERN GULF OF MAINE: THE ROLE OF STORAGE LIPIDS Briseño-Avena, C.; Benfield, M. C.; Wiebe, P. H.; Greene, C. H.: FINE- TO BASIN-SCALE DISTRIBUTIONS OF CALANUS FINMARCHICUS AND ITS PREDATORS IN WILKINSON BASIN, GULF OF MAINE DURING DECEMBER 1998 AND 1999 FROM VPR DATA Pendleton, D. E.; Pershing, A. J.; Mayo, C. A.; Brown, M. W.; Kenney, R. D.: RESPONSE OF NORTH ATLANTIC RIGHT WHALES TO REGIONAL-SCALE COPEPOD CONCENTRATIONS IN GULF OF MAINE: CLIMATOLOGICAL AND INTER-ANNUAL TRENDS Pilskaln, C. H.; Anderson, D. M.; Keafer, B. A.; Percy, D.; Brown, J. F.; Norton, K.; Faulkner, C. M.: PARTICLE DYNAMICS AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF THE GULF OF MAINE BENTHIC NEPHELOID LAYER Location: W304 A/B 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 Barber, R. T.; Chai, F.; Chao, Y.; Foley, D.; Sakagami, T.; Chavez, F. P.: RUMORS OF PROGRESS IN THE USE OF OPERATIONAL ECOLOGICAL FORECASTING FOR LIVING OCEAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT. Chavez, F. P.; Chai, F.; Chao, Y.; Foley, D.; Barber, R. T.: BREAKING NEW GROUND: USING REMOTE SENSING AND MODELING IN OPERATIONAL FORECASTING OF FISHERIES* Record, N. R.; Pershing, A. J.; Monger, B.; Pendleton, D. E.; Mayo, C.; Chen, C.: OPERATIONAL FORECASTS OF RIGHT WHALE DISTRIBUTIONS FROM SATELLITE AND OCEANOGRAPHIC DATA USING DYNAMICAL MODELS Friedland, K. D.; Hare, J. A.; Wood, G. B.; Col, L. A.; Buckley, L. J.; Mountain, D. G.; Kane, J.; Brodziak, J.; Lough, R. G.; Pilskaln, C. H.: DOES THE FALL PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM CONTROL RECRUITMENT OF GEORGES BANK HADDOCK, MELANOGRAMMUS AEGLEFINUS, THROUGH PARENTAL CONDITION? Han, G.; Kulka, D. W.; He, M.: DISPERSION OF EGGS, LARVAE AND PELAGIC JUVENILES OF GRAND BANKS WHITE HAKE IN RELATION TO OCEAN CURRENT VARIABILITY Roffer, M. A.; Upton, M. A.; Gawlickowski, G. J.; Westhaver, D. C.; Muller-Kager, F. E.; Mariano, A. J.; Hammond, D. L.: APPLICATION OF INFRARED AND OCEAN COLOR SATELLITE DATA IN PELAGIC FISHERIES ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT IN THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES * represents Invited presentations ( ) 45 Monday Chair(s): Kazuyuki Nakamura, [email protected]; Daisuke Inazu, [email protected]; Peter Jan van Leeuwen, [email protected] ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 17:00 Diaz, G.; Rivero, C.; Goni, G.; Bringas, F.: THE LINK BETWEEN BLUEFIN TUNA AND OCEAN ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS Brodeur, R. D.; Howell, E.; Polovina, J.; Ciannelli, L.; Pearcy, W.; Laurs, M.; Childers, J.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATIONS IN ALBACORE HABITAT IN THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC USING REMOTELY-SENSED ENVIRONMENTAL DATA Armstrong, E. M.; Holt, C. A.; Mantua, N.; Methot, R.; Punt, A.: SATELLITE-DERIVED SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE FRONTAL ANALYSIS FOR FISHERIES MANAGEMENT Foley, D. G.: DELIVERY AND APPLICATION OF OCEANOGRAPHIC SATELLITE DATA TO SUPPORT THE STEWARDSHIP OF LIVING MARINE RESOURCES Stumpf, R. P.; Tomlinson, M. C.; Wynne, T. T.: APPLICATION OF OCEAN COLOR SATELLITE IMAGERY FOR OPERATIONAL NOWCASTING AND FORECASTING OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS* Long, W.; Xu, J.; Lanerolle, L.; Hood, R. R.; Gross, T. F.; Wiggert, J. D.; Murtugudde, R. G.; Brown, C. W.: CHESROMS: OPERATIONAL MODELING OF CHESAPEAKE BAY PHYSICS AND ECOLOGY Aikman, F.; Vincent, M.; Patchen, R.: DEVELOPMENT AND EVOLUTION OF OPERATIONAL FORECAST SYSTEMS FOR THE COASTAL AND ESTUARINE ENVIRONMENT IN NOAA’S NATIONAL OCEAN SERVICE Lazarus, S. M.; Splitt, M. E.; Chiao, S.; Zarillo, G.; Howard, K.; Lamberton, N.; Santos, P.; Sharp, D.; Blottman, P.: A HIGH-RESOLUTION COUPLED REAL-TIME ATMOSPHERE/WAVE FORECAST SYSTEM FOR THE COASTAL ZONE Arnone , R. A.; Casey , B.; Ko, D.; Flynn, P.; Ladner, S. D.; Gould, R. W.; Lee, Z. P.; Hagy, J.; Green, R.; Greene, R.: COUPLING SATELLITE BIO-OPTICS, NUMERICAL MODELS AND OBSERVATIONS TO DEFINE A COASTAL ECOSYSTEM D’Sa, E. J.; Korobkin, M.; Ko, D. S.: ASSESSMENT OF NASA REMOTE SENSING PRODUCTS FOR ASSIMILATION INTO A GULF COAST MONITORING SYSTEM: PRELIMINARY RESULTS Brando, V. E.; Cherukuru, N. R.; Dekker, A. G.; Robson, B. J.; Webster, I. W.; Margvelashvili, N.: COMBINING OCEAN COLOUR SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS WITH COASTAL OCEAN BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS IN THE TROPICAL FITZROY RIVER ESTUARY Hemphill, N.; Sinnen, W.: TRINITY RIVER, CALIFORNIA: EVALUATING EFFECTIVENESS OF MANAGEMENT ACTIONS ON MIGRATORY SALMON USING AN ECOSYSTEM APPROACH Helmuth, B.; Wethey, D. S.; Szathmary, P. L.; Smith, K. A.; Woodin, S. A.; Lakshmi, V.; Hilbish, T. J.: FROM MODIS TO MUSSELS: ECOLOGICAL FORECASTING OF COASTAL ECOSYSTEM RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE Lakshmi, V.; Purvis, C.; Helmuth, B.: SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING OF THE ROCKY INTERTIDAL USING MODIS AND ASTER SENSORS Smith, K. A.; Wethey, D. S.; Helmuth, B.: PATTERNS OF POTENTIAL TEMPERATURE RISK DURING INTERTIDAL EMERGENCE IN DIFFERENT TIDE REGIMES. Guild, L.; Lobitz, B.; Armstrong, R.; Gilbes, F.; Gleason, A.; Goodman, J.; Hochberg, E.; Monaco, M.; Berthold, R.; Kerr, J.: CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEM ASSESSMENT USING NASA AIRBORNE AVIRIS AND DCS IMAGERY Castillo, K. D.; Lima, F. P.: COMPARISON OF SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE DERIVED FROM MODIS TERRA/AQUA AND SUBTIDAL MEASUREMENTS FROM THE INNER LAGOON AND OUTER BARRIER REEFS OF SOUTHERN BELIZE 120: Oceans and Human Health: Identifying and Understanding Ocean Health Benefits and Threats Chair(s): Paul Sandifer, [email protected]; Ed Laws, [email protected]; Stephen Brandt, [email protected]; Sharon Smith, ssmith@ rsmas.miami.edu Location: W205 B/C 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 Sandifer, P. A.; Sotka, C.; Garrison, D.; Fay, V.: FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN OCEANS AND HUMAN HEALTH RESEARCH Symonds, E. M.; Rosario, K.; Breitbart, M.: VIRUSES FOUND IN SEWAGE AND THEIR POTENTIAL TO INDICATE FECAL POLLUTION IN COASTAL WATERS ABDELZAHER, A. M.; WRIGHT, M.; SOLO-GABRIELE, H. M.; Garcia, S.; Armstrong, J.; Deng, Y.; Abdel Fattah, H; Kish, J.; Miller, G.; Elmir, S.; Shih, P.; Newman, X.; Quaye, E.; Sinigalliano, C.; Gidley, M.; Wanless, D.; Scott, T.; Lucasik, G.; Harwood, V.; McQuaig, S.; Bonilla, F.; Bonilla, T.; Palmer, C.; Plano, L.; Scorzetti, G.; Fell, J.: PATHOGEN AND INDICATOR MICROBE LEVELS AT A RECREATIONAL MARINE BEACH Nigro, O. D.; Vithanage, G.; Fujioka, R. S.; Steward, G. F.: WHERE STREAMS COMMINGLE WITH THE SEA: ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS ON PATHOGENIC VIBRIOS IN COASTAL WATERS Strom, M. S.; Landis, E. D.; Paranjpye, R. N.; Sokurenko, E. V.; Moseley, S. L.; Chattopadhyay, S.: EMERGING PATHOGENESIS OF VIBRIO PARAHAEMOLYTICUS Bogomolni, A.; Dennett, M. R.; Gast, R. J.; Blachly, C. R.; Ellis, J. C.; Pokras, M. A.; Touhey, K.; Tseng, F.; Moore, M.: ZOONOTIC PATHOGENS IN MARINE VERTEBRATES OF THE COASTAL NORTHEAST U.S. Rose, J. M.; Bogomolni, A.; Gast, R. J.; Ellis, J. C.; Pokras, M. A.; Moore, M.: PATTERNS OF ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE IN NORTHEASTERN COASTAL VERTEBRATES Wang, G. Y.; Gao, Z.; Kono, S.: IMPLICATIONS OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES ASSOCIATED WITH ALIEN MARINE SPONGES FOR HAWAII REEF ECOSYSTEMS AND HUMAN HEALTH Incardona, J. P.: FISH EMBRYOS AS SENTINELS FOR UNEXPECTED HUMAN HEALTH THREATS Sanger, D. M.; DiDonato, G. T.; Holland, A. F.: TIDAL CREEK ECOSYSTEMS: SENTINEL HABITATS FOR ASSESSING THE CONSEQUENCES OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT ON SOUTHEASTERN COASTS Moore, S. K.; Feifel, K. M.; Mantua, N. J.; Trainer, V. L.; Hickey, B. M.; Cox, A. M.: LARGE-SCALE CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND PARALYTIC SHELLFISH TOXINS IN PUGET SOUND SHELLFISH ON INTERANNUAL TO INTERDECADAL TIMESCALES White, D. J.; Parsons, M. L.; Moeller, P. D.; Bienfang, P.; DeFelice, S. V.; Huncik, K.: CIGUATOXIN CHARACTERIZATION IN HAWAIIAN ARCHIPELAGO FISHES: TOXICITY IDENTIFIED BY N2A BIOASSAY Bienfang, P.; Moeller, P.; DeFelice, S.; Hemscheidt, T.; Huncik, K.; White, D.: CIGUATERA: CHARACTERIZATION OF A NEW NEUROTOXIN IN HAWAIIAN FISHES (~) 46 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 14:15 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Cheung, I. S.; Silver, M. W.: DOMOIC ACID TOXICITY IN THE HEPATOPANCREAS OF “ROCK CRABS” (CANCER ANTENNARIUS AND CANCER PRODUCTUS) AND POTENTIAL TOXICITY TO HUMANS Lefebvre, K. A.; Tilton, S.; Bammler, T.; Beyer, R.; Janssen, P.; Farin, F.; Srinouanprachanh, S.; Gallagher, E.: EFFECTS OF SUB-ACUTE DOMOIC ACID EXPOSURE ON GENE EXPRESSION IN THE VERTEBRATE CNS: IMPLICATIONS FOR HUMAN HEALTH Reich, A. R.; Backer, L. C.; Kirkpatrick, B.; Fleming, L. E.; Nierenberg, K.; Kirkpatrick, G.; Cheng, Y. S.; Benson, J.; Abraham, W.; Baden, D.: THE HUMAN HEALTH EFFECTS OF MARINE TOXINS: CURRENT AEROSOLIZED FLORIDA RED TIDE RESEARCH Dyble, J.; Fahnenstiel, G. L.; Vanderploeg, H. A.; Litaker, R. W.: ASSESSING THE ROLE OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS AND GENETIC COMPOSITION ON TOXIN PRODUCTION IN LAKE ERIE CYANOBACTERIAL HAB POPULATIONS Moeller, P. D.; Beauchesne, K.; HSIA, M.; Schock, T.; Huncik, K.: RAGS TO RICHES, TOXINS TO PHARMACEUTICALS. SEAMART Olascoaga, M. J.; Beron-Vera, F. J.; Brand, L. E.; Kocak, H.: AN APPLICATION OF LAGRANGIAN COHERENT STRUCTURES TO HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS McGillicuddy, D. J.; Anderson, D. M.; He, R.; Keafer, B. A.: HINDCASTING THE HISTORIC 2005 NEW ENGLAND RED TIDE: FORCING MECHANISMS AND FUTURE IMPLICATIONS Beletsky, D.; Schwab, D. J.; McCormick, M. J.: EVALUATION OF A 3D CIRCULATION MODEL TO PREDICT BACTERIAL CONTAMINATION AT GREAT LAKES BEACHES Goodwin, K. D.: EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES FOR PUBLIC HEALTH APPLICATIONS OF COASTAL OBSERVING SYSTEMS Gustavo A. Carvalho, G.; Peter J. Minnett, P.; Warner Baringer , W.; Viva Banzon, V.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF THREE DISTINCT SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR ALGORITHMS TO IDENTIFY HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS OFF THE WEST FLORIDA COAST Mueller-Spitz, S. R.; McLellan, S. L.: CHARACTERIZING POLLUTION PLUME DYNAMICS USING CLOSTRIDIUM PERFRINGENS DISTRIBUTION AND MOLECULAR DIVERSITY. 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 142: Nutrient Cycling at the Sediment-water Interface Chair(s): Loreto De Brabandere, [email protected]; Thomas K. Frazer, [email protected]; Donald C. Behringer, [email protected]; Thomas J. Saunders, [email protected] Location: W304 E/F 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 134: Toward Integrating Source-to-Sink Field Studies of Sediment Dispersal Systems 14:30 Chair(s): Clark Alexander, [email protected]; Andre Droxler, [email protected]; Alan Orpin, [email protected]; John Swenson, [email protected] Location: W202 13:30 13:45 14:00 Wadman, H. M.; McNinch, J. E.: STRUCTURAL CONTROL ON CONTINENTAL SHELF SEDIMENT DYNAMICS, NORTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND Leithold, E. L.; Blair, N. E.; Childress, L. B.; Brulet, B.; Thompson, C.: SIGNALS OF LANDSCAPE DESTABILIZATION ON CONTINENTAL MARGINS—COMPARISONS OF ORGANIC GEOCHEMICAL RECORDS FROM THE EEL AND WAIPAOA SHELVES Rose, L. E.; Kuehl, S. A.: VARIABILITY OF TERRESTRIAL INPUTS TO THE WAIPAOA CONTINENTAL SHELF: EVIDENCE FROM STABLE CARBON ISOTOPES AND C/N OVER RECENT AND HOLOCENE TIME SCALES Wolinsky, M. A.; Swenson, J. B.: INFLUENCE OF FLUVIAL AND MARINE ENERGY ON LAND-SEA SEDIMENT PARTITIONING: INSIGHTS FROM THE WAIPAOA SEDIMENTARY SYSTEM, NEW ZEALAND Droxler, A. W.; Francis, J.; Jorry, S.; Carson, B.; Dickens, J.; Beaufort, L.: SWITCH IN CARBONATE-SILICICLASTIC SEDIMENT DISPERSAL AND ACCUMULATION DURING THE LAST GLACIAL SEA LEVEL CYCLE, GULF OF PAPUA SHELF EDGE AND ADJACENT BASINS 14:45 Jaeger, J. M.; Rosen, G. P.; Kramer, B.; Stoner, J.; Cowan, E. A.; Channell, J.: CROSS-MARGIN SIGNAL TRANSFER IN A GLACIAL SOURCE-TO-SINK SEDIMENTARY SYSTEM; BERING GLACIER, SOUTHERN ALASKA Drexler, T. M.; Nittrouer, C. A.; Ogston, A. S.; Mullenbach, B. L.; DeGeest, A. L.: OFF-SHELF EXPORT FROM THE GULF OF LIONS CONTINENTAL SHELF: ROLES OF LACAZEDUTHIERS AND CAP DE CREUS CANYONS IN THE GULF OF LIONS SEDIMENT DISPERSAL SYSTEM Pate, R. D.; Goodbred, S. L.; Youngs, P.; Kuehl, S. A.: MULTIPLE PROXY RECORDS OF DELTA EVOLUTION AND DISPERSAL SYSTEM BEHAVIOR: DEEP BOREHOLE EVIDENCE FROM THE BENGAL BASIN, BANGLADESH 15:00 15:15 Jarvis, B. S.; Schwartz, M. C.: EFFECTS OF ORGANIC CARBON LOADING ON COUPLED NITRIFICATION/ DENITRIFICATION IN ESTUARINE SEDIMENTS Serpa, D.; Falcao, M.; Duarte, P.; Fonseca, C.; Vale, C.: EVALUATION OF AMMONIUM AND PHOSPHATE RELEASE FROM INTERTIDAL AND SUBTIDAL SEDIMENTS OF A SHALLOW COASTAL LAGOON (RIA FORMOSA - PORTUGAL) Simon, N. S.; Lynch, D. D.: TOTAL AND EXTRACTED PHOSPHORUS IN SEDIMENT CORES COLLECTED BEFORE AND AFTER ONSET OF AN APHANIZOMENON FLOS AQUAE BLOOM IN UPPER KLAMATH LAKE, OR, USA Holtappels, M.; Bruechert, V.; Schlueter, M.; Kuypers, M.; Lavik, G.: A NON-INVASIVE METHOD TO DETERMINE NUTRIENT FLUXES ACROSS THE BENTHIC BOUNDARY LAYER Saunders, T. J.; Frazer, T. K.; De Brabandere, L. C.; Saunders, L. V.; Collins, M. E.: THE SIMULTANEOUS QUANTIFICATION OF SHORT-TERM BENTHIC NITRATE FLUXES AND DIFFUSE GROUNDWATER SEEPAGE Malkin, E. M.; Hollander, D. J.; Peebles, E. B.: PARALLEL NITROGEN CYCLES IN SOUTHWEST FLORIDA’S TIDAL RIVERS: SELECTIVE REMINERALIZATION OF ALGAL MATERIAL SUPPORTS FISH BIOMASS Spivak, A. C.; Canuel, E. A.; Duffy, J. E.; Richardson, J. P.: RESOURCE AVAILABILITY, BIODIVERSITY, AND TROPHIC STRUCTURE AFFECT NUTRIENT DYNAMICS IN AN EXPERIMENTAL SEAGRASS ECOSYSTEM Smith, C. S.; Haese, R. R.; Murray, E. J.: SEDIMENT WATER INTERACTIONS IN THE SWAN RIVER ESTUARY (AUSTRALIA), 2000-2006 * represents Invited presentations ( ) 47 Monday 14:30 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 154: Forecast, Predictability and Data Assimilation 10:00 Chair(s): Gregg Jacobs, [email protected]; Emanuel Coelho, [email protected]; Igor Shulman, [email protected]; Germana Peggion, [email protected] 10:15 Location: W304 G/H 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Li, Z.; Cho, Y.; Farrara, J. D.; McWilliams, J. C.; Ide, K.: A THREE-DIMENSIONAL VARIATIONAL DATA ASSIMILATION SCHEME IN SUPPORT OF COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS KRYSTA, M.; BLAYO, E.; COSME, E.; ROBERT, C.; VERRON, J.; VIDARD, A.: HYBRIDISATION OF DATA ASSIMILATION METHODS FOR APPLICATIONS IN OCEANOGRAPHY Toner, M. S.: VALIDATING THE INTERNAL TIDES OF OPERATIONAL OCEAN MODELS USING SEQUENTIAL PROFILE DATA Miyazawa, Y.; Kagimoto, T.; Komatsu, K.; Setou, T.; Zhang, R. C.: MESO-SCALE VARIATIONS REPRODUCED BY THE JCOPE2 REANALYSIS Hogan, P. J.; Smedstad, O. M.; Cummings, J. A.; Wallcraft, A. J.: RESULTS FROM A REAL-TIME NOWCAST/ FORECAST SYSTEM FOR THE GULF OF MEXICO Hoffman, R. N.; Blumberg, A. F.; Ponte, R. M.; Kostelich, E. J.; Szunyogh, I.; Vinogradov, S.; Henderson, J. M.: DESIGN AND INITIAL TESTS OF A COASTAL OCEAN DATA ASSIMILATION SYSTEM Broquet, G. H.; Edwards, C. A.; Moore, A. M.: 4D VARIATIONAL DATA ASSIMILATION IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM Townsend, T. L.; Rowley, C. D.; Barron, C. N.; Smedstad, L. F.; Helber, R. W.: IMPACT OF OPERATIONAL ASSIMILATION OF IN SITU TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY DATA ON GLOBAL OCEAN FORECASTS Wang, J.; Watanabe, E.; Hasumi, T.: ARCTIC OSCILLATION AND DIPOLE ANOMALY AND THEIR CONTRIBUTION TO SEA ICE EXPORT FROM THE ARCTIC IN THE 20TH CENTURY: OBSERVATION AND MODELING Maslowski, W.; Clement Kinney, J. L.; Whelan, J.; Miller, A.: ACCELERATED ARCTIC WARMING - A WORKABLE INTERPRETATION AND FUTURE PROJECTION* 165: Advances in Coastal Morphodynamics: From Estuaries and Beaches to Deltas and Shelves Chair(s): Art Trembanis, [email protected]; Carl Friedrichs, [email protected]; Andrew Short, [email protected]; Jeff List, [email protected] Location: W202 16:00 Trembanis, A. C.; Friedrichs, C. T.; Short, A. D.; List, J. H.: ADVANCES IN COASTAL MORPHODYNAMICS: FROM ESTUARIES AND BEACHES TO DELTAS AND SHELVES ~ 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Wright, L. D.; Bogden, P.; Bintz, J.: A NEW PARADIGM FOR STUDYING LARGE-SCALE COASTAL MORPHODYNAMIC PROCESSES: THE DISTRIBUTED COASTAL LABORATORY ten Haaf, M. E.; Hoekstra, P.; van Dongeren, A.; van Ormondt, M.; Oost, A. P.: WASHOVER DEVELOPMENT ON MESOTIDAL BARRIER ISLANDS Sallenger, A. H.; Wright, C. W.; Howd, P.: CONTINUED BARRIER ISLAND DETERIORATION FOLLOWING HURRICANE KATRINA Ruggiero, P.; Kaminsky, G.; Gelfenbaum, G.: MORPHODYNAMICS OF HIGH-ENERGY DISSIPATIVE BEACHES: A DECADE OF OBSERVATIONS IN THE US PACIFIC NORTHWEST 179: Marine Predator Hot Spots 157: Arctic Sea Ice Variability Interacted with Atmospheric and Ocean Circulation Patterns Chair(s): Steven Bograd, [email protected]; Barbara Block, [email protected]; Daniel Costa, [email protected]; Daniel Palacios, [email protected] Chair(s): Jia Wang, [email protected]; Bill Hibler, [email protected] Location: W101 Location: W110 08:00 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 Shimada, K.; Kamoshida, T.; Inoue, J.; Itoh, M.; Hori, M.; Carmack, E.; McLaughlin, F.; Zimmermann, S.; Proshutinsky, A.: CATASTROPHIC SEA ICE REDUCTION IN 2007 CAUSED BY FURTHER ACTIVATION OF SEA ICE MOTION AND OCEAN CIRCULATION IN THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN* Peterson, I. K.: BEAUFORT SEA WIND FORCING OF THE FLOW THROUGH THE NORTHWEST PASSAGE Yang, J.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF EKMAN PUMPING AND ITS IMPACT ON THE ARCTIC OCEAN Lukovich, J. V.; Barber , D. G.: SEA-ICE RESPONSE TO STRATOSPHERE-SURFACE COUPLING IN THE BEAUFORT SEA Proshutinsky, A.; Krishfield, R.; Morison, J.; Peralta-Ferriz, C.: SEA SURFACE HEIGHT VARIABILITY IN THE BEAUFORT GYRE* Watanabe Eiji, E.; Hasumi Hiroyasu, H.: PACIFIC WATER TRANSPORT IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN SIMULATED BY AN EDDY-RESOLVING COUPLED SEA ICE-OCEAN MODEL Hu, H.; Wang, J.: MODELING SEA ICE AND OCEAN CIRCULATIONS IN THE BERING SEA Smedsrud, L. H.: OCEANIC HEAT TRANSPORT AND ARCTIC SEA ICE COVER 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 Lawson, G. L.; Nogueira, J.; Walli, A.; Castleton, M.; Block, B. A.: HOTSPOTS IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF NORTHERN BLUEFIN TUNA IN THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC OCEANS Richardson, D. E.; Llopiz, J. K.; Cowen, R. K.; Leaman, K. D.; Vertes, P. S.; Muller-Karger, F. E.: SAILFISH (ISTIOPHORUS PLATYPTERUS) SPAWNING AND LARVAL ENVIRONMENT IN A FLORIDA CURRENT FRONTAL EDDY: RESULTS FROM A LAGRANGIAN STUDY Smith, S. C.; Neilson, J. D.; Porter, J. M.; Golet, W. J.; Logan, J. M.; Van Guelpen, L.: USE OF POP-UP SATELLITE TAGS TO REFINE KNOWLEDGE OF SWORDFISH FEEDING ECOLOGY ON GEORGES BANK, AN AREA OF FISHERY AND RESOURCE CONCENTRATION. Shillinger, G. L.; Palacios, D. M.; Bailey, H.; Bograd, S. J.; Swithenbank, A. L.; Spotila, J. R.; Wallace, B. P.; Paladino, F. V.; Eckert, S. A.; Block, B. A.: HOT SPOTS FOR EASTERN PACIFIC LEATHERBACK SEA TURTLES (DERMOCHELYS CORIACEA) Palacios, D. M.; Shaffer, S. A.; Tremblay, Y.; Kappes, M. A.; Foley, D. G.; Bograd, S. J.; Costa, D. P.: A TALE OF TWO HOT SPOTS: AT-SEA SEGREGATION IN HAWAIIAN ALBATROSSES (~) 48 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 09:15 09:45 10:00 10:15 182: Variability and Trends in Oceanic Oxygen: From a Tracer of Biological Production to a Bellwether of Climate Change Costa, D. P.; Crocker, D. E.; Fedak, M. E.; Goebel, M. E.; McDonald, B.; Huckstadt, L.; Burns, J. M.: HABITAT SELECTION AND COMMON HOT SPOTS OF 3 SEAL SPECIES IN THE WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA Sarkar, N.; Bograd, S. J.; Costa, D. P.; Simmons, S. E.; Tremblay, Y.; Robinson, P.; Hassrick, J.: THE THERMAL STRUCTURE OF EDDIES IN THE GULF OF ALASKA AND NORTHERN ELEPHANT SEAL BEHAVIOR Baumgartner, M. F.; Wenzel, F.: SPRINGTIME FORAGING ECOLOGY OF NORTH ATLANTIC RIGHT WHALES Ballance, L. T.; Redfern, J. V.; Pitman, R. L.; Gerrodette, T.: HOTSPOTS: DENSITY AND SPECIES RICHNESS FOR CETACEANS IN THE OCEANIC EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC Tremblay, Y.; Shaffer, S. A.; Palacios, D. M.; Bograd, S. J.; Eckert, S. A.; Mate, B. R.; Dewar, H.; Block, B. A.; Costa, D. P.: MULTI-SPECIES PATTERNS OF HABITAT UTILIZATION AND SPECIES DIVERSITY IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT AS REVEALED BY THE TAGGING OF PACIFIC PELAGICS (TOPP) PROGRAM Chair(s): Nicolas Gruber, [email protected]; Arne Körtzinger, [email protected]; Steven Riser, [email protected] Location: W109 B 13:30 14:00 14:15 14:30 180: Long-term Ecological Research in the Deep Sea Chair(s): Henry A. Ruhl, [email protected]; David M. Bailey, [email protected] 14:45 Location: W101 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Billett, D. S.; Lampitt, R. S.; Bett, B. J.; Gooday, A. J.; Kalogeropoulou, V.; Martinez Arbizu, P.; Paterson, G. L.; Reid, W.; Salter, I.; Soto, E. H.; Vanreusel, A.; Wolff, G. A.: LONG-TERM CHANGE IN ORGANIC MATTER FLUX AND DEEP-SEA COMMUNITIES AT THE PORCUPINE ABYSSAL PLAIN (NE ATLANTIC) SUSTAINED OBSERVATORY- THE ‘AMPERIMA’ EVENT.* Thistle, D.; Eckman, J. E.: LARGE, MOTILE EPIFAUNA INTERACT STRONGLY WITH HARPACTICOID COPEPODS AND POLYCHAETES AT A BATHYAL SITE Smith, K. L.; Kaufmann, R. S.; Ruhl, H. A.; Kahru, M.: DETRITAL AGGREGATE COVERAGE ON THE DEEPSEA FLOOR IN THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC OVER A 17-YEAR PERIOD Kahn, A. S.; Smith, K. L.; Ruhl, H. A.: TEMPORAL CHANGES IN THE POPULATION STRUCTURE AND REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGIES OF TWO BENTHIC SPONGES IN THE ABYSSAL NORTHEAST PACIFIC Vardaro, M. F.; Smith, Jr., K. L.: CLIMATE VARIATION AND BIOTURBATION ON THE SEA FLOOR IN THE ABYSSAL NORTH PACIFIC Drazen, J. C.; Popp, B. N.; Smith, K. L.: THE IMPORTANCE OF CARRION TO ABYSSAL FISHES: STOMACH CONTENT AND STABLE ISOTOPE EVIDENCE Sherman, A. D.; McGill, P. R.; Hobson, B. W.; Henthorn, R. G.; Chase, A. C.; Smith, K. L.: ROVER: A MOBILE PLATFORM FOR LONG-TERM DEEP OCEAN ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH Bagley, P. M.; Smith, K. L.; Bett, B. J.; Priede, I. G.; Rowe, G. T.; Ruhl, H. A.; Bailey, D. M.; Clarke, J.; Walls, A.: DEEP OCEAN ENVIRONMENTAL LONG TERM OBSERVATORY SYSTEM (DELOS): INITIATION OF A 25 YEAR STUDY OF DEEP-OCEAN ECOLOGY NEAR OFFSHORE HYDROCARBON OPERATIONS 15:00 15:15 Emerson, S. R.: OXYGEN CONCENTRATION VARIABILITY: A TRACER OF DIURNAL TO DECADALSCALE MARINE BIOLOGICAL AND PHYSICAL PROCESSES ~ Martz, T. R.; Johnson, K. S.; Riser, S. C.: OCEAN METABOLISM OBSERVED WITH OXYGEN SENSORS ON PROFILING FLOATS IN THE PACIFIC* Kaiser, J.; Gist, N.; Barnett, B.; Bender, M. L.; Robinson, C.: THE METABOLIC BALANCE OF THE ATLANTIC OCEAN FROM BOTTLE INCUBATIONS AND DISSOLVED OXYGEN/ARGON RATIO MEASUREMENTS Stramma, L.; Johnson, G. C.; Firing, E.; Brandt, P.: SUPPLY PATHS OF AND TIME VARIATIONS IN THE OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONES OF THE EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC AND ATLANTIC OCEANS Gilbert, D.: GLOBAL OXYGEN TRENDS IN THE COASTAL OCEAN AND OPEN OCEAN Deutsch, C.; Ito, T.: THE POWER SPECTRUM AND VERTICAL STRUCTURE OF THERMOCLINE OXYGEN VARIABILITY* Frölicher, T. L.; Joos, F.; Plattner, G. K.; Steinacher, M.: VARIABILITY AND TRENDS IN OCEANIC OXYGEN: DETECTION AND ATTRIBUTION USING A COUPLED CARBON CYCLE - CLIMATE MODEL ENSEMBLE 183: Interannual Trends in Phytoplankton Dynamics in Coastal Ecosystems Chair(s): Thomas C. Malone, [email protected]; Paul M. DiGiacomo, [email protected]; Franciscus Colijn, [email protected]; Liana Talaue-McManus, lmcmanus@rsmas. miami.edu Location: W105 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 Hunt, C. D.; Borkman, D. G.; Lbby, S.; Turner, J. T.; Mickelson, M. L.: PHYTOPLANKTON TRENDS IN MASSACHUSETTS BAY - 1992-2007 Harding, Jr., L. W.; Miller, W. D.; Adolf, J. E.: LONG-TERM TRENDS OF PHYTOPLANKTON IN CHESAPEAKE BAY FROM IN-SITU AND REMOTE OBSERVATIONS Gallegos, C. L.: LONG-TERM PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS IN THE RHODE RIVER, MARYLAND (USA) Parsons, M. L.; Dortch, Q.; Morrison, W.; Rabalais, N. N.; Turner, R. E.; Maier, A.: PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS IN THE PLUME OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER: RESPONSES TO NITROGEN ENRICHMENT, SILICA LIMITATION, AND PHOSPHORUS LIMITATION. Briceno, H. O.; Boyer, J. N.: LONG-TERM MONITORING OF NUTRIENT AND CHLOROPHYLL-A RELATIONSHIPS IN FLORIDA BAY Natacha GUISELIN, N.; Alain LEFEBVRE, A.; Luis Felipe ARTIGAS, L. F.; Frédérique BARBET, F.; Elsa BRETON, E.; Jean-Michel BRYLINSKI, J. M.: LONG-TERM (1992-2007) CHANGES IN DIATOM AND PHAEOCYSTIS GLOBOSA SPRING BLOOM DYNAMICS IN COASTAL WATERS OF THE EASTERN ENGLISH CHANNEL. * represents Invited presentations ( ) 49 Monday 09:30 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting McQuatters-Gollop, A.; Raitsos, D. E.; Edwards, M.; Pradhan, Y.; Mee, L. D.; Lavender, S. J.; Attrill, M. J.: CLIMATE EXACERBATES EUTROPHICATION IN THE NORTH SEA Goes, J. I.; Gomes, H. R.; Thoppil, P. G.; Matondkar, S. G.; AlAzri, A. R.; Dwivedi, R. M.: INTERANNUAL TRENDS IN PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS IN THE ARABIAN SEA LINKED TO EURASIAN WARMING Messié, M.; Calienes, R.; Ledesma, J.; Barber, R. T.; Pennington, J. T.; Chavez, F. P.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY AND LONG TERM TRENDS IN EASTERN PACIFIC UPWELLING ECOSYSTEMS O’Higgins, L. A.; Peterson, W. T.: CLIMATOLOGICALLY DRIVEN VARIATION IN PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AT A COASTAL STATION IN THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 192: Human Impact in Large Connected Ecosystems: Watershed-Coastal Coupling 15:00 Chair(s): Christopher J. Madden, [email protected]; David Rudnick, [email protected]; Fred Sklar, [email protected] Location: W102 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 Bernard, C.; Heinze, C.; Dürr, H.: COUPLING RIVERINE FLUXES OF NUTRIENTS TO A GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL OCEAN GENERAL CIRCULATION MODEL. Syvitski, J. P.; Vorosmarty, C.: DELTAS AT RISK Giosan, L.: DANUBE DELTA: A BIOSPHERE RESERVE AT RISK Russell, M. J.; Weller, D. E.; Jordan, T. E.: LANDSCAPE INDICATORS OF WATERSHED IMPAIRMENT NUTRIENTS Turner, R. E.; Darby, F.: CONSEQUENCES OF EUTROPHICATION TO SALT MARSH BELOWGROUND BIOMASS Sklar, F. H.; Barnes, J.; Cadavid, L.: POTENTIAL WATER BALANCE IMPACTS OF GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE EXTANT EVERGLADES IN COMPARISON TO A SIMULATED PRE-DRAINAGE EVERGLADES Saunders, C. J.; Rudnick, D. T.; Sklar, F. H.; Coronado, C.; Newman, S.; Willard, D. A.; Holmes, C. W.: EVERGLADES ACCRETION: SORTING OUT THE REGIONAL IMPORTANCE OF HYDROLOGIC, NUTRIENT, AND SEA-LEVEL DRIVERS Price, R. M.; Stalker, J. C.; Jolicoeur, J. L.; Smith III, T. J.; Anderson, G. H.; Engel, V.; Rudnick, D. T.; Newman, J. M.: GROUNDWATER INPUTS OF NUTRIENTS TO COASTAL ZONES OF SOUTH FLORIDA Koch, M. S.; Madden, C. J.; Nielsen, O. I.; Jensen, H. S.; Rosch, K.; Kletou, D.; Schopmeyer, S.: EFFECTS OF EFFICIENT NUTRIENT RECYCLING ON THE STABILITY OF THE FLORIDA BAY ECOSYSTEM Madden, C. J.: ECOSYSTEM-BASED MANAGEMENT OF THE EVERGLADES-FLORIDA BAY ECOSYSTEMS USING INTERLINKED SIMULATION MODELS 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 198: Impacts and Interactions of Soft-bottom Benthic Systems Chair(s): Doug Miller, [email protected] Location: W101 196: Impacts of Everglades Restoration on the South Florida Coastal Marine Environment 16:00 16:15 Chair(s): Erik Stabeneau, [email protected]; Edward Kearns Location: W102 13:30 Rudnick, D. T.; Saunders, C. J.; Sklar, F. H.; Coronado, C.; Halley, R. B.: EVERGLADES - FLORIDA BAY RESPONSES TO HYDROLOGIC RESTORATION AND SEA LEVEL RISE: CONSIDERATIONS OF WETLAND SOIL AND MUD BANK DYNAMICS Keller, B. D.: EVERGLADES RESTORATION AND THE FLORIDA KEYS NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARY: MONITORING FOR POSSIBLE ECOSYSTEM EFFECTS KANG, H.; Kourafalou, V. H.; Peng, G.; Paris, C.: INTERDISCIPLINARY MODELING SUPPORT TO CERP WITH THE COASTAL SOUTH FLORIDA HYCOM SYSTEM Kearns, E. J.; Perry, W. B.; Renshaw, A.: SALINITY-BASED ECOLOGICAL AND HYDROLOGIC GOALS FOR BISCAYNE AND FLORIDA BAYS Marshall, F. E.; Smith, D. T.; Buckingham, C.: THE USE OF STATISTICAL MODELS WITH PALEOSALINITY DATA TO SIMULATE THE PRE-DRAINAGE HYDROLOGY IN THE GREATER EVERGLADES ECOSYSTEM Johns, E. M.; Kelble, C. R.; Lee, T. N.; Melo, N.; Smith, R. H.; Ortner, P. B.: SALINITY VARIABILITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA COASTAL WATERS ON TIME SCALES FROM EPISODIC TO MULTIDECADAL: HOW MIGHT THE EVERGLADES RESTORATION CHANGE THESE PATTERNS? Jolicoeur, J. L.; Price, R. M.; Savabi, R. M.: ADSOPTION/ DESORPTION OF PHOSPHORUS ON LIMESTONE FROM THE BISCAYNE AQUIFER UNDER FRESHWATER AND SEAWATER CONDITIONS Kelble, C. R.; Ortner, P. B.; Hitchcock, G. L.; Dagg, M. J.; Johns, E. M.: SALINITY AND MESO-ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN FLORIDA BAY Wang, J. D.; Luo, J.; Kearns, E. J.: ASSESSING WETLANDS RESTORATION IMPACTS ON NEARSHORE SALINITIES IN BISCAYNE BAY, FLORIDA. Stabenau, E. R.; Kotun, K.: MANAGEMENT OF THE EXPANDING EVERGLADES AND FLORIDA BAY HYDROLOGIC MONITORING NETWORK Bellmund, S. A.: HISTORIC ALTERATIONS AND CURRENT RESTORATION FOR BISCAYNE BAY Tunberg, B. G.; Jones, M. S.; Reed, S. A.; Stephens, M. C.: ECOLOGICAL DISTURBANCES IN THE ST. LUCIE ESTUARY AND THE SOUTHERN INDIAN RIVER LAGOON, EASTERN FLORIDA, ELUCIDATED THROUGH MACROBENTHIC MONITORING Volety, A. K.; Haynes, L.; Booth, A. C.; Doering, P. H.; Sime, P.; Goodman, P. K.; Tolley, S. G.; Savarese, M.: ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT AND COMPREHENSIVE EVERGLADES RESTORATION PLAN: UTILIZING SHELLFISH RESPONSES IN SETTING WATER QUAILTY TARGETS IN SW FLORIDA ESTUARIES 16:30 Gaiser, E. E.: GRADIENTS OF ANTHROPOGENIC IMPACT ON PERIPHYTON ABUNDANCE AND COMPOSITION IN THE FLORIDA COASTAL EVERGLADES Woodin, S. A.; Wethey, D. S.: PERCEPTION OF PRESSURE PULSES: PATCHES, POROSITY AND PEREGRINATION* Feller, R. J.: PATCHINESS = SAMPLING ERROR FROM NON-VERTICAL CORE TUBES ? Snelgrove , P. V.; Tunnicliffe, V.: SLENDER SOLE AS BENTHIC ECOSYSTEM ENGINEERS IN SAANICH INLET, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA (~) 50 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:45 17:15 Smith, T. B.; Schaffner, L. C.: RESPONSES OF BENTHIC MACROFAUNA TO ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS: IS THERE A CHARACTERISTIC STRESSOR RESPONSE? Reidenbach, M. A.; Limm, M.; Stacey, M. T.: THE INFLUENCE OF BOTTOM TOPOGRAPHY ON BOUNDARY LAYER MIXING AND NUTRIENT TRANSPORT ACROSS THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE. Li, Y.; Wang, H. V.; Sisson, G. M.; Shen, J.: EFFECT OF BENTHIC MICROALGAE ON NUTRIENT BUDGET OF A SHALLOW WATER SYSTEM: A NUMERICAL MODELING STUDY 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 200: Committee’s Choice 15:00 Chair(s): Jon Sharp, [email protected] Location: W110 13:30 13:45 15:15 Bachraty, B. C.: A MODEL FOR DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENT FAUNA BIOGEOGRAPHIC DISPERSAL Quay, P. D.; Peacock, C.; Bjorkman, K.; Karl, D.: RATES OF PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE OCEAN: A COMPARISON OF TRADITIONAL IN-VITRO AND NEWER IN-SITU METHODS Dutkiewicz, S.; Follows, M. J.; Bragg, J. G.: USING RESOURCE COMPETITION THEORY TO UNDERSTAND THE DISTRIBUTION OF MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON Kolasa, K.; Craw, V.; Palandro, D.; Sargent, F.: DIGITAL SEGRASS MAPPING IMAGERY REVEALS KARST FEATURES AND NATURAL REEFS OF THE SPRINGS COAST REGION OF FLORIDA English, C. A.: SCIENCE (MIS)COMMUNICATION IN A POLICY WORLD – WHY BOTHER? Allison, L. C.; Johnson, H. L.; Marshall, D. P.: ADJUSTMENT IN THE ANTARCTIC CIRCUMPOLAR CURRENT AND THE GLOBAL PYCNOCLINE Cotner, J. B.; Cory, R. M.; McNeill, K.; Amado, A. M.; Edhlund, B.: REACTIVE OXYGEN EFFECTS ON ON DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AND MICROBES Keller, B. D.: EVERGLADES RESTORATION AND THE FLORIDA KEYS NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARY: MONITORING FOR POSSIBLE ECOSYSTEM EFFECTS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 51 Monday 17:00 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Monday Monday Posters 306. 006: Watersheds to the Global Ocean: Spaceborne Measurements of Water Surfaces and Modeling Flows 307. Chair(s): Doug Alsdorf, [email protected]; Lee-Lueng Fu, [email protected]; Eric Lindstrom, [email protected]; Ernesto Rodriguez, [email protected] 308. Location: Poster Hall 1381. 1382. 1383. 1384. 1385. 1386. 1387. 1388. 1389. 1390. 1391. 1392. 309. Scharffenberg, Martin, M. G.; Stammer, Detlef, D.: ANNUAL VARIATIONS OF GEOSTROPHIC CURRENTS AND EDDY KINETIC ENERGY INFERRED FROM TOPEX/ POSEIDON-JASON-1 TANDEM MISSION DATA Gruenler, S.; Romeiser, R.; Stammer, D.: ESTIMATES OF RIVER DISCHARGE BASED ON REMOTELY SENSED SURFACE VELOCITIES AND WATER LEVELS Hamski, J. P.; Azad Hossain, A. K.; Hasan, K.; Alsdorf, D. E.; Hossain, F.; Pavelsky, T.; Khan, A. S.; Hoque, A. Z.: ESTIMATION OF HYDRAULIC PARAMETERS AND DISCHARGE OF THE GANGES AND BRAHMAPUTRA RIVERS FROM SHUTTLE RADAR TOPOGRAPHY MISSION DIGITAL ELEVATION MODELS Hausman, J. K.; Zlotnicki, V.: SEA STATE BIAS IN SATELLITE RADAR ALTIMETRY - REVISITED LEON, J. G.; SEYLER, F.; BONNET, M. P.; CALMANT, S.: RATING CURVE IN THE UNGAUGED CAQUETA BASIN COMBINING ALTIMETRY-DERIVED WATER STAGES AND DISCHARGE PROPAGATED FROM REMOTE STATIONS Moller, D.; Rodriguez, E.: CHARACTERIZATION OF KA-BAND SWATH ALTIMETRY PERFORMANCE FOR SURFACE WATER HYDROLOGY Birkett, C. M.; Beckley, B.; Preaux, S.; Hofton, M.; Bjerklie, D.: EXPLORING THE COMBINED POTENTIAL OF RADAR AND LIDAR ALTIMETRIC DATASETS FOR INLAND WATER APPLICATIONS Jung, H.; Alsdorf, D.: REPEAT-PASS INTERFEROMETRIC SAR MEASUREMENTS OF SEASONAL CHANGES IN CONGO FLOOD WATER ELEVATIONS Durand, M.; Andreadis, K.; Moller, D.; Alsdorf, D.; Lettenmaier, D. P.: PROFILING ALTIMETRY COMPARED WITH SWATH ALTIMETRY IN THE CONTEXT OF TERRESTRIAL HYDROLOGY DATA ASSIMILATION ENJOLRAS, V. M.; RODRIGUEZ, E.: MONITORING RIVERS AND LAKES WITH A KA-BAND INTERFEROMETRIC RADAR ALTIMETER Sakova, I. V.; Meyers, G.; Coleman, R.: LOW-FREQUENCY VARIABILITY IN THE INDIAN OCEAN AND ITS CONNECTION WITH INDIAN OCEAN DIPOLE MODE IN 2006 Withdrawn 310. 561. 562. 563. 564. 565. 566. 567. 568. 012: Implicit and Adjoint Techniques and Their Application to Ocean Circulation and Biogeochemical Problems Chair(s): Samar Khatiwala, [email protected]; Wilbert Weijer, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 010: Physical Oceanography and Limnology: General 964. Chair(s): Janet Sprintall, [email protected]; Ed Dever, edever@coas. oregonstate.edu 965. Location: Poster Hall 305. Shin, C. W.; Byun, S. K.; Kim, C.; Lee, J. H.; Kim, B. C.; Hwang, S. C.; Seung, Y. H.; Shin, H. R.: SEASONAL VARIATION OF THE LOW SALINITY INTERMEDIATE WATER IN THE SOUTH OF SUBPOLAR FRONT OF THE EAST/JAPAN SEA Fernandes, A. M.; Paternostro, C. L.: TIDAL CURRENTS IN LOWER COOK INLET, ALASKA: OBSERVED TRANSECT STRUCTURE AND VOLUME TRANSPORT. Carson, M. L.; Harrison, D. E.: IS THE UPPER OCEAN WARMING? COMPARISONS OF 50-YEAR TRENDS FROM DIFFERENT APPROACHES Guo, X.; Yang, D.; Kermani, A.; Shen, L.: DIRECT NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF TURBULENCE INTERACTING WITH AIR-SEA INTERFACE AT SMALL SCALES Motohiko Tsugawa, M.; Hiroyasu Hasumi, H.: A SIMULATION STUDY ON THE AGULHAS CURRENT SYSTEM AND THE INDO-ATLANTIC INTERBASIN EXCHANGE Oka, E.: SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL VARIATIONS OF THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL MODE WATER IN 2003-2006 Gierach, M. M.; Subrahmanyam, B.; Thoppil, P.: UPPER OCEAN RESPONSE TO HURRICANE KATRINA (2005) IN A 1/25° NESTED GULF OF MEXICO HYCOM McCartney, M. S.; Fratantoni, P. S.: BRANCHES, BIFURCATIONS, AND RETROFLECTIONS OVER THE TAIL OF THE GRAND BANKS OF NEWFOUNDLAND Jin, X.; Dong, C.; McWilliams, J. C.; Chelton, D. B.: WINDSST COUPLING IN THE COASTAL UPWELLING: AN EMPIRICAL NUMERICAL SIMULATION Vinogradov, S. V.; Ponte, R. M.: EXPLORING TIDE GAUGE LONG SEA LEVEL RECORDS FOR OCEAN AND CLIMATE STUDIES Pujiana, K.; Gordon, A. L.: INTRASEASONAL FLOW IN MAKASSAR STRAIT Kobashi, F.; Tanimoto, Y.; Murayama, T.; Iwasaka, N.; Tokinaga, H.; Nonaka, M.; Konda, M.: VARIATION OF MARINE ATMOSPHERIC BOUNDARY LAYER OBSERVED OVER THE WINTER KUROSHIO EXTENSION Rafael J. Benítez-Joubert, R. J.; Jorge R. Ortiz-Zayas, J. R.: ESTIMATING REAERATION RATES IN TROPICAL SALT-WEDGE ESTUARIES: A COMPARISON OF METHODS Iskandar, I.; Tozuka, T.; Masumoto, Y.; Yamagata, T.: IMPACT OF INDIAN OCEAN DIPOLE ON INTRASEASONAL ZONAL CURRENT IN THE EASTERN EQUATORIAL INDIAN OCEAN 966. Cornuelle, B. D.; Hoteit, I. M.: 4DVAR DATA ASSIMILATION IN THE TROPICAL PACIFIC Winguth, A.; Tjiputra, J. F.: SENSITIVITY OF THE CARBON CYCLE IN MARINE ECOSYSTEMS TO CLIMATIC CHANGES - AN ADJOINT APPROACH Li, X.; Primeau, F.: A FAST NEWTON-KRYLOV SOLVER FOR SEASONALLY VARYING GLOBAL OCEAN BIOGEOCHEMISTRY MODELS SUITABLE FOR AUTOMATIC PARAMETER OPTIMIZATION (~) 52 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 967. 022: Trace Metal Biogeochemistry - Interactions Between Atmosphere and Ocean Khatiwala, S.: FAST SPINUP OF SEASONALLY-FORCED GLOBAL OCEAN BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS USING MATRIX-FREE NEWTON-KRYLOV KANE, A.; MOULIN, C.; THIRIA, S.; BOPP, L.; BADRAN, F.; BRAJARD, J.; AUMONT, O.: OPTIMIZATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON PARAMETERS IN THE PISCES MODEL Chair(s): Philip W. Boyd, [email protected]; Mark L. Wells, [email protected]; Peter Sedwick, [email protected]; Benjamin S. Twining, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 013: Ridge-To-Reef: Impacts of Watershed Change on Tropical Coastal Ecosystems 841. Chair(s): Michael Field, [email protected]; Matthew Larsen, [email protected]; Jonathan Stock, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1393. 1394. 1395. 1396. 1397. 1398. 1399. 1400. 1401. 1402. 1403. 842. Takesue, R. K.; Bothner, M. H.; Field, M. E.: TRACE ELEMENT COMPOSITIONS OF UPLAND AND SUMMER (2006) TRAPPED FLOOD SEDIMENT, HANALEI BAY, KAUA’I Cochran, S. A.; Chavez, P. S.; Isbrecht, J.; Bogle, R. C.: MAPPING SUSPENDED SEDIMENT CONCENTRATION ON A FRINGING CORAL REEF USING AIRBORNE MULTISPECTRAL REMOTE SENSING AND IN SITU SAMPLING: MOLOKA`I, HAWAI`I Tribble, G. W.: HYDROLOGIC CHARACTERISTICS OF TWO HAWAIIAN WATERSHEDS Bothner, M. H.; Casso, M. A.; Takesue, R. K.; Reynolds, R. L.; Draut, A. E.; Storlazzi, C. D.; Field, M. E.: USING RADIOISOTOPES IN MOBILE SEDIMENTS OF THE HANALEI BAY SYSTEM TO ASSESS SEDIMENT SOURCES, SINKS, AND POTENTIAL FOR CONTAMINANT SCAVENGING Presto, M. K.; Storlazzi, C. D.; Logan, J. B.; Grossman, E. E.: HYDRODYNAMICS AND THE DISPERSAL OF SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE IN KALOKO-HONOKOHAU NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK, HAWAII Warrior, H. V.: PRODUCTION OF HYPER-SALINE POOLS IN SHALLOW BASINS BY EVAPORATION. Krumholz, J. S.; Jadot, C.; Williams, H.: DESIGNING A “REEF- SAFE” SLOW RELEASE FERTILIZER FOR MANGROVE RESTORATION PROJECTS. Sanders, C. J.; Smoak, J. M.; Sanders, L. M.; Brandini, N.; Machado, W. T.; Patchineelam, S. R.: COMPARING DISTINCT MANGROVE MARGINS TO INFER RELATIVE SEA LEVEL RISE IN SOUTHEASTERN BRAZIL Drayer, C. L.; Swart, P. K.; Altabet, M. A.; Anderson, W. T.; Lamb, K. A.; Evans, S.; Sanchez, M.; Bellmund, S.: NITROGEN CYCLYING IN BISCAYNE BAY. FL Reynolds, R. L.; Bothner, M. H.; Berg, C. J.; Draut, A. E.; Casso, M.; Goldstein, H.: SOURCES OF TERRIGENOUS SEDIMENT IN HANALEI BAY, KAUA’I, HAWAI’I: COMPARISON OF MAGNETIC AND CS-137 PROPERTIES IN MARINE SEDIMENT AND UPLAND SURFICIAL DEPOSITS Storlazzi, C. S.; Presto, M. K.; Bothner, M. H.; Draut, A. E.; Field, M. E.; Hoeke, R.: CONTROLS ON SEDIMENT DYNAMICS IN A CORAL REEF-LINED BAY: HANALEI BAY, KAUAI 843. 844. 845. 846. 847. 848. 849. 850. 851. 852. 853. 854. 855. Smith, S. L.; Yoshie, N.; Yamanaka, Y.: MULTI-ELEMENT ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS IN THE SERIES IRONENRICHMENT EXPERIMENT: COMPARING FIXEDAND VARIABLE-COMPOSITION VERSIONS OF THE NEMURO ECOSYSTEM MODEL Bahrou, A.; Ollivier, P.; Church, T.; Hanson, T.: VOLATILIZATION OF POLONIUM BY TELLURITE RESISTANT MARINE MICROBES Shaked, Y.: IRON REDOX DYNAMICS IN THE SURFACE WATERS OF THE GULF OF AQABA, RED SEA Vogel, C.; Fisher, N. S.: ACCUMULATION AND CYCLING OF TRACE METALS BY HETEROTROPHIC MARINE BACTERIA Wilken, S.; Peeken, I.; Hoffmann, B.; Kirchgeßner, N.; Hoffmann, L.; Hersch, N.; Rubner, W.; Lochte, K.; Merkel, R.: IMPACT OF IRON AVAILABILITY ON DIATOM VALVE STRUCTURE AND GRAZING PROTECTION Gelado, M. D.; Hernández, J. J.; López, P.; Collado, C.; Prieto, S.; LLinás, O.; Rueda, M. J.; Brito de Azevedo, E.: CHARACTERISATION OF METAL DEPOSITION FLUXES TO NORTHEASTERN SUBTROPICAL ATLANTICCANARY ISLANDS REGION. Tian, Z. L.; Ollivier, P. R.; Veron, A. J.; Church, T. M.: ATMOSPHERIC FE DEPOSITION MODES AT BERMUDA AND THE ADJACENT SARGASSO SEA Peeken, I.; Hoffmann, L. J.; Breitbarth, E.; Jansen, S.; von Harbou, L.; Croot, P.; Kraegefsky, S.; Bathmann, U.: CHANGES IN IRON SPECIATION CAUSED BY ZOOPLANKTON DURING THE IRON FERTILIZATION EXPERIMENT EIFEX Séguret, M.; Ussher, S.; Worsfold, P.; Nimmo, M.: DISSOLUTION OF AEROSOL IRON IN SEAWATER USING FLOW INJECTION-CHEMILUMINESCENCE DETECTION Aita, M. N.; Smith, S. L.; Ishida, A.; Kishi, M. J.; Yamanaka, Y.: EFFECTS OF IRON ON SPACIAL AND TEMPORAL PHYTOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTION USING AN ECOSYSTEM MODEL (NEMURO) EMBEDDED IN A 3-D GLOBAL MODEL Oka, A.; Hasumi, H.; Obata, H.; Gamo, T.; Yamanaka, Y.: STUDY ON VERTICAL PROFILES OF RARE EARTH ELEMENTS BY USING AN OCEAN GENERAL CIRCULATION MODEL Willers, V.; Varela, D. E.: EFFECT OF ZINC AVAILABILITY ON GROWTH RATE, CELL SIZE AND ELEMENTAL COMPOSITION IN A COASTAL AND AN OCEANIC DIATOM Palacz, A. P.; Measures, C. I.; Chai, F.: MODELING IRON, ALUMINUM AND CARBON CYCLE IN THE EASTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC OCEAN Brown, M. T.; Bruland, K. W.: DISSOLVED ALUMINUM IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF ALASKA: COASTAL, EDDY, AND HNLC WATERS Hardy, K. R.; Wells, M. L.; Trick, C. G.; Hughes, M. P.; Trainer, V. L.: DOMOIC ACID ASSISTED COPPER UPTAKE BY A NATURAL COMMUNITY FROM HNLC WATERS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 53 Monday 968. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 856. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Johansen, A. M.; Shank, L. M.; Sorey, M. N.; Lenington, M. J.; Zhang, Z.; Best, B.: EVIDENCE OF DMS AND OTHER BIOGENIC GASES AFFECTING IRON BIOAVAILABILITY IN REMOTE MARINE AEROSOLS 356. 357. 358. 025: Taxon-specific Biogeochemistry in Aquatic Systems – Who does what? Chair(s): Michael W. Lomas, [email protected]; Margaret R. Mulholland, [email protected]; Deborah A. Bronk, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 857. 858. 859. 860. 861. 862. 359. Bowen, J. L.; Morrison, H. G.; Hobbie, J. E.; Sogin, M. L.: CAN A MASSIVELY PARALLEL TAG SEQUENCING APPROACH BE USED TO TRACK ENVIRONMENTALLY INDUCED CHANGES IN SALT MARSH SEDIMENTS? Bender, S. J.; Armbrust, E. V.: UNDERSTANDING THE CONNECTION BETWEEN DIFFERING NITROGEN SOURCES AND THE UREA CYCLE IN THE DIATOM, THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA Humphrys, M. S.; Gihring, T. M.; Mills, H. J.; Delgardio, J.; Kostka, J. E.: STABLE ISOTOPE PROBING OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITY DYNAMICS ASSOCIATED WITH PHYTODETRITUS DEGRADATION IN MARINE PERMEABLE SEDIMENTS Roe, K. L.; Barbeau, K. B.; Mann, E. L.; Haygood, M. G.: CULTURE STUDIES OF IRON ACQUISITION BY TRICHODESMIUM AND ASSOCIATED BACTERIA AS A MODEL FOR IRON CYCLING IN TRICHODESMIUM COLONIES Casey, J.; Lomas, M. W.; Sylvan, J.; Ammerman, J.; Dyhrman, S.: UPTAKE OF PHOSPHATE AND ATP BY FLOWSORTED CYANOBACTERIA, PICOEUKARYOTES AND NANOEUKARYOTES IN THE SUBTROPICAL WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC. Chow, C. T.; Steele, J. A.; Patel, A.; Kakajiwala, M.; Sachdeva, R.; Fuhrman, J. A.: CONNECTING BACTERIAL IDENTITY WITH FUNCTION BY RESPONSE TO ENRICHMENT 360. 361. 032: Oceanic Flows Past Sea Mountains and Islands and Their Marine Environmental Impacts Chair(s): Changming Dong, [email protected]; Christian Mohn, [email protected]; Pablo Sangrà, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 985. 986. 030: Environmental Records of Anthropogenic Impacts On Coastal Ecosystems 987. Chair(s): Joan-Albert Sanchez-Cabeza, [email protected]; Ellen Druffel, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 351. 352. 353. 354. 355. Hyun/Sangmin, S.: GEOCHEMICAL DATA AND SOURCE OF ORGANIC MATTER FROM THE SURFACE SEDIMENT OF THE TWO BAYS OF KOREA Withdrawn Knoery, J.; Claisse, D.; Chiffoleau, J. F.; Couture, R. M.; Gobeil, C.; Munschy, C.; Orians, K. J.; Sheil, A. E.; Tixier, C.; Tronczynski, J.: BEYOND STATUS AND TRENDS OF COASTAL CHEMICAL CONTAMINATION APPRAISED BY BIOMONITORING : ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES FACING THE FRENCH MUSSEL WATCH PROGRAM Jayce G, J.; Warner Ithier-Guzman, W.; Ashanti J. Pyrtle, A.: EFFECTS OF CLAY MINERALOGY ON RETENTION AND MOBILITY OF ANTHROPOGENIC RADIONUCLIDES IN PUERTO RICO Kading, T. J.; Bernier, G.; Mason, R. P.; Williams, C. R.: MERCURY AND OTHER TRACE METAL DEPOSITION TRENDS RECONSTRUCTED FROM A LEAD-210 DATED SEDIMENT CORE FROM BERG RIVER SALT MARSH, SOUTH AFRICA Shumilin, E.; Gordeev, V.; Choumiline, K.: AN ASSESSMENT OF GEOCHEMICAL MOBILITY OF METALS IN SURFACE SEDIMENTS OF THE SANTA ROSALIA MINING REGION, WESTERN GULF OF CALIFORNIA Bareille Gilles, B. G.; Donard Olivier, D. O.; Jouanneau Jean-Marie, J. J.; Weber Olivier, W. O.: GEOCHEMISTRY OF TRACE METALS IN SEDIMENT CORES FROM THE BASQUE CONTINENTAL SHELF Kuo, w.; Hung, C.: PERSISTENT ORGANIC POLLUTANTS IN SUSPENDED PARTICLES IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC NORTHWEST Sombrito, E. Z.; Sta. Maria, E. J.; Bulos, A. M.; Honrado, M. V.; Siringan, F. P.; Olivares, R. U.: SEDIMENT ACCUMULATION RATES IN MANILA BAY, A MARINE POLLUTION HOT SPOT IN THE SEAS OF EAST ASIA Todd, B. R.; Ballantine, D. L.; Otero, E.: NUTRIENT DISTRIBUTION ACROSS THE INSULAR SHELF OF PUERTO RICO: ASSESSMENT BY ALGAL TISSUE NITROGEN Ziolkowski, L. A.; Druffel, E. R.: RADIOCARBON CONTENT OF SOOT AND CHARRED BLACK CARBON USING THE BENZENE POLYCARBOXYLIC ACID METHOD. 988. 989. 990. 991. 992. Piedeleu, M.; Sangrà , P.; Pascual, A.; Gordo, C.: AN OBSERVATIONAL STUDY OF THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF WIND AND TOPOGRAPHIC FORCING ON OCEANIC EDDY SHEDDING BY TALL DEEP WATER ISLANDS (GRAN CANARIA). Isoguchi, O.; Shimada, M.; Sakaida, F.; Kawamura, H.: KUROSHIO-INDUCED COLD EDDY STREETS IN THE LEES OF ISOLATED ISLANDS Kaufmann, M. J.; Maranhao, M.; Brotas, V.; v. Broeckel, K.: DISTRIBUTION OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES AT THREE NE-ATLANTIC SEAMOUNTS AND AN EMEDITERRANEAN SEAMOUNT DETERMINED BY CHEMOTAXONOMY Hasegawa, D.; Lewis, M.; Gangopadhyay, A.: REAL AND APPARENT PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM DUE TO ISLAND MASS EFFECTS Munday, D. R.; Marshall, D. P.; Piggott, M. D.: MODELLING THE FLOW PAST ISLANDS USING THE FINITE ELEMENT METHOD Mason, E.; Sangrà , P.; Colas, F.; Molemaker, J.; Shchepetkin, A.; Hughes, M.; Dong, C.; McWilliams, J.: A HIGHRESOLUTION NUMERICAL MODEL STUDY AT THE CANARY ISLANDS Cuhel, R. L.; Aguilar, C.: HYDROGRAPHIC CONSEQUENCES OF FLOW OVER TWO ADJACENT SEAMOUNTS WITH DIFFERING BATHYMETRY ARE REVEALED IN WATER COLUMN PLANKTON ECOLOGY. Gilcoto, M.; Wu, L. Y.; Tomczak, M.; Sandery, P.: ISLAND WAKES IN NUMERICAL MODELS OF SHALLOW WATER REGIONS (~) 54 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 993. Mohn, C.; White, M.: ASSESSMENT OF PASSIVE TRACER RETENTION AT SEAMOUNTS IN RELATION TO VARIABILITY IN THE PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT Sangrà , P.; Pascual, A.; Mason, E.; Auladell, M.; Pelegrí, J. L.: ON THE ORIGIN AND IMPORTANCE OF SWESTIES 762. 763. 764. 046: Operational Oceanography: Assimilation, Modeling, and Applications in the Global Ocean Chair(s): Eric Bayler, [email protected]; Robert Miller, [email protected]; Chris Mooers, [email protected]; Ruth Preller, [email protected]; Roger Samelson, [email protected] 765. 766. 767. Location: Poster Hall 179. 180. 181. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187. 188. 189. 190. Hillier, L. E.; Demirov, E.; Davidson, F. J.; Stone, B.: VALIDATING OCEAN SURFACE CURRENT INPUTS FOR SEARCH AND RESCUE Chin, T. M.; Mariano, A. J.: A DRIFTER DEPLOYMENT STRATEGY USING SIMULATED TRAJECTORIES CONSTRAINED BY PARTICLE FILTER Carnes, M. R.; Barron, C. N.; Helber, R. W.; Dastugue, J. M.: A NEW GLOBAL CLIMATOLOGY OF OCEAN TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY STATISTICS FOR DATA ASSIMILATION Yang, S. C.; Keppenne, C.; Rienecker, M.; Kalnay, E.: APPLICATIONS OF BRED VECTORS IN THE NASA GMAO OCEAN DATA ASSIMILATION SYSTEM Smedstad, L. F.; Barron, C. N.; Helber, R. W.; Townsend, T. L.: USING SYNTHETIC PROFILES TO IMPROVE SOUND SPEED PREDICTION IN OPARATIONAL GLOBAL OCEAN MODELS Mourre, B.; Ballabrera, J.; Garcia-Ladona, E.; Font, J.: ENSEMBLE-BASED MODEL SALINITY ERROR COVARIANCES INDUCED BY EXTERNAL FORCING UNCERTAINTIES IN THE EASTERN NORTHATLANTIC OCEAN. Kim, C. S.; Choi, B. J.; Cho, Y. K.: A NUMERICAL EXPERIMENT ON THE PATH VARIATION OF TH CHANGJIANG DILUTED WATER IN SUMMER Withdrawn Nerger, L.; Gregg, W. W.: ESTIMATION OF MODEL BIAS BY THE ASSIMILATION OF SATELLITE CHLOROPHYLL DATA INTO A GLOBAL MODEL OCEAN Liu, L.; Lozano, C.; Kim, H.: ON THE ASSIMILATION OF ALTIMETER SEA SURFACE HEIGHT ANOMALIES IN A HIGH RESOLUTION Choi, B.; Cho, Y.; Seo, G.; Kim, S.; Kim, Y.: ASSIMILATION OF SST AND HYDROGRAPHIC DATA INTO A NORTHWEST PACIFIC OCEAN CIRCULATION MODEL USING ENSEMBLE KALMAN FILTER Woodward, M. E.; Krynen, D. G.; Sarnowski, K.; Lunde, B. N.; Rowley, C.; Cummings, J. A.: EVALUATION OF AN AUTOMATED OBSERVATION QUALITY CONTROL SYSTEM TO SUPPORT DYNAMIC OCEAN MODELS IN AN OPERATIONAL ENVIRONMENT. 768. 769. 770. 771. 772. 773. 774. 775. 776. 777. 778. 779. 780. 051: Watersheds, Lakes, Rivers, Estuaries: General 1404. Chair(s): JoLynn Carroll, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 761. Montlucon, D.; Eglinton, T.; Giosan, L.; Dickens, A.: EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF DELTAIC LAKE SEDIMENTS AS RECORDERS OF NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC CHANGE IN ARCTIC RIVER DRAINAGE BASINS 1405. Jiang, X.; Yu, Z.; Ku, T.; Kang, X.; Wei, W.; Chen, H.: GEOCHEMICAL BEHAVIOR OF URANIUM IN THE YELLOW RIVER PLUME (YELLOW RIVER ESTUARY) Martinez-Rivera, N.; Martino-Cardona, D. M.; Ramirez, A.: FISH HEALTH IN A TROPICAL URBAN WATERSHED Latimer, J. S.; Mickinney, R.; Cicchetti, G.; Charpentier, M.: APPLICATION OF A WATERSHED NITROGEN LOADING MODEL TO FORTY-NINE (49) MEDIUM SIZED SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND EMBAYMENT TYPE ESTUARIES Withdrawn Withdrawn Williams, J. C.; Czajkowski, K.; Hayase, R.: IMPACTS OF LAND COVER AND USAGE ON WATER QUALITY IN WESTERN LAKE ERIE WATERSHEDS. Feng, H.; Zhang, W.; Chang, J.; Qu, J.; Yu, L.: SOURCE OF PB TO THE YANGTZE RIVER INTERTIDAL ZONE BASED ON PB ISOTOPE RATIO Umek, J. W.; Brownstein, J. D.; Chandra, S.: LIMNOLOGY AND AQUATIC FOOD WEB STRUCTURE OF A LARGE TERMINAL LAKE Withdrawn Lockwood, M. E.: THE CI-FLOW PROJECT: COMBINING RESOURCES FOR BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF WATER IMPACTS FROM THE SKY TO THE SUMMIT TO THE SEA Ping, C. L.; Dou, F.; Jorgenson, M. T.; Lynn, L. A.; Michaelson, G. J.: CARBON FLUX ACROSS THE ERODING COASTLINE OF BEAUFORT SEA, ALASKA MORRIS, D. P.; BELMONT, P.: PENETRATION OF UV RADIATION IN STREAMS OF EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA, USA: TOPOGRAPHIC CONTROLS AND THE ROLE OF SUSPENDED PARTICULATES O’Mullan, G. D.; Juhl, A.; Kalachikov, S.; Lipscomb, J.; McGillis, W.; Morozova, I.; Russo, J.; Sambrotto, R.; Shuman, H.: HYDROGRAPHIC AND MICROBIAL VARIABILITY IN SURFACE WATERS OF THE HUDSON RIVER ESTUARY Donnelly, M. J.; Brockmeyer, R.; Stewart, J.; Greening, W.; Walters, L. J.: RECOVERY OF SALTMARSH FLORA AND FAUNA AT RESTORED MOSQUITO IMPOUNSMENTS IN MOSQUITO LAGOON (VOLUISA COUNTY, FL) Schemel, L. E.; Craig, M.: VARIABILITY IN THE QUALITY OF FLOODWATERS FOR WETLAND RESTORATION IN SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO BAY Martinó-Cardona, D. M.; Martinez-Rivera, N.; Ramirez, A.: NATIVE FISHES IN AN ISLAND URBAN RIVER: CATADROMY AS A MEAN OF SURVIVAL Elrod, A. K.; Hains, J. J.: IRON SEQUESTRATION IN LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM ARTIFICIAL HYPOLIMNETIC OXYGENATION: RICHARD B. RUSSELL RESERVOIR Shostell, J. M.; Hoch, M. P.: LONG TERM ASSESSMENTS OF STREAM ECOSYSTEM HEALTH WITHIN A WATERSHED IMPACTED BY HIGH POPULATION GROWTH RATES Björkvald, L.; Borg, H.; Laudon, H.; Mörth, M.: TRACE METALS AND SULPHUR ISOTOPES IN SMALL BOREAL STREAMS: THE INFLUENCE OF LANDSCAPE TYPE Swan, B. K.; Reifel, K. M.; Tiffany, M. A.; Valentine, D. L.: FROM BACTERIA TO BIRDS: THE IMPACT OF SULFIDE IRRUPTIONS ON MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN A HYPERSALINE LAKE Andresen, C. G.; Erdner, D.: UNCOVERING BIODIVERSITY IN ESTUARIES; THE ENIGMATIC PICOEUKARYOTES * represents Invited presentations ( ) 55 Monday 994. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 1406. 1407. 1408. 1409. 1410. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 1038. Casper, A. F.; Dixon, B.; Steimle, E. T.; Hall, M. L.; Conmy, R. N.: HI-RESOLUTION MAPPING OF THE SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN CO2/O2/N2 CDOM, & CHLOROPHYLL FLORESCENCE IN COASTAL RIVERS Lehman, P. W.; Teh, S.; Boyer, G.: MICROCYSTIS IN THE SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY Kolosovich, A.; Chandra, S.: INVASION POTENTIAL OF THE NEW ZEALAND MUD SNAIL IN LAKE TAHOE AND THE LOWER TRUCKEE RIVER (USA) Nunez, J. M.; Burnes , R. M.; Phlips, E. J.: A NEW SAMPLING DEVICE FOR COLLECTING ZOOPLANKTON WITH EASE AND ACCURACY Holliday, L.; Morris, L.; Hall, L.: DISTRIBUTION AND TRENDS OF CAULERPA PROLIFERA IN THE INDIAN RIVER LAGOON, FL 1039. 1040. 1041. 052: Synthesis of Coupled Physical-ecosystem Dynamics and Linkages to Environmental Forcing On Event to Climate Scales 1042. Chair(s): Enrique Curchitser, [email protected]; Hal Batchelder, [email protected]; Eileen E. Hofmann, [email protected]; Cabell Davis, [email protected] 1043. Location: Poster Hall 1030. 1031. 1032. 1033. 1034. 1035. 1036. 1037. 1044. Curchitser, E. N.; Hedstrom, K.; Powell, T. M.; Large, W. G.; Haidvogel, D. B.; Fiechter, J.: A NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF ECOSYSTEM RESPONSE TO LARGE-SCALE CLIMATE Fach, B. A.; Timmermann, R.; Meyer, B.; Wolf-Gladrow, D.; Bathmann, U.: MODELING THE INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS ON ANTARCTIC KRILL (EUPHAUSIA SUPERBA) POPULATION DYNAMICS. Ross, R. M.; Quetin, L. B.; Fritsen, C.; Yarmey, L.; Kozlowski, W. A.; Sines, K.; Vernet, M.: MODELING PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS (CHLOROPHYLL A) DURING FALL AND WINTER OF 2001 AND 2002 AT 64°AND 68° S IN COASTAL WATERS WEST OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA Sasai, Y.; Sasaoka, K.; Sasaki, H.; Ishida, A.; Yamanaka, Y.: SEASONAL AND INTRA-SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF MARINE BIOLOGY IN THE KUROSHIO EXTENSION WITH AN EDDY RESOLVING COUPLED PHYSICALBIOLOGICAL MODEL Carrroll, M. L.; Denisenko, S. G.; Voronkov, A.; Ambrose, W. G.; Henkes, G.; McMahon, K. W.: ARCTIC BIVALVES AS INDICATORS OF ENVIRONMENTAL VARIATION FROM INTRA-ANNUAL TO CENTENNIAL TIMESCALES Frants, M.; Gille, S. T.; Hewes, C. D.; Holm-Hansen, O.; Lombrozo, A.; Measures, C. I.; Mitchell, B. G.; Reiss, C.; Zhou, M.: USING OPTIMAL MULTIPARAMETER ANALYSIS TO ASSESS MIXED-LAYER > IRON TRANSPORT IN SOUTHERN DRAKE PASSAGE. Genin, A.; Koseff, J. R.; Monismith, S. G.; Steinbuck, J. V.; Vaknin, R.; Holtzman, R.: IN SITU LAGRANGIAN MEASUREMENTS OF PHYTOPLANKTON PRODUCTION AND MORTALITY: A NET HETEROTROPHIC STATE OF THE UPPER OLIGOTROPHIC WATER COLUMN Murphy, E. J.; Watkins, J. L.; Trathan, P. N.; Meredith, M. M.; Reid, K.; Forcada, J.; Thorpe, S. E.; Johnston, N. M.: VARIABILITY AND CHANGE IN SOUTHERN OCEAN ECOSYSTEMS: THE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE FLUCTUATIONS AND BIOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS ON THE DYNAMICS OF SCOTIA SEA ECOSYSTEMS 1045. 1046. Pawlowicz, R.; Allen, S.; Cassis, D.; Dower, J.; Riche, O.: PHYSICAL FACTORS AFFECTING PRODUCTIVITY IN THE STRAIT OF GEORGIA Erik W Chapman, E. W.; William R Fraser, W. R.; Eileen E Hofmann, E. E.: THE INFLUENCE OF VARIABILITY IN PREY COMPOSITION AND DISTRIBUTION ON ADÉLIE PENGUIN (PYGOSCELIS ADELIAE) FORAGING ENERGETICS AND CHICK GROWTH: A MODELING STUDY Cavanagh, R. D.; Murphy, E. J.; Hofmann, E.: INTEGRATING CLIMATE AND ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS: CIRCUMPOLAR ANALYSES OF SOUTHERN OCEAN ECOSYSTEMS Samuelsen, A.; Hansen, C.: PHYSICAL MECHANISMS FOR SHELF RECRUITMENT OF CALANUS FINMARCHICUS OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORWAY Aguilar, C.; Cuhel, R. L.: DEEP CHLOROPHYLL MAXIMA DOMINATED BY PICOPLANKTONIC CYANOBACTERIA AT THE MID-LAKE REEF COMPLEX (MLRC) IN LAKE MICHIGAN. Yang, E.; Ju, S.; Choi, J.; Yoo, S.; Son, S.; Kim, W.: IMPACTS OF THE 1998-1999 EL NIÑO AND LA NIÑA EVENTS ON THE ROLE OF HETEROTROPHIC PROTISTS IN THE MICROBIAL FOOD WEB OF THE NORTHEAST EQUATORIAL PACIFIC OCEAN Hashioka, T.; Yamanaka, Y.; Sakamoto, T. T.: PREDICTED IMPACTS OF GLOBAL WARMING ON MARINE ECOSYSTEM WITH A 3-D HIGH-RESOLUTION ECOSYSTEM MODEL Jaspers, C.; Carstensen, J.; Nielsen, T. G.: MESOZOOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTION ACROSS THE SOUTHERN INDIAN OCEAN WITH EMPHASIS ON APPENDICULARIANS Piñones, A.; Hofmann, E. E.; Dinniman, M. S.; Klinck, J. M.: WEST ANTARCTIC PENINSULA CIRCULATION AND IMPLICATIONS FOR BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTION 057: Ocean-atmosphere Exchanges and Meridional Transports in Global Water and Energy Cycles Chair(s): W. Timothy Liu, [email protected]; Mark A. Bourassa, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1047. 1048. 1049. 1050. 1051. 1052. Sato, O. T.; Polito, P. S.: ESTIMATING THE ERROR IN THE MERIDIONAL HEAT FLUX USING SATELLITE DATA de Boyer Montegut, C.; Izumo, T.; Luo, J. J.; Behera, S. K.; Masson, S.; Yamagata, T.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF WESTERN ARABIAN SEA UPWELLING AND ITS ROLE IN INDIA MONSOON RAINFALL VARIABILITY Aoki, K.; Kutsuwada, K.: VERIFICATION OF THE WIND-DRIVEN TRANSPORT IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE USING GRIDDED WIND-STRESS PRODUCTS Uehara, H.; Kizu, S.; Hanawa, K.; Yoshikawa, Y.; Roemmich, D.: ESTIMATION OF HEAT AND FRESHWATER TRANSPORTS IN THE NORTH PACIFIC USING HIGH RESOLUTION XBT DATA Romanou, A.; Rossow, W. B.; Clayson, C. A.; Roehrig, R.: LATENT HEAT FLUX VARIABILITY IN THE TROPICAL PACIFIC FROM OBSERVATIONS AND MODELS Vellinga, M.; Wu, P.: RELATIONS BETWEEN NORTHWARD OCEAN AND ATMOSPHERE ENERGY TRANSPORTS IN A COUPLED CLIMATE MODEL (~) 56 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 1053. 1055. 1056. 1057. 059: Eddies, Fronts and Sub-Mesoscale Processes In The Upper Ocean Hughes, P. J.; Bourassa, M. A.; Smith, S. R.: REGIONAL COMPARISON OF SURFACE TURBULENT FLUX PRODUCTS Masahisa/Kubota, K.; Tsuyoshi/Watabe, W.: INTERCOMPARISON OF VARIOUS GLOBAL EVAPORATION PRODUCTS Capps, S. B.; Zender, C. S.: USING QUIKSCAT SURFACE WIND MEASUREMENTS TO UNDERSTAND WIND SPEED VARIABILITY AND SURFACE FLUX IMPLICATIONS Trenary, L. L.; Han, W.: MECHANISMS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE TROPCIAL THERMOCLINE COOLING IN THE INDIAN OCEAN Burgman, R. J.; Clement, A.; Mitas, C.; Chen, J.; Esslinger, K.: EVIDENCE FOR ATMOSPHERIC VARIABILITY OVER THE PACIFIC ON DECADAL TIMESCALES Chair(s): Raffaele Ferrari, [email protected]; Amala Mahadevan, [email protected]; Amit Tandon, [email protected]; Leif Thomas, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1070. 1291. 1292. 058: Oceanic Observations and Geophysical Fluid Dynamics 1293. Chair(s): Robert Bruce Scott, [email protected]; Joseph Henry LaCasce, [email protected] 1294. Location: Poster Hall 1058. 1059. 1060. 1061. 1062. 1063. 1064. 1065. 1066. 1067. 1068. 1069. Nagano, A.; Ichikawa, H.; Ichikawa, K.; Konda, M.; Murakami, K.: A TIME SERIES ANALYSIS OF THE KUROSHIO HEAT TRANSPORT SOUTH OF JAPAN USING INVERTED ECHO SOUNDER DATA Hristova, H. G.; Pedlosky, J.; Spall, M. A.: RADIATING INSTABILITY OF A MERIDIONAL BOUNDARY CURRENT Weijer, W.: NORMAL MODES OF THE SOUTH INDIAN OCEAN Chen, S.; Qiu, B.; Hacker, P.; Hogg, N.; Jayne, S.; Sasaki, H.: THE KUROSHIO EXTENSION NORTHERN RECIRCULATION GYRE: PROFILING FLOAT MEASUREMENTS AND FORCING MECHANISM Roullet, G.; Klein, P.; Hua, B. L.; Le Gentil, S.; Sasaki, H.: 3D ENERGETIC OF THE OCEAN TURBULENCE FROM THE LARGE SCALES TO THE FILAMENT SCALES Rogers, A. L.; Riser, S. C.: SVERDRUP BALANCE IN THE PACIFIC OBSERVED USING PROFILING FLOATS Firing, E.; Hummon, J. M.; Ascani, P.; Dutrieux, P.; Johnson, G. C.: PACIFIC SUBTHERMOCLINE EQUATORIAL CURRENTS: A DEEPER CLIMATOLOGY FROM NEW SHIPBOARD ADCPS Alam, M.R.; Yuming, L.; Yue, D. K. P.: BROADBAND WAVES OVER MUDDY SEAFLOOR Amrhein, D.; Kaplan, A.: HOW DO DISTINCT PHYSICAL PHENOMENA AND PROCESSES AFFECT SPECTRAL SLOPES OF CLIMATE VARIABLES? Lin/Xiaopei, L. X.; Zhai/Ping, Z. P.: THE GLOBAL ZONAL BAND DISTRIBUTION OF DOMINANT HIGH FREQUENCY OSCILLATION- ZERO GROUP VELOCITY ROSSBY WAVE WITH CRITICAL FREQUENCY Wells, A. J.; Cenedese, C.; Farrar , J. T.; Zappa, C. J.: VARIATION IN OCEAN SURFACE TEMPERATURE DUE TO NEAR SURFACE FLOW: STRAINING THE COOL SKIN LAYER. Yamazaki, T.; Takeuchi, R.; Nakata, K.; Monoe, D.; Oomi, T.; Fukushima, T.; Tsunogai, U.; Zhang, J.: A SYSTEMATIC OBSERVATION OF METHANE PLUME BEHAVIOUR AROUND SEAFLOOR COLD SEEPAGE 1295. 1296. 1297. 1298. 1299. 1300. 1301. 1302. 1303. 1304. 1305. 1306. Gonzalez-Lopez, J. O.; Morell-Rodriguez, J. M.; Capella, J.: THE INTENSIFICATION OF HURRICANE GEORGES IN THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN REGION THROUGH ITS INTERACTION WITH AN ANTICYCLONIC EDDY Wong, A. P.: ANOMALOUS T-S STEPS AND SUBTROPICAL FRONT MEANDERS IN THE UPPER SOUTHEAST INDIAN OCEAN Boyd, T. J.: EDDIES OVER THE LOMONOSOV RIDGE: HORIZONTAL VARIABILITY IN THE THERMOCLINE OF THE CENTRAL ARCTIC OCEAN Hyde, K. J.; O’Reilly, J. E.; Belkin, I. M.: SATELLITE CLIMATOLOGY OF CHLOROPHYLL AND SST FRONTS IN THE NORTHEAST U.S. LARGE MARINE ECOSYSTEM von Eye, M.; Worster, M. G.; Dalziel, S.: VELOCITY STRUCTURE OF PLUME EDDIES IN A ROTATING STRATIFIED ENVIRONMENT, WITH APPLICATIONS TO THE GREENLAND SEA Withdrawn Rivera, A. P.; Blaha, J.; Horowitz, M.: A CASE STUDY DESCRIBING AN OFFSHORE WARM FILAMENT OF THE FLORIDA CURRENT NEAR 30N Zharkov, V.; Nof, D.: MODELING OF AGULHAS RING INJECTION INTO THE SOUTH ATLANTIC DURING GLACIALS AND INTERGLACIALS Yim, B. Y.; Noh, Y.; You, S. H.; Yoon, J. H.; Qiu, B.: SEASONAL VARIATION OF EDDY KINETIC ENERGY OF THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL COUNTERCURRENT SIMULATED BY AN EDDYRESOLVING OGCM Chini, G. P.; Julien, K.: REDUCED EQUATIONS FOR QUASI-3D LANGMUIR TURBULENCE Hosegood, P. J.; Gregg, M. C.; Alford, M. H.: 4-D OBSERVATIONS OF A RESTRATIFYING SURFACE MIXED LAYER WITH SUB-MESOSCALE LATERAL Sturges, W.; Kenyon, K. E.: MEAN FLOW IN THE GULF OF MEXICO Nagura, M.; Ishida, A.; Sasaki, H.: A MODEL STUDY OF POSSIBLE ERRORS IN THE SURFACE HORIZONTAL HEAT ADVECTION DUE TO USE OF SPATIALLY COARSE SST DATA IN THE TROPICAL PACIFIC OCEAN Lopez, R.; Lopez, J. M.; Corredor, J.; Morell, J.: PHYTOPLANKTON PHOTOSYNTHETIC COMPETENCY IN CARIBBEAN SEA MESOSCALE EDDIES AS MEASURED BY FAST REPETITION RATE FLUOROMETRY Gray, A.; D’Asaro, E. A.; Harcourt, R.; Johnston, S.; Lee, C. M.; Rudnick, D. L.: AESOP 2006: SUBMESOSCALE OBSERVATIONS OF RESTRATIFICATION AT A FRONT IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT WITH A LAGRANGIAN FLOAT AND TOWED PROFILERS. Harcourt, R. R.; D’Asaro, E. A.; Lee, C. M.: LARGE EDDY SIMULATION OF UPPER OCEAN MIXING WITHIN A FRONT Bricheno, L. M.; Cotter, C. J.; Piggott, M. D.: OPEN OCEAN DEEP CONVECTION IN ICOM; CHARACTERISTIC SCALINGS AND ADAPTIVE MESH RESULTS. * represents Invited presentations ( ) 57 Monday 1054. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 1307. 1308. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 068: Oceanic Overflows and Dense Gravity Currents: Observations, Modeling and Parameterization Cole, K. L.; DiMarco, S. F.; Leben, R. R.: DYNAMIC MODE VARIABILITY IN THE DEEP GULF OF MEXICO Cole, S. T.; Rudnick, D. L.: SEASONAL AND LATITUDINAL VARIATIONS OF SMALL-SCALE TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY GRADIENTS IN THE UPPER OCEAN Chair(s): Sonya Legg, [email protected]; Arnold Gordon, [email protected]; Tamay Ozgokmen, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 065: Advances in the Application of Chemical Biomarkers in Aquatic Ecosystems 1309. Chair(s): Thomas S. Bianchi, [email protected]; Elizabeth A. Canuel, [email protected] 1310. Location: Poster Hall 863. 864. 865. 866. 867. 868. Zimmerman, A. R.; Mitra, S.: HYDROGEN-PYROLYSIS/ LIPID COMPOUND ANALYSIS OF BLACK CARBON COMPOSITION AND SOURCE IN GANGESBRAHMAPUTRA RIVER SEDIMENTS Bourgoin, L. H.; Tremblay, L.: BACTERIAL CONTRIBUTION TO THE ORGANIC MATTER OF THE ST. LAWRENCE ESTUARINE SYSTEM. uchida/masao, M.; Eglinton, T. I.; Hayes, J. M.; Montluçon, D.; Coppola, L.; Andersson, P.: HYDRODYNAMIC CONTROLS ON THE MOLECULAR-LEVEL COMPOSITION OF ORGANIC MATTER IN SEDIMENTS ALONG WASHINGTON MARGIN AND CASCADIA BASIN TRANSECT Medeiros, P. M.; Sikes, E. L.: CHANGES IN NATURAL SOURCE INPUTS TO SEDIMENTARY ORGANIC CARBON ALONG THE MULLICA RIVER AND ESTUARY, NJ: A MULTI-BIOMARKER AND STABLE ISOTOPE CHARACTERIZATION Sampere, T. P.; Bianchi, T. S.; Wakeham, S. G.: LIGNINPHENOLS IN DENSITY FRACTIONS OF LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL MARGIN SEDIMENTS: RIVER TO CANYON TRANSPORT Loh, A. N.; Canuel, E. A.; Bauer, J. E.: LIPID BIOMARKER DISTRIBUTIONS IN OCEANIC AND ESTUARINE DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTER: SOURCE AND DIAGENETIC SIGNATURES 1311. 1312. 1313. 1314. 1315. 1316. 1317. 1318. 1319. 1320. 066: Linking Ecosystem Health to Marine Animal Health Chair(s): Nathalie Valette-Silver, [email protected]; Teri Rowles, [email protected]; Cheryl Woodley, [email protected] 1321. Location: Poster Hall 362. 363. 364. 365. 366. Muench, R. D.; Wåhlin, A.; Ozgokmen, T.; Hallberg, R.; Gordon, A.; Padman, L.: DENSE OUTFLOWS OVER A STEEP, CORRUGATED SEABED: ROSS SEA, ANTARCTICA Ilicak, M.; Özgökmen, T. M.; Peters, H.; Baumert, H. Z.; Iskandarini, M.: PERFORMANCE OF THE 2ND ORDER TURBULENCE CLOSURES IN THE RED SEA OVERFLOW Aiki, H.; Takahashi, K.; Yamagata, T.: THE RED SEA OUTFLOW REGULATED BY THE INDIAN MONSOON Girton, J. B.; Yousoufian, K. S.: DENMARK STRAIT OVERFLOW EDDIES AS A PROXY FOR THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION VARIABILITY Das, H. S.; Niedoroda, A.: ROLE OF GRAVITY CURRENTS ON SEAFLOOR MORPHOLOGY Matt, S.; Iskandarani, M.; Leaman, K. D.: MIXING AND ENTRAINMENT IN A 2D GRAVITY CURRENT FROM A HIGH-ORDER NON-HYDROSTATIC SPECTRAL ELEMENT MODEL AND THE IMPACT OF TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN FORCING Matsumura, Y.; Hasumi, H.: TOPOGRAPHIC EFFECTS ON DENSE GRAVITY CURRENTS Bozec, A.; Chassignet, E. P.; Garraffo, Z.; Halliwell, G.; Lozier, S.: EVALUATION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN OUTLOW WATER VARIABILITY IN NORTH ATLANTIC HYCOM SIMULATIONS Swaters, G. E.: STABILITY CHARACTERISTICS OF ABYSSAL OVERFLOWS Xu, X.; Chassignet, E. P.; Townsend, T. L.: THE MEDITERRANEAN OUTFLOW IN A NORTH ATLANTIC SIMULATION Withdrawn Guan, X.; Ou, H. W.; Chen, D.: TIDAL EFFECT ON THE DENSE WATER DISCHARGE: A MODELLING STUDY Tessler, Z. D.; Gordon, A. L.: OBSERVATIONS ON THE TRANSPORT AND STRUCTURE OF THE PANAY STRAIT OVERFLOW 079: Photobiogeochemistry: Shedding Light on Biogeochemical Cycles from Rivers to the Sea Garcias-Bonet, N.; Sherman, T. D.; Marbà, N.; Duarte, C. M.: LABYRINTHULA IN WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEAGRASSES: BIOGEOGRAPHY AND PATHOGENICITY Paul, V. J.; Ross, C.; Ritson-Williams, R.; Walters, L. J.; Arthur, K. E.; Gunasekera, S. P.; Meickle, T.: IMPACTS OF BENTHIC CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS ON CORAL REEFS Valette-Silver, N. J.: LINKING ECOSYSTEM HEALTH TO MARINE ANIMAL HEALTH Hirons, A. C.; Potter, C. W.: CONTRIBUTION OF COMMERCIAL FISHING TO THE DECLINE IN HAWAIIAN MONK SEALS (MONACHUS SCHAUINSLANDI) Rocha, M. L.; Dias, J. F.: HISTOPATHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE LIVER OF FLATFISH ACHIRUS LINEATUS IN A POLLUTED ESTUARY IN BRAZILIAN COAST Chair(s): Gregory A. Cutter, [email protected]; Richard G. Zepp, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 869. 870. 871. White, E. M.; Wang, W.; Kieber, D. J.; Mopper, K.: SEMIAUTOMATED METHOD FOR DETERMINATION OF PHOTOCHEMICALLY PRODUCED CARBON DIOXIDE FROM DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN MARINE WATERS Vermilyea, A. W.; Hansard, S. P.; Voelker, B. M.: SOURCES AND SINKS OF HYDROGEN PEROXIDE IN THE GULF OF ALASKA He, Z.; Marron, C. A.; Chin, Y. P.; Weavers, L. K.: PHOTODEGRADATION OF CIPROFLOXACIN AND METOLACHLOR IN NATURAL AND CONSTRUCTED WETLANDS (~) 58 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 872. 874. 875. 876. 877. 878. 879. 880. 881. 882. 369. Zhao, B.; McRoberts, D.; Zafiriou, O. C.: A HANDSON PRIMARY SCHOOL ACTIVITY THAT SHOWS PHOTOBLEACHING OF CDOM AND THE USE OF REPLICATES AND CONTROLS, AND RELATES PHOTOBLEACHING TO THE WATER CYCLE Lin, C. Y.; Hill, V. L.; Manley, S. L.: BROMOPEROXIDASE CATALYZED PRODUCTION OF POLYBROMOMETHANES FROM SEAWATER DOM Helms, J. R.; Stubbins, A. P.; Mopper, K.: THE PHOTOCHEMICAL INTERFERENCE IN OXYGEN-BASED MEASUREMENTS OF PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY Swan, C. M.; Siegel, D. A.; Nelson, N. B.; Kostadinov, T. S.: PHOTOCHEMICAL CYCLING OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) IN THE OPEN SEA: COMPARISON OF PHOTOLYTIC QUANTUM YIELD AMONG THE MAJOR OCEAN BASINS Del Vecchio, R.; Pisano, T.; Heigthon, L.; Yang, J.; Zhu, Q.; Guerriero, N.; Thiallet, A.; Kujawinski, E. B.; Blough, N. V.: OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF TERRESTRIAL CDOM: RELATION TO LIGNIN Wang, W.; Johnson, C. G.; White, E. M.; Zafiriou, O. C.: AN ISOTOPIC EXCHANGE METHOD FOR MEASURING PHOTOPRODUCTION OF CO2 FROM DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN SEAWATER Dahl, E. E.; Murawski, K. W.: PHOTOCHEMICAL PRODUCTION OF C1-C3 ALKYL NITRATES DURING GOMECC Gonsior, M.; Peake, B. M.; Cooper, W. J.; Cooper, W. T.: SUNLIGHT-INDUCED CHANGES IN THE MOLECULAR COMPOSITION OF DOM IN THE CAPE FEAR RIVER BY ULTRAHIGH RESOLUTION ELECTROSPRAY FT-ICR, EEM AND UV/VIS Jolliff, J. K.; Kindle, J. C.; Siegel, D. A.; Nelson, N. B.: PHOTOBIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELING: PHOTON BUDGETS AND ELEMENT CYCLING IN THE UPPER OCEAN RICHARD, C.; ter Halle, A.; Halladja, S.: USING 2,4,6-TRIMETHYLPHENOL AS A SCAVENGER TO EVALUATE THE CONTRIBUTION OF HUMIC TRIPLET EXCITED STATES IN THE NOM-MEDIATED PHOTODEGRADATION OF POLLUTANTS Estapa, M. L.; Mayer, L. M.; Hardy, K. R.: “PHOTOREMINERALIZATION” OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON 370. 371. 372. 373. 374. 375. 376. 100: Operational Oceanography: Observing System Design & Implementation Chair(s): Keith Alverson, [email protected]; Frank L. Bub, [email protected]; Paul DiGiacomo, [email protected]; Ed Harrison, [email protected]; Allan Robinson, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 210. 211. 084: Harmful Algal Blooms: Interactive Influence of Nutrient Competition, Differential Grazing, and Other Causative Factors 212. Chair(s): Christopher J. Gobler, [email protected]; William G. Sunda, [email protected]; Edna Graneli, [email protected] 213. Location: Poster Hall 367. 368. Salomon, P. S.; Campos Baeta Neves, M. H.; Rodriguez, E. G.; Granéli, E.: PARASITE INFECTION OF PLANKTONIC DINOFLAGELLATES IN A COASTAL TROPICAL AREA OF THE SOUTHERN ATLANCTIC Tenenbaum, D. R.; Salomon, P. S.; Granéli, E.: ESTIMATING THE INGESTION OF HETEROCAPSA TRIQUETRA (DINOPHYTA) CELLS BY PRYMNESIUM PARVUM (HAPTOPHYTA): A FLOW CYTOMETRY APPROACH Arthur, K. E.; Ross, C.; Paul, V. J.: THE ROLE OF NUTRIENTS IN LYNGBYA GROWTH AND CHEMICAL DEFENCE Hayes, K. C.; Lewitus, A. J.; Wilde, S. B.: SEASONAL VARIATIONS IN PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND MICROZOOPLANKTON GRAZING IN A EUTROPHIC COASTAL LAGOONAL SYSTEM IN SOUTH CAROLINA Mohlin, M.; Pattanaik, B.; Roleda, M. Y.; Wulff, A.: DIAZOTROPHIC CYANOBACTERIA FROM THE BALTIC SEA ARE NOT AFFECTED BY THE INTERACTION OF UV RADIATION AND NUTRIENT LIMITATION Graham, S. L.; Strom, S. L.: RESPONSE OF MICROZOOPLANKTON GRAZERS TO SIMULATED HETEROSIGMA AKASHIWO BLOOMS Cawley, K. M.; McKnight, D. M.; Aiken, G.: THE IMPACT OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) ON THE GROWTH OF ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE IN LABORATORY CULTURES Joyner, J. J.; Paerl, H. W.: ECOLOGY OF THE TOXIC MARINE CYANOBACTERIA, LYNGBYA SPP., IN FLORIDA ESTUARINE AND COASTAL WATERS 214. Holiday, D.; Carter, G.; Gould, R.; MacIntyre, H.: HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO: USING MODIS AQUA AND IN SITU DATA TOWARD HABS PREDICTION IN TURBID COASTAL WATERS Egerton, T. A.; Morse, R. E.; Marshall, H. G.; Mulholland, M. R.: DAILY VARIABILITY IN ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS AND PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSITION DURING TWO BLOOM EVENTS IN THE LAFAYETTE RIVER, VIRGINIA. 215. 216. Takeda, S.; Obata, H.; Inoue, T.; Teranishi, G.: UNDERWAY SAMPLING SYSTEM FOR DETERMINATION OF DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE TRACE METALS IN OCEANIC SURFACE WATERS (GEOSS/BIOCARBON) Berger, J.; O’Sullivan, J.; Halkyard, J.; Orcutt, J.: THE EXTENDED DRAFT PLATFORM: THE OOI GLOBALSCALE NODE FOR THE MID-ATLANTIC SITE Garcia, R. F.; Meinen, C. S.; Baringer, M. O.: UTILIZING VOLTAGE MEASUREMENTS ON A SUBMARINE CABLE TO ESTIMATE FLORIDA CURRENT TRANSPORT OPERATIONALLY: A REAL-TIME OBSERVING SYSTEM Stathoplos, L.; Keegstra, P.; Soracco, M.; DiGiacomo, P.: NOAA’S OPERATIONAL OCEAN COLOR PRODUCTS FROM THE COASTWATCH OKEANOS SYSTEM Ning, F. L.; Jiang, G. S.: A CONCEPTUAL DESIGN FOR BOREHOLE OBSERVATORIES OF GAS HYDRATES BURIED IN OCEANIC SEDIMENTS Ondrusek, M. E.; Stengel, E.; Kinkade, , C.: NEAR IR WATER-LEAVING RADIANCE MEASUREMENTS IN TURBID WATERS Pedersen, O. P.: THE POTENTIAL OF AN AUTONOMOUS UNDERWATER VEHICLE (AUV) AS A MARINE SAMPLING PLATFORM. * represents Invited presentations ( ) 59 Monday 873. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 217. 218. 219. 220. 221. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 380. Obata, H.; Teranishi, G.; Inoue, T.; Takeda, S.: A SEQUENTIAL CLEAN FILTERING SYSTEM FOR PARTICULATE TRACE METALS IN OCEANIC SURFACE WATERS (GEOSS/BIOCARBON) Py, F.; Ryan, J.; Rajan, K.; Fox, M.: ADAPTIVE WATER SAMPLING FROM AN AUTONOMOUS UNDERWATER VEHICLE BASED ON UNSUPERVISED CLUSTERING Johnson, M.; Arzayus, K. M.: CELEBRATING TEN YEARS OF PROGRESS TOWARD BUILDING A GLOBAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM Sheng, J.; Pfitsch, W.; Katz, J.: SHIPBOARD LARGE THROUGHPUT CELL CYTOMETRY WITH CINEMATIC DIGITAL HOLOGRAPHIC MICROSCOPE Meyers, G. A.; de Ruijter, W. P.: INDOOS—A SUSTAINED OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM IN THE INDIAN OCEAN FOR CLIMATE RESEARCH 108: Controls on Carbon Biogeochemistry and Fluxes and Their Associated Scales of Variability in Ocean Margins Chair(s): James Bauer, [email protected]; Charles S. Hopkinson, Jr., [email protected]; Wei-Jun Cai, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 893. 894. 104: Coastal Sensor Networks and Ocean Microbial Fuel Cell Technology 895. Chair(s): Robert F. Chen, [email protected]; Kim Frashure, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 222. 223. 224. 225. 226. 227. 896. Ellison, R. M.; Lizotte, M.; Crowell, J.: HIGH SPATIAL RESOLUTION MAPPING OF WATER QUALITY AND BATHYMETRY WITH A PERSON-DEPLOYABLE, LOW COST AUTONOMOUS UNDERWATER VEHCILE Gilbert, S. A.; Luther, M. E.; Tamburri, M.; Johengen, T.: THE ALLIANCE FOR COASTAL TECHNOLOGIES: SENSOR NEEDS FOR COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS Spada, F. W.; Manov, D. V.; Chang, G.; Benson, B.; Kastner, R.: REAL-TIME TELEMETRY TECHNOLOGIES FOR MOORED OCEANOGRAPHIC APPLICATIONS Levine, E. R.; Cray, B.: THE NUWC AUTONOMOUS OCEAN PROFILER FOR COASTAL NETWORKS AND OPERATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHY Nielsen, M. E.; White, H. K.; Sharma, S.; Girguis, P. R.; Reimers, C. E.: BENTHIC MICROBIAL FUEL CELLS AT COLD SEEPS REFLECT VARIABLE TRANSPORT PROCESSES AND MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES SANG-EUN/OH, S.; JUNG RAE/KIM, J. R.; BRUCE E./ LOGAN, B. E.: EFFECTS OF APPLIED VOLTAGES AND OXYGEN CONCENTRATIONS AT THE ANODE ON POWER OF A MICROBIAL FUEL CELL 897. 898. 899. 900. 901. 902. 107: Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms: Regional and Comparative Studies of the GEOHAB and ECOHAB Programs 903. Chair(s): Pat Glibert, [email protected]; Danielle Luttenberg Meitiv, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 377. 378. 379. Lenes, J. M.; Walsh, J. J.; Weisberg, R. H.; Dieterle, D. A.; Heil, C. A.; Chen, R.; Jolliff, J. K.; Barth, A.; He, R.; Prospero, J. M.: A KARENIA ODYSSEY: MODEL IMPLICATIONS FOR CURRENT AND FUTURE UNDERSTANDING 904. LEE, J. B.; KIM, H. S.: TROPICAL SPECIES OCCURRENCE OF MARINE DINOFLAGELLATES IN THE ADJACENT SEA OF JEJU ISLAND (KOREA) AND THE EAST CHINA SEA BY GLOBAL WARMING AL AZRI, A. R.; GOES, J.; GOMES, H.; AL-HASHMI, K.: BUILDING A FRAMEWORK FOR THE ECOLOGICALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF MARINE LIVING RESOURCES OF THE SULTANATE OF OMAN. Zheng, L.; Weisberg, R. H.; Barth, A.; Alvera Azcarate, A.: CIRCULATION INFLUENCES ON WEST FLORIDA SHELF RED-TIDE EVENTS: FINITE VOLUME MODEL APPLICATIONS TO SHELF-ESTUARY INTERACTIONS 905. 906. Sikes, E. L.; Uhle, M. E.; Nodder, S. D.: SOURCE, DEGRADATION, AND FATE OF SEDIMENTARY ORGANIC MATTER IN A COASTAL MARINE ENVIRONMENT: EVIDENCE FROM THE HAURAKI GULF, NEW ZEALAND Chuang, W.; Hung, C.; Gong, G.: LATERAL EXPORT FLUX OF ORGANIC CARBON IN THE EAST CHINA SEA Osburn, C. L.; Stedmon, C. A.: RESOLVING OPTICAL AND CHEMICAL MEASUREMENTS OF TERRESTRIAL DOM FLUX IN THE NORTH SEA-BALTIC SEA MIXING ZONE Masserini, R. T.; Fanning, K. A.: HIGH RESOLUTION INSTRUMENTATION FOR MONITORING EPISODIC NUTRIENT EVENTS Souza, A. C.; Pease, T. K.: ORGANIC MATTER CYCLING IN COASTAL SEDIMENTS: THE IMPACT OF NONCOMPETITIVE INHIBITION ON EXTRACELLULAR ENZYMES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR ORGANIC MATTER PRESERVATION Quigg, A. S.; Kurtz, J. C.; Lehrter, J. C.: PRIMAY PRODUCTIVITY ESTIMATES IN GULF OF MEXICO WATERS: COMPARING IN SITU METHODS (FRRF, FIRE) WITH TRADITIONAL TECHNIQUES. Kahl, L. A.; Vardi, A.; Schofield, O.: EXPORT FLUX VARIABILITY DUE TO CHANGES IN PHYTOPLANKTON PHYSIOLOGY Otosaka, S.; Tanaka, T.; Togawa, O.; Amano, H.; Minakawa, M.; Khim, B. K.; Noriki, S.: TIME-SCALE OF POC CYCLE IN THE JAPAN SEA Rau, G. H.: ELECTROCEMICAL PRODUCTION OF OCEAN ALKALINITY FOR CARBON DIOXIDE AND ACID MITIGATION, AND HYDROGEN GENERATION Dierssen, H. M.; Burdige, D.; Drake, L. A.; Zimmerman, R. C.: EPISODIC CARBON EXPORT OF BENTHIC MACROALGAE FROM THE GREAT BAHAMA BANK TO THE DEEP SEAFLOOR VISIBLE FROM SATELLITE IMAGERY Meysman, F.; Middelburg, J. J.: WHAT CONTROLS THE RATE OF ORGANIC MATTER PROCESSING IN MARINE SEDIMENTS: GEOCHEMISTRY, PHYSICS OR ECOLOGY? Meiggs, D. J.; Bristow, G.; Nuzzio, D. B.; Taillefert, M.: IN SITU DEPTH PROFILES AND BENTHIC FLUX MEASUREMENTS TO DETERMINE SEASONAL VARIATIONS OF BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES IN ESTUARINE AND CONTINENTAL SHELF SEDIMENTS Min, D.; Amos, A. F.: CAPTURING AN EPISODIC FRESHWATER DISCHARGE EVENT BY COASTAL OCEAN MONITORING AT THE ARANSAS PASS TIDAL INLET, SOUTH TEXAS Withdrawn (~) 60 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 110: Transport and Mixing in Flows Through Aquatic Vegetation 252. 253. Location: Poster Hall 781. 782. 783. 784. 785. 786. Lacy, J. R.; Wyllie-Echeverria, S.: FIELD MEASUREMENTS OF CURRENT ATTENUATION AND VERTICAL MIXING IN EELGRASS MEADOWS Variano, E. A.; Ho, D. T.; Engel, V.; Schmieder, P. J.; Reid, M. C.; Sukop, M.: PHYSICAL AND NUMERICAL MODELLING OF FLOW THROUGH THE EVERGLADES Branco, B. F.; Oldham, C. E.: VERTICAL MASS EXCHANGE ACROSS SUBMERGED AQUATIC VEGETATION CANOPIES USING A NEW EDDY CORRELATION METHOD Fram, J. P.; MacIntyre, S.; Caraco, N. F.; Cole, J. J.; McGillis, W. R.: MODELING DISSOLVED OXYGEN IN A TIDAL FRESHWATER EMBAYMENT OF INVASIVE FLOATING VEGETATION WITH A HEAT BUDGET Lightbody, A. F.; Nepf, H. M.: MEASURING AND MODELING FLOW THROUGH SPATIALLY HETEROGENEOUS VEGETATION MA, G.; Sheng, Y. P.: A TKE MODEL FOR SIMULATING THE EFFECTS OF VEGETATION ON ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC FLOW AND TURBULENT MIXING 120: Oceans and Human Health: Identifying and Understanding Ocean Health Benefits and Threats Chair(s): Paul Sandifer, [email protected]; Ed Laws, edlaws@ lsu.edu; Stephen Brandt, [email protected]; Sharon Smith, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 381. 382. 383. 119: Operational Oceanography: Assimilation, Modeling, and Applications in Coastal/Estuarine Ecosystems and Living Marine Resources 384. Chair(s): Frank Aikman, [email protected]; Robert Arnone, [email protected]; Vittorio Brando, [email protected]; Guoqi Han, [email protected]; John Pereira, [email protected]; Woody Turner, [email protected]; Cara Wilson, [email protected] 386. 385. Location: Poster Hall 246. 247. 248. 249. 250. 251. Sandidge, J. C.; Ladner, S. D.; Martinolich, P. M.; Arnone, R. A.: IMPROVED SPATIAL RESOLUTION MODIS BIOOPTICAL PRODUCTS FOR COASTAL MONITORING Cherukuru, N. R.; Brando, V. E.; Robson, B.; Dekker, A. G.: COUPLING BIOGEOCHEMICAL AND INHERENT OPTICAL PROPERTY MODELS: A CASE STUDY IN TROPICAL COASTAL ENVIRONMENT, FITZROY ESTUARY AND KEPPEL BAY, AUSTRALIA. Ramage, L.; Cunningham, A.; McKee, D.: MODELLING UNDERWATER LIGHT FIELDS IN SHELF SEAS: IMPLICATIONS FOR PRIMARY PRODUCTION MODELLING. Shotwell, S. K.; Hanselman, D. H.: REDUCING RECRUITMENT UNCERTAINTY IN ALASKAN SABLEFISH STOCK ASSESSMENT THROUGH THE APPLICATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL SATELLITE INFORMATION Ahmed, S.; Gilerson, A.; Zhou, J.; Ioannou, I.; Hlaing, S.; Gross, B.; Moshary, F.: FLUORESCENCE CONTRIBUTION TO THE REFLECTANCE SPECTRA IN COASTAL WATERS AND ITS APPLICATION TO RETRIEVAL ALGORITHMS Ladner, S. D.; Ko, D. S.; Arnone, R. A.; Gould, R. W.: IMPACT OF ASSIMILATED OCEAN COLOR SATELLITE SALINITY ON A NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO CIRCULATION MODEL 387. 388. 389. 390. 391. 392. 393. Sinigalliano, C.; Wanless, D.; Scott, T.; Stewart, J.; Meeroff, D.; Bloetscher, F.; Boyer, J.; Goodwin, K.: MOLECULAR MICROBIAL WATER QUALITY ASSESSMENT AND BACTERIAL SOURCE TRACKING FOR THE FLORIDA AREA COASTAL ENVIRONMENT (FACE) PROGRAM Walsh, C. J.; Leggett, S. R.; Henry, M. S.; Pierce, R. H.; Osborn, S.: CELLULAR METABOLISM OF BREVETOXIN (PBTX-2) IN IMMUNE CELL LINES Green, D. H.; Hart, M. C.; Carrano, C. J.; Kuepper, F. C.; Amin, S. A.: THE ROLE OF SYMBIOTIC BACTERIAL SIDEROPHORES IN PROMOTING PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY Collier, T. K.; Varanasi, U.; Dickhoff, W. W.: THE SEAFOOD DILEMMA: A WAY FORWARD Zhu, X.; Wang, J. D.: MICROBIAL WATER QUALITY AT A SUBTROPICAL BEACH SETTING: A MODELING APPROACH Wanless, D. R.; Sinigalliano, C. D.: INTEGRATING MICROBIAL SOURCE-TRACKING MARKERS WITH BACTERIAL INDICATORS TO BETTER CHARACTERIZE WATER QUALITY AT A SOUTH FLORIDA RECREATIONAL BEACH Strutton, P. G.; Wood, A. M.; Tweddle, J. F.; Cannon, D.; Hunter, M.; Foley, D.; Scott, B.: ADVANCES IN UNDERSTANDING, PREDICTING AND TRACKING OREGON HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS Hitchcock, G. L.; Crawford, D.: PRODUCTION AND RESPIRATION RATES IN KARENIA BREVIS Klump, J. V.; McLellan, S. L.; Mueller-Spitz, S.; Bravo, H. R.: PARTICLE DYNAMICS ASSOCIATED WITH PATHOGEN TRANSPORT IN COASTAL LAKE MICHIGAN Abdelzaher, A.; Wright, M.; Scott, T.; Lucasik, G.; SoloGabriele, H.; Bonilla, A.; Bonilla, T.; Palmer, C.: DUAL LAYER FILTRATION SYSTEM FOR CONCENTRATING FECAL INDICATORS AND PATHOGENS FROM MARINE WATERS Polansky, L. Y.: DETERMINING THE ROLE OF KARENIA BREVIS BLOOMS IN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT RESPIRATORY DIAGNOSES ADMISSIONS IN SARASOTA COUNTY, FLORIDA Lyons, M. M.; Ward, J. E.; Roberts, S. B.; Smolowitz, R.; Vallino, J.; Allam, B.: GOT SNOW? TRACKING MARINE PATHOGENS IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS Tomlinson, M. C.; Wynne, T. T.; Stumpf, R. P.; Schwab, D.; Stumbaugh, M.: EFFORTS TOWARD FORECASTING HARMFUL MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA BLOOMS IN WESTERN LAKE ERIE * represents Invited presentations ( ) 61 Monday Chair(s): Anne Lightbody, [email protected]; Evan Variano, [email protected] Aurin, D. A.; Dierssen, H. M.: AN OCEAN COLOR ALGORITHM FOR RETRIEVING BIO-OPTICAL PROPERTIES IN THE TURBID WATERS OF LONG ISLAND SOUND. Fontana, C.; Grenz, G.; Pinazo, C.; Diaz, F.: ENVIRONMENTAL OCEANOGRAPHIC MODELLING SYSTEM DRIVEN BY OCEAN COLOR DATA IN A COASTAL AREA OF THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA. Monday ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 137: Oceanic and Meteorological Measurements From Voluntary Observing Ships and Other Platforms of Opportunity 261. Chair(s): Rod G. Zika, [email protected]; Franciscus Colijn, [email protected]; Lisa Beal, [email protected]; Peter Minnett, [email protected] 262. Location: Poster Hall 1346. 1347. 1348. 1349. 1350. 1351. 1352. 263. Cosca, C. E.; Feely, R. A.; Wisegarver, D. P.; Lebon, G. T.: FOUR YEARS OF UNDERWAY FCO2 OBSERVATIONS FROM FOUR VOS SHIPS IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN. Lips, U.; Lips, I.; Kikas, V.: FERRYBOX MEASUREMENTS: A TOOL TO MONITOR AND ASSESS MESO-SCALE VARIABILITY (GULF OF FINLAND, BALTIC SEA) Smith, S. R.; Rolph, J. J.; Bourassa, M. A.: THE SHIPBOARD AUTOMATED METEOROLOGICAL AND OCEANOGRAPHIC SYSTEM (SAMOS) INITIATIVE Castelao, G. P.; Goni, G. J.; Snowden, D. P.; Chinn, P. I.; Roseli, J. P.; Wolfe, C.; Bringas, F.: NOAA/AOML THERMOSALINOGRAPH OPERATIONS DELCROIX, T.; DIVERRES, D.; GOURIOU, Y.; IHILY, J. M.; JACQUIN, S.; MAES, C.; MORROW, R.; REVERDIN, G.; TECHINE, P.; VARILLON, D.: MONITORING SEA SURFACE SALINITY IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN FROM SHIPS OF OPPORTUNITY Zika, R. G.; Williams, E.; Cucchiara, D.; Maxwell, C.; Cummings, S.: THE EXPLORER OF THE SEAS OBSERVATORY: FOUR YEARS OF REGIONAL MARINE SURFACE WATER MEASUREMENTS IN THE CARIBBEAN SEA Gilman, M.; Moore, K.; Soloviev, A.; Young, K.: PLANKTON-RELATED SURFACTANTS IN THE PROBLEM OF VISIBILITY OF FAR SHIP WAKES 141: Hydrodynamics and Morphodynamics of Marshes and Shallow Coastal Environments Chair(s): Zoe Hughes, [email protected]; Brittina Argow, [email protected]; Sergio Fagherazzi, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 787. 788. 789. 790. 791. Chair(s): Heath E. Capello, [email protected]; Clifford A. Ochs, [email protected] Chair(s): Paul M. DiGiacomo, [email protected]; Steven Greb, [email protected]; Arnold Dekker, [email protected]; Nikolay P. Nezlin, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 925. Location: Poster Hall 255. 256. 257. 258. 259. 260. Tutak, B.; Sheng, Y. P.: EFFECTS OF TIDAL FLATS AND MARSHES ON ESTUARINE CIRCULATION IN GTMNERR, FL Rees, M. E.; Jachec, S. M.: WAVE MODELING AROUND SUBMERGED BREAKWATERS/ARTIFICIAL REEFS Borrelli, M.; Boothroyd, J. C.: DOCUMENTING CHANGE ALONG A LOW-ENERGY COASTAL EMBAYMENT WITH FRINGING MARSH: A NEW PROXY-BASED SHORELINE INDICATOR Zawada, D. G.; Hearn, C. J.: ALONG-SHORE SAND FEATURES IN A LOW-ENERGY, SUBTROPICAL ESTUARY: OBSERVATIONS AND MODELING Withdrawn 147: In, Around, and Out: Autochthonous Production, Allochthonous Inputs, and Downstream Transport of Riverine Carbon 139: Applications of Remote Sensing Data for Assessing and Monitoring Coastal and Inland Water Quality 254. Hernández-Cruz, L. R.; Dixon, B.; Pyrtle, A.: DIFFUSE LIGHT ATTENUATION COEFFICIENT VS. TURBIDITY TO DETERMINE WATER QUALITY IN RIVERS, ESTUARIES AND OCEANS O’Neill, J. D.; Costa, M. P.; Sharma, T.; Komick, N.: MAPPING BENTHIC SUBSTRATES IN WESTERN CANADIAN COASTAL WATERS USING HYPERSPECTRAL IMAGERY Valdmets, K.; Ansko, I.; Reinart, A.: EFFECT OF CALIBRATION UNCERTAINTY TO REMOTE SENSING REFLECTANCE VALIDATION Lahet, F.; Stramski, D.: REMOTE SENSING OF TURBID PLUMES USING MODIS IMAGERY IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL WATERS DURING STORM EVENTS Gilerson, A.; Tonizzo, A.; Fortich, R.; Ioannou, I.; Gross, B.; Moshary, F.; Ahmed, S.: CHARACTERIZATION OF THE MULTI-ANGULAR POLARIZED REFLECTANCE FROM COASTAL WATERS Lebonitte, J. T.; Nayegandhi, A.: TOPOGRAPHIC-CHANGE ANALYSIS OF SANDY HOOK, NEW JERSEY, BASED ON LIDAR DATA Darecki, M.; Wozniak, B.; Krezel, A.: SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING OF THE BALTIC ECOSYSTEM AND ITS PRIMARY PRODUCTION Hoyt, K.; McCormick, B.; Kumar, A.: MONITORING THE COASTAL OCEAN ENVIRONMENT FOR HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS Tarrant, P. E.; Neuer, S.: THE APPLICATION OF MODIS 250M DATA TO MONITOR ALGAL BLOOMS IN A SOUTHWESTERN US RESERVOIR SYSTEM Naugolnykh, K.: INFRASONIC PRECURSOR OF TROPICAL CYCLONE 926. 927. 928. 929. 930. 931. Peierls, B. L.; Paerl, H. W.: USING SPATIAL PATTERNS TO INFER ORGANIC CARBON UTILIZATION BY ESTUARINE BACTERIOPLANKTON Marcano-Rivas, A. S.; Ortiz-Zayas, J.: LONGITUDINAL CHANGES IN THE QUALITY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN THREE TROPICAL WATERSHEDS Ochs, C. A.; Capello, H. E.: CARBON IN THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER: TYPES, TRANSFORMATIONS, TRANSPORT Langerwisch, F.; Rost, S.; Poulter, B.; Zimmermann-Timm, H.; Cramer, W.: MODELING CARBON DYNAMICS IN AMAZONIA WITH THE DYNAMIC GLOBAL VEGETATION MODEL LPJML - INPUT, TRANSFORMATION, AND OUTPUT OF FLUVIAL CARBON Lockwood, D. E.; Richey, J. E.; Quay, P. D.; Ung, M.; Sampson, M.: ECOLOGICAL CONTROLS ON THE CARBON CYCLE OF THE MEKONG RIVER Downing, B. D.; Bergamaschi, B. A.; Kratzer, C.; Dileanis, P.: LONGITUDINAL PROFILES OF CDOM, TEMPERATURE, AND CONDUCTIVITY AS A MEANS TO LOCALIZE GROUNDWATER INPUTS IN THE SAN JOAQUIN RIVER, CA. Gordon, E. S.; Schillawski, S. E.; Petrik, C.; Petsch, S. T.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN MOLECULAR COMPOSITION OF RIVERINE ORGANIC MATTER DELIVERED TO THE US ATLANTIC COAST (~) 62 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 932. 172: The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and Decadal Predictability Capello, H. E.; Ochs, C. A.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATION IN PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER Ellis, E. E.; Richey, J. E.; Aufdenkampe, A. K.; Krusche, A. V.; Quay, P. D.: THE IMPORTANCE OF PH, PARTICULATE CARBON, AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN CONTROLLING WATER-COLUMN RESPIRATION RATES IN THE AMAZON BASIN Chair(s): Bill Johns, [email protected]; Martin Visbeck, [email protected]; Rowan Sutton, [email protected]; Axel Timmermann, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1372. 151: Hurricane-generated Waves, Currents and Storm Surge Chair(s): Will Perrie, [email protected]; Don Resio, [email protected] 1373. Location: Poster Hall 569. 570. 571. 572. 573. 574. 575. 576. 577. 578. 579. Perrie, W.; Resio, D.: A TWO-SCALE APPROXIMATION FOR EFFICIENT SIMULATION OF NONLINEAR INTERACTIONS IN HURRICANE-GENERATED WAVES Dukhovskoy, D. S.; Morey, S. L.: GENERATION OF BAROCLINIC TOPOGRAPHIC WAVES BY A TROPICAL CYCLONE IMPACTING A LOW-LATITUDE CONTINENTAL SHELF Howden, S. D.; Asper, V. L.; Dodd, D. W.; Lohrenz, S. E.; Roman , D.; Bender, L. C.; Guinasso, N. L.; Walpert, J.; Blain, C. A.: HURRICANE KATRINA WAVES AND STORM SURGE OBSERVATIONS BY THE CENTRAL GULF OF MEXICO OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM ZHANG, Y.; SHENG, Y. P.: HURRICANE-GENERATED WAVE AND WAVE-INDUCED LOADING ON COASTAL BRIDGES DURING HURRICANE IVAN(2004) Zhang, W. Z.; Hong, H. S.; Shang, S. P.: SOUTHWARD TRANSPORT THROUGH THE TAIWAN STRAIT DUE TO TYPHOONS Blanton, B. O.; Lander, H.; Luettich, R. A.; Reed, M.; Gamiel, K.; Galluppi, K.: COMPUTATIONAL ASPECTS OF STORM SURGE SIMULATION. Jones, O. P.; Kofoed-Hansen, H.: SIMULATING HURRICANE GENERATED WAVES AND WAVE-SETUP USING COUPLED UNSTRUCTURED SPECTRAL WAVE AND FLOW MODELS Romero, L.; Kleiss, J. K.; Melville, W. K.: AIRBORNEOBSERVATIONS OF WIND-WAVE SPECTRA IN THE GULF OF TEHUANTEPEC Chen, Q. J.; Wang, L.; Tawes, R.; Zhao, H.: RESPONSE OF THE NORTHEASTERN GULF OF MEXICO TO HURRICANES Guinasso, N. L.; Bender, L. C.; Howden, S. D.; Walpert, J. N.: WAVE HEIGHTS FROM A 3-M DISCUS BUOY IN THE MISSISSIPPI SOUND DURING HURRICANE KATRINA Segura, W.; Capella, J. E.: STRUCTURE OF NEARINERTIAL BAND GENERATED BY HURRICANE GEORGES BETWEEN TWO ISLANDS 1374. 1375. 1376. 1377. 1378. 1379. 1380. 184: Enhance Our Vision in Underwater Environments Chair(s): Weilin Hou, [email protected]; Alan Weidemann, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 580. 581. 582. 583. 168: Small Mountainous Rivers: From the Watershed to the Global Ocean 584. Chair(s): Anne E. Carey, [email protected]; W. Berry Lyons, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 792. 793. FINE, R. A.; SMETHIE, W. M.; HAPPELL, J.; Khatiwala, S.; Macdonald , A.: BEYOND THE DWBC, NADW PATHWAYS Haak, H.; Baehr, J.; Cunningham, S. A.; Heimbach, P.: OBSERVED AND SIMULATED DAILY VARIABILITY OF THE MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION AT 26N IN THE ATLANTIC Smith, J. N.; Smethie Jr., W. M.; Toole, J. M.: 129I TRANSPORT IN THE DEEP WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN Zhang, D.; McPhaden, M. J.: DECADAL AND MULTIDECADAL VARIABILITY OF ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL CELLS AND THE THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION d’Orgeville, M.; Peltier, W. R.: THE RELATION OF THE PACIFIC AND ATLANTIC BASINS ON DECADAL AND MULTIDECADAL TIMESCALES Yvon-Lewis, S. A.; O’Hern, J.: HCFCS AND OTHER HALOCARBONS IN THE DEEP WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT Willis, J. K.: MONITORING THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION USING A COMBINATION OF ALTIMETER AND ARGO DATA Srokosz, M.; Byfield, V.: THE RAPID CLIMATE CHANGE PROGRAMME (RAPID) - LATEST RESULTS AND FUTURE PLANS Hu, A.; Meehl, G. A.: EFFECT OF IDEALIZED HURRICANES ON THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL HEAT TRANSPORT 585. Lee, K. M.; Ogston, A. S.; Nittrouer, C. A.; Allison, M. A.: EFFECT OF ABRUPT CHANGE IN SEDIMENT SUPPLY ON SMALL MOUNTAINOUS RIVER DELTAS: ELWHA RIVER, WASHINGTON, USA Withdrawn 586. Carder, K. L.; Costello, D. K.; Kaltenbacher, E.; Peacock, T. G.: ENHANCED OPTICAL COMMUNICATION THROUGH THE SEA-AIR INTERFACE Xu, Z.; Yue, K. P.: INFLUENCE OF NONLINEARITY OF OCEAN SURFACE WAVES TO THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL FLUCTUATIONS OF UNDERWATER LIGHT FIELDS Mullen, L. J.; Cochenour, B.; Laux, A.: COMPARISON OF EXTENDED RANGE UNDERWATER IMAGING TECHNIQUES* Hou, W.; Weidemann, A. D.: WHAT CAN WE LEARN ABOUT THE WATER FROM THE SECCHI DISK DISAPPEARANCE? Gleason, A. C.; Reid, R. P.; Voss, K. J.: CLASSIFICATION OF UNDERWATER MULTISPECTRAL IMAGERY FOR CORAL REEF MONITORING Williams, S. B.; Pizarro, O.; Mahon, I.; Johnson-Roberson, M.; Rigby, P.; Barkby, S.: ADVANCES IN AUTONOMOUS BENTHIC SURVEYING AND CHARACTERIZATION OF BENTHIC HABITATS Zhai, P.; Kattawar, G. W.: A HYBRID MATRIX OPERATOR - MONTE CARLO METHOD FOR THE SOLUTION TO THE 3D VECTOR RTE IN COUPLED ATMOSPHEREOCEAN SYSTEMS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 63 Monday 933. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Monday 587. 588. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Johnson-Robeson, M. K.; Pizarro, O.; Williams, S.; Rigby, P.: ACTIVE LEARNING FOR COMPUTER ASSISTED CLASSIFICATION OF BENTHIC SPECIES FROM UNDERWATER IMAGERY Voss, K. J.; Nordine Souaidia, N.: A NEW TOOL TO MEASURE THE UPWELLING POLARIZED SPECTRAL RADIANCE DISTRIBUTION 795. 796. 187: Mercury Pollution: Towards a Holistic Appraisal of Sources, Environmental Cycling, Biotic Exposure, Consequences, and Management 797. Chair(s): Chad Hammerschmidt, [email protected]; James Wiener, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 394. 395. 396. 397. 398. 399. 400. 408. 409. 410. 798. Keith, E. O.; Guentzel, J. G.: MERCURY TRANSPORT AND BIOACCUMULATION IN THE ALVARADO LAGOON SYSTEM, VERACRUZ STATE, MEXICO Evers, D. C.; Graham, R. T.; Perkins, C. R.: SHARK MERCURY LEVELS IN BELIZE Hammerschmidt, C. R.; Fitzgerald, W. F.: SEDIMENTWATER EXCHANGE OF METHYLMERCURY IN NEW YORK HARBOR DETERMINED FROM SHIPBOARD BENTHIC FLUX CHAMBERS Krabbenhoft, D. P.; Sunderland, E.; Landing, W. M.; Moreau, J. W.; Hansard, S. P.; Measures, C.: DISTRIBUTIONS OF MERCURY AND METHYLMERCURY IN THE NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN Deonarine, A.; Lau, B.; Hsu-Kim, H.: ROLE OF NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER DURING THE PRECIPITATION OF NANOPARTICULATE HGS(S) AND OTHER METAL SULFIDES Guentzel, J. L.: A WATERSHED APPROACH TO MERCURY CYCLING AND TRANSPORT IN SOUTH CAROLINA Lamborg, C. H.; Hammerschmidt, C. R.; Luther, G. W.: MERCURY AND MONOMETHYLMERCURY IN HYDROTHERMAL FLUIDS FROM LAU BASIN Amirbahman, A.; Merritt, K. A.; Voytek, M. A.; Chen, C. Y.: CYCLING OF METHYLMERCURY IN THE SEDIMENTS OF THE PENOBSCOT RIVER ESTUARY (MAINE, USA) Crespo-Medina, M.; Chatziefthimiou, A.; Bloom, N.; Reinfelder, J.; Vetriani, C.; Barkay, T.: INTERACTIONS OF CHEMOSYNTHETIC BACTERIA WITH MERCURY AT DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENTS Wiener, J. G.; Rolfhus, K. R.; Haro, R. J.: WETLAND PROXIMITY AFFECTS METHYLMERCURY IN THE AQUATIC FOOD WEB OF CHEQUAMEGON BAY (LAKE SUPERIOR) 799. 196: Impacts of Everglades Restoration on the South Florida Coastal Marine Environment Chair(s): Erik Stabeneau, [email protected]; Edward Kearns Location: Poster Hall 800. 801. 802. McPherson, M. L.; Hill, V. J.; Zimmerman, R. C.; Dierssen, H.: THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF FLORIDA BAY: IMPACTS FOR SEAGRASS PRODUCTIVITY Banzon, P. V.; Kearns, E. J.; Renshaw, A.: USE OF MODIS IMAGERY TO DETECT LANDSCAPE-SCALE CHANGES IN VEGETATIVE AND HYDROLOGIC PROPERTIES OF THE FLORIDA EVERGLADES Melo, N.; Lee, T. N.; Johns, E. M.; Smith, R. H.; Kelble, C. R.; Ortner, P. B.: UNDERSTANDING FLORIDA BAY HYPERSALINITY AND WATER EXCHANGE 197: New Perspectives in Silicon Cycling; from Rivers to Seas and Sediments Chair(s): Dick Dugdale, [email protected]; Mark Brzezinski, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 958. 959. 192: Human Impact in Large Connected Ecosystems: Watershed-Coastal Coupling Chair(s): Christopher J. Madden, [email protected]; David Rudnick, [email protected]; Fred Sklar, [email protected] 960. 961. Location: Poster Hall 794. Meyers, S. D.; Luther, M. E.; Linville, A.; Wilson, M.; Havens, H.: RESIDENCE TIME IN TAMPA BAY AND ITS VARIATION WITH NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCES Hoare, A. M.; Hollander, D. J.; Heil, C. A.; Glibert, P. M.: UNDERSTANDING THE EFFECTS OF CHANGING HYDROLOGY ON NUTRIENT SOURCES AND COUPLING BETWEEN THE EVERGLADES AND FLORIDA BAY: AN ISOTOPIC BIOGEOCHEMICAL PERSPECTIVE Sullivan, P. L.; Price, R. M.; Scinto, L. J.; Ross, M. S.; Cline, E.; Dreschel, T. W.; Sklar, F. H.: GROUNDWATER-SURFACE WATER INTERACTIONS IN TREE ISLANDS AT LOXAHATCHEE IMPOUND LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT (LILA), FLORIDA. Goodbred, S. L.; Rogers, K. G.; Weinman, B. A.; Pate, R. D.: FROM ALL SIDES - REAL AND PERCEIVED THREATS IN THE BENGAL DELTA Calabretta, C. J.; Oviatt, C. A.: A CHARACTERIZATION OF BENTHIC MACROFAUNAL COMMUNITIES PRESENT AT ANTHROPOGENICALLY IMPACTED ENVIRONMENTS WITHIN NARRAGANSETT BAY, RI MARTINEZ-RIVERA, E.; SCHWING, P.; PYRTLE, A. J.; HAYNES, S.: INVESTIGATING HISTORICAL LAND USE WITHIN THE MANATEE RIVER WATERSHED Stavn, R. H.; Falster, A. U.: DETERMINATION OF SUSPENDED QUARTZ AND AMORPHOUS SILICATE CONCENTRATIONS NON-DESTRUCTIVELY BY X-RAY DIFFRACTION NUGRAHA, A.; PONDAVEN, P.; TREGUER, P.: ROLE OF UPPER TROPHIC LEVELS ON SILICON, NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS CYCLING IN THE OCEAN, A BOXMODEL STUDY Withdrawn Herron, S. E.; Benitez-Nelson, C.; Thunell, R.: INSIGHTS INTO SEDIMENT TRAP FLUXES: POSSIBLE UNDERESTIMATION OF OPAL FLUX IN THE SANTA BARBARA AND CARIACO BASINS (~) 64 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Tuesday Oral Sessions 003: Ocean Acidification: Causes and Impacts on Biogeochemical Processes, Biota and Climate Chair(s): Victoria J. Fabry, [email protected]; William M. Balch, [email protected]; Richard A. Feely, [email protected] 001: ASLO Multicultural Program Student Symposium Chair(s): Benjamin Cuker, [email protected]; Deidre M. Gibson, [email protected] Location: W110 Location: W103 08:00 08:15 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D.: COCCOLITHOPHORE CALCIFICATION UNDER HIGH CO2* Bates, N. R.; Amat, A.; Andersson, A. J.; Jeffries, M.; Wanninkhof, R.; Maenner, S.; Sabine, C. L.: SEASONAL RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN CORAL CALCIFICATION AND SEAWATER CARBONATE CHEMISTRY* Ries, J. B.; McCorkle, D. C.; Cohen, A. L.: EFFECTS OF CO2-DRIVEN REDUCTIONS IN SEAWATER CACO3 SATURATION STATE ON ARAGONITIC AND LOW-TOHIGH MG CALCITIC MARINE INVERTEBRATES AND ALGAE Szlosek, J.; Engel, A.; Armstrong, R. A.; Lee, C.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON PARTICLE COAGULATION EFFICIENCY IN THE OCEAN Voss, M.; Lunau, M.; Schmidt, R.; Barcelos e Ramos, J.; Riebesell, U.: NITROGEN FIXATION RATES AND HETEROTROPHIC ACTIVITY UNDER HIGH PCO2 IN FREE DRIFTING MESOCOSMS IN THE BALTIC SEA Balch, W. M.; Bowler, B. C.; Drapeau, D. T.; Booth, E. S.: HOW ON EARTH WILL WE MEASURE THE IMPACT OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION OVER BASIN SCALES? Steinacher, M.; Joos, F.; Frölicher, T.; Plattner, G. K.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION IN THE ARCTIC OVER THE 21ST CENTURY Hepburn, C. D.; Currie, K. I.; Hurd, C. L.: SENSITIVITY OF SUBANTARCTIC CORALLINE MACROALGAE TO ELEVATED CO2 Gledhill, D. K.; Wanninkhof, R.; Millero, F. J.; Eakin, C. M.; Christensen, T.; Heron, S.; Liu, G.; Morgan, J.; Skirving, W.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION OF THE GREATER CARIBBEAN REGION 1996 - 2006 Ilyina, T. P.; Zeebe, R. E.; Maier-Reimer, E.; Heinze, C.: A TOOL FOR EARLY DETECTION OF GLOBAL-SCALE CHANGES IN MARINE CALCIFICATION Zeebe, R. E.; Zachos, J. C.: ESTABLISHING ANTHROPOGENIC CO2 EMISSION TARGETS FOR ALLOWABLE FUTURE CHANGES IN OCEAN PH Feely, R. A.; Sabine, C. L.; Hernandez-Ayon, J. M.; Ianson, D.; Hales, B.: EVIDENCE FOR UPWELLING OF CORROSIVE ‘OCEAN ACIDIFIED’ WATER ONTO THE CONTINENTAL SHELF Lima, I.; Doney, S. C.; Mahowald, N.; Feely, R. A.; MacKenzie, F. T.; Lamarque, J. F.; Rasch, P. J.: IMPACT OF ANTHROPOGENIC ATMOSPHERIC NITROGEN AND SULFUR DEPOSITION ON OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND INORGANIC CARBON SYSTEM Wurst, M.; Voss, M.; Engel, A.; Grossart, H. P.; Riebesell, U.; Lunau, M.: COUPLING OF TRANSPARENT EXOPOLYMER PARTICLE DYNAMICS AND MICROBIOLOGICAL PROCESSES DURING AN OCEAN ACIDIFICATION EXPERIMENT IN THE BALTIC SEA Tunnicliffe, V.; Davies, K. T.; Butterfield, D. A.; Embley, R. W.; Rideout, C.: CALCIFICATION OF MUSSEL SHELLS IN A SETTING OF HIGH CARBON DIOXIDE RELEASE ON A SEAMOUNT IN THE MARIANA VOLCANIC ARC: BIOTIC RESPONSES TO A LOW PH OCEAN * represents Invited presentations ( ) 65 TUESDAY 08:30 08:00 Stiell, B. D.; Kjellerup, B.; Sowers, K.: THE DISTRIBUTION OF ANAEROBIC POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYL DECHLORINATORS IN THE BALTIMORE HARBOR Leon, L. K.; Stewart, G.; Marchese, P.; Zheng, Y.: A SNAPSHOT LOOK AT THE 210PO-210PB BALANCE IN WESTERN LONG ISLAND SOUND Wilkerson, C. N.: COMPARISON OF NEKTON UTILIZATION OF THREE INTERTIDAL HABITATS IN THE HAMPTON RIVER (CHESAPEAKE BAY, VA) Armaiz-Nolla, K. E.; Moseman, S.: EFFECTS OF NITROGEN AND SEDIMENT ADDITIONS ON MICROBIAL DIVERSITY IN A COASTAL WETLAND Sarkodee-Adoo, J.; Hood, R. R.; Sexton, M.: THE EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE ON SCYPHOMEDUSAN CHRYSAORA QUINQUECIRRHA SWIMMING AND MORTALITY Day, R. M.; Cuker, B. E.: EARLY SEASON DEPLETION OF OXYGEN IN THE BOTTOM WATERS OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY. Kourosh, C.; Lou, S.; Rodríguez, C.: TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF BRACHYRUAN CRAB LARVAE DURING A TIDAL CYCLE IN A SMALL ESTUARY IN PUERTO RICO Compton, S. S.; Pride, C.: DENSITY AND DISTRIBUTION OF BENTHIC FORMINIFERA AT FOUR STATIONS ALONG THE GEORGIA CONTINENTAL SHELF Pizarro, M. A.; Gabelli, S. B.; Pineiro, S. A.: STUDY OF NUDIX HYDROLYTIC ENZYMES IN BDELLOVIBRIO AND LIKE ORGANISMS Garcia, S. F.; Maldonado, E.; Latz, M.: THE EFFECTS OF TURBULENCE ON LARVAE OF THE WHITE SEA URCHIN Weber, K. M.; Castanon, A. D.; Walsh, E. J.: UNPALATABILITY OF A COLONIAL ROTIFER, SINANTHERINA SOCIALIS, TO DRAGONFLY AND DAMSELFLY NYMPHS Rosa, S. N.; Flick, R. E.; Elwany, H.: TSUNAMI RUNUP IN HAWAII: THE DESCRIPTION AND RECURRENCE OF EXREME EVENTS Arneson, L. K.; Kirkpatrick, G.: FLOWCAM®, A POTENTIAL NEW METHOD TO ANALYZE PHYTOPLANKTON ECOLOGY Cowart, D. A.; Guida, S. M.; Shah, S. I.; Marsh, A. G.: EFFECTS OF AG AND TIO2 NANOPARTICLES ON THE SURVIVAL AND METABOLISM OF ZEBRAFISH (DANIO RERIO) EMBRYOS Alupay, J. S.; Pitman, R. L.; Ballance, L. T.: INTERANNUAL VARIATION IN FORK LENGTH OF FLYINGFISH FROM THE EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC Salahuddin, Z. Q.; Ryer, C. H.: PHOTOTAXIS AND HABITAT PREFERENCE BY JUVENILE ENGLISH SOLE ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 14:45 15:00 15:15 TUESDAY 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 10:15 Hofmann, G. E.; O’Donnell, M. J.; Sewell, M. A.; Hammond, L. M.; Todgham, A. E.; Zippay, M. L.: DOES ELEVATED CO2 AFFECT LARVAL SKELETAL DEVELOPMENT IN SEA URCHINS?: EXPLORING THE MECHANISMS WITH GENE EXPRESSION ANALYSIS AND MORPHOMETRICS Seibel, B. A.; Rosa, R.; Maas, A.; Birden, L.: METABOLIC RESPONSES TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION Checkley, D. M.; Dickson, A. G.; Takahashi, M.; Eisenkolb, N.; Radich, J. A.: EFFECTS OF HIGH CO2 ON OTOLITH GROWTH OF A MARINE FISH Kolber, Z. S.; Klimov, D.; Wang, K.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON PHOTOSYNTHETIC PROPERTIES OF MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON Klinger, T.; Kershner, J.: LOW PH REDUCES GROWTH RATES IN KELP GAMETOPHYTES ZImmerman, R. C.: SEAGRASS RESPONSE TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION: FROM INDIVIDUAL LEAVES TO POPULATIONS Bissett, A.; de Beer, D.; Schoon, R.; Arp, G.; Reimer, A.: MICROBIAL MEDIATION OF CHANGES TO BULK WATER PH Albright, R.; Mason, B.; Langdon, C.: EFFECT OF DEPRESSED SATURATION STATE ON SETTLEMENT, POST-SETTLEMENT SURVIVORSHIP, AND GROWTH OF PORITES ASTREOIDES AND MONTASTREA FAVEOLATA LARVAE Suarez-Bosche, N. E.; Lebrato, M.; Eastwood, N.; Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D.: THE DEVELOPMENT OF ECHINODERM LARVAE IN A HIGH CO2 WORLD Conmy, R. N.; Coble, P. G.: LATITUDINAL DEPENDENCY OF TERRESTRIAL CDOM: IOP DIFFERENCES BETWEEN WATERSHEDS THAT SUPPLY THE WEST FLORIDA SHELF. 012: Implicit and Adjoint Techniques and Their Application to Ocean Circulation and Biogeochemical Problems Chair(s): Samar Khatiwala, [email protected]; Wilbert Weijer, [email protected] Location: W109 A 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Dijkstra, H. A.: THE APPLICATION OF IMPLICIT TECHNIQUES IN OCEAN MODELING * Heimbach, P.: APPLICATION OF ADJOINT METHODS IN OCEAN MODELING* Ward, B. A.; Friedrichs, M. A.; Anderson, T. R.: COMPARISON OF PARAMETER OPTIMISATION TECHNIQUES APPLIED TO ONE-DIMENSIONAL MARINE BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS Rauser, F.; Korn, P.; Marotzke, J.: ADJOINT BASED ERROR ESTIMATION AND CORRECTION - A SHALLOW WATER CASE-STUDY Veneziani, M.; Edwards, C. A.; Moore, A. M.: ADJOINT SENSITIVITY STUDIES OF THE CENTRAL CALIFORNIA CIRCULATION Cowles, G. W.; Helenbrook, B. T.: A FULLY IMPLICIT SOLVER FOR THE SHALLOW WATER EQUATIONS ON UNSTRUCTURED GRIDS USING A PRECONDITIONED DUAL-TIME-STEPPING APPROACH 011: River-dominated Ocean Margins in the Context of Climate Change 014: Polar Biogeochemistry Chair(s): Christophe Rabouille, [email protected]; Brent MacKee, [email protected]; Minhan Dai, [email protected] Chair(s): David Thomas, [email protected]; Kevin Arrigo, [email protected] Location: W102 Location: W304 G/H 08:00 13:30 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 Mackenzie, F. T.; Lerman, A.; Andersson, A.: LAND-OCEAN MARGIN TRANSFERS IN THE CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE~ Mckee, B. A.: UP THE TIDAL RIVER: IN SEARCH OF ANOTHER MISSING LINK* Najjar, R. G.; Hilton, T.; Katz, B.; Mann, M.; Graham, S.; Patterson, L.; Li, M.; Zhong, L.: CLIMATE FORCING OF MID-ATLANTIC ESTUARIES IN THE 20TH CENTURY Pruski, A. M.; Desmalades, M.; Escoubeyrou, K.; Vetion, G.; Lantoine, F.; Gremare, A.: ORIGIN AND QUALITY OF SEDIMENTARY ORGANIC MATTER IN THE RHONE PRODELTA (GULF OF LYONS, FRANCE) Cathalot, C.; Buscail, R.; Deflandre, B.; Gremare, A.; Lansard, B.; Metzger, E.; Pastor, L.; Viollier, E.; Rabouille, C.: THE FATE OF THE RHONE RIVER DELIVERY TO THE COASTAL OCEAN: BOTTOM WATER AND SEDIMENT RECYCLING COUPLING galy, v.; Eglinton, t.; France-Lanord, c.: EXTREME BURIAL EFFICIENCY OF TERRESTRIAL ORGANIC CARBON IN THE HIMALAYAN SYSTEM Van Cappellen, P.; Loucaides, S.: TERRESTRIAL BIOGENIC SILICA: AN OVERLOOKED SOURCE OF NUTRIENT SILICON TO THE COASTAL MARINE ENVIRONMENT Fuentes-Figueroa, D.; Morell, J. M.; Corredor, J. E.; Otero, E.; Gonzalez, J. G.: VARIATION OF PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY STRUCTURE ALONG THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Lovenduski, N. S.; Ito, T.: THE FUTURE OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN CO2 SINK Regaudie-de-Gioux, A.; Duarte, C. M.: IMPACTS OF CLIMATE WARMING ON ARCTIC PELAGIC METABOLISM: AN EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT Manizza, M.; Follows, M. J.; Dutkiewicz, S.; Menemenlis, D.; Hill, C. H.; McClelland, J.; Peterson, B. J.: TOWARDS MODELING THE CARBON CYCLE OF THE ARCTIC OCEAN Arrigo, K. R.; van Dijken, G. L.: RECENTLY ENHANCED PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN Smith, W. O.; Comiso, J. C.: SOUTHERN OCEAN PIGMENTS AND PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN THE SEAWIFS AGE Sedwick, P. N.; Marsay, C. M.; Aguilar-Islas, A. M.; Lohan, M. C.; DiTullio, G. R.; CORSACS Science Team: EARLY AND PERVASIVE IRON LIMITATION IN THE ROSS SEA POLYNYA Babin, M.; Bélanger, S.: PAN-ARCTIC PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND ORGANIC MATTER PHOTOOXIDATION: SIGNIFICANCE OF THESE TWO LIGHTDRIVEN PROCESSES Kalanetra, K. M.; Hollibaugh, J. T.: COMPARISON OF AMMONIA OXIDIZING ARCHAEA AND BACTERIA POPULATIONS IN THE ARCTIC AND SOUTHERN OCEANS BY ANALYSIS OF AMMONIA MONOOXYGENASE GENE DISTRIBUTIONS (~) 66 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:15 16:45 Eddie, B. J.; Krembs, C.; Juhl, A.; Neuer, S.: INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABLES ON THE MICROBIAL COMMUNITY OF ARCTIC LAND FAST SEA ICE Niemi, A.; Michel, C.; Gosselin, M.: DISTRIBUTION OF SEA-ICE EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES AND MICOORGANISMS DURING THE DARK WINTER PERIOD, WESTERN CANADIAN ARCTIC Pasquer, B.; Meiners, K.; Raymond, B.: DISTRIBUTION OF MICROALGAL BIOMASS OFF EAST ANTARCTICA: MODEL RESULTS Tozzi, S.; Smith, W. O.; Kolber, Z.: HIGH RESOLUTION ROSS SEA PHYTOPLANKTON PRIMARY PRODUCTION ESTIMATED BY MULTIPLE VARIABLE FLUORESCENCE APPROACHES. Sachs, O.; Sauter, E. J.; Schlüter, M.; Rutgers van der Loeff, M. M.; Jerosch, K.; Holby, O.: RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN BENTHIC ORGANIC CARBON FLUX, OXYGEN PENETRATION, AND PLANKTON PROVINCES IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN Hwang, J.; Eglinton, T. I.; Manganini, S. J.; Honjo, S.; Krishfield, R.; Proshutinsky, A.: RADIOCARBON EVIDENCE FOR LATERAL SUPPLY OF ORGANIC CARBON TO THE DEEP CANADA BASIN 17:00 17:15 020: Underrepresented But Not Forgotten: How to Increase Student Diversity in Marine Science Chair(s): Deidre M. Gibson, [email protected]; Kam Tang, [email protected] Location: W103 13:30 13:45 017: Biophysical Interactions at Inertial and Dissipation Scales 14:00 Chair(s): Joe Ackerman, [email protected]; Pete Jumars, [email protected] Location: W204 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 Delavan, S. K.; Webster, D. R.: SIGNAL STRUCTURE IN BIVALVE EXCURRENT FLOW Dickman, B. D.; Jackson, J. L.; Webster, D. R.; Weissburg, M. J.: REAL-TIME TURBULENT ODOR PLUME QUANTIFICATION: I. SIGNAL STRUCTURE PERCEIVED BY BLUE CRABS Jackson, J. L.; Dickman, B. D.; Webster, D. R.; Weissburg, M. J.: REAL-TIME TURBULENT ODOR PLUME QUANTIFICATION: II. CORRELATION TO SPECIALIZED BEHAVIORS IN BLUE CRABS 14:15 Trowbridge, J. H.; Jumars, P.: RECENT PERSPECTIVES ON TURBULENCE IN OCEANIC BOUNDARY LAYERS* Simpson, J. H.: THE PUZZLE OF MIXING IN THE SEASONAL THERMOCLINE OF THE SHELF SEAS Kunze, E.; Dower, J. F.; Dewey, R.: BIOLOGICALLYGENERATED TURBULENCE IN A COASTAL INLET Prairie, J. C.; Franks, P. J.; Jaffe, J. S.: PHYTOPLANKTON SPATIAL DISTRIBTUIONS: THE RANDOM TO CLUMPED TRANSITION SCALE Pfitsch, D. W.; Malkiel, E.; Gemmell, B.; Takagi, M.; Sheng, J.; Buskey, E. J.; Katz, J.: STUDYING IN-SITU MARINE ZOOPLANKTON BEHAVIOR USING A SUBMERSIBLE HOLOGRAPHIC IMAGING SYSTEM Gopalan, B.; Malkiel, E.; Karp-Boss, L.; Sheng, J.; Katz, J.: DIFFUSION OF PARTICLES IN ISOTROPIC TURBULENCE USING HIGH SPEED DIGITAL HOLOGRAPHIC CINEMATOGRAPHY * Maldonado, E. M.; Latz, M. I.: EFFECT OF SMALL-SCALE TURBULENCE ON GRAZING AND GROWTH OF SEA URCHIN LARVAE Ross, T.; Metaxas, A.; Sameoto, J.; Logan, A.: THE MYSTERIOUS BEHAVIOR OF GREEN SEA URCHIN LARVAE Hendriks, I. E.; van Duren, L. A.; Morris, E. P.; Bouma, T. J.; Folkard, A.; Pope, N.; Peralta, G.; Ysebaert, T.; Johnson, G. E.; Verduin, J.: TURBULENT RELATIONSHIPS: IS THERE A RULE OF THUMB PREDICTING THE INFLUENCE OF EPIBENTHIC ORGANISMS ON HYDRODYNAMICS BASED ON THEIR STRUCTURAL PARAMETERS? Stevens, C. L.; Taylor, D. I.; Delaux, S.; Schiel, D. R.: THE DYNAMICS OF WAVE-INFLUENCED MACROALGAL PROPAGULE SETTLEMENT Ackerman , J. D.; Ragaz, P.; Nishihara, G. N.: THE PHYSICAL ECOLOGY OF FENESTRATED MACROPHYTES 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Spence, L. L.; DiBono, P. E.: MORE THAN A PIPELINE: COLLABORATIVE STRATEGIES KEY FOR A MORE DIVERSE WORKFORCE Gilligan, M. R.: MARINE LABS AND MAJORITY UNDERREPRESENTED INSTITUTIONS CAN BUILD PARTNERSHIPS THAT INCREASE UNDERREPRESENTED MINORITY PARTICIPATION IN THE MARINE SCIENCES. Pyrtle, A.J.; Ithier-Guzman, W.; Whitney, V.: FACILITATING LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT AMONG STUDENT PARTICIPANTS IN UNDERREPRESENTED MINORITY PROGRAMS: THE MS PHD’S CASE STUDY Halversen, C.; Strang, C.; Weiss, E.: REDUCING BARRIERS TO ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT AND MARINE GEOSCIENCES CAREERS: A MODEL MIDDLE SCHOOL PROGRAM INTEGRATING GEOSCIENCES AND LITERACY Hoskins, D. L.: THE SSU COAST CAMP: A NOVEL APPROACH TO INCREASE DIVERSITY IN MARINE SCIENCE Batson, B. L.; Thomas, P. J.; Ithier, W.; Mayo, M.; Haynes, S.; Pyrtle, A. J.; Betzer, P.; Bhansali, S.; Greene, B.; Turner, R.: THE FGLSAMP BRIDGE TO THE DOCTORATE PROJECT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA: A MODEL FOR THE RETENTION OF MINORITY GRADUATE STUDENTS IN THE OCEAN SCIENCES Cuker, B. E.; Gibson, D. M.; Cutter, G. A.; Schaffner, L. C.: THE HALL-BONNER PROGRAM FOR MINORITY DOCTORAL SCHOLARS IN THE OCEAN SCIENCES: BUILDING CRITICAL MASS. Gibson, D. M.; Tang, K. W.: DREAMS - ENHANCING RESEARCH, ACADEMIC AND LEADERSHIP TRAINING OF UNDERREPRESENTED STUDENTS IN MARINE SCIENCE 028: Nearshore Processes Chair(s): Jack Puleo, [email protected]; Q. Jim Chen, [email protected] Location: W202 08:00 08:15 Nelson, T. R.; Voulgaris, G.; Warner, J. C.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL EVOLUTION OF SMALL SCALE RIPPLES ON THE INNER SHELF Raineault, N. A.; Nordstrom, K. F.; Jackson, N. L.: EFFECTS OF BULKHEADS ON ESTUARINE BEACH SWASH ZONE CHARACTERISTICS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 67 TUESDAY 17:00 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 08:30 08:45 09:00 TUESDAY 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 034: Climate Impacts on Sub-polar Seas: Mechanisms of Change and Evidence of Response Hancock, M. J.; Landry, B. J.; Mei, C. C.: SANDBAR FORMATION UNDER SURFACE WAVES - THEORY AND EXPERIMENTS Cambazoglu, M. K.; Haas, K. A.; Hanes, D. M.: NUMERICAL MODELING OF CROSS-SHORE SEDIMENT TRANSPORT AND SEASONAL BAR MIGRATION EVENTS Splinter, K. D.; Holman, R. A.: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN 2D CIRCULATION AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT DURING ONSHORE SANDBAR MIGRATION EVENTS Plant, N. G.; Sallenger, A.; Howd, P.; Stockdon, H.; Holland, K. T.: BAYESIAN-PREDICTION APPROACH APPLIED TO COASTAL MORPHODYNAMICS Van Dongeren, A. R.; Plant, N.; Roelvink, J. A.; Haller, M. C.; Cohen, A. B.; Catalan, P.: BEACH WIZARD: BATHYMETRY ESTIMATION BY REMOTE SENSING Mullarney, J. C.; Hay, A. E.; Bowen, A. J.: OBSERVATIONS AND MODELLING OF THE VELOCITY STRUCTURE OF A TIDAL JET Park, K.; Oh, J.; Kim, H.; Im, H.: MASS TRANSPORT MECHANISM IN KYUNGGI BAY AROUND HAN RIVER MOUTH, KOREA Mulligan, R. P.; Bowen, A. J.; Hay, A. E.: WAVE-DRIVEN CIRCULATION AND FLUSHING OF A COASTAL BAY Chair(s): George L. Hunt, Jr., [email protected]; Ken Drinkwater, [email protected]; Jeff Napp, [email protected]; Erica Head, [email protected] Location: W203 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 032: Oceanic Flows Past Sea Mountains and Islands and Their Marine Environmental Impacts 09:15 Chair(s): Changming Dong, [email protected]; Christian Mohn, [email protected]; Pablo Sangrà, [email protected] 09:30 Location: W204 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 Flament, P.; Chavanne, C.; Lumpkin, C.: ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC FLOWS ASSOCIATED WITH MOUNTAINOUS ISLANDS: HAWAII~ Florian Peine, F.; Christian Mohn, C.; Theresa Reichelt, T.; Barbara Springer, B. M.; Robert Turnewitsch, R.: DEEPOCEAN PARTICULATE-MATTER DYNAMICS AS INFLUENCED BY THE ANAXIMENES SEAMOUNT: A WEAK-TIDE ENVIRONMENT WU, T. R.: TSUNAMI INDUCED UPWELLING CURRENT Wagawa, T.; Yoshikawa, Y.: BATHYMETRIC INFLUENCES OF THE EMPEROR SEAMOUNTS UPON THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBARCTIC GYRE: BOUNDARY CURRENT ALONG THE EASTERN SIDE OF THE EMPEROR SEAMOUNTS Chaffey, T. F.; Mitarai, S.; Siegel, D. A.: CIRCULATION AND DEMOGRAPHIC MODELING OF THE STRUCTURING OF MARINE POPULATIONS ALONG IRREGULAR COASTLINES Turnewitsch, R.; Nycander, J.; Chapman, D. C.; Reyss, J. L.; Lampitt, R. S.: REFLECTIONS OF ABYSSAL KILOMETERSCALE FLOW / TOPOGRAPHY INTERACTIONS IN THE SEDIMENTARY RECORD STEGNER, A.; PERRET, G.; DUBOS, T.; CHOMAZ, J. M.: CYCLONE-ANTICYCLONE ASYMMETRY OF LARGESCALE ISLAND WAKE Nencioli, F.; Dickey, T. D.; Kuwahara, V. S.; Rii, Y. M.; Bidigare, R. R.: MESOSCALE EDDIES IN THE LEE OF HAWAII: CLOSED OR OPEN SYSTEMS? Dong, C.; McWilliams, J.; Shchepetkin, A.; Thomas, L.: PV ANOMALIES IN THE SHALLOW-WATER ISLAND WAKE 09:45 10:00 10:15 Mueter, F.; Hunt , G.; Broms, C.; Drinkwater, K.; Friedland, K.; Hare, J.; Melle, W.; Taylor, M.: COMPARISON OF 4 NORTHERN HEMISPHERE REGIONS: ECOSYSTEM RESPONSES TO RECENT OCEANOGRAPHIC VARIABILITY * Drinkwater, K. F.; Sundby, S.: THE RESPONSE OF THE BARENTS AND NORWEGIAN SEAS TO RECENT CLIMATE CHANGES Basedow, S. L.; Tande, K. S.: PHYSICAL IMPACT ON THE SIZE-SPECIFIC DISTRIBUTION OF ZOOPLANKTON ACROSS AND ALONG THE POLAR FRONT Karnovsky, N. J.; Harding, A.; Gremillet, D.; Walkusz, W.; Welcker, J.; Wiktor, J.; Routti, H.; Kwasniewski, S.; Bailey, A.; McFadden, L.; Brown, Z.: CONTRASTING CONDITIONS IN THE GREENLAND SEA: IMPLICATIONS FOR ENERGY TRANSFER TO HIGHER TROPHIC LEVELS. Head, E.; Melle, W.; Broms, C.; Pepin, P.: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE ECOLOGY OF CALANUS FINMARCHICUS IN CANADIAN AND NORWEGIAN SUB-ARTIC SEAS Stabeno, P. J.; Napp, J. M.; Mordy, C. W.: THE INFLUENCE OF SEASONAL SEA ICE ON THE EASTERN BERING SEA SHELF ECOSYSTEM: 2005 Sambrotto, R. N.; Burdloff, D.; Swenson, K.: NITROGEN AND CARBON PRODUCTIVTY IN THE RETREATING ICE REGION OF THE EASTERN BERING SEA DURING 2007 Coyle, K. O.; Pinchuk, A. I.; Eisner, L. B.; Napp, J. M.: ZOOPLANKTON SPECIES COMPOSITION AND ABUNDANCE IN THE EASTERN BERING SEA IN SUMMER: THE ROLE OF WATER COLUMN STABILITY ON ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE Moore, S. E.; Overland, J. E.: ARE GRAY WHALES AND WALRUS RESPONDING TO ‘TIPPING POINTS’ IN SEASONAL SEA ICE EXTENT? Shin, H.; Kim, H.: CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON ANTARCTIC MARINE ECOSYSTTEM AND KRILL FISHERY 040: Ecosystem in Sea Ice Influenced Areas Chair(s): Meibing Jin, [email protected]; Clara Deal, [email protected]; Sang H. Lee, [email protected] Location: W304 G/H 08:00 08:15 08:30 Grebmeier, J. M.; Cooper, L. W.; Pirtle-Levy, R.; Brown, R. S.; Lovvorn, J. R.: ORGANIC CARBON EXPORT AND INFAUNAL BIOMASS IN THE NORTHERN BERING SEA IN 2006 AND 2007 Jinping/Zhao, J.; Jacqueline/Grebmeier, J. M.; Yutian/Jiao, Y.: OPTICAL FEATURES OF BERING SEA RELATED TO THE ECOLOGICAL PROCESS DURING THE ICE MELTING DAYS IN 2007 Cooper, L. W.; Janout, M.; Grebmeier, J. M.; Frey, K. E.; Pirtle-Levy, R.; Lovvorn, J. R.: PROGRESSION OF THE SPRING BLOOM IN THE NORTHERN BERING SEA AND TRANSMISSION OF PARTICULATES TO THE SEA FLOOR (~) 68 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 10:00 10:15 Chen, J.; Li, H.: RESPONSE OF ORGANIC CARBON BURIAL RATE TO RECENT SEA ICE DECREASING IN ARCTIC CHUKCHI SEA SHELF Mei, Z.; Saucier, F.; Zakardjian, B.: SIMULATION OF PRIMARY AND SECONDARY PRODUCTIONS OF GULF OF ST LAWRENCE (CANADA): IMPORTANCE OF TEMPERATURE REGULATION Mathis, J. T.; Bates, N. R.; Hansell, D. A.: NET COMMUNITY PRODUCTION AND THE BIOLOGICAL PUMP IN THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN Lovvorn, J. R.; Grebmeier, J. M.; Cooper, L. W.; Richman, S. E.; Bump, J. K.; Sirenko, B. I.: MODELING THE ENERGETICS OF SPECTACLED EIDERS DURING LONG-TERM CHANGE IN SEA ICE AND BENTHIC FOODS OF THE BERING SEA Hufford, G. L.; Ray, G. C.; Frey, K. E.; Lubunski, E. A.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF DIMINISHING BERINGIAN SEA ICE ON WALRUSES AND RIBBON SEALS Cui, X.; Grebmeier, J. M.; Cooper, L. W.; Lovvorn, J. R.; North, C. A.; Kolts, J. M.: EFFECTS OF PREY AND ENVIRONMENTAL VARIATION ON SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF GROUNDFISH IN THE NORTHERN BERING SEA Russell, J. L.; Ainley, D. G.; Goodman, P. J.: PROJECTED CHANGES IN ANTARCTIC SEA ICE IN THE AR4 CLIMATE MODELS: IMPLICATIONS FOR ADELIE AND EMPEROR PENGUIN HABITATS 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 051: Watersheds, Lakes, Rivers, Estuaries: General Chair(s): JoLynn Carroll, [email protected] 17:00 Location: W108 16:00 16:15 16:30 17:00 17:15 Dickens, A. F.; Montlucon, D. B.; Kenna, T. C.; Baldock, J. A.; Eglinton, T. I.: A HISTORICAL RECORD OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON EXPORTED FROM THE OB RIVER, SIBERIA* Korosov, A. A.; Pozdnyakov, D. V.; Pettersson, L. H.: A SPACEBORNE ASSESSMENT OF RIVERINE DOC FLUX INTO THE KARA SEA Shiller, A. M.; Aiken, G. R.: PREDICTING THE CLIMATE CHANGE RESPONSE OF DISSOLVED AND COLLOIDAL TRACE ELEMENTS IN THE YUKON RIVER BASIN~ Dix, N. G.; Phlips, E. J.; Gleeson, R. A.: WATER QUALITY CHANGES WITHIN THE GUANA TOLOMATO MATANZAS NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE, FL ASSOCIATED WITH FOUR TROPICAL STORMS Hanisak, M. D.; Sanderson, K. M.: WATER QUALITY IN INDIAN RIVER LAGOON, FLORIDA: “WET” VS. “DRY” YEARS 17:15 059: Eddies, Fronts and Sub-Mesoscale Processes In The Upper Ocean Chair(s): Raffaele Ferrari, [email protected]; Amala Mahadevan, [email protected]; Amit Tandon, [email protected]; Leif Thomas, [email protected] Location: W109 A 08:00 08:15 057: Ocean-atmosphere Exchanges and Meridional Transports in Global Water and Energy Cycles 08:30 08:45 Chair(s): W. Timothy Liu, [email protected]; Mark A. Bourassa, [email protected] Location: W203 13:30 13:45 Bigorre, S.; Weller, R.: AIR-SEA INTERACTIONS IN THE GULF STREAM REGION FROM LONG-TERM IN-SITU OBSERVATIONS Fu, R.; Arias, P. A.: CAUSES AND THE EFFECT OF THE CHANGES IN MOISTURE TRANSPORT FROM ATLANTIC OCEAN TO S. AMERICA IN RECENT DECADES carton, J. A.; Grodsky, S.: SALINITY, FRESHWATER FLUX, AND CLIMATE Lin, I.; Pun, I.; Wu, C.: SUPERTYPHOON BOOSTERS IN THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN Duncan, B. E.; Han, W.: INTRASEASONAL VARIABILITY OF INDIAN OCEAN SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE DURING BOREAL SUMMER: MADDEN-JULIAN OSCILLATION VERSUS SUBMONTHLY FORCING AND PROCESSES Clayson, C. A.: AN OVERVIEW OF SEAFLUX: NEW SCIENCE AND METHODS IN AIR-SEA FLUXES Liu, W. T.; Xie, X.: SPACEBASED OBSERVATION OF MERIDIONAL WATER AND HEAT TRANSPORT IN AN OCEAN BASIN Liu, Q.; Hu, H.: LOW POTENTIAL VORTICITY WATER TRANSPORT FROM CENTRAL NORTH PACIFIC TOWARD TAIWAN ISLAND AND ITS RELATION TO THE OCEAN-ATMOSPHERE EXCHANGE* Hilburn, K. A.; Wentz, F. J.: CLOSING THE WATER CYCLE OVER THE OCEAN USING A CONSTELLATION OF SATELLITES Bourassa, M. A.; Weissman, D. E.; Liu, W. T.: SCATTEROMETER DERIVED SURFACE TURBULENT STRESS Weissman, D. E.; Bourassa, M. A.: ESTIMATING AIR-SEA MOMENTUM FLUX WITHIN RAIN Polito, P. S.; Sato, O. T.: GLOBAL TEMPORAL TRENDS IN THE QUIKSCAT WIND VECTOR AND IN THE AMPLITUDE OF ITS VARIABILITY Johns, W. E.; Bryden, H. L.; Baringer, M. O.; Beal, L. M.; Cunningham, S. A.; Kanzow, T.; Hirschi, J.; Marotzke, J.; Garraffo, Z.; Meinen, C.: OBSERVATIONS OF ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL HEAT TRANSPORT VARIABILITY AT 26.5°N FROM THE RAPID-MOC ARRAY* Yan, X. H.; Jo, Y. H.; Liu, W. T.: REMOTE SENSING STUDIES OF MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION IN NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN 09:00 09:15 CLAUSTRE, H.; Niewiadomska, K.; D’ORTENZIO, F.; PRIEUR, L.: SUBMESOSCALE PHYSICALBIOGEOCHEMICAL COUPLING ACROSS THE LIGURIAN CURRENT (NORTHWESTERN MEDITERRANEAN) USING A BIO-OPTICAL GLIDER Anderson, L. A.; McGillicuddy, D. J.; Ledwell, J. R.: A PLANKTON BLOOM IN A MODE-WATER EDDY CAUSED BY EDDY-WIND INTERACTION Mahadevan, A.; Tandon, A.: SUBMESOSCALE FLUXES AND BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTION IN THE UPPER OCEAN Nagai, T.; Yamazaki, H.; Katagiri, M.; Takano, A.: SUBMESOSCALE SUBDUCTION AND ENHANCEMENT OF CHLOROPHYLL PIGMENTS AT THE KUROSHIO FRONT Resplandy, L.; Lévy, M.; d’Ovidio, F.; Merlivat, L.: SUBMESOSCALE VARIABILITY OF PCO2 IN THE NORTHEAST ATLANTIC Glover, D. M.; Doney, S. C.; Nelson, N. B.; Wallis, A.: SUBMESOSCALE ANISOTROPY (FRONTS, EDDIES, AND FILAMENTS) AS OBSERVED NEAR BERMUDA WITH OCEAN COLOR DATA * represents Invited presentations ( ) 69 TUESDAY 09:45 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 09:30 09:45 10:00 TUESDAY 10:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting d’Ovidio, F.; Lévy, M.; Jouini, M.; Takahashi, K.: ESTIMATING SUBGRID FILAMENT LOCATIONS FROM MESOSCALE SURFACE VELOCITIES Withdrawn Glessmer, M. S.; Eden, C.; Oschlies, A.: UPWELLING OFF MAURITANIA - TRANSPORTS, PATHWAYS AND IMPORTANCE FOR THE VENTILATION OF THE OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE INVESTIGATED IN AN EDDY-RESOLVING MODEL Calil, P.; Richards, K. J.: GENERATION OF SUBMESOSCALE VORTICITY FILAMENTS AND THEIR IMPACT ON PRIMARY PRODUCIVITY IN AN ISLAND WAKE 14:30 14:45 15:00 067: Variability and Mixing Near Topography 15:15 Chair(s): Georgi G. Sutyrin, [email protected]; Gordon E. Swaters, [email protected] Location: W109 B 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 079: Photobiogeochemistry: Shedding Light on Biogeochemical Cycles from Rivers to the Sea Johnson, E. R.; Hinds, A. K.; McDonald, N. R.: VORTEX SCATTERING BY FINITE-AMPLITUDE STEP TOPOGRAPHY* MacCready, P.: WHEN IS FORM DRAG USEFUL? Brink, K. H.; Lentz, S. J.: WHEN DOES BUOYANCY ARREST NEUTRALIZE BOTTOM STRESS OVER A SLOPING BOTTOM? Palmer, M. R.; Sharples, J.; Xing, J.: INTENSE MIXING OVER MODERATE SHELF TOPOGRAPHY Zhang, Y.; Flierl, G. R.; Pedlosky, J.: INTERACTION OF EDDIES WITH SHELF WATER IN A PARTIALLY ENCLOSED BAY Kämpf, J.: NEWS ON CANYON-UPWELLING RESEARCH Barnier, B.; Le Sommer, J.; Duchez, A.; Penduff, T.; Molines, J. M.; Biastoch, A.; Drijfhout, S.: ORIGIN OF THE INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF THE ZAPIOLA ANTICYCLONE Dewar, W. K.; Hogg, A. M.: THOUGHTS ON THE MESOSCALE, MIXING AND TOPOGRAPHY* Bouruet-Aubertot, P.; Reverdin, G.; Turnherr, A.: LOWFREQUENCY VARIABILITY OF THE REGIONAL CIRCULATION IN THE LUCKY STRIKE SEGMENT AND IMPACT OF MIXING PROCESSES Sutyrin, G.: BALANCED AND UNBALANCED VARIABILITY NEAR TOPOGRAPHY Chair(s): Gregory A. Cutter, [email protected]; Richard G. Zepp, [email protected] Location: W304 C/D 08:00 08:15 08:30 09:00 09:15 072: Nearshore and Coastal Regions: General Chair(s): Lyle Hibler, [email protected] 09:30 Location: W202 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 Lyon, P. E.; Arnone, R. A.; Lee, Z.; Martinolich, P. M.; Sosik, H.; Vandemark, D.; Feng, H.; Morrisone, R.: POTENTIAL SATELLITE FOR MONITORING BIO-OPTICAL PROPERTIES: QUALITY ASSESSMENT OF OCEAN COLOR MONITOR DATA IN THE COASTAL ZONE Liefer, J. D.; Smith, W.; Dorsey, C.; MacIntyre, H.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN ABUNDANCE OF THE DIATOM PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SP. IN COASTAL ALABAMA WATERS Robinson, K. L.; Frazer, T. K.; Jacoby, C. A.; Youngbluth, M. J.: INTERACTIONS BETWEEN PHYTOPLANKTON, MICROZOOPLANKTON AND MESOZOOPLANKTON IN NEARSHORE SYSTEMS ALONG THE WEST COAST OF PENINSULAR FLORIDA, USA Parkinson, R.; Day, O.; Mallela, J.; Gibson, K.: PRELIMINARY FINDINGS FROM A NEW LONG-TERM CORAL REEF MONITORING PROGRAM IN TOBAGO, WEST INDIES Colas, F.; Capet, X.; McWilliams, J. C.: A NUMERICAL STUDY OF THE CIRCULATION IN PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND Maxwell, A. R.; Hibler, L. F.; Molne, M. A.: IMPROVED FINE SCALE MODEL PERFORMANCE USING AUV FEEDBACKS IN A TIDALLY DOMINATED SYSTEM. Finkl, C. W.; Andrews, J. L.; Robertson, W.; Forrest, B. M.: MEGA COASTAL MORPHODYNAMIC FEATURES ON THE FLORIDA ATLANTIC CONTINENTAL SHELF: SHOREFACE TO UPPER FLORIDA-HATTERAS SLOPE FROM MIAMI TO JACKSONVILLE Legault, K. R.; Gorleski, E. S.; Gaffney, D. A.: EFFECT OF MANGROVE STANDS ON FLOODING VELOCITY HAZARD ZONES IN THE FLORIDA KEYS 09:45 10:00 10:15 Altieri, K. E.; Perri, M. J.; Turpin, B. J.; Seitzinger, S. P.: IN-CLOUD PHOTOCHEMISTRY OF WATER SOLUBLE ORGANIC GASES AND ITS RELEVANCE TO ATMOSPHERIC DOC/DON DEPOSITION Kieber, D. J.; Keene, W. C.; Zhou, X.; Maring, H.; Davis, A. J.; Maben, J. R.; Dahl, E. E.; Izaguirre, M. A.; Long, M. S.; von Glasow, R.; Smoydzyn, L.; Sander, R.: MARINE AEROSOLS PRODUCED FROM BURSTING BUBBLES: PROPERTIES, PHOTOCHEMICAL EVOLUTION, AND OCEANIC FEEDBACKS Zafiriou, O. C.; Pheldgun, E.: PHOTOBIOGEOCHEMISTRY, OR PROBING THE IMPACTS OF SUNLIGHT-INDUCED CHANGES IN NON-LIVING MATTER: EVOLVING QUESTIONS, RELEVANCE, APPROACHES, AND ANSWERS~ Stubbins, A.; Mopper, K.; Hubbard, V.; Uher, G.; UpstillGoddard, R. G.; Law, C. S.; Aiken, G.: RELATING CARBON MONOXIDE PHOTOPRODUCTION TO ORGANIC MATTER FUNCTIONALITY Miller, W. L.; Moran, M. A.; Fichot, C. G.; Johnson, E. A.: PHOTOBIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF CARBON MONOXIDE (CO) IN THE COASTAL OCEAN: FROM GENES TO SPACE Xie, H.; Zafiriou, O. C.: LIGHT-INDUCED FORMATION OF CARBON MONOXIDE FROM PARTICLES IN SEAWATER: PRELIMINARY RESULTS Aarnos, H.; Ylostalo, P.; Vahatalo, A. V.: PHOTOCHEMISTRY MINERALIZES DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) AND INCREASES DOM BIOAVAILABILITY IN THE BALTIC SEA Luther, G. W.; Trouwborst, R. E.; Johnston, A.; Koch, G.; Pierson, B. K.: BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF FE(II) OXIDATION IN A PHOTOSYNTHETIC MICROBIAL MAT: IMPLICATIONS FOR PRECAMBRIAN FE(II) OXIDATION Jones, R. P.; Zepp, R. G.; Molina, M.; White, E. M.: LIGHTINDUCED PROCESSES AFFECTING ENTEROCOCCI IN AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTS (~) 70 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Miller, P. L.; Dieser, M.; Foreman, C.; Fimmen, R.; Guerard, J. J.; Cory, R.; Chin, Y. P.; McKnight, D. M.: DIRECT AND INDIRECT EFFECTS OF UV RADIATION ON BACTERIAL ABUNDANCE AND COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN PONY LAKE, ANTARCTICA Blough, N. V.; Boyle, E.; Del Vecchio, R.: OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AND MODEL COMPOUNDS: RELATION TO STRUCTURE Mopper, K.; Helms, J.; Stubbins, A.; Ritchie, J.; Minor, E.; Kieber, D.: ABSORBANCE SPECTRAL SLOPES AND SLOPE RATIOS AS INDICATORS OF MOLECULAR WEIGHT AND SOURCES OF ESTUARINE CDOM Zepp, R. G.; Shank, G. C.; Vähätalo, A.; Bartels, E.; Jones, R. P.: PHOTOBIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF SARGASSUM: A POTENTIALLY IMPORTANT SOURCE OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN THE UPPER OCEAN Mayer, L. M.; Hardy, K. R.; Schick, L. L.: PHOTODISSOLUTION OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTER CAN SHUNT ITS DECAY TO MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES Skrabal, S. A.; Kieber, R. J.; Whitehead, R. F.: PHOTOCHEMISTRY OF SUSPENDED SEDIMENTS: EFFECTS ON DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON AND COPPER SPECIATION Rusak, S. A.; Strzepek, R. F.; Peake, B. M.; Cooper , W. J.: PHOTOBIOCHEMICAL PRODUCTION OF HYDROGEN PEROXIDE AND SUPEROXIDE BY PHAEOCYSTIS ANTARCTICA IN RESPONSE TO IRON LIMITATION Hansard, S. P.; Vermilyea, A. W.; Easter, H. D.; Voelker, B. M.: SUPEROXIDE SOURCES AND SINKS IN THE GULF OF ALASKA 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 084: Harmful Algal Blooms: Interactive Influence of Nutrient Competition, Differential Grazing, and Other Causative Factors 15:00 Chair(s): Christopher J. Gobler, [email protected]; William G. Sunda, [email protected]; Edna Graneli, [email protected] 15:15 Location: W205 B/C 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 Sunda, W. G.; Hardison, D. R.; Shertzer, K.; Gobler, C. J.; Graneli, E.: POSITIVE FEEDBACK AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ECOSYSTEM DISRUPTIVE ALGAL BLOOMS~ Heil, C. A.; Bronk, D.; Havens, J.: EFFECTS OF DAYLIGHT SURFACE AGGREGATION BEHAVIOR ON NUTRIENT DYNAMICS OF A KARENIA BREVIS BLOOM Sipler, R. E.; Schofield, O.; Seitzinger, S. P.: THE EFFECTS OF BREVETOXIN ON NATURAL MICROBIAL POPULATIONS Procise, L. A.; Mulholland, M. R.: GRAZING BY THE RED TIDE DINOFLAGELLATE, KARENIA BREVIS: IMPLICATIONS FOR BLOOM DYNAMICS Townsend, D. W.; Karp-Boss, L.; Thomas, M. A.: BLOOM DYNAMICS OF ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE: THE ROLE OF COMPETITIVE INTERACTIONS Chen, L.; Zhang, H.; Lin, S.; Anderson, P. A.; Avery, D.; Dam, H. G.: THE SODIUM CHANNEL GENE FROM A COPEPOD AND ITS POTENTIAL LINK TO SAXITOXIN RESISTANCE Strom, S. L.; Bright, K. J.; Prahl, F.; Sparrow, M.: INTERACTIONS BETWEEN DIATOM GROWTH STAGE, POLYUNSATURATED ALDEHYDE CONTENT, AND TOXICITY TO PROTIST GRAZERS Lindehoff, E.; Granéli, E.; Glibert, P. M.: CELLULAR NITROGEN LEVELS REGULATE NITROGEN UPTAKE BY PRYMNESIUM PARVUM (HAPTOPHYTA) AND ITS INTERACTIONS WITH CO OCCURRING SPECIES. Seeyave, S.; Probyn, T. A.; Pitcher, G. A.; Kudela, R. M.; Cembella, A. D.: NITROGEN NUTRITION AND TOXICITY OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SPP., ALEXANDRIUM CATENELLA AND DINOPHYSIS SPP. BLOOMS IN THE BENGUELA Graneli, E.: THE IMPORTANCE OF ALLELOPATHY FOR HABS BLOOM FORMATION AND EXTERNAL FACTORS INVOLVED IN THIS PROCESS Adolf, J. E.; Bowers, H. A.; Place, A. R.: CRYPTOPHYTES, KARLOTOXINS, AND BLOOM FORMATION BY THE ICHTHYOTOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE, KARLODINIUM VENEFICUM Waggett, R. J.; Adolf, J. E.; Place, A.; Tester, P. A.: ANTIGRAZING PROPERTIES OF THE DINOFLAGELLATE KARLODINIUM VENEFICUM DURING PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTIONS WITH THE COPEPOD ACARTIA TONSA Saba, G. K.; Steinberg, D. K.; Bronk, D. A.: GRAZING AND NUTRIENT RELEASE FROM ACARTIA TONSA COPEPODS FEEDING ON TOXIN-PRODUCING KARLODINIUM VENIFICUM: INTERACTIONS OF TOPDOWN AND BOTTOM-UP CONTROL Novoveska, L.; Liefer, J. D.; Smith, W. L.; Place, A. R.; MacIntyre, H. L.: ABUNDANCE AND TOXICITY OF A KARLODINIUM VENEFICUM BLOOM IN THE WEEKS BAY NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE, ALABAMA Bernhardt, P. W.; Mulholland, M. R.; Gobler, C.; Morse, R.; Boneillo, G.; Filippino, K. C.; Procise, L.: ECOSYSTEM IMPACTS OF A COCHLODINIUM POLYKRIKOIDES BLOOM IN A MID-ATLANTIC ESTUARY. Morse, R. E.; Mulholland, M. M.; Egerton, T. A.; Marshall, H. G.: DINOFLAGELLATE BLOOM DYNAMICS AND PATTERNS OF NUTRIENT UPTAKE IN A SHALLOW EUTROPHIC ESTUARY Gobler, C. J.; Berry, D. L.; Wilhelm, S. W.; Grigorev, I.; Terry, A.; Berg, M.; Dyhrman, S.; Koyne, C.; Berges, J.; Collier, J.: PRELIMINARY INSIGHT FROM THE FIRST GENOME SEQUENCE OF A HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM SPECIES, THE BROWN TIDE ALGA, AUREOCOCCUS ANOPHAGEFFERENS 094: Coastal Ocean Modeling and Prediction Chair(s): Ruoying He, [email protected]; John Wilkin, [email protected]; Katja Fennel, [email protected] Location: W101 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 Schwab, D. J.; Beletsky, D.; Lang, G. A.: A REAL TIME SYSTEM FOR PREDICTION OF COASTAL CIRCULATION AT GREAT LAKES BEACHES Hanson, J. L.; Devaliere, E.; Friebel, H. C.; Luettich, R.: AN INSTRUMENTED MODEL TEST BED FOR THE CAROLINAS COAST Pietrafesa, L. J.; Peng, M.; Bao, S.; Xia, M.; Liu, H.; Buckley, E.; Kelleher, K.; Gourley, J.: A COMPREHENSIVE COASTAL SURGE, INUNDATION AND FLOOD MODEL WARNING SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE Wu, X.; Mooers, C.; Bang, I.: THE OCEAN CIRCULATION OF A SMALL, TWO-STRAIT SEMI-ENCLOSED SEA Schaeffer, A.; Molcard, A.; Fraunie, P.; Garreau, P.; Langlais, C.; Barnier, B.: WIND INDUCED COASTAL CURRENTS IN THE NORTH MEDITERRANEAN MICROTIDAL SEA * represents Invited presentations ( ) 71 TUESDAY 14:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 09:15 09:30 TUESDAY 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Hyder, P.; Siddorn, J.; Holt, M.; O’Dea, E.; Mahdon, R.; Smyth, T.; Holt, J.: EVALUATING THE PERFORMANCE OF AN OPERATIONAL HYDRODYNAMIC, SEDIMENT AND ECOSYSTEM MODEL OF THE NW EUROPEAN SHELF. Wiggert, J. D.; Xu, J.; Long, W.; Lanerolle, L. W.; Hood, R. R.; Brown, C. W.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES AND WATER QUALITY WITHIN A COUPLED MODEL OF CHESAPEAKE BAY Penta, B.; Kindle, J. C.; Shulman, I. G.; Lee, Z. P.; Jolliff, J. K.; deRada, S.; Anderson, S. C.: THE IMPACT OF AN IOPBASED UNDERWATER LIGHT PROPAGATION SCHEME ON AN ECOSYSTEM MODEL OF THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM. Arndt, S.; Lacroix, G.; Gypens, N.; Lancelot, C.; Regnier, P.: PHYSICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL CONTROLS ON PRIMARY PRODUCTION DYNAMICS ALONG THE LAND-OCEAN CONTINUUM: IMPLICATIONS FOR COASTAL OCEAN MODELLING Auad, G.; Miller, A. J.: RESILIENT PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL CLIMATE CHANGES IN THE GULF OF ALASKA Martin, B. T.; Piggott, M. D.; Pain, C. C.; Allison, P. A.: NUMERICAL MODELLING OF THE INTERACTION OF INTERNAL WAVES WITH BATHYMETRY USING ADAPTIVE MESH TECHNIQUES Hong, X.; Martin, P.; Wang, S.; Rowley, C.: SIMULATION OF HIGH SST VARIABILITY IN THE REGION SOUTH OF MARTHA’S VINEYARD Bao, S.; Pietrafesa, L. J.; Peng, M.: NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF HURRICAN OCEAN INTERACTION IN COASTAL OCEANS USING A HIGH RESOLUTION WRF/ROMS COUPLED MODEL Springer, S. R.; Samelson, R. M.; Allen, J. S.; Egbert, G. D.; Kurapov, A. L.; Miller, R. N.; deRadda, S.: A NESTED MODEL OF THE OREGON COASTAL TRANSITION ZONE: SIMULATIONS AND COMPARISONS WITH OBSERVATIONS DURING THE 2001 UPWELLING SEASON He, R.: UNDERSTANDING COASTAL CIRCULATION IN THE GULF OF MAINE AND MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT: A REGIONAL MODEL HINDCAST REXPERIMENT Le Henaff, M.; De Mey, P.; Marsaleix, P.: DYNAMICAL AND STOCHASTIC MODELLING FOR THE EVALUATION OF COASTAL OBSERVATIONAL NETWORKS IN THE BAY OF BISCAY Wei, J.; Malanotte-Rizzoli, P.; Chen, C.; Beardsley, R. C.: VALIDATION AND APPLICATION OF ENSEMBLE KALMAN FILTER IN THE GULF OF MAINE Farrara, J. D.; Chao, Y.; Li, Z.; Wang, X.; Park, K.; Zhang, H.; Li, P.; Vu, Q.: APPLICATION AND EVALUATION OF A DATA-ASSIMILATIVE COASTAL OCEAN FORECASTING SYSTEM 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 104: Coastal Sensor Networks and Ocean Microbial Fuel Cell Technology Chair(s): Robert F. Chen, [email protected]; Kim Frashure, [email protected] Location: W101 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 096: Trace Metal Cycling Along the Ocean-continent Boundary: Benthic-pelagic Coupling 16:00 Chair(s): James McManus, [email protected]; Silke Severmann, [email protected]; Maeve Lohan, [email protected] 16:15 Location: W304 C/D 16:00 Martin, W. R.; Morford, J. L.: SEDIMENTARY CYCLING OF REDOX-SENSITIVE METALS: INSIGHTS FROM SEDIMENTS UNDERLYING WELL-OXYGENATED BOTTOM WATER Buck, K. N.; Bruland, K. W.; Measures, C. I.; Barbeau, K.: THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF IRON AND COPPER IN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA SHELF AND ANTARCTIC CIRCUMPOLAR CURRENT WATERS IN THE SOUTHERN DRAKE PASSAGE Lohan, M. C.; Bruland, K. W.: A NEW SOURCE OF IRON TO COASTAL UPWELLING REGIMES Lam, P. J.; Bishop, J. K.; Lee, J. M.; Wood, T. J.: TRACING THE SOURCE OF IRON TO THE HNLC WESTERN SUBARCTIC PACIFIC* Severmann, S.; McManus, J.; Berelson, W. M.; Riedel, T. E.; Owens, J.; Homoky, W. B.: THE BENTHIC FLUX OF IRON FROM RIVER-DOMINATED CONTINENTAL SHELVES OF THE NORTH PACIFIC Aller, R. C.: THE UNSTEADY BENTHIC PUMP: SUCKING, SPITTING, AND PULSING.* 16:30 Needoba, J. A.; Johnson, K. S.: SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS OF THE MULTI-YEAR TIME SERIES DATA FROM THE LOBO SENSOR NETWORK IN ELKHORN SLOUGH, CA* Canion, A. K.; MacIntyre, H. L.; Phipps, S. W.: VARIABILITY IN PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY MODEL INPUTS ON MULTIPLE TIMESCALES: IMPLICATIONS FOR PRODUCTIVITY MONITORING IN WEEKS BAY, USA Neely, M. B.; Heil, C. A.; Murasko, S. M.; Dziemiela, K.: COUPLING AN IN SITU AUTONOMOUS PLATFORM AND A MONITORING PROGRAM IN THE CALOOSAHATCHEE RIVER, FL TO UNDERSTAND NUTRIENT DYNAMICS OF COASTAL HAB’S Francesco Peri, F.; Michal Pollard, M.: INTEGRATION OF CURRENT-OFF-THE-SHELF (COTS) TECHNOLOGY INTO LOW COST COASTAL SENSING PLATFORMS Deese, H.; Beard Tisdale, K.; Pettigrew, N. R.: AN EVENT BASED APPROACH FOR OCEAN OBSERVING DATA: A CASE STUDY ON STRATIFICATION PROCESSES IN THE GULF OF MAINE Luther, M. E.; Meyers, S. D.; Gilbert, S. A.; Subramanian, V.; McIntyre, M.; Wilson, M. C.; Havens, H. H.; Linville, A.: A COASTAL OCEAN PREDICTION SYSTEM FOR TAMPA BAY, FLORIDA Graves, S. J.; Smith, M. R.; Conover, H. T.; Keiser, K. R.: SCOOP DISTRIBUTED INFORMATION MANAGEMENT SERVICES FOR COASTAL MODELING Jones, M. B.; Jones, C. S.; Barseghian, D.; McManus, M. M.; Pawlak, G.: MANAGING AND ANALYZING CABLEDSEAFLOOR SENSOR DATA USING KEPLER SCIENTIFIC WORKFLOWS* Tender, L. M.: THE NAVY BUG (BENTHIC UNATTENDED GENERATOR) Beyenal, H.; Donovan, C.; Dewan, A.; Lewandowski, Z.: OPTIMIZING POWER GENERATION BY MICROBIAL FUEL CELLS Lewandowski, Z.; Beyenal, H.: MICROBIAL FUEL CELLS - FROM LABORATORY STUDIES TO APPLICATIONS (~) 72 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:45 17:00 17:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Ringeisen, B. R.; Biffinger, J.: AEROBIC MICROBIAL FUEL CELLS FOR OPERATION IN THE OCEAN COLUMN White, H. K.; Reimers, C. E.; Stecher, H. A.; Alleau, Y.; Howell, K.; Girguis, P. R.: EXAMINING THE ECOLOGY OF PLANKTON-FED MICROBIAL FUEL CELLS AT VARYING WHOLE CELL POTENTIALS Reimers, C. E.; Nielsen, M. E.; Kauffman, P.: A BENTHIC MICROBIAL FUEL CELL FOR SANDY SEDIMENTS 09:00 09:15 09:30 107: Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms: Regional and Comparative Studies of the GEOHAB and ECOHAB Programs 09:45 10:00 Location: W205 B/C 10:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Kudela, R. M.; Trainer, V. L.; Pitcher, G.; Moita, T.; Figueiras, P.; Probyn, T.: IMPLEMENTATION OF GEOHAB CORE RESEARCH PROJECT--HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN UPWELLING SYSTEMS Glibert, P. M.: HABS AND EUTROPHICATION: FOCUS ON MID-ATLANTIC Hickey, B. M.; Trainer, V. L.; Cochlan, W. P.; Foreman, M. G.; Lessard, E. J.; Pena, A.; Thomson, R. E.; Trick, C. G.; Wells, M. L.; Herndon, J.; MacFadyen, A.; Olson, M. B.: ECOHAB PACIFIC NORTHWEST: TOXIC PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA IN THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT Anderson, C. R.; Siegel, D. A.; Kudela, R. M.; Brzezinski, M. A.: AN EMPIRICAL APPROACH TO ESTIMATING THE PROBABILITY OF TOXIGENIC PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA BLOOMS IN THE SANTA BARBARA CHANNEL Carlson, D. F.; Clarke, A. J.: SEASONAL ALONG-ISOBATH GEOSTROPHIC FLOWS AND THE TRANSPORT OF KARENIA BREVIS RED TIDE BLOOMS INTO FLORIDA;S BIG BEND Kim, H.; Miller, A. J.; McGowan, J.; Carter, M.: CLIMATE AND COASTAL ALGAL BLOOMS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT 117: Turbulence, Mixing, and Multi-scale Interactions in Estuaries and Nearshore Environments Chair(s): W. Rockwell Geyer, [email protected]; Stephen Monismith, [email protected]; James A. Lerczak, [email protected] Location: W109 B 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 110: Transport and Mixing in Flows Through Aquatic Vegetation 14:30 Chair(s): Anne Lightbody, [email protected]; Evan Variano, [email protected] 14:45 Location: W108 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 Weitzman, J. S.; Aveni-Deforge, K.; Koseff, J. R.; Thomas, F. I.: THE COUPLING OF HYDRODYNAMICS AND NUTRIENT EXCHANGE IN NATURAL SEAGRASS CANOPIES, PART ONE: FLOW CONDITIONS Aveni-DeForge, K.; Weitzman, J. S.; Koseff, J. R.; Thomas, F. I.: THE COUPLING OF HYDRODYNAMICS AND NUTRIENT EXCHANGE IN NATURAL SEAGRASS CANOPIES, PART TWO: CANOPY CHARACTERISTICS AND NUTRIENT UPTAKE Leonard, L. A.; Croft, A. L.; Childers, D. L.; Solo-Gabriele, H.: OBSERVATIONS OF PLANT FLOW INTERACTIONS IN THE RIDGE AND SLOUGH LANDSCAPE OF EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK Harvey, J. W.; Schaffranek, R. W.; Larsen, L. G.; Nowacki, D.; Noe, G. B.; O’Connor, B. L.: CONTROLS ON FLOW VELOCITY AND FLOW RESISTANCE IN THE PATTERNED FLOODPLAIN LANDSCAPE OF THE EVERGLADES * 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 Jessup, A. T.: COHSTREX: THE COHERENT STRUCTURES IN RIVERS AND ESTUARIES EXPERIMENT Wang, B.; Fringer, O. B.: HIGH-RESOLUTION SIMULATIONS OF A SALINITY FRONT INTERACTING WITH COMPLEX GEOMETRY AND INTERTIDAL MUDFLATS Horner-Devine, A. R.; Talke, S.; Chickadel, C.: THE STRUCTURE OF ESTUARY BOILS OBSERVED WITH A DIGITAL ECHOSOUNDER Chickadel, C. C.; Horner-Devine, A. R.; Jessup, A. T.: THERMAL REMOTE SENSING OF BOILS GENERATED AT A SUBMERGED ESTUARINE SILL Edwards, K. A.; Jessup, A. T.: AIRCRAFT TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS IN THE SNOHOMISH ESTUARY DURING COHSTREX Talke, S. A.; Horner-Devine, A. R.; Chickadel, C.: CHARACTERIZING COHERENT STRUCTURES IN AN ESTUARY USING IN-SITU AND REMOTE MEASUREMENTS Barad, M. F.; Fringer, O. B.; MacCready, P.: SURFACE SIGNATURES GENERATED BY ONE- AND TWODIMENSIONAL SINUSOIDAL BATHYMETRY Geyer, W. R.; Scully, M. E.; Trowbridge, J. H.: ESTIMATION OF TURBULENCE LENGTH-SCALE IN ESTUARINE BOUNDARY LAYER FLOWS AND WAKES Fong, D. A.; Giddings, S. N.; Monismith, S. G.; Hench, J. L.; Nidzieko, N. J.: TURBULENCE AND DYNAMICS IN A SHALLOW, MACROTIDAL ESTUARY Brasseur, L. H.; Brubaker, J. M.: TIME SCALES OF VARIABILITY IN TURBULENCE PARAMETERS IN A PARTIALLY MIXED ESTUARY Souza, A. J.: TURBULENCE PROCESSES IN A MACROTIDAL ESTUARY. Scully, M. E.; Geyer, W. R.: IMPORTANCE OF LATERAL CIRCULATION TO ESTUARINE STRATIFICATION AND MIXING * represents Invited presentations ( ) 73 TUESDAY Chair(s): Pat Glibert, [email protected]; Danielle Luttenberg Meitiv, [email protected] Dierberg, F. E.; DeBusk, T. A.; Jackson, S. D.; Owens, P.; Kharbanda, M.; Grace, K. A.; Juston, J.: USING TRACERS FOR QUANTIFYING TRANSPORT PROCESSES IN LARGE-SCALE CONSTRUCTED WETLANDS Tinoco Lopez, R. O.; Cowen, E. A.: MASS AND MOMENTUM TRANSPORT IN LOW SPEED FLOWS THROUGH FLEXIBLE AQUATIC VEGETATION Hansen, A. T.; Hondzo, M.; Hurd, C. L.: MASS TRANSFER IN CANOPY FLOW: AN INVESTIGATION OF THE EFFECT OF HYDROZOAN COLONIZATION ON THE GIANT KELP MACROCYSTIS PYRIFERA Zhang, X.; Nepf , H. M.: EXCHANGE FLOW BETWEEN OPEN WATER AND AN AQUATIC CANOPY White, B. L.: LATERAL EXCHANGE IN A STRAIGHT CHANNEL WITH FRINGING VEGETATION Rosman, J. H.; Koseff, J. R.; Monismith, S. G.: FLOW DEVELOPMENT AND TURBULENCE GENERATION WITHIN A KELP FOREST (MACROCYSTIS PYRIFERA): LESSONS FROM A SMALL SCALE LABORATORY MODEL* ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Nidzieko, N. J.; Monismith, S. G.: LATERAL CIRCULATION IN STRATIFIED AND WELL-MIXED ESTUARINE FLOWS WITH CURVATURE MacVean, L. J.; Stacey, M. T.: THE INFLUENCE OF PERIMETER HABITAT ON AN ESTUARY: MODIFIED TRANSPORT IN A TIDAL CHANNEL DUE TO EXCHANGE WITH RECOVERING SALT MARSH IN SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO BAY 09:15 09:30 TUESDAY 135: What is Being Done in the Caribbean? Who, How and Why, Should We Be Partners? 09:45 Chair(s): Warner Ithier-Guzman, [email protected]; Ashanti J. Pyrtle, [email protected]; Marietta Mayo, [email protected]; Nekesha Williams, [email protected] 10:00 Location: W101 10:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Warner Ithier-Guzman, W.; Ashanti J. Pyrtle, A.: ASSESING THE RADIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF THE BONUS PROTOTYPE NUCLEAR POWER PLANT ON THE LOCAL ENVIRONMENT, RINCON PUERTO RICO Simmons, C.; Echols, E.; Carvalho-Knighton, K. M.; Prytle, A. J.: CHARACTERIZATION AND REMEDIATION OF ENERGETIC COMPOUNDS IN SEDIMENT AND WATER ON VIEQUES ISLAND, PUERTO RICO Hernandez, J. L.; Lonin, S.; Palacios, D. M.: OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC MODELING IN THE WESTERN CARIBBEAN SEA: A CASE STUDY OF GUAJIRA COASTAL UPWELLING REGION Jauhari, P.; Hubbard, R.: PRELIMINARY OCEANOGRAPHIC STUDIES AROUND TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO lang, J. C.; Ginsburg, R. N.: LOSING LARGE MASSIVE CORALS ON CARIBBEAN REEFS WILL BE CATASTROPHIC Maza, M. A.; Voulgaris, G.: DIURNAL CURRENTS, SEA BREEZE AND TIDES ON THE INNER SHELF OFF CARTAGENA DE INDIAS, CARIBBEAN COAST OF COLOMBIA 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 139: Applications of Remote Sensing Data for Assessing and Monitoring Coastal and Inland Water Quality 14:45 Chair(s): Paul M. DiGiacomo, [email protected]; Steven Greb, [email protected]; Arnold Dekker, [email protected]; Nikolay P. Nezlin, [email protected] 15:00 Location: W304 A/B 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 Greb, S. R.: ADVANCING THE USE OF REMOTE SENSING FOR WATER QUALITY Costa, M.; Telmer, K.; Novo, E. M.; Pereira Filho, W.: LIGHT FROM AMAZONIAN WATERS AND HUMAN EFFECTS ON IT: A LARGE-SCALE MONITORING APPROACH Dekker, A. G.; Brando, V. E.; Schroeder, T.; Blondeau-Patissier, D.; Cherukuru, N. R.; Clementson, L.: BIO-OPTICAL VARIABILITY OF SOUTH AND EAST AUSTRALIAN COASTAL WATERS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PARAMETERISATION OF COMPLEX WATERS ALGORITHMS Morrison, J. R.; Trowbridge, P.; Gregory, T. K.; Novak, M. G.: HYPERSPECTRAL AIRBORNE REMOTE SENSING FOR ASSESSING WATER QUALITY AND CLARITY IN THE GREAT BAY ESTUARY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Jones, B. H.; Reifel, K. M.; Nezlin, N. P.; DiGiacomo, P. M.; Johnson, S.: TRACKING STORMWATER PLUMES AND THEIR CONSTITUENTS IN THE COASTAL OCEAN - THE BIGHT ‘03 PROGRAM 15:15 Yu, Q.; Chen, R. F.; Tian, Y. Q.; Gardner, G. B.; Zhu, W. N.: ESTIMATING COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) IN A COASTAL RIVER PLUME USING IN SITU AND IMAGING HYPERSPECTRAL REMOTE SENSING Chen, Z.; Hu, C.; Muller-Karger, F. E.: RECENT ADVANCES IN REMOTE SENSING OF ESTUARINE WATER QUALITY: AN EXAMPLE IN TAMPA BAY, FLORIDA, USA Gitelson, A. A.; Dall’Olmo, G.; Moses, W.; Rundquist, D. C.; Barrow, T.; Fisher, T. R.; Gurlin, D.; Holz, J.: A MODEL FOR REMOTE CHLOROPHYLL-A RETRIEVAL IN TURBID PRODUCTIVE WATERS Metsamaa, L.; Kutser, T.; Reinart, A.; Alikas, K.; Jaanus, A.: CHLOROPHYLL RETRIEVAL FROM OCEAN COLOR SATELLITES IN OPTICALLY COMPLEX WATERS Mangin, A. H.; Fanton d’Andon, O. H.; Lavender, S. J.; Ganzin, N. J.; Kaitala, S. J.: DEVELOPING A EUROPEAN OCEAN COLOUR SERVICE SUPPORTING WATER QUALITY ASSESSMENT AND OPERATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHY Reinart, A.; Valdmets, K.; Arst, H.; Alikas, K.: OPTICAL CLASSIFICATION OF LAKES FOR REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS. Giardino, C.; Brando, V. E.; Dekker, A. G.: AN APPROACH TO CORRECT FOR ADJACENCY EFFECTS PRESENT IN MERIS DATA OVER LAKES: EFFECTS ON CHLOROPHYLL ASSESSMENT Shi, W.; Wang, M.: OBSERVATION OF A MASSIVE BLUE ALGAE BLOOM EVENT IN THE CHINA’S TAI LAKE DURING THE SPRING OF 2007 USING THE MODIS DATA Kutser, T.; Metsamaa, L.; Dekker, A. G.: VARIATION IN REMOTE SENSING SIGNAL DUE TO VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF CYANOBACTERIA IN WATER COLUMN Davis, C. O.; Bissett, W. P.; Kohler, D.; Montes, M.; Arnone, R.; Lee, Z. P.; Kudela, R.: REMOTE SENSING OF A HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM IN MONTEREY BAY, CALIFORNIA Lee, Z.; Rhea, J.; Gray, D.; Kudela, R.; Palacios, S.; Weidemann, A.; Arnone, R.: HYPERSPECTRAL INHERENT AND APPARENT OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF AN INTENSIVE PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM IN THE MONTEREY BAY Palacios, S. L.; Peterson, T. D.; Kavanaugh, M. T.; Kudela, R. M.: OPTICAL DETECTION OF A DINOFLAGELLATE BLOOM IN MONTEREY BAY, CA Fischer, A. M.; Ryan, J. P.: REMOTE SENSING DETECTION OF RED TIDES IN A COASTAL UPWELLING SYSTEM EMBAYMENT 152: Lateral Mixing in the Ocean from Meters to Mesoscale Chair(s): Miles A. Sundermeyer, [email protected]; James R. Ledwell, [email protected]; Raffaele Ferrari, [email protected]; M.-Pascale Lelong, [email protected] Location: W109 A 13:30 13:45 McWilliams, J. C.: SUBMESOSCALE PROCESSES EVIDENT IN NEAR-SURFACE HORIZONTAL SPECTRA* Tandon, A.; Mahadevan, A.: INTERACTION OF FRONTOGENETIC AND WIND-FORCED INSTABILITIES AND THEIR EFFECT ON SUBMESOSCALE TRANSPORT AND MIXING (~) 74 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 17:00 Waugh, D. W.: STIRRING IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN Niiler, P.: “UPPER OCEAN ‘EDDY’ MOMENTUM, VORTICITY AND THERMAL ENERGY CONVERGENCES COMPUTED FROM LAGRANGIAN OBSERVATIONS” * Lumpkin, R.; Elipot, S.: RELATIVE DISPERSION IN THE GULF STREAM AND ITS RECIRCULATION Gildor, H.; Fredj, E.: EVIDENCE FOR SUBMESOSCALE BARRIERS TO MIXING IN THE OCEAN FROM Sundermeyer, M. A.; Terray, E. A.; Ledwell, J. R.: OBSERVATIONS OF UPPER OCEAN MIXING USING AIRBORNE LIDAR Inall, M. E.; Griffiths, C. R.: LAYERED ISOPYCNAL INTRUSIONS FROM A SLOPING BOUNDARY 17:15 168: Small Mountainous Rivers: From the Watershed to the Global Ocean Chair(s): Anne E. Carey, [email protected]; W. Berry Lyons, [email protected] Location: W108 13:45 Chair(s): Andrea Thorrold, [email protected]; Annette deCharon, [email protected]; Liesl Hotaling, [email protected] 14:00 Location: W304 E/F 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Parsons, C.; Sullivan, D.: YOUR WEBSITE & U.S. DIVERSITY: WHAT THE RESEARCH LITERATURE SAYS ABOUT MULTICULTURAL DESIGN * Storck, S. J.; Martin, M.; Storksdieck, M.: EVALUATING FORMAL AND INFORMAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARIES. Karp-Boss, L.; Weller, H.; Boss, E. S.; Albright, J.; deCharon, A.: TEACHING PHYSICAL CONCEPTS BY OCEAN INQUIRY: REACHING PRE- AND IN- SERVICE TEACHERS* Smith, L. K.; Laursen, S.; Thiry, H.; Hunter, A.: RESCIPE FOR SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR SCIENTISTS TO SUPPORT THEIR WORK WITH EDUCATION deCharon, A.; Chao, Y.; Cousin, R.; Li, P.; Vu, Q.: CREATING INTERACTIVE DATA TOOLS & CASE STUDIES TO SUPPORT FUTURE USE OF SATELLITE-DERIVED SALINITY DATA Kemp, P. F.; Achilles, K.; Bruno, B. C.: THE C-MORE EDUCATION AND OUTREACH PROGRAMS 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 173: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Larval Dispersion and Connectivity 165: Advances in Coastal Morphodynamics: From Estuaries and Beaches to Deltas and Shelves Chair(s): Lisa Levin, [email protected]; Stephen Chiswell, [email protected]; Matthew Hare, [email protected]; Linda Rasmussen, [email protected] Chair(s): Art Trembanis, [email protected]; Carl Friedrichs, cfried@vims. edu; Andrew Short, [email protected]; Jeff List, [email protected] Location: W105 08:00 Location: W202 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 Blair, N. E.; Leithold, E. L.; Thompson, C. E.; Lloyd, K. H.; Childress, L. B.: WHAT DOES CONTROL THE COMPOSITION OF POC EXPORTED FROM RIVERS? Wheatcroft, R. A.; Goni, M. A.; Pasternack, G. B.; Warrick, J. A.: EFFECTIVE DISCHARGE OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON FROM SMALL, MOUNTAINOUS RIVERS Lyons, W. B.; Goldsmith, S. T.; Carey, A. E.; McElwee, G. T.; Harmon, R. S.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN SMALL RIVERS, PANAMA Costa, O. S.; Lyons, W. B.; McElwee, G. T.; Carey, A. E.; Harmon, R. S.; Saas, E. J.; Bouchard, V. L.: NUTRIENT CONCENTRATIONS AND N SPECIATION IN AN UNPOLLUTED TROPICAL FORESTED WATERSHED, PANAMA Moore, E. A.; Kurtz, A. C.: STRONTIUM BUDGET FOR THE FLY RIVER, PAPUA NEW GUINEA Kurtz, A. C.; Moore, E. A.: WEATHERING FLUXES IN THE FLY RIVER, PAPUA NEW GUINEA Carey, A. E.; Mendoza, J. A.; McElwee, G. T.; Welch, K. A.; Lyons, W. B.: PRELIMINARY ASSESSMENT OF STREAM GEOCHEMISTRY IN WEST CENTRAL NICARAGUA DURING BASEFLOW CONDITIONS Goldsmith, S. T.; Johnson, B. M.; Carey, A. E.: WEATHERING AND CO2 CONSUMPTION POTENTIAL OF ANDESITIC-DACITIC TERRAINS, DOMINICA, LESSER ANTILLES List, J. H.; Raubenheimer, B.: LARGE-SCALE NEARSHORE MORPHODYNAMICS: MODEL GUIDANCE TO FIELD MEASUREMENTS Adams, P. N.; Inman, D. L.: VARIABILITY IN DIVERGENCE OF LONGSHORE DRIFT AS A FUNCTION OF ENSO-DRIVEN DEEP WATER WAVE DIRECTION IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Yates, M. L.; Guza, R. T.; Seymour, R. J.; O’Reilly, W. C.: SEASONAL BEACH CHANGES AND EQUILIBRIUM CONCEPTS Miselis, J. L.; McNinch, J. E.: LATERAL AND VERTICAL SEDIMENT HETEROGENEITY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO NEARSHORE MORPHOLOGY 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 Cowen, R. K.: POPULATION CONNECTIVITY IN MARINE SYSTEMS: PROGRESS AND PROMISING DIRECTIONS~ Chiswell, S. M.; Rickard, G. J.: EULERIAN AND LAGRANGIAN STATISTICS AND DISPERSAL IN NUMERICAL MODELS Rucheng Tian, R. T.: A MODELING EXPLORATION OF CONNECTION BETWEEN SEA SCALLOP POPULATION IN THE MIDDLE ATLANTIC BIGHT AND OVER GEORGES BANK Pous, s. p.; Ellien, c.; Reveillac, e.; Robinet, t.; Feunteun, e.: MODELING THE TRANSPORT PATHWAYS OF TROPICAL EEL LARVAE IN INDIAN OCEAN Pineda, J.; Reyns, N.: DISPERSAL AND CONNECTIVITY IN NEARSHORE BENTHIC POPULATIONS WHEN LARVAL TRANSPORT PROCESSES ARE NOT WELL KNOWN * represents Invited presentations ( ) 75 TUESDAY 13:30 164: Improving Geosciences Education and Public Outreach: Sharing Strategic and Rewarding Approaches 16:00 Ashton, A. D.: SHOREFACE PROFILE EVOLUTION ON HUMAN TIMESCALES: MORPHODYNAMIC VERSUS MORPHOKINEMATIC APPROACHES Skarke, A. D.; Trembanis, A. C.: MICROMORPHODYNAMIC EVOLUTION OF BEDFORMS ON A TRANSGRESSIVE BARRIER SHOREFACE AND CAPE-ASSOCIATED SHOAL ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 09:30 09:45 10:00 TUESDAY 10:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 09:45 Cushman, E.; Jue, N. K.; Sotka, E. E.: THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF LARVAL AND ADULT DISPERSAL IN THE ECONOMICALLY-IMPORTANT GAG GROUPER MYCTEROPERCA MICROLEPIS: A GENETIC APPROACH Krug, P. J.: DO BIOPHYSICAL COUPLING MODELS PREDICT CARIBBEAN POPULATION CONNECTIVITY? A TEST WITH SIX GASTROPOD SPECIES THAT VARY IN DISPERSAL POTENTIAL Halanych, K. M.; Scheltema, R. S.: PHYLOGEOGRAPHY AND LARVAL CONNECTIVITY OF ANTARCTIC SHELF INVERTEBRTE FAUNA Pringle, J. M.; Wares, J. P.; Byers, J. E.: DARWIN’S DEMON & COASTAL CURRENTS; FITNESS AND LARVAL PLANKTONIC DURATION IN THE COASTAL OCEAN. 10:00 10:15 13:30 174: Sharing Scientific Ocean Drilling’s Greatest Hits with Educators 13:45 Chair(s): Sharon Katz Cooper, [email protected]; Leslie Peart, [email protected] 14:00 Location: W105 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 St. John, K. E.; Leckie, R. M.; Peart, L.; Klaus, A. D.: SCIENCE MADE ACCESSIBLE - AN OVERVIEW OF THE SCHOOL OF ROCK King, T. M.; King, G. R.; Leckie, R. M.: WANTED, MOHAWK GUY AND HIS BAND OF NEOGENE PLANKTIC FORAMINIFER FRIENDS FOR CRIMES AGAINST CALCAREOUS NANNOFOSSILS AND OTHER PHYTOPLANKTON* Firth, J. V.; St. John, K. E.: FROM DEEP OCEAN SEDIMENTS TO GLACIAL LAKES: BACKTRACKING EVIDENCE FOR LATE PLEISTOCENE/EARLY HOLOCENE JÖKULHAUPS USING CORES FROM ODP LEGS 169 AND 169S Grant, D.: CORES, KIDS, CLIMATE AND THE K-T Smith, D. C.: MICROORGANISMS LIVING DEEP WITHIN MARINE SEDIMENTS* Peart, L.; LaBonté , A.; Inderbitzen, K.; Orcutt, B.; Blair, A.; Davis, E. E.: UNDERGRADUATE AND PRE-COLLEGE EXERCISES UTILIZING RECENT AND HISTORICAL DATA FROM CORKS AT SEVERAL ODP AND IODP DRILL SITES ON THE JUAN DE FUCA PLATE 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 197: New Perspectives in Silicon Cycling; from Rivers to Seas and Sediments Moriceau, B.; Passow, U.; Gallinari, M.; Laruelle, G. G.; Van Cappellen, P.; Garvey , M.; Soetaert , K.; Armstrong, R.; Ragueneau, O.: BIOGENIC SILICA RECYCLING IN AGGREGATES AND FECAL PELLETS IS SLOWER THAN IN FREE CELLS Krause, J. W.; Lomas, M. W.; Nelson, D. M.: A 15 YEAR RECORD OF BIOGENIC SILICA AT THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY SITE: ARE DIATOMS ON THE DECLINE? Kelly, B.; Varela, D. E.: BIOLOGICAL CYCLING OF SILICON, NITROGEN AND CARBON IN THE NE PACIFIC AND THE BERING AND CHUKCHI SEA Esther, T. A.; Hammond, D. E.; Johnson , H. P.; Hautala, S.; Morello, A.; Schwartz, R. J.; Brzezinski, M.; Beucher, C.: WHERE DOES HIGH SI ORIGINATE IN CASCADIA BASIN? Hammond, D. E.; Hautala, S.; Johnson, H. P.; Esther, T.; Schwartz, R. J.: WHAT MAINTAINS THE SILICIC ACID PLUME AT 2.5 KM DEPTH IN THE NORTH PACIFIC? Thunell, R. C.; Benitez-Nelson, C.; Muller-Karger, F.; Lorenzoni, L.; Fanning, K.; Scranton, M.; Varela, R.; Astor, Y.: SILICON CYCLING IN THE CARIACO BASIN, VENEZUELA: SEASONAL VARIABILITY IN SILICATE AVAILABILITY AND THE SI:C:N COMPOSITION OF SINKING PARTICLES Verdeny , E.; Masque, P.; Garcia-Orellana, J.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Maiti, K.; Buesseler, K. O.: EXAMINING PARTICLE FLUX WITHIN MESOSCALE EDDIES USING 210PB210PO DISEQUILIBRIUM Baines, S. B.; Twining, B. S.; Vogt, S.: ARE ALL DIATOMS THE SAME? VARIATIONS IN CELLULAR STOICHIOMETRY OF DIATOMS FROM TWO HNLC REGIONS AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR SI, FE AND C EXPORT. Chai, F.; Dugdale, R.; Brzezinski, M.; Chao, Y.; Nelson, D.: SILICON AND NITROGEN CYCLING IN THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC: A MODEL-DATA COMPARISON STUDY Brzezinski, M. A.; Nelson, D. M.; Twining, B.; Baines, S.: IRON AND SILICON CO-LIMITATION IN THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC Dugdale, F.; Parker, A.; Chai, F.; Brzezinski, M.; Wilkerson, F.: DYNAMICS OF STEADY STATE IN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC UPWELLING PRODUCTIVITY: COMPARISON OF SI AND N KINETICS FROM LAB AND FIELD Chair(s): Dick Dugdale, [email protected]; Mark Brzezinski, [email protected] 200: Committee’s Choice Location: W304 E/F Chair(s): Jon Sharp, [email protected] 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 Tréguer, P. J.: NEW PERSPECTIVES IN THE SI MARINE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY~ Sarmiento, J. L.; Simeon, J.; Schlitzer, R.; Gnanadesikan, A.: SI* AND THE LINKS BETWEEN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN AND LOW LATITUDE SURFACE AND BOTTOM WATERS* Armbrust, E. V.: DIATOM GENOMICS: NEW INSIGHTS INTO ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION* Reynolds, B. C.: A PARADOX IN THE GLOBAL SI CYCLE MASS BALANCE de Souza, G. F.; Reynolds, B. C.; Rickli, J.; Frank, M.; Bourdon, B.: STABLE ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION OF DISSOLVED SILICON IN THE EASTERN ATLANTIC OCEAN Maher, W. A.; Ellwood, M. J.; Croot, P. L.: OCEANIC GERMANIUM/SILICON FRACTIONATION: EVIDENCE FROM OCEANIC PROFILES AND DIATOM CULTURES Location: W105 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 Kustka, A. B.; Bidle, K. D.; Reinfelder, J. R.: MOLECULAR EVIDENCE FOR C4-TYPE C FIXATION IN DIATOMS Leinen, M.: CONDUCTING OCEAN FERTILIZATION IN A RESPONSIBLE WAY Rigal, F.; Comtet, T.; Viard, F.: INFLUENCE OF FIELD TEMPERATURE VARIATIONS ON PELAGIC LARVAL DURATION IN THE INVASIVE GASTROPOD CREPIDULA FORNICATA: IMPLICATIONS ON POPULATION CONNECTIVITY Bates, J. R.: THE IRIS FEEDBACK OVER THE TROPICAL OCEANS: IMPLICATIONS FOR GLOBAL CLIMATE SENSITIVITY IN AN EXTENDED MODEL Schubel, J. R.: Bringing The Best Science To The Public In Ways That Engage, Educate, And Empower: Some Thoughts From The Other Side (~) 76 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 14:45 15:00 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 15:15 de Boer, A. M.; Gnanadesikan, A.: MERIDIONAL DENSITY GRADIENTS DO NOT DRIVE OVERTURNING. Fournier, G. R.; Forand, J. L.; Mathieu, P.; Weidemann, A.; Hou, W.; Gray, D.: RANGE-GATED ACTIVE UNDERWATER IMAGING: EVOLUTION, PERFORMANCE AND PERSPECTIVES* BLUMBERG, A.; Bruno, M.; Herrington, T.: INCORPORATION OF HIGH-RESOLUTION TOPOGRAPHIC INFORMATION, HIGH-RESOLUTION WEATHER FORECASTS, AND ADVANCED DATA ASSIMILATION INTO A COASTAL INUNDATION MODEL TUESDAY * represents Invited presentations ( ) 77 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Tuesday Posters 4. 5. 001: ASLO Multicultural Program Student Symposium Chair(s): Benjamin Cuker, [email protected]; Deidre M. Gibson, [email protected] 6. Location: Poster Hall 461. TUESDAY 462. 463. 464. 465. 466. 467. 468. 469. Casillas-Maldonado, J. I.; Kubaryk, J. M.: EFFECTS OF INCREASING SURFACE AREA OF PERIPHYTON SUBSTRATES IN TILAPIA RENDALLI YIELDS IN SWINE MANURE FERTILIZED PONDS Allen, L.: THE EFFECTS OF PBDE-47 ON THE BENTHIC AMPHIPOD, LEPTOCHEIRUS PLUMULOSUS, AND POLYCHAETE, STREBLOSPIO BENEDICTI: A BREIF OVERVIEW Cousins, J. L.: CARBONIC ANHYDRASE EXPRESSION IN ZOSTERA MARINA Payton, J. R.; Hawkyard, D. M.; Langdon, C. J.: USE OF WAX BEADS TO FACILITATE BIOENCAPSULATION OF OXYTETRACYCLINE BY ARTEMIA SALINA NAUPLII Terbio, M. C.; Adams, A. J.: DETERMINING MOVEMENT PATTERNS OF SPAWNING SNOOK ON GULF BEACHES BY REMOTELY & MANUALLY TRACKING TAGGED SNOOK Aleman-Diaz, A.: COMMERCE, RESEARCH AND EDUCATION: CONTRIBUTIONS AND CHALLENGES OF MARINE EXTENSION WORK IN NOAA SEA GRANT PROGRAM-PUERTO RICO, MICHIGAN AND NATIONAL OFFICE Williams, S. Y.; Fodrie, F. J.; Heck, K. L.: NURSERY ORIGINS OF ADULT GRAY AND LANE SNAPPERS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO: THE CONTRIBUTION OF DIFFERENT SEAGRASS MEADOWS TO FISHERY PRODUCTION Zavala Lopez , A.; Losekoot, M.: FORAGING LEACH’S STORM-PETREL (OCEANODRAMA LEUCORHOA) DO NOT REQUIRE VOCALIZATIONS TO RELOCATE THEIR UNDERGROUND BURROW Burrell, C. T.; Dietrich, A. M.; Cerrato, J. M.; Falkinham, J. O.: MANAGING MANGANESE IN DRINKING WATER: AN ASSESSMENT FOR MIRCOBES AND METALS 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 003: Ocean Acidification: Causes and Impacts on Biogeochemical Processes, Biota and Climate Chair(s): Victoria J. Fabry, [email protected]; William M. Balch, [email protected]; Richard A. Feely, [email protected] 17. Location: Poster Hall 1. 2. 3. CAO, L.; Caldeira, K.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION, CORAL REEFS, AND CO2 STABILIZATION Dumousseaud, C. C.; Achterberg, E. P.; Hydes, D. J.; Mowlem, M.; Tyrrell, T.: SURFACE WATER PH MEASUREMENTS AND CARBONATE CHEMISTRY IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN (ICELAND BASIN) Cullison, S. E.; DeGrandpre, M. D.; Langdon, C.; Corredor, J. E.: ESTABLISHING NATURAL VARIATION IN pH AND pCO2 ON A CORAL REEF USING HIGH TEMPORAL RESOLUTION AUTONOMOUS SENSORS Fernandez, E. R.; Tamone, S. L.: THE EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON LYRE CRAB HYAS LYRATUS METABOLIC PROCESSES St.Louis, J. L.; Salisbury, J.: CONTRIBUTION OF CALCIFICATION TO THE CARBON BUDGET IN THE GULF OF MAINE Hallock, P.; Robbins, L. L.; Peters, M.: ARE SUBTROPICAL CALCAREOUS GREEN ALGAE RESPONDING TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION? Fagan, K. E.; Solomon, R. F.; Sabine, C. L.; Feely, R. A.; DeCarlo, E. H.; Mackenzie, F. T.: VARIABILITY IN THE SURFACE WATER INORGANIC CARBON PARAMETERS OF A HAWAIIAN CORAL REEF SYSTEM AND IMPLICATIONS FOR CALCIFICATION RATES Lunau, M.; Wurst, M.; Piontek, J.; Grossart, H. P.; Riebesell, U.; Engel, A.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON MICROBIAL ORGANIC MATTER DEGRADATION DURING AN OFFSHORE MESOCOSM EXPERIMENT Hintz, C. J.; Shaw, T. J.; McCorkle, D. C.; Chandler, G. T.; Bernhard, J. M.; Blanks, J. K.: CALCITE SATURATION STATE EFFECTS ON THE MG AND SR DISTRIBUTION COEFFICIENTS OF CULTURED BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA Kishi, Y.; Narita, H.; Zhang, J.: PARTICULATE NUTRIENTS AND CALCIUM CARBONATE IN THE SUBARCTIC PACIFIC OCEAN. Maas, A. E.; Birden, L.; Seibel, B. A.: THE ECOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE OF PTEROPOD PHYSIOLOGY Watanabe, Y.; Maeda, N.; Fukuhara, T.; Mito, S.; Harada, K.: IMPACTS OF LOWERED PH ON FLOCCULATION OF MARINE SUSPENDED DEBRIS Middelburg, J. J.; Soetaert, K.; Riebesell, U.; Shulz, K. G.: A 13 C LABELING STUDY TO TRACE CARBON FLOWS WITHIN NATURAL PLANKTON COMMUNITIES AT ELEVATED CO2 Okazaki, R. R.; Swart, P. K.; Langdon, C.; Millero, F. J.: FLORIDA BAY CORALS: RESILIENT TO STRESS? 005: Role of the Oceans in Climate Variability Over the Americas Peters, A. J.; Bates, N. R.: THE CONTRIBUTION OF ATMOSPHERIC ACID DEPOSITION TO OCEAN ACIDIFICATION OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN AND CORAL REEF DOMINATED MARINE ECOSYSTEMS Blanks, J. K.; Chandler, G. T.; Hintz, C. J.; Shaw, T. J.; McCorkle, D. C.; Bernhard, J. M.: INTRA- AND INTER- SPECIES VARIATION OF D-MG AND D-SR IN LIVE BENTHIC FORAMINIFERAL CALCITE AND ARAGONITE FROM THE CHARLESTON BUMP SPANNING FIVE YEARS OF STUDY Bontes, B. M.; Timmermans, K. R.; de Baar, H.: EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIFDIFICATION ON SOUTHERN OCEAN DIATOMS. Chair(s): Chunzai Wang, [email protected]; Gabriel A. Vecchi, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 18. 19. Flannery, J. A.; Richey, J. N.; Meckler, A. N.; Hollander, D. J.: A 1400 YEAR LATE HOLOCENE SEDIMENTARY RECORD LINKING GULF OF MEXICO CLIMATOLOGY TO HYDROLOGIC VARIABILITY ON THE NORTH AMERICAN CONTINENT Karnauskas, K. B.; Busalacchi, A. J.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE IN THE EAST PACIFIC WARM POOL AND CENTRAL AMERICAN RAINFALL (~) 78 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 20. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Leadbetter, S. J.; Lozier, M. S.: CONTRASTING NORTH AMERICAN WINTERS AND NORTHERN EUROPE WINTERS - THE ROLE OF THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC OCEANS 597. 598. 007: Geology and Geophysics: General Chair(s): Location: Poster Hall 441. 442. 599. 600. 011: River-dominated Ocean Margins in the Context of Climate Change 601. Chair(s): Christophe Rabouille, [email protected]; Brent MacKee, [email protected]; Minhan Dai, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 41. 42. 43. 44. Zhai, W. D.; Dai, M. H.: CARBONATE SYSTEM AND SEAAIR CO2 FLUXES IN SPRING IN THE YELLOW SEA Withdrawn Chen, C.; Shiah, F.; Chiang, K.; Gong, G.; Kemp, W. M.: EFFECTS OF THE CHANGJIANG RIVER DISCHARGE ON PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY RESPIRATION IN THE EAST CHINA SEA Pastor, L. C.; Deflandre, B.; Viollier, E.; Metzger, E.; Sandoval, L.; Escoubeyrou, K.; Desmalades, M.; Buscail, R.; Vétion, G.; Pruski, A., Gremaré, A.: EARLY DIAGENETIC PROCESSES IN A RIOMAR SYSTEM: THE RHÔNE DELTA 602. 603. 604. 014: Polar Biogeochemistry 605. Chair(s): David Thomas, [email protected]; Kevin Arrigo, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 591. 592. 593. 594. 595. 596. 606. Cassar, N.; DiFiore, P. J.; Bender, M. L.; Barnett, B. A.; Tilbrook, B.: AUSTRALIAN SUBANTARCTIC NET COMMUNITY PRODUCTIVITY ESTIMATES BY EQUILIBRATOR INLET MASS SPECTROMETRY Belicka, L. L.; Harvey, H. R.: RECYCLING AND SEQUESTRATION OF TERRIGENOUS ORGANIC CARBON IN THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN Krembs, C.; Juhl, A. R.: EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES, AN IMPORTANT COMPONENT IN THE ATTACHMENT AND DETACHMENT OF ICE-ALGAL BIOMASS FROM SEA ICE. Sines, K. A.; Kozlowski, W. A.; Martinson, D. G.; Iannuzzi, R. A.; Vernet, M.: SURFACE NUTRIENTS IN RELATION TO PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSITION IN THE SEA ICE ZONE WEST OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA Karsh, K. L.; Sigman, D. M.; Trull, T. W.; Thompson, P. A.; Wang, Y.; Davies, D. M.: NITROGEN AND OXYGEN ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION ASSOCIATED WITH NITRATE ASSIMILATION DURING CONTINUOUS CULTURE OF A MARINE DIATOM Mills, M. M.; Kropuenske, L. R.; Van Dijken, G. L.; Alderkamp, A. C.; Berg, G. M.; Robinson, D. H.; Arrigo, K. R.: GROWTH AND PRODUCTIVITY OF PHAEOCYSTIS ANTARCTICA AND FRAGILARIOPSIS CYLINDRUS UNDER SIMULATED MIXED LAYER IRRADIANCES. 017: Biophysical Interactions at Inertial and Dissipation Scales Chair(s): Joe Ackerman, [email protected]; Pete Jumars, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 729. 730. 731. 732. Jumars, P. A.; Karp-Boss, L.; Fauci, L. J.; Boss, E.; Trowbridge, J. H.: TURBULENCE EFFECTS ON PLANKTON: A NEW CARTOON van Duren, L. A.; Hendriks, I. E.; Bouma, T. J.; Folkard, A.; Johnston, G. E.; Morris, E. P.; Pope, N. D.; Verduin, J.: FLOW INTERACTIONS OVER PLANT- AND ANIMAL ASSEMBLAGES: IS THE OVERALL EFFECT EQUAL TO THE SUM OF THE CONSTITUENTS? Jumes, M. L.; Strunce, S. M.; Giebel, N. L.; Wang, Y.; Jiang, H.; Strickler, J. R.: CHARACTERISTICS OF THE NEARFIELD FEEDING CURRENT OF CALANOID COPEPODS Jiang, H.; Paffenhöfer, G. A.: COMPUTATIONAL FLUID DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS OF PROTIST SINKING, SWIMMING, JUMPING, OR INTERACTING WITH EACH OTHER * represents Invited presentations ( ) 79 TUESDAY Yusifov, M.; Rabinowitz, P.: MUD VOLCANOES IN THE SOUTH CASPIAN CASPIAN Bowlin, E. M.; Reid, R. P.; Gaspar, A. P.: SEDIMENT INTERACTIONS CONTROLLING GROWTH OF MODERN MARINE STROMATOLITES: HIGHBORNE CAY, BAHAMAS Palmer, M. A.; Arrigo, K. R.: A SATELLITE-BASED ASSESSMENT OF SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL CHANGES IN BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTIVITY OF THE BEAUFORT SEA, CANADIAN ARCTIC Kostka, J. E.; Gihring, T. M.; Lavik, G.; Kuypers, M.: QUANTIFICATION OF NITROGEN REMOVAL FROM ARCTIC MARINE SEDIMENTS AND TEMPERATURE REGULATION OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES THAT MEDIATE DENITRIFICATION AND ANAMMOX Severinghaus, J. P.; Kawamura, K.: HEAVY NOBLE GASES AS TRACERS OF PAST AIR CONVECTION IN ICE CORE RECORDS Rabouille, C.; Soltwedel, T.; Sauter, E.; Schewe, I.; Sachs, O.; Tengberg, A.: RECYCLING OF ORGANIC MATTER IN ARCTIC MARINE SEDIMENTS: INVESTIGATIONS AT THE DEEP-SEA LONG-TERM OBSERVATORY HAUSGARTEN Herrmann, M.; Najjar, R.; McElroy, K.; Neeley, A.; VilaCosta, M.; Westby, G.; Dacey, J.; DiTullio, G.; Kieber, D.; Kiene, R.; Matrai, P.; Simó, R.; Vernet, M.: GROSS BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTION OF DIMETHYLSULFIDE (DMS) AT TWO COASTAL SITES WEST OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA Shields, A. R.; Peloquin, J. A.; Smith, Jr., W. O.: DOES TEMPERATURE STRUCTURE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN THE ROSS SEA, ANTARCTICA? Tönnesson, K.; Nielsen, T. G.; Arendt, K. E.: FEEDING OF CARNIVOROUS ZOOPLANKTON IN WEST GREENLAND WATERS Kropuenske, L. R.; Arrigo, K. R.: DIFFERENT PHOTOPROTECTION AND REPAIR STRATEGIES HELP EXPLAIN SOUTHERN OCEAN PHYTOPLANKTON SPECIES DISTRIBUTION Cochran, J. K.; Evans, C. T.; Deming, J. W.; Hoffman, S.; Thompson, A.; Hirschberg, D. J.: THORIUM-234 AND POC FLUXES AND EXTRACELLULAR ENZYMATIC ACTIVITY IN THE LAPTEV SEA Bhatia, M. P.; Das, S. B.; Kujawinski, E. B.: MOLECULARLEVEL STUDIES OF MICROBIOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES AND ORGANIC CARBON COMPOSITION ON THE SURFACE OF THE GREENLAND ICE SHEET ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 733. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Regula, C. M.; Colin, S. P.; Dabiri, J. O.; Costello, J. H.; Young, K.: FEEDING DETERMINANTS IN THE CRUISING HYDROMEDUSAE AEQUOREA VICTORIA 328. 329. 019: Mixing in the Ocean 330. Chair(s): Robin Muench, [email protected]; Louis St. Laurent, [email protected]; Mary Louise Timmermans, [email protected]; Jody Klymak, [email protected] 331. Location: Poster Hall 301. TUESDAY 311. 312. 313. 314. 315. 316. 317. 318. 319. 320. 321. 322. 323. 324. 325. 326. 327. 332. Bell, G. R.; Marshall, D. P.; Pain, C. C.: DIAPYCNAL MIXING IN A NEXT GENERATION OCEAN MODEL Kelly, S. M.; Nash, J. D.; Martini, K. I.; Alford, M. H.; Kunze, E.: DYNAMICS OF MIXING HOTSPOTS ON THE ROUGH, NEAR-CRITICAL OREGON SLOPE Kang, J.; Tian, C.: THE RESEARCH OF DIAPYCNAL TURBULENT MIXING IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN Qiao, F. L.; Xia, C. S.; Song, Z. Y.; Yang, Y. Z.: FROM THE SURFACE WAVE INDUCED VERTICAL MIXING TO UPPER OCEAN CIRCULATION AND CLIMATE CHANGE Gibson, C. H.; Keeler, R. N.; Bondur, V. G.; Leung, P. T.: VERTICAL OCEAN MIXING BY FOSSIL TURBULENCE WAVES Gremes-Cordero, Silvia, S. B.; Drennan, William, W. M.: DIRECT MEASUREMENTS OF TURBULENT KINETIC DISSIPATION RATE IN THE OPEN OCEAN SURFACE LAYER Timmermans, M. L.; Toole, J. M.; Proshutinsky, A.; Krishfield, R. A.: ICE-TETHERED PROFILER OBSERVATIONS OF A DOUBLE-DIFFUSIVE STAIRCASE IN THE CANADA BASIN THERMOCLINE Radko, T.: ORIGIN AND DYNAMICS OF THERMOHALINE STAIRCASES Wain, D. J.; Rehmann, C. R.: EXPERIMENTS ON THE FATE OF BOUNDARY-MIXED FLUID IN A LAKE Shipton, J.; Marshall, D. P.: PARAMETERISING SUBGRIDSCALE EDDIES IN AN ANISOTROPIC, ADAPTIVE MESH OCEAN MODEL. Tian, J.; Yang, L.: MIXING ON CONTINENTAL SHELF AND SLOPE OF THE NORTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA Fer, I.: MIXING OF THE WEST SPITSBERGEN CURRENT: SUMMERTIME OBSERVATIONS Hirano, D.; Kitade, Y.: TURBULENT EDDY DIFFUSIVITY ESTIMATED FROM OVERTURNING SCALE OFF ADELIE LAND, ANTARCTICA Kokubu, Y.; Yamazaki, H.; Nagai, T.: WATER EXCHANGE CONTROLLED BY MIXING PROCESS AT THE MOUTH OF TOKYO BAY Satoshi Kimura, S.; William Smyth, W. D.: DIRECT NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SALT SHEETS AND TURBULENCE IN A DOUBLE-DIFFUSIVE SHEAR LAYER Sukoriansky, S.; Galperin, B.: APPLICATION OF THE QUASI-NORMAL SCALE ELIMINATION THEORY TO OCEANIC TURBULENCE Leong, D. N.; Ross, T.; Lavery, A.; Moum, J. N.: ASSESSING THE ISOTROPY OF TURBULENCE USING BROADBAND ACOUSTICS Gerbi, G. P.; Trowbridge, J. H.; Terray, E. A.; Plueddemann, A. J.: OBSERVATIONS OF TURBULENT KINETIC ENERGY AND DISSIPATION RATE IN THE OCEAN SURFACE BOUNDARY LAYER 333. 334. 335. Goh, G.; Noh, Y.; Raasch, S.: CONVECTIVE DEEPENING OF THE OCEAN MIXED LAYER SIMULATED BY LES Zaron, E. D.; Egbert, G. D.: NEW CONSTRAINTS ON BAROCLINIC TIDAL DISSIPATION FROM ALTIMETRY Zhai, F.; Yang, Q.; Tian, J.: THE HEAT EXCHANGE BETWEEN MIXED LAYER AND BARRIER LAYER IN YELLOW SEA AND EAST CHINA SEA Lueck, R. G.: SHEAR PROBE MEASUREMENTS FROM SLOWLY MOVING PLATFORMS Catton, K. B.; Webster, D. R.; Yen, J.: CAN KRILL MIX THE OCEAN? Wang, W.: EKMAN WAVE AND THE WIND ENERGY PATHWAY INTO THE SUBSURFACE OCEAN Lozovatsky, I. D.; Liu, Z.; Wei, H.; Fernando, H. J.: TURBULENCE IN REVERSING AND ROTATING TIDAL FLOWS Xie, L.; Zhao, W.; Tian, J.: MIXING INDUCED BY EDDY IN NORTHERN PART OF SOUTH CHINA SEA 024: Coastal Ocean Processes: Integration and Synthesis of Interdisciplinary Shelf Studies Chair(s): Richard A. Jahnke, [email protected]; Oscar Schofield, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 805. 806. 807. 808. 809. 810. 811. 812. 813. 814. Riche, O.; Pawlowicz, R.: ESTUARINE CIRCULATION AND NEW PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE STRAIT OF GEORGIA USING AN INVERSE METHOD Houghton, R. W.; Chant, R.: VERTICAL SALT FLUX IN A RIVER PLUME: LATTE OBSERVATIONS VS. GRADIENT RICHARDSON NUMBER CALCULATIONS Madry, S. L.; Stillwell, L.; Mitasova, H.; Galluppi, K.; Yi, H.: CREATION OF AN INTEGRATED TOPOBATHY DEM FOR COASTAL AND OFFSHORE NORTH CAROLINA Murrell, M. C.; Vickery, S. S.; Stanley, R. S.; Lehrter, J. C.; Kurtz, J. C.; Hagy, J. D.; Schaeffer, B. A.: PRIMARY PRODUCTION, BACTERIOPLANKTON PRODUCTION, AND COMMUNITY RESPIRATION ON THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO CONTINENTAL SHELF: LINKAGE TO HYPOXIA Zhang, W. G.; Wilkin, J. L.; Chant, R. J.: MODELING OF FRESHWATER PATHWAYS IN NEW YORK BIGHT Lips, I.; Lips, U.; Liblik, T.; Kuvaldina, N.: AN UPWELLING EVENT IN THE GULF OF FINLAND (BALTIC SEA) IN AUGUST 2006: OBSERVATIONAL RESULTS Hickman, A. E.; Moore, C. M.; Sharples, J.; Holligan, P. M.; Kristov, V.; Palmer, M. R.; Kim, Y. N.: TAXONOMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL GRADIENTS WITHIN THE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY OF A STABLE SHELF SEA THERMOCLINE Thibodeau, B.; Lehmann, M. F.; Chaillou, G.; Kowarzyk, J.; Maranger, R.; Gilbert, D.; Gélinas, Y.: A SEVERE NITROGEN DEFICIT IN THE LOWER ST. LAWRENCE ESTUARY: THE IMPORTANCE OF BENTHIC NITRATE ELIMINATION Schaeffer, B. A.; Hagy, J.; Kurtz, J.; Murrell, M.; Smith, G.: DYNAMICS OF PHYTOPLANKTON, DETRITUS, AND COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN HYPOXIC AND NON-HYPOXIC GULF OF MEXICO WATERS. Monahan, E. C.; Vlahos, P.; Elmoznino, J.: THE ROLE OF BREAKING WAVES IN ENHANCING THE RATE OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS IN OCEANIC SURFACE WATERS: DEDUCTIONS FROM A TIPPING BUCKET EXPERIMENT (~) 80 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 815. 816. 817. 819. 820. 821. 822. 823. Signorini, S. R.; Garcia, V. M.; Garcia, C. E.; McClain, C. R.: PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS IN THE SOUTHWESTERN ATLANTIC CONTINENTAL SHELF BEDDICK, JR., D. L.; DEVEREUX, R.; ELDRIDGE, P. M.; LEHRTER, J. C.; YATES, D. F.: RESUSPENDED SEDIMENTS CAN CONTRIBUTE TO THE ESTABLISHMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF HYPOXIA ON THE LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL SHELF Gersman, R.; Hammond, D. E.; Berelson, W. M.; Collins, L. E.; Schwartz, R. J.: PARTICULATE FLUXES OF NATURALLY OCCURING RADIOISOTOPES AS MEASURED FROM SEDIMENT TRAPS AT THE SANPEDRO BASIN, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Jiang, M.; Zhou, M.; Gangopadhyay, A.: MODELING COASTAL PROCESSES IN MASSACHUSETTS BAY AND BUZZARDS BAY Lehrter, J.; Devereux, R.; Eldridge, P.; Beddick, D.; Fry, B.: SEDIMENT METABOLISM ON THE LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL SHELF Hagy, J. D.; Murrell, M. C.; Lehrter, J. C.; Stanley, R. S.; Schaeffer, B. A.: COUPLED BIOLOGICAL-PHYSICAL PROCESSES AFFECTING HYPOXIA IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO Raimonet, M.; Laruelle, G.; Regnier, P.; Ragueneau, O.; Kempa, M.; Moriceau, B.; Ni Longphuirt, S.; Leynaert, A.; Thouzeau, G.; Chauvaud, L.: BENTHIC-PELAGIC COUPLING IN THE BAY OF BREST (FRANCE): NEW INSIGHTS FROM A COUPLED PHYSICAL-BIOLOGICAL MODEL Rivord, J.; Schaeffer, B. A.: VARIABILITY OF THE DIFFUSE DOWNWELLING IRRADIANCE IN GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIC AND NON-HYPOXIC WATERS Lund, J. M.; Fratantoni, P. S.; Hodges, B. A.; Fratantoni, D. M.: EXPLORING THE FEASIBILITY OF GLIDER-BASED TRANSPORT, STRATIFICATION, AND ECOLOGY MEASUREMENTS ON THE NEW ENGLAND SHELF BETWEEN MVCO AND LINE W 476. 477. 478. 479. 480. 481. 482. 483. 484. 485. 486. 026: Research Experiences of Undergraduates in Aquatic Sciences 487. Chair(s): Russell L. Cuhel, [email protected]; Carmen Aguilar, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 470. 471. 472. 473. 474. 475. Berkenkamp, K.; Weissburg, M.: DISSECTING THE LIFEDINNER PRINCIPLE: ANALYZING EFFECTS OF ODOR SIGNAL SEPARATION ON BLUE CRAB FORAGING Hancock, L. P.; McDonald, P. S.; Goetz, F. E.; Dinnel, P.: THE BAMBOO WORM INVASION OF SAMISH BAY: ECOLOGY AND CONTROL OF CLYMENELLA TORQUATA IN A NORTHEASTERN PACIFIC ESTUARY. Hardy, M. L.; Cochran, J. R.: CHARACTERIZATION OF VOLCANISM ALONG THE SOUTHEAST INDIAN RIDGE Kollars, N. M.; Haley, S.; Erdner, D.; Dyhrman, S.: MOLECULAR DETECTION AND MONITORING OF THE TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM CATENELLA IN PUGET SOUND, WA Simon, M. W.; Rinehimer, J. P.; Harris, C. K.: SEASONAL SEDIMENT ERODIBILITY AND TIDAL EFFECTS IN AN IDEALIZED NUMERICAL MODEL OF THE YORK RIVER ESTUARY Straka, A. M.; Schijf, J.: SORPTION OF YTTRIUM AND THE RARE EARTH ELEMENTS ON A MARINE MACROALGA 488. 489. 490. 491. 492. 493. Nace, T.; Goni, M. A.: ORIGIN AND DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANIC MATTER DERIVED FROM THE UMPQUA, KLAMATH, AND EEL RIVERS Hartzell, K.; Goldman, E.; Liefer, J.; MacIntyre, H.L.: GISBASED ANALYSIS OF NUTRIENTS AND MICROALGAL BIOMASS IN LITTLE LAGOON, ALABAMA, A POORLYFLUSHED COASTAL LAGOON Arnold, M. C.; Gelsleichter, J.: USE OF VITELLOGENIN AS A BIOMARKER FOR ECOESTROGEN EXPOSURE IN HOGCHOKERS (TRINECTES MACULATUS) FROM THE MYAKKA AND CALOOSAHATCHEE RIVERS Shepard, A. K.; Jones, R. J.; Parsons, R. J.; Carlson, C. A.: THE TEMPORAL DYNAMICS OF VIRUSES AND BACTERIOPLANKTON IN BERMUDA’S INSHORE WATERS AND CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEMS IMPACTED BY SEWAGE OUTFALL. Benkwitt, C.; Brodeur, R.; Daly, E.; Hurst, T.: DIEL FEEDING CHRONOLOGY, GASTRIC EVACUATION AND DAILY FOOD CONSUMPTION OF JUVENILE CHINOOK SALMON IN COASTAL WATERS Price, L. M.; Saba, G. K.; Steinberg, D. K.: ZOOPLANKTON GRAZING ON TWO ECOLOGICALLY IMPORTANT HARMFUL ALGAL SPECIES IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY Bors, E.; Ma, M.; Li, L.; Christie, A.: IDENTIFICATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF PEPTIDE TRANSMITTERS/ HORMONES IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM OF THE GREEN CRAB CARCINUS MAENAS Victor, K.; Williams, S. L.: THE EFFECTS OF ELEVATED ATMOSPHERIC CO2 ON NATIVE OYSTER (OSTREA LURIDA) LARVAE FROM TOMALES BAY, CALIFORNIA. Schvarcz, C. R.; Heidelberg, J. F.; Heidelberg, K. B.: IN SITU ANALYSIS OF PHOTOSYNTHETIC GENE EXPRESSION OF THE SMALLEST KNOWN EUKARYOTE, OSTREOCOCCUS SPP. Millar, J.; Schmitt, R.: PARAMETERIZING THE MIXING DUE TO SALT FINGERS Lauffenburger, N. E.; Hara, T.; Ullman, D.; Vagle, S.: OBSERVATION OF NEAR SURFACE BUBBLE STRUCTURES USING AN UNDERWATER SONAR SYSTEM Da Costa, A.; Longnecker, K.; Kujawinski, E. B.: EFFECTS OF PROTOZOAN GRAZERS AND PERIODIC SUBSTRATE ADDITION ON GROUNDWATER MICROORGANISMS Halonen, J. R.; Sommerfield, C.; Moskalski, S.: SHORTTERM SEDIMENT DEPOSITION IN A DELAWARE ESTUARY SALTMARSH Needham, D. M.; O’Neil, J. M.; Beckert, K. A.; Fertig, B.; Carruthers, T. J.: VIRUS AND BACTERIA DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE ALONG A EUTROPHICATION GRADIENT IN THE COASTAL BAYS OF MARYLAND, USA. Hofmann , B. N.; Garvis, C. A.; Selby, W. L.; Ingram, E. L.; Miller, P. L.; Robinson, M. A.: ANALYSIS OF THE BIOLOGICAL FUNCTION AND WATER QUALITY ADEQUACY OF A CONSTRUCTED WETLAND Davila, N. K.; Caffrey, J. M.: APPLICATIONS OF THE DIAGENETIC MODEL CANDI IN PENSACOLA BAY Orr, J. A.; Pedersen, R.; Steppe, C. N.; Barlow, A.: CONNECTIVITY AMONG RESTORED OYSTER BARS IN THE SEVERN RIVER ESTUARY Pedersen, R.; Orr, J.; Steppe, C. N.: AN ASSESSMENT OF SPATFALL ON RESTORED OYSTER BARS IN THE SEVERN RIVER ESTUARY (MARYLAND, USA). * represents Invited presentations ( ) 81 TUESDAY 818. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 494. 495. 496. TUESDAY 497. 498. 499. 500. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Benbow, T. A.; Petruncio, E. T.; Acker, J. G.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF THE SUBPOLAR FRONT IN THE JAPAN/EAST SEA DURING 2002-2007 Caceres, R. I.; Ortiz-Zayas, J.; Valdes, E.: POPULATION DYNAMICS AND NUTRITIONAL VALUE OF EPILITHIC ALGAE IN ARTIFICIAL REARING PONDS ASSOCIATED TO THE REINTRODUCTION OF THE PUERTO RICAN CRESTED TOAD Cooley, C. P.; Curran, M. C.: USE OF CLOVE OIL AND CARBON DIOXIDE AS AN ANESTHETIC FOR THE GRASS SHRIMP PALAEMONETES PUGIO Hagerty, N.; Howe, W.; Maier, D.; Baptista, A. M.: INCORPORATING SCIENTIFIC JUDGMENT INTO WORKFLOW SYSTEMS FOR OCEAN SCIENCE Ibarra, S. N.; Pirtle, J. L.: COMPARING KELP COMMUNITIES ON THE INNER AND OUTER COASTS OF SOUTHEAST ALASKA Brooks, C.; Dijkstra, J. A.: TEMPERATURE EFFECT ON HEART RATE IN INTRODUCED AND INVASIVE COLONIAL ASCIDIANS IN THE GULF OF MAINE Finn, J.; Janssen, J. J.; Consi, T.: AN INSIDER’S VIEW ON ROUND GOBY SEX, THE GREAT LAKES INVADER 837. 838. 839. 840. 1081. 1082. 1083. 1084. 028: Nearshore Processes Chair(s): Jack Puleo, [email protected]; Q. Jim Chen, [email protected] 1085. Location: Poster Hall 824. 825. 826. 827. 828. 829. 830. 831. 832. 833. 834. 835. 836. Faries, J. W.; Hicks, B. S.; Puleo, J. A.: BEDLOAD SEDIMENT TRANSPORT IN THE SWASH ZONE OF LABORATORY BEACHES Wurzel, W. W.; Newsome, S. D.; Moore, J.: THE INFLUENCE OF ANTHROPOGENIC MARINE SUBSIDIES ON TROPHIC DYNAMICS IN A LOW-PRODUCTIVE TERRESTRIAL ENVIRONMENT Ardhuin, F.; Rascle, N.: WAVE-CURRENT INTERACTIONS IN THREE DIMENSIONS Long, J. W.; Ozkan-Haller, H. T.: APPLYING NEARSHORE FLOW MODELS TO RIVERINE ENVIRONMENTS Pearre, N. S.; Puleo, J. A.: AUTOMATED LARGE-SCALE SHORELINE VARIABILITY ANALYSIS FROM VIDEO Pietro, L. S.; O’Neal, M. A.; Puleo, J.: DEVELOPING TERRESTRIAL-LIDAR-BASED DIGITAL ELEVATION MODELS FOR MONITORING BEACH NOURISHMENT PERFORMANCE Yu, X.; Hsu, T.; Hanes, D. M.: SEDIMENT TRANSPORT UNDER WAVE GROUPS - A TWO-PHASE MODEL STUDY Willoh, K.; Piccirillo, P.; Weiss, J.: TURBULENT BORE WAVE EVOLUTION: COMPARATIVE RESULTS FOR A NON-BARRED AND BARRED BEACH Glebushko, K.; Burke, P. B.; Paternostro, C. L.: HARMONIC ANALYSIS OF SOUTHEAST ALASKA TIDAL CURRENTS: SUMNER STRAIT AND TONOWEK NARROWS. Guannel, G. E.; Ozkan-Haller, H. T.; Haller, M. C.; Kirby, J. T.; Teran Cobo, P.: MODELING OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MODES DURING CROSSTEX EXPERIMENT Elias, E.; Gelfenbaum, G.; Mortiz, H. M.: SEDIMENT TRANSPORT PROCESSES AT THE MOUTH OF COLUMBIA RIVER Hoeke, R. K.; Aucan, J.: SEA-LEVEL RISE, FLOODING, FLUSHING AND WAVE HEIGHTS AT A CORAL ATOLL Xu, J.; Myers, E.: MODELING TIDAL DYNAMICS AND TIDAL DATUMS IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST REGION 1086. 1087. 1088. 1089. 1090. 1091. Hesser, T. J.; Slinn, D. N.: MODELING BOUNDARY LAYER DYANMICS OF SHEET FLOW USING A MIXTURE APPROACH Monfort, C. L.; Lippmann, T. C.; Lillycrop, W. J.; Sallenger, A. H.; Birkemeier, W. A.: ASSIMILATION OF AIRBORNE IMAGERY WITH LIDAR FOR BATHYMETRIC ESTIMATION Hayden, J. T.; Puleo, J. A.; MacMahan, J. H.: TIDAL CURRENT SCOURING IN INDIAN RIVER INLET, DELAWARE FRANK, D.; FOSTER, D. L.: WAVE-CURRENT BOUNDARY LAYER INTERACTIONS Yu, F.: THE OBSERVATION EVIDENCE OF YELLOW SEA WARM CURRENT Perkovic, D.; Lippmann, T. C.; Frasier, S. J.: COMPARISON OF DOPPLER RADAR AND VIDEO DERIVED MEASUREMENTS OF SURF ZONE CURRENTS AND MORPHOLOGY SAFAK, I.; SHEREMET, A.; HSU, T. J.: OBSERVATIONS OF TURBULENCE ON THE MUDDY ATCHAFALAYA BAY, LOUISIANA, USA Curtiss, G. M.; Osborne, P. O.; Horner-Devine, A. R.: SEASONAL TRANSPORT OF GRAVEL ON A MIXED SAND AND GRAVEL BEACH IN A LOW ENERGY, MESO TO MACRO-TIDAL SETTING. Harris, E. L.; Lippmann, T. C.; Hathaway, K. K.: BATHYMETRIC INVERSION FROM SHORE-BASED VIDEO IMAGERY Polonichko, V.: UNDERSTANDING ACOUSTIC WAVE SAMPLING IN THE NEARSHORE: ADVANTAGES AND LIMITATIONS Su, S.; Sheremet, A.; Kaihatu, J. M.: AN INVERSE MODELING APPROACH FOR NONLINEAR WAVE DISSIPATION ON A SHALLOW MUDDY SHELF Withdrawn Wolf, J.; Souza, A. J.; Bell, P. S.; Thorne, P. D.; Cooke, R. D.; Pan, S.: IN-SITU MEASUREMENTS OF WAVES, TIDES, BEDFORMS AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT IN THE NEARSHORE ZONE MARGELOWSKY, G. R.; FOSTER, D. L.; NICHOLS, C. S.: CHARACTERIZATION OF SEABED GEOMETRY IN A FREE SURFACE WAVE ENVIRONMENT Wren, P. A.: SEDIMENT TRANSPORT PROCESSES ON THE INNER-SHELF OF SOUTH CAROLINA DURING HURRICANE ERNESTO 029: Ecology and Oceanography of Thin Plankton Layers Chair(s): Percy Donaghay, [email protected]; Tim Cowles, [email protected]; Van Holliday, [email protected]; Margaret McManus, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 734. 735. 736. Churnside, J. H.: BIRDS DISRUPT THIN ZOOPLANKTON LAYERS AT THE SURFACE Breckenridge, J. K.; Bollens, S. M.: VERTICAL MIGRATORY BEHAVIOUR OF DECAPOD LARVAE IN A PARTIALLYMIXED ESTUARY: FIELD AND EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES Bollens, S. M.; Quenette, J.; Bochdansky, A.; RollwagenBollens, G.: VERTICAL MIGRATION OF “THIN LAYERS” OF THE DINOFLAGELLATE AKASHIWO SANGUINEA IN RELATION TO VARYING LIGHT AND NUTRIENT CONDITIONS (~) 82 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 737. 738. 739. 740. 742. 743. 744. Steinbuck, J. V.; Genin, A.; Monismith, S. G.; Koseff, J. R.; Holtzman, R.: OBSERVATIONS OF A PLANKTONIC LAYER IN ITS PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT Wingard, C. E.; Cowles, T. J.; Pierce, S. D.; Desiderio, R. A.: WRINKLES IN SPACE AND TIME: PATTERNS OF PLANKTONIC THIN LAYERS AND VELOCITY SHEAR IN COASTAL SYSTEMS Sevadjian, J. C.; McManus, M. A.; Pawlak, G.; Greenlaw, C. F.: THE INFLUENCE OF PHYSICAL STRUCTURE AND SHOALING INTERNAL TIDES ON THIN PLANKTON LAYERS IN MAMALA BAY, HAWAII. Jacobsen, H. P.; Norrbin, M. F.: VIDEO PLANKTON RECORDER REVEALS A THIN LAYER OF HYDROMEDUSAE IN A SEMI-ENCLOSED NORTH NORWEGIAN BAY. Fratantoni, D. M.; Hodges, B. A.; Lund, J. M.: AUTONOMOUS INVESTIGATION OF THIN PHYTOPLANKTON LAYERS AND THEIR PHYSICAL CONTEXT Alford, M. E.; Sutor, M. M.; Benfield, M. C.: IN-SITU CHARACTERIZATION OF FINESCALE ZOOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTIONS USING A NEW DIGITAL IMAGING SYSTEM Sullivan, J. M.; Donaghay, P.; Rines, J.; McFarland, M.; Graff, J.: THREE YEARS OF THIN LAYER OBSERVATIONS IN MONTEREY BAY, CA USA Sackmann, B. S.; Ryan, J. P.: AUTOMATED CHARACTERIZATION OF LAYERED STRUCTURE USING WAVELETS 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 031: Global Ocean Holozooplankton Diversity: Assessment, Analysis, and Prediction 64. 65. Chair(s): Ann Bucklin, [email protected]; Shuhei Nishida, [email protected]; Laurence P. Madin, [email protected]; Sigrid Schiel, [email protected] 66. Location: Poster Hall 745. 746. 747. 748. 749. Engels, M. S.; Piwinski, S. K.; Foley, J. M.; Lea, C. E.; Lavender, K. L.; Cheng, L.: DISTRIBUTION AND ANNUAL VARIABILITY OF HALOBATES ACROSS THE EASTERN AND CENTRAL TROPICAL PACIFIC Gudmundsdottir, R.; Halsband-Lenk, C.; Norrbin, F.; Eiane, K.: PSEUDOCALANUS IN SVALBARD WATERS; DISTRIBUTION PATTERNS OF TWO SIBLING COPEPOD SPECIES Ortman, B. D.; Bucklin, A.; Pages, F.; Youngbluth, M.: DNA BARCODING THE SIPHONOPHORA (CNIDARIA: HYDROZOA) TO INVESTIGATE SPECIES BOUNDARIES AND DIVERSITY Nigro, L. M.; Angel, M.; Bucklin, A.: DNA BARCODING OF MARINE PLANKTONIC OSTRACODS (ARTHROPODA; CRUSTACEA) FROM THE SARGASSO SEA, NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN. Remsen, A.: THE SIPPER PLANKTON IMAGING SYSTEM 67. 68. 040: Ecosystem in Sea Ice Influenced Areas Chair(s): Meibing Jin, [email protected]; Clara Deal, [email protected]; Sang H. Lee, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 607. 034: Climate Impacts on Sub-polar Seas: Mechanisms of Change and Evidence of Response 608. Chair(s): George L. Hunt, Jr., [email protected]; Ken Drinkwater, [email protected]; Jeff Napp, [email protected]; Erica Head, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 55. Chiba, S.; Ogawa, N. O.; Tadokoro, K.: SYNCHRONY IN DECADAL VARIATION OF OCEANIC AND TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS: COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE SUBARCTIC NORTH PACIFIC AND LAKE BAIKAL Danielson, S. L.; Eisner, L. B.; Hedstrom, K.; Weingartner, T. J.; Kowalik, Z.: A LOOK AT THE SUMMER EVOLUTION OF STRATIFICATION OVER THE CENTRAL BERING SEA SHELF UNDER CHANGING CLIMATE CONDITIONS Pinchuk, A. I.; Coyle, K. O.: DISTRIBUTION, EGG PRODUCTION AND GROWTH OF EUPHAUSIIDS IN THE VICINITY OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS AND ON THE MIDDLE SHELF, SOUTHEASTERN BERING SEA Clement Kinney, J.; Maslowski, W.; Okkonen, S.: ON THE PROCESSES CONTROLLING SHELF-BASIN EXCHANGE AND OUTER SHELF DYNAMICS IN THE BERING SEA Mull, J. M.; Weingartner, T.; Johnson, M.: CALCULATIONS OF EKMAN TRANSPORT ACROSS THE BERING SEA SHELF BREAK USING QUIKSCAT WIND MEASUREMENTS Jewett, S.; Hamazaki, T.; Danielson, S.; Weingartner, T.: RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSES OF NORTON SOUND, ALASKA BENTHIC FAUNA Pereira, J.; Wainer, I.; Raphael, M.; Mata, M. M.: SOUTHERN ANNULAR MODE RESPONSE AND ITS IMPACT ON THE WEDDELL SEA IN A EXPERIMENT FOR MINIMUM SEA-ICE CONDITIONS AROUND ANTARCTICA Sasaoka, K.; Chiba, S.; Saino, T.: SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF CHLOROPHYLL A IN THE NORTH PACIFIC DURING 1997-2007 USING OCEAN COLOR REMOTE SENSING Withdrawn Condron, A.; Winsor, P.: RESPONSE OF THE ARCTIC FRESHWATER BUDGET TO EXTREME NAO FORCING Eisner, L. B.; Cieciel, K. D.; Farley, E. V.; Feldmann, A.; Moss, J. H.; Murphy, J. M.: VARIATIONS IN SPRING SST AND FORAGE FISH DISTRIBUTIONS IN THE SOUTHEASTERN BERING SEA: BASIS SURVEY RESULTS FOR 2002-2007 Pegau, W. S.; Holderied, K.; Kitasei, S.: OCEANOGRAPHIC VARIABILITY ALONG THE ALASKAN COAST Alkire, M. B.; Falkner, K. K.; Collier, R. W.; Morison, J.; Andersen, R.; Desiderio, R. A.: THE USE OF CONTINUOUS PROFILES OF OXYGEN AND NITRATE TO ASSESS THE SOURCES OF HALOCLINE WATERS IN THE CENTRAL ARCTIC OCEAN 609. Hunt, G. L.; Jahncke, J.; Decker, M. B.; Vlietstra, L.: TEMPORAL TRENDS IN SEABIRDS NEAR THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS Caissie, B. E.; Brigham-Grette, J.: DEVELOPMENT OF A PALEO-ICE DURATION PROXY IN THE BERING SEA, PRELIMINARY RESULTS BASED ON DIATOM ASSEMBLAGES AND SEDIMENT GRAIN SIZE Aakerman, H. J.: COSTAL PROCESSES AND THEIR INFLUENCE UPON DISCHARGE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STROKDAMMANE PLAIN, WEST SPITSBERGEN, SVALBARD Humphrey, A. B.; Grebmeier, J. M.; Cooper, L. W.: A SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL ANALYSIS OF BENTHIC COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE NORTHERN BERING SEA * represents Invited presentations ( ) 83 TUESDAY 741. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 610. 611. 612. TUESDAY 613. 614. 615. 616. 617. 618. 619. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Lee, S. H.; Stockwell, D. A.; Whitledge, T. E.; Chung, K. H.; Kang, S. H.: CARBON AND NITROGEN UPTAKE RATES OF PHYTOPLANKTON FROM IN SITU INCUBATIONS UNDER THE SEA ICE IN THE CANADA BASIN Warren, C. E.; Grebmeier, J. M.; Cooper, L. W.: BENTHIC COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND BIODIVERSITY ON THE NORTHERN CONTINENTAL SHELVES OF THE USA AND CANADA EVALUATED DURING THE INTERNATIONAL POLAR YEAR 2007-2008 Jin, M.; Deal, C.; Wang, J.: INFLUENCE OF CHANGING SEA ICE COVER ON THE PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND FISHERY IN THE EASTERN BERING SEA Elliott, S.; Hunke, E.; Maltrud, M.: HIGH LATITUDE SULFUR CYCLING IN LOS ALAMOS ICE-OCEAN MODELS Oakes, S. A.; Ross, R. M.; Quetin, L. B.: A MODEL OF WINTER GROWTH FOR ANTARCTIC KRILL (EUPHAUSIA SUPERBA) DURING THEIR FIRST AND SECOND YEAR Saenz, B. L.; Arrigo, K. R.: A NEW MODEL OF ANTARCTIC SEA ICE ALGAL PRODUCTION: A TIMESERIES FROM 1997-2003 Vernet, M.; Martinson, D.; Iannuzzi, R.; Stammerjohn, S.; Kozlowski, W.; Sines, K.; Smith, R. C.; Garibotti, I.: PRIMARY PRODUCTION WITHIN THE SEA ICE ZONE WEST OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA Deal, C.; Jin, M.; Wang, J.: MODELING THE ICE-OCEAN ECOSYSTEM IN LANDFAST ICE ON THE CHUKCHI SHELF AND WITHIN THE FLUCTUATING ICE MARGIN OF THE BERING SEA Hoff, K.; Pfirman, S.; Tremblay, B.; Newton, R.: EFFECTS OF RETREATING ARCTIC SEA ICE ON WALRUS AND OTHER MARINE MAMMALS White, B. A.; Matsumoto, K.; Austin, J.: THE ROLE OF ICE IN THE LAKE SUPERIOR CARBON CYCLE 504. 505. 506. 507. 508. 509. 053: Arctic Marine Communities and Biodiversity Chair(s): Rolf Gradinger, [email protected]; Russ Hopcroft, [email protected]; Bodil Bluhm, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 620. 621. 622. 041: Juvenile Copepods in Planktonic Communities Chair(s): Georgi G. Sutyrin, [email protected]; Gordon E. Swaters, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall Location: Poster Hall Withdrawn Paffenhofer, G. A.: JUVENILE COPEPODS IN PLANKTONIC COMMUNITIES - A TUTORIAL PRESENTATION~ 336. 337. 042: Outreach in Ocean Sciences - Taking the Ocean to the Classroom 338. Chair(s): Joachim Dengg, [email protected]; Teresa Greely, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 501. 502. 503. Wells, R. S.; George, A. M.: COMPARING USE OF MANGROVES BY BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS ON WEEKDAYS AND WEEKENDS Sirenko, B.: A COMPARISON OF ARCTIC AND ANTARCTIC FAUNAS: A CASE STUDY OF THE LAPTEV AND WEDDELL SEAS Foster, N. R.; Grischenko, A. V.; Lees, D. C.: BIODIVERSITY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY OF BRYOZOA IN COOK INLET, GULF OF ALASKA 067: Variability and Mixing Near Topography Chair(s): Gustav Paffenhofer, [email protected]; Don Deibel, [email protected] 750. 751. Achilles, K. M.; Weersing, K. A.; Grabowski, M. N.; Bruno, B. C.: PROMOTING EDUCATION AND OUTREACH OPPORTUNITIES IN MICROBIAL OCEANOGRAPHY Wetzel, L. R.; Kniss, C. D.; Whicker, P. J.: IMPROVING QUANTITATIVE LITERACY IN UNDERGRADUATE MARINE SCIENCE COURSES Cline, A. H.; Moore, T. S.; Grant, D.; Carroll, S.; Comstock, S.; Fitz-Randolph, K.; Macoy, V.; Nylen, C.: BRINGING OCEAN SCIENCE RESEARCH TO THE MIDDLE SCHOOL CLASSROOM Neuhaus, R.; Dengg, J.: NAT-WORKING MARINE RESEARCH - A SCHOOL ENCOUNTER BEYOND LAB EDUCATION Healy, G. F.; Zaragoza, M.; Swart, P. K.: PROJECT INSTAR: LESSONS LEARNED OVER 10 YEARS OF PROVIDING OCEAN SCIENCE RESEARCH TO K-12 TEACHERS* Figueiredo, R. J.; Boykin, P. O.; Davis, J. R.; Paramygin, V.; Sheng, Y. P.; Tutak, B.; Wolinsky, D. I.: A CYBERINFRASTRUCTURE FOR HANDS-ON EDUCATION AND TRAINING IN THE USE OF GRID COMPUTING FOR COASTAL MODELING 339. Green, V. L.; Brauer, S.; Herfort, L.; Howe, W.; Zhang, Y.; Baptista, A. M.: FRONTLINE MENTORING: DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MENTOR TRAINING FOR POST-DOCTORAL FELLOWS AND JUNIOR FACULTY Cudaback, C. N.: ENGAGING UNDERGRADUATES WITH HUMAN IMPACTS Volbers, A. N.; Freibauer , A.; Saugier, P.; CarboSchools Consortium: CARBOSCHOOLS –CARBOOCEAN’fS AND CARBOEUROPE’S COMBINED INITIATIVE TO EDUCATE SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS IN LATEST MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL CARBON CYCLE RESEARCH 340. 341. 342. Robertson, R.: LOCAL AND SURFACE INTENSIFICATION OF TIDAL CURRENTS AND MIXING IN THE INDONESIAN SEAS Choboter, P. F.: DYNAMICS AND INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF THE CROSS-SHELF CIRCULATION DURING WIND-DRIVEN COASTAL UPWELLING Luneva, M. V.; Clayson, C. A.: EFFECT OF THE COUPLING BETWEEN THE UPPER AND LOWER CIRCULATIONS NEAR THE FRONT ON THE DEEP MIXING Warner, S. J.; MacCready, P.: A NUMERICAL INVESTIGATION OF FORM DRAG INDUCED BY STRATIFIED TIDAL FLOW OVER ROUGH TOPOGRAPHY WITHIN AN ESTUARY Nakamura, T.; Matthews, J. P.; Awaji, T.; Mitsudera, H.: SMALL-SCALE EDDIES AROUND THE KURIL STRAITS GENERATED BY BAROTROPIC TIDAL FLOW Benthuysen, J. A.; Thomas, L.: THE MODIFICATION OF FRICTIONALLY DRIVEN SECONDARY CIRCULATIONS BY BUOYANCY FORCES OVER A SLOPING BOTTOM Teinturier, S.; Sutyrin, G. G.; Stegner, A.; Taupier-Letage, I.: ANOMALOUS FAST DRIFT OF A SURFACEINTENSIFIED EDDY NEAR STEEP CONTINENTAL SLOPE (~) 84 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 343. 344. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Kamenkovich, V. M.; O’Driscoll, K. T.: THE ANALYSIS OF TURBULENT MIXING NEAR TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES IN THE INDONESIAN SEAS BASED ON RESULTS OF SIMULATIONS WITH A REGIONAL MODEL Kim, Y. B.; Chang, K. I.; Park, J. H.; Kim, K.; Park, J. J.; Watts, D. R.: OBSERVATION OF TOPOGRAPHIC ROSSBY WAVES NEAR DOKDO OF THE ULLEUNG INTERPLAIN GAP 624. 625. 072: Nearshore and Coastal Regions: General 626. Chair(s): Lyle Hibler, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1092. 1094. 1095. 1096. 1097. 1098. 1099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 627. 628. 629. 630. 631. 077: Education and Outreach Using Ocean Observing Systems. Chair(s): J. A. Yoder, [email protected]; E. L. Rom, [email protected]; J. McDonnell, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 510. 511. 512. 513. 074: Influence of Recent Changes in the Arctic 514. Chair(s): Andrew Pershing, [email protected]; David Mountain, [email protected]; Igor Belkin, [email protected]; Charles Greene, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 623. Petrone, C. J.; Brodie, K. L.; Foxgrover, A. C.; Kraatz, L. M.; Lake, S. J.; Relles, N. J.; Rodríguez-Calderón, C.; Shen, T.; Spier, C. R.; Sturdivant, S. K.; Patterson, M. R.; Jones, D.: LESSONS FROM PROJECT SEACAMEL: INTEGRATING SCIENCE EDUCATION AND OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM (OOS) TECHNOLOGY Clarke, M. E.; Romsos, C. G.; Goldfinger, C.; Gref, B.; Wakefield, W. W.: INTERACTIVE HABITAT DATABASE FOR THE PACIFIC COAST OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM (PACOOS): AN ECOSYSTEM OBSERVING TOOL FOR THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT Schoonmaker, J. E.; Potemra, J. T.; DeCarlo, E. H.; Pawlak, E.: INCORPORATION OF OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS DATA IN UNDERGRADUATE CURRICULA Dorton, J. R.; Porter, D. E.; Pfaff, S. R.; Quagliariello, J. A.; Cothran, J.; King, S.: CAROLINAS COAST MARINE WEATHER PORTAL: NOAA’S NWS AND COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS WORKING TOGETHER FOR THE MARINE COMMUNITY Kirkpatrick, B. A.; Currier, R. D.; Nierenberg, K.; Reich, A.; Backer, L. C.; Fleming, L. E.; Stumpf, R.: OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS AND PUBLIC HEALTH: THE FLORIDA BEACH CONDITIONS REPORTING SYSTEM TO MINIMIZE EXPOSURE TO KARENIA BREVIS AEROSOLS Kasper, J. L.; Weingartner, T.: MODELING CIRCULATION IN THE LANDFAST ICE ZONE * represents Invited presentations ( ) 85 TUESDAY 1093. Bagheri, S.; Gill, J. P.; Gill, J. P.: HYPERSPECTRAL DATA IN SPECTRAL ANALYSIS OF NEARSHORE WATER QUALITY PARAMETERS TEW, K. S.; Ye, Y. X.; Kuo, J.; Fang, L. S.; Liu, Y. S.; Cheng, J. O.; Meng, P. J.: PICOPLANKTON ABUNDANCE AND DIVERSITY IN A HYPER-EUTROPHIC LAGOON Gehrman, E. A.: A CASE STUDY: THE IMPACT OF THE 1962 NOR’EASTER ON DELAWARE’S ATLANTIC COASTLINE Rodriguez-Rubio Efrain, E.; Bastidas-Salamanca Martha, M.; Guerrero-Zorilla Diego, D.: THE COLOMBIA CURRENT: AN EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC COASTAL CURRENT, EARLY OCEANOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS Lee, I.; Wang, Y.; Liu, J. T.: INTERNAL TIDAL CURRENTS IN THE KAOPING SUBMARINE CANYON Jiang, L.; Breaker, L. C.; Yan, X. H.; Tseng, Y. H.: AN UPWELLING COMPARATIVE STUDY BETWEEN US WEST AND EAST COAST WITH A DEVELOPMENT OF AN IMPROVED UPWELLING INDEX AND NUMERICAL MODELS Blattner, K. L.; Moisan, T. A.; Linkswiler, M. A.; Makinen, C. P.; Ohi, N.; Blanco, J. L.: ABUNDANCE AND BIOMASS OF CYANOBACTERIA IN THE SOUTHERN MIDATLANTIC BIGHT Veeramony, J.; Edwards, K. l.; Hsu, L.: INFLUENCE OF TIDES AND WINDS ON NEARSHORE HYDRODYNAMICS AND MORPHOLOGY DURING MILD WAVE CONDITIONS Martinolich, P. M.; Lee, Z. P.; Lyon, P. E.; Ladner, S. L.: DERIVING INHERENT OPTICAL PROPERTIES USING MERIS Dzwonkowski, B.; Lipphardt, B. L.; Yan, X. H.; Kohut, J. T.; Garvine, R. W.: SUB-INERTIAL MID-SHELF ACROSSSHELF OFFSHORE FLOWS IN THE SURFACE LAYER OF THE CENTRAL MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT Makinen, C. P.; Moisan, T. A.; Blanco, J. L.; Blattner, K. L.; Linkswiler, M. A.; Ohi, N.: PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE SOUTHERN MIDATLANTIC BIGHT: BASELINE MEASUREMENTS FOR THE WA-COOL PROJECT Lehner, S.; Brusch, S.; Schulz-Stellenfleth, J.: WIND FIELD AND SEA STATE DERIVED FROM TERRASAR X IMAGES Dahlqvist, R. M.; Andersson, P. S.; Porcelli, D.: REE SEAWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN THE BERING STRAIT AND THE CHUKCHI SEA Pershing, A. J.; Greene, C. H.; Head, E. H.; Johnson, C.: COHERENT RESPONSE OF NORTHWEST ATLANTIC SHELF ECOSYSTEMS TO DECADAL CLIMATE VARIABILITY Savoie, M. A.; Trefry, J. H.; Trocine, R. P.: UNDERICE INTERACTION AND MIXING OF SPRING FLOODWATERS WITH CONTINENTAL SHELF WATER IN THE ALASKAN BEAUFORT SEA Hardin, J. L.; Neff, J. M.; Durell, G. S.; Newton III, F. C.: MEASURING BIOAVAILABLE HYDROCARBONS IN THE NEARSHORE BEAUFORT SEA: COMPARISON OF CAGED MUSSELS (MYTILUS TROSSULUS) AND SEMIPERMEABLE MEMBRANE DEVICES (SPMDS) Fratantoni, P. S.: THE NORTH ATLANTIC SHELFBREAK CURRENT: AN ADVECTIVE LINK FOR CLIMATE VARIABILITY Galginaitis, M. S.: VARIABILITY IN CROSS ISLAND (ARCTIC ALASKA) SUBSISTENCE WHALING: AN EXAMINATION OF NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC FACTORS Divoky, G. J.; Harter, B. B.: DECREASES IN SUMMER PACK ICE EXTENT RESULT IN ANNUAL AND SEASONAL PREY SHIFTS AND LOWER BREEDING SUCCESS IN AN ARCTIC SEABIRD Belkin, I. M.; O’Reilly, J. E.: SOUTHWARD PROPAGATION OF ARCTIC/SUBARCTIC TEMPERATURE ANOMALIES ALONG NORTH AMERICA’S EASTERN SEABOARD Weingartner, T. J.; Danielson, S. L.; Kasper, J.: CIRCULATION IN THE LANDFAST-ICE ZONE OF THE ALASKAN BEAUFORT SEA ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 085: The Nordic Seas and the North Atlantic’s Subpolar Gyre: Similarities, Differences, and Interconnection 1210. 1211. Chair(s): Fiammetta Straneo, [email protected]; Jonathan Lilly, [email protected]; Anna Wåhlin, [email protected]; Tor Eldevik, [email protected] 1212. Location: Poster Hall 632. TUESDAY 633. 634. 635. 636. 637. 638. 639. 640. 641. 642. 643. 644. 645. Falck, E.; Jones, E. P.; Kattner, G.; Budéus, G.: FRESH WATER IN THE NORTHERN EAST GREENLAND CURRENT FROM 1982 THROUGH 2005. Våge, K.; Pickart, R. S.; Davies, H. C.: THE GREENLAND TIP JET: ROLE OF THE AMBIENT ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION AND EFFECT ON CONVECTION IN THE IRMINGER SEA Broström, G.; Ferrow, A. E.: DUAL BUOYANCY FORCING IN SEMI-ENCLOSED SEAS: AN IDEALIZED STUDY OF THE ARCTIC MEDITERRANEAN. de Steur, L.; Hansen, E.: FRESHWATER FLUXES IN FRAM STRAIT FROM A 9-YEAR LONG MOORING RECORD Johnson, C.; Sherwin, T.; Shimmield, T.; Smythe-Wright, D.: WYVILLE THOMSON RIDGE OVERFLOW WATER IN THE ROCKALL TROUGH Hall, M. M.; Torres, D. J.: ABSOLUTE VELOCITY IN THE LABRADOR SEA: ADCP OBERVATIONS ALONG AR7W Withdrawn Schmidt, S.; Fischer, J.; Send, U.; Visbeck, M.: SEASONAL AND DECADAL VARIATIONS OF WEST GREENLAND CURRENT SALINITY AND THE IMPACT ON THE CENTRAL LABRADOR SEA. Neumann, U.; Karstensen, J.; Visbeck, M.; Send, U.: THE INFLUENCE OF HEAT AND FRESHWATER FLUXES ON CONVECTIVE ACTIVITY IN THE CENTRAL IRMINGER SEA Iovino, D.; Straneo, F.; Spall, M.: ON THE EFFECT OF A SILL ON DENSE WATER FORMATION IN A MARGINAL SEA Eriksen, C.; Rhines, P. B.: EXPLORING ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING ALONG THE ICELAND FAROE RIDGE Lherminier, P.; Mercier, H.; Gourcuff, C.; Pérez, F. F.; Vázquez-Rodríguez, M.; Morin, P.: VARIABILITY OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC CIRCULATION MEASURED BY THE OVIDE PROJECT Sigray, P.; Lundberg, P.; Nilsson, J.: OBSERVATIONS OF NORTH ATLANTIC INFLOW BY DUAL USE OF A TRANS-ATLANTIC FIBRE-OPTIC CABLE Latarius, K.; Quadfasel, D.; Voet, G.; Karstensen, J.; Budeus, G.: RECENT OBSERVATIONS FROM THE GREENLAND SEA: SEASONAL TO INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY AND IMPLICATIONS ON WATER MASS FORMATION. 1213. 1214. 1215. 1216. 1217. 1218. 1219. 1220. 1221. 1222. 1223. 1224. 094: Coastal Ocean Modeling and Prediction Chair(s): Ruoying He, [email protected]; John Wilkin, wilkin@marine. rutgers.edu; Katja Fennel, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1225. 088: Characterization and Modeling of Ocean Features Chair(s): Avijit Gangopadhyay, [email protected]; Alex Warn-Varnas, [email protected]; Pierre Lermusiaux, [email protected]; Lou Goodman, [email protected] 1226. Location: Poster Hall 1227. 1208. 1209. Mask, A. C.: ACOUSTIC SIGNATURES IN A FORECASTING OCEAN MODEL Jensen, J. K.: OCEANOGRAPHIC FEATUES IN THE NORWEGIAN TRENCH Fernandes, F. P.; Silveira, I. A.: VERTICAL PROJECTION OF VELOCITY, DENSITY AND TEMPERATURE USING VELOCITY-BASED FEATURE MODEL AND A LINEARIZED EQUATION OF STATE Raval, A. Y.; Wen, X.: ENERGY EXCHANGE AT THE AIRWATER INTERFACE Liang, W. D.; Yang, Y. J.; Tang, T. Y.; Chuang, W. S.; Wu, C. R.: KUROSHIO IN THE LUZON STRAIT Faure, V.; Speer, K.: A STATISTICAL INVERSE MODEL IN THE SOUTHEASTERN PACIFIC OCEAN Miller, R. N.; Vernieres, G.; Ehret, L. L.; McClean, J. L.; Maltrud, M.: DIAGNOSTIC STUDY OF A BAROCLINIC QUASIGEOSTROPHIC MODEL OF THE KUROSHIO OFF JAPAN Withdrawn Logutov, O. G.; Lermusiaux, P. F.; Haley, P. J.: TIDAL MODELING AND TIDALLY-DRIVEN COASTAL FEATURES Heitsenrether, R. M.; Brandt, A.: LABORATORY STUDY ON THE RECOVERY OF A STORM PERTURBED UPPER OCEAN LAYER Livermont, E. A.; Herrington, T. O.; Miller, J. K.: NONPARAMETRIC ESTIMATION OF WAVE DATA AS A MEANS OF ANALYZING THE UNEXPLAINED VARIATION CREATED BY THE NYHOPS FORECAST SYSTEM FOR THE NEW JERSEY COASTLINE Gangopadhyay, A.; Brown, W. S.; Kohut, J.; Glenn, S.: THE APPLICATION OF AN OPERATIONAL CIRCULATION MODELING SYSTEM TO THE MID-ATLANTIC REGION Solé, J.; Wilkin, J.; Werner, F.; Zhang, W.; Zavala-Garay, J.; Vizoso, G.; Tintoré, J.: STUDY OF POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE ECOSYSTEMS OF TEMPERATE SEAS: THE ALBORAN SEA CASE Calado, L.; Gangopadhyay, A.; Silveira, I. C.: FEATUREORIENTED REGIONAL MODELING AND SIMULATIONS (FORMS) FOR THE WESTERN SOUTH ATLANTIC, SOUTHEASTERN BRAZIL REGION Balasubramanian, R.; Gangopadhyay, A.; Chaudhuri, A. H.; Ray, S.: DETECTING UPWELLING REGIONS USING CLUSTERING ON SST IMAGES OF MONTEREY BAY Ayoub, N. K.; Lucas, M. A.; Valladeau, G.: SENSITIVITY OF THE MIXED-LAYER HEAT CONTENT REPRESENTATION TO ATMOSPHERIC FORCING IN AN EDDY-PERMITTING MODEL OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC Horton, C. W.; Clifford, M. A.: MODELING OF INTERNAL TIDES IN THE GULF OF OMAN AND THE PERSIAN GULF 1228. Laruelle, G. G.; Dürr, H. H.; Van Kempen, C.; Slomp, C. P.; Middelkoop, H.; Meybeck, M.: MODELING NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS RETENTION IN THE COASTAL OCEAN AT THE GLOBAL SCALE Li, M.; He, R.: NUMERICAL MODELING STUDY ON COASTAL OCEAN BIOPHYSICAL RESPONSES TO HURRICANES Allende-Arandía, M. E.; Zavala-Hidalgo, J.; MateosJasso, A.: A NUMERICAL STUDY OF TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY IN THE VERACRUZ CORAL REEF SYSTEM Zavala-Hidalgo, J.; Mateos-Jasso, A.; De Buen Kalman, R. C.; Allende-Arandia, M. E.; Fernández-Eguiarte, A.; Vargas, J. M.; Martínez-López, B.: CIRCULATION ON THE VERACRUZ CORAL REEF SYSTEM DURING AUTUMNWINTER 2006-2007 (~) 86 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 1229. 1230. 1231. 1232. 1233. 1235. 1236. 1237. 1238. 1239. 1240. 1241. 1242. 1243. 1244. 1245. 1246. 1247. 098: Contribution of Data Assimilation to Ocean Modeling Siedlecki, S. A.; Mahadevan, A.; Archer, D. E.: MODELING THE SUPPLY OF NUTRIENTS TO THE COASTAL OCEAN: THE ROLE OF A SHELF BREAK FRONT Mateos-Jasso, A.; Zavala-Hidalgo, J.; Gallegos-Garcia, A.: ON THE SEASONALITY OF THE YUCATAN UPWELLING Dawe, J. T.; Allen, S. E.: RESOLUTION OF BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYER TRANSPORTS IN A MODEL OF CANYON UPWELLING. Campbell, T. J.; Chen, S.; Gabersek, S.; Hodur, R.; Jin, H.: A COUPLED AIR/OCEAN/WAVE MODELING SYSTEM - DEVELOPMENT AND CASE STUDY Mooers, C. N.; Wu, X.; Bang, I.: VOLUME, HEAT, AND SALT TRANSPORTS THROUGH PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND, ALASKA Erofeeva, S. Y.; Egbert, G. D.; Ray, R. D.: MODELING AND DATA ASSIMILATION FOR NON-LINEAR SHALLOW WATER TIDAL CONSTITUENTS Madsen, K. S.; She, J.; Højerslev, N. K.: REGIONAL OCEAN CLIMATE MODELING FOCUSING ON THE NORTH SEA-BALTIC SEA TRANSITION ZONE Edwards, K. L.; Veeramony, J.; Hsu, Y.; Dykes, J.; Allard, R.: MODELING WAVE- AND TIDE- DRIVEN CURRENTS WITH DELFT3D FOR AUVFEST 2007 Logvinov, E.; Pedlosky, J.: THE COASTAL BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYER Inazu, D.; Sato, T.; Nakamura, K.; Miura, S.; Fujimoto, H.; Larsen, C. F.; Higuchi, T.: ACCURATE TIDE MODELING AND SEMIDIURNAL SEICHES IN SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA Cahill, B.; Schofield, O.; Hunter, E.; Wilkin, J.; Bissett, P.: THE EVOLUTION OF COASTAL OPTICS ASSOCIATED WITH A TURBID PLUME AND FEEDBACKS ON NEARSHORE PHYSICS Smirnov, S.; Yankovsky, A.; Boyer, D.; Baines, P.: COASTALTRAPPED WAVE PROPAGATION IN THE PRESENCE OF SUBMARINE TOPOGRAPHY Middleton, J. F.; Teixeira, C. E.: OCEAN CIRCULATION WITHIN A MID-SIZED BAY OR GULF TO WIND AND REMOTE FORCING Fennel, K.; Hetland, R. D.; DiMarco, S. F.: COUPLED PHYSICAL-BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELING OF THE LOUISIANA DEAD ZONE Koch, A. O.; Kurapov, A. L.; Allen, J. S.; Egbert, G. D.; Miller, R. N.; Kosro, P. M.: ACROSS SLOPE TRANSPORT IN THE SEPARATION ZONE OFF CAPE BLANCO, OREGON. Lehmann, M. K.; Fennel, K.; He, R.; Wilkin, J.: A BIOOPTICAL PRODUCT FROM A COUPLED BIOPHYSICAL OCEAN CIRCULATION MODEL OF THE WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC Lembke, C. E.; Weisberg, R. H.; Byrne, R. H.; Russell, D. R.; Patten, J.; Farmer, A.; Tilbury, G.: UTILIZATION OF THE BOTTOM STATIONED OCEAN PROFILER FOR COASTAL OBSERVING APPLICATIONS ON THE WEST FLORIDA SHELF Peng, M.; Pietrafesa, L.: A NUMERICAL PROJECTION OF THE COASTAL FLOODING AND EROSION IN CAROLINA COAST Jan, S.; Tseng, Y.; Dietrich, D.; Yang, Y.: THE ORIGIN OF THE TAIWAN STRAIT CURRENT Chair(s): Kazuyuki Nakamura, [email protected]; Daisuke Inazu, [email protected]; Peter Jan van Leeuwen, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1248. 1249. 1250. 1251. 1252. 1253. 1254. Smith, S. R.; Ngodock, H. E.; Jacobs, G. A.: AN ANALYSIS/ FORECAST SYSTEM BASED ON THE 4DVAR CYCLING REPRESENTER DATA ASSIMILATION METHOD AND THE NAVY COASTAL OCEAN MODEL Nakamura, K.; Higuchi, T.; Hirose, N.: BATHYMETRY INVERSION BY SEQUENTIAL DATA ASSIMILATION OF TSUNAMI SIMULATION MODEL Richman, J. G.; Miller, R. N.: IMPACT OF MODEL REPRESENTATION ERROR ON OCEAN CLIMATE FORECASTS Valsala, V. K.; SMaksyutov, S.; Ikeda, M.: DESIGN AND VALIDATION OF AN OFFLINE OCEANIC TRACER TRANSPORT MODEL FOR CARBON CYCLE STUDY Losch, M.; Strass, V.; Cisewski, B.: STATE ESTIMATION IN SUPPORT OF AN IRON FERTILIZATION EXPERIMENT IN THE ANTARCTIC POLAR FRONTAL ZONE* Stoessel, A.: EMPLOYING SATELLITE-DERIVED SEA-ICE CONCENTRATION TO CONSTRAIN UPPER-OCEAN TEMPERATURE IN A GLOBAL OCEAN GCM Wirth, A.; Verron, J.: ESTIMATION OF FRICTION PARAMETERS AND LAWS IN 2D SHALLOW-WATER GRAVITY CURRENTS ON THE F-PLANE, BY DATA ASSIMILATION 111: Environmental Change: General Chair(s): Location: Poster Hall 95. 96. Hayden, M. H.; Kleypas, J.: CIGUATERA POISONING: INCREASED INCIDENCE ASSOCIATED WITH CORAL REEF DECLINE? Stuckey, M. J.; Black, B. A.: HIGH RESOLUTION RECONSTRUCTIONS OF SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES FROM PACIFIC GEODUCK GROWTH INCREMENT CHRONOLOGIES 112: Natural Iron Fertilization in the Southern Ocean, and Implications for the Biological Carbon Pump Chair(s): Peter J. Statham, [email protected]; Mike Lucas, [email protected]; Stéphane Blain, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 646. 647. 648. 649. Mills, R. A.; Marsh, R.: ENHANCED HOLOCENE EXPORT PRODUCTION ASSOCIATED WITH THE CROZET PLATEAU Homoky, W. B.; Severmann, S.; Mills, R. A.; Statham, P. J.; Fones, G. R.; Taylor, S. L.: RE-EVALUATING THE IMPACT OF REDOX CYCLING ON MARINE POREWATER FE ISOTOPES Statham, P. J.; Blain, S.: NATURAL ISLAND IRON FERTILISATION IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN: COMPARISON OF IRON SOURCES AT CROZET AND KERGUELEN Venables, H. J.; Pollard, R. T.; Popova, E. E.; Moore, C. M.: REMOTE SENSING OF A NATURALLY IRON FERTILIZED PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM AROUND THE CROZET PLATEAU, SOUTHERN OCEAN * represents Invited presentations ( ) 87 TUESDAY 1234. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 650. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Jouandet, M.; Blain, S.; Metzl, N.; Mongin, M.: NET COMMUNITY PRODUCTION IN THE NATURAL IRON FERTILIZED BLOOM OF KERGUELEN 652. 125: Collaborative Partnerships in Ocean Science Education 653. Chair(s): Linda Duguay, [email protected]; Sue Cook, [email protected]; Blanche Meeson, [email protected] 654. Location: Poster Hall TUESDAY 515. 516. 517. 518. 519. 520. 521. 522. 523. 524. 525. 526. Bruno, B. C.; Baumgartner, E. P.; Davidson, K. G.; Hicks Johnson, T.; Rivera, M.: OCEAN LITERACY ALLIANCE - HAWAII: ESTABLISHING A FRAMEWORK FOR COLLABORATION KIM, C.; Fortner, R. W.: COMPARING COLLABORATION EXPERIENCE OF TWO PROFESSIONS: EDUCATORS AND SCIENTISTS IN COSEE GREAT LAKES Geer, I. W.; Brey, J. A.; Moran, J. M.; Weinbeck, R. S.; Mills, E. W.; Hopkins, E. J.: AMS ONLINE OCEAN STUDIES FOSTERING OCEAN SCIENCE LITERACY IN AMERICAN UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION Tuddenham, P. D.; Bishop, K. O.: HOW DOES THE USE OF TECHNOLOGY AND SUPPORTING ORGANIZATION DESIGN PRINCIPLES SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE COSEE NETWORK AND COLLABORATIVE PARTNERSHIPS? Carruthers, T.; Murray, L.; Gibson, D.; Hall, W.; Witherspoon, C.; Burns, K.: COASTAL TRENDS ISSUES AND THE FORMATION OF SCIENCE-EDUCATION PARTNERSHIPS Hamner, W. M.; Tuddenham, P.; Lemus, J.; Fong, P.: LEVERAGING UNIVERSITY UNDERGRADUATES TO DISSEMINATE OCEAN SCIENCES THROUGH ONLINE DISTANCE LEARNING Jones, J. P.: STUDENTS TEACHING STUDENTS IN NAGISA AND GETTING GREAT DATA Deans, N. L.; McCammon, M.; Wiese, F. K.: SEANET: COLLABORATIONS IN OCEAN SCIENCE EDUCATION IN ALASKA Dean, A. F.; Emanuelson, L.: LONG LIVE LIMPETS: SUSTAINING A COLLABORATIVE SCIENCE EDUCATION PROGRAM Williams, E. J.: WIN-WIN INFORMAL AND FORMAL EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES AS PART OF A COMMERCIAL CRUISE LINE AND ACADEMIC PARTNERSHIP Geary, E. E.; Wright, E.; Yule, S.; Larsen, J.; Hoffman, M.: CREATING SUCCESSFUL COLLABORATIONS TO SUPPORT OCEAN SCIENCE EDUCATION: EXAMPLES FROM THE GLOBE PROGRAM AND THE COALITION FOR EARTH SYSTEM EDUCATION. Sempier, T. T.; Walker, S. H.; Thompson, N. L.; Hare, R. D.: TEACHER PERCEPTIONS OF THE CENTERS FOR OCEAN SCIENCES EDUCATION EXCELLENCE: CENTRAL GULF OF MEXICO 655. 152: Lateral Mixing in the Ocean from Meters to Mesoscale Chair(s): Miles A. Sundermeyer, [email protected]; James R. Ledwell, [email protected]; Raffaele Ferrari, [email protected]; M.-Pascale Lelong, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 345. 346. 347. 348. 349. 350. Natarov, A.; Richards, K. J.: LATERAL MIXING BY INTERLEAVING IN THE EQUATORIAL THERMOCLINE Jacobs, J.; Lelong, P.: COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT SUBMESOSCALE LATERAL MIXING SCENARIOS: A NUMERICAL STUDY Nadiga, B. T.: A NOVEL APPROACH TO MODELING SUBGRID SCALES IN UNDER-RESOLVED LARGESCALE FLOWS Wang, Z.; Goodman, L.: ON THE HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL STRUCUTRE OF TURBULENCE McPhee, M. G.: MIXING ASYMMETRY IN TURBULENT FLOWS WITH LARGE HORIZONTAL SCALAR GRADIENTS Xu, D.; Xue, H.; Greenberg, D. A.: NUMERICAL STUDY OF LAGRANGIAN TRANSPORT PROCESS IN A MARCOTIDAL BASIN 154: Forecast, Predictability and Data Assimilation Chair(s): Gregg Jacobs, [email protected]; Emanuel Coelho, [email protected]; Igor Shulman, [email protected]; Germana Peggion, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1283. 1284. 1285. 129: The Ecosystem of the Beaufort Sea 1286. Chair(s): Patricia Ramlal, [email protected]; Tom Weingartner, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 651. Itoh, M.; Shimada, K.; Carmack, E.; Kamoshida, T.; Nishino, S.; McLaughlin, F.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF PACIFIC WINTER WATER THROUGH THE BARROW CANYON FROM 2000 TO 2006 Yamamoto-Kawai, M.; McLaughlin, F.; Carmack, E.; Nishino, S.; Shimada, K.: VARIABILITY OF FRESHWATER DISTRIBUTION IN THE CANADA BASIN OF THE ARCTIC OCEAN IN 2000S William, T.; Londry, K.; Papst, M.: MICROBIAL ACTIVITY ASSOCIATED WITH SHALLOW POCKMARK GAS VENTS ON THE BEAUFORT SEA SHELF Ramlal, P. S.; Kling, H. J.; Buat, P.: A COMPARISON OF TAXONOMIC AND ALGAL ACTIVITY FROM THE BBE FLUOROPROBE WITH DIRECT TAXONOMIC AND GAS FLUX MEASUREMENTS IN THE CANADIAN COASTAL BEAUFORT SEA Wong, S.; Papst , M. H.; Walkusz, W.; Paulic, J.: INITIAL ICHTHYOPLANKTON ANALYSIS OF THE MACKENZIE PLUME FRONT Seo , G. H.; Kim , S. I.; Choi , B. J.; Cho , Y. K.; Kim , Y. H.: DATA ASSIMIATION INTO REGINAL OCEAN MODELING SYSTEM OF THE NORTHWEST PACIFIC MARGINAL SEAS BY USING ENSEMBLE KALMAN FILTER: IDENTICAL TWIN EXPERIMENT Carter, R.; Farrar, P. D.; Horton, C. W.: NAVY OCEAN MODEL COMPARISONS IN THE GULF OF OMAN Karspeck, A. R.; Kaplan, A.; Cane, M. A.: PREDICTABILITY LOSS IN AN INTERMEDIATE ENSO MODEL DUE TO INITIAL ERROR AND ATMOSPHERIC NOISE Shulman, I.; Rowley, C.; Cummings, J.: MODELING OF UPWELLING/RELAXATION EVENTS DURING AUTONOMOUS OCEAN SAMPLING NETWORK (AOSN) EXPERIMENTS. (~) 88 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 157: Arctic Sea Ice Variability Interacted with Atmospheric and Ocean Circulation Patterns 459. Chair(s): Jia Wang, [email protected]; Bill Hibler, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 656. 657. 658. 660. 661. 164: Improving Geosciences Education and Public Outreach: Sharing Strategic and Rewarding Approaches Chair(s): Andrea Thorrold, [email protected]; Annette deCharon, [email protected]; Liesl Hotaling, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 527. 528. 173: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Larval Dispersion and Connectivity 160: Reconstruction of Global Paleoceanic Environments Chair(s): Lisa Levin, [email protected]; Stephen Chiswell, [email protected]; Matthew Hare, [email protected]; Linda Rasmussen, [email protected] Chair(s): Amy C. Hirons, [email protected]; Maribeth S. Murray, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 443. 444. 445. 446. 447. 448. 449. 450. Smith, D. W.; Madin, L. P.: VIRTUAL STOWAWAY ON AN OCEANOGRAPHIC CRUISE: AN INTERACTIVE EDUCATIONAL WEBSITE EMPLOYING LINKED SHIPBOARD PANORAMAS Sills, N.; Karp-Boss, L.; Weller, H.; Boss, E. S.: TEACHING SCIENCE BY OCEAN INQUIRY: BRINGING THE OCEAN TO THE CLASSROOM Location: Poster Hall Filipsson, H. L.; Mackensen, A.; McCorkle, D. C.; Bernhard, J. M.; Andersson, L. S.; Danielssen, D. S.; Lindahl, O.; Naustvoll, L. J.; Nordberg, K.; Sahlsten, E.: A SEASONAL STUDY OF δ18O(W) AND δ13C(DIC) IN THE BALTIC AND SKAGERRAK WATER COLUMN Winsor, K.; McManus, J. F.: BENTHIC FORAMINIFERAL MG/CA TEMPERATURE RECORD OF THE MIS 1211 GLACIAL CYCLE: IMPLICATIONS FOR CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND SEA LEVEL Dowsett, H. J.; Robinson, M. M.: PRISM GLOBAL SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE RECONSTRUCTION: A GLOBAL WARMING DATA SET DeVries, T. J.; Primeau, F. W.: SENSITIVITY OF OCEAN CIRCULATION AND TRACER DISTRIBUTIONS TO SMALL CHANGES IN SURFACE HEAT AND FRESHWATER FLUXES Goodman, P. J.; Russell, J. L.: MIOCENE OCEAN CIRCULATION: CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND AN OPEN PANAMANIAN SEAWAY Hull, P. M.; Norris, R. D.: MUTANTS IN RECOVERIES FROM MASS EXTINCTIONS: A PHENOTYPIC REFLECTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS OR UNUSUAL GENOTYPES? Abdul, N. A.; Pride, C. J.: GLACIAL-INTERGLACIAL VARIABILITY OF THE BENGUELA CURRENT SYSTEM, SW AFRICA (ODP LEG 175, SITE 1084) USING MULTIPLE PALEOCEANOGRAPHIC PROXIES Irvine, G. V.; Schaaf, J. M.; Hilton, M. R.; Southon, J. R.; Carpenter, S. J.: VARIATIONS IN THE RESERVOIR AGE OF THE NE PACIFIC OVER 6,000 YEARS SUGGEST CHANGES IN OCEAN CIRCULATION - - LINKED TO CLIMATE? 752. 753. 754. 755. 756. 757. 758. 759. Storer, C.; Naro-Maciel, E.; Holmes, K.; DeSalle, R.; Brumbaugh, D.: GENETIC DIFFERENTIATION OF SPINY LOBSTER, PANULIRUS ARGUS, POPULATIONS IN THE CARIBBEAN AND IMPLICATIONS FOR CONSERVATION Crandall, E. D.; Treml, E. A.; Taffel, J. R.; Barber, P. H.: COALESCENT AND BIOPHYSICAL MODELS OF LONGDISTANCE DISPERSAL DYNAMICS IN NERITID SNAILS Hare, M. P.: THE OYSTER AS BIOINDICATOR OF POPULATION CONNECTIVITY AMONG SOUTHEASTERN FLORIDA LAGOONS Kiyomatsu, K.; Waseda, T.; Miyazawa, Y.: LARVAL DISPERSION OF THE JAPANESE SARDINE INCLUDING IMPACTS OF MESO- AND DECADAL-SCALE SST VARIATIONS Criales, M. M.; Browder, J. A.; Robblee, M. B.; Cardenas, H.; Jackson, T. L.: SELECTIVE TIDAL STREAM TRANSPORT FOR PINK SHRIMP IN SOUTH FLORIDA Haase, A. T.; Cudaback, C. N.: PREDICTING OYSTER LARVAE DISPERSAL IN PAMILICO SOUND FROM SURFACE DRIFT BUOYS AND CURRENT PROFILE OBSERVATIONS McMillan, P.; Levin, L. A.; Rasmussen, L.; Becker, B.; Muccino, J.; Tang, E.: COMPARING FINGERPRINTING AND PHYSICS: MULTIPLE APPROACHES TO LARVAL CONNECTIVITY OF MYTILID MUSSELS laurel, B. J.; Bradbury, I. R.; Snelgrove, P. V.; Bentzen, P.; Campana, S. E.: GLOBAL TRENDS IN DISPERSAL AND CONNECTIVITY AMONG MARINE SPECIES * represents Invited presentations ( ) 89 TUESDAY 659. 460. Babbin, A. R.; Truong, G.; Newton, R.; Schlosser, P.: OXYGEN ISOTOPE RATIOS IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN: IMPLICATION FOR THE FRESHWATER BALANCE SUMATA, H.; SHIMADA, K.: NORTHWARD TRANSPORT OF PACIFIC WATER ALONG THE NORTHWIND RIDGE IN THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN Kawaguchi, Y.; Mitsudera, H.: A NUMERICAL STUDY OF ICE-DRIFT DIVERGENCE BY CYCLONIC WIND WITH A LAGRANGIAN ICE MODEL Miles, S. G.; Darby , D. A.: HOW SEA ICE SEDIMENT SOURCES VARY BETWEEN GLACIAL TO INTERGLACIAL INTERVALS DURING THE LATE PLEISTOCENE Shaw, W. J.; Stanton, T. P.: VARIABILITY OF ARCTIC SUMMERTIME OCEAN-TO-ICE HEAT FLUX ALONG THE 2002-2007 NPS FLUX BUOY DRIFTS Krishfield, R. A.; Proshutinsky, A.; Pickart, R.: MOORED OBSERVATIONS OF ICE DRAFT IN THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN FROM 2003-2007 Randle, N. R.; Hastings, D. W.; Flower, B. P.: ASSESSING THE INTEGRITY OF A STRATIGRAPHIC SEQUENCE USING PAIRED AMS RADIOCARBON DATES ON PLANKTONIC FORAMINIFERA: DEVELOPMENT OF A HIGH-RESOLUTION CHRONOLOGY Cutter, L. S.; Cutter, G. A.; Paytan, A.: RECONSTRUCTING UPPER OCEAN NITRATE CONCENTRATIONS VIA BARITE SE/S: DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW PROXY ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 174: Sharing Scientific Ocean Drilling’s Greatest Hits with Educators 1168. Chair(s): Sharon Katz Cooper, [email protected]; Leslie Peart, [email protected] 1169. Location: Poster Hall 529. TUESDAY 530. 531. 532. Tauxe, K. S.: INTRODUCING STUDENTS TO EXCITING CAREERS IN SEAGOING RESEARCH McConaugha, C. S.: WHAT DO YOU WANT TO BE? Christensen, B. A.; Wiltsey, C.; Pride, C.; Castner, A.; Bohlen, S.; Cooper, S.; Peart, L.: OCEAN OF OPPORTUNITY: USING OCEAN DRILLING SEDIMENTS CORES TO IMPROVE OCEAN LITERACY Leckie, R. M.; Thomas, D. J.; Peart, L.: TEACHING RAPID CLIMATE CHANGE USING EXAMPLES FROM THE GEOLOGIC RECORD - A DISCOVERY-BASED LEARNING MODULE FOR THE PALEOCENE-EOCENE THERMAL MAXIMUM 1170. 1171. 1172. 181: Novel Approaches for Improving Ocean Science Literacy in K-12 Classrooms 1173. Chair(s): Richard A. Tankersley, [email protected]; John Windsor, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 533. 534. 535. 536. 537. 199: Other Lambert, J. L.; Wolfe, G.; Hargis, J.: TEACHER EDUCATION AND ONLINE OCEAN SCIENCE STUDIES Moulton, E. L.; Moore, L.: THE EXPLORATION OF ROUND REEF Kveven, A.; Clay, T.: CONNECTING WHAT STUDENTS LEARN TO WHERE THEY LIVE: NOVEL APPROACHES USING STUDENT-DRIVEN RESEARCH PROJECTS AT THE OCEAN RESEARCH COLLEGE ACADEMY Peterson, M. G.; Hardee, S. E.; Linneman, S.; AcevedoGutierrez, A.: INTEGRATING NOVEL APPROACHES TO CLASSROOM STRUCTURE WITH LOCAL OCEANSCIENCE MODELS THROUGH GRADUATE STUDENTTEACHER PARTNERSHIPS IN WASHINGTON STATE Loman Chiodo, K. M.: IMPROVING OCEAN LITERACY THROUGH CASE METHOD TEACHING Chair(s): Location: Poster Hall 538. 539. 540. 183: Interannual Trends in Phytoplankton Dynamics in Coastal Ecosystems Chair(s): Thomas C. Malone, [email protected]; Paul M. DiGiacomo, [email protected]; Franciscus Colijn, [email protected]; Liana Talaue-McManus, [email protected] 548. 549. Location: Poster Hall 1165. 1166. 1167. KIM, H. C.; YOO, S. J.; ZHU, J. R.; OH, I. S.; PARK, B. K.; ISHIZAKA, J.: DECADE VARIATIONS OF THE CHANGJIANG DILUTED WATER AND SEAWIFS CHLOROPHYLL D’Alelio, D.; Ribera d’Alcalà, M.; Dubroca, L.; Sarno, D.; Zingone, A.; Montresor, M.: BIENNIAL OCCURRENCE OF SEX IN THE DIATOM PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA MULTISTRIATA: EVIDENCE FROM A LONG-TERM PLANKTON SERIES Santoro, A. E.; Nidzieko, N. J.; van Dijken, G. L.; Arrigo, K. R.; Boehm, A. B.: SOURCES OF INTER-ANNUAL CHLOROPHYLL VARIABILITY IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT Marshall, H. G.; Egerton, T. A.; Johnson, R.; Semcheski, M.; Bowman, N.; Mansfield, N.: RE-OCCURRING HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN THE TIDAL RIVERS OF VIRGINIA, U.S.A. Kozlowski, W. A.; Vernet, M.; Deutschman, D. H.; Trees, C.: PIGMENT DERIVED PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSTION ALONG THE WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA Mouw, C. B.; Yoder, J. A.: OPTICAL DETERMINATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON SIZE DISTRIBUTION FROM SATELLITE Phlips, E. J.; Badylak, S.: A TEN-YEAR RECORD OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSITION AND BIOMASS IN THE INDIAN RIVER LAGOON, FLORIDA Soler-Figueroa, B. M.; González-Lagoa, J. G.: COMPARISONS BETWEEN NUTRIENT CONCENTRATION AND DINOFLAGELLATE POPULATION DENSITY AT TWO BIOLOMINESCENT BAYS IN PUERTO RICO Withdrawn 550. Ogawa, H.; Yoshimura, T.; Suzumura, M.; Imai, K.; Tsurushima, N.; Tsuda, A.; Nojiri, Y.; Koike, I.: TEMPORAL VARIATION PROPERTY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON, NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS IN SURFACE OF THE WESTERN SUBARCTIC PACIFIC Kameyama, S.; Tanimoto, H.; Inomata, S.; Tsunogai, U.: PTR-MS-BASED METHOD FOR MEASURING DISSOLVED NONMETHANE HYDROCARBONS (OR VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS) IN SEAWATER: INSTRUMENTATION AND PRELIMINARY RESULTS Waggoner, J. D.; Rathburn, A. E.; Bernhard, J. M.; Martin, J. B.; Perez, E. M.; Gieskes, J. M.; Ziebis, W.: VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION PATTERNS OF LIVING (ROSE BENGAL STAINED OR CELL TRACKER GREEN LABELED) BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA FROM MONTEREY BAY (CA) METHANE SEEPS Ramos, R. J.; Graber, H. C.; Lund, B.; Caruso, M.; Williams, N.: DETERMINATION OF INTERNAL WAVE PROPERTIES FROM X-BAND RADAR OBSERVATIONS Miller, J. R.; Chen, Y.; Russell, G. L.; Francis, J. E.: FUTURE REGIME SHIFT IN FEEDBACKS DURING ARCTIC WINTER Hibbert, A.; Leach, H.; Woodworth, P. L.; Hughes, C. W.: HIGH-LATITUDE ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN COUPLING IN SEA-LEVEL RECORDS (~) 90 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Wednesday Oral Sessions 13:30 006: Watersheds to the Global Ocean: Spaceborne Measurements of Water Surfaces and Modeling Flows 13:45 Chair(s): Doug Alsdorf, [email protected]; Lee-Lueng Fu, [email protected]; Eric Lindstrom, [email protected]; Ernesto Rodriguez, [email protected] 14:00 Location: W108 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 019: Mixing in the Ocean Chair(s): Robin Muench, [email protected]; Louis St. Laurent, [email protected]; Mary Louise Timmermans, [email protected]; Jody Klymak, [email protected] Location: W109 B 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 013: Ridge-To-Reef: Impacts of Watershed Change on Tropical Coastal Ecosystems 09:30 Chair(s): Michael Field, [email protected]; Matthew Larsen, [email protected]; Jonathan Stock, [email protected] 09:45 Location: W205 B/C Zhao, Z.; Alford, M. H.; MacKinnon, J. A.; Pinkel, R.; Klymak, J.: LONG-RANGE PROPAGATION OF THE SEMIDIURNAL INTERNAL TIDE NORTHWARD FROM THE HAWAIIAN RIDGE MacKinnon, J. A.; Alford, M.; Pinkel, R.; Zhao, Z.; Klymak, J.: INTERNAL WAVES ACROSS THE PACIFIC: THE ROLE OF SUBHARMONIC INSTABILITIES Alford, M. H.; Klymak, J.; Zhao, Z.; MacKinnon, J.; Pinkel, R.; Gregg, M. C.; Winters, K.: SHIPBOARD AND MOORED OBSERVATIONS OF THE SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF NEAR-INERTIAL WAVES Carter, G. S.; Merrifield, M. A.; Martin, J. P.; Girton, J. B.; Sanford, T. B.; Lee, C. M.: FORTNIGHTLY VARIATIONS IN BAROCLINIC TIDAL FLUXES AT THE HAWAIIAN RIDGE Merrifield, M. A.; Carter, G. S.; Zilberman, N. V.: DIURNAL INTERNAL TIDES OBSERVED DURING THE HAWAII OCEAN MIXING EXPERIMENT Zilberman, N. V.; Merrifield, M. A.; Carter, G. S.; Luther, D. S.; Levine, M. D.; Boyd, T. J.: TIME-VARIABLE CONVERSION OF BAROTROPIC TO BAROCLINIC M2 TIDAL ENERGY AT THE KAENA RIDGE, HAWAII Pinkel, R.; Klymak, J. M.; Rainville, L.: MOMENTUM FLUX OF THE BAROCLINIC TIDE OVER KAENA RIDGE, HAWAII Sun, O. M.; Pinkel, R.: ENERGY TRANSFER BETWEEN THE SEMIDIURNAL TIDE AND NEAR-INERTIAL MOTIONS AT THE KAENA RIDGE * represents Invited presentations ( ) 91 WEDNESDAY 14:30 14:15 Stammer, D. B.: DETERMINING THE GEOSTROPHIC OCEAN CURRENTS AND EDDIES FROM NEXT GENERATION ALTIMETER MISSIONS.* Beron-Vera, F. J.; Olascoaga, M. J.; Goni, G. J.: MESOSCALE VORTICES AS REVEALED BY LAGRANGIAN COHERENT STRUCTURES DINEZIO, P. N.; GONI, G. J.; LUMPKIN, C. F.: GLOBAL COMPARISON OF SEA SURFACE CURRENTS DERIVED FROM DRIFTER AND ALTIMETRY OBSERVATIONS Leben, R. R.; Hamlington, B. D.; Powell, B. S.: OPTIMAL FILTERS FOR ESTIMATING SLOPE AND HIGHERORDER DERIVATIVES FROM ALONG-TRACK AND WIDE-SWATH ALTIMETRY Egbert, G. D.; Ray, R. D.: PROSPECTS FOR TIDAL STUDIES WITH HIGH-RESOLUTION ALTIMETRY Fu, L. L.: OCEANIC MESOSCALE PROCESSES DETERMINED FROM SATELLITE ALTIMETRY AND THE PROSPECTS OF A WIDE-SWATH RADAR ALTIMETER Strub, P. T.; Saraceno, M.; James, C.; Kosro, P. M.: ALTIMETER USES IN COASTAL REGIONS: TWO APPROACHES Romeiser, R.; Gruenler, S.; Stammer, D.: CURRENT MEASUREMENTS IN RIVERS FROM SPACE BY ALONGTRACK INTERFEROMETRIC SAR Lettenmaier, D. P.: IMPLICATIONS OF THE NRC DECADAL REVIEW FOR A SWATH ALTIMETRY MISSION* Rodriguez, E.; Moller, D.; Pollard, B.: MAKING GLOBALLY CONSISTENT WATER LEVEL MEASUREMENTS Alsdorf, D.; Andreadis, K.; Lettenmaier, D.; Moller, D.; Rodriguez, E.; Bates, P.; Mognard, N.; WATER HM Participants: VIRTUAL MISSION FIRST RESULTS SUPPORTING THE WATER HM SATELLITE CONCEPT Andreadis, K. M.; Lettenmaier, D. P.; Alsdorf, D.: RIVER DISCHARGE ESTIMATION THROUGH ASSIMILATION OF REMOTELY-SENSED WATER SURFACE ELEVATIONS Biancamaria, S.; Bates, P.; Boone, A.; Mognard, N. M.; Cretaux, J. F.; Roblou, L.; Lamouroux, J.: COMPARISON OF MODEL OUTPUTS WITH ESTIMATED PARAMETERS FROM REMOTE SENSING FOR THE OB RIVER IN SIBERIA Shum, C.; Lee, H.; Alsdorf, D.; Ibaraki, M.; Lu, Z.; Braun, A.; Kuo, C.; Cheng, K.: LOUISIANA WETLAND MONITORING USING SATELLITE ALTIMETRY AND SAR INTERFEROMETRY Hoekstra, P.; Hoitink, A.; Buschman, F.; Tarya, A.; Bergh, G. v.; Bak, R.: FROM RIVER BASIN TO BARRIER REEF; AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO LAND-SEA INTERACTION IN TROPICAL WATERS Fabricius, K. E.; Uthicke, S.; Cooper, T. F.; Humphrey, C.; De’ath, G.: BIOPHYSICAL INDICATORS OF CHANGING WATER QUALITY AROUND CORAL REEFS Field, M. E.; Ogston, A. O.; Storlazzi, C. D.; Cochran, S. A.; Presto, M. K.; Stock, J. D.; Logan, J. B.: CHRONIC TURBIDITY ON THE MOLOKAI FRINGING CORAL REEF: GOATS, SUGAR, AND WATERSHED CHANGE Stock, J. D.; Rosener, M.; Tribble, G. W.; Field, M. E.: GEOMORPHIC TRANSPORT LAWS TO GENERALIZE SEDIMENT LOADING TO THE REEFS OF MOLOKA’I, HAWAI’I, USA Larson, R. A.; Schwing, P. T.; Brooks, G. R.; Holmes, C. W.; Devine, B.: SHORT-LIVED RADIOISOTOPE INVENTORIES AS TRACERS OF TERRESTRIAL SEDIMENT DISTRIBUTION ON A WATERSHED SCALE: ST. JOHN, US VIRGIN ISLANDS Carilli, J. E.; Hughen, K. A.; Norris, R. D.; Grumet, N.: CORAL BARIUM/CALCIUM RECORDS OF INCREASED SEDIMENTATION ONTO THE MESOAMERICAN REEF Moyer, R. P.; Grottoli, A. G.: CARBON ISOTOPES (δ13C & ∆14C) IN CORALS AND ADJACENT NATURAL WATERS AS RECORDERS OF CATCHMENT-TO-REEF CARBON TRANSFER. Larsen, M. C.; Webb, R. M.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF RUNOFF, FLUVIAL SEDIMENT AND NUTRIENT DISCHARGES ON THE CORAL REEFS OF PUERTO RICO ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 WEDNESDAY 14:45 15:00 15:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 09:30 Klymak, J. M.; Pinkel, R.; Alford, M.; Legg, S.: THE DYNAMICS OF NON-LINEAR TIDAL MIXING NEAR TOPOGRAPHY Legg, S.; Klymak, J.: INTERNAL HYDRAULIC JUMPS GENERATED BY TIDAL FLOW OVER A TALL STEEP RIDGE Jenkyns, R. L.; Kunze, E. L.: MOMENTUM TRANSFER BETWEEN SEMIDIURNAL INTERNAL WAVES AND SUBINERTIAL FLOW AT A DISSIPATING SURFACE REFLECTION Dietrich, D. E.; Tseng, Y. H.; Bowman, M. J.; Piacsek, S. A.: SENSITIVITY OF MAJOR OCEAN CURRENTS TO PARAMETERIZED INTERNAL WAVES Nikurashin, M.; Ferrari, R.: RADIATION AND DISSIPATION OF INTERNAL WAVES IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN. Silverthorne, K. E.; Toole, J. M.: SEASONAL KINETIC ENERGY VARIABILITY OF NEAR-INERTIAL MOTIONS Cuypers, Y.; Bouruet Aubertot, P.: NUMERICAL STUDY OF INTERNAL TIDE BREAKING PROCESSES Peters, H.; Baumert, H. Z.: A TWO-EQUATION MODEL OF INTERNAL WAVE- AND MEAN SHEAR-DRIVEN TURBULENT MIXING Martini, K. I.; Alford, M. H.; Kelly, S.; Nash, J. D.; Kunze, E.: LOCAL AND REMOTELY-GENERATED INTERNAL WAVES ON THE OREGON CONTINENTAL SLOPE Hall, R. A.; Huthnance, J. M.; Williams, R. G.: MIXING AND DISSIPATION OF INTERNAL WAVE ENERGY ON A SHELF SLOPE 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 024: Coastal Ocean Processes: Integration and Synthesis of Interdisciplinary Shelf Studies 14:15 Chair(s): Richard A. Jahnke, [email protected]; Oscar Schofield, [email protected] 14:30 Location: W110 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 Siegel, D. A.; Guillocheau, N.; Washburn, L.; Warrick, J. A.; Toole, D. A.; Kostadinov, T. S.; Brzezinski, M. A.; Anderson, C. R.: A TIME-SERIES ASSESSMENT OF SEDIMENT PLUMES AND PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOMS IN THE SANTA BARBARA CHANNEL, CALIFORNIA Kirkpatrick, G. J.; Pederson, B. A.; Bowker, R.; Millie, D. F.; Moline, M. A.; Kamykowski, D.; Schofield, O. M.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL SCALES OF VARIATION IN PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE ON THE WEST FLORIDA CONTINENTAL SHELF McPhee-Shaw, E. E.; Chang-Spada, G.: INTEGRATING MULTIPLE COASTAL OBSERVING EFFORTS TO DESCRIBE THE CIRCULATION FEATURES OF A SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TOXIC BLOOM EVENT Lohrenz, S. E.; Schofield, O. E.; Fahnenstiel, G. L.; Millie, D. F.: OPTICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF PHYSICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL VARIABILITY IN A LAKE MICHIGAN COASTAL ECOSYSTEM Frazer, T. K.; Chant, R. J.; Glenn, S. M.; Jacoby, C. A.; Keller, S. R.; Moline, M. A.; Reinfelder, J. R.; Schofield, O.; Wright, D. D.; Yost, J.: PHYTOPLANKTON AND ZOOPLANTON DYNAMICS IN A BUOYANT RIVER PLUME Beall, B. F.; Trick, C. G.; Cochlan, W. P.; Trainer, V.; Wells, M. L.: NUTRIENT SUPPLY AFFECTS THE COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF SMALL PHYTOPLANKTON AND BACTERIOPLANKTON IN THE COASTAL SUBARCTIC PACIFIC OCEAN 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 RADAKOVITCH, O.; BOURRIN, F.; CANALS, M.; DURRIEU DE MADRON, X.; ESTOURNEL, C.; LUDWIG, W.; PALANQUES, A.; ROUSSIEZ, V.; ULSES, C.; OLLIVIER, P.: TRANSPORT AND DEPOSITION OF PARTICULATE MATTER AND PARTICULATE METAL ON THE GULF OF LION SHELF : NEW FINDINGS FROM LARGE MULTIDISCIPLINARY EXPERIMENTS Wright, D. D.; Frazer, T. K.; Moline, M.; Schofield, O.; Reinfelder, J. R.: TROPHIC TRANSFER OF TRACE METALS IN A BUOYANT RIVER PLUME Tweddle, J. F.; Sharples, J.; Palmer, M. R.; Holligan, P. M.: TURBULENCE DRIVEN NITRATE FLUXES OVER SUBMARINE BANKS IN THE SEASONALLY STRATIFIED CELTIC SEA Tynan, C. T.; Ainley , D. G.; Barth , J. A.; Cowles , T. J.; Brodeur, R. D.; Reese, D.; Ford, R. G.: COMPARING EXPORT OF SHELF CARBON IN WHALE BIOMASS WITH CARBON FLUX IN OFFSHORE JETS OF THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT Largier, J. L.; Botsford, L. W.; Roughan, M.; Dugdale, R. C.; Dorman, C. E.; Dever, E. P.; Kudela, R. M.; Wilkerson, F. P.; Bollens, S. M.; Garfield, N.; Kaplan, D. M.: THE UPWELLING-RELAXATION CYCLE AND ITS EFFECT ON PLANKTON PRODUCTIVITY OVER THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA SHELF DURING WEST Sharples, J.; Moore, C. M.; Hickman, A. E.; Tweddle, J. F.; Holligan, P. M.; Green, J. A.; Palmer, M. R.; Rippeth, T. P.; Simpson, J. H.: FROM PHYSICS TO FISH AT THE SHELF EDGE Vander Woude, A. J.; Kudela, R. M.: CO2 VARIABILITY WITHIN RETENTIVE EMBAYMENTS: THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA UPWELLING REGION OF COOP WEST Richardson, M. D.; Jackson, D. R.: ACOUSTIC CHARACTERIZATION OF TIME-DEPENDENT MIXING AT THE SEAFLOOR Todd, R. E.; Rudnick, D. L.: PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS IN SAN PEDRO BAY, CALIFORNIA USING SPRAY GLIDERS Omand, M. M.; Leichter, J. J.; Feddersen, F.; Franks, P. J.; Guza, R. T.: AN INTEGRATED PERSPECTIVE ON BIOPHYSICAL DYNAMICS: FROM THE SURFZONE THROUGH THE NEARSHORE. Dever, E. P.; Kudela, R.; Dugdale, R. C.; Wilkerson, F.; Dorman, C. E.; Largier, J. L.: WIND FORCING AND PHYSICAL, NITRATE AND FLUORESCENCE VARIABILITY IN THE SURFACE BOUNDARY LAYER OVER THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA SHELF Chant, R. J.; Wilkin, J.; Hunter, E.; Jurisa, J.; Zhang, W.; Castelao, R.; Kohut, O.; Glenn, S.: DISPERSAL OF A BUOYANT RIVER DISCHARGE: INTERACTION BETWEEN WIND, MORPHOLOGY AND REMOTELY FORCED FLOWS. Glenn, S. M.; Jones, C.; Twardowski, M.S.; Bowers, L.; Kerfoot, J.; Kohut, J.; Webb, D.; Schofield, O.: OBSERVING STORM-INDUCED SEDIMENT RESUSPENSION PROCESSES IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT WITH SLOCUM GLIDERS Friedrichs, C. T.; Diaz, R. J.; Harris, C. K.; Kuehl, S. A.; McNinch, J. E.; Sanford, L. P.; Schaffner, L. C.: MUDBED: MULTI-DISCIPLINARY BENTHIC EXCHANGE DYNAMICS Chen, R. F.; Cai, W. J.; Chant, R.; Gardner, G. B.; Huang, W.; Reinfelder, J.; Schofield, O.: CARBON CYCLING IN THE HUDSON RIVER PLUME (~) 92 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:45 17:00 17:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Berg, P.; Hume, A.; Huettel, M.; Long, M.; Klump, V.; Savidge, W.: EDDY CORRELATION MEASUREMENTS OF BENTHIC OXYGEN EXCHANGE: AN UPDATE ON THE TECHNIQUE AND RESULTS FROM NEW DEPLOYMENTS Moulin, A. J.; Maul, G. A.; Hudson, H.: MECHANISMS OF WARM AND COLD WATER TEMPERATURE EVENTS IN THE FLORIDA KEYS BETWEEN 1988 AND 2003 Jahnke, D. B.; Nelson, J. R.; Savidge, D. K.; Savidge, W. B.; Robertson, C. Y.; Richards, M. E.; Jahnke, R. A.: INTEGRATING SEAFLOOR IRRADIANCE MEASUREMENTS INTO BENTHIC BIOGEOCHEMISTRY: DEMONSTRATING THE NEED FOR COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVATORIES 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 028: Nearshore Processes Chair(s): Jack Puleo, [email protected]; Q. Jim Chen, [email protected] 09:15 Location: W202 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 029: Ecology and Oceanography of Thin Plankton Layers Chair(s): Percy Donaghay, [email protected]; Tim Cowles, [email protected]; Van Holliday, [email protected]; Margaret McManus, [email protected] 15:00 Location: W102 08:00 15:15 Menden-Deuer, S.; Fredrickson, K. A.: QUANTIFYING BIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS OF PLANKTON LAYER FORMATION IN EAST SOUND, ORCAS ISLAND, WASHINGTON * represents Invited presentations ( ) 93 WEDNESDAY 08:15 Gelpi, C. G.; Norris, K. E.: VERTICAL MIXING IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT AS DETERMINED FROM TEMPERATURE DYNAMICS Ono, J.; Ohshima, K. I.: GENERATION AND DISSIPATION OF THE DIURNAL COASTAL-TRAPPED WAVES OVER THE SAKHALIN SHELF IN THE OHKHOTSK SEA Lowe, R. J.; Symonds, G.; Taebi, S.; Pattiaratchi, C. B.; Ivey, G. N.; Brinkman, R. M.: HYDRODYNAMICS OF FRINGING REEF SYSTEMS: NINGALOO REEF, WESTERN AUSTRALIA Hench, J. L.; Lenihan, H. S.; Monismith, S. G.: MOMENTUM BALANCES ACROSS A WAVE-DOMINATED CORAL REEF Janssen, T. T.; Herbers, T. H.: EXTREME WAVES ON THE CONTINENTAL SHELF Haas, K. A.; Warner, J. C.: THREE-DIMENSIONAL MODELING OF NEARSHORE HYDRODYNAMICS DURING THE PASSAGE OF WEATHER FRONTS Wilson, G.; Ozkan-Haller, H. T.; Holman, R.: MODEL VALIDATION FOR 2D SURF-ZONE CIRCULATION Apotsos, A. A.; Raubenheimer, B.; Elgar, S.; Guza, R. T.: WAVE-DRIVEN SETUP AND ALONGSHORE FLOWS OBSERVED ONSHORE OF A SUBMARINE CANYON Jaramillo, S.; Sheremet, A.; Allison, M.; Rogers, E.: MUD INDUCED WAVE-DISSIPATION IN THE ATCHAFALAYA SHELF, LOUISIANA, USA. Cote, J. M.; Osborne, P. D.; MacDonald, N. J.: CHARACTERIZING WAKE SIGNATURE AND DEVELOPING WAKE CLIMATOLOGY TO DETERMINE BEACH RESPONSE IN RICH PASSAGE, PUGET SOUND, WASHINGTON Ryan, J. P.; Sackmann, B. S.; Rienecker, E. V.: SCALES AND PROCESSES OF PHYTOPLANKTON THIN LAYER PATCHINESS IN A COASTAL UPWELLING SYSTEM, FROM SYNOPTIC MULTIDISCIPLINARY MAPPING BY AUV Cowles, T. J.; Wingard, C.; Desiderio, R.; Pierce, S.: BIO-PHYSICAL INTERPLAY BETWEEN VERTICAL GRADIENTS IN VELOCITY, PHYTOPLANKTON, AND DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER Hodges, B. A.; Fratantoni, D. M.; Lund, J. M.: PROPAGATION OF A THIN LAYER THROUGH A SYNTHETIC MOORING ARRAY Donaghay, P. L.; Sullivan, J. M.; Rines, J.; Hanson, A. K.: ALTERNATE MECHANISMS CONTROLLING THE FORMATION, MAINTENANCE AND DISSIPATION OF THIN LAYERS IN NORTHWESTERN MONTERY BAY IN 2005 AND 2006. Holliday, D. V.; Greenlaw, C. F.: PATTERNS IN THE FINE-SCALE VERTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF ZOOPLANKTON Stacey, M. T.; McManus, M. A.; Steinbuck, J. V.: CONVERGENCES AND MIXING IN THIN LAYERS Cheriton, O. M.; McManus, M. A.; Stacey, M. S.; Steinbuck, J. V.; Ryan, J. P.: PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL CONTROLS ON THE MAINTENANCE AND DISSIPATION OF A THIN PHYTOPLANKTON LAYER Birch, D. A.; Young, W. R.; Franks, P. J.: THIN LAYERS OF PLANKTON: FORMATION AND DESTRUCTION BY SHEAR, STRAIN, AND DIFFUSION Sutor, M. M.; Fratantoni, D. M.; Alford, M.: THE USE OF GLIDER-MOUNTED ACOUSTICS AND IN-SITU IMAGING SYSTEMS TO RESOLVE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF ZOOPLANKTON LAYERS IN MONTEREY BAY, CA Rines, J.; McFarland, M.; Donaghay, P.; Sullivan, J.; Graff, J.: THIN LAYERS AND HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN MONTEREY BAY, CA Rollwagen-Bollens, G.; Bochdansky, A.; Bollens, S. M.; Gibson, A.; Quenette, J.; Wagner, E.: UPWARD BIOLOGICAL PUMP MEDIATED BY THE VERTICALLY MIGRATING, THIN-LAYER FORMING DINOFLAGELLATE AKASHIWO SANGUINEA Hanson, A. K.; Egli, P. E.; Sweetman, R.; Veitch, S. P.; Morin, E. N.; Donaghay, P. L.: THE ROLE OF NUTRIENT GRADIENTS IN THE EPISODIC FORMATION OF THIN PLANKTON LAYERS IN MONTEREY BAY, CA. Moline, M. A.; Orrico, C. M.; Robbins, I. C.; Blackwell, S. M.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL COHERENCE OF PLANKTONIC LAYERS Goodman, L.; Wang, Z.: AUV TURBULENCE OBSERVATIONS IN LOCO Grunbaum, D.; Lessard, E.; Waters, R. L.; Chan, K.; Tobin, E.: ASSESSING IMPACTS OF PROTIST MOVEMENT BEHAVIORS ON FORMATION AND DISPERSION OF THIN LAYERS AND OTHER FINE-SCALE STRUCTURES Johnson, A. C.; Webster, D. R.; Weissburg, M. J.; Yen, J.: COPEPOD BEHAVIOR RESPONSE AT VERTICALLYALIGNED THIN LAYERS OF VELOCITY GRADIENT Benoit-Bird, K. J.: THREE-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURE OF THIN ZOOPLANKTON LAYERS IS IMPACTED BY FORAGING FISH ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 030: Environmental Records of Anthropogenic Impacts On Coastal Ecosystems 14:00 Chair(s): Joan-Albert Sanchez-Cabeza, [email protected]; Ellen Druffel, [email protected] 14:15 Location: W205 B/C 08:00 08:15 08:30 WEDNESDAY 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 Stein, E. D.; Lyon, G. S.: HOW EFFECTIVE HAS THE CLEAN WATER ACT BEEN AT REDUCING POLLUTANT MASS EMISSIONS TO THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT OVER THE PAST 30 YEARS? Kelly, A. E.; Reuer, M. K.; Goodkin, N. F.; Boyle, E. A.: LEAD CONCENTRATIONS AND ISOTOPIC RATIOS IN CORALS AND WATER NEAR BERMUDA, 1780-2000 A.D. Díaz-Asencio , M.; Alonso-Hernández, C. M.; Bolanos , Y.; Gómez-Batista , M.; Morabito, R.; Hernández-Albernas , J.; Sanchez-Cabeza, j. a.: ONE CENTURY SEDIMENTARY RECORD OF MERCURY AND LEAD POLLUTION IN THE SAGUA ESTUARY (CUBA) DERIVED FROM 210PB AND 137CS CHRONOLOGY Godoy, J. M.; Carvalho, F.; Carvalho, Z. L.; Godoy, M. L.; Roldão, L. A.; Lopes, R. T.: COMPARATIVE HEAVY METALS PROFILES IN BOTTON SEDIMENTS FROM A STRONGLY CONTAMINATED BAY AND AN ADJACENTE PRISTINE BAY Lerberg, E. W.; Canuel, E. A.; Kuehl, S. A.; Dickhut, R. M.; Wakeham, S. G.; Bianchi, T. S.: EXAMINATION OF ORGANIC MATTER IN SEDIMENT CORE RECORDS TO ELUCIDATE ANTRHROPOGENIC IMPACTS WITHIN THE SACRAMENTO-SAN JOAQUIN RIVER DELTA, CA RUIZ-FERNANDEZ, A. C.; HILLAIRE-MARCEL, C.: 210 PB-DERIVED AGES FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION OF TERRESTRIAL CONTAMINANT HISTORY INTO THE MEXICAN PACIFIC COAST: POTENTIAL AND LIMITATIONS Dolor, M. K.; McDonough, W. F.; Helz, G. R.: SEDIMENT PROFILES OF LESS COMMONLY DETERMINED ELEMENTS OBTAINED RAPIDLY BY LASER ABLATION-ICP-MS Wilson, B. A.; Olsen, C. F.; Zhu, J.; Cantwell, M.: TRICLOSAN: LONG-TERM TRACER FOR SEWAGE EFFLUENT IN ESTUARINE SYSTEMS Correggiari, A.; Asioli, A.; Gallerani, A.; Foglini, F.; Langone, L.; Miserocchi, S.; Remia, A.; Tesi, T.; Trincardi, F.; Vigliotti, L.; Milligan, T.; Palinkas, C. M.; Wheatcroft, R. A.: PO RIVER PRODELTA: AN ARCHIVE OF THE HUMAN IMPACT Mulsow, S.; Piovano, E.; Damatto, S.; Chapron, E.; Cordoba, F.: RECENT AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM RESPONSE TO ENVIRONMENTAL EVENTS REVEALED FROM 210PB SEDIMENT PROFILES 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 036: Scientific Results from Global and Regional Ocean Syntheses Chair(s): Detlef Stammer, [email protected]; Tong Lee, [email protected]; David Legler; Nico Caltabiano, [email protected] Location: W204 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 031: Global Ocean Holozooplankton Diversity: Assessment, Analysis, and Prediction 16:00 Chair(s): Ann Bucklin, [email protected]; Shuhei Nishida, [email protected]; Laurence P. Madin, [email protected]; Sigrid Schiel, [email protected] 16:15 Location: W105 13:30 13:45 Falkenhaug, T.; Gislason, A.; Gaard, E.: VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION AND POPULATION STRUCTURE OF COPEPODS ALONG THE NORTHERN MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE Nishida, S.; Matsuura, H.; Kuriyama, M.: SPECIES DIVERSITY IN THE MESOPELAGIC ZONE: IMPLICATIONS FROM MULTI-SPECIES, SYMPATRIC ASSEMBLAGES OF CONGENERIC COPEPODS Bucklin, A.; Jennings, R. M.; Ortman, B. D.; Nigro, L. M.; Copley, N. J.; Wiebe, P. H.: DNA BARCODING OF MARINE ZOOPLANKTON: ANALYSIS OF SPECIES DIVERSITY Jennings, R. M.; Hopcroft, R. R.: PHYLOGENETICS AND GLOBAL GENETIC DIVERSITY OF PTEROPODS (PELAGIC MARINE SNAILS) Chen, G.; Hare, M. P.: CRYPTIC ACARTIA TONSA DIVERSITY: SMALL SCALE NICHE PARTITIONING AND LARGE SCALE COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHY Kuriyama, M.; Machida, R. J.; Nishida, S.: POPULATION CONNECTIVITY BETWEEN OCEANS IN MESOAND BATHYPELAGIC COPEPODS OF THE FAMILY SCOLECITRICHIDAE Dolan, J. R.; Tunin, A.; Pizay, M. D.; Ritchie, M. E.: ASSESSEMENT OF SHORT-TERM TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN THE COMMUNITY STRUCTURE OF TINTINNIDS, PLANKTONIC CILIATES OF THE MICROZOOPLANKTON Nair , V. R.; Gireesh , R.: BIODIVERSITY OF CHAETOGNATHS OF THE ANDAMAN SEA, INDIAN OCEAN 16:30 Giese, B. S.; Carton, J. A.: IS A 100-YEAR OCEAN REANALYSIS POSSIBLE? * Lee, T.; McPhaden, M. J.: DECADAL VARIABILITY IN THE INDO-PACIFIC OCEAN INFERRED FROM SATELLITE DATA AND ECCO ASSIMILATION Baehr, J.; Forget, G.; Heimbach, P.; Wunsch, C.; Kanzow, T.; Wunsch, C.; Wunsch, C.: INFLUENCE OF THE RAPID/ MOCHA AND FLORIDA CURRENT CABLE DATA ON THE ECCO-GODAE OCEAN STATE ESTIMATE Cabanes, C.; Lee, T.; FU, L. L.: MECHANISMS OF INTERANNUAL VARIATIONS OF THE MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN Withdrawn Fukumori, I.; Kim, S.; Lee, T.: MECHANISMS OF MIXEDLAYER TEMPERATURE BALANCE IN THE NINO3 AREA ON ANNUAL TO INTERANNUAL SCALES Douglass, E. M.; Roemmich, D.; Stammer, D.: TIMEVARYING HEAT AND SALT BUDGETS IN THE NORTH PACIFIC Menemenlis, D.; Zhang, H.; Hill, C. N.: THE ECCO2 HIGH RESOLUTION GLOBAL-OCEAN AND SEA-ICE DATA SYNTHESIS Rosati, A. J.; Gudgel, R.; Stern, W.; Zhang, S.: “COUPLED MODEL INITIALIZATION AND ENSO PREDICTION”* Zhang, S.; Rosati, A.; Harrison, M.: IMPACT OF AN ENSEMBLE CIRCULATION-DEPENDENT INFLATION FILTER ON OCEANIC CLIMATE DETECTION WITHIN `BIASED’ COUPLED GCMS Jacobson, A. R.; Mikaloff Fletcher, S. E.; Key, R. M.; Sarmiento, J. L.; Gruber, N.; Gloor, M.: CO2 FLUX INVERSIONS WITHOUT PREDETERMINED ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON* (~) 94 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:45 17:00 17:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Gronell, A. M.; Wijffels, S. E.; Willis, J.; Domingues, C. M.; Ridgway, K.: CHANGING EXPENDABLE BATHYTHERMOGRAPH FALL-RATES AND THEIR IMPACT ON ESTIMATES OF OCEAN HEAT CONTENT CHANGES AND THERMOSTERIC SEA LEVEL RISE Maximenko, N. A.; Lebedev, K. V.; Hacker, P. W.; Potemra, J. T.; Yoshinari, H.; DeCarlo, S. H.: MONITORING GEOSTROPHIC OCEAN CURRENTS USING ARGO AND SATELLITE DATA Gemmell, A. L.; Haines, K.; Smith, G. C.; Blower, J. D.: OCEAN SYNTHESIS INTERCOMPARISON USING OCEANDIVA 17:00 17:15 044: Interrelations Among the Chemistry, Geology and Biology of Hydrocarbon Seep Communities in the Deep Gulf of Mexico 038: Progress in Mechanistic Modelling of the Ocean Carbon Cycle Chair(s): Charles Fisher, [email protected]; Harry Roberts, hrober3@ lsu.edu; James Brooks, [email protected]; Gregory Boland, [email protected] Chair(s): Curtis Deutsch, [email protected]; Katsumi Matsumoto, [email protected] Location: W304 E/F Location: W304 E/F 08:00 08:15 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 16:00 Ragueneau, O.; Moriceau, B.; Dittert, N.: SI-BASED RECONSTRUCTION OF THE CARBON BIOLOGICAL PUMP Gnanadesikan, A.; Anderson, W. G.: BIOLOGICAL IMPACTS ON THE GENERAL CIRCULATION: THE ROLE OF WATER CLARITY Peloquin, J. A.; Gruber, N. P.: GLOBAL DISTRIBUTION OF PHYTOPLANKTON FUNCTIONAL GROUP ABUNDANCES USING PIGMENT MARKERS Armstrong, R. A.: EVOLUTIONARY OPTIMIZATION IN MARINE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY MODELING: AN EXAMPLE FROM OPTIMAL FORAGING Follows, M. J.; Dutkiewicz, S.; Bragg, J.; Kempes, C.: A SELF-SELECTING MODEL OF MARINE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES* Tagliabue, A.; Bopp, L.: DO GLOBAL OCEAN BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS NEED TO ACCOUNT FOR IRON SPECIATION AND ABIOTIC CYCLING? Dunne, J. P.; Gnanadesikan, A.; Sarmiento, J. L.: COUPLING BETWEEN THE C, N, P, FE, SI, CA AND LITHOGENIC CYCLES IN A GLOBAL OCEAN BIOGEOCHEMICAL AND ECOLOGICAL MODEL Le Quéré, C.; Buitenhuis, E. T.; Rödenbeck, C.; Lefèvre, N.; Takahashi, T.: SENSITIVITY OF THE GLOBAL OCEANIC CO2 SINK TO CHANGES IN ATMOSPHERIC FORCING Ito/Taka, T. I.; Follows/Mick, M. F.: OCEAN CARBON PUMPS AND AIR-SEA DISEQUILIBRIUM OF CO2 Heinze, C.: GLACIAL/INTERGLACIAL CARBON CYCLE CHANGES AS DERIVED FROM GLOBAL MODELING OF MARINE SEDIMENT CORES 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 046: Operational Oceanography: Assimilation, Modeling, and Applications in the Global Ocean Chair(s): Eric Bayler, [email protected]; Robert Miller, [email protected]; Chris Mooers, [email protected]; Ruth Preller, [email protected]; Roger Samelson, [email protected] 039: Real-Time Forecasting of Winds, Waves, and Storm Tides: From the Deep Ocean to the Watershed Chair(s): Scott C. Hagen, [email protected]; Hans C. Graber, [email protected] Location: W304 A/B 08:00 Location: W101 16:00 16:30 16:45 Roberts, H. H.; Fisher, C. R.; Shedd, W.; Hunt, Jr., J.; Bernard, B.; Brooks, J.: FLUID -- GAS EXPULSION ON THE DEEP GULF OF MEXICO CONTINENTAL SLOPE: GEOLOGIC FRAMEWORK FOR CHEMOSYNTHETIC COMMUNITY SITES MacDonald, I. R.; Smith , M.; Garcia-Pineda, O.: NESTED CLASSIFICATION OF GULF OF MEXICO SEEP COMMUNITIES FROM BENTHIC PHOTOGRAPHY Cordes, E. E.; Becker, E. L.; Hourdez, S.; Fisher, C. R.: BIOGEOGRAPHIC AND BATHYMETRIC TRENDS IN THE SEEP COMMUNITIES BELOW 1000M IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO* Hourdez, S.; Nelson, K.; Schaeffer, S. W.; Cordes, E. E.; Brooks, J. M.; Fisher, C. R.: PHYLOGENIES OF KEY TAXA FROM DEEP-SEA CHEMOSYNTHETIC COMMUNITYES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO AND RELATIONSHIPS WITH OTHER TAXA FROM AROUND THE WORLD* Carney, R. S.; Becker, E.; Fisher, C. R.; Macko, S. A.: STABLE ISOTOPE-DETERMINED TROPHIC POSITION OF BENTHIC INVERTEBRATES IN THE VICINITY OF GULF OF MEXICO HYDROCARBON SEEPS Joye, S. B.; Roberts, H. H.; Bowles, M. W.; Samarkin, V. A.; Girguis, P.: MICROBIAL ACTIVITY AND COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN SEDIMENTS ASSOCIATED WITH BRINE SEEPS ON THE LOWER CONTINENTAL SHELF, GULF OF MEXICO 08:15 Weaver, R. J.; Slinn, D. N.; Graber, H. C.; Cox, A. T.; Hagen, S. C.; Jensen, R. E.: STORM SURGE FORECASTING IN LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN~ Celebioglu, T. K.; Wang, H. V.: A COUPLED WAVECURRENT MODEL FOR STORM SURGE PREDICTION FORBES, M. C.; MATTOCKS, C. A.: A REAL-TIME STORM SURGE PREDICTION SYSTEM FOR THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA 08:30 Bell, M. J.: PROGRESS AND CHALLENGES IN OPERATIONAL OCEAN FORECASTING * Bub, F. L.; Rigney, J. P.; Harding, J. M.; Lorens, R. B.; Krynen, D. G.: OPERATIONAL OCEAN MODELING AT THE NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHIC OFFICE Allard, R.; Riedlinger, S.; Cook, J.; Geiszler, D.: PROVIDING METEOROLOGICAL AND OCEANOGRAPHIC SUPPORT DURING AUVFEST 2007 * represents Invited presentations ( ) 95 WEDNESDAY 08:30 Smith, M. R.; Davis, J. R.; Creager, G. J.; Graves, S. J.; Sheng, Y. P.: ON THE EFFICIENCY OF A DISTRIBUTED FORECAST SYSTEM FOR THE SIMULATION OF TROPICAL STORM DRIVEN WAVES AND STORM SURGE lindner, b. l.; johnson, j.; timmons, d.; miller, g.; evsich , r.; alsheimer, f.: CONVEYING FORECASTS OF TROPICALCYCLONE-GENERATED SURGE TO THE PUBLIC WITH AN INTERACTIVE, INTERNET-BASED SURGE MODEL ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 WEDNESDAY 10:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Ibrahim Hoteit, I.; Gerasimo Korres, G.; George Triantafyllou, G.: JOINT AND DUAL KALMAN FILTERING FOR SIMULTANEOUS ASSIMILATION OF PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS INTO A 3D COUPLED MARINE ECOSYSTEM MODEL Torres, R. J.; Allen, J. I.; Smyth, T. J.: THE ENSEMBLED KALMAN FILTER IN ECOSYSTEM FORECASTING: CAN SATELLITE PRODUCTS IMPROVE FORECASTS? Lermusiaux, P. F.: SCIENTIFIC AND OPERATIONAL OCEAN MODELING AND DATA ASSIMILATION* Rowley, C.; Martin, P. J.; Cummings, J. A.: THE NRL RELOCATABLE OCEAN NOWCAST/FORECAST SYSTEM Wilkin, J. L.; Zavala-Garay, J.; Arango, H. A.: PREDICTABILITY OF MESOSCALE VARIABILITY IN THE EAST AUSTRALIA CURRENT SYSTEM GIVEN STRONG CONSTRAINT DATA ASSIMILATION Skandrani, C.; Skachko, S.; Brankart, J. M.; Brasseur, P.; Verron, J.: CONTROLLING THE AIR-SEA FLUXES IN A GLOBAL OCEANIC MODEL BY ASSIMILATION OF SST AND SSS DATA; Keppenne, C. L.; Rienecker, M. M.; Kovach, R. M.; Jacob, J. P.; Marshak, J.: USE OF THE ENSEMBLE KALMAN FILTER IN A GLOBAL COUPLED SEASONAL PREDICTION SYSTEM 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 070: Microbial Associations With Marine Invertebrates Chair(s): Anthony Moss, Ph.D., [email protected]; Russell Hill, Ph.D., [email protected] 16:15 Location: W105 16:00 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Cicirelli, E. M.; Mohamed, N. M.; Kroll, S.; Hill, R. T.; Fuqua, C.: MICROBIAL SYMBIONTS OF SPONGES AND QUORUM SENSING~ Southwell, M. W.; Popp, B. N.; Martens, C. S.: COOCCURRENCE OF PHOTOSYNTHETIC AND NITRIFYING COMMUNITIES IN CARIBBEAN SPONGES: IMPLICATIONS FOR MICROBIAL INTERACTIONS AND NUTRIENT CYCLING Montalvo, N. F.; Hill, R. T.: IDENTIFICATION OF SPECIFIC BACTERIAL SYMBIONTS IN THE GIANT BARREL SPONGES, XESTOSPONGIA MUTA AND XESTOSPONGIA TESTUDINARIA Moss, A. G.; Smith, K.; Donovan, E. W.; Adams, L. E.: MICROBES ASSOCIATED WITH THE COASTAL CTENOPHORE MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI. Sharp, K. H.: MICROBIAL ECOLOGY OF CORALS: INVESTIGATING BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES IN EARLY LIFE STAGES OF CARIBBEAN CORALS 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 101: Towards Improved Predictive Modeling of DOM Cycling: From the Watershed to the Coastal Ocean Chair(s): Maria Tzortziou, [email protected]; Patrick J. Neale, [email protected] 100: Operational Oceanography: Observing System Design & Implementation Location: W304 C/D 16:00 Chair(s): Keith Alverson, [email protected]; Frank L. Bub, [email protected]; Paul DiGiacomo, [email protected]; Ed Harrison, [email protected]; Allan Robinson, [email protected] 16:15 Location: W304 A/B 13:30 Bryden, H. L.; Cunningham, S. A.; Kanzow, T.; Rayner, D.; Baringer, M. O.; Johns, W. E.; Marotzke, J.; Hirschi, J.; Beal, L. M.; Meinen, C. S.: AN OPERATIONAL ARRAY FOR MONITORING THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION AT 26°N* Alverson, K.: AN INTEGRATED, OPERATIONAL GLOBAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM Lunde, B. N.; Krynen, D.; Woodward, M.; Blaha, J.; Cummings, J.; Rowley, C.; Sarnowski, K.: IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NAVY COUPLED OCEAN DATA ASSIMILATION SYSTEM AT THE NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHIC OFFICE Allen, A. A.; Howlett, E. M.: U.S. COAST GUARD’S SEARCH AND RESCUE OPTIMAL PLANNING SYSTEM (SAROPS) OPERATIONAL USE OF SURFACE CURRENT PRODUCTS AND THE DETERMINATION OF THEIR UNCERTAINTIES Allen, S. S.; Meyers, G.: THE AUSTRALIAN INTEGRATED MARINE OBSERVING SYSTEM - FIRST STEPS D’Adamo, N.; Meyers, G. A.: THE AUSTRALIAN INTEGRATED MARINE OBSERVING SYSTEM Fischer, A. S.; Harrison, D. E.; Mainsant, G.: THE STATE OF THE OCEAN CLIMATE: CLIMATE INDICES AND THEIR UNCERTAINTY AS A MEASURE OF OUR ABILITY TO OBSERVE THE OCEAN DiGiacomo, P. M.; Christian, R. R.; Malone, T. C.; TalaueMcManus, L.; Muelbert, J. H.: COASTAL OBSERVING SYSTEM DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION FOR SOCIETAL BENEFIT Bogden, P. S.; Crane, G.; Bintz, J.; Wright, L. D.: SCOOP AND SURAGRID: POWERING NEXT GENERATION SCIENCE TO MITIGATE COASTAL DISASTERS Howe, B. M.; Duda, T. F.; Dushaw, B. D.: DESIGN OF AN ACOUSTICAL OBSERVING NETWORK FOR THE NORTH ATLANTIC BASIN USING A HIGHRESOLUTION NUMERICAL OCEAN MODEL Bellingham, J. G.; Zhang, Y.; Davis, R.; Godin, M.: IMPROVING AUV-BASED COASTAL OBSERVING SYSTEMS McGann, C.; Py, F.; Rajan, K.; Thomas, H.; Henthorn, R.; McEwen, R.: AUTOMATED DECISION MAKING FOR A NEW CLASS OF AUV SCIENCE Smith, P. S.; Halkyard, J.; Berger, J.; Orcutt, J.: THE TRISPAR: A POSSIBLE OOI GLOBAL-SCALE NODE FOR HIGH-LATITUDE SITES. Wilson, S.; Chambers, D.; LaBrecque, J.; Merrifield, M.; Miller, L.; Neilan, R.; Thomas, R.; Wahr, J.; Willis, J.: MONITORING GLOBAL SEA LEVEL RISE AND ITS CAUSES* 16:30 Bergamaschi, B. A.; Downing, B. D.; Spencer, R. G.; Pellerin, B. A.; Boss, E. S.: HIGH FREQUENCY VARIABILITY IN DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER COMPOSITION AND ACTIVITY AS DETERMINED USING IN SITU OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS Barnard, A. H.; Roesler, C. S.; Orrico, C.; Franklin, H.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL SCALES OF TERRESTRIALLY-DERIVED PARTICULATE AND DISSOLVED MATERIALS IN THE PENOBSCOT RIVER SYSTEM: TRANSPORT AND TRANSFORMATIONS Ouellet, A.; Plouhinec, J. B.; Catana, D.; Lucotte, M.; Gelinas, Y.: IMPACT OF FOREST HARVESTING ON RESERVOIRS AND LAKES: ASSESSING THE CARBON BUDGET OF AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS (~) 96 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:45 17:00 17:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Ziervogel, K.; Arnosti, C.: ENZYMATIC HYDROLYSIS OF POLYSACCHARIDES IN SURFACE AND BOTTOM WATERS IN THE DELAWARE BAY ESTUARY AFFECTED BY ELEVATED (MINERAL) PARTICLE LOAD Graneli, W.: THE BROWNIFICATION OF S SWEDISH LAKES - CAUSED BY INCREASED PRECIPITATION, DECREASED SULFUR DEPOSITION OR CHANGED LAND USE? Tian, Y. Q.; Chen, R. F.; Huang, W.; Yu, Q.; Gardner, B. G.; Lee, J.: USE OF REMOTE SENSING AND PROCESSBASED MODELS TO EXAMINE THE DISTRIBUTION AND TRANSPORT OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN WATERSHEDS AND ADJACENT COASTAL WATERS 17:15 124: Influence of Tropical Rivers on Oceanic Biogeochemical Cycles Chair(s): Patricia L. Yager, [email protected]; Ajit Subramaniam, ajit@ ldeo.columbia.edu; Jeffrey Richey, [email protected] Location: W202 13:30 14:00 116: Confronting Marine Biogeochemical Models With Data: Approaches to Quantitative Evaluation and Calibration 14:15 Chair(s): Raymond Najjar, [email protected]; Eileen Hofmann, [email protected]; Chuck McClain, [email protected] 14:30 Location: W304 E/F 13:30 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Allen, J. I.: SKILL ASSESSMENT OF MARINE BIOLOGICAL MODELS: A SHORT TUTORIAL~ Friedrichs, M. A.: ASSESSING THE SKILL OF MARINE BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELS THROUGH DATA ASSIMILATION* Wallhead, P. J.; Martin, A. P.; Srokosz, M. A.; Franks, P. J.: PREDICTING THE BULK PLANKTON DYNAMICS OF GEORGES BANK: MODEL SKILL ASSESSMENT McDonald, C. P.; Urban, N. R.: USING INFORMATION THEORY TO DETERMINE OPTIMAL MODEL COMPLEXITY IN AQUATIC BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELING Withdrawn Stock, C. A.; Dunne, J. P.: CALIBRATING AN ECOSYSTEM MODEL TO A GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL DATABASE WITH EMPHASIS ON THE ROLE OF ZOOPLANKTON Schneider, B.; Bopp, L.; Gehlen , M.; Segschneider, J.; Froelicher, T.; Joos, F.: CLIMATE-DRIVEN VARIABILITY OF MARINE PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND AIR-SEA CO2-FLUX: COMPARISON OF CLIMATE CARBON CYCLE MODELS WITH OBSERVATION-BASED ESTIMATES 14:45 15:00 15:15 125: Collaborative Partnerships in Ocean Science Education Chair(s): Linda Duguay, [email protected]; Sue Cook, [email protected]; Blanche Meeson, [email protected] Location: W103 13:30 117: Turbulence, Mixing, and Multi-scale Interactions in Estuaries and Nearshore Environments 14:00 Chair(s): W. Rockwell Geyer, [email protected]; Stephen Monismith, [email protected]; James A. Lerczak, [email protected] 14:15 Location: W109 B 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 Subramaniam, A.; Bronk, D.: THE NITROGEN CYCLE FUGUE: VARIATIONS ON THE NEW PRODUCTION THEME IN GREAT RIVER PLUMES~ Morell, J. M.; Corredor, J. E.; López, J. M.; Brocco, B.; Fuentes, D.; Antoun, H.; López, R.; Cabrera, A.; Méndez, M.: MAJOR RIVER PLUMES IN THE TROPICAL OCEAN: PHYSICAL AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL EXPRESSION* Grosse, J.; Doan, H. N.; Ngoc, L. N.; Ngoc, G. T.; Bombar, D.; Voss, M.: EFFECTS OF THE MEKONG RIVER ON ABUNDANCE AND NITROGEN FIXATION RATES OF CYANOBACTERIA IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA Brown, J. E.; Arnone, R.: BAY OF BENGAL - SEASONAL BIO-OPTICAL PROPERTIES AND THE INFLUENCE OF RIVER DISCHARGE Richey, J. E.; Krusche, A. K.; Ellis, E.; Alin, S.: INTERPRETING DYNAMIC SIGNATURES OF LANDWATER COUPLING AND IN-STREAM PROCESSES IN THE AMAZON: FROM SMALL STREAMS TO THE WESTERN TROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC Wang, Z. A.; Liu, X.; Byrne, R. H.: THE SUMMERTIME CO2 FLUXES AND CARBON SYSTEMS IN THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AND ORINOCO RIVER PLUMES TREIGNIER, C.; DERENNE, S.; SALIOT, A.: ORIGIN AND DISPERSION OF MARINE AND TERRIGENOUS ORGANIC MATTER IN THE CONGO DEEP-SEA FAN Ozkan-Haller, H. T.; Long, J. W.: TEMPORAL RESPONSE OF WAVE GROUP FORCED VORTICES* Smith, J. A.: FLUSHING THE NEAR SHORE Canals, M. F.; Pawlak, G.: VORTEX DYNAMICS AND ENERGY DISSIPATION IN OSCILLATORY FLOW PAST COMPLEX BOUNDARIES Magaldi, M. G.; Özgökmen, T. M.; Griffa, A.; Chassignet, E. P.; Peters, H.; Iskandarani, M.: CAPES AND FORM DRAG: THE ROLE OF STRATIFICATION Uchiyama, Y.; McWilliams, J. C.; Shchepetkin, A. F.: SUBMESOSCALE INSTABILITY IN SUBTIDAL INNER SHELF CIRCULATION OFF PALOS VERDES, CALIFORNIA 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Barba, K.: LESSONS FROM THE FIELD: BUILDING AND SUSTAINING PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ORGANIZATIONS WITH DIVERSE BACKGROUNDS~ Zimmerman, T. D.; Halversen, C.; Strang, C.: PROMOTING AND RESEARCHING SUSTAINABLE OCEAN SCIENTIST-INFORMAL EDUCATION PARTNERSHIPS: THE COSEE-CA COSIA MODEL. Zande, J. M.; Sullivan, D. S.: MATE ROV COMPETITION: BUILDING INDUSTRY PARTNERSHIPS FOR MARINE TECHNICAL EDUCATION McDonnell, J. D.; Parsons, C.: BUILDING PARTNERSHIPS BETWEEN SCIENTISTS AND EDUCATORS: A PERSPECTIVE FROM THE CENTERS FOR OCEAN SCIENCE EDUCATION EXCELLENCE - MID ATLANTIC (COSEE MA) Meeson, B. W.: USING PARTNERSHIPS TO IMPROVE EDUCATIONAL USE OF SCIENTIFIC DATA Tweedie, M. S.; Snyder, H. D.: PARTNERSHIPS WITH DIVERSE EXPERTISE PRODUCE EFFECTIVE OCEAN SCIENCE EDUCATION ROBIGOU, V.; BULLERDICK, S.; ANDERSON, A.: COSEE OCEAN LEARNING COMMUNITIES: COLLABORATIVE PARTNERSHIPS START AT HOME * represents Invited presentations ( ) 97 WEDNESDAY 14:00 Janes, D. C.; Bourgault, D.: SILL PROCESSES IN THE SAGUENAY FJORD ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Kingsley, G.; Cook, S.; Meeson, B.: THE INFLUENCE OF POLICY INDUCEMENTS AND EMBEDDED RELATIONS ON THE FORMATION AND OPERATIONS OF PARTNERSHIPS Martin, M. J.; Thompson, K.; Fackler, C. J.; Lloyd, R.; Smith, A.; Cousteau, P.; Fricke, R.; DeMezza, M.: INNOVATIVE PARTNERSHIPS FOR OCEAN LITERACY AND STEWARDSHIP: WILD EARTH DEEP OCEAN Spector, B. S.; Leard, C. S.: NETWORKS OF SCIENTISTS AND EDUCATORS: HOW TO MAKE THEM WORK Smith, D. R.; Geer, I. W.; Moran, J. M.; Weinbeck, R. S.; Mills, E. W.: AMS EDUCATION PROGRAMS FOR THE OCEAN SCIENCES: A PARTNERSHIP OF A PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY, GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, UNIVERSITIES, AND THE K-12 COMMUNITY Knowlton, C. W.; Scowcroft, G. A.: THE NATIONAL OCEAN SCIENCES BOWL AS AN INTERSECTION OF OPPORTUNITIES FOR COLLABORATION Murray, L.; Spence, L.; Ward, A.; Gibson, G.: PARTNERSHIPS IN OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS EDUCATION: A TRANSFER MODEL 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 WEDNESDAY 128: Comparing Aquatic Ecosystems 09:45 Chair(s): Jason Link, [email protected]; Anna-Stiina Heiskanen, [email protected]; Bernard Megrey, [email protected]; Angel Borja, [email protected] Location: W102 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 10:00 De Forest, L.; Domokos, R.; Drazen, J.: THE INFLUENCE OF A HAWAIIAN SEAMOUNT ON A MESOPELAGIC MICRONEKTON COMMUNITY Carroll, J.; Dahle, S.; Korneev, O.: THE CHANGING BARENTS SEA: ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS AND DEVELOPING TRENDS Link, J. S.; Megrey, B. A.; Gjoesaeter, H.; Stockhausen, W.; Skaret, G.; Overholtz, W.; Gaichas, S.; Dommasnes, A.; FalkPetersen, J.; Mueter, F.: A COMPARISON OF BIOLOGICAL TRENDS FROM FOUR NORTHERN HEMISPHERE MARINE ECOSYSTEMS Withdrawn Juanes, J. A.; Recio, M.; Ondiviela, B.; Barquín, J. A.; Oti, L.; Galván, C.; Medina, R.; Castanedo, S.; Puente, A.; Revilla, J. A.; Alvarez, C.; García, A.: AN INTEGRATED ASSESSMENT OF CONSERVATION AND QUALITY STATUS OF AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS AT THE AQUATIC DISTRICT SCALE. Guinda, X.; Juanes, J. A.; Puente, A.; Revilla, J. A.: THE EUROPEAN WATER FRAMEWORK DIRECTIVE AS AN INTEGRATIVE APPROACH TO THE MANAGEMENT OF THE WHOLE AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS. 10:15 141: Hydrodynamics and Morphodynamics of Marshes and Shallow Coastal Environments Chair(s): Zoe Hughes, [email protected]; Brittina Argow, [email protected]; Sergio Fagherazzi, [email protected] Location: W108 08:00 08:15 08:30 137: Oceanic and Meteorological Measurements From Voluntary Observing Ships and Other Platforms of Opportunity 08:45 Chair(s): Rod G. Zika, [email protected]; Franciscus Colijn, [email protected]; Lisa Beal, [email protected]; Peter Minnett, [email protected] 09:00 Location: W204 08:00 Wehde, H.; Durand, D. D.; Jaccard, P. F.; Sørensen, K.: FERRYBOX IN THE CONTEXT OF THE EUROPEAN CONTRIBUTION TO GEOSS - GMES Goni, G. J.; Snowden, D. P.; Baringer, M. O.; Molinari, R.: THE ROLE OF THE SHIP OF OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM Beal, L. M.; Hummon, J.; Williams, E.; Baringer, W.: THE EXPLORER OF THE SEAS OBSERVATORY: ANNUAL AND INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF THE FLORIDA CURRENT. Flagg, C. N.; Rossby, H. T.; Donohue, K.; Schwartze, G.; Fontana, S.: THE OLEANDER AND NORRONA VOS ADCP PROJECTS Bender, L. C.; DiMarco, S. F.: THE EFFECT OF MOBILE SCATTERERS ON ADCP CURRENT SPEEDS IN THE NORTHWESTERN GULF OF MEXICO Watson, A. J.; Schuster, U.; Telszewski, M.; Johannessen, T.; Olsen, A.; Omar, A.; Pfeil, B.; Koertzinger, A.; Steinhoff, T.; Wallace, D.; Olafsson, J; Corbière, A; Metzl, N.; Lefèvre, N.; Rios, A.; Perez, F.; Padin, X. A.; Bates, N.; Wanninkhof, R.; Gonzales-Davila, M.: ACCURATE MONITORING OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-SEA CO2 FLUX FROM A NETWORK OF VOLUNTARY OBSERVING SHIPS Petersen, W.: PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE SOUTHERN NORTH SEA - ESTIMATIONS FROM CONTINUOUS OXYGEN MEASUREMENTS BY A FERRYBOX Powell, B.; Moore, A. M.; Arango, H.; Milliff, R.; Foley, D.; DiLorenzo, E.: DATA ASSIMILATION AND REAL-TIME ENSEMBLE OCEAN FORECASTING IN THE INTRA AMERICAS SEA Soloviev, A.; Moore, M.; Gilman, M.; Young, K.: INVESTIGATION OF SHIP WAKES USING VOLUNTEER OBSERVING SHIPS 09:15 Rossby, T.: MERCHANT MARINE VESSELS AS OCEANLEVEL ‘ORBITING’ SATELLITES: A SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY PARTNERSHIP FOR THE SYSTEMATIC OBSERVATION OF THE OCEANS* 09:30 Sommerfield, C. K.; Moskalski, S. M.: TIME-DEPENDANT TIDAL ASYMMETRY AND SEDIMENT FLUX IN A SALT MARSH RIVER OF DELAWARE BAY Wilson, C. A.; Hughes, Z. J.; FitzGerald, D. M.; Mahadevan, A.; Pennings, S. C.: PHYSICAL AND ECOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS IN CREEK HEADWARD EROSION. Bouma, T. J.; Friedrichs, M.; van Wesenbeeck, B. K.; Brun, F. G.; Dijkstra, J. T.; Temmerman, S.; de Vries, M. B.; Graf, G.; Herman, P. M.: PLANT GROWTH STRATEGIES DIRECTLY AFFECT BIOGEOMORPHOLOGY OF ESTUARIES Marani, M.; D’Alpaos, A.; Lanzoni, S.; Carniello, L.; Rinaldo, A.: MULTIPLE EQUILIBRIUM STATES AND ABRUPT TRANSITIONS IN TIDAL ECO-MORPHODYNAMICS* Huang, H.; Chen, C.; Blanton, J. O.; Andrade, F. A.: THE IMPACT OF INTERTIDAL ZONE ON TIDAL CREEK RESIDENCE TIME AND WATER EXCHANGE Wu, C. H.; Yaun, H.: NON-HYDROSTATIC MODELING OF VEGETATION EFFECTS ON FLOW MOTIONS Temmerman, S.; Bouma, T. J.; Van De Koppel, J.; De Vries, M. B.; Herman, P. M.: VEGETATION-FLOW INTERACTIONS IN COASTAL WETLANDS: IMPLICATIONS FOR LANDSCAPE SELFORGANISATION AND STORM SURGE PROPAGATION* (~) 98 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 09:45 10:00 10:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Hearn, C. J.: MODELING PROPOSED HABITAT RESTORATION IN SEMI-TROPICAL SHALLOW COASTAL TIDAL WETLANDS Hensel, P. F.; Scott, G. A.; Allen, A. L.; Gill, S. K.; Cahoon, D. R.; Nemerson, D.; Guntenspergen, G.: GEODETIC AND TIDAL DATUMS: TYING WETLAND SURFACE ELEVATION CHANGE TO LOCAL WATER LEVELS Currin, C. A.; Fonseca, M. S.; Malhotra, A.; Poray, A.; Greene, M.: FORECASTING WAVE ENERGY AND SALT MARSH ELEVATION CHANGES IN STUDIES OF ESTUARINE SHORELINES 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 151: Hurricane-generated Waves, Currents and Storm Surge 159: Estuarine and Coastal Hydrodynamics: Advancement in Observational Technology and Modeling Development Chair(s): Will Perrie, [email protected]; Don Resio, [email protected] Chair(s): Chunyan Li, [email protected]; Arnoldo Valle-Levinson, [email protected]; Robert Chant, [email protected] Location: W109 A 08:00 08:15 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 Location: W304 G/H Resio, D. T.; Long, C. E.: IMPLICATIONS OF RECENT OBSERVATIONS ON THE ROLE OF WAVE BREAKING IN WIND WAVE SPECTRA* Kleiss, J. M.; Melville, W. K.; Romero, L.: OBSERVATIONS OF WAVE BREAKING IN HIGH WINDS Kukulka, T.; Hara, T.: EFFECTS OF BREAKING WAVES ON A COUPLED WIND-WAVE MODEL AND AIR-SEA MOMENTUM FLUX Fan, Y.; Ginis, I.: EFFECTS OF WIND-WAVE-CURRENT INTERACTION ON OCEAN AND SURFACE GRAVITY WAVE RESPONSE TO HURRICANES Tamura, H.; Waseda, T.; Miyazawa, Y.; Komatsu, K.: THE VARIATION OF WAVE SPECTRAL SHAPE UNDER TYPHOON WIND FORCING INCLUDING WAVECURRENT INTERACTION Chen, Y.; Shi, F.; Johnson, B.; Kobayashi, N.: 2DH MODELING OF WAVES, CURRENTS AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT AT FRF DURING HURRICANE ISABEL Tang, C. L.; Perrie, W.; Jenkins, A. D.; Detracey, B. M.; Hu, Y.; Toulany, B.; Smith, P. C.: SURFACE CURRENTS INDUCED BY WAVES ON THE GRAND BANKS - A STUDY OF THE WAVE EFFECTS ON SURFACE CURRENTS Friebel, H. C.; Hanson, J.; de Leeuw , G.; Zappa, C. J.; Moerman, M. M.: INFLUENCE OF COASTAL WAVE FIELD DEVELOPMENT ON ATMOSPHERIC DRAG Savelyev, I.; Haus, B.; Donelan, M.: AIR-SEA MOMENTUM TRANSFER IN HURRICANE CONDITIONS: LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS. Yu, Z.; Sutyrin, G.; Ginis, I.: ROLL VORTICES IN THE PLANETARY BOUNDARY LAYER UNDER STRONG WINDS Teague, W. J.; Jarosz, E.; Wang, D. W.; Hulbert, M. S.; Quaid, A. J.: OBSERVED OCEANIC RESPONSE UNDER HURRICANE IVAN Yau, P.; Dietrich, D. E.; Tseng, Y. H.; Jan, S.; Lin, C.; Wang, X. B.: MODELED OCEANIC RESPONSE TO HURRICANE KATRINA Aucan, J.; Pequignet, A. C.; Vetter, O. J.; Becker, J. M.; Merrifield, M. A.: WAVE TRANSFORMATION AND SETUP ACROSS IPAN REEF, GUAM DURING TROPICAL STORM MAN-YI roelvink, j. a.; reniers, a. j.; van dongeren, a.; van thiel de vries, j. s.; lescinski, j.: MODELING HURRICANE IMPACTS ON BARRIER COASTS 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Winant, C.: TIDAL CIRCULATION IN A STARTIFIED ESTUARY* Chen, C. S.; Beardsley, R. C.; Cowles, G.: AN UNSTRUCTURED GRID, FINITE-VOLUME COASTAL OCEAN MODEL (FVCOM): APPLICATIONS TO MULTISCALE COASTAL AND ESTUARINE SYSTEMS* Ponte, A. L.: THEORETICAL MODEL OF THE TIME DEPENDENT WIND DRIVEN FLOW IN A ROTATING BASIN Lai, Z.; Chen, C.; Cowles, G.; Beardsley, R. C.: A VALIDATION EXPERIMENT OF THE NONHYDROSTATIC FVCOM: SURFACE SOLITARY WAVES OVER FLAT AND SLOW-VARYING TOPOGRAPHY Withdrawn Rego, J. L.; Li, C.: INTERACTION ON A BROAD AND SHALLOW SHELF Babson, A. L.; Kawase, M.: MODELING SILL EFFECTS ON FJORD STRATIFICATION, INTERNAL TIDES, TRANSPORT AND RESIDENCE TIMES Valle-Levinson, A.; Guo, X.: FLOW INTERACTIONS WITH A BATHYMETRIC DEPRESSION IN THE SETO INLAND SEA Gong, D.; Glenn, S. M.; Castelao, R. M.; Kohut, J. T.; Schofield, O.: CHARACTERIZING SUMMER TIME SHELF-SLOPE EXCHANGE PROCESSES ON THE NEW JERSEY SHELF Jurisa, J. T.; Hunter, E.; Chant, R. J.; Houghton, R. W.: TWO MODES OF DOWN-SHELF FRESHWATER FLOWS OFF THE NEW JERSEY COAST Li, C. C.; Weeks, E.: DEVELOPMENT OF AN AUTOMATED UNMANNED BOAT FOR MEASUREMENTS IN TIDAL PASSES Thurston, W.; Souza, A. J.; Pritchard, M.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE EFFECTS OF TURBULENCE ON PARTICLE SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS IN AN ESTUARINE BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYER Zhang, Y.; Wu, D.; Lin, X.; You, Y.: THE BARRIER LAYER IN THE EAST CHINA SEA IN SUMMER Wiles, P.; Lorke , A.; Rippeth, T. P.; Simpson, J. H.: MEASURING TURBULENCE IN LOW ENERGY BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYERS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 99 WEDNESDAY 08:30 SHENG, Y. P.; PARAMYGIN, V. A.; ZHANG, Y.; DAVIS, J. R.; MA, G.: AN INTEGRATED 2D/3D STORM SURGE MODELING SYSTEM FOR SIMULATING HURRICANEGENERATED WAVES, CURRENTS, AND STORM SURGE Wang, H. V.; Cho, K. H.: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF CHESAPEAKE BAY’S RESPONSE TO THE HURRICANE ISABEL AND FLOYD Fritz, H. M.; Albusaidi, F. B.; Blount, C.: CYCLONE GONU STORM SURGE IN THE GULF OF OMAN Yankovsky, A. E.: LARGE-SCALE EDGE WAVES GENERATED BY HURRICANE WILMA’S LANDFALL ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 162: Dynamics of Colored Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM) in the Global Ocean 15:15 Chair(s): Alison Branco, [email protected]; Collin Roesler, [email protected] 165: Advances in Coastal Morphodynamics: From Estuaries and Beaches to Deltas and Shelves Location: W304 C/D 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 WEDNESDAY 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 Urban-Rich, J.; Baer, S.: DETECTION AND FATE OF ZOOPLANKTON PRODUCED FDOM IN MONTEREY BAY Chair(s): Art Trembanis, [email protected]; Carl Friedrichs, [email protected]; Andrew Short, [email protected]; Jeff List, [email protected] Aiken, G. R.: FROM SOURCE TO SEA: VARIATIONS IN BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER DELIVERED TO THE COAST~ Gardner, B.; Chen, R. F.; Huang, W.; Peri, F.: SUBSURFACE SOURCES OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) ASSOCIATED WITH THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER PLUME Coble, P. G.; Conmy, R. N.: DYNAMICS OF CDOM AND CARBON IN THE GULF OF MEXICO Huang, W.; Chen, R. F.; Tian, Y.; Gardner, G. B.; Cialino, K. T.: SEASONAL VARIATIONS IN THE SOURCE OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) IN THE NEPONSET RIVER WATERSHED Stedmon, C. A.; Osburn, C. L.: SPECTRAL LIGHT ABSORPTION BY CDOM IN THE NORTH SEA-BALTIC SEA MIXING ZONE: MODELLING SEASONALITY AND DEPENDENCY ON WATER MASS MIXING. Salisbury, E.; Campbell, J. W.; Vandemark, D.; Hunt, C.; McDowell, W. H.; Jonsson, B. F.; Mahadevan, A.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF THE COLORED ORGANIC MATTER FLUORESCENCE - SALINITY RELATIONSHIP IN PLUME WATERS AND ITS RELEVANCE TO REMOTE SENSING Steiner, N. S.; Ioannou, I.; Amin, R.; Zhou, J.; Gilerson, A.; Gross, B.; Moshary, F.; Ahmed, S.: CHARACTERISTICS OF CDOM ABSORPTION IN UV AND THEIR APPLICATION FOR THE ADVANCED IOP RETRIEVAL ALGORITHMS Omori , Y.; Hama, T.; Ishii, M.; Saito, S.: MOLECULAR WEIGHT COMPOSITION OF MARINE HUMIC SUBSTANCES IN THE SUBTROPICAL WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC Bracchini, L.; Dattilo, A. M.; Loiselle, S. A.; Santinelli, C.; Focardi, S.; Rossi C.: THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF CDOM IN THE MEDITERRANEAN BASIN. EXPLORING THE ROLE OF PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL FORCING. Nelson, N. B.; Siegel, D. A.; Carlson, C. A.; Swan, C. M.; Goldberg, S. J.: CDOM IN THE DEEP SEA: DISTRIBUTION AND DYNAMICS FROM TRANSOCEAN SECTIONS* Fichot, C. G.; Miller, W. L.: CDOM DYNAMICS IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN: WHAT WE LEARN FROM DECADAL TIME-SERIES OF SATELLITE-DERIVED CDOM ABSORPTION COEFFICIENTS. Belanger, S.: CDOM PHOTOOXIDATION IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN: CO2 PRODUCTION AND CLIMATE CHANGE* Amon, R. M.; Stedmon, C.; Walker, S. A.; Duan, S.: CDOM ACROSS THE ARCTIC OCEAN Retamal, L.; Vincent, W. F.: MULTIPLE EFFECTS OF COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER ON UNDERWATER PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN A WARMING CLIMATE Brooks, M. L.; Lovvorn, J. R.: SURPRISING RESULTS OF CDOM PHOTOOXIDATION IN THE BERING SEA: IMPLICATIONS FOR FOOD WEBS Ortega-Retuerta, E.; Reche, I.; Frazer, T. K.; Duarte, C. M.: BIOGENERATION OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER BY BACTERIOPLANKTON AND KRILL IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN Location: W202 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Gelfenbaum, G.; Elias, E.; Moritz, H.: MORPHODYNAMICS OF AN EBB-TIDAL DELTA IN RESPONSE TO ANTHROPOGENIC CHANGES Hanes, D. M.; Erikson, L. H.; Elias, E.; Barnard, P. L.: EVOLUTION OF THE SAN FRANCISCO EBB TIDAL DELTA OVER THE PAST HALF CENTURY Patrick, P. L.; Hanes, D. M.; Erikson, L.; Rubin, D. M.: DETERMINING SEDIMENT TRANSPORT PATHWAYS IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY COASTAL SYSTEM BY UTILIZING MULTIBEAM BATHYMETRY, NUMERICAL MODELING AND MINERAL PROVENANCE Murray, A. B.; Coco, G.; Green, M.: DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO MODELING INNER-SHELF ‘SORTED BEDFORMS,’ AND THEIR RESPONSES TO COMPLEX FORCING SCENARIOS Dellapenna, T. M.; Majzlik, E. M.; Noll, C. J.; Fielder, B. R.; Pitkewicz, J.; Allison, M. A.: IMPACT OF HURRICANES ON THE INNER SHELF OF THE TEXAS COASTEVIDENCE FROM HURRICANES CLAUDETTE AND RITA AND RELICT IMPACTS FROM THE GALVESTON SHOREFACE Xu, J. P.; Paull, C. K.; Normark, W. R.; Ussler, W.; Caress, D. W.; Rosenberger, K.; Keaten, R.; Covault, J. A.; Maier, K. L.; Barry, J.: ORIGINS OF LARGE WAVE-SHAPED BEDFORMS ON THE FLOOR OF MONTEREY SUBMARINE CANYON 171: U.S. GODAE: Ocean Prediction with the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM ) Chair(s): Eric Chassignet, [email protected]; Harley Hurlburt, [email protected]; George Halliwell, [email protected]; Jim Cummings, [email protected] Location: W101 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 Chassignet, E. P.; Hurlburt, H. E.; HYCOM Consortium: GLOBAL OCEAN PREDICTION WITH THE HYBRID COORDINATE OCEAN MODEL (HYCOM): AN OVERVIEW Smedstad, O. M.; Cummings, J. A.; Metzger, E. J.; Hurlburt, H. E.; Wallcraft, A. J.; Shriver, J. F.; Chassignet, E. P.: THE 1/12 DEGREE REAL TIME HYCOM NOWCAST/FORECAST SYSTEM* Metzger, E. J.; Hurlburt, H. E.; Wallcraft, A. J.; Smedstad, O. M.; Kara, A. B.; Shriver, J. F.; Smedstad, L. F.; Posey, P. G.; Thoppil, P.; Franklin, D. S.: EVALUATION, VALIDATION AND TRANSITION OF THE 1/12° GLOBAL HYCOM/ NCODA/PIPS SYSTEM* deRada, S.; Shulman, I.; kindle, J. C.; Anderson, S.: NUMERICAL EVALUATION OF BOUNDARY FORCING FROM GODAE GLOBAL PRODUCTS IN THE US WEST COAST Halliwell, G. R.; Barth, A.; Smedstad, O. M.; Hogan, P. J.; Weisberg, R. L.: SENSITIVITY OF WEST FLORIDA SHELF SIMULATIONS TO INITIAL AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS PROVIDED BY HYCOM DATA ASSIMILATIVE OCEAN HINDCASTS (~) 100 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 May, P. W.; Pullen, J. D.; Holt, T. R.; Doyle, J. D.: EVALUATION OF COASTAL SIMULATIONS IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC Kourafalou, V. H.; Ge, P.; Kang, H.: COASTAL HYCOM MODELING IN SOUTH FLORIDA: EVALUATION OF GODAE BOUNDARY CONDITIONS, RESOLUTION AND FORCING Peng, G.; Garraffo, Z.; Halliwell, G.; Smedstad, O.; Meinen, C. S.; Kourafalou, V.: VARIABILITY OF THE FLORIDA CURRENT TRANSPORT AT 27N Shay, T. J.; Werner, F. E.; Seim, H. E.; Kolar, R. L.; Dresback, K. M.; Luettich, R. A.; Blanton, B. O.: NOWCAST/ FORECAST AND CLIMATOLOGICAL STUDIES OF THE OCEANOGRAPHY IN THE US SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT (SAB): DOWNSCALING FROM HYCOM TO A COASTAL FINITE ELEMENT MODEL* kara, B.; Wallcraft, A.; Hurlburt, H.: MIXED LAYER MODEL PERFORMANCES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA Hurlburt, H. E.; Metzger, E. J.; Tilburg, C. E.; Shriver, J. F.: ABYSSAL CURRENT STEERING OF UPPER OCEAN CURRENT PATHWAYS IN AN OCEAN MODEL WITH HIGH VERTICAL RESOLUTION Srinivasan, A.; Chassignet, E. P.; Smedstad, O. M.; Thacker, W. C.; Bertino, L.; Brasseur, P.; Chin, T. M.; Counillon, F.; Cummings, J.: DEMONSTRATION AND COMPARISON OF SEQUENTIAL APPROACHES FOR ALTIMETER DATA ASSIMILATION IN HYCOM Brasseur, P.; Broquet, G.; Brankart, J. M.; Castruccio, F.; Lauvernet, C.; Verron, J.: IMPROVING THE PARAMETERIZATION OF ERRORS STATISTICS FOR DATA ASSIMILATION IN A HYCOM BAY OF BISCAY REGIONAL CONFIGURATION Hyun, K.; Hogan, P. J.: VORTEX-VORTEX MERGER AND INTERACTIONS BETWEEN THE LOOP CURRENT EDDIES Toshi Shinoda, T.: TROPICAL INSTABILITY WAVES IN HYCOM Zamudio, L.; Hogan, P. J.: OCEANOGRAPHIC PROCESSES GENERATED BY HURRICANE IVAN Rasmussen, T. S.; Kliem, N.: THE PERFORMANCE OF A REGIONAL COUPLED OCEAN/SEA ICE MODEL IN THE NARES STRAIT Prasad, T. G.; Hogan, P. J.: ON THE MECHANISMS OF EPISODIC SALINITY OUTFLOW EVENTS IN THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 172: The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and Decadal Predictability 15:00 Chair(s): Bill Johns, [email protected]; Martin Visbeck, [email protected]; Rowan Sutton, [email protected]; Axel Timmermann, [email protected] 15:15 Location: W203 08:00 08:15 08:30 Cunningham, S. A.; Kanzow, T.; Rayner, D.; Baringer, M. O.; Johns, W. E.; Hirschi, J.; Beal, L. M.; Meinen, C.; Bryden, H. L.; Marotzke, J.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION* Eldevik, T.; Nilsen, J. E.; Iovino, D.; Olsson, K. A.; Sandø, A. B.; Drange, H.: THE NORDIC SEAS AS A PACEMAKER IN THE OCEAN CONVEYOR Visbeck, M.; Fischer, J.; Zantopp, R.; Stramma, L.; Brandt, P.; Schott, F.: DEEP WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT VARIABILITY OBSERVED IN THE WESTERN LABRADOR SEA 16:00 16:15 16:30 Toole, J. M.; Curry, R. G.; Joyce, T. M.; Peña-Molino, B.; Smethie, Jr., W. M.; Smith, J. N.: LINE W: A SUSTAINED MEASUREMENT PROGRAM SAMPLING THE NORTH ATLANTIC DEEP WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT AND GULF STREAM ABOUT 39°N 70°W Smethie, W. M.; Cunningham, A.; Curry, R.; Toole, J. M.; Joyce, T.: VARIABILITY OF PROPERTIES OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC DEEP WATER CORE OF THE DEEP WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT ALONG LINE W SOUTH OF CAPE COD BETWEEN 1994 AND 2006 Kelly, K. A.; Thompson, L.; Dickinson, S.: THE COHERENCE OF UPPER OCEAN HEAT TRANSPORT IN THE WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC Pena-Molino, B.; Joyce, T. M.: VARIABILITY IN THE SLOPE WATER AND ITS REALTION TO THE GULF STREAM PATH Meinen, C. S.; Baringer, M. O.; Garcia, R. F.: VARIATIONS OF THE FLORIDA CURRENT TRANSPORT FROM 1964 TO 2007 AND THE RELATIONSHIP TO FORCING Kirchner, K.; Rhein, M.; Mertens, C.; Hüttl, S.; Böning, C. W.: ON THE FLOW OF SOUTH ATLANTIC WATER INTO THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE Smith, G. C.; Haines, K.; Lea, D.: RECONSTRUCTION OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION USING A PHYSICALLY-BASED DATA ASSIMILATION METHOD Huettl, S.; Boening, C. W.: EFFECTS OF MOC VARIABILITY ON THE UPPER LAYER TROPICAL ATLANTIC Wu, L.; Li, C.; Yang, C.; Xie, S.: GLOBAL TELECONNECTIONS IN RESPONSE TO A SHUTDOWN OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION Cruz, C.; Klinger, B.: SENSITIVITY OF MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING RESPONSE TO SWITCHED-ON SOUTHERN OCEAN WIND Fuckar, N. S.; Vallis, G. K.: ELEMENTS OF INTERACTION BETWEEN THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION AND THE SOUTHERN OCEAN IN A HIERARCHY OF OCEAN GENERAL CIRCULATION MODELS Latif, M.: INTERNAL MULTI-DECADAL AND MULTICENTENNIAL MOC VARIABILITY, IMPLICATIONS FOR PAST AND FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGES Msadek, R.; Frankignoul, C.: MULTIDECADAL VARIABILITY OF THE ATLANTIC MOC AND ITS INFLUENCE ONTO THE ATMOSPHERE IN THE IPSL CLIMATE MODEL Danabasoglu, G.: ON MULTI-DECADAL VARIABILITY OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION IN THE COMMUNITY CLIMATE SYSTEM MODEL VERSION 3 (CCSM3) Bates, S. C.; Bitz, C.; Battisti, D.; Barsugli, J.: ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION VARIABILITY IN MODERN AND LAST GLACIAL MAXIMUM SIMULATIONS OF CCSM3 Hazeleger, W.; CLIVAR Atlantic Implementation Panel: DECADAL PREDICTIONS OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION: A CLIVAR PERSPECTIVE. Delworth, T. L.; Dixon, K. W.; Hurlin, W. J.; Zhang, S.; Rosati, A. J.: DECADAL PREDICTABILITY OF THE AMOC AS SIMULATED IN THE GFDL CM2.1 MODEL* Czeschel, L.; Marshall, D. P.; Johnson, H. L.: DECADAL RESPONSE OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION TO LOCAL AND REMOTE FORCING * represents Invited presentations ( ) 101 WEDNESDAY 14:00 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 181: Novel Approaches for Improving Ocean Science Literacy in K-12 Classrooms von der Heydt, A. S.; Frankcombe, L.; Dijkstra, H. A.: IS THE ATLANTIC MULTIDECADAL VARIABILITY EXCITED BY ATMOSPHERIC NOISE? RESULTS FROM AN ENSEMBLE OF COUPLED CLIMATE MODEL SIMULATIONS. Hawkins, E.; Sutton, R.: DECADAL PREDICTABILITY OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION: ESTIMATION OF OPTIMAL PERTURBATIONS FOR A COUPLED GCM Keenlyside, N.; Latif, M.; Jungclaus, J.; Kornblueh, L.; Park, W.; Roeckner, E.: DECADAL PREDICTION: CLOSING THE GAP BETWEEN CLIMATE PROJECTIONS AND SEASONAL FORECASTS Chair(s): Richard A. Tankersley, [email protected]; John Windsor, [email protected] Location: W103 08:00 08:15 08:30 173: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Larval Dispersion and Connectivity 08:45 Chair(s): Lisa Levin, [email protected]; Stephen Chiswell, [email protected]; Matthew Hare, [email protected]; Linda Rasmussen, [email protected] 09:00 Location: W304 G/H WEDNESDAY 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 Bradbury, I. R.; Campana, S.; DiBacco, C.; Bentzen, P.: ESTIMATING CONTEMPORARY LARVAL DISPERSAL AND CONNECTIVITY IN AN ESTUARINE FISH: INTEGRATING MOLECULAR AND OTOLITH ELEMENTAL APPROACHES Young, E. F.; Rock, J.; Carvalho, G. R.; Murphy, E. J.; Meredith, M. P.; Thorpe, S. E.; Hutchinson, W. F.; North, T.; Collins, M.; Belchier, M.; Hauser, L.; Rodhouse, P.; Everson, I.: MERGING MOLECULAR AND OCEANOGRAPHIC PROCESSES IN THE SCOTIA SEA AND BEYOND Ogburn, M. B.; Forward, R. B.; Luettich, R. A.: LINKING BLUE CRAB LARVAL SUPPLY AND SETTLEMENT Eckert, G. L.; Hill, D. F.; Herter, H. L.; Smith, Q. T.: MODEL AND IN SITU STUDIES OF LARVAL DISPERSAL AND CONNECTIVITY IN GLACIER BAY, ALASKA Ayata, S. D.; Ellien, C.; Dubois, S.; Dumas, F.; Farcy, S.; Viard, F.; Thiébaut, E.: SUSTAINABILITY OF THREATENED BIOGENIC REEFS: INSIGHT FROM A MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDY OF LARVAL DISPERSAL OF THE HONEYCOMB WORM SABELLARIA ALVEOLATA Oguz, T. I.; Fach, B. A.; Salihoglu, B.: MODELING ANCHOVY EGGS AND LARVAE TRANSPORT IN THE BLACK SEA Rasmussen, L. L.; Cornuelle, B.; Levin, L. A.; Largier, J. L.; McMillan, P.; Becker, B. J.: LARVAL CONNECTIVITY IN A DYNAMIC DOMAIN: LIMITATIONS AND ADVANTAGES OF A COMBINED MODELINGFINGERPRINTING APPROACH Mitarai, S.; Siegel, D. A.; Warner, R. R.; Gaines, S. D.; Kendall, B. E.; Costello, C. J.; Winters, K. B.: LARVAL DISPERSAL AND POPULATION DYNAMICS IN A TURBULENT COASTAL OCEAN Churchill, J. H.; Runge, J. A.; Chen, C.; Cowles, G. W.; Stuebe, D.: FACTORS CONTROLLING RETENTION OF LARVAL COD (GADUS MORHUA) WITHIN THE WESTERN GULF OF MAINE Jackson, P. R.; Ledwell, J. R.; Thurnherr, A. M.; Lavelle, J. W.: A TRACER RELEASE EXPERIMENT ON THE EAST PACIFIC RISE (9ºN TO 10ºN): IMPLICATIONS FOR LARVAL DISPERSION 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 Kastler, J. A.; Walker, S. H.; Spranger, M. S.; Dindo, J.; Brook, R. D.: THE TEACHER-SCIENTIST INSTITUTES OF THE COSEE:CGOM - CATALYZING RELATIONSHIPS AMONG SCIENTISTS AND TEACHERS TO ENRICH CLASSROOM OCEAN SCIENCES LEARNING Sluss, T. D.; Javed, K.: INTEGRATING STREAM ECOLOGY INTO KENTUCKY SCHOOL CURRICULUM Diederick, L. K.: LIVING IN A BACTERIAL WORLD: NEW PERSPECTIVES FOR TEACHING OLD CONCEPTS Fackler, C. J.; Martin, M.: NOAA NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARIES BRING OCEAN SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL LITERACY INTO AMERICA’S CLASSROOMS Acker, J. G.; Herring, D.; Leptoukh, G.; Shen, S.; Kempler, S.: THE GIOVANNI-NEO OCEANOGRAPHIC EDUCATION COOKBOOK Paternoster, J. M.; Sill, A. S.; Morton, S. L.; Nowocin, K. J.; Symon, E.: VOLUNTEERS AND SCIENTISTS UNITE TO MONITOR MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON AND HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS Curran, M. C.; Aultman, T.; Fogleman, T.; Schaffner, H.: INCORPORATING REAL DATA IN K-12 ACTIVITIES: THE DEVELOPMENT OF OCEAN LITERATE STUDENTS USING SHRIMP, FLOUNDER, AND MARSH LESSONS Bennett, K. C.; Grupe, B.; Laferriere, A. M.; Schuiteman, M.; Trainer, J.; Smart, T.; Archerd, S.; Ashcraft, K.; Atkins, E.; Button, J.; Davidson, K.; Edd, A.; Erb, A.; Jung, L.; Lojkovic, M.; Smith, S.; Stebbins, M. L.; Thornton, P.; Trainer, A.: TAKING INQUIRY INTO THE FIELD: CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT FOR ELEMENTARY MARINE SCIENCE. EXAMPLES FROM THE GK12 L “ EARNING ABOUT WHERE WE LIVE ” PROJECT. Tankersley, R. A.; Windsor, J. G.; Hanselman, J.; Medina, J.: TAKING IT TO THE STREETS: SEAS MOBILE LABORATORY EXPOSES STUDENTS TO OCEAN SCIENCE RESEARCH Keener-Chavis, P.; Martinez, C.; Feldman, M.: A GLIMPSE OF OCEAN BIODIVERSITY THROUGH EXPLORATION COUPLED WITH TELEPRESENCE 186: Science at Aquarius: Multidisciplinary Studies of a Tropical Reef Chair(s): Stephen Monismith, [email protected]; James Leichter, [email protected] Location: W205 B/C 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 Prager, E. J.: AQUARIUS REEF BASE: ADVANCED UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY NOW AND FOR THE FUTURE* Cheroske, A. G.; Cronin, T. W.; Caldwell, R. L.; Chiou, T. H.: POLARIZED SIGNALING IN MANTIS SHRIMP Patterson, M. R.: SCIENCE AT AQUARIUS: SCALING METABOLISM FROM POLYPS TO REEFS* Martens, C. S.; Lindquist, N.; Hench, J. L.; Mendlovitz, H. P.; Camilli, R.; Duryea, A. N.; Gibson, P. J.; Popp, B. N.: IN SITU MEASUREMENTS OF DIEL VARIATIONS IN BARREL SPONGE RESPIRATION FROM NOAA’S AQUARIUS UNDERWATER OBSERVATORY ON CONCH REEF, FLORIDA KEYS (USA) (~) 102 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 17:00 17:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Lindquist, N.; Hench, J.; Weisz, J. B.; Martens, C. S.: DETAILED SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL MEASUREMENTS OF SPONGE EXCURRENT PLUMES MEASURED IN SITU UTILIZING THE AQAURIUS REEF BASED OBSERVATORY Monismith, S. G.; Davis, K. A.; Genin, A.; Holtzman, R.; Lindquist, N. L.; Martens, C. S.; Southwell, M.; Santoro, A.; Nidzieko, N.; Hench, J. L.; McDonald, C.; Steinbuck, J. V.; Rosman, J. H.: BENTHIC GRAZING ON A TROPICAL REEF 09:30 09:45 10:00 189: The Census of Marine Life: Discoveries of Diversity, Abundance, and Distribution in the World’s Oceans 10:15 Chair(s): Gail Scowcroft, [email protected]; Linda Amaral-Zettler, [email protected]; Kristen Yarincik, [email protected] 193: Seismic Oceanography Location: W105 08:00 08:15 08:30 09:00 09:15 Chair(s): Richard Hobbs, [email protected]; Gerd Krahmann, [email protected]; Martin Visbeck, [email protected] O’Dor, R. K.: CENSUSING MARINE LIFE - DIVERSITY, DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE* Vanden Berghe, E.; Costello, M. J.; Zhang, P.; Grassle, F.: OCEAN BIOGEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEM: EXPLORING ITS CONTENT Amaral-Zettler, L. A.; Sogin, M. L.; de Leeuw, J. W.; Patterson, D. J.; Schouten, S.; Stal, L. J.; Herndl, G. J.: ICOMM, THE INTERNATIONAL CENSUS OF MARINE MICROBES: UNVEILING THE OCEAN’S HIDDEN MAJORITY ARTIGAS, L. F.; OTERO, E.; PARANHOS, R.; GOMEZ, M. L.; PICCINI, C.; COSTAGLIOLA, M.; SILVA, R.; SUAREZ, P.; GALLARDO, V. A.; HERNANDEZ BECERRIL, D. U.: THE LACAR-ICOMM NETWORK: IDENTIFICATION OF RESEARCH CAPABILITIES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR ASSESSING MARINE MICROBIAL DIVERSITY IN SOUTH AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Plaisance, L.; Meyer, C.; Knowlton, N.: MOLECULAR APPROACHES FOR CATEGORIZING MARINE BIODIVERSITY OF CORAL REEFS Jackson, G.; McKinley, R. S.: THE PACIFIC OCEAN SHELF TRACKING PROJECT, PROVIDING A WINDOW ON THE MOVEMENT OF SALMON AND OTHER SPECIES Location: W109 A 16:00 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Holbrook, W. S.; Fer, I.; Schmitt, R. W.; Klymak, J. M.: SEISMIC OCEANOGRAPHY: WHERE WE ARE, WHERE WE’RE GOING~ Nedimovic, M. R.; Greenan, B. W.; Louden, K. E.; Ruddick, B. R.; Mirshak, R.; Aghaei, O.; Enachesku, M.; Shimeld, J. W.: ROSE: COINCIDENT SEISMIC AND HYDROGRAPHIC SURVEY OF THE GULF STREAM AND SLOPE WATERS SOUTHEAST OF NOVA SCOTIA Jones, S. M.; Hardy, R. J.; Hardy, D.: A LARGE LEGACY SEISMIC REFLECTION DATASET FROM ROCKALL TROUGH: CAUSES AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF WATER LAYER RESPONSE, AND RECOGNITION OF INTERNAL WAVES Géli, L. B.; Hobbs, R.; Klaeschen, D.; Cosquer, E.; Marsset, B.; Klingelhoefer, F.; Pappenberg, C.: HIGH RESOLUTION SEISMIC IMAGES OF THE WATER STRUCTURE OBTAINED WITH A SMALL VOLUME SOURCE ARRAY Ambar, I.; Alvarado Bustos, R.; Hobbs, R.; Huthnance, J.; Krahmann, G.; Moate, B.; Silva, P.; Quentel, E.: GULF OF CADIZ OCEANOGRAPHY FOR COMPARISON WITH SEISMIC IMAGING * represents Invited presentations ( ) 103 WEDNESDAY 08:45 Bergstad, O. A.: EXPLORING THE MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE MACRO- AND MEGAFAUNAL COMMUNITIES* Menot, L.; Carney, R. S.; Sibuet, M.; Rowe, G. T.; Lavrado, H. P.; Levin, L. A.; Billett, D. S.; Ingole, B.; Hughes, J. A.; Poore, G. C.; Galeron, J.; Vanreusel, A.; Kitazato, H.; Krylova, E. M.: LOCAL TO GLOBAL -SCALE BIODIVERSITY PATTERNS ON CONTINENTAL MARGINS: FIRST OUTPUTS FROM COML/COMARGE SYNTHESES Baco-Taylor, A. R.; Rowden, A. A.; Levin, L. A.; Smith, C. R.; RENEWZI Scientific Party: EXPLORATION OF COLD SEEP COMMUNITIES OFF NEW ZEALAND King, N. J.; Priede, I. G.: ECOMAR: ECOSYSTEMS OF THE MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE AT THE SUB-POLAR FRONT AND CHARLIE-GIBBS FRACTURE ZONE ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Wednesday Posters 978. 009: Hydrogeological Systems, Natural Gas Flux in Dissolved and Gas Phases, and Formation of Oceanic Hydrate Deposits 979. Chair(s): Michael Max, [email protected]; Arthur Johnson, [email protected]; Warren Wood, [email protected] 980. Location: Poster Hall 401. 402. 403. 404. Müller, W. H.; Anders, E.: PROCESSING THE DEEPBIOSPHERE Withdrawn Withdrawn Rogers, R. E.; Zhang, G.; Dearman, J.; Wilson, W. W.: LABORATORY TESTS OF HYDRATE FORMATION IN POROUS MEDIA INFLUENCED BY BIOPRODUCTS 981. 982. WEDNESDAY 015: Interactions Between the Kuroshio and Marginal Seas of China and Their Environmental Impact 983. Chair(s): Dongliang Yuan, [email protected]; Fan Wang, [email protected]; Dongxiao Wang, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 969. 970. 971. 972. 973. 974. 975. 984. Kim, E.; Jeon, D. C.; Suk, M. S.: THE CHARACTERISTICS OF VARIATIONS OF SURFACE LAYER ANOMALIES IN THE NORTHWESTERN PACIFIC OCEAN AFTER OCT., 1992 Riedlinger, S. N.; Barron, C. N.; Ko, D. S.; Martin, P. J.: INVESTIGATING EXCHANGE BETWEEN THE KUROSHIO AND MARGINAL SEAS OF CHINA USING MODEL SIMULATIONS OF FLOATS AND DRIFTERS Wu, C.; Hsin, Y.; Shaw, P.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATIONS OF THE KUROSHIO EAST OF TAIWAN Byun, D. S.; Cho, Y. K.; Hart, D. E.: UNLOCKING ROLE OF THE EAST CHINA SEA CURRENT SYSTEM IN THE COCHLODINIUM POLYKRIKOIDES BLOOM CONUNDRUM OF THE SOUTH SEA OF KOREA Tseng, Y. H.; Jan, S.; Yang, Y.; Dietrich, D.; Chien, S. H.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY AND THE DYNAMICS OF KUROSHIO PATH AND ITS INTRUSION INTO THE LUZON AND TAIWAN STRAITS Kai-Chieh Cathy Yang, K. C.; Craig M. Lee, C. M.; Daniel L. Rudnick, D. L.: GLIDER-BASED MEASUREMENTS OF KUROSHIO SEASONAL VARIATION ZHOU, H.; YUAN, D. Y.; GUO, P. F.; SHI, M. C.: THE INTERMEDIATE-DEPTH CIRCULATION EAST OF MINDANAO OBSERVED BY ARGO PROFILING FLOATS 018: The Aquatic Gel Phase, Its Role in Biogeochemical Cycles Chair(s): Pedro Verdugo, [email protected]; Peter H. Santschi, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1481. 1482. 1483. 1484. 1485. 016: How Does the Subtropical North Atlantic Transfer Heat, Cycle Nutrients and Uptake Carbon? 1486. Chair(s): Ric Williams, [email protected]; Susan Lozier, [email protected]; Elaine McDonagh, [email protected]; Andy Watson, [email protected] 1487. Location: Poster Hall 976. 977. Telszewski, M.; Chazottes, A.; Schuster, U.; Watson, A. J.; Moulin, C.; Bakker, D.: SEA SURFACE PCO2 AND AIR-SEA FLUX FIELDS OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC FOR 2004 TO 2006 USING NEURAL NETWORKS Baringer, M. O.: HEAT AND TEMPERATURE CHANGES FROM HIGH DENSITY XBT LINES IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC MESSIAS, M. J.; WATSON, A. J.; Brown, P. J.; Schuster, U.: TRACER-DERIVED TRANSIT TIME DISTRIBUTIONS IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC ALONG 36ËšN AND INFERRED ANTROPOGENIC CARBON CONCENTRATIONS Neely, K.; Bates, N. R.; Johnson, R. J.; McGillicuddy, D. J.: THE INFLUENCE OF MESOSCALE EDDIES ON INORGANIC CARBON CYCLING AND AIR-SEA CO2 GAS EXCHANGE IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN Ullman, D. J.; McKinley, G. A.; Bennington, V. S.; Dutkiewicz, S.: NORTH ATLANTIC CARBON CYCLE RESPONSE TO CLIMATE VARIABILITY IN THE SUBTROPICS Mather, R. L.; Reynolds, S. E.; Wolff, G. A.; Williams, R. G.; Pan, X.; Torres, S. V.; Woodward, E. M.; Sanders, R.; Achterberg, E. P.: GREATER ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS UTILISATION IN THE NORTHERN SUBTROPICAL GYRE Brearley, J. A.; McDonagh, E. L.; King, B. A.; Bryden, H. L.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF THE ATLANTIC INTERIOR GEOSTROPHIC TRANSPORT AT 36N Karleskind, P.; Memery, L.; Levy, M.: A 1-YEAR MESOSCALE SIMULATION OF THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN THE NORTH-EASTERN ATLANTIC OCEAN Pavic, M.; Cunningham, S. A.; Brown, P. J.; Watson, A. J.; Schuster, U.; Longworth, H. R.: TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF CARBON FLUXES IN THE SUBTROPICAL ATLANTIC AT 24.5°N 1488. Ogawa, T.; Hama, T.: MICROBIAL DEGRADATION OF BIOCHEMICAL COMPOUNDS DERIVED FROM MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON Händel, N.; Piontek, J.; Wohlers, J.; Riebesell, U.; Engel, A.: DYNAMICS OF DISSOLVED NEUTRAL AND ACIDIC SUGARS IN SEAWATER Robbins, M. C.; Wetz, M. S.; Paerl, H. W.: DISTRIBUTION OF TRANSPARENT EXOPOLYMER PARTICLES ALONG AN ESTUARINE SALINITY GRADIENT Kawasaki, N.; Benner, R.; Nagata, T.; Ogawa, H.; Benner, R.: CONTRIBUTIONS OF LIVING BACTERIA AND BACTERIAL DETRITUS TO SUSPENDED POC IN THE NORTH PACIFIC GYRE Schwehr, K. A.; Miao, A.; Xu, C.; Zhang, S.; Santschi, P. H.: IN SEARCH OF AN ELUSIVE SCALE FOR THE RELATIVE HYDROPHOBICITY OF EXOPOLYMERIC GEL-FORMING SUBSTANCES Boehme, J. R.; Wells, M. L.: OPTICAL VARIABILITY OF COLLOIDAL DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER: ANNUAL COLLOIDAL CYCLING IN THE DAMARISCOTTA RIVER ESTUARY Daniels, C.; Cowen, J. P.; Hebel, D. V.: ABIOTIC PARTICLE FORMATION FROM THE DOM POOL IN KANEOHE BAY SEAWATER. Withdrawn (~) 104 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 033: Unresolved Problems of ENSO Dynamics: Past, Present, Future 1182. Chair(s): Alexey Fedorov, [email protected]; Jaclyn Brown, [email protected] 1183. Location: Poster Hall 1184. 995. 996. 997. 998. 999. 1000. 1185. 038: Progress in Mechanistic Modelling of the Ocean Carbon Cycle Chair(s): Curtis Deutsch, [email protected]; Katsumi Matsumoto, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1186. 1187. 1188. 036: Scientific Results from Global and Regional Ocean Syntheses Chair(s): Detlef Stammer, [email protected]; Tong Lee, [email protected]; David Legler; Nico Caltabiano, [email protected] 1189. Location: Poster Hall 1190. 1191. 1174. 1175. 1176. 1177. 1178. 1179. 1180. 1181. Santorelli , A.; Carton, J. A.; Grodsky, S. K.; Chepurin, G.; Giese, B. S.: HEAT CONTENT OF THE GLOBAL UPPER OCEAN DURING THE PAST HALF CENTURY Halkides, D. J.; Lee, T.: MECHANISMS CONTROLLING SEASONAL-TO-INTERANNUAL MIXED-LAYER TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY IN THE EASTERN TROPICAL INDIAN OCEAN Chepurin, G. A.; Carton, J. A.; Doney, S. C.; Lima, I. D.: IMPACT OF TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY ASSIMILATION ON THE GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL PARAMETERS DISTRIBUTION Schodlok, M. P.; Menemenlis, D.; Volkov, D.: ASSESSMENT OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN SOLUTION IN THE ECCO2 DATA SYNTHESES Zhang, H.; Menemenlis, D.; Lee, T.; Schodlok, M.; Volkov, D.; Zlotnicki, V.: ASSESSMENT OF THE ECCO2 HIGH RESOLUTION GLOBAL-OCEAN AND SEA-ICE DATASYNTHESIS USING THE CLIVAR/GODAE GLOBAL SYNTHESIS AND OBSERVATIONS PANEL METRICS Matsumoto, S.; Nakano, T.; Fujii, Y.; Ishizaki, S.; Kamachi, M.: OCEAN CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND WATER MASS VARIABILITY IN THE REANALYSES OF THE MRIMULTIVARIATE OCEAN VARIATIONAL ESTIMATION (MOVE) SYSTEM Nguyen, A. T.; Kwok, R.; Menemenlis, D.: ASSESSMENT OF THE ECCO2 COUPLED OCEAN AND SEA ICE SOLUTION IN THE ARCTIC Pohlmann, H.; Jungclaus, J.; Marotzke, J.: GAIN IN PREDICTABILITY DUE TO THE INITIALIZATION OF A GLOBAL CLIMATE MODEL WITH OCEANIC REANALYSIS 1192. 1193. 1194. 1195. 1196. Kwon, E.; Primeau, F.: THE PRESENT-DAY STRENGTH OF CARBONATE PUMP AND THE IMPACT OF ITS CHANGE ON GLOBAL CARBON CYCLING Plancherel, Y.; Jacobson, A. R.; Key, R. M.; Sarmiento, J. L.: REANALYSIS OF OCEANIC REMINERALIZATION STOICHIOMETRY BY SIMULATED ANNEALING APPLIED IN A WATER MASS ANALYSIS FRAMEWORK. Thomas, P. J.; Boller, A. J.; Zhao, Z.; Tabita, F. R.; Cavanaugh, C. M.; Scott, K. M.: STABLE CARBON ISOTOPE DISCRIMINATION BY FORM IC RUBISCO FROM THE METABOLICALLY VERSATILE BACTERIUM RHODOBACTER SPHAEROIDES Matsumoto, K.; Tokos, K.: ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON UPTAKE IN A NEWLY CONFIGURED INTERMEDIATE COMPLEXITY CARBON-CLIMATE MODEL Withdrawn Dietze, H.; Oschlies, A.: DOES IRON CONTROL THE OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE IN THE EASTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC? Boller, A. J.; Thomas, P. J.; Cavanaugh, C. M.; Scott, K. M.: ISOTOPE DISCRIMINATION BY FORM ID RUBISCO FROM THE DIATOM SKELETONEMA COSTATUM Bennington, V.; McKinley, G. A.; Ullman, D.; Dutkiewicz, S.: BLOOM AND EXPORT VARIABILITY IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC Scott, V.: SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS OF A 1-D OCEAN CARBON CYCLE MODEL- IDENTIFYING THE ORIGINS OF UNCERTAINTY Yoshikawa, C.; Kawamiya, M.; Kato, T.; Yamanaka, Y.; Matsuno, T.: GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF THE FEEDBACK BETWEEN FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE CARBON CYCLE Coles, V. J.; Hood, R. R.; Brown, C. W.: MODELING COCCOLITHOPHORID CALCIFICATION IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC 039: Real-Time Forecasting of Winds, Waves, and Storm Tides: From the Deep Ocean to the Watershed Chair(s): Scott C. Hagen, [email protected]; Hans C. Graber, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1197. PARAMYGIN, V. A.; SHENG, Y. P.: VERIFICATION OF CH3D-SSMS FORECASTING SYSTEM FOR CHARLOTTE HARBOR, FL WITH DATA DURING HURRICANE WILMA (2005) * represents Invited presentations ( ) 105 WEDNESDAY 1001. Ishida, A.; Kashino, Y.; Hosoda, S.; Ando, K.: DIFFERENT DISCHARGE MECHANISMS OF WARM WATER BETWEEN NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN PACIFIC OCEANS DURING EL NINO Bunge, L.; Clarke, A. J.: ASSESSMENT OF INDICES OF INTERANNUAL AND INTERDECADAL VARIABILITY IN THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC Yasuda, T.; Hasegawa, T.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF UPPER OCEAN HEAT CONTENT IN THE TROPICAL PACIFIC IN 20TH CENTURY SIMULATIONS Park, W.; Keenlyside, N.; Latif, M.; Stroeh, A.: TROPICAL PACIFIC CLIMATE AND ITS RESPONSE TO GLOBAL WARMING IN THE KIEL CLIMATE MODEL Zhang, x.; McPhaden, M. J.: EASTERN PACIFIC FORCING OF ENSO SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANOMALIES Lee, S.; Enfield, D. B.; Wang, C.: ENSO TELECONNECTION TO THE TROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC Yeh, S.; Kirtman, B. P.; Park, Y.: ATMOSPHERIC WEATHER NOISE AND THE TROPICAL PACIFIC SST VARIABILITY IN A CGCM Macdonald, A. M.: THE MEAN WOCE-ERA PACIFIC OCEAN GENERAL CIRCULATION AS SEEN THROUGH ASSIMILATIVE AND INVERSE MODELS Yin, Y.; Alves, O.; Oke, P.; Tseitkin, F.: POAMA OCEAN REANALYSIS EVALUATION AND INTERCOMPARISON Llovel, W.; Lombard, A.; Cazenave, A.; Rogel, P.; Penduff, T.; Abarca del Rio, R.: PAST SEA LEVEL RECONSTRUCTION AND VARIABILITY OF SEA LEVEL TREND PATTERNS Volkov, D. L.; Fu, L. L.: THE ROLE OF VORTICITY FLUXES IN THE DYNAMICS OF THE ZAPIOLA ANTICYCLONE ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 1198. 1199. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 047: Ocean Processes in the Western Tropical Pacific Xu, Z.: A REAL-TIME TSUNAMI SIMULATION SYSTEM WITH THE ALL-SOURCE GREEN’S FUNCTION Davis, J. R.; Paramygin, V. A.; Forrest, D. R.; Sheng, Y. P.: ON THE GENERATION AND USE OF PROBABALISTIC WIND FIELDS FOR THE SIMULATION OF STORM SURGE AND INUNDATION Chair(s): James W. Murray, [email protected]; Zachary Johnson, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1002. 044: Interrelations Among the Chemistry, Geology and Biology of Hydrocarbon Seep Communities in the Deep Gulf of Mexico 1003. Chair(s): Charles Fisher, [email protected]; Harry Roberts, [email protected]; James Brooks, [email protected]; Gregory Boland, [email protected] 1004. Location: Poster Hall 1489. WEDNESDAY 1490. 1491. 1492. 1493. 1494. 1495. 1496. 1497. 1498. 1499. Wankel, S. D.; Girguis, P. R.; Fisher, C.; Shah, S.: MEASUREMENT OF DISSOLVED GASES AT GULF OF MEXICO HYDROCARBON SEEPS WITH AN IN SITU MASS SPECTROMETER (ISMS) Struck, J. M.; Duperron, S.; Hourdez, S.; Cordes, E. E.; Girguis, P. R.; Fisher, C. R.; Dubilier, N.: PHYLOGENY AND ECOLOGY OF BATHYMODIOLUS ENDOSYMBIONTS FROM GULF OF MEXICO COLD SEEPS. Fisher, C. R.; Cordes, E. E.; Roberts, H. H.; Bernard, B.; Carney, R.; Joye, S.; MacDonald, I. R.; Morrison, C. L.; Becker, E.; Lessard-Pilon, S.: OVERVIEW OF THE COMMUNITIES ASSOCIATED WITH OIL, GAS, AND BRINE SEEPAGE, AND ASSOCIATED HARD GROUNDS IN THE DEEP GULF OF MEXICO Becker, E. L.; Cordes, E. E.; Macko, S. A.; Fisher, C. R.: USING STABLE ISOTOPES OF CARBON, NITROGEN, AND SULFUR TO DETERMINE LOCAL FOOD WEB STRUCTURE IN LOPHELIA PERTUSA-ASSOCIATED COMMUNITIES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO Brooks, J. M.; Bernard, B. B.; Fisher, C. R.; Orange, D. L.; Adkison, D. L.; Cordes , E. E.: CHEMOSYNTHETIC ECOSYSTEM DISCOVERIES IN NIGERIA, INDIA AND INDONESIA FROM GEOCHEMICAL CORING STUDIES Lessard-Pilon, S. A.; Porter, M. D.; Fisher, C.: CHANGES AT COLD SEEP COMMUNITIES OVER THE COURSE OF ONE YEAR QUANTIFIED USING PHOTOMOSAICS AND GIS Garcia-Pineda, O.; Zimmer, B.; Mestas-Nunez, A.; MacDonald, I. R.: QUANTIFICATION OF OIL SEEPS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO BY SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING Bowles, M. W.; Samarkin, V. A.; Joye, M. J.: ACTIVITY, DIVERSITY, AND RELATIVE ABUNDANCE OF SULFATE REDUCING BACTERIA IN OIL-RICH SEDIMENTS FROM A LOWER CONTINENTAL SLOPE GULF OF MEXICO COLD SEEP Raggi, L.; Boetius, A.; Escobar, E.; Dubilier, N.: POSSIBLE HYDROCARBON-DEGRADING ENDOSYMBIONT IN BATHYMODIOLUS HECKERAE, A MUSSEL FROM CHAPOPOTE, AN ASPHALTIC SEEP IN THE GULF OF MEXICO Hu, X.; Cai, W.; Wang, Y.; Guo, X.: CARBON CYCLING IN TWO BRINE WATER CHARGED COLD SEEP SEDIMENTS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO Feng, D.; Chen, D. F.; Roberts, H. H.: PETROLOGY AND GEOCHEMISTRY OF SEEP CARBONATES FROM ALAMINOS CANYON, GULF OF MEXICO 1005. 1006. 1007. 1008. 1009. 1010. 1011. 1012. 1013. 1014. 1015. 1016. Kirkpatrick, J. B.; Stanley, R. H.; Cassar, N.; Bender, M. L.; Murray, J. W.: GROSS PRODUCTION AND UNDERWAY NET COMMUNITY PRODUCTION MEASUREMENTS IN THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC Yang, J. G.; Cho, Y. K.; Choi, B. J.: COMPARISONS OF THE SEA SURFACE WIND DATASETS IN THE NORTHWEST PACIFIC MARGINAL SEAS Ritchie, A. E.; Johnson, J. I.: AEROBIC ANOXYGENIC PHOTOTROPHIC BACTERIAL SURFACE ABUNDANCE ALONG OFFSHORE AND ONSHORE TRANSECTS NEAR PACIFIC OCEAN ISLANDS Withdrawn Yamanaka, G.; Yasuda, T.; Fujii, Y.; Ishizaki, H.: MIXED LAYER HEAT BALANCE ON SEASONAL TO INTERANNUAL TIMESCALES IN THE WESTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC: AN OGCM STUDY Noh, J. H.; Choi, D. H.; Lee, C. M.; Selph, K. E.: AUTOTROPHIC PICOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTION IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC -FROM CHUUK LAGOON TO EAST CHINA SEA Lance, V. P.; Johnson, Z. I.; LeFevre, A. J.; Ritchie, A. E.; Barber, R. T.: PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY REGULATION IN THE WESTERN AND CENTRAL PACIFIC NEAR THE INITIATION AND TERMINIATION OF THE 2006-2007 MODERATE ENSO EVENT.* Shyam, R.; Mioni, C.; Ritchie, A. E.; Lai, J.; Johnson, Z. I.: IRON/LIGHT CO-LIMITATION OF THE DEEP CHLOROPHYLL MAXIMUM IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC OCEAN Johnson, Z. I.; Zinser, E. R.: THE WESTERN PACIFIC WARM POOL (WP2) CRUISE: A WINDOW INTO A FUTURE OF WARMER AND MORE STRATIFIED OCEANS~ Yigiterhan, O.; Fitzgerald, W. F.; Mason, R.; Balcom, P.; Bernier, G.; Murray, J. W.: DISSOLVED TOTAL MERCURY AND METHYLMERCURY DISTRIBUTIONS IN THE WESTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC* Dutrieux, P.; Menkes, C. E.; Murray, J. W.; Firing, E.; Hummon, J. M.; Ascani, F.: THERMOCLINE AND SUBTHERMOCLINE CURRENTS FROM THE CENTRAL TO WESTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC: A SNAPSHOT VIEW FROM THE EUC-FE CAMPAIGN Bober, C. A.; Ritchie, A. E.; Johnson, Z. I.: ABUNDANCE AND MOLECULAR DIVERSITY OF PROCHLOROCOCCUS WITHIN PACIFIC OCEAN COASTAL ISLAND SYSTEMS Park, Y.; Yeh, S.: THE EFFECTS OF THE TSUSHIMA WARM CURRENT ON THE EAST/JAPAN SEA CIRCULATION Marchetti, A.; Armbrust, E. V.; Bonnet, S.; Johnson, Z.; Lance, V.; Varela, D. E.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL CONTROLS ON PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSITION AND PRODUCTIVITY ASSESSED BY C, N, AND Si UTILIZATION IN THE EASTERN AND WESTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC Murray, J. W.; McPhaden, M. J.; Pal, S.: THE EUCFE RESEARCH CRUISE IN THE WESTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC (~) 106 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 1017. 1018. 1019. 1020. 1021. 1022. 1023. 1024. 1026. 1027. 1028. 1029. Varela, D. E.; Murray, J. W.: BIOGENIC SILICA PRODUCTION IN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC SURFACE WATERS FROM 140ËšW TO 180ËšE DeHaan, C. J.: SPECTRAL COMPARISONS BETWEEN A HIGH RESOLUTION MODEL AND IN SITU DATA IN FREQUENCY AND WAVENUMBER Slemons, L. O.; Murray, J. W.; Resing, J.; Paul, B.: ZONAL AND MERIDIONAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF FE, AL AND MN IN THE WESTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC Bosc, C.; Maes , C.; Delcroix, T.: THERMOHALINE VARIABILITY OF THE EASTERN EDGE OF THE WESTERN PACIFIC WARM POOL, AS INFERRED FROM ARGO FLOATS Wong, G. T.; Lin, I. I.; Huang, C. W.; Chen, J. P.: OASES IN AN OCEAN DESERT Fujii, M.; Boss, E.; Chai, F.: THE VALUE OF ADDING OPTICS TO ECOSYSTEM MODELS: A CASE STUDY Hidayat, R.; Kizu, S.: MJO-INDUCED RAINFALL VARIABILITY OVER THE MARITIME CONTINENT OBSERVED BY TRMM Radenac, M. H.; Menkes, C.; Eldin, G.; Faure, V.; Dagorne, D.; Zakharova, E.; Gorgues, T.; Marchesiello, P.; Messie, M.: OCEANIC SEASONAL VARIABILITY NORTH OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA: AN INTEGRATED APPROACH Tozuka, T.; Qu, T.; Yamagata, T.: IMPACT OF THE SOUTH CHINA SEA THROUGHFLOW ON THE INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW Kashino, Y.; Ishida, A.; Hosoda, S.: ANNUAL AND INTERANNUAL OCEAN VARIATIONS IN THE MINDANAO DOME REGION: OBSERVATIONAL STUDY Brown, S. L.; Selph, K. E.; Christensen, S.; Bidigare, R. R.: PICOPLANKTON COMMUNITY DYNAMICS ACROSS THE WESTERN PACIFIC WARM POOL Shank, L. M.; Johansen, A. M.: ATMOSPHERIC TRACE METAL AND LABILE IRON DEPOSITION FLUXES TO THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC OCEAN DURING EUCFE2006 Jeon, D.; Kim, E.; Shin, C. W.: THE ANNUAL VARIABILITY OF NORTH EQUATORIAL CURRENTS MEASURED IN THE NORTHWESTERN PACIFIC OCEAN 413. 414. 415. 416. 417. 418. 049: Open Ocean Time-series Data: A Tool to Observe Temporal Variability of Biogeochemical Processes Chair(s): Juan Carlos Miquel, [email protected]; Laurent Coppola, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1500. 1501. 1502. 1503. 1504. 048: Chemical Oceanography, Marine Chemistry: General Chair(s): 1505. Location: Poster Hall 405. 406. 411. 412. Levine, N. M.; Toole, D. A.; Neeley, A. R.; Dacey, J. W.; Doney, S. C.; Bates, N. R.; Moran, M. A.: BACTERIALLY DRIVEN DIURNAL CHANGES IN THE UPPER OCEAN SULFUR CYCLE Polly, J. A.; Komada, T.: ANAEROBIC DEGRADATION OF ORGANIC MATTER IN AN INTERTIDAL SEDIMENT: HARNESSING NATURAL C ISOTOPES TO UNDERSTAND ORGANIC MATTER TRANSFORMATIONS Maruiz Marrero, M.; Ashanti J. Pyrtle, A.: DETERMINATION OF RADIONUCLIDES IN SEDIMENTS AND SURFACE WATER OF TAMPA BAY Brownell, D. K.; Moore, R. M.: PROCHLOROCOCCUS MARINUS AS AN OCEANIC SOURCE OF METHYL IODIDE (CH3I) Roberts, M. L.; von Reden, K. F.; Jenkins, W. J.; Rosenheim, B. E.; McNichol, A. P.; Schneider, R. J.: CFAMS: A NEW RADIOCARBON MEASUREMENT TOOL FOR MARINE GEOCHEMISTRY LaBRECQUE, J. J.; Alfonso, J. A.; Azocar, J. A.; Acevedo, M.; Vasquez, Y.; Benzo, Z.: DETERMINATION OF SELECTED TRACE ELEMENTS IN BIOMONITORS Lippiatt, S. M.; Berger, C. J.; Bruland, K. W.: A NEW CHEMICAL LEACH METHOD TO ASSESS THE FRACTION OF PARTICULATE IRON THAT IS AVAILABLE TO PHYTOPLANKTON Stewart, G. M.; Masqué, P.; Verdeny, E.; TovarSanchez, A.: THE CELLULAR DISTRIBUTION OF PHYTOPLANKTON 210PO AND 210PB AND ZOOPLANKTON VERTICAL MIGRATION: INSIGHTS INTO THE BEHAVIOR OF MARINE ORGANIC CARBON TRACERS Peeler, K. A.; Sharp, J. H.: ESTABLISHING A REFERENCE MATERIAL FOR “ACCURATE” ANALYSIS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN (DON) IN SEAWATER SAMPLES Lott III, D. E.; Stanley, R.; Jenkins, W. J.: AN AUTOMATED, HIGH PRECISION, MASS-SPECTROMETRIC NOBLE GAS AND HELIUM ISOTOPE MEASUREMENT SYSTEM FOR EXTRACTED SEAWATER SAMPLES Toltin, A. C.; Weber, J. C.; Conte, M. H.: PHOSPHORUS FLUX IN THE DEEP SARGASSO SEA AND PARTITIONING BETWEEN LABILE AND REFRACTORY CARRIER PHASES Skjelvan, I.; Falck, E.: CARBON TIME SERIES AT OCEAN WEATHER STATION M* Buesseler, K. O.; Owens, S. A.; Lamborg, C. H.; Valdes, J. R.; Lomas, M. W.; Johnson, R.; Steinberg, D. K.; Siegel, D. A.; Burke, A.: CARBON FLUX THROUGH THE TWILIGHT ZONE - NEW TOOLS TO MEASURE CHANGE Withdrawn Martin, J.; Miquel, J. C.; Gasser, B.: MASSIVE OCCURRENCE OF MUCILAGINOUS AGGREGATES IN THE OPEN LIGURIAN SEA DURING SUMMER 2002 Barbero-Muñoz, L.; Boutin, J.; Merlivat, L.; Sallée, J. B.; Takahashi, T.; Sutherland, S. C.: TIME-SERIES STUDY OF THE AIR-SEA CO2 FLUX IN FRONTAL REGIONS OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN FROM IN SITU DATA 055: Fidelity and Metrics of Ocean Models in Climate Simulations Chair(s): Julie McClean, [email protected]; LuAnne Thompson, [email protected]; Steven Jayne, [email protected]; Anastasia Romanou, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1200. 1201. Scott, J. R.; Korty, R. L.: HURRICANE-INDUCED MIXING AND ITS EFFECT ON OCEAN HEAT UPTAKE AND CIRCULATION IN 21TH CENTURY CLIMATE CHANGE EXPERIMENTS Suzuki, T.: UNDERSTANDING PROJECTIONS OF SEA LEVEL RISE IN A MODEL FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH ON CLIMATE VERSION 3.2(MIROC3.2) * represents Invited presentations ( ) 107 WEDNESDAY 1025. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 1202. 1203. 1204. 1205. 1206. 1207. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 064: Linkages Between Climate, Upwelling and Anoxia: The Cariaco Basin and Similar Systems Dushaw, B. D.; Worcester, P. F.: A DECADE OF ACOUSTIC THERMOMETRY IN THE NORTH PACIFIC (B): UNDERSTANDING BASIN-WIDE AVERAGES OF TEMPERATURE BY COMPARISIONS TO THE POP NUMERICAL OCEAN MODEL. Nakano, H.; Hirabara, M.; Tsujino, H.: IMPACT OF THE INCREASE IN THE HORIZONTAL RESOLUTION FROM 1/2 TO 1/12 ON A GLOBAL OCEAN MODEL Jiang, C.; McPhaden, J.; Thompson, L.; Kelly, K.: DO SOUTHERLY WINDS CONTROL THE LATITUDINAL ASSYMMETRY IN THE SEASONAL CYCLE OF THE SST IN THE EASTERN PACIFIC? Lindsay, K. T.; Bryan, F. O.; Peacock, S. L.: EVALUATING OCEANIC MODEL PARAMETERIZATIONS WITH TRANSIT TIME DISTRIBUTIONS Song, Z. Y.; Qiao, F. L.: THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE ATMOSPHERE-WAVE-OCEAN CIRCULATION COUPLED NUMERICAL MODEL BASED ON CCSM3 Carman, J. C.; McClean, J. L.: COMPARISONS OF CLIMATE MODEL OCEAN SURFACE MIXED LAYER WITH DATA Chair(s): Frank Muller-Karger, [email protected]; Larry Peterson, [email protected]; Laura Lorenzoni, [email protected]; Mary Scranton, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1506. 1507. 1508. WEDNESDAY 062: Interaction of Riverine-Marine Systems 1509. Chair(s): Faiza Al-Yamani, [email protected]; Igor Polikarpov, [email protected]; Valeriy Skryabin, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. 107. 108. 109. 1510. Al-Mansouri, H. A.; Al-Yamani, F. Y.: TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLID CONCENTRATION IN THE NW ARABIAN GULF IN RELEVANCE TO SHATT AL-ARAB RIVER DISCHARGE. Burke, P. B.; Paternostro, C. L.; Glebushko, K.; Rear, L. V.: COMPARISON OF TIDAL CURRENTS IN THE HUDSON RIVER DURING SPRING AND FALL 2006 Fulweiler, R. W.; Lenaker, P. L.; Henry, K. M.; Twilley, R. R.: HOT FLASHES AND DYNAMIC LANDSCAPES - TRACKING THE FATE OF NITROGEN THROUGH SPACE AND TIME IN A DELTAIC COAST Al-Rifaie, K. S.; Al-Yamani , F. Y.: SIGNIFICANCE OF THE FRESHWATER INPUT FROM SHATT AL ARAB RIVER ON KUWAIT’S BACTERIOPLANKTON ABUNDANCE Whritenour, C. A.; Schulz, K. L.: ECOLOGICAL STOICHIOMETRY OF THE SALT MARSH: SI:N RATIOS AND EFFECTS ON ALGAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION Saburova, M. A.; Al-Yamani, F.; Polikarpov, I. G.: MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY OF THE ARABIAN GULF UNDER RIVERINE INFLUENCE IN ARID ZONE Skryabin, V. A.; Al-Yamani, F.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATIONS OF COMPOSITION AND ABUNDANCE OF TINTINNIDS IN KUWAIT’S WATERS OF THE ARABIAN GULF De Brabandere, L. C.; Behringer, D. C.; Jacoby, C. A.; Blitch, S. B.; Frazer, T. K.: SPATIAL VARIATION IN STABLE CARBON AND NITROGEN ISOTOPE RATIOS IN PRIMARY PRODUCERS AND SELECTED CONSUMERS FROM SHALLOW COASTAL WATERS Williams, N. B.; Pyrtle, A. J.; Dixon, B.: FINGERPRINTING DEPOSITED SEDIMENTS IN A TROPICAL ESTUARY: A GEOCHEMICAL APPROACH 1511. Collins, L. E.; Berelson, W. M.: THE EFFECTS OF OXYGEN, TEMPERATURE, AND MICROBIAL INHIBITION ON REMINERALIZATION RATES OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON, SAN PEDRO BASIN, CA Taylor, G. T.; Lin, X.; Podlaska, A.; Lopez Gasca, M.: TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES AND ACTIVITIES WITHIN THE PHYSICO-CHEMICAL CONTEXT OF THE CARIACO BASIN Wishner, K. F.; Gelfman, C.; Gowing, M. M.; Outram, D. M.; Rapien, M.; Williams, R.: VERTICAL ZONATION AND DISTRIBUTIONS OF CALANOID COPEPODS THROUGH THE LOWER OXYCLINE OF THE ARABIAN SEA OXYGEN MINIMUM ZONE Montes, E.; Muller-Karger, F. E.; Thunell, R.; Hollander, D.; Astor, Y.; Varela, R.; Soto, I.; Lorenzoni, L.: COUPLING OF SINKING BIOGENIC PARTICULATE FLUXES AND PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE EUPHOTIC ZONE OF THE CARIACO BASIN, VENEZUELA Lorenzoni, L.; Hansell, D.; Muller-Karger, F. E.; Varela, R.; Astor, Y.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN THE CARIACO BASIN Rueda-Roa, D. T.; Ezer, T.; Muller-Karger, F.: WHAT DRIVES UNUSUAL UPWELLING PATTERNS IN THE SOUTHEASTERN CARIBBEAN SEA? ANALYSIS OF LOCAL AND REMOTE SENSING DATA 078: Northern Gulf of Mexico Landscape Change and Natural Hazards Chair(s): John C. Brock, [email protected]; Dawn Lavoie, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1512. 1513. Palaseanu_Lovejoy, M. E.; Nayegandhi, A.; Brock, J.; Wright, C. W.; Woodman, R.: UNSUPERVISED CLASSIFICATION OF VEGETATION COMMUNITIES USING AIRBORNE LIDAR DATA AT JEAN LAFITTE NATIONAL PARK, LOUISIANA, USA Wang, P.; Horwitz, M.: EROSIONAL AND DEPOSITIONAL CHARACTERISTICS OF REGIONAL OVERWASH DEPOSITS CAUSED BY HURRICANES IVAN AND DENNIS ALONG SANTA ROSA ISLAND, FLORIDA 081: Ocean Salinity in Climate and Ocean Dynamics Chair(s): Gary Lagerloef, [email protected]; Ray Schmitt, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1322. 1323. 1324. Hosoda, S.; Suga, T.; Shikama, N.; Mizuno, K.: GLOBAL SURFACE SALINITY CHANGE DETECTED BY ARGO FLOATS Bingham, F. M.: SEASONAL CYCLES OF MIXED LAYER SALINITY IN THE NORTH PACIFIC FROM ARGO DATA Larson, N. G.; Janzen, C. D.; Murphy, D. J.: AN INSTRUMENT FOR EXTENDING ARGO TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY MEASUREMENTS THROUGH THE SEA SURFACE (~) 108 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 1325. 1326. 1327. 1328. 1329. 1330. 1331. 1333. 1334. 1344. Bulusu, S.; MURTY, V. S.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF SEA SURFACE SALINITY FROM ARGO PROFILES AND HYCOM SIMULATIONS IN THE TROPICAL INDIAN OCEAN Hackert, E. C.; Busalacchi, A. J.; Ballabrera-Poy, J.; Zhang, R. H.; Murtugudde, R.: SALINITY BIASES IN LEVEL AND LAYER DATA ASSIMILATION RESULTS FOR THE TROPICAL PACIFIC Zhang, R. H.; Busalacchi, A. J.: IMPACTS OF FRESHWATER FLUX FORCING ON SALINITY AND INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY IN A HYBRID COUPLED MODEL OF THE TROPICAL PACIFIC Gourrion, J.; Chapron, B.; Reul, N.: VALIDATION STRATEGY FOR JOINT SSS/SST OBSERVATIONS IN THE CONTEXT OF SALINITY MONITORING FROM SPACE Fujii, Y.; Matsumoto, S.; Nakano, T.; Yasuda, T.; Kamachi, M.: SALINITY VARIABILITY IN THE TROPICAL AND SUBTROPICAL PACIFIC IN THE MRI MULTIVARIATE OCEAN VARIATIONAL ESTIMATION (MOVE) SYSTEM Wang/Yue, W. Y.; Wu/Dexing, W. D.: THE LONG-TERM VARIATION OF SALINITY IN THE BOHAI SEA Ueki, I.; Ando, K.: SALINITY VARIATION OBSERVED WITH TRITON ARRAY Jacob, S. D.; Le Vine, D. M.; Lagerloef, G. S.: SEA SURFACE SALINITY AND TRANSPORT VARIABILITY TO SURFACE FORCING CHANGES Heffner, D. M.; Subrahmanyam, B.: INDIAN OCEAN ROSSBY WAVES EXAMINED USING HYCOM SIMULATIONS AND MULTIPLE SATELLITE SENSORS Whitefield, J. D.; Johnson, R. J.; Knap, A. H.: DEEP WATER VARIABILITY AT THE BERMUDA TIME-SERIES SITES 1345. 090: UV Effects on Aquatic Ecosystems: Integration at Multiple Trophic Levels Chair(s): Wade H Jeffrey, [email protected]; Robert Sanders, [email protected]; Craig Williamson, [email protected]; Sandra Connelly, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1514. 1515. 1516. 1517. 086: Nonlinear Internal Wave Observations, Dynamics, and Acoustic Impacts 1518. Chair(s): Steven R Ramp, [email protected]; James Lynch, [email protected]; Oliver Fringer, [email protected] 1519. Location: Poster Hall 1335. 1336. 1337. 1338. 1339. 1340. 1341. 1342. 1343. Mirshak, R.; Kelley, D. E.; Bourgault, D.: A PARAMETER TO DESCRIBE INTERNAL GRAVITY WAVE SHOALING Schaferkotter, M. R.; Gallacher, P. C.: THE EVOLUTION OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES IN THE MIDATLANTIC BIGHT DURING SW06: NONHYDROSTATIC HINDCASTS Buijsman, M. C.; Kanarska, Y.; McWilliams, J. C.; Peacock, T.; Echeverri, P.: INTERNAL TIDES IN THE LUZON STRAIT: A ROMS-LABORATORY COMPARISON Shroyer, E. S.; Moum, J. N.; Nash, J. D.: SHOALING NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES Gawarkiewicz, G.; Andrey Shcherbina, A.; Bahr, F.; Marquette, C.; Abbot, P.: INTERACTION OF A SLOPE EDDY WITH THE SHELFBREAK FRONT IN THE MIDDLE ATLANTIC BIGHT: CONTRASTING SUMMER AND SPRING CONDITIONS Caruso, M. J.; Williams, N. J.; Lund, B.; Ramos, R.; Graber, H. C.: REMOTE SENSING OF INTERNAL WAVES IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT Kelley, D. E.; Mirshak, R.: INFERRING PROPAGATION DIRECTION OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES IN A VERTICALLY SHEARED BACKGROUND FLOW Nakayama, K.; Kakinuma, T.: INTERNAL WAVES IN A TWO-LAYER SYSTEM USING FULLY NONLINEAR INTERNAL-WAVE EQUATIONS Dauxois, T.; Gostiaux, L.; Mercier, M.: EXPERIMENTAL INTERNAL WAVES Ma, B. B.; Reeder, D. B.; Yang, Y. J.; Lou, J. Y.: OBSERVATION OF INTERNAL SOLITARY WAVES IN THE NORTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA LI, Q.; FARMER, D. M.; DUDA, T. F.: THE EFFECT OF A ROUGH SEA SURFACE ON INVERTED ECHO SOUNDER PERFORMANCE 1520. Pizarro, M.; Silva, A.; Gallegos, S.; Iturriaga, R.: AN UNUSUAL BLOOM OF TETRASELMIS SPP. OFF THE CHILEAN COAST DURING 2006 Neale, P. J.; Jeffrey, W. F.; Moeller, R. E.; Phillips-Kress, J.; Pakulski, J. D.; Porter, J. A.; Heinze, A.; Macaluso, A.; Sanders, R. W.; Speekman, C. L.: PLANKTONIC RESPONSE TO UV IN A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT: EFFECTS OF EARLY SPRING WARMING ON BIOLOGICAL WEIGHTING FUNCTIONS Rose, K. C.; Williamson, C. E.; Fischer, J. M.; Olson, M.; Connelly, S.; Tucker, A. J.; Overholt, E. P.: THE ROLE OF FISH AND ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IN STIMULATING ZOOPLANKTON MIGRATION Connelly, S. J.; Williamson, C. E.; Jellison, K. L.: THE POTENTIAL FOR INTERACTIONS BETWEEN ABIOTIC AND BIOTIC FORCING ON THE CONTROL OF THE FRESHWATER HUMAN PATHOGENS CRYPTOSPORIDIUM PARVUM AND GIARDIA LAMBLIA Tucker, A. J.; Williamson, C. E.; Rose , K. C.; Connelly, S. J.; Oris , J. T.; Olson, M. H.; Mitchell, D. L.: TEMPERATURE AND ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION INTERACT TO CONTROL INVASIVE WARMWATER FISHES. Miller, A. L.; Cochran, M. A.; Serdula, J. A.; Davis, K.; Ann, D.; Jeffrey, W. H.; Vaughan, P. P.: BACTERIAL GROWTH RESPONSE TO PHOTOACTIVE QUINONES Jeffrey, W. H.; Baldwin, A. J.; Heinze, A.; Macaluso, A.; Moeller, R.; Neale, P. J.; Pakulski, J. D.; Phillips-Kress, J.; Porter, J. H.; Sanders, R.: THE EFFECTS OF UV AND TEMPERATURE ON MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN A TEMPERATE LAKE 092: Nitrogen Supply in the Oligotrophic Ocean Chair(s): Cliff Law, [email protected]; Joe Montoya, [email protected]; Doug Capone, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 419. 420. 421. Capone, D. G.; Hewson, I.; Beinart, R.; Gunderson, T.; Zehr, J. P.; Sohm, J.; Guieu, C.: DIAZOTROPHS AND DIAZOTROPHY AT THE MEDITERRANEAN DYFAMED SITE Filippino, K. C.; Mulholland, M. R.; Bernhardt, P. W.; Mondragon, E.; Zehr, J. P.: CONTRASTING N2 FIXATION IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY OUTFLOW PLUME WITH SURROUNDING COASTAL AND SHELF WATERS Pennebaker, K. M.; Carter, B. J.; Letelier, R. M.; White, A. E.; Zehr, J. P.: INFLUENCE OF A MESOSCALE ANTICYCLONIC EDDY ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF UNICELLULAR CYANOBACTERIA IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN * represents Invited presentations ( ) 109 WEDNESDAY 1332. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 422. 423. 424. 425. WEDNESDAY 426. 427. 428. 429. 430. 431. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Rees, A. P.; Law, C. S.; Millward, N.: NATURAL RATES AND NUTRIENT LIMITATION OF NITROGEN FIXATION IN ATLANTIC AND MEDITERRANEAN WATERS. Grant, S. R.; Bernardino, A. F.; Bottjer, D.; Celussi, M.; Croal, L.; Eloe, E.; Gifford, S.; Gomez-Consarnau, L.; Hartz, A. J.; Hmelo, L.; Liu, Y.; Paerl, R. W.; Procise, L. A.; Radan, R. L.; Vaquer, R.; Yoshinaga, M. Y.: INVESTIGATION OF MESOSCALE BIOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS WITHIN A CYCLONIC EDDY IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE Langlois, R. J.; Huemmer, D.; Mills, M.; Ridame, C.; Davey, M.; Geider, R.; LaRoche, J.: RESPONSES OF DIAZOTROPHIC PHYLOTYPES TO INORGANIC NUTRIENTS AND SAHARAN DUST Bonilla-Rosso, G.; Falcon, L.; Espinosa-Asuar, L.; Eguiarte, L. E.; Castillo, A.; Escalante, A. E.; Cerritos, R.; Molina, V.; Heidelberg, K.; Rusch, D. B.; Halpern, A. L.; Venter, C.; Segovia, L.; Souza, V.: NITROGEN CYCLE POTENTIAL ASSESSMENT IN A MARINE MICROBIAL COMMUNITY FROM THE YUCATAN CHANNEL AND SARGASSOS THROUGH METAGENOMIC ANALYSIS. Bombar, D.; Dippner, J. W.; Doan, H. N.; Loick, N.; Ngoc, L. N.; Voss, M.: AN ESTIMATION OF DIFFERENT SOURCES OF NEW NITROGEN DURING MONSOON-FORCED UPWELLING OFF THE VIETNAMESE COAST Shiozaki, T.; Kodama, T.; Takeda, S.; Furuya, K.: CONTRIBUTION OF N2 FIXATION TO NEW PRODUCTION IN THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC ALONG 155OE Woodward, E. M.; Kitidis, V.: AMMONIA CONCENTRATIONS AND PROCESSES IN OLIGOTROPHIC WATERS. Sakamoto, C. M.; Needoba, J. A.; Plant, J. N.; Coletti, L. J.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF LOW LEVEL NITRATE, NITRITE, AND AMMONIA DISTRIBUTIONS FROM A COASTAL UPWELLING ZONE TO OLIGOTROPHIC WATERS Plant, J. N.; Johnson, K. S.; Sakamoto, C. M.; Needoba, J. A.; Coletti, L. J.: NEW TECHNIQUES FOR LOW LEVEL AMMONIUM MEASUREMENTS IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC OCEAN Moisander , P. H.; Beinart, R. A.; Voss, M.; Zehr, J. P.: DIVERSITY AND ABUNDANCE OF DIAZOTROPHIC MICRO-ORGANISMS IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA DETERMINED WITH QPCR AND A NIFH MICROARRAY 886. 887. 888. 889. 890. 891. 892. 102: The Gulf of Maine: Biogeochemical and Ecosystem Dynamics, Land-Water Interface Exchanges, Physical and Biological Coupling, and Human Induced Change Chair(s): Cynthia H. Pilskaln, [email protected]; David W. Townsend, [email protected]; James Manning, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1521. 1522. 101: Towards Improved Predictive Modeling of DOM Cycling: From the Watershed to the Coastal Ocean 1523. Chair(s): Maria Tzortziou, [email protected]; Patrick J. Neale, [email protected] 1524. Location: Poster Hall 883. 884. 885. Yamashita, Y.; Maie, N.; Tanoue, E.; Jaffé, R.: ASSESSMENT OF DYNAMICS OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS BY EEM-PARAFAC Abdulla, H. A.; Minor, E. C.; Dias, R. F.: STABLE ISOTOPIC AND FTIR INVESTIGATIONS INTO THE INTERACTION BETWEEN ORGANIC MODEL COMPOUNDS AND DOM IN A SUB-ESTUARY. Ingall, E. D.; Jackson, C. L.: COMPOSITION AND TRANSFORMATION OF ESTUARINE DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER FROM SAMPLES RECOVERED USING COMBINED ELECTRODIALYSIS AND REVERSE OSMOSIS Steen, A. D.; Arnosti, C.: DEGRADATION RATES OF EXTRACELLULAR ENZYMES IN POLAR AND SUBTROPICAL SEAWATER: IMPLICATIONS FOR BIOAVAILABILITY OF HIGH MOLECULAR WEIGHT ORGANIC CARBON Cai, Y. H.; Guo, L. D.: QUANTITATIVE DETERMINATION OF COLLOILDAL ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS IN RIVER WATER AND SEAWATER FROM THE GULF COAST REGION Tzortziou, M.; Neale, P. J.; Megonigal, P. J.; Butterworth, M.: TIDAL MARSH OUTWELLING OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY WATERSHED Stephens, B. M.; Minor, E. C.: HIGH-MOLECULAR WEIGHT DOM CHARACTERISTICS ALONG THE CONTINUUM FROM RIVER TO RESERVOIR: A COMPARISON OF CHESAPEAKE BAY AND LAKE SUPERIOR TRANSECTS Mason, C. T.; Morris, D. P.: THE ASSESSMENT OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER BIOLABILITY IN LOTIC SYSTEMS Schillawski, S. E.; Gordon, E.; Petsch, S. T.; Yu, Q.; Bauer, J.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY IN THE COMPOSITION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN NORTHEAST U.S. RIVERS: IMPLICATIONS FOR TERRESTRIAL INPUTS TO THE COASTAL OCEAN Wang, X. R.; Cai, Y. H.; Guo, L. D.: ABUNDANCE OF DISSOLVED AND COLLOIDAL CARBOHYDRATES IN SURFACE WATERS FROM THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER, PEARL RIVER AND BAY OF SAINT LOUIS 1525. 1526. 1527. Manning, C. A.; Jones, R. J.; Runge, J. A.: CROSS-SHELF VARIABILITY IN SEASONAL COMPOSITION OF ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN THE WESTERN GULF OF MAINE Jones, R. J.; Runge, J. A.: COOPERATIVE, LONGTERM ECOSYSTEM MONITORING IN THE GULF OF MAINE: OBSERVATIONS OF MESOZOOPLANKTON AND ICHTHYOPLANKTON FOR THE TIME PERIOD OF 2003-2007 Rubiano-Gomez, L.; Hetland, R. D.: GULF OF MAINE COASTAL CURRENT RESPONSE TO SEASONAL FRESHWATER DISCHARGE AND VARIABLE WIND FORCING Gregory, T. K.; Morrison, J. R.; Novak, M. G.: PROGRESS IN OBSERVING ESTUARINE AND COASTAL OCEAN PROCESSES WITH THE GREAT BAY COASTAL BUOY. Xue, H.; Liu, G.; Thomas, A.: A HINDCAST OF THE GULF OF MAINE FROM 1985 TO 2006 Liu, G.; Chai, F.; Xue, H.; Thomas, A.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATION OF PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS IN THE GULF OF MANE: OBSERVATIONS AND NUMERICAL INVESTIGATIONS Lysiak, N. S.; Moore, M. J.; Knowlton, A. R.; Valiela, I.: INTERPRETING A LONG-TERM STABLE ISOTOPE RECORD DERIVED FROM NORTH ATLANTIC RIGHT WHALE BALEEN: IMPLICATIONS FOR ECOSYSTEMLEVEL CHANGES IN THE GULF OF MAINE? (~) 110 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 116: Confronting Marine Biogeochemical Models With Data: Approaches to Quantitative Evaluation and Calibration 105: Diurnal Variability in the Surface Ocean and in Air-Sea Interaction Chair(s): Chris Merchant, [email protected]; Carol Anne Clayson, [email protected] Chair(s): Raymond Najjar, [email protected]; Eileen Hofmann, [email protected]; Chuck McClain, Charles. [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1528. 1529. 1530. 1531. 1532. 1534. 1535. Location: Poster Hall 907. 908. 909. 910. 911. 912. 913. 914. 113: Ecosystems: General Chair(s): Location: Poster Hall 1536. 1537. 1538. 1539. 1540. 915. Polyakov, O.; Powell, E. N.; Kraeuter, J. N.; Hofmann, E. E.; Bricelj, V. M.; Klinck, J. M.; Buckner, S. C.: VIRTUAL POPULATION ANALYSIS OF GREAT SOUTH BAY HARD CLAM (MERCENARIA MERCENARIA) POPULATIONS Kavanaugh, M. T.; Letelier, R. M.; Saraceno, M. C.; Spitz, Y. H.; Venegas, R. M.; Zirbel, M. J.: SATELLITE-DERIVED BIOPHYSICAL PROVINCES: TOOLS FOR OBJECTIVE INVESTIGATIONS OF MARINE ECOSYSTEMS Fielman, K.; Ueda, N.; Blair, N.; Liles, M.; Santos, S.: IT’S A SMALL WORLD: INVESTIGATING MOLECULAR AND PHYSIOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGICAL STOICHIOMETRY IN A SELF-SUSTAINING, ENCLOSED ECOSPHERE Walters, L. J.; Sacks, P. E.; Turner, T.: DIADEMA ANTILLARIUM: RECRUITMENT, DENSITIES, FORAGING AND THE FATE OF UNCONSUMED MACROALGAL FRAGMENTS IN FLORIDA AND THE US VIRGIN ISLANDS Colton, M.; Scheurer, D.; Valette-Silver, N.; Turner, E.: OPERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR ECOSYSTEM FORECASTING Mattern, J.; Dowd, M.; Fennel, K.: APPLICATION OF THE ENSEMBLE KALMAN FILTER TO A ONE-DIMENSIONAL, BIOGEOCHEMICAL OCEAN MODEL OF THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY SITE Withdrawn Kilbourne, B. F.; Dunne, J. P.; Stock, C.: EVALUATION OF ECOSYSTEM MODEL PERFORMANCE: EXPANSION OF THE REGIONAL TESTBEDS FRAMEWORK FROM THE ARABIAN SEA AND EQUATORIAL PACIFIC TO SOUTHERN OCEAN Smith, K. W.; McGillicuddy, D. J.; Lynch, D. R.: PARAMETER ESTIMATION USING AN ENSEMBLE SMOOTHER: THE EFFECT OF THE CIRCULATION IN BIOLOGICAL ESTIMATION Tian, T.; Friedrichs, M. A.; Hofmann, E. E.: MODEL-BASED ANALYSES OF NUTRIENT AND CARBON CYCLING ON THE U.S. EASTERN CONTINENTAL SHELF Miller, D. H.; Kreis, Jr., R. G.; Huang, W.; Xia, X.: QUANTITATIVE EVALUATION OF A MULTITROPHIC LEVEL ECOSYSTEM MODEL FOR POPULATION DYNAMICS OF THE INVASIVE SPECIES BYTHOTREPHES LONGIMANUS IN LAKE MICHIGAN Saba, V. S.; Friedrichs, M. A.; Carr, M.: ESTIMATING OCEANIC PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY: AN EVALUATION OF OCEAN COLOR ALGORITHMS AND GENERAL CIRCULATION MODELS Luo, Y.; Ducklow, H. W.; Friedrichs, M. A.: THE IMPORTANCE OF MICROBIAL DYNAMICS IN MARINE BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODELING: A TENTATIVE DATA ASSIMILATION STUDY OF OPEN OCEAN ECOSYSTEMS Pan, X.; Mannino, A.; Russ, M.; Hooker, S.: SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING RETRIEVALS OF INHERENT OPTICAL PROPERTIES WITHIN U.S. SOUTHERN MIDDLE ATLANTIC BIGHT 117: Turbulence, Mixing, and Multi-scale Interactions in Estuaries and Nearshore Environments Chair(s): W. Rockwell Geyer, [email protected]; Stephen Monismith, [email protected]; James A. Lerczak, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 110. 111. 112. 113. Hackett, E. E.; Luznik, L.; Katz, J.; Osborn, T. R.: EFFECT OF SPATIAL AVERAGING ON SPECTRAL CHARACTERISTICS IN THE FREQUENCY DOMAIN OF IN-SITU VELOCITY DATA Ishizu Miho, M.; Kitade Yujiro, Y.; Matsuyama Masaji , M.: THE COLD-WATER BELT OFF THE SOYA WARM CURRENT IN THE NORTHEAST COAST OF HOKKAIDO Popinet, S.; Stevens, C. L.: FLOW VARIABILITY IN AN ESTUARINE EMBAYMENT WITH MULTIPLE HEADLANDS zhang, f.; Drennan, W. M.; Haus, B. K.; Graber, H. C.: ON THE CURRENT-WAVE-WIND INTERACTION IN THE SHOALING WAVE EXPERIMENT * represents Invited presentations ( ) 111 WEDNESDAY 1533. Poulter, D. J.; Robinson, I. S.: ANALYSIS OF DIURNAL VARIABILITY WITH THE GHRSST HIGH RESOLUTION DIAGNOSTIC DATA SET Filipiak, M. J.; Merchant, C. J.; Kettle, H.; Le Borgne, P.; Gentemann, C. L.: DIURNAL VARIABILITY IN SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE DERIVED FROM GEOSTATIONARY SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS: SEASONAL PATTERNS AND DEPENDENCE ON WIND SPEED AND INSOLATION Noh, Y.; Goh, G.; Raasch, S.; Gryschka, M.: EVOLUTION OF TURBULENCE IN THE OCEAN MIXED LAYER RESPONDING TO THE STABILIZING BUOYANCY FLUX SIMULATED BY LES KIM, T. W.; Cho, Y. K.: VARIABILITY OF THE SEA WATER TEMPERATURE AND ITS PREDICTION IN TIDAL FLAT Zhang, X.; DiMarco, S. F.; Smith, D. C.: SEA BREEZE DRIVEN OCEAN RESPONSE ON A STRATIFIED CONTINENTAL SHELF AT THE CRITICAL LATITUDE Castro, S. L.; Wick, G. A.; Emery, W. J.: EVALUATION OF MODEL-DERIVED LOOK-UP TABLES FOR ESTIMATION OF DIURNAL WARMING IN SATELLITEDERIVED SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE PRODUCTS Jampana, V. S.; Edson, J. B.; Fairall, C. W.: ENERGY FLUX AND THE DISSIPATION DEFICIT IN THE MARINE SURFACE LAYER Jeffery, C. D.; Robinson, I. S.; Woolf, D. K.; Donlon, C. J.: THE DIURNAL RESPONSE OF SST AND AIR-SEA CO2 EXCHANGE TO PHASE-DEPENDENT WIND SPEED AND CLOUD COVER ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 114. 115. 116. 117. 118. 119. WEDNESDAY 120. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 917. Andradóttir, H. O.: THERMAL AND HYDRAULIC DYNAMICS OF SHALLOW LAKE ELLIDAVATN IN ICELAND KITADE, Y.; FUKUCHI, Y.; MATSUYAMA, M.: TURBULENT MIXING ASSOCIATED WITH INTERNAL TIDE IN SURUGA BAY Lerczak, J. A.; Geyer, W. R.; Scully, M. E.: THE TIMEDEPENDENT SECONDARY CIRCULATION IN A STRAIGHT, PARTIALLY-STRATIFIED ESTUARY Kulis, P. S.; Hodges, B. R.: GRAVITY CURRENT MIXING IN SHALLOW, WIND-DOMINATED SYSTEMS Orton, P. M.; McGillis, W. R.; Zappa, C. J.: TIDE AND WIND FORCING OF ESTUARINE UPPER WATER COLUMN TURBULENCE Tejada-Martinez, A. E.; Gargett, A. E.; Grosch, C. E.: ADCP MEASUREMENTS WITHIN A LARGE-EDDY SIMULATOR OF LANGMUIR TURBULENCE IN SHALLOW WATER Giddings, S. N.; Fong, D. A.; Monismith, S. G.; Edwards, K. A.; Jessup, A. T.: THE INFLUENCE OF SHOAL/CHANNEL INTERACTIONS IN A SHALLOW, MACROTIDAL ESTUARY ON FRONTOGENESIS, TRANSVERSE CIRCULATIONS AND VERTICAL MIXING 918. 919. 920. 921. 922. 118: Ecological Forecasts for the Ecological Observing Needs of the Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS): Tracking Factors that Influence Living Marine 923. Chair(s): Jonathan Phinney, [email protected]; Hein- Rune Skjoldal, [email protected]; Jason Link, [email protected] 924. Location: Poster Hall 1541. 1542. 1543. 1544. 1545. 1546. 128: Comparing Aquatic Ecosystems Flood, R. D.; Cerrato, R.: BENTHIC COMMUNITIES, ACOUSTIC BACKSCATTER AND ECOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS Su, J.; Tian, T.; Merico, A.; Wirtz, K.; Staneva, J.: AN INTEGRATED DATA-MODELING APPROACH FOR INVESTIGATING THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE GERMAN BIGHT ECOSYSTEM Peterson, W. T.; Casillas, E.; Liu, H.: USE OF ECOLOGICAL DATA TO PRODUCE FORECASTS OF THE NUMBER OF PACIFIC SALMON THAT RETURN TO SPAWN TO RIVERS OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST XU, Y.; CHAI, F.; CHAO, Y.; ROSE, K.; CHAVEZ, F.: SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF PERUVIAN ANCHOVY GROWTH AND POPULATION DYNAMICS: A MODEL STUDY Withdrawn Hare, J. A.; Alexander, M. A.; Fogarty, M. J.: COUPLING CLIMATE AND FISH POPULATION MODELS: AN EXAMPLE BASED ON A MECHANISTIC RECRUITMENT HYPOTHESIS FOR ATLANTIC CROAKER Chair(s): Jason Link, [email protected]; Anna-Stiina Heiskanen, [email protected]; Bernard Megrey, [email protected]; Angel Borja, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1547. 1548. 1549. Withdrawn Kearney, K. A.; Sarmiento, J. L.; Christensen, V.; Gnanadesikan, A.; Stock, C.: LINKING A LOWER TROPHIC LEVEL BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODEL WITH AN UPPER TROPHIC LEVEL ECOSYSTEM MODEL Dettmann, E. H.: FACTORS INFLUENCING NITROGENCHLOROPHYLL RELATIONSHIPS FOR TEN ESTUARIES ON THE U.S. ATLANTIC AND GULF OF MEXICO COASTS 133: Ocean Modeling in the Eddying Regime Chair(s): Mathew Maltrud, [email protected]; Matthew Hecht, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1255. 124: Influence of Tropical Rivers on Oceanic Biogeochemical Cycles 1256. Chair(s): Patricia L. Yager, [email protected]; Ajit Subramaniam, [email protected]; Jeffrey Richey, [email protected] 1257. Location: Poster Hall 1258. 916. Colebank, Y.; Reison, D.; Subramaniam, A.: USING ARGO PROFILERS AND OCEAN COLOR SATELLITE DATA TO TRACE THE CONGO RIVER McGuinness, L. M.; Corredor, J. E.; Morell, J. M.; Kerkhof, L. J.: STABLE ISOTOPE PROBING USING 13C AND 15N IN THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME Antoun, H.; Corredor, J.; Morell, J.; Lopez, J.: INFLUENCE OF THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME ON PHYTOPLANKTON SIZE CLASS DISTRIBUTION IN THE CARIBBEAN Corredor, J. E.; Morell, J. M.; López, J. M.; Cabrera, A.: COMMUNITY COMPOSITION, PHOTOSYNTHETIC CAPACITY, DIAZOTROPH ABUNDANCE AND NITROGENASE ACTIVITY OF PHOTOTROPHIC PLANKTON IN THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME John, D. E.; Zielinski, B. L.; Bronk, D. A.; Byrne, R. H.; Corredor, J. E.; Paul, J. H.: QUANTIFICATION AND CLONING OF CARBON-FIXATION (RUBISCO) MRNA TRANSCRIPTS FROM THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME AND EASTERN CARIBBEAN SEA Foster, R. A.; Subramaniam, A.; Zehr, J. P.: INFLUENCE OF THE CONGO AND NIGER RIVER PLUMES ON DISTRIBUTIONS OF FREE-LIVING AND SYMBIOTIC CYANOBACTERIA Brocco, B. A.; Morell, J. M.; Corredor, J. E.; Lopez, J.: INFLUENCES OF THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME IN THE BALANCE BETWEEN PLANKTON PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND RESPIRATION IN THE CARIBBEAN SEA Fraser, C. A.; Corredor, J. E.; Morell, J. M.; McGuinness, L. R.; Kerkhof, L. J.: ACTIVE MICROBES IN THE ORINOCO RIVER PLUME Yager, P. L.: HOW AMAZON RIVER INORGANIC CARBON AND NUTRIENT CONCENTRATIONS LIKELY DETERMINE THE EXTENT OF CARBON SEQUESTRATION IN THE WESTERN TROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC. 1259. Cummins, P. F.; Holloway, G.: THE REYNOLDS STRESS IN SHEARED TWO-DIMENSIONAL TURBULENCE Hammann, A. C.; Gnanadesikan, A.: EDDY PARAMETERIZATIONS IN A WIND-DRIVEN CHANNEL WITH TOPOGRAPHY Jeffery, N.; Wingate, B.; Kurien, S.: THE IMPORTANCE OF TILTED ROTATION IN BAROCLINIC AND SYMMETRIC INSTABILITIES Hecht, M. W.; Hunke, E. C.; Maltrud, M. E.: A BROADRANGING FORMULATION OF LATERAL MIXING Kurogi, M.; Hasumi, H.: EFFECTS OF THE WIND STRESS FIELD AND STRATIFICATION ON THE KUROSHIO PATH VARIATION STUDIED BY A NESTED GRID OGCM (~) 112 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 1260. 1261. 1262. 1263. 1264. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Mitsudera, H.; Ikumi, Y.; Kawaguchi, Y.; Nakamura, T.: NUMERICAL MODELING AND PARAMETERIZATION OF DENSE SHELF WATER FORMATION DUE TO BRINE REJECTION OVER A GENTLE SLOPE, WITH AN APPLICATION TO THE SEA OF OKHOTSK Nishikawa, S.; Tsujino, H.; Nakano, H.: IMPROVED REPRESENTATION OF MIXED LAYER DEPTH AND MODE WATERS IN THE HIGH-RESOLUTION MODELS OF THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC Matthews, D. K.; Emery, W. J.: MAPPING EKMAN CURRENTS FROM SATELLITE AND IN SITU DATA IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT Griesel, A.; Gille, S. T.; Sprintall, J.; McClean, J. L.; LaCasce, J. L.; Maltrud, M. E.: HOW WELL DO LAGRANGIAN DIFFUSIVITIES PARAMETERIZE THE EFFECTS OF EDDIES IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN OF 1/10° POP ? Berloff, P. S.; Kamenkovich, I. V.; Pedlosky, J.: ON FORMATION OF MULTIPLE ZONAL JETS IN THE OCEANS 1276. 1277. 1278. 1279. 1280. 1281. 143: Meso- and Smaller-Scale Processes in the Coastal Ocean: Challenges for Monitoring and Prediction 1282. Location: Poster Hall 1265. 1266. 1267. 1268. 1269. 1270. 1271. 1272. 1273. 1274. 1275. Godin, O. A.; Zavorotny , V. U.; Zabotina, L.: WAVEFRONT STABILITY IN AN INHOMOGENEOUS OCEAN Kawamura, Y.; Kitade, Y.: ENERGY DISSIPATION OF INTERNAL TIDES IN SAGAMI BAY, JAPAN Wang, X.; Chao, Y.; Farrara , J.; Li, Z.; Li, P.; Park, K.; Vu, Q.; McWillams , J. C.; Johnston, S.; Rudnick , D.; Klymak, J.; Pinkel, R.: MODELING AND PREDICTING TIDES IN MONTEREY BAY, CALIFORNIA Dykes, J. D.; Wang, D. W.: A REGIONAL WAVE MODELING SYSTEM IN THE ADRIATIC SEA Rennie, S. E.; Brandt, A.; Herzog, A. P.; Criss, T. B.: ANALYSIS OF HIGH-SPEED STEREOPHOTOGRAMMETRY OF OCEAN SURFACE WAVES Kang, D.; Fringer, O. B.: SIMULATIONS OF THE INTERACTION OF MESOSCALE CURRENTS AND INTERNAL TIDES Andres, M.; Park, J.; Wimbush, M.; Chang, K.: 10–70-DAY VARIABILITY OF KUROSHIO TRANSPORT IN THE EAST CHINA SEA Huang, H. P.; Curchitser, E. N.; Kaplan, A.; Edwards, C. A.: HORIZONTAL TEMPERATURE GRADIENT, VORTICITY, AND STRAIN IN THE SUBMESOSCALE OCEAN VARIABILITY FROM NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS Margolina, T.; Collins, C. A.; Rago, T. A.: ACROSS-SHORE EDDY TRANSPORT OFF CENTRAL CALIFORNIA Brody, S. R.; Girton, J. B.; Kunze, E.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE INTERNAL TIDE ENTERING MONTEREY CANYON Usui, N.; Tsujino, H.; Nakano, H.; Fujii, Y.; Kamachi, M.: FORMATION PROCESS OF THE KUROSHIO LARGE MEANDER USING A REGIONAL ASSIMILATION SYSTEM MOVE/MRI.COM-WNP 145: Ocean Circulation Using Satellite Gravimetry and Altimetry Chair(s): Victor Zlotnicki, [email protected]; Donald P. Chambers, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1353. 1354. 1355. 1356. 1357. 1358. 1359. 1360. Bringas, F.; Goni, G. J.; DiNezio, P. N.: OBSERVED VARIABILITY IN THE BRAZIL CURRENT FRONT AND ITS LINK TO A RECENT TREND IN THE SUBTROPICAL GYRE Knudsen, P.; Andersen, O. B.; Rio, M. H.; Johannesen, J.; Haines, K.: THE GOCINO PROJECT - MEAN SEA SURFACES AND MEAN DYNAMIC TOPOGRAPHIES FROM SPACE FOR OCEAN MODELLING Cadden, D. D.; Subrahmanyam, B.: SURFACE AND SUBSURFACE GEOSTROPHIC CURRENT VARIABILITY FROM ALTIMETRY Zlotnicki, V.: LARGE SCALE MODES OF BOTTOM PRESSURE VARIABILITY FROM GRACE AND THE ECCO MODEL - REVISITED Chu, P. C.; Fan, C. W.; Sun, C.: OPTIMAL SPECTRAL DECOMPOSITION (OSD) FOR RECONSTRUCTING SURFACE OCEAN CIRCULATIONS FROM SATELLITE ALTIMETRY Hiroto Abe, H.; Kimio Hanawa, K.: MEAN SEA SURFACE HEIGHT FIELD IN THE NORTH PACIFIC Duan, X.; Guo, J. Y.; Shum, C. K.: FILTERING OF GRACE VARIABLE GRAVITY SOLUTIONS TO MITIGATE LAND-OCEAN SIGNAL LEAKAGE Guo, J. Y.; Shum, C. K.: DESTRIPING AND FILTERING OF GRACE VARIABLE GRAVITY SOLUTIONS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 113 WEDNESDAY Chair(s): Jeffrey W. Book, [email protected]; Michel Rixen, [email protected]; Tamay Ozgokmen, [email protected]; Lakshmi Kantha, [email protected] Liao, Q.; Bootsma, H.: IN-SITU PIV MEASUREMENT OF TURBULENT FLOW STRUCTURES OVER A MUSSELCOVERED BED IN LAKE MICHIGAN Parks, A. B.; Shay, L. K.; Martinez-Pedraja, J.; Gurgel, K. W.; Haus, B. K.; Johns, W. E.: OBSERVED SUBMESOSCALE SURFACE CURRENT VARIABILITY IN THE FLORIDA STRAITS DETECTED BY WERA Simoncelli, S.; Pinardi, N.; Mariano, A. J.; Oddo, P.: TOWARDS RAPID ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT AND COASTAL FORECASTING IN THE NORTHERN ADRIATIC Wang, J. B.; Rizzoli, P. M.; Jochum, M.; Seo, H.: THE IMPACT OF MESOSCALE VARIABILITY ON THE COASTAL DYNAMICS OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN COAST IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN Carniel, S.; Kantha, l. h.; Book, J. W.; Rixen, M.; Prandke, H.; Sclavo, M.: TURBULENCE MEASUREMENTS ACROSS A COASTAL FILAMENT IN THE SOUTHERN ADRIATIC SEA DURING SPRING 2006 Arnold, N. P.; Kaplan, A.; Huang, H. P.; Curchitser, E. N.; Edwards, C. A.: STATISTICS OF SMALL-SCALE AND SHORT-TERM OCEAN SURFACE VARIABILITY IN MONTEREY BAY FROM SIMULATIONS AND OBSERVATIONS Rixen, M.; Carta, A.; Grandi, L.; Gualdesi, L.; Ranelli, P.; Book, J.; Martin, P.; Preller, R.; Oddo, P.; Pinardi, N.; Guarnieri, A.; Chiggiato, J.; Carniel, S.; Russo, A.; Orlic, M.; Tudor, M.; Vandenbulcke, L.; DART Consortium: HOW TO RECONCILE CONTRADICTING FORECASTS IN THE COASTAL OCEAN? ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 158: Time-series Observations of Biogeochemical Processes and Their Long Term Trends 159: Estuarine and Coastal Hydrodynamics: Advancement in Observational Technology and Modeling Development Chair(s): Susanne Neuer, [email protected]; Frank Muller-Karger, [email protected]; Laura Lorenzoni, [email protected]; Michael W. Lomas, [email protected] Chair(s): Chunyan Li, [email protected]; Arnoldo Valle-Levinson, [email protected]; Robert Chant, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall Location: Poster Hall 934. 935. 936. 937. WEDNESDAY 938. 939. 940. 941. 942. 943. 944. 945. 946. 947. 948. 949. 121. 122. Withdrawn O’Donnell, J.; Bohlen, W. F.; Houk, A.: SURFACE CURRENTS AND BOTTOM OXYGEN VARIATIONS IN WESTERN LONG ISLAND SOUND Jackman, L. M.; Bates, N. R.; Johnson, R. J.; Lomas, M. W.: VARIABILITY OF THE CARBON BUDGET AND CONSEQUENTIAL FLUXES AT THE BATS SITE DuBois, S. L.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Berelson, W.; Hammond, D.; Paneva, R.: CHARACTERIZATION OF INORGANIC AND ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS SPECIES IN THE SAN PEDRO BASIN, CALIFORNIA Tiahlo, M.; Johnson, R. J.; Lomas, M. W.: PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE NORTHWESTERN SARGASSO SEA: 19 YEARS OF DATA FROM THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY. XU, Y.; Chant, R. J.; Glenn, S. M.; Schofield, O.: VARIABILITY IN SST AND CHL-A IN THE NEW YORK BIGHT: SPRINGTIME IN WINTER? Muñoz-Hincapié, M. F.; Morell, J.; Corredor, J.: RESPIRATORY RATES AT THE CARIBBEAN TIME SERIES STATION (CATS) Leinweber, A.; Gruber, N.; Shipe, R.: SEASONAL TO PENTADAL CARBON CYCLING IN SANTA MONICA BAY, CA Neeley, A.; Dacey, J. W.; Toole, D. A.; Nemcek, N.; Percy, D.; Bates, N. R.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF OCEANIC ORGANIC SULFUR COMPOUNDS IN THE SUBTROPICAL GYRE OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN: DMS, DMSP AND DMSO Withdrawn Lyons, G. C.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Thunell, R.: PHOSPHORUS COMPOSITION OF SINKING PARTICLES FROM GUAYMAS BASIN, GULF OF CALIFORNIA Lomas, D. A.; Lomas, M. W.: MULTI-YEAR CHANGES IN PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS AND COMPOSITION AT THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY (BATS) SITE Van Engeland, T.; Knuijt, A.; Laane, R. W.; Soetaert, K.; Middelburg, J. J.: WAVELET ANALYSES SHOW HIGH VARIABILITY IN RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN DISSOLVED ORGANIC NITROGEN, PRIMARY PRODUCERS AND RIVER DISCHARGE IN THE SOUTHERN NORTH SEA Nolan, K. M.; Chelton, D. B.; Schlax, M. G.; Lukas, R.; Lethaby, P.; Santiago-Mandujano, F.: STATISTICAL SURVEY OF MESOSCALE EDDIES AND THEIR WATER PROPERTIES IN THE REGION OF STATION ALOHA Ishida, H.; Watanabe, Y. W.; Ishizaka, J.; Nakano, T.; Nagai, N.; Watanabe, Y.; Maeda, N.; Magi, M.: RECENT TREND OF THE VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION AND THE SIZE COMPOSITION OF CHLOROPHYLL-A IN THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC REGION Bell, S. J.; Johnson, R. R.; Lomas, M. W.; Bates, N. R.; Knap, A. H.: INTERDECADAL NUTRIENT VARIABILITY THROUGHOUT THE WATER COLUMN IN THE WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. 133. 134. 135. Withdrawn Peery, A. T.; Shearman, R. K.; Barth, J. A.; Erofeev, A.: MAPPING SEMI-REGULAR AUTONOMOUS UNDERWATER VEHICLE GLIDER OBSERVATIONS ONTO A CROSS-SHELF SECTION Ullman, D. S.; Codiga, D. L.; Kincaid, C. R.: VELOCITY STRUCTURE AND EDDY PROPERTY FLUXES IN THE MID-SHELF FRONTAL ZONE OF THE NEW YORK BIGHT Vásquez, Y. E.; Alfonso, J. A.; LaBrecque, J. J.; Angel, I. F.: DISTRIBUTION OF TRACE METALS IN THREE VENEZUELAN ESTUARIES LEE, J.; SHENG, Y. P.: AN UNSTRUCTURED-GRID 3D HYDRODYNAMIC MODEL FOR SIMULATING ESTUARINE AND COASTAL HYDRODYNAMICS DURING NORMAL AND EXTREME EVENTS Gay III, S. M.: FORCING OF SEMIDIURNAL CURRENTS BY TIDES, WINDS AND BATHYMETRY IN A SMALL FJORD IN PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND, ALASKA Waterhouse, A. F.; Valle-Levinson, A.: SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF TIDAL AND RESIDUAL FLOWS AT A TIDAL INLET Lee, J.; Valle-Levinson, A.; Austin, J.; Pringle, J.: MODELING OF WIND-DRIVEN INTERACTIONS AT THE ESTUARY/ OCEAN TRANSITION Erofeev, A.; Barth, J. A.; Shearman, R. K.; Peery, T.; RubianoGomez, L.; Brodersen, J. G.: LONG-TERM GLIDER OBSERVATIONS OFF THE OREGON COAST Winant, C. D.; Valle-Levinson, A.: OBSERVATIONS OF WAVE- AND WIND-INDUCED REYNOLDS STRESSES IN A WINDY BAY Murphy, P. L.; Valle-Levinson, A.: TIDAL AND RESIDUAL CIRCULATION IN ST. ANDREW BAY, FL Aleszczyk, M. L.; Ullman, D. S.; Kohut, J. T.; Kincaid, C. R.: CROSS-FRONTAL SURFACE TEMPERATURE AND VELOCITY STRUCTURE IN THE NEW JERSEY MIDSHELF FRONTAL ZONE Cheng, P.; Valle-Levinson, A.: HYDRODYNAMICS OVER HOLLOWS IN ESTUARIES Bennett, D. C.; Houk, A. E.; O’Donnell, J.: OBSERVATIONS OF TIDAL AND RESIDUAL CIRCULATION IN LONG ISLAND SOUND Castelao, R. M.; Glenn, S.; Schofield, O.; Chant, R.; Wilkin, J.; Kohut, J.: SEASONAL EVOLUTION OF HYDROGRAPHIC FIELDS IN THE CENTRAL MIDDLE ATLANTIC BIGHT FROM GLIDER OBSERVATIONS 162: Dynamics of Colored Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM) in the Global Ocean Chair(s): Alison Branco, [email protected]; Collin Roesler, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 950. Schuman, C.; Urban-Rich, J.: ZOOPLANKTON PRODUCED FLUORESCENT DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (FDOM) IN THE GREAT SOUTH CHANNEL (~) 114 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 951. 952. 953. 954. 955. 956. Sauer, M. J.; Roesler, C. R.: A NOVEL RADIATIVE TRANSFER APPROACH FOR IMPROVING SATELLITEBASED CHLOROPHYLL ESTIMATES IN THE PRESENCE OF CDOM McKnight, D. M.; Cawley, K.; Chin, Y.; Miller, P. L.; Foreman, C.: CHARACTERISTICS OF A MICROBIALLY-DERIVED IHSS REFERENCE FULVIC ACID FROM A SALINE COASTAL POND IN ANTARCTICA Keith, D. J.; Kuhn-Hines, A.: THE DISTRIBUTION OF COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) AND SALINITY ALONG THE SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND COAST FROM AIRCRAFT REMOTE SENSING Branco, A. B.; Kremer, J. N.: THE EFFECT OF WATERSHED LAND COVER ON THE ALLOCHTHONOUS INPUT OF COLORED DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (CDOM) TO COASTAL RECEIVING WATERS Reader, H. E.; Miller, W. L.; Salisbury, J.; St.Louis, J.; Plagge, A.: DISTRIBUTIONS OF CHROMOPHORIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER DURING THE GULF OF MEXICO EAST COAST CARBON (GOMECC) CRUISE SUMMER 2007 Nelson, J. R.; Subramaniam, A.; Tzeng, M.; Robertson, C. Y.; Del Vecchio, R.: SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR RECORD OF SEASONAL AND INTER-ANNUAL VARIABILITY IN CDOM DYNAMICS IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT Brown, C. A.; Huot, Y.; Gentili, B.; Claustre, H.: INTERPRETATION AND APPLICATIONS OF SECOND ORDER VARIABILITY IN SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR: THE ROLE OF NON-ALGAL MATTER AND BACKSCATTERING 144. 145. 146. 147. 148. 149. 150. 151. 152. 165: Advances in Coastal Morphodynamics: From Estuaries and Beaches to Deltas and Shelves 153. Chair(s): Art Trembanis, [email protected]; Carl Friedrichs, [email protected]; Andrew Short, [email protected]; Jeff List, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 136. 137. 138. 139. 140. 141. 142. 143. 154. Hansen, J. E.; Barnard, P. L.; Erikson, L.; Eshleman, J. L.: WAVE FORCED SUB-AERIAL BEACH VARIABILITY, OCEAN BEACH, SAN FRANCISCO, CA Forrest, B. M.; Finkl, C. W.; Andrews, J. L.; Campbell, T. J.: MORPHODYNAMIC HISTORY OF LONGBOAT PASS, MANATEE COUNTY, FLORIDA Li, M. Z.; Zou, Q.; Hannah, C.; Perrie, W.; Prescott, R.; Toulany, B.: NUMERICAL MODELLING OF SEABED DISTURBANCE AND SEDIMENT MOBILITY, AND IMPLICATIONS TO MORPHODYNAMICS ON THE STORM-DOMINATED SABLE ISLAND BANK, SCOTIAN SHELF George, D. A.; Warrick, J. A.: ELWHA RIVER DELTA: GEOMORPHOLOGY OF A MIXED-SEDIMENT BEACH Nebel, S. H.; Trembanis, A. C.: SHORELINE ANALYSIS AND BARRIER ISLAND DYNAMICS- EVENT TO DECADAL SCALE PATTERNS FROM CEDAR AND PARRAMORE ISLANDS, VIRGINIA Lee, G.; Kim, G.; Sim, J.; Kim, M.: WAVE EFFECTS ON SEDIMENT TRANSPORT ON THE TIDAL FLAT, GANGWHA, KOREA Lees, D. C.; Driskell, W. B.: ARMORED MIXED-SOFT SEDIMENTS - DISTINCTIVELY DIFFERENT SEDIMENT PARADIGMS? COSTAS, S.; ZHANG, K.; LEATHERMAN, S.: THE INFLUENCE OF GEOLOGIC FRAMEWORK ON BEACH MORPHDYNAMICS ALONG THE SOUTHEAST COAST OF FLORIDA 155. 156. Stubbs, C. C.; Sautter, L. R.; Harris, M. S.: MULTIBEAM AND SCUBA EXPLORATIONS OF A MID-SHELF ANCIENT RIVER SYSTEM McNamara, D. E.; Murray, A. B.; Smith, M. D.: THE IMPACT OF LARGE SCALE COASTAL DYNAMICS ON THE OPTIMIZATION OF BEACH REPLENISHMENT DECISIONS Bearman, J. A.; Foxgrover, A.; Friedrichs, C. T.; Jaffe, B. E.: FACTORS CONTROLLING TIDAL FLAT MORPHODYANMICS IN SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO BAY Stevens, H. J.; Trembanis, A. C.; Smith, A. W.: COASTAL MONITORING: DEVELOPMENTS AND INSIGHTS ON PROJECT DESIGN Thomas, R. C.; Heilman, D. J.; Darnell, J. T.: PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS FOR NUMERICAL MODELING IN SALT MARSH DESIGN, TEXAS GULF COAST Noll, C. J.; Dellapenna, T. M.; Webster, R. K.: HYPERPYCNAL FLOW WITHIN LOW GRADIENT RIVER DELTAS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR SEDIMENT TRANSPORT TO THE SHELF: BRAZOS RIVER Fielder, B. R.; Dellapenna, T. M.; Mike Savarese, M.; Noll, C. J.: NATURAL GEOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO ANTHROPOGENIC ALTERATIONS OF THE NAPLES BAY ESTUARINE SYSTEM Bell, P. S.: MAPPING THE BATHYMETRY OF THE DEE ESTUARY USING WAVE INVERSIONS OF MARINE RADAR IMAGE SEQUENCES Robertson, W.; Zhang, K.; Finkl, C. W.; Whitman, D.: HURRICANE-INDUCED DEPTH OF CLOSURE DERIVED FROM AIRBORNE LASER BATHYMETRY INDICATES HYDRODYNAMIC AND GEOLOGIC CONTROLS IN SOUTHEAST FLORIDA Brodie, K. L.; McNinch, J. E.: PERSISTENT BEACH MEGACUSPS CONTROLLED BY HYDRODYNAMIC FEEDBACKS AROUND NEARSHORE BATHYMETRY: KITTY HAWK, NC Van der Wegen, M.; Roelvink, J. A.; Jaffe, B.: APPLICATION OF A 2D NUMERICAL MODEL IN THE SAN FRANCICSO ESTUARY TO ESTIMATE MORPHODYNAMIC CHANGE FROM GLOBAL WARMING AND SEA LEVEL RISE Kraatz, L. M.; McNinch, J. E.; Friedrichs, C. T.: GEOMORPHIC CHANGES OF FINE-GRAINED SEDIMENTARY FURROWS: INSIGHT INTO SEDIMENT TRANSPORT AND DEPOSITION IN THE YORK RIVER ESTUARY Kim, B. O.; Lee, C. K.: MORPHOLOGY OF TOMBOLOLIKE DEPOSITS IN THE KOKUNSAN ARCHIPELAGO, WESTERN KOREA 166: Potential for Atmospheric CO2 Sequestration in the Ocean Chair(s): Philip Kithil, [email protected]; Wiebke J. Boeing, Ph.D., [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 432. 433. Yamada, N.; Suzumura, M.; Tsurushima, N.; Harada, K.: BACTERIAL ACTIVITY IN THE LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS SIMULATING OCEAN CO2 SEQUESTRATION Shitashima , K.; Maeda, Y.; Ohsumi, T.: HYDROTHERMAL SYSTEMS AS NATURAL ANALOGUE OF CCS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 115 WEDNESDAY 957. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 169: Global Mode and Intermediate Waters: Their Physics, Biogeochemistry, and Variability 180: Long-term Ecological Research in the Deep Sea Chair(s): Henry A. Ruhl, [email protected]; David M. Bailey, [email protected] Chair(s): Rana A Fine, [email protected]; Lynne Talley, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall Location: Poster Hall 1361. 1362. 1363. 1364. WEDNESDAY 1365. 1366. 1367. 1368. 1369. 1370. 1371. 1550. Hartin, C. A.; Fine, R. A.; Willey, D. A.; Happell, J.: ESTIMATED RATES OF FORMATION OF SUBANTARCTIC MODE WATER AND ANTARCTIC INTERMEDIATE WATER IN THE SOUTHEAST PACIFIC Sato, K.; Suga, T.: STRUCTURE AND MODIFICATION OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC EASTERN SUBTROPICAL MODE WATER Holzer, M.; Primeau, F. W.: THE PATH-DENSITY DISTRIBUTION OF OCEANIC SURFACE-TO-SURFACE TRANSPORT AND ITS LONG-TIME ASYMPTOTICS Holte, J. W.; Talley, L. D.; Chereskin, T. K.; Sloyan, B. M.: OBSERVATIONS OF SUBANTARCTIC MODE WATER MIXED LAYERS AND ANTARCTIC INTERMEDIATE WATER DURING AUSTRAL WINTER 2005 Gary, S. F.; Lozier, M. S.; Böning, C. W.; Bower, A. S.: EXPLORING THE VARIABILITY OF EXPORT PATHWAYS OF LABRADOR SEA WATER FROM THE SUBPOLAR NORTH ATLANTIC USING SIMULATED TRAJECTORIES Cashman, K. E.; Lozier, M. S.: VARIABILITY IN THE NORTHWARD PENETRATION OF MEDITERRANEAN OUTFLOW WATER Korablev, A. A.; Johannessen, O. M.; Pnyushkov, A. V.; Smirnov, A. V.: CENSUS OF THE THERMOHALINE ANOMALIES PROPAGATED THROUGH THE NORDIC SEAS DERIVED FROM HISTORICAL DATA 1896-2006 Tsubouchi, T.; Suga, T.; Hanawa, K.: COMPARISON STUDY OF SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF SUBTROPICAL MODE WATERS IN THE WORLD OCEAN Dmitrenko, I. A.; Kirillov, S. A.; Ivanov, V. V.; Woodgate, R. A.: EDDY CARRIES THE SIGNATURE OF INTERACTION BETWEEN THE FRAM STRAIT AND BARENTS SEA BRANCHES OF THE ATLANTIC WATER INFLOW INTO THE ARCTIC OCEAN Ivanov, V. V.; Repina, I. A.; Alexeev, V. A.; Polyakov, I. V.; Dmitrenko, I. A.: PROPAGATION OF SEASONAL SIGNAL IN THE ATLANTIC WATER LAYER IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN Herraiz-Borreguero, L.; Rintoul, S.; Coleman, R.: TEMPORAL EVOLUTION OF SUBANTARCTIC MODE WATERS 1551. 1552. 182: Variability and Trends in Oceanic Oxygen: From a Tracer of Biological Production to a Bellwether of Climate Change Chair(s): Nicolas Gruber, [email protected]; Arne Körtzinger, [email protected]; Steven Riser, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 434. 435. 436. 437. 438. 439. 171: U.S. GODAE: Ocean Prediction with the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM ) 440. Chair(s): Eric Chassignet, [email protected]; Harley Hurlburt, [email protected]; George Halliwell, [email protected]; Jim Cummings, [email protected] 1288. 1289. Janzen, C. D.; Larson, N. G.: ASSESSING THE CALIBRATION STABILITY OF OXYGEN SENSOR DATA ON ARGO PROFILING FLOATS USING ROUTINE WOCE MONITORING DATA FROM HOT Galbraith, E. D.; Sarmiento, J. L.; Bianchi, D.: WHAT LIMITS THE EXTENT OF ANOXIA IN THE GLOBAL OCEAN? Nicholson, D. P.; Emerson, S. R.; Eriksen, C. C.: DEEP EUPHOTIC ZONE NET COMMUNITY PRODUCTION IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC GYRE FROM AUTONOMOUS GLIDER MEASUREMENTS Moore, T. S.; Nees, H. A.; Madison, A. S.; Holyoke, R. R.; Nuzzio, D. B.; Luther, G. W.: DESIGN AND APPLICATION OF AN UNATTENDED MOORED OBSERVATORY IN THE LOWER DELAWARE BAY Körtzinger, A.; Send, U.; Wallace, D.; Karstensen, J.; DeGrandpre, M.: THE SEASONAL CYCLE OF O2 AND PCO2 IN THE CENTRAL LABRADOR SEA: ATMOSPHERIC, BIOLOGICAL AND PHYSICAL IMPLICATIONS Altabet, M. A.; Chai, F.; Gangopadhyay, A.: HIGHRESOLUTION MODEL SIMULATION OF THE SUBOXIC ZONES OF THE EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC Sasano, D.; Tokieda, T.; Ishii, M.; Midorikawa, T.; Kitagawa, T.; Tanaka, H.; Kamiya, H.: DECADAL TREND OF DISSOLVED OXYGEN IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC ALONG 165°E 186: Science at Aquarius: Multidisciplinary Studies of a Tropical Reef Location: Poster Hall 1287. Bailey, D. M.; Collins, M. A.; Gordon, J. D.; Zuur, A. F.; Priede, I. G.: LONG-TERM CHANGES IN ATLANTIC DEEP-WATER FISH POPULATIONS: EFFECTS OF FISHING AND CLIMATE Wei, C.; Boland, G.; Wicksten, M. K.; Escobar-Briones, E. G.; /Rowe, G. T.: LONG-TERM SAMPLING IN THE DEEP GULF OF MEXICO Ruhl, H. A.; Ellena, J. A.; Smith, K. L.: LONGHYPOTHESIZED RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SURFACE CONDITIONS AND ABYSSAL MACROFAUNA COMMUNITIES SUPPORTED IN TEN-YEAR STUDY AT NORTHEAST PACIFIC SITE Lozano, C.; Mehra, A.; Liu, L.; Kim, H.: RTOFS: REAL TIME HIGH RESOLUTION OPERATIONAL OCEAN FORECAST SYSTEM FOR THE ATLANTIC (26S-76N) Kim, H.; Mehra, A.; Liu, L.; Iredell, D.; Lozano, C.: THE VALIDATION OF THE OCEAN COMPONENTS OF NCEP HURRICANE COUPLED ATMOSPHERIC-OCEAN FORECAST SYSTEM Splitt, M. E.; Grossi, M. D.: EVALUATION OF THE REAL-TIME OCEAN FORECAST SYSTEM IN FLORIDA ATLANTIC COASTAL WATERS Chair(s): Stephen Monismith, [email protected]; James Leichter, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1553. Stokes, M. D.; Leichter, J. J.; Wing, S. R.; Deane, G. B.: PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL HETEROGENEITY ON A FLORIDA KEYS REEF SLOPE: INTERACTIONS OF INTERNAL WAVES AND REEF TOPOGRAPHY (~) 116 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 188: Estuarine Impacts, Resilience and Recovery 1557. Chair(s): Kedong Yin, [email protected]; Paul J. Harrison, [email protected]; Hans Paerl, [email protected] 1558. Location: Poster Hall 157. 158. 159. 160. 161. 162. 164. 165. 166. 167. 168. 1560. 1561. 194: Hypoxia in Estuaries and the Coastal Ocean: Commonalities, Comparisons, Contradictions, Climate Change Chair(s): Nancy Rabalais, [email protected]; Jan Newton, [email protected]; James O’Donnell, [email protected]; George Voulgaris, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 169. 170. 171. 172. 173. 189: The Census of Marine Life: Discoveries of Diversity, Abundance, and Distribution in the World’s Oceans 174. 175. Chair(s): Gail Scowcroft, [email protected]; Linda Amaral-Zettler, [email protected]; Kristen Yarincik, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1554. 1555. 1556. Heger, A.; Sutton, T. T.: WHO’S EATING WHOM? IDENTIFICATION AND QUANTIFICATION OF DEEPPELAGIC PREY FISHES IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN Levin, L. A.; Ziebis, W.; Mendoza, G.; Thornhill, D.; Halanych, K.; Lee, R.; Washington, T.; Thurber, A.: DORVILLEIDAE AT METHANE SEEPS: A MODEL FOR UNDERSTANDING DIVERSITY ON THE CONTINENTAL MARGIN Thoma, J. N.; France, S. C.: BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE OCTOCORAL GENUS PARAMURICEA ON ATLANTIC SEAMOUNTS: EVIDENCE FOR MULTIPLE INVASIONS OF THE NORTHWESTERN ATLANTIC DEEP SEA? 176. 177. 178. Weissberger, E. J.; Coiro, L. L.; Davey, E. W.: EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON ANIMAL BURROW CONSTRUCTION AND CONSEQUENT EFFECTS ON SEDIMENT REDOX PROFILES KIM, T.; SHENG, Y. P.: SIMULATION OF HYPOXIA IN UPPER CHARLOTTE HARBOR, FLORIDA Hall, C. M.; Spiering, B. A.; Brown, R. B.: CAN REMOTELY SENSED PARAMETERS, COUPLED WITH IN SITU MEASUREMENTS, BE USED TO ESTIMATE THE SIZE AND LOCATION OF HYPOXIA IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO? Cooper, S. R.; Brandenberger, J. M.; Crecelius, E. A.; Louchouarn, P.; Leopold, E.; McDougall, K.: RECONSTRUCTING TRENDS IN HYPOXIA USING MULTIPLE PALEOECOLOGICAL INDICATORS RECORDED IN SEDIMENT CORES FROM PUGET SOUND, WA Greene, R. M.; Lehrter, J. C.; Hagy, J. D.: MULTIPLE REGRESSION MODELS FOR HINDCASTING AND FORECASTING MIDSUMMER HYPOXIA IN THE GULF OF MEXICO Lee, Y. J.; Lwiza, K. M.: HYPOXIA IN LONG ISLAND SOUND; ANTHROPOGENIC OR CLIMATE INDUCED? Dietz, M. E.; Van Vleet, E. S.; Hollander, D. J.: A MULTIPROXY APPROACH TO INVESTIGATING ECOSYSTEM CHANGE IN RESPONSE TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN AND HISTORIC LOW-OXYGEN CONDITIONS ON THE LA CONTINENTAL SHELF Ruef, W.; Devol, A.; Newton, J.; Smith, C.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITLY IN HOOD CANAL HYPOXIA Feng, Y.; DiMarco, S.; Chapman, P.: ESTABLISHING METRICS FOR CLASSIFYING THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESS ZONES OF THE COASTAL LOUISIANA HYPOXIC REGION Alvarez, F.; DiMarco, S. F.; Kurtz, J. C.; Quigg, A. S.: SHIPBOARD PHOSPHORUS, NITROGEN AND SILICA NUTRIENT LIMITATION ASSAYS USING IN-VIVO PHYTOPAM FLUORESCENCE IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO. * represents Invited presentations ( ) 117 WEDNESDAY 163. 1559. O’Neil, J. M.; Coles, V. J.: NITROGEN FIXATION IN CHESAPEAKE BAY TRIBUTARIES: A SEASONALLY IMPORTANT NITROGEN TERM? Falls, J. A.; Lipcius, R. N.: THE EFFECT OF BENTHIC MACROALGAE ON JUVENILE CRAB PREDATION AND SURVIVAL IN THE YORK RIVER ESTUARY Ellis, G. S.; Hollander, D. J.: ORGANIC MATTER IN CARBONATE BIOMINERALS: A BULK AND MOLECULAR ISOTOPIC APPROACH TO ECOLOGICAL MONITORING AND RECONSTRUCTION Luengen, A. C.; Raimondi, P. T.; Flegal, A. R.: LINKAGES BETWEEN ALGAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND WATER CHEMISTRY DATA ON SHORT SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL SCALES Grablow, K. R.; Walters, L. J.: RECOVERY RATE OF SEAGRASS FROM BOAT PROPELLER SCARS IN MOSQUITO LAGOON, FLORIDA Nosach, C. R.; Lessmann, J.; Robbins, B.: INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS ON THE GERMINATION OF SOUTH FLORIDA VALLISNERIA AMERICANA Wetz, M. S.; Paerl, H. W.: ESTUARINE PHYTOPLANKTON RESPONSES TO HURRICANES AND TROPICAL STORMS WITH DIFFERENT CHARACTERISTICS (TRAJECTORY, RAINFALL, WINDS) Cousins, M.; Stacey, M. T.: EFFECTS OF SEASONAL STRATIFICATION ON NUTRIENT RETENTION IN A COASTAL LAGOON WITH HARMFUL CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS Moseman, S. M.: DOES MICROBIAL DIVERSITY MAINTAIN NITROGEN FIXATION IN A COASTAL WETLAND OF TIJUANA ESTUARY IMPACTED BY SEDIMENTATION AND NUTRIENT LOADING? Dias, J. F.; Rocha, M. L.; Schmidt, T. C.; Morais, D. B.: Ï»¿MULTIDECADAL VARIATIONS IN BIODIVERSITY OF FISHES IN AN IMPACTED < Longval, B. A.; Oviatt, C. A.: BIOMASS SIZE SPECTRA AS A TOOL TO CHARACTERIZE THE FISH COMMUNITY OF NARRAGANSETT BAY, RHODE ISLAND Koskelo, A. I.; Fisher, T. R.: HYDROLOGIC AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL STORM RESPONSE IN CHOPTANK BASIN HEADWATERS Stocks, K. I.; Clark, M. R.; Rowden, A. A.; Consalvey, M.; Tittensor, D.; Lundsten, L.: THE GLOBAL CENSUS OF MARINE LIFE ON SEAMOUNTS (CENSEAM) Yeh, J.; Drazen, J. C.: DEPTH ZONATION OF DEEP-SEA MEGAFAUNAL SCAVENGERS OF THE HAWAIIIAN ISLANDS Zelnio, K. A.; Rodríguez, E.; Daly, M.; Fisher, C. R.: NEW SPECIES OF ANEMONE AND ZOANTHID FROM HYDROTHERMAL VENTS AT THE EAST-LAU SPREADING CENTER AND GLOBAL VENT AND SEEP ANEMONE DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION Sutton, T. T.; Wiebe, P. H.; Bucklin, A.; Madin, L.: BATHYPELAGIC FISH DIVERSITY IN THE SARGASSO SEA, NORTHWESTERN ATLANTIC OCEAN Pante, E. G.; France, S. C.: PHYLOGEOGRAPHY OF DEEP-SEA CHRYSOGORGIID CORALS (CNIDARIA: OCTOCORALLIA) FROM THE NEW ENGLAND AND CORNER SEAMOUNTS (WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN) ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Thursday Oral Sessions 14:15 008: Decadal Variations in Ocean Interior Circulation, Water Masses, and Biogeochemistry - Results From The CLIVAR/CO2 Repeat Hydrography Program 14:30 Chair(s): Richard A. Feely, [email protected]; Lynne Talley, [email protected]; Rik Wanninkhof, [email protected] Location: W304 G/H 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 THURDAY 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 14:45 Talley, L. D.; Sprintall, J.; McDonagh, E.; Swift, J. S.; Mecking, S.; Bindoff, N.: GLOBAL-SCALE, DECADAL CHANGES IN SALINITY AND OXYGEN BASED ON RECENT REPEAT HYDROGRAPHIC SECTIONS Rodgers, K. B.; Sarmiento, J. L.; Gnanadesikan, A.; Key, R. M.; Dunne, J. P.; Wanninkhof, R.; Sabine, C. L.; Feely, R. A.: REDUCING UNCERTAINTY IN THE DETECTION OF ANTHROPOGENIC DIC CHANGES Henry-Edwards, A. G.; Karstensen, J.; Khatiwala, S.: A METHOD TO DETERMINE INDIVIDUAL WATER MASS CARBON UPTAKES USING AN INVERSE MIXING ANALYSIS Assmann, K. M.; Heinze, C.; Bentsen, M.; Olsen, A.: DECADAL CHANGES IN ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON UPTAKE IN AN ISOPYCNIC OCEAN CARBON CYCLE MODEL Downes, S. M.; Bindoff, N. L.; Rintoul, S. R.: CHANGES IN THE SUBDUCTION OF SOUTHERN OCEAN WATER MASSES IN TEN IPCC MODELS Gruber, N.; Lovenduski, N. S.; Hoppema , M.; Tilbrook, B.: CAN WE DETECT A DECADAL TREND IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN CARBON SINK IN DATA FROM THE INTERIOR OCEAN?* Meredith, M. P.; Naveira Garabato, A. C.; Gordon, A. L.; Johnson, G. C.: EVOLUTION OF THE DEEP AND BOTTOM WATERS OF THE SCOTIA SEA, SOUTHERN OCEAN, DURING 1995-2005 Ishii, M.; Tokieda, T.; Saito, S.; Sasano, D.; Nakano, T.; Midorikawa, T.; Nakadate, A.; Kamiya, H.: TREND OF DIC INCREASE IN THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC ALONG P9 AND P13 Bullister, J. L.; Sonnerup, R. E.; Wisegarver, D. P.: ESTIMATING DECADAL CHANGES IN ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON IN THE INDIAN OCEAN USING CFCS AND SULFUR HEXAFLUORIDE* Azetsu-Scott, K.; Jones, E. P.; Gershey, R. M.: DECADAL VARIATION OF ALKALINITY IN THE LABRADOR SEA 15:00 15:15 019: Mixing in the Ocean Chair(s): Robin Muench, [email protected]; Louis St. Laurent, [email protected]; Mary Louise Timmermans, [email protected]; Jody Klymak, [email protected] Location: W109 A 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 018: The Aquatic Gel Phase, Its Role in Biogeochemical Cycles Chair(s): Pedro Verdugo, [email protected]; Peter H. Santschi, [email protected] 09:45 Location: W101 13:30 13:45 14:00 Miao, A.; Quigg, A.; Schwehr, K.; Xu, C.; Santschi, P.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES ON ENGINEERED SILVER NANOPARTICLES’ (ESNS) BIOAVAILABILITY AND TOXICITY TO A COASTAL MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON Stolpe, B.; Hassellöv, M.: SEASONAL OCCURRENCE OF COLLOIDAL BIOPOLYMERS CHANGING THE NANOSCALE SIZE DISTRIBUTION OF P, FE, CU, AG AND PB IN COASTAL SEAWATER Xu, C.; Santschi, P. H.: ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES FROM MARINE BACTERIUM SAGITTULA STELLATA AND SOIL BACTERIUM PSEUDOMONAS FLUORESCENS BIOVAR II Zhang, S.; Santschi, P.: APPLICATION OF CROSS FLOW ULTRAFILTRATION FOR ISOLATING EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES (EPS) FROM MARINE DIATOMS Pokrovsky, O. S.; Kovac, N.; Viers, J.; Boucayrand, C.; Faganeli, J.; Bajt, O.: TRACE ELEMENTS COMPOSITION IN THE NORTHERN ADRIATIC MUCOUS MACROAGGREGATES Reche, I.; Valderrama, A.; Pace, M. L.; Cole, J. J.; Verdugo, P.: SELF-ASSEMBLY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON: INSIGHTS FROM LAKE WATERS Grossart, H. F.: EFFECTS OF BACTERIA ON PHYTOPLANKTONIC DOM RELEASE AND DYNAMICS OF EXTRACELLULAR POLYMERS (TEP AND CSP) Faganeli, J.; Ogrinc, N.; Kovac, N.; Kukovec, K.; Falnoga, I.; Mozetic, P.; Bajt, O.: 13C AND 15N IN POM IN RELATION TO MUCILAGE FORMATION IN THE NORTHERN ADRIATIC SEA 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 Richards, K. J.: VERTICAL MIXING IN THE EASTERN TROPICAL PACIFIC Sen, A.; Scott, R. B.; Arbic, B. K.: ENERGY DISSIPATION RATE OF DEEP-OCEAN GEOSTROPHIC FLOWS BY QUADRATIC BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYER DRAG Arbic, B. K.; Polzin, K. L.; Scott, R. B.: ON QUADRATIC BOTTOM DRAG, HORIZONTAL EDDY VISCOSITY, AND THE ENERGY DISSIPATION OF THE OCEANIC GEOSTROPHIC FLOW Rahter, B. A.; St. Laurent, L.: TURBULENT MIXING IN THE MIXED LAYER/THERMOCLINE TRANSITION LAYER Stefanova, N.; McPhaden, M. J.; Zhang, X.: ESTIMATING VERTICAL EDDY VISCOSITY IN THE PACIFIC EQUATORIAL UNDERCURRENT Stöber, U.; Walter, M.; Mertens, C.; Rhein, M.: MIXING ESTIMATES FROM HYDROGRAPHIC OBSERVATIONS IN DEEP WATER ALONG THE WESTERN BOUNDARY OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC Huussen, T. N.; Naveira-Garabato, A.; McDonagh, E.; Bryden, H.: CLOSING THE INDIAN OCEAN OVERTURNING CIRCULATION: THE MIXING PERSPECTIVE Bianchi, D.; Sarmiento, J. L.; Gnanadesikan, A.; Schlosser, P.: CONSTRAINING THE UPWELLING BRANCH OF THE MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION WITH HELIUM-3 NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS Moum, J. N.; Nash, J. D.: MIXING MEASUREMENTS ON AN EQUATORIAL OCEAN MOORING MENESGUEN, C.; HUA, B. L.; SCHOPP, R.: INTERMITTENT MIXING IN EQUATORIAL DEEP JETS Tailleux, R.: ON THE ENERGETICS OF TURBULENT MIXING IN STRATIFIED FLUIDS Gouillon, F.; Chassignet, E. P.: NUMERICAL REPRESENTATION OF INTERNAL WAVES IN THE HYBRID COORDINATE OCEAN MODEL (HYCOM) (~) 118 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 028: Nearshore Processes Dobslaw, H.; Thomas, M.: CONSIDERATION OF TIDAL MIXING IN A GLOBAL OCEAN GENERAL CIRCULATION MODEL Furuichi, N.; Niwa, Y.; Hibiya, T.: GLOBAL MAPPING OF WIND-INDUCED INTERNAL WAVE ENERGY IN THE DEEP OCEAN Komori, N.; Taguchi, B.; Ohfuchi, W.; Sasaki, H.; Klein, P.: DEEP OCEAN INERTIA-GRAVITY WAVES SIMULATED IN A HIGH-RESOLUTION GLOBAL COUPLED ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN GCM Iwamae, N.; Hibiya, T.; Watanabe, M.: NUMERICAL STUDY OF THE BOTTOM-CONFINED INTENSE MIXING USING AN EIKONAL APPROACH STAQUET, C.; PAIRAUD, I.; SOMMERIA, J.; MEHDIZADEH , M. M.: NUMERICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL MODELLING OF THE INTERNAL TIDE NEAR A CONTINENTAL SLOPE Pelegrí ­, J. L.; Sangrà , P.: ON THE GRADIENT RICHARDSON NUMBER IN ISOPYCNIC COORDINATES Chair(s): Jack Puleo, [email protected]; Q. Jim Chen, [email protected] Location: W202 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 021: Biological Oceanography, Marine Biology: General 09:15 Chair(s): John Reinfelder, [email protected] Location: W101 08:00 08:15 08:30 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 033: Unresolved Problems of ENSO Dynamics: Past, Present, Future Chair(s): Alexey Fedorov, [email protected]; Jaclyn Brown, [email protected] Location: W103 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 Zavala-Garay, J.; Zhang, C.; Kapur, A.: ON THE ORIGIN OF THE OBSERVED ENSO VARIABILITY Alexander, M. A.; Vimont, D. J.; Chang, P.; Scott, J. D.: EXTRATROPICAL INFLUENCES ON ENSO: THE SEASONAL FOOTPRINT MECHANISM McPhaden, M. J.: EVOLUTION OF THE 2006-07 EL NIÑO: THE ROLE OF INTRASEASONAL TO INTERANNUAL TIME SCALE DYNAMICS* Vecchi, G. A.; Clement, A.; Soden, B. J.: TROPICAL PACIFIC SIGNATURE OF GLOBAL WARMING* Fedorov, A. V.; Brierley, C.: PERMANENT EL NINO IN THE EARLY PLIOCENE: EVIDENCE, MECHANISMS, AND THE POLEWARD HEAT TRANSPORT PARADOX. Druffel, E. R.; Griffin, S.; Druffel-Rodriguez, K. C.; Dunbar, R. B.: ENSO RECORDS IN TROPICAL PACIFIC CORALS FROM STABLE ISOTOPE AND RADIOCARBON MEASUREMENTS Kessler, W. S.; Perez, R. C.: EXTRA-EQUATORIAL RESPONSE TO A COMPOSITE EL NINO: INTERIOR VS WESTERN BOUNDARY TRANSPORT* * represents Invited presentations ( ) 119 THURDAY 08:45 Agboola, J. I.; Kudo, I.: SPATIO-TEMPORAL ANALYSES OF NUTRIENTS AND PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS IN SUB-ARTIC COASTAL ENVIRONMENT OF JAPAN. Liu, H.; Chang, J.: THE EVALUATION OF PHOSPHORUSDEFICIENCY AREA FOR MICROPHYTOPLANKTON IN THE EAST CHINA SEA USING ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE ACTIVITIES Yoshie, N.; Suzuki, K.; Kuwata, A.; Nishioka, J.; Saito, H.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATIONS OF PHYTOPLANKTON PHOTOSYNTHETIC PHYSIOLOGY DURING THE SPRING DIATOM BLOOM IN THE WESTERN SUBARCTIC PACIFIC Reinfelder, J. R.: NITROGEN COST OF THE DIATOM CO2 CONCENTRATING MECHANISM Sun, T.; Jain, A.: EFFECT OF INTERANNUAL TO INTERDECADAL CLIMATE VARIABILITY ON MARINE BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLE AND OCEANIC CARBON UPTAKE Saito/Hiroaki, H.; Tsuda/Atsushi, A.; Ota/Takashi, O.; Nojiri/Yukihiro, Y.; Aramaki/Takafumi, T.; Imai/Keiri, K.; Kiyosawa/Hiroshi, H.; Nishioka/Jun, J.; Ogawa/Hiroshi, H.; Suzuki/Koji, K.; Takeda/Shigenobu, S.; Yoshimura/ Takeshi, T.: ROLES OF ECOSYSTEM COMPONENTS FOR BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING IN THE HNLC SUBARCTIC PACIFIC: IMPORTANCE OF TOP-DOWN CONTROL Palladino, D.; Bochdansky, A. B.: PHOSPHORUS UPTAKE, ALLOCATION AND ELIMINATION IN VARIOUS BIOCHEMICAL FRACTIONS IN THE ESTUARINE COPEPOD ACARTIA TONSA Cohen, J. H.: VISION IN THE DEEP-SEA COPEPOD GAUSSIA PRINCEPS: PHYSIOLOGICAL CAPABILITIES AND THEIR ECOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS Castelin, M.; Bouchet, P.: CONNECTIVITY IN AN OCEANIC SEAMOUNTS SYSTEM: COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHY OF GASTROPODS WITH CONTRASTING REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGIES Karaköylü, E. M.; Franks, P. J.; Tanaka, Y.; Roberts, P. L.; Jaffe, J. S.: COPEPOD FEEDING QUANTIFIED BY PLANAR LASER IMAGING OF GUT FLUORESCENCE Henderson, S. M.; Guza, R. T.; Elgar, S.; Raubenheimer, B.; O’Rielly, W. C.; Herbers, T. H.: COMPARISON OF OBSERVED AND MODELED ALONGSHORE-VARIABLE SURFZONE CURRENTS Lippmann, T. C.; Thornton, E. B.: ESTIMATING SUBSURFACE CROSS-SHORE FLOW FROM OBSERVATIONS OF SURFACE CURRENTS Palmsten, M. L.; Holman, R. A.; Ruggiero, P.; Maddux, T. B.: HORIZONTAL PRESSURE GRADIENTS IN THE SWASH ZONE Spydell, M. S.; Feddersen, F.; Guza, R. T.: SURFZONE DRIFTER DISPERSION DURING THE HB06 EXPERIMENT Clark, D. B.; Feddersen, F.; Guza, R. T.: PRETTY IN PINK: SURFZONE DYE DISPERSION IN VARYING CONDITIONS DURING THE HB06 EXPERIMENT Holland, K. T.; Plant, N. G.; Edwards, K.: HIGHRESOLUTION COMPARISON OF NEARSHORE MODEL PREDICTIONS AND OBSERVATIONS Pawlak, G.; Bricker, J. D.; Bandet-Chavanne, M. D.; Lowe, R. J.; Jones, N. L.; Fong, D. A.; Monismith, S. G.: ROUGH BED BOUNDARY LAYER PROCESSES AT THE KILO NALU OBSERVATORY Shi, F.; Kirby, J.; Haller, M.; Catalan, P.: NUMERICAL STUDY ON SURFZONE AIR BUBBLES USING A MULTIPHASE VOF MODEL feddersen, f.; R, T.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE TURBULENT DISSIPATION RATE IN THE SURFZONE Luznik, L.; Hackett, E. E.; Katz, J.; Osborn, T. R.: DIRECT ESTIMATION OF THE REYNOLDS STRESSES FROM PIV DATA ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 09:45 10:00 10:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 14:30 Brown, J. N.; Fedorov, A. V.: THE ENERGETICS OF THE TROPICAL OCEAN AND ENSO DYNAMICS - AN INTERMODEL COMPARISON. Leloup, J.; Lengaigne, M.: ENSO IN THE IPCC-AR4 MODELS: A MULTI-VARIABLE APPROACH Anderson, W.; Gnanadesikan, A: VARIABILITY OF THE TROPICAL PACIFIC AND THE ROLE OF OCEAN COLOR 14:45 15:00 037: Transport, Biogeochemistry, and Ecology in Permeable Sediments Chair(s): Markus Huettel, [email protected]; Joel Kostka, [email protected]; Alex Rao, [email protected]; Jan Scholten, [email protected] 15:15 Location: W304 E/F 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 THURDAY 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 16:00 Burnett, W. C.; Chanton, J. P.; Santos, I.; Dimova, N.; Mwashote, B.; Peterson, R.; Hu, W.; Li, X.: ASSESSING THE DRIVING FORCES OF SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE~ Taniguchi, M.; Nakano, T.; Onodera, S.; Ishitobi, T.; Fujii, T.: EFFECTS OF SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE ON SEASHELL ECOSYSTEM IN THE COASTAL ZONE Rao, A. F.; Gonneea, M. E.; Henderson, P. B.; Fitzsimmons, J.; Morales, S.; Herrera-Silveira, J.; Charette, M. A.: NUTRIENT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF A KARST AQUIFER SYSTEM AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THE COASTAL OCEAN IN THE NORTHERN YUCATÁN PENINSULA, MÉXICO Windom, H. L.; Niencheski, L. F.: TRACE ELEMENT BEHAVIOR IN A FRESHWATER-SEA WATER MIXING ZONE WITHIN PERMABLE SEDIMENTS Crusius, J.; Erban, L.; Jenkins, W. J.; Giblin, A.; Kroeger, K.; Foreman, K.; Bratton, J. F.: RADON-222 AS A TRACER OF COASTAL GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE: EXAMINING CONTROLS ON SPATIAL VARIABILITY Boehm, A. B.; De Sieyes, N. R.; Yamahara, K. M.; Layton, B. A.; Joyce, E. H.: NUTRIENT-RICH, FRESH SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE IS ENHANCED DURING NEAP TIDES AT AN OPEN OCEAN BEACH* Dulaiova, H.; Chung, E.; Gonneea, M. E.; Henderson, P. B.; Charette, M. A.: MULTITUDINAL PATHWAYS OF GROUNDWATER ADVECTION AND ASSOCIATED NUTRIENT FLUXES IN SALT MARSH ESTUARIES Kroeger, K. D.; Charette, M. A.; Casciotti, K.; Eagle Gonneea, M.; Henderson, P.; Rogers, D.; Baldwin, S.; Edwards, K.: NITROGEN TRANSFORMATIONS IN SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE ZONES: INSIGHTS FROM ISOTOPE PAIRING EXPERIMENTS Charette, M. A.; Gonneea, M. E.; Henderson, P. B.; Rao, A.; Herrera-Silveira, J.: TRACE METAL BIOGEOCHEMISTRY IN KARSTIC SUBTERRANEAN ESTUARIES Khalili, A.; Liu, B.: FLOW AND CONCENTRATION RELEASE THROUGH/AROUND MARINE AGGREGATES:A MATHEMATICAL MODELING* Reed, A. H.: GEOMETRY OF COMPLEX AND SMALLSCALED GEOLOGICAL STRUCTURES Gihring, T. M.; Kostka, J. E.; Mills, H.; Gao, H.; Collins, G.; Liu, S. M.; Lavik, G.; van Beusekom, J.; Kuypers, M.: QUANTIFICATION OF NITROGEN REMOVAL AND TEMPERATURE REGULATION OF MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES THAT MEDIATE DENITRIFICATION AND ANAMMOX IN PERMEABLE MARINE SEDIMENTS Dade, W. B.; Renshaw, C. E.: FLOW-DRIVEN EXCHANGE OF SOLUTES AND PORE WATER AT THE SEDIMENTWATER INTERFACE 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Wilson, A. M.; Huettel, M.; Klein, S.: ESTIMATING THE PERMEABILITY OF COASTAL AND SEAFLOOR SANDS Evrard, V.; Huettel, M.; Soetaert, K.; Heip, C. H.; Xenopoulos, M. A.; Middelburg, J. J.: DISENTANGLING THE ROLE OF BENTHIC PRIMARY PRODUCERS IN MODERATING CARBON AND NITROGEN FLOWS THROUGH FOOD WEBS IN SANDY SEDIMENTS Stierhoff, K. L.; Sansone, F. J.; Pawlak, G. R.; Hebert, A. B.; Colgrove, C.; Stanton, T.: ENHANCED POREWATER DISPERSAL IN SANDY SEDIMENTS SUBJECT TO PHYSICAL FORCING AT KILO NALU OBSERVATORY, OAHU, HAWAII Waldbusser, G. G.; Marinelli, R. L.: EFFECTS OF INFAUNA ON PERMEABLE SEDIMENT CHEMISTRY AND TRANSPORT PROCESSES: MULTIPLE SITE AND SPECIES COMPARISONS Schlueter, M.; Schankat , M.; Hinkelmann, R.; Bartsch, S.: FOCUSED AND DISPERSED FLOW AT SAND BOILS AND THROUGH POROUS SEDIMENTS: RELEASE OF NUTRIENTS AND 2D MODELLING OF TRANSPORT AND REACTION PROCESSES. Herzfeld, I.; Sansone, F. J.; Smith, C. M.; Colgrove, C.; Ross, M. M.; Dailer, M. L.; Vermeij, M. J.: DIURNAL DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON, PHOSPHORUS, NITROGEN, AND IRON DYNAMICS IN PERMEABLE BACK-REEF SEDIMENTS OF THE SOUTH SHORE OF MAUI, HAWAII Janssen, F.; de Beer, D.: HEAVY METAL UPTAKE BY PERMEABLE SEDIMENTS Gao, H.; Collins, G.; Kostka, J. E.; Liu, S. M.; Schreiber, F.; Poleresky, L.; Lavik, G.; de Beer, D.; Kuypers, M. M.: EXTENSIVE NITROGEN LOSS FROM PERMEABLE INTERTIDAL WADDEN SEA SEDIMENTS Liu, B.; Khalili, A.: OSCILLATORY FLOWS OVER PERMEABLE WAVY BOTTOM RIPPLES Huettel, M.; Chipman, L.; Higgs, M.; Laschet, M.; Cook, P. L.; Wenzhoefer, F.: COMPARISON OF METABOLIC ACTIVITIES IN PERMEABLE NEARSHORE SEDIMENTS 045: Marine Aquaculture - What are the Burning Environmental Issues and Solutions? Chair(s): Dror Angel, [email protected]; John Marra, [email protected] Location: W103 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 Macleod, C. K.; Moltschaniwskyj, N. A.; Forbes, S. E.; Crawford, C. M.: ECOLOGICAL AND FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY OF SEDIMENTS ASSOCIATED WITH FINFISH CAGE AQUACULTURE - DO SOME SYSTEMS COPE BETTER ? * Valdemarsen, T. B.; Holmer, M.: IMPORTANCE OF IRON CONTENT FOR SULFUR DYNAMICS IN ORGANIC LOADED FISH FARM SEDIMENTS Angel, D. L.; Krost, P.; Madran, M.; Helman, D.: SEDIMENT OXYGEN DEMAND AS A MEANS TO EXAMINE THE ASSIMILATIVE CAPACITY OF THE BENTHOS TO WASTES GENERATED BY A FISH FARM IN THE RED SEA CALLIER, M. D.; RICHARD, M.; McKindsey, C. W.; Archambault, P.: RESPONSES OF BENTHIC MACROFAUNA AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL FLUXES TO VARIOUS LEVELS OF MUSSEL BIODEPOSITION: AN IN SITU «BENTHOCOSM» EXPERIMENT Venayagamoorthy, S. K.; Fringer, O. B.; Koseff, J. R.; Naylor, R. L.: SIMULATIONS OF MIXING AND TRANSPORT OF DISSOLVED WASTE DISCHARGED FROM NEARCOASTAL AQUACULTURE PENS (~) 120 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 17:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Anderson, M. R.; Melvin, W.; Whalen, R.; Cross, J.: SITE SELECTION AND FALLOWING - MITIGATING HABITAT IMPACTS FOR COLD WATER FINFISH AQUACULTURE IN NEWFOUNDLAND, CANADA 17:00 17:15 050: Dynamics of Estuarine Circulations and River Plumes: From Process Studies to Predictive Models 054: Sediment Transport in Lakes, Estuaries, and Shallow Shelves Chair(s): Ming Li, [email protected]; Parker MacCready, [email protected] Chair(s): Nathan Hawley, [email protected]; Courtney K. Harris, [email protected]; Barry M. Lesht, [email protected]; Larry P. Sanford, [email protected] Location: W203 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:15 Ralston, D. K.; Geyer, W. R.; Lerczak, J. A.; Scully, M. E.: SALT FLUX AND TURBULENT MIXING IN AN ESTUARY WITH STRONG STRATIFICATION AND COMPLEX BATHYMETRY* Baptista, A. M.; Seaton, C. Y.; Hyde, N.; Zhang, Y.: CIRCULATION DYNAMICS IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER ESTUARY: AN OBSERVATORY-ENABLED PERSPECTIVE * Shcherbina, A. Y.; Gawarkiewicz, G. G.: WINTER WINDDRIVEN BUOYANCY FLUX AND DYNAMICS OF CAPE COD COASTAL CURRENT LI, Y.; LI, M.; Zhong, L.: EOF ANALYSIS OF WINDDRIVEN CURRENTS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY Hetland, R. D.; MacDonald, D. G.: SPREADING IN THE NEAR-FIELD MERRIMACK RIVER PLUME Liu, Y.; MacCready, P.; Hickey, B.: COLUMBIA RIVER PLUME INFLUENCE ON SUMMER SHELF CIRCULATION AS REVEALED BY A COASTAL OCEAN CIRCULATION MODEL HINDCAST Chen, S. N.; Sanford, L. P.: AXIAL WIND EFFECTS ON STRATIFICATION AND LONGITUDINAL SALT TRANSPORT IN IDEALIZED, PARTIALLY MIXED ESTUARIES Warner, J. C.; Geyer, W. R.; Arango, H. G.: NUMERICAL STUDY OF ESTUARINE RESIDENCE TIME: USING COMPOSITE GRIDS TO EXTEND MODELING DOMAINS Li, M.; Zhong, L.; Radhakrishnan, S.; Piomelli, U.; Geyer, W. R.: LARGE EDDY SIMULATIONS OF ESTUARINE MIXING PROCESSES Austin, J. A.; Vander Woude, A. J.: THE INFLUENCE OF UPWELLING WINDS ON ESTUARINE SALT EXCHANGE Location: W205 B/C 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 053: Arctic Marine Communities and Biodiversity 10:15 Chair(s): Rolf Gradinger, [email protected]; Russ Hopcroft, [email protected]; Bodil Bluhm, [email protected] Location: W105 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 13:30 Atsushi Matsuoka, A. M.; Yannick Huot, Y. H.; Koji Shimada, K. S.; Sei-Ichi Saitoh, S. S.: BIO-OPTICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN: IMPLICATIONS FOR OCEAN COLOR ALGORITHMS Hopcroft, R. R.; Kosobokova, K. N.: DIVERSITY AND VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ZOOPLANKTON IN THE ARCTIC’S CANADA BASIN Lovejoy , C.; Potvin, M.; Scarcella, K.; Terrado, R.: IN FROM THE COLD UNCULTIVATED PROTISTS IN ARCTIC, A DEEP DARK SECRET Kedra, M.; Weslawski, J. M.: CLIMATE-DRIVEN CHANGE IN THE BIODIVERSITY SOFT BOTTOM MACROBENTHOS? - ARCTIC CASE STUDY (KONGSFJORDEN, SPITSBERGEN) 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 Wiberg, P. L.; Wheatcroft, R. A.; Milligan, T. G.; Hill, P. S.; Meurer, A. M.; Law, B. A.: CONSOLIDATION AND EROSION ACROSS A MUD-SAND GRADIENT Hamm, N. T.; Dade, W. B.; Renshaw, C. E.: OBSERVATIONS OF FINE-PARTICLE TRANSPORT AND DEPOSITION Jones, C. A.; Sanford, L.: CONSTRAINED MODELING OF CONSOLIDATING SEDIMENT EROSION Xu, K.; Harris, C. K.; Hetland, R. D.; Kaihatu, J.: SEDIMENT TRANSPORT FROM THE MISSISSIPPI AND ATCHAFALAYA RIVERS TO THE LOUISIANA/TEXAS SHELF Zhao, H.; Chen, Q. J.: INTEGRATING SATELLITE IMAGERY AND NUMERICAL MODELS FOR COASTAL SEDIMENT TRANSPORT STUDY Schuttelaars, H. M.; Huijts, K. H.; Talke, S. A.; de Swart, H. E.: EFFECT OF FLOCCULATION PROCESSES ON THE TRANSVERSE DISTRIBUTION OF COHESIVE SEDIMENT IN TIDAL ESTUARIES Renfro, A. A.; Cochran, J. K.; Hirschberg, D. J.: SEASONAL VARIATIONS IN 7BE AND 234TH INVENTORIES OF BOTTOM SEDIMENTS IN A COASTAL LAGOON (JAMAICA BAY, NEW YORK) Zhu, J.; Wilson, B. A.; Gontz, A. M.; Olsen, C. R.: TRACERS AND CLOCKS FOR EXAMINING PARTICLE SOURCE FUNCTIONS, DYNAMICS AND ACCUMULATION IN THE URBANIZED LOWER HUDSON RIVER ESTUARY Corbett, D. R.; Walsh, J. P.; Seaver, K.; Mallinson, D. J.: CHARACTERISTICS OF STORM DEPOSITS ON THE LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL SHELF: INSIGHTS FROM SEDIMENTOLOGICAL AND RADIOCHEMICAL EXAMINATIONS Rossmann, R.: THE USE OF DATED SEDIMENT CORES TO DESCRIBE THE HISTORY OF CONTAMINANT LOADS TO SYSTEMS: A CASE STUDY OF MERCURY FLUXES TO LAKE MICHIGAN Allison, M. A.; Duncan, D. A.; Sheremet, A.; Jaramillo, S.: FLOC BEHAVIOR IN HIGH TURBIDITY WINTER STORM EVENTS ON THE ATCHAFALAYA DELTA INNER SHELF, LOUISIANA Kim, Y. H.; Suttles, S. E.; Sanford, L. P.: INTERACTIONS BETWEEN TIDAL ASYMMETRIES IN VELOCITY, NEAR-BED STRATIFICATION, AND SEDIMENT RESUSPENSION IN AN ESTUARINE TURBIDITY MAXIMUM Hawley, N.: SEDIMENT TRANSPORT PROCESSES IN LAKE ERIE Nakagawa, Y.; Kuwae, T.: FIELD STUDIES ON FINE SEDIMENT TRANSPORT DYNAMICS AND OXYGEN FLUXES NEAR THE BED Rusello, P. J.; Cowen, E. A.: HIGH RESOLUTION BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYER MEASUREMENTS, BED STRESS AND SUSPENDED SEDIMENT MEASUREMENTS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 121 THURDAY 10:00 Bluhm, B. A.; MacDonald, I. R.; Iken, K. B.; Gagaev, S.; Robinson, S.: IN- AND EPIFAUNAL BENTHIC COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE ARCTIC CANADA BASIN IN JULY 2005 Gradinger, R.; Iken, K.; Bluhm, B.: ARCTIC PRESSURE RIDGES - REFUGIA FOR SEA ICE FAUNA? ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 14:45 15:00 15:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Sanford, L. P.; Halka, J. P.: SHORELINE EROSION, SHORE PROTECTION, AND NEARSHORE SEDIMENT DYNAMICS IN CHESAPEAKE BAY Withdrawn Withdrawn 17:00 17:15 061: From Transcripts to Transcriptomes: RNA Abundance, Persistence and Degradation in the Marine Environment 074: Influence of Recent Changes in the Arctic Chair(s): Ian Hewson, [email protected]; Pia H. Moisander, [email protected] Chair(s): Andrew Pershing, [email protected]; David Mountain, [email protected]; Igor Belkin, [email protected]; Charles Greene, [email protected] Location: W101 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 THURDAY 17:00 17:15 Lam, P.; Lavik, G.; Hamersley, M. R.; Woebken, D.; Jetten, M.; Kuypers, M.: DECIPHERING THE MARINE NITROGEN CYCLE IN A MARINE SUBOXIC WATER COLUMN WITH FUNCTIONAL GENE EXPRESSION ANALYSES Shi, T.; Pennebaker, K.; Rabouille, S.; Mondragon, E.; Zehr, J. P.: GENOME-WIDE EXPRESSION DYNAMICS REVEAL DIEL PATTERNS OF METABOLIC SWITCHING IN THE UNICELLULAR DIAZOTROPHIC MARINE CYANOBACTERIUM CROCOSPHAERA WATSONII WH 8501 Mock, T.; Samanta, M. P.; Iverson, V.; Berthiaume, C.; Robison, M.; Holtermann, K.; Durkin, C.; Splinter BonDurant, S.; Richmond, K.; Rodesch, M.; Kallas, T.; Huttlin, E. L.; Cerrina, F.; Sussman, M. R.; Armbrust, E. V.: WHOLE GENOME EXPRESSION PROFILING OF THE MARINE DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA: NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE MOLECULAR UNDERPINNINGS OF GLOBAL-SCALE PROCESSES Zielinski, B. L.; John, D. E.; Paul, J. H.: METATRANSCRIPTOME OF A EUKARYOTIC MARINE PLANKTON COMMUNITY IN TAMPA BAY, FL Culley, A. I.; Steward, G. F.: RNA VIRUSES: BIT PARTS OR MAJOR PLAYERS IN THE PLANKTON? McDaniel, L. D.; Paul, J. H.; Brietbart, M.: OCCURRENCE OF PHAGE INTEGRASE-LIKE GENE EXPRESSION IN TAMPA BAY Location: W105 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 064: Linkages Between Climate, Upwelling and Anoxia: The Cariaco Basin and Similar Systems 09:30 Chair(s): Frank Muller-Karger, [email protected]; Larry Peterson, [email protected]; Laura Lorenzoni, [email protected]; Mary Scranton, [email protected] 09:45 Location: W110 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 McConnell, M. C.; Thunell, R. C.; Astor, Y.; Peterson, L. C.; Black, D.; Lea, D.: A MULTI PROXY APPROACH TO ASSESS TROPICAL CLIMATE VARIABILITY DURING MARINE ISOTOPE STAGE 3: RESULTS FROM THE CARIACO BASIN* Goni, M. A.; Alleau, Y.; Woodworth, M. P.; Thunell, R. T.: HIGH RESOLUTION RECORD OF ORGANIC MATTER FLUXES IN THE CARIACO BASIN OVER THE PAST TWO MILLENNIA Astor, Y.; Fuentes, G.; Lorenzoni, L.; Guzman, L.; Scranton, M. I.; Muller-Karger, F.: SINKS AND SOURCES OF CO2 IN A COASTAL TROPICAL ENVIRONMENT: THE CARIACO BASIN* Wang, D.; Weisberg, R.; Flagg, C.; Scranton, M.: DEEP INTRUSION IN THE CARIACO BASIN: AN HYPOTHESIS Li, X. N.; Flagg, C.; Wang, D. P.; Weisberg, R.; Taylor, G. T.; Astor, Y.; Fanning, K.; Scranton, M. I.: TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF OXIDANT AND REDUCTANT SUPPLY TO THE REDOX INTERFACE IN THE CARIACO BASIN AND CONTROLS ON CHEMOAUTOTROPHY Yucel, M.; Moore, T. S.; Janzen, C.; Konovalov, S. K.; Luther, G. W.: SULFUR SPECIATION IN THE BLACK SEA ANOXIC BASIN SEDIMENTS 10:00 10:15 McClelland, J. W.; Holmes, R. M.; Peterson, B. J.; Amon, R.; Brabets, T.; Cooper, L.; Crump, B.; Gibson, J.; Guay, C.; Raymond, P.; Striegl, R.; Zhulidov, A.; Zimov, S.: THE PARTNERS DATA SET: HIGHLIGHTS FROM AN EXTRAORDINARY FIELD PROGRAM ENCOMPASSING THE SIX LARGEST RIVERS IN THE PAN-ARCTIC WATERSHED* Dunton, K. H.; Schonberg, S. V.: THE ECOLOGY OF ARCTIC LAGOONS IN A CHANGING CLIMATE: ARE TERRESTRIAL INPUTS OF ORGANIC MATTER IMPORTANT? Trefry, J. H.; Trocine, R. P.; Semmler, C. M.; Savoie, M. A.: DEFINING NATURAL RIVER-SHELF INTERACTIONS FOR TRACE METALS IN THE COASTAL BEAUFORT SEA Brown, J. S.; Cook, L. L.; Boehm, P. D.; Trefry, J. H.; Durell, G. S.: HYDROCARBON DISTRIBUTION IN SEDIMENTS OF THE NEARSHORE BEAUFORT SEA Neff, J. M.; Hardin, J. L.; Durell, G. S.; Himmer, T. M.: HYDROCARBONS AND METALS IN TISSUES OF BENTHIC CRUSTACEANS AND MOLLUSCS FROM THE NEAR-SHORE BEAUFORT SEA: POSSIBLE EFFECTS OF OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT Bisagni, J. J.; Mountain, D. G.: SHELF WATER SALINITY VARIABILITY, EASTERN NEWFOUNDLAND TO CAPE HATTERAS, 1950-2003 Reid, P. C.: EFFECTS OF SEQUENTIAL INCREASES IN SEA TEMPERATURE IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC AND BERING SEA ON PLANKTON AND BENTHIC BIODIVERSITY,THE BIOLOGICAL PUMP AND THE ARCTIC Mountain, D. G.; Kane, J.: RECENT SALINITY VARIABILITY AND ASSOCIATED ECOSYSTEM CHANGES ON GEORGES BANK Rebuck, N. D.; Townsend, D. W.: HISTORICAL RECORD AND DECADAL-SCALE TRENDS OF NUTRIENT CONCENTRATIONS OF SLOPE WATERS IN THE GULF OF MAINE Ji, R.; Davis, C. S.; Chen, C.; Townsend, D. W.; Mountain, D. G.; Beardsley, R. C.: INFLUENCE OF SCOTIAN SHELF WATER INFLOW ON PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS IN THE GULF OF MAINE: DATA ANALYSIS AND MODELING (~) 122 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 078: Northern Gulf of Mexico Landscape Change and Natural Hazards 13:45 Chair(s): John C. Brock, [email protected]; Dawn Lavoie, [email protected] 14:00 Location: W205 B/C 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Kolker, A. S.; Allison, M. A.: BATHYMETRIC AND SEDIMENTOLOGICAL CHANGES IN SPACE AND TIME: TOWARDS A SUBSIDENCE MAP OF AN INTERDISTRIBUTARY BASIN IN THE MISSISSIPPI DELTA Flocks, J.; Twichell, D.; Baldwin, W.; Miner, M.; Kulp, M.: INFLUENCE OF ANTECEDENT GEOLOGY ON BARRIER ISLAND DEVELOPMENT, NORTHERN CHANDELEUR ISLANDS, LOUISIANA Twichell, D. C.; Baldwin, W. E.; Flocks, J. G.; Pendleton, E. A.; Miner, M. D.; Kulp, M.: SUBSURFACE CONTROL ON SEAFLOOR EROSIONAL PROCESSES OFFSHORE OF THE CHANDELEUR ISLANDS, LA Miner, M. D.; Kulp, M. A.; Georgiou, I. Y.; Sallenger, A. H.; FitzGerald, D. M.; Flocks, J. G.; Twichell, D. C.: SEDIMENT TRANSPORT TRENDS ALONG THE CHANDELEUR ISLANDS, LOUISIANA: IMPLICATIONS FOR ISLAND SUSTAINABILITY AND BARRIER ISLAND MANAGEMENT Donoghue, J. F.; Stapor, F. W.; Kish, S. A.; Forrest, B. M.; Brook, G. A.; Brook, F. Z.; Balsillie, J. H.: NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO HOLOCENE SEA-LEVEL HISTORY AND ITS IMPACT ON BARRIER GROWTH Poore, R. Z.; Richey, J. N.: NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO CLIMATE VARIABILITY 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 085: The Nordic Seas and the North Atlantic’s Subpolar Gyre: Similarities, Differences, and Interconnection 16:15 Chair(s): Fiammetta Straneo, [email protected]; Jonathan Lilly, lilly@ esr.org; Anna Wåhlin, [email protected]; Tor Eldevik, [email protected] 16:30 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Mauritzen, C.: ACTIVE TRACERS AND PASSIVE DYNAMICS - ON INTERPRETING HYDROGRAPHY IN AREAS OF DENSE WATER FORMATION.* Wu, P. L.; Wood, R. A.: INTERCONNECTION AND VARIABILITY BETWEEN THE NORDIC SEAS AND THE SUB-POLAR NORTH ATLANTIC Scheinert, M. M.; Böning, C.; Biastoch, A.: DEEP SUBPOLAR GYRE FRESHENING: JUST A RESULT OF THE NAO? Deshayes, J.; Straneo, F.; Spall, M. A.: MECHANISMS OF VARIABILITY IN A CONVECTIVE BASIN Yashayaev, I.; Dickson, R. R.; Dunphy, M.; Kieke, D.; Loder, J. W.; van Aken, H. M.; Wright, D. G.: RECENT THERMOHALINE CHANGES IN THE NORTHERN NORTH ATLANTIC Curry, R.: TIMING AND ATTRIBUTION OF OBSERVED NORTH ATLANTIC HEAT AND FRESHWATER CONTENT VARIABILITY 16:45 17:00 17:15 092: Nitrogen Supply in the Oligotrophic Ocean Chair(s): Cliff Law, [email protected]; Joe Montoya, [email protected]; Doug Capone, [email protected] 091: California Current Ecosystem Dynamics – The Role of Climate Variability Location: W304 C/D Chair(s): Mark Ohman, [email protected]; Nick Bond, [email protected] 08:00 Montoya, J. P.; Zehr, J. P.: NITROGEN FIXATION IN BLUE Location: W304 G/H 13:30 Di Lorenzo, E.; Schneider, N.: NORTH PACIFIC GYRES OSCILLATION EXPLAINS OCEAN CLIMATE AND ECOSYSTEM CHANGE IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT* * represents Invited presentations ( ) 123 THURDAY Location: W203 Franks, P. J.; Di Lorenzo, E.; Schneider, N.; Riviere, P.: REGIONAL AND BASIN-SCALE ECOSYSTEM FLUCTUATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH THE NORTH PACIFIC GYRE OSCILLATION Bane, J. M.; Spitz, Y. H.: INTRASEASONAL TO INTERDECADAL OSCILLATIONS OF THE UPWELLING STRENGTH ALONG THE OREGON COAST: ORIGINS AND IMPACTS Bond, N. A.; Hickey, B. M.; Peterson, W. T.; Lessard, E.; Cochlan, W.: THE WEATHER DURING THE SUMMER OF 2006 IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST AND ITS CONSEQUENCES FOR THE COASTAL OCEAN Bograd, S. J.; Castro, C. G.; Collins, C. A.; Chavez, F. P.: LONG-TERM TRENDS IN SPICINESS, DISSOLVED OXYGEN, AND INORGANIC NUTRIENTS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM Aksnes, D. L.; Ohman, M. D.: LONG-TERM NITRACLINE SHOALING AND DECREASED WATER COLUMN TRANSPARENCY IN THE SOUTHERN SECTOR OF THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM Jose Gomez-Valdes, J.; Gilberto Jeronimo, G.: UPPER MIXED LAYER TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY VARIABILITY IN THE TROPICAL BOUNDARY OF THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT Clarke, A. J.; Dottori, M.: PLANETARY WAVE PROPAGATION OFF CALIFORNIA AND ITS EFFECT ON ZOOPLANKTON Landry, M. R.; Goericke, R.; Ohman, M. D.: CCE-LTER PROCESS STUDIES: ENVIRONMENTAL FORCING OF PLANKTON COMMUNITY TRAJECTORIES IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM* Rykaczewski, R. R.; Checkley, D. M.: FROM PHYSICS TO FISH: INFLUENCE OF OCEAN WINDS ON THE PELAGIC ECOSYSTEM IN UPWELLING REGIONS Perry, M. J.; Sackmann, B. S.; Eriksen , C. C.; Lee, C. M.: MULTIYEAR SEAGLIDER OBSERVATIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM: VARIABILITY IN PHYTOPLANKTON ANNUAL CYCLE IN DEEP WATERS OFF THE WASHINGTON SLOPE Kahru, M.; Manzano-Sarabia, M.; López-Cortés, D. J.; Mitchell, B. G.: TIME SERIES OF SATELLITE DERIVED PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT Sydeman, W. J.; Bradley, R. W.; Buffa, J.; Largier, J. L.; Ralston, S.; Suryan, R.: CLIMATE CHANGE, UPWELLING, AND ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS IN THE GULF OF THE FARALLONES Stukel, M. R.; Landry, M. R.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Goericke, R.: CARBON EXPORT AND THE FATE OF PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 THURDAY 10:15 13:30 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 16:15 WATER: WHO, WHERE, AND HOW MUCH? White, A. E.; Spitz, Y. H.; Zehr, J. P.; Karl, D. M.; Bjorkman, K.: PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL FORCING OF DIAZOTROPHIC BIOMASS ALONG A TRANSECT FROM 23OS TO 24.75ON Moore, R. M.; Punshon, S.; Mahaffey, C.; Church, M.; Karl, D.: DISSOLVED HYDROGEN MEASUREMENTS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE EQUATORIAL PACIFIC: RESULTS FROM THE CMORE-BULA CRUISE Sohm, J. A.; Gunderson, T.; Carpenter, E. J.; Capone, D. G.: NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN: RATE MEASUREMENTS AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN SPECIES SPECIFIC ACTIVITY Moutin, T.: PHOSPHATE AVAILABILITY AND NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC OCEAN: OVERVIEW AND OBJECTIVES OF THE BOUM CRUISE PROJECT Mulholland, M. R.; Bernhardt, P. W.; Hutchins, D. A.; Fu, F. X.; Feng, Y.; Warner, M. E.; Zhang, Y.; Portune, K.: DOES CO2 PLAY A ROLE IN CONTROLLING N2 FIXATION ACROSS SYSTEMS? Webb, E. A.; Ehrenreich, I. M.; Brown, S. L.; Valois, F.; Waterbury, J. B.: PHENOTYPIC AND GENOTYPIC CHARACTERIZATION OF MULTIPLE STRAINS OF THE DIAZOTROPHIC CYANOBACTERIUM, CROCOSPHAERA WATSONII, ISOLATED FROM THE OPEN OCEAN Huisman, J.; Rabouille, S.; Agawin, N.: COMPETITION AND FACILITATION BETWEEN UNICELLULAR N2FIXING CYANOBACTERIA AND NON-N2-FIXING PHYTOPLANKTON SPECIES Hood, R. R.; Coles, V. J.; Capone, D. G.: MODELING NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN* Wilson, C.: NITROGEN FIXATION HOTSPOTS? AREAS OF PERSISTENT SUMMER CHLOROPHYLL BLOOMS IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC GYRES Karl, D. M.; HOT/C-MORE Team: NUTRIENT DYNAMICS AT STATION ALOHA~ Mahaffey, C.; Bjorkman, K.; Karl, D. M.: PHYSIOLOGICAL AND COMMUNITY RESPONSE OF AUTOTROPHS TO SIMULATED UPWELLNG OF NUTRIENT RICH DEEP WATER AT STATION ALOHA IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE. Law, C. S.; Woodward, E. M.; Boyd, P. W.; Stevens, C.; Sutton, P.; Marriner, A.; Bury, S.; Hall, J.: NEW NITROGEN SOURCES IN THE SUBTROPICAL SOUTH-WEST PACIFIC Ibello, V.; Cantoni, C.; Cozzi, S.; Civitarese, G.; Ribera d’ Alcalà, M.: NITROGEN FIXATION IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA Volpe, G.; Banzon, V.; Santoleri, R.; Mariano, A.; Sciarra, R.: ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SATELLITEDERIVED AEROSOL OPTICAL THICKNESS AND CHLOROPHYLL IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA Bell, T. G.; Lesworth, T.; Baker, A. R.; Liss, P. S.; Jickells, T. D.: THE IMPORTANCE OF ATMOSPHERIC NITROGEN IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC ATLANTIC Knapp, A. N.; Hastings, M. G.; Sigman, D. M.; Lipschultz, F.; Galloway, J. N.: THE FLUX AND ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION OF REDUCED AND TOTAL NITROGEN IN BERMUDA RAIN Yool, A.; Martin, A. P.; Fernandez I., C.; Clark, D.: WHAT IS THE NEW ‘NEW’? 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Clark, D. R.: SIMULTANIOUS N-ASSIMILATION, NH4+ REGENERATION AND NITRIFICATION IN THE EUPHOTIC ZONE: IMPLICATIONS FOR NEW PRODUCTION ESTIMATES USING THE F-RATIO Salihoglu, B.; Garcon, V.; Oschlies, A.; Lomas, D.: INFLUENCE OF NUTRIENT UTILIZATION AND REMINERALIZATION STOICHIOMETRY ON PHYTOPLANKTON SPECIES AND CARBON EXPORT: A MODELING STUDY AT BA Frew, R. D.; Boyd, P. W.; Law, C. S.: THE FATE OF NEW NITROGEN PRIOR TO AND DURING A TRICHODESMIUM THIEBAUTII BLOOM IN THE SUBTROPICAL WATERS OF THE SW PACIFIC Hannides, C. C.; Landry, M. R.; Popp, B. N.: TEMPORAL VARIATION IN FOOD-WEB NITROGEN SOURCE IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE AS DETERMINED FROM COMPOUND-SPECIFIC STABLE NITROGEN ISOTOPE ANALYSES Landolfi, A.; Dietze, H.; Oschlies, A.: THE MORE YOU FIX THE MORE YOU LOOSE? 097: Tsunami and Storm Inundation and Sediment Transport Chair(s): Bruce Jaffe, [email protected]; Vasily Titov, [email protected]; Guy Gelfenbaum, [email protected]; Pat Lynett, [email protected] Location: W202 13:30 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Jaffe, B. E.; Gelfenbaum, G.: INVERSE SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MODELING TO LEARN HYDRODYNAMIC INFORMATION CONTAINED IN TSUNAMI DEPOSITS~ Woodruff, J. D.; Donnelly, J. P.; Mohrig, D.; Geyer, W. R.: RECONSTRUCTING RELATIVE WAVE HEIGHTS RESPONSIBLE FOR HURRICANE-INDUCED DEPOSITS* Zhang, Y. J.; Baptista, A. M.; Wang, K.; Goldfinger, C.; Witter, R.; Priest, G. P.; Peterson, C.; Cruikshank, K.: TSUNAMI INUNDATION STUDY WITH UNSTRUCTURED GRIDS: BENCHMARKING AND APPLICATION TO THE CASCADIA SUBDUCTION ZONE Ramana Murthy, M. V.; Usha, T.; Subaramanian, B. R.: INUNDATION ALONG SOUTH EAST COAST OF INDIA FOR 26TH DECEMBER 2004 TSUNAMI : FIELD MEASUREMENTS VS NUMERICAL MODEL * Du, X.; Fagherazzi, S.: TSUNAMI INCISIONS PRODUCED BY THE DECEMBER 2004 EARTHQUAKE ALONG THE COASTS OF THAILAND, INDONESIA, AND SRI LANKA Kabiling, M. B.: TWO-DIMENSIONAL STORM SURGE MODELING AND SCOUR ANALYSIS Mohammed, F.; Fritz, H. M.: 3D GRANULAR LANDSLIDE TSUNAMI EXPERIMENTS 106: Operational Applications of Ocean Satellite Observations Chair(s): Margaret Srinivasan, [email protected]; Robert Leben, [email protected] Location: W304 A/B 08:00 08:15 08:30 Jacobs, G.; Arnone, R.; May, D.; Bub, F.: OPERATIONAL OCEAN ENVIRONMENT PREDICTION BASED ON SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS* Shriver, J. F.; Helber, R. W.; Barron, C. N.; Jacobs, G. A.: THE IMPACT OF SATELLITE ALTIMETERS ON UPPER OCEAN PARAMETER SIMULATIONS Song, Y. T.: REMOTE SENSING FOR TSUNAMI RESEARCH AND EARLY WARNINGS* (~) 124 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Liu, G.; Eakin, C. M.; Christensen, T. R.; Gledhill, D. K.; Heron, S. F.; Morgan, J. A.; Skirving, W. J.; Strong, A. E.: NOAA CORAL REEF WATCH’S OPERATIONAL APPLICATION OF SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING DATA IN NEAR-REAL-TIME GLOBAL MONITORING OF CORAL HEALTH Jedlovec, G.; Vazquez, J.; Armstrong, E.: A NEW ENHANCED SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE COMPOSITE FOR USE BY THE SHORT TERM PREDICTION RESEARCH AND TRANSITION (SPORT) ACTIVITY Zhang, H. M.; Reynolds, R. W.; Rutledge, G.; Mendelssohn, R.; Schwing, F.; DeWitt, L.; Swank, D.: MULTI-SATELLITE BLENDED SURFACE MARINE PRODUCTS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS Gaytan Aguilar, S.; de Valk, C. F.: SLOWLY VARYING BIAS CORRECTION OF NEAR-SURFACE WIND FIELDS BASED ON WIND SCATTEROMETER DATA Holt, B.: SAR IMAGING OF THE OCEAN SURFACE-AN OVERVIEW Li, X.; Pichel, W.: VALIDATION OF SUB-KILOMETER SAR WIND PRODUCTS FOR THE NOAA ALASKA SAR DEMONSTRATION Withdrawn 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 108: Controls on Carbon Biogeochemistry and Fluxes and Their Associated Scales of Variability in Ocean Margins Chair(s): James Bauer, [email protected]; Charles S. Hopkinson, Jr., [email protected]; Wei-Jun Cai, [email protected] 16:00 Location: W108 08:00 08:30 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 114: New Directions for Funding and the Future of US Oceanographic Institutions Chair(s): D. James Baker, [email protected]; Ray Schmitt, [email protected]; Carl Wunsch, [email protected] Location: W103 13:30 13:45 14:00 Wunsch, C.: THE CHALLENGE OF LONG DURATION OCEANIC MEASUREMENTS Farrington, J. W.: INSPIRED BY CURIOSITY, INSPIRED BY USE: A PARADIGM FOR OCEAN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING RESEARCH. Gagosian, R. B.: NEW APPROACHES FOR THE SUPPORT OF OCEAN SCIENCES RESEARCH * represents Invited presentations ( ) 125 THURDAY 08:45 16:15 Jahnke, R. A.: DEVELOPING A CONSISTENT FRAMEWORK FOR QUANTIFYING CARBON EXCHANGES AT CONTINENTAL MARGINS ~ Cai, W.; Jiang, L.; Wang, Y.; Hu, X.; Bauer, J.; DeAlteris, J.; Hopkinson, C.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF CARBON DIOXIDE SIGNALS AND THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL CONTROLS IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT Bopp, L.; Borges, A. V.; Aumont, O.; Ethe, C.; Ciais, P.: INTEGRATING CO2 FLUXES IN THE COASTAL OCEAN: SIMULATING NATURAL VARIABILITY AND ANTHROPOGENIC UPTAKE WITH A GLOBAL MODEL OF 0.5° HORIZONTAL RESOLUTION. Jiang, L. Q.; Cai, W. J.; Wang, Y.: CARBON DIOXIDE DEGASSING IN RIVER- AND MARINE-DOMINATED ESTUARIES: IMPORTANCE OF FRESHWATER RUNOFF Plattner, G.; Gruber, N.; Lachkar, Z.; Frenzel, H.; Loher, D.: OCEAN CARBON CYCLING AND CO2 AIR-SEA EXCHANGE IN EASTERN BOUNDARY UPWELLING SYSTEMS Lachkar, Z.; Gruber, N.; Plattner, G. K.: WHAT CONTROLS BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTIVITY IN EASTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT SYSTEMS? Urban, N. R.; McKinley, G.; McDonald, C. P.; Atilla, N.; Desai, A.; Wu, C.: CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE CO2 EFFLUX FROM THE LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES Atilla, N.; McKinley, G.; Urban, N.; Kimura, N.; Bennington, V.; Desai, A.; Wu, C.: CARBON CYCLING IN LAKE SUPERIOR: OBSERVATIONS, MODELS AND IMPACTS ON THE REGIONAL CARBON BALANCE Withdrawn Duarte, C. M.: THE ROLE OF BIOTA IN CARBON CYCLING AT THE OCEAN MARGINS~ Munro, D. R.; Quay, P. D.: VARIABILITY IN PRIMARY PRODUCTION RATES OFF THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COAST: APPLICATION OF THE OXYGEN TRIPLE ISOTOPE METHOD Seitzinger, S. P.; Mayorga, E.; Beusen, A.; Bouwman, A. F.; Dumont, E.; Fekete, B.; Harrison, J.; Kroeze, C.; Lee, R.; Vorosmarty, C. J.: PAST, CURRENT & FUTURE TRAJECTORIES OF WATERSHED NUTRIENT EXPORT: A GLOBAL NEWS APPLICATION TO THE MILLENNIUM ECOSYSTEM ASSESSMENT SCENARIOS Thottathil, S. D.; Madhusudhana Gupta , G. V.; Balachandran, K. K.; Robin, R. S.; Madhu, N. V.; Nair, S.: SEASONALITY IN CARBON BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND INFLUENCE OF NET ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTION ON CO2 SUPERSATURATION IN EUTROPHIC COCHIN ESTUARY, INDIA Jonsson, B. F.; Salisbury, J.; Campbell, J. W.; Mahadevan, A.: VARIABILITY IN THE CONTINENTAL SHELF BIOLOGICAL PUMP REVEALED BY LAGRANGIAN TRACKING OF SATELLITE CHLOROPHYLL Wild-Allen, K.; Feng, M.: NUTRIENT SUPPLY TO THE WESTERN AUSTRALIAN SHELF M. Gupta, G. V.; S.S.Sarma, V. V.; Robin, R. S.; Raman, A. V.; Jai Kumar, M.; Rakesh, M.; Subramanian, B. R.: INFLUENCE OF NET ECOSYSTEM METABOLISM IN TRANSFERRING RIVERINE ORGANIC CARBON TO ATMOSPHERIC CO2 IN A TROPICAL COASTAL LAGOON (CHILKA LAKE, INDIA) Zablocki, J.; Andersson, A.; Bates, N. R.: DYNAMICS OF CARBON DIOXIDE IN A MANGROVE-DOMINATED MARINE ECOSYSTEM Guo, L. D.; Cai, Y. H.; Wang, X. R.: EXPORT FLUXES OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC AND INORGANIC CARBON AND NITROGEN FROM THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER Bauer, J. E.; Raymond, P. A.; Keesee, E. J.; Perkey, D. W.; Mull, K.: TRANSFORMATIONS OF ORGANIC MATTER IN A MAJOR U.S. EAST COAST ESTUARY: IMPLICATIONS FOR IDENTIFYING DOM AND POM SOURCE AND AGE SIGNATURES IN OCEAN MARGINS Mitra, S.; Zimmerman, A.; Dunn, J. C.; Woerner, W.; Hunsinger, G.: REFRACTORY BLACK CARBON IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY AND LOWER GANGESBRAHMAPUTRA Eglinton, T. I.; Hwang, J.; Manganini, S. J.; MontlUçon, D. B.; Toole, J. M.: ORGANIC CARBON CYCLING OVER THE NORTHWEST ATLANTIC MARGIN: IMPORTANCE OF LATERAL TRANSPORT Vlahos, P.; Wallace, D.: DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON (DIC) IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT: CLOSING THE CARBON BALANCE ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 15:00 Abbott, M. R.: U.S. FUNDING FOR OCEAN RESEARCH: MATCHING RESOURCES AND REQUIREMENTS Minster, J.: FUNDING AND OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTITUTIONS Orcutt, J.: GLOBAL OCEAN OBSERVATIONS GOVERNMENT AND INDUSTRY ROLE Haymet, A. D.: OCEAN OBSERVING INITIATIVE: THE INTERNATIONAL EFFORT Baker, D. J.; Schmitt, R. W.: THE ENDOWED OBSERVATION 15:15 133: Ocean Modeling in the Eddying Regime Chair(s): Mathew Maltrud, [email protected]; Matthew Hecht, [email protected] 117: Turbulence, Mixing, and Multi-scale Interactions in Estuaries and Nearshore Environments Location: W204 Chair(s): W. Rockwell Geyer, [email protected]; Stephen Monismith, [email protected]; James A. Lerczak, [email protected] 13:30 Location: W109 A 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 THURDAY 17:15 13:45 MacDonald, D. G.; Goodman, L.; Hetland, R. D.: OBSERVATIONS AND MODELING OF TKE PARAMETERS IN THE NEAR FIELD OF THE MERRIMACK RIVER PLUME* Helfrich, K. R.; White, B. L.; Scotti, A.: RAPID GRAVITATIONAL ADJUSTMENT OF A HORIZONTAL SHEAR LAYER Chen, F.; MacDonald, D. G.; Hetland, H.: ESTIMATES OF SPREADING IN A NEAR-FIELD RIVER PLUME FROM OBSERVATIONS AND MODEL SIMULATIONS Kilcher, L.; Nash, J. D.; Moum, J. N.: LIFT-OFF OF THE COLUMBIA RIVER OUTFLOW Rehmann, C. R.; Carr, M. L.: SIMULTANEOUS ESTIMATES OF LONGITUDINAL DISPERSION WITH TRACER STUDIES AND ACOUSTIC DOPPLER CURRENT PROFILER MEASUREMENTS Mickett, J. B.; Alford, M. H.; Devol, A. H.: OBSERVATIONS OF STRONG, PERSISTENT, 4--10 DAY-PERIOD INTERNAL WAVES IN HOOD CANAL, WASHINGTON 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 129: The Ecosystem of the Beaufort Sea 15:15 Chair(s): Patricia Ramlal, [email protected]; Tom Weingartner, [email protected] 16:00 Location: W105 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 Paulic, J. E.; Papst, M. H.: DISTRIBUTION AND ASSEMBLAGE STRUCTURE OF MARINE LARVAL FISH IN THE NEARSHORE CANADIAN BEAUFORT SEA Ashjian, C. J.; Braund, S. R.; Campbell, R. G.; George, J. C.; Moore, S. E.; Okkonen, S. R.; Sherr, B. F.; Sherr, E. B.: ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABILITY AND BOWHEAD WHALE DISTRIBUTION ON THE ALASKAN BEAUFORT SHELF NEAR BARROW, AK McLaughlin, F. A.; Yamamoto-Kawai, M.; Carmack, E. C.; Zimmermann, S.; Shimada, K.; Proshutinsky, A.: THE HYDROGRAPHY OF THE CANADA BASIN: 2002-2007 Williams, W. J.; Carmack, E. C.; Ingram, R. G.: WINDDRIVEN UPWELLING DUE TO ISOBATH DIVERGENCE ON THE MACKENZIE SHELF Forest, A.; Bélanger, S.; Sampei, M.; Sasaki, H.; Fortier, L.: THREE-YEAR ASSESSMENT OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON FLUXES IN AMUNDSEN GULF (BEAUFORT SEA): SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS AND SEDIMENT TRAP MEASUREMENTS Conlan, K. E.; Aitken, A.; Hendrycks, E.; McClelland, C.; Blasco, S.; Melling, H.: DISTRIBUTION PATTERNS OF CANADIAN BEAUFORT SHELF MACROBENTHOS Walkusz, W.; Kwasniewski, S.; Paulic, J.; Wong, S.; Papst, M.: ZOOPLANKTON OF THE CANADIAN BEAUFORT SEA Nelson, R. J.; Carmack, E. C.; McLaughlin, F. A.; Cooper, G. A.: GENETICS OF PACIFIC ZOOPLANKTON INVASION OF THE ARCTIC OCEAN. 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Treguier, A. M.; Le Sommer, J.; Madec, G.; England, M.; Rintoul, S.: VARIABILITY OF THE MERIDIONAL CIRCULATION OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN: THE ROLE OF EDDY FLUXES Biastoch, A.; Lutjeharms, J.; Scheinert, M.; Boening, C. W.; Siedler, G.: THE IMPORTANCE OF SMALL-SCALE DYNAMICS ON THE AGULHAS LEAKAGE Wolfe, C. L.; Cessi, P.: OVERTURNING CIRCULATION IN AN EDDY-RESOLVING MODEL: THE EFFECT OF THE POLE-TO-POLE TEMPERATURE GRADIENT Merryfield, W. J.; Scott, R. B.: PROBING THE NEPTUNE EFFECT: EDDY-TOPOGRAPHIC INTERACTION IN AN ULTRA-HIGH RESOLUTION PRIMITIVE EQUATION MODEL Bryan, F. O.; Maltrud, M. E.; Peacock, S.: THE GLOBAL OCEAN TRANSIT TIME DISTRIBUTION COMPUTED WITH AN EDDY RICH GENERAL CIRCULATION MODEL Haertel, P. T.; Jensen, T.: SIMULATING EDDIES NEAR THE EQUATORIAL UNDERCURRENT USING SLIPPERY SACKS Samelson, R. M.; Chelton, D. B.; Schlax, M. G.; de Szoeke, R. A.: SATELLITE-BASED ESTIMATES OF EDDY KINEMATICS LaCasce, J. H.: THE MERGER RATE IN FREELYDECAYING, 2-D TURBULENCE Marshall , D. P.; Adcroft, A. J.: PARAMETERIZING GEOSTROPHIC EDDIES IN OCEAN MODELS: ENERGETICS, POTENTIAL VORTICITY MIXING AND FLOW INSTABILITY Petersen, M. R.; Hecht, M. W.; Holm, D. D.; Wingate, B. A.: THE LANS-ALPHA TURBULENCE PARAMETERIZATION IN PRIMITIVE EQUATION OCEAN MODELING Kamenkovich, I. V.; Berloff, P. S.; Pedlosky, J.: ON THE DYNAMICS OF THE ZONAL JETS IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC Galperin, B.; Sukoriansky, S.; Dikovskaya, N.: ZONOSTROPHIC TURBULENCE: A PARADIGM OF ZONATION IN THE EARTH’S OCEANS AND ON GIANT PLANETS Klein, P.; Danioux, E.; Sasaki, H.: PROPAGATION OF WIND ENERGY INTO THE DEEP OCEAN THROUGH MESOSCALE EDDIES: A PATHWAY TO MIXING Canuto, V. M.; Dubovikov, M. S.; Clayson, C. A.; Luneva, M. V.: MODELING MESOSCALES IN THE MIXED LAYER (~) 126 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 143: Meso- and Smaller-Scale Processes in the Coastal Ocean: Challenges for Monitoring and Prediction 17:00 Chair(s): Jeffrey W. Book, [email protected]; Michel Rixen, [email protected]; Tamay Ozgokmen, [email protected]; Lakshmi Kantha, [email protected] 17:15 Location: W204 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:15 169: Global Mode and Intermediate Waters: Their Physics, Biogeochemistry, and Variability Chair(s): Rana A Fine, [email protected]; Lynne Talley, [email protected] Location: W109 B 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 165: Advances in Coastal Morphodynamics: From Estuaries and Beaches to Deltas and Shelves 10:15 Chair(s): Art Trembanis, [email protected]; Carl Friedrichs, [email protected]; Andrew Short, [email protected]; Jeff List, [email protected] 13:30 Location: W202 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 Nittrouer, C. A.; Davies, M. H.: THE VALUE OF TEMPORAL PERSPECTIVE FOR UNDESTANDING COASTAL SEDIMENTATION: THIRTY YEARS ON THE WASHINGTON CONTINENTAL SHELF* Warrick, J. A.: GRAVITY CURRENT SEDIMENT DISPERSAL FROM A SEMI-ARID MOUNTAINOUS RIVER* Ma, Y.; Wright, L. D.; Harris, C. K.; Friedrichs, C. T.: OBSERVATIONS OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT ON THE CONTINENTAL SHELF OFF THE MOUTH OF THE WAIAPU RIVER, NEW ZEALAND: EVIDENCE FOR CURRENT-SUPPORTED GRAVITY FLOWS Kineke, G. C.; Bentley, S. J.; Lermon, M.; Johnson, S.: COLD FRONTS AND SEABED VARIABILITY ON THE SHALLOW LOUISIANA SHELF 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 Maze, G.; Forget, G.; Marshall, J.: IDENTIFYING THE LOCATION AND TIMING OF GLOBAL MODE WATER FORMATION PROCESSES Cerovecki, I.; Talley, L.; Mazloff, M.: SUBANTARCTIC MODE WATER AND ANTARCTIC INTERMEDIATE WATER FORMATION Dong, S.; Sprintall, J.; Gille, S.; Talley, L.: DEEP MIXED LAYERS AND MODE WATER FORMATION FROM ARGO FLOAT PROFILES IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN* Chereskin, T. K.: A SYNOPTIC VIEW OF THE VORTICITY BALANCE OF THE SUBANTARCTIC FRONT IN THE SOUTHEAST PACIFIC* Carter, B. R.; Dickson, A. G.; Talley, L.; Chereskin, T.; Holte, J.; Hartin, C.; Hartin, C.: AN INVERSE MODEL TO SEPARATE MIXING FROM GAS EXCHANGE IN THE REGION OF AAIW FORMATION* Sallee, J. B.; Morrow, R.; Speer, K.: EDDY HEAT DIFFUSION AND SUBANTARCTIC MODE WATER FORMATION* Tanaka/Yukio, Y. T.; Hasumi/Hiroyasu, H. H.: A ROLE OF MESOSCALE EDDIES IN THE FORMATION OF ANTARCTIC INTERMEDIATE WATER Naveira Garabato, A. C.; Jullion, L.; Stevens, D. P.; Heywood, K. J.; King, B. A.: VARIABILITY OF MODE AND INTERMEDIATE WATERS IN DRAKE PASSAGE DURING THE LATE 20TH AND EARLY 21ST CENTURIES Lalande, C.; Fortier, L.: IMPACT OF A WARMING OF THE INTERMEDIATE WATER LAYER ON THE EXPORT OF PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON IN THE EURASIAN ARCTIC Piechura, J.; Walczowski, W.: WARMING OF THE WEST SPITSBERGEN CURRENT AND SEA ICE EXTENTION NORTH OF SVALBARD Schlosser, P.; Newton, R.; Anderson, L.; Smethie, W. M.; Mortlock, R.; Fairbanks, R.: FRESHWATER FRACTIONS, PATHWAYS, AND MEAN RESIDENCE TIMES OF WATERS IN THE SURFACE LAYERS OF THE ARCTIC OCEAN DERIVED FROM TRACER DATA McClean, J. L.; Ivanova, D. P.: DEPICTIONS OF LABRADOR SEA WATER FROM THE IPCC MODELS AND A FINE RESOLUTION POP SIMULATION DURING HIGH AND LOW NAO INDEX PERIODS* Kieke, D.; Rhein, M.; Stramma, L.; Klein, B.; Yashayaev, I.; Koltermann, K. P.: FORMATION, SPREADING AND FATE OF LABRADOR SEA WATER* Bower, A. S.; Lozier, M. S.: EXPORT PATHWAYS OF LABRADOR SEA WATER FROM THE SUBPOLAR NORTH ATLANTIC OBSERVED WITH RAFOS FLOATS Steinfeldt, R.; Rhein, M.; Bullister, J. L.; Tanhua, T.: INVENTORY CHANGES OF ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON IN LABRADOR SEA WATER * represents Invited presentations ( ) 127 THURDAY 10:00 Orlic, M.; Beg Paklar, G.; Dadic, V.; Leder, N.; Mihanovic, H.; Pasaric, M.; Pasaric, Z.: OBSERVATION AND MODELING OF PERIODIC UPWELLING/DOWNWELLING IN THE ADRIATIC SEA* Flampouris, S.; Ziemer, F.; Schymura, G.: HIGH TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL RESOLUTION MONITORING OF THE BATHYMETRY AND CURRENT FIELD IN COASTAL AREAS BY USING GROUND BASED X-BAND RADAR Gemmrich, J.: HIGH RESOLUTION TURBULENCE MEASUREMENTS BENEATH YOUNG WAVES. Thomson, J. M.; Jessup, A. T.: REMOTE ESTIMATION AND VALIDATION OF WAVE-BREAKING ENERGY DISSIPATION Johnston, S.; Rudnick, D.; Todd, R.; Cole, S.: TIDAL BEAMS AND MIXING NEAR MONTEREY BAY Levine, M. D.; Kuebel Cervantes, B. T.: INTERNAL TIDE ON THE OREGON SHELF* Book, J. W.; Martin, P. J.; Chiggiato, J.; Rixen, M.; Burrage, D.; Tudor, M.; Ladner, S.: EDDIES IN THE WESTERN ADRIATIC CURRENT DOWNSTREAM OF CAPE GARGANO: PREDICTIONS, MONITORING, AND ADAPTIVE SAMPLING DURING THE DART EXPERIMENT Haza, A. C.; Ozgokmen, T. M.; Poje, A. C.; Martin, P.; Garraffo, Z. D.: RELATIVE DISPERSION FROM A HIGHRESOLUTION COASTAL AND OCEAN MODELS Pullen, J.; Doyle, J. D.; May, P.: AIR-SEA DYNAMICS DURING THE PHILIPPINES MONSOON Ivanov, L. M.: SUBMESOSCALE/MESOSCALE SYNTHESIS BASED ON DATA-DATA AND DATA-MODEL FUSION INVOLVING NON-PROBABILISTIC A PRIORI INFORMATION Palinkas, C. M.; Ogston, A. S.: LINKAGE OF SEABED AND WATER-COLUMN OBSERVATIONS TO QUANTIFY EVENT-SCALE SEDIMENT DEPOSITION AND EROSION Ogston, A. S.; Sternberg, R. W.: SEDIMENT DISPERSAL FROM RIVER SUSPENSION TO CONTINENTAL SHELF DEPOSIT - A SYNTHESIS OF RECENT OBSERVATIONAL STUDIES ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 10:00 Lozier, M. S.; Sindlinger, L. R.: ON THE SALINIFICATION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN OVERFLOW WATERS* Edson, J. B.; Weller, R. A.; Plueddemann, A. J.; Ware, J.; Faluotico, S.; Bigorre, S.: OBSERVATIONS AND MODELS OF MOMENTUM, HEAT AND MASS EXCHANGE FROM CLIMODE* Kadko, D. C.; Johnson, R.: INSIGHTS INTO 18 DEGREE MODE WATER FORMATION FROM MEASUREMENTS OF 7BE AT THE BERMUDA TIME-SERIES (BATS) STATION Andersson, A. J.; Bates, N. R.; Jeffries, M. A.; Neely, J. K.; Doney, S. C.; Benoit, N.: INCREASING UPTAKE AND FATE OF CO2 IN NORTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL MODE WATER (STMW)* Forget, G.; Maze, G.; Marshall, J.: QUANTITATIVE AND DYNAMICAL ANALYSIS OF THE EDW VOLUME CYCLE USING AN OBSERVATION-MODEL SYNTHESIS.* Qiu, B.; Chen, S.; Hacker, P.: NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE SUBTROPICAL MODE WATER INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY FROM THE KESS PROFILING FLOAT PROGRAM* Rainville, L.; Jayne, S. R.: EVOLUTION OF THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL MODE WATER DURING KESS* Howe, P. J.; Donohue, K.; Watts, D. R.: MEAN STREAMCOORDINATE STRUCTURE OF THE KUROSHIO EXTENSION FIRST MEANDER TROUGH Suga, T.; Sukigara, C.; Saino, T.; Toyama, K.; Yanagimoto, D.; Hanawa, K.; Shikama, N.: SUBTROPICAL MODE WATER AS AN AGENT TO MAINTAIN DEEP CHLOROPHYLL MAXIMA IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC 10:15 178: Structure and Function of River Plumes in Coastal Margins Chair(s): Tawnya Peterson, [email protected]; Alexander Horner-Devine, [email protected] Location: W203 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 THURDAY 173: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Larval Dispersion and Connectivity Chair(s): Lisa Levin, [email protected]; Stephen Chiswell, [email protected]; Matthew Hare, [email protected]; Linda Rasmussen, [email protected] 14:45 Location: W110 15:00 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 Lopez-Duarte, P. C.; Christy, J. H.; Tankersley, R. A.: HOW YOU GET THERE DEPENDS ON WHERE YOU START: VARIATION IN FIDDLER CRAB LARVAL DISPERSAL MECHANISMS Hurst, T. P.; Scheingross, J. S.; Seale, E. M.; Laurel, B. J.; Cooper, D. W.; Duffy-Anderson, J. T.: COMBINING LABORATORY AND FIELD OBSERVATIONS TO MODEL VERTICAL MOVEMENTS OF LARVAL PACIFIC COD: EFFECTS OF ONTOGENY, TEMPERATURE, AND LIGHT Hilbish, T. J.; Wethey, D. S.; Lima, F. P.: CHARACTERISTIC LENGTH IN MARINE POPULATIONS: THE INTERPLAY OF LARVAL DISPERSAL AND ADULT POPULATION SUCCESS IN DETERMINING DISTRIBUTION Arnold, W. S.: LIFE-STAGE SPECIFIC APPROACHES TO TRACKING BIVALVE LARVAE Puebla, O.; Bermingham, E.; Guichard, F.: GENETIC SIGNATURE OF THE SPATIAL SCALE OF DISPERSAL MEDIATED BY CORAL REEF FISH LARVAE Hatcher, B. G.; Yang, B.; Beresford, R.; Sheng, J.: FORENSIC MODELING OF MARINE INVASIONS OF AN INLAND SEA USING ECOLOGICAL CONNECTIVITY ANALYSIS Huebert, K. B.; Sponaugle, S.: THE HOME STRETCH: 3-D SWIMMING TRAJECTORIES OF SETTLEMENT-STAGE CORAL REEF FISH LARVAE IN THE FLORIDA KEYS North, E. W.; Schlag, Z.; Biermann, J.: THE INFLUENCE OF LARVAL BEHAVIOR AND MIXING ON DISPERSAL, CONNECTIVITY, AND ENTRY TO ESTUARIES FROM SHELF WATERS Clay, T. W.; Grünbaum, D.: SMALL CHANGES IN MORPHOLOGY LEAD TO LARGE CHANGES IN MOVEMENT AND TRANSPORT IN TURBULENCE FOR LARVAE OF THE SAND DOLLAR DENDRASTER. Withdrawn 15:15 Lessard, E. J.; Frame, E. R.: THE INFLUENCE OF THE COLUMBIA RIVER PLUME ON PATTERNS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH, GRAZING AND CHLOROPHYLL ON THE WASHINGTON AND OREGON COASTS* Wilkerson, F.; Parker, A.; Hogue, V.; Marchi, A.; Dugdale, R.: INFLUENCE OF THE SAN FRANCISCO OUTFLOW ON THE PRODUCTIVITY OF THE GULF OF THE FARALLONES Rao, S. A.; Austin, J. A.; Pringle, J. M.: THE ROLE OF CHESAPEAKE BUOYANT PLUME IN OBSERVED RELAXATION OF THE UPWELLING FRONT Halverson, M. J.; Pawlowicz, R.: TIDES AND SALINITY IN THE FRASER RIVER PLUME McCabe, R. M.; MacCready, P.; Hickey, B. M.: OBSERVATIONAL AND NUMERICAL MODEL ANALYSIS OF NEAR-FIELD COLUMBIA RIVER PLUME ENTRAINMENT AND MOMENTUM Geier, S. L.; Hickey, B. M.; McCabe, R.; Kudela, R.; Dever, E.: THREE INTERACTING BUOYANT PLUMES IN THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT Gregorio, S. O.; Thomas, P. J.; Brend, M. A.; Linden, P. F.: LARGE-SCALE AND SMALL-SCALE LABORATORY SIMULATIONS OF GRAVITY-DRIVEN COASTAL CURRENTS Peterson, T. D.; Kudela, R. M.; Horner-Devine, A. R.; Banas, N. S.; Bruland, K. W.; Frame, E. R.; Hickey, B. M.; Jay, D. A.; Lessard, E. J.; Lohan, M. C.; McCabe, R. M.; Peterson, J. O.: INFLUENCE OF A RECIRCULATING RIVER PLUME BULGE ON BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES ALONG THE OREGON/WASHINGTON SHELF 188: Estuarine Impacts, Resilience and Recovery Chair(s): Kedong Yin, [email protected]; Paul J. Harrison, [email protected]; Hans Paerl, [email protected] Location: W102 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 NIXON, S. W.; FULWEILER, R. W.: OLIGOTROPHICATION - COMING TO AN ESTUARY NEAR YOU?* Carstensen, J.; Conley, D. J.; Ærtebjerg, G.; Henriksen, P.: EFFECTS OF A LARGE-SCALE EUTROPHICATION AND OLIGOTROPHICATION EXPERIMENT IN DANISH ESTUARIES AND COASTAL WATERS Greening, H.; Janicki, A.: REVERSAL OF EUTROPHIC CONDITIONS IN TAMPA BAY, FLORIDA, USA Sellner, K. G.; Harding, L. W.: NUTRIENT IMPACTS ON THE CHESAPEAKE AND ITS SUB-ESTUARIES: RESILIENCE (?) AND RECOVERY (SLOW TO UNDETECTABLE) (~) 128 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:45 15:00 15:15 Alber, M.; Schaefer, S. C.; Pomeroy, L. R.; Sheldon, J. E.; Joye, S. B.: NITROGEN INPUTS TO THE ALTAMAHA RIVER ESTUARY (GEORGIA, USA): A HISTORIC ANALYSIS. Paerl, H. W.; Peierls, B. L.; Rossignol, K. L.; Wetz, M. S.: ECOLOGICAL RESPONSES AND RECOVERY OF THE PAMLICO SOUND SYSTEM DURING A PERIOD OF ELEVATED HURRICANE ACTIVITY: WHAT’S MANAGEABLE AND WHAT’S NOT? Pinckney, J. L.: RESILIENCE AND RECOVERY OF LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN AFTER HURRICANE KATRINA YIN, K. D.; YIN, K. D.; Harrison, P. J.: ECOSYSTEM BUFFERING OF NITROGEN ENRICHMENT IN A SUBTROPIC PEARL RIVER ESTUARY COASTAL WATERS IN SOUTH CHINA Liu, H.; Chen, B.; Chen, X.; Chen, M.; Harrison, P. J.: PLANKTONIC MICROBIAL FOOD WEB DYNAMICS IN HONG KONG WATERS WITH CONTRASTING TROPHIC CONDITIONS Ho, A.; Xu, J.; Yin, K.; Harrison, P. J.: DYNAMICS OF NUTRIENTS AND PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS IN HONG KONG WATERS BEFORE AND AFTER SEWAGE ABATEMENT Diaz, R. J.: HYPOXIA, A PARADOX OF EUTROPHICATION* Bianchi, T. S.; Sampere, T. P.; Wysocki, L. A.; Duan, S.: MECHANISMS OF RESILIENCY AND RECOVERY IN RESPONSE TO HIGH ORGANIC MATTER INPUTS ON A RIVER-DOMINATED MARGIN (RIOMAR): THE LOUISIANA SHELF/SLOPE Dahlen, D.; Hunt, C.; Keay, K.: ANOTHER WAY TO LOOK AT RECOVERY OF COASTAL SEDIMENTS FROM EXCESS CARBON LOADING Taylor, D. I.: WASTEWATER DIVERSION, LARGE REDUCTIONS IN NUTRIENT LOADINGS, AND CHANGES TO THE BOSTON HARBOR WATER COLUMN Carlozo, N.; Radcliffe, G.; Fisher, T. R.: TRENDS IN WATER QUALITY IN RESPONSE TO HUMAN POPULATION AND LAND USE IN THE DELAWARE, HUDSON, AND CHESAPEAKE BASINS Kennish, M. J.; Bricker, S. B.: STRATEGIES TO COUNTER ESTUARINE EUTROPHICATION IN THE MIDATLANTIC REGION Hendrickson, J. C.; Sucsy, P.: RESIDENCE TIME EFFECTS ON INTERNAL ORGANIC CARBON AND NITROGEN LOAD IN A SOUTHEAST U.S. COASTAL PLAIN RIVER. Kim, H.; Montagna, P. A.: EFFECTS OF FRESHWATER INFLOW ON PELAGIC AND BENTHIC COMMUNITIES IN TEXAS ESTUARIES: A MODELING STUDY 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 194: Hypoxia in Estuaries and the Coastal Ocean: Commonalities, Comparisons, Contradictions, Climate Change Chair(s): Nancy Rabalais, [email protected]; Jan Newton, [email protected]; James O’Donnell, [email protected]; George Voulgaris, [email protected] 191: In Situ Optical Properties for the Investigation of Particle Dynamics Location: W102 16:00 Chair(s): Grace Chang, [email protected] Location: W304 A/B 13:30 14:00 Agrawal, Y. C.: LIGHT SCATTERING BY PARTICLES NEW OBSERVATIONS AND DIRECTIONS* Kostadinov, T. S.; Siegel, D. A.; Maritorena, S.; Guillocheau, N.: RETRIEVING THE PARTICLE SIZE DISTRIBUTION USING GLOBAL OCEAN COLOR SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS Honda, M. C.; Matsumoto, K.; Kawakami, H.; Fujiki, T.; Watanabe, S.; Dickey, T.: ESTIMATION OF PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY WITH THE RATIO OF SPECTRAL IRRADIANCE AT A WAVELENGTH OF 555 NM TO THAT AT 443 NM AT SUBSURFACE WATER Spear, A. H.; Huffman, D.; Garcia-Rubio, L. H.: THE USE OF MULTIWAVLENGTH SPECTROSCOPY FOR THE SPECTRAL CHARACTERIZATION OF KARENIA BREVIS AND THE INFLUENCE OF CHLOROPLASTS ON ITS SPECTRAL FINGERPRINT Zhang, X.: RETRIEVE SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS OF PHYTOPLANKTON SUSPENDED PARTICLES AND DETRITUS FROM VOLUME SCATTERING FUNCTIONS IN A COASTAL WATER OFF NEW JERSEY Gray, D. J.; Weidemann, A. D.; Lee, Z.; Lee, M.; Shybanov, E. B.; Martynov, O. V.: VARIABILITY OF THE VOLUME SCATTERING FUNCTION IN NATURAL WATERS Peng, F.; Effler, S. W.; O’Donnell, D.; Weidemann, A. D.; Auer, M. T.: MODELING LIGHT SCATTERING IN LAKE SUPERIOR THROUGH A TWO-COMPONET APPROACH Russo, C. R.; Boss, E.: MEASURING SUSPENDED SEDIMENT CONCENTRATION USING HIGH RESOLUTION CURRENT METERS Schultz, H.; Zappa, C. J.; Banner, M. L.; Wolff, L. B.; Yalcin, J.; Corrada-Emmanuel, A.: A METHOD FOR RECOVERING THE TWO-DIMENSIONAL SLOPE FIELD OF OCEAN SURFACE WAVES USING AN IMAGING POLARIMETER Stomp, M.; Huisman, J.: COLORFUL NICHES OF AQUATIC MICROORGANISMS SHAPED BY VIBRATIONS OF THE WATER MOLECULE Gernez, P.; Antoine, D.; Huot, Y.: DIURNAL VARIABILITY OF SURFACE INHERENT OPTICAL PROPERTIES AND FLUORESCENCE, AS MEASURED IN THE NORTHWESTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEA (BOUSSOLE MOORING) 16:15 Stramski, D.: PARTICLE FUNCTIONAL TYPES IN OCEAN OPTICS: BEYOND BULK PARAMETERIZATION OF SUSPENDED PARTICULATE MATTER~ Twardowski, M. S.; Barnard, A.; Schofield, O.; Sullivan, J.; Claustre, H.; Dierssen, H.; Buonassissi, C.; Freeman, S.; Zaneveld, J. R.; Moore, C.: STRANGERS IN THE LIGHT: GETTING BETTER ACQUAINTED WITH PARTICLES AND PROCESSES THAT HAVE PREVIOUSLY BEEN DIFFICULT TO RESOLVE* 16:30 Dam, H. G.; O’Donnell, J.; Bohlen, W. F.; Kremer, J. N.; Vlhahos, P.; Whitney, M. M.: NUTRIENTS, WEATHER, CLIMATE AND HYPOXIA IN LONG ISLAND SOUND* Lehmann, M. F.; Bender, M. L.; Barnett, B.; Gelinas, Y.; Mucci, A.; Maranger, R.; Gilbert, D.: AEROBIC RESPIRATION AND HYPOXIA IN THE LOWER ST. LAWRENCE ESTUARY: CONSTRAINTS FROM STABLE ISOTOPE RATIOS OF DISSOLVED OXYGEN IN THE WATER COLUMN Berelson, W. M.; Riedel, T.; McManus, J.; Severmann, S.: THE EFFECTS OF OXYGEN ON BENTHIC FLUX OF NUTRIENTS AND IRON MEASURED WITH BENTHIC CHAMBERS DEPLOYED ON THE OREGON/N. CALIFORNIA SHELF * represents Invited presentations ( ) 129 THURDAY 14:30 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 14:00 Baustian, M. M.; Rabalais, N. N.: THE EFFECT OF LIGHT ON HYPOXIC BOTTOM WATER OXYGEN CONCENTRATIONS IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO Lonsdale, M.; Elliott, J. K.; Hannafious, D.; Newton, J.: FACTORS AFFECTING THE DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE OF BEGGIATOA SPP. BACTERIAL MATS IN HOOD CANAL, WA Devol, A. H.; Newton, J.; Kawase, M.: HYPOXIA AND FISH KILL EVENTS IN HOOD CANAL, WASHINGTON STATE 14:15 14:30 14:45 200: Committee’s Choice 15:00 Chair(s): Jon Sharp, [email protected] Location: W110 Frank, T. M.: VISION IN THE DEEP Legendre, L.; Pesant, S.; Gattuso, J. P.; Taalba, A. N.: PRIMARY PRODUCTION OF DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON IN OCEANS 15:15 THURDAY 13:30 13:45 Wegner, K. E.; Baptista, A. M.; Cresswell, J. J.: CULTURAL SENSITIVITY, REVELANCE, AND THE IMPORTANCE OF FAMILY: WORKING WITH UNDERREPRESENTED STUDENTS IN COASTAL MARGIN SCIENCE Gage, S. H.; Joo, W.; Biswas, S. K.; Kasten, E. P.: AN AUTOMATED ACOUSTIC MONITROING SYSTEM FOR ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF SOUNDSCAPE CHANGE Bergren, R. L.: OCEAN SCIENTIST = ROCK STAR Lyman, J. M.; Johnson, G. C.: ESTIMATING ANNUAL GLOBAL UPPER OCEAN HEAT CONTENT ANOMALIES DESPITE IRREGULAR IN SITU OCEAN SAMPLING Draut, A. E.; Bothner, M. H.; Reynolds, R. L.; Field, M. E.; Cochran, S. A.; Logan, J. B.; Storlazzi, C. D.; Berg, C. J.: IMPLICATIONS OF SEASONAL FLOOD DEPOSITS FOR CORAL-REEF ECOSYSTEMS; EXAMPLE FROM HANALEI BAY, KAUA’I, HI, USA Paola, C.: IS RESTORATION OF THE MISSISSIPPI DELTA FEASIBLE? (~) 130 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Thursday Posters 36. 008: Decadal Variations in Ocean Interior Circulation, Water Masses, and Biogeochemistry - Results From The CLIVAR/CO2 Repeat Hydrography Program 37. 38. Chair(s): Richard A. Feely, [email protected]; Lynne Talley, [email protected]; Rik Wanninkhof, [email protected] 39. Location: Poster Hall 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 40. 021: Biological Oceanography, Marine Biology: General Chair(s): John Reinfelder, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1412. 1413. 1414. 1415. 1416. 1417. 1418. 1419. 1420. 1421. 1422. 1423. Lopez-Gasca, M.; Li, X. N.; Podlaska, A.; Taylor, G. T.: ANAEROBIC THIOSULFATE AND SULFUR OXIDATION/DISPROPORTIONATION MEDIATED BY AUTOTHROPIC BACTERIA IN THE CARIACO’ S BASIN REDOXCLINE Tang, K. W.; Smith, W. O.; Elliott, D. T.; Shields, A. R.: IT’ S GOOD TO BE BIG--- PHAEOCYSTIS ANTARTICA COLONY SIZE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF ZOOPLANKTON GRAZERS Leong, S. C.; Hosaka, T.; Saino, T.: PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES AND PRODUCTION OF PHYTOPLANKTON DETERMINED FROM VARIABLE FLUORESCENCE QUANTUM YIELD Mackey, K. R.; Paytan, P.; Grossman, A. R.: BLOOM OR DOOM: SURVIVING THE TRANSITION FROM MIXING TO STRATIFICATION Ewing, T.; Onthank, K. L.; Cowles, D. L.: THE EFFECT OF OCTOPUS PREDATION ON A SPONGE-SCALLOP ASSOCIATION Onthank, K. L.; Cowles, D. L.: METABOLIC MEASUREMENTS OF ENERGY FLOW THROUGH OCTOPUS RUBESCENS Giebel, H. A.; Brinkhoff, T.; Simon, M.: REGIONAL PREFERENCES OF THE RCA (ROSEOBACTER CLADE AFFILIATED) CLUSTER AND THE SAR11 CLADE: SOUTHERN OCEAN VS. TEMPERATE SEAS Beversdorf, L. J.; Bjorkman, K.; Church, M. J.; DeLong, E. F.; Karl, D. M.: AEROBIC PRODUCTION OF METHANE IN THE SEA Ashvini Chauhan, A.; Jennifer Cherrier, J.; Henry Williams, H. N.: MICROBIAL COMMUNITY SHIFTS AS A FUNCTION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) AVAILABILITY OVER A TIDAL CYCLE IN APALACHICOLA BAY, FL Maeda , M.; Ishiwata, Y.; Obata, M.; Mizobuchi, A.; Taguchi, S.: DIEL VARIATION OF LIGHT ABSORPTION OF MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON ISOCHRYSIS GALBANA IN RESPONSE TO NITRATE CONCENTRATIONS Gillis, N. K.; Walters, L. J.; Hoffman, E. A.: GENETIC DIVERSITY AND POPULATION ADMIXTURE CONTRIBUTE TO ESTABLISHMENT OF MYTELLA CHARRUANA, AN INVASIVE MUSSEL Hassett, R. P.; Crockett, E. L.: TEMPERATURE EFFECTS ON DIETARY CHOLESTEROL DEMAND AND CHOLESTEROL CONTENT OF ZOOPLANKTON * represents Invited presentations ( ) 131 THURDAY 29. Wang, X. J.; Murtugudde, R.; Busalacchi, A.: OCEAN CLIMATE COUPLING IN THE TROPICAL PACIFIC OVER THE PAST 50 YEARS: IMPLICATIONS AND FEEDBACKS McNichol, A. P.; Sonnerup, R. E.; Arsenault, M. A.: RECONSTRUCTING THE OCEAN 13C SUESS EFFECT Bishop, J. K.: SPATIAL ASSESSMENT OF PARTICULATE CARBON IN THE ATLANTIC Chanson, M.; Millero, F. J.: CHANGES OF ANTHROPOGENIC CO2 IN THE MAJOR OCEANS Davis, X. J.; Rothstein, L. M.; Dewar, W. K.; Menemenlis, D.: NUMERICAL AND THEORETICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL MODE WATER AND ITS ROLE IN PACIFIC CLIMATE VARIABILITY Diggs, S. C.; Swift, J. H.; Kozyr, A.; Kinkade, D. B.; Kappa, J.; Fields, J. C.; Anderson, S.; Muus, D.; Piercy, S.: MANAGING HIGH QUALITY CTD AND WATER SAMPLE DATA FOR THE CLIVAR/CO2 REPEAT HYDROGRAPHY PROGRAM Jeffries, M. A.; Bates, N. R.: GLOBAL ESTIMATES OF NET COMMUNITY PRODUCTION (NCP) ESTIMATED FROM SEASONAL CLIMATOLOGICAL MAPS OF INORGANIC CARBON DATA. Lee, K.; Park, G.: NO RECENT UPTAKE OF ANTHROPOGENIC CO2 BY THE EAST (JAPAN) SEA Sasaki, Y. N.; Minobe, S.; Schneider, N.; Kagimoto, T.; Nonaka, M.; Sasaki, H.: DECADAL SEA LEVEL VARIABILITY IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC IN A GLOBAL EDDY-RESOLVING OCEAN MODEL HINDCAST Swift, J. H.; Osborne, J.; Diggs, S. C.; Talley, L. D.: VISUALIZING OCEAN INTERIOR CHANGES FROM THE CLIVAR/CO2 REPEAT HYDROGRAPHY PROGRAM USING JAVA OCEANATLAS Kumamoto, Y.; Murata, A.; Watanabe, S.; Fukasawa, M.; SONNERUP, R. E.: TEMPORAL CHANGES IN THE 13CSUESS EFFECT AND ANTHROPOGENIC CO2 IN THE SUBTROPICAL SOUTH PACIFIC BETWEEN 1992 AND 2003 Kawano, T.; Kouketsu, S.; Uchida, H.; Katsumata, K.; Doi, T.; Kawai, Y.; Kumamoto, Y.; Aoyama, M.; Fukasawa, M.: CHANGE IN TEMPERATURE OF BOTTOM WATER IN THE PACIFIC Katsumata, K.; Fukasawa, M.: DECADAL CHANGES OF BOTTOM WATER AND MERIDIONAL HEAT/SALT FLUXES ACROSS THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE SUBTROPICAL GYRES Wanninkhof, R.; Doney, S. C.; Bullister, J. L.; Feely, R. A.; Millero, F. J.: METHODS OF DETERMINING CHANGES IN ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON INVENTORY IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN OVER THE LAST DECADE* Kouketsu, S.; Fukasawa, M.; Kawano, T.; Uchida, H.; Kumamoto, Y.; Kaneko, I.; Doi, T.; Aoyama, M.; Murakami, K.; Kawai, Y.: CHANGES OF WATER PROPERTIES AND TRANSPORTS BETWEEN WHP-P3 AND ITS REVISIT Fonseca, C. A.; Baringer, M. O.; Meinen, C. S.: WATER MASSES CHANGES IN THE DEEP WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT ALONG 26.5 N Pfeil, B. G.; Kozyr, A.; Olsen, A.; Bakker, D.; Dittert, N.: QUALITY CONTROLLED GLOBAL SURFACE PCO2 DATABASE Peng, T. H.; Wanninkhof, R.: DECADAL INCREASE OF ANTHROPOGENIC CO2 IN THE OCEAN Tanhua, T.; Jones, P. E.; Jeansson, E.; Jutterström, S.; Smethie, W. M.; Wallace, D.; Anderson, L. G.: THE ARCTIC OCEAN SINK FOR ANTHROPOGENIC CO2 Tokieda, T.; Ishii, M.; Sasano, D.; Saito, S.; Midorikawa, T.; Nakadate, A.: CHANGES IN OCEAN CIRCULATION AND ANTHROPOGENIC CO2 STORAGE BASED ON CFCS AGE IN THE WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 1424. 1425. 1426. 1427. 1428. 1429. 1430. 1431. 1432. THURDAY 1433. 1434. 1435. 1436. 1437. 1438. 1439. 1440. 1441. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 1442. Ambler, J. W.; Aulenbach, D. L.; Peck, A. T.; Winsor, M. A.; Makinen, C. P.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY IN SUMMER CLADOCERAN-TUNICATE BLOOMS IN COASTAL WATERS OFF WALLOPS ISLAND, VA. Hale, S. A.; Debure, K. R.: UNSUPERVISED THRESHOLDING AND MORPHOLOGICAL PROCESSING FOR AUTOMATIC OUTLINE EXTRACTION Medina, J. M.; Tankersley, R. A.: EFFECTS OF CHEMICAL CUES ON VISUAL ORIENTATION OF EARLY LIFE STAGES OF THE AMERICAN HORSESHOE CRAB (LIMULUS POLYPHEMUS) Brito, M.; Tyack, P. L.; Zimmer, W. X.: DO NORTH ATLANTIC RIGHT WHALES COMPENSATE FOR INCREASES IN SHORT TERM AMBIENT NOISE? Biddle, J. F.; House, C. H.; Fitz-Gibbon, S.; Schuster, S.; Brenchley , J. E.: DEEPLY BURIED SUBSURFACE MICROORGANISMS AS SEEN BY ISOTOPIC AND METAGENOMIC CHARACTERIZATIONS Patterson, W. F.; Snyder, R. A.; Rao, K. R.; Gibson, S.: BIOACCUMULATION OF PCBS AND MERCURY IN MARINE FISHES IN THE NORTH CENTRAL GULF OF MEXICO Shimotori, K.; Hama, T.: EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES ON BACTERIAL PRODUCTION OF MARINE HUMIC SUBSTANCES Murata, A.; Takatsuji, H.; Leong, S. C.; Taguchi, S.: NONREDFIELD TYPE BEHAVIOR OF DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE IN RELATION TO NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS LIMITATION IN COASTAL WATER Wang, Y.; Janssen, J.: INTERACTIONS BETWEEN LARVAL DEEPWATER SCULPIN AND THE VERNAL COASTAL WARMING IN LAKE MICHIGAN Jarrett, J. N.; Dupuis, J.; Leinheiser, A.: VARIATION IN PREDATOR INDUCED PLASTICITY AMONG POPULATIONS OF THE BARNACLE, CHTHAMALUS FISSUS Collier, J. L.; Collado-Mercado, E.: LABYRINTHULOMYCETE DIVERSITY IN TWO ESTUARIES OF LONG ISLAND, NY, USA Moret-Ferguson, S. E.; Siuda, A. N.; Schell, J. M.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN ZOOPLANKTON DENSITY OF EAST PACIFIC SURFACE WATERS Shin, K.; Jang, M. C.; Kim, W. S.: SEASONAL CHANGES OF VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF MESOZOOPLANKTON IN THE KOREA STRAIT Stockwell, D. A.; Whitledge, T. E.: SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY IN PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY AND SIZE-FRACTIONATED CHLOROPHYLL PATTERNS ACROSS THE GULF OF ALASKA SHELF: GLOBEC 2000-2004 Yen, J.; Heaphy, M.; Sehn, J.; Lasley, R.: FOLLOWING A LAMINAR CHEMICAL TRAIL: STAYING ON TRACK AND BEING ON TIME Easton, E. E.; Spears, T.; Thistle, D.: USE OF MITOCHONDRIAL CYTOCHROME B AS A TOOL FOR RE-EVALUATION OF THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO SPECIES OF THE ZAUSODES COMPLEX Hou, A.; Bae, H.: COMMUNITY STRUCTURES OF ENTEROCOCCUS SPECIES IN LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN AND THE 17TH STREET CANAL WATERS FOLLOWING HURRICANE KATRINA Mizobuchi, A.; Obata, M.; Maeda, M.; Taguchi, S.: DIEL VARIATION IN CELLULAR CARBON CONTENT OF PHYTOPLANLKTON IN RESPONSE TO DIFFERENT LIGHT:DARK CYCLE 1443. 1444. Motokawa, S.; Leong, S.; Mizobuchi, A.; Taguchi, S.: OPTICAL RESPONSE OF THE DINOFLAGELLATE HETEROCAPSA CIRCULARISQUAMA TO NITRATE CONCENTRATIONS Makino, M.; Leong, S. C.; Taguchi, S.: ULTRAVIOLET RDIATION (UVB) EFFECT ON NATURAL PHYTOPLANKTON ASSEMBLAGES IN SAGAMI BAY, JAPAN Belz, M.; Miller, R. L.; Ellis, J. T.: A FIELD PORTABLE SYSTEM FOR PARTICLE ABSORPTION MEASUREMENTS ON FILTERS 023: Space-Based Measurements of Ocean Climate Change Chair(s): Carl Mears, [email protected]; Richard W. Reynolds, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. Byrne, D. A.: SATELLITE-BASED MEASUREMENTS OF OCEAN CLIMATE VARIABILITY IN THE AGULHAS CURRENT SYSTEM Oliver, M. J.; Irwin, A.; Falkowski, P. G.; Schofield, O.: TIME-RESOLVED DETECTION, VALIDATION AND QUANTIFICATION OF GLOBAL OCEAN BIOME/ WATER MASS BOUNDARIES Friedrich, T.; Oschlies, A.; Eden, C.: SATELLITE-BASED BASINWIDE ESTIMATES OF SURFACE PCO2 IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC - A METHODOLOGICAL STUDY Vargas, M.; Brown, C.; Sapiano, M.: PHYTOPLANKTON PHENOLOGY FROM SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR OBSERVATIONS Merchant, C. J.: OPTIMAL ESTIMATION FOR RETRIEVING SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE Schollaert Uz, S.; Brown, C. W.; Heidinger, A. K.; Jelenak, A.: DETECTING EMILIANIA HUXLEYI BLOOMS IN GLOBAL AVHRR IMAGERY Mitchum, G. T.; Bernier, N.: WEB ACCESS TO SATELLITE ALTIMETER CALIBRATIONS VIA THE GLOBAL TIDE GAUGE NETWORK Mears, C. A.; Santer, B. D.; Wentz, F. J.; Taylor, K. E.; Wehner, M. F.; Gleckler, P.: DECADAL CHANGE IN OCEANIC WIND SPEED AND WATER VAPOR Irwin, A. J.; Oliver, M. J.; Schofield, O.; Falkowski, P. G.: SATELLITE DETECTION OF SEASONAL AND SECULAR CHANGE OF GLOBAL OCEAN BIOME DISTRIBUTIONS DUFORET, L.; LOISEL, H.; ANTOINE, D.; DESSAILLY, D.; MERIAUX, X.: LONG-TERM GLOBAL OBSERVATIONS OF THE PARTICULATE BACKSCATTERING COEFFICIENT AND PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON IN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE GLOBPHY PROJECT 037: Transport, Biogeochemistry, and Ecology in Permeable Sediments Chair(s): Markus Huettel, [email protected]; Joel Kostka, [email protected]; Alex Rao, [email protected]; Jan Scholten, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 662. 663. Laschet, M. F.; Chipman, L. E.; Higgs, M. K.; Huettel, M.: OXYGEN CONSUMPTION IN PERMEABLE GULF COAST SEDIMENTS King, E. L.; Tuncay, K.; Ortoleva, P.; Meile, C.: MICROBIAL METABOLISM AND SUBSTRATE VARIABILITY IN POROUS MEDIA: SIGNIFICANCE OF SMALL-SCALE HETEROGENEITY? (~) 132 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 664. 665. 666. 667. 668. 669. 670. 671. 672. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Chipman, L. E.; Higgs, M. K.; Laschet, M.; Huettel, M.: DEGRADATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IN PERMEABLE SEDIMENTS Savidge, W. B.; Nelson, J. R.; Voulgaris, G.; Robertson, C. Y.: SEASONAL INVENTORIES OF FINE PARTICULATES IN A SANDY CONTINENTAL SHELF SEDIMENT Böer, S. I.; Ramette, A.; Hedtkamp, S. I.; Beusekom van, J.; Fuhrman, J. A.; Boetius, A.: WHICH FACTORS SHAPE BACTERIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN COASTAL PERMEABLE SEDIMENTS? Zhu, Q.; Aller, R. C.: TWO-DIMENSIONAL PCO2 DISTRIBUTIONS AND DYNAMICS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS Voulgaris, G.; Savidge, D.; Gargett, A. E.; Morin, J.; Amft, J.; Nelson, J.; Savidge, W.: PHYSICAL CONTROLS ON BENTHIC EXCHANGES ON THE MID-SHELF OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT: RIPPLE EVOLUTION AND TURBULENCE MEASUREMENTS Higgs, M. K.; Chipman, L. E.; Laschet, M.; Huettel, M.: DISSOLUTION OF BIOGENIC SILICA IN PERMEABLE COASTAL SANDS Robertson, C. Y.; Nelson, J. R.; Voulgaris, G.; Savidge, W.; Tzeng, M.: PARTICLE MOBILIZATION FROM MIDSHELF SAND SEDIMENTS OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT IN RESPONSE TO PHYSICAL FORCING O’Connor, B. L.; Harvey, J. W.: INTERPRETING DISSOLVED OXYGEN MICRO-PROFILES IN COMPLEX HYDRAULIC AND SEDIMENT CONDITIONS Taillefert, M.; Meiggs, D.; Nuzzio, D. B.; Luther III, G. W.: THE EFFECT OF TIDAL FORCING ON BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES IN SALT MARSH SEDIMENTS 542. 543. 544. 545. 546. 547. 551. 552. 553. Richards, C.; deYoung, B.: SUB-TIDAL EXCHANGE IN BONNE BAY, NEWFOUNDLAND Hunter, E. J.; Chant, R. J.; Wilkin, J. L.: SUB-TIDAL VARIABILITY IN THE HUDSON RIVER PLUME AS A RESULT OF HIGH FREQUENCY FORCING RONG, Z.; LI, M.; LIU, Y.: HOW DOES CHANGJIANG RIVER PLUME SPREAD IN EAST CHINA SEA AND YELLOW SEA? Schiller, R. V.; Kourafalou, V. H.; Hogan, P.: RIVER PLUME EXPERIMENTS WITH THE HYBRID COORDINATE OCEAN MODEL: APPLICATION TO THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER DISCHARGE Rosario-Llantin, J.; Zarillo, G. A.: THREE DIMENSIONAL HYDRODYNAMIC AND EUTROPHICATION MODEL SET-UP FOR THE MOSQUITO LAGOON, FL Ezer, T.; Oey, L.; Hobbs, R.: MODELING INUNDATION PROCESSES IN AN EXTREMELY LARGE TIDE ENVIRONMENT: APPLICATIONS TO FLOW DYNAMICS AND BELUGA WHALES MOVEMENT STUDIES IN COOK INLET, ALASKA DU, Y.; XUE, H.; Pettigrew, N. R.; Salisbury, J.: IMPLEMENTATION OF A WETTING AND DRYING MODEL IN SIMULATING THE ANDROSCOGGIN/KENNEBEC PLUME AND THE CIRCULATION IN CASCO BAY Leonov, D. A.; Kawase, M.: SILL DYNAMICS AND FJORD DEEP WATER RENEWAL: IDEALIZED MODELING STUDY Kim, Y. T.; Kim, K. J.; Jeong, J. H.; Jung, K. T.; Lee, E.: ROLE OF FRESHWATER AND WATERWAY ON SALINITY REGIME AND TURBIDITY MAXIMUM ZONE IN LOWER HAN RIVER ESTUARY, KOREA 054: Sediment Transport in Lakes, Estuaries, and Shallow Shelves 045: Marine Aquaculture - What are the Burning Environmental Issues and Solutions? Chair(s): Nathan Hawley, [email protected]; Courtney K. Harris, [email protected]; Barry M. Lesht, [email protected]; Larry P. Sanford, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall Location: Poster Hall 1562. 1563. 1564. 1565. Tinta, T.; Forte, J.; Turk, V.; Malej, A.: THE INFLUENCE OF MARICULTURE ON MICROORGANISMS IN THE WATER AND SEDIMENT AROUND THE FISH CAGE IN THE GULF OF TRIESTE Botsford, L. W.; Kaplan, D. M.: MODELS, MANAGEMENT AND MAYHEM: HOW MODEL-BASED ASSESSMENTS OF FISH POPULATION PERSISTENCE CAN AID IN THE DESIGN AND MONITORING OF NETWORKS OF MARINE RESERVES Poulton, N. J.; Nelson, H.; Peterson, K. A.: AN EVALUATION OF VIABILITY ASSAYS USING A CONTINUOUS IMAGING PARTICLE ANALYZER (FLOWCAM®) FOR BALLAST WATER ANALYSIS AND REGULATORY COMPLIANCE Portilla, E.; Tett, P.; Gillibrand, P. A.; Inall, M.: CAN FISH FARMING CHANGE MICROPLANKTON COMMUNITY COMPOSITION? 673. 674. 675. 676. 677. 678. 050: Dynamics of Estuarine Circulations and River Plumes: From Process Studies to Predictive Models 679. Chair(s): Ming Li, [email protected]; Parker MacCready, [email protected] 680. Location: Poster Hall 541. Barber, D. C.; Edinger, J. E.; Riihimaki, C. A.: GEOHYDRODYNAMIC MODELING OF ESTUARINE CIRCULATION IN HUDSON STRAIT: 8,000 YR BP AND PRESENT 681. Withdrawn Zong, H.; Liu, Y.; Shi, F.: MODELING SEDIMENT DEPOSITION IN THE YELLOW RIVER MOUTH Sottolichio, A.; Amouric, A.; Parisot, J. P.; Verney, R.: WIND WAVES AND SEDIMENT DYNAMICS IN THE INTERTIDAL MUDFLATS OF THE ARCACHON LAGOON (FRENCH ATLANTIC COAST) Rinehimer, J. P.; Harris, C. K.: FEEDBACKS BETWEEN BED CONSOLIDATION, RESUSPENSION, AND TURBIDITY IN A PARTIALLY MIXED ESTUARY Guerra, J. V.; Soares, F. L.; Felix, L. G.: CIRCULATION AND FLUX OF SUSPENDED-PARTICULATE MATTER (SPM) THROUGH THE CENTRAL CHANNEL, ILHA GRANDE BAY, SE BRAZIL Naidu, A. S.; Kelley, J. J.; Kowalik, Z.; Lee, W.; Miller, C. M.; Ravens, T. M.; Smith, O. P.: USE OF PASSIVE INTEGRATED TRANSPONDER TAG FOR ASSESSING THE ALONGSHORE TRANSPORT RATE OF GRAVEL, NORTH ARCTIC ALASKA Voynova, Y.; Sharp, J. H.: THE IMPACT OF LARGE FRESHWATER DISCHARGE EVENTS ON THE DELAWARE ESTUARY Xu, F.; Wang, D. P.; Riemer, N.: A SIZE-RESOLVED METHOD FOR FLOCCULATION PROCESSES OF FINEGRAINED PARTICLES Barry, K. M.: AN ADAPTIVE MULTI-GRAIN SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MODEL * represents Invited presentations ( ) 133 THURDAY Chair(s): Dror Angel, [email protected]; John Marra, [email protected] ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 682. 683. 684. 685. 686. 687. 688. 689. 690. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 1445. Son, M.; Hsu, T.: MODELING AGGREGATION AND BREAKUP PROCESSES OF COHESIVE SEDIMENT Ozdemir, C. E.; Hsu, T.; Traykovski, P. A.: HIGHRESOLUTION NUMERICAL MODELING OF WAVESUPPORTED GRAVITY-DRIVEN MUDFLOW AND ITS PARAMETERIZATION Poppe, L. J.; Ackerman, S. D.; Williams, S. J.; Moser, M. S.; Stewart, H. F.; Glomb, K. A.: SEDIMENTARY ENVIRONMENTS AND PROCESSES OF GREAT ROUND SHOAL CHANNEL, OFFSHORE MASSACHUSETTS Fugate, D. C.: PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL COUPLING IN THE ESTUARINE TURBIDITY MAXIMUM (ETM) OF THE CALOOSAHATCHEE RIVER, FL Su, C.; Chang, M.: THE FATE OF SEDIMENTS IN THE TAIWAN STRAIT: A REASSESSMENT Lundkvist, M.; Frederiksen, L.; Edelvang, K.; Flindt, M. R.: DEVELOPMENT OF BIOLOGICAL SEDIMENT STABILITY IN MUD/SAND MIXTURES: A LABORATORY STUDY Baumgarten, J. M.; Nitsche, F. O.; Kenna, T.: 20TH CENTURY DEPOSITION IN THE TAPPAN ZEE SECTION OF THE HUDSON RIVER ESTUARY: COMBINING GEOPHYSICAL AND GEOCHEMICAL TECHNIQUES Buck, N. L.; Hamm, N. T.; Dade, W. B.: VERTICAL STRUCTURE OF MASS AND TURBULENCE IN SEDIMENT-LADEN CHANNEL FLOWS Keen, T. R.; Harding, F.: SEASONAL PATTERNS OF EXCHANGE BETWEEN ST. LOUIS BAY AND MISSISSIPPI SOUND, U.S.A. 1446. 1447. 1448. 1449. 1450. 070: Microbial Associations With Marine Invertebrates Chair(s): Anthony Moss, Ph.D., [email protected]; Russell Hill, Ph.D., [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1451. 056: Ecosystem Research Informing Management Decisions THURDAY Chair(s): Felix A. Martinez, [email protected]; Elizabeth Turner, [email protected]; Mike Dowgiallo, [email protected] 1452. Location: Poster Hall 1566. 1567. 1568. 1569. 1570. Gifford, S. M.; Moran, M. A.: MICROARRAYBASED ANALYSIS OF SILICIBACTER POMEROYI’S TRANSCRIPTIONAL RESPONSE TO METABOLITES OF THE DMSP DEGRADATION PATHWAYS Delaney, J. A.; Ulrich, R. M.; Fries, D. P.; Paul, J. H.: DEVELOPMENT OF A REAL-TIME NASBA ASSAY FOR THE DETECTION OF PSEUDONITZSCHIA Hewson, I.; Moisander, P. H.; Bench, S. R.; Schweighofer, K.; Poretsky, R.; Montoya, J. P.; Zehr, J. P.: METATRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSES OF BACTERIOPLANKTON IN SURFACE WATERS OF THE OLIGOTROPHIC NORTH ATLANTIC AND SOUTH PACIFIC OCEANS Poretsky, R. S.; Hewson, I.; Sun, S.; Moran, M. A.; Zehr, J.: DIEL METATRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSIS OF BACTERIOPLANKTON AT STATION ALOHA Chappell, P. D.; Moffett, J. W.; Waterbury, J. B.; Webb, E. A.: USING QRT-PCR OF THE FE STRESS RESPONSE GENE ISIB TO RELATE N FIXATION RATES AND GROWTH UNDER DIFFERENT FE CONDITIONS IN TRICHODESMIUM SPP. Lloyd, K. G.; Albert, D.; Teske, A.: SEAFLOOR BACTERIAL MATS AS INDICATORS OF SUBSURFACE MICROBIAL ACTIVITY IN A GULF OF MEXICO METHANE SEEP Robinson, C. L.: A FRAMEWORK FOR ASSESSING THE REPRESENTIVITY OF FISH DIVERSITY IN NATIONAL MARINE CONSERVATION AREAS AND NATIONAL PARKS OF CANADA González-Marrero, R. L.; Yoshioka, P. M.: EFFECTS OF STATUS AND DENSITY OF A THREATENED CORAL SPECIES, ACROPORA CERVICORNIS, ON CORAL REEF FISH RECRUITMENT: IMPLICATIONS ON FISHERIES MANAGEMENT Labiosa, W. B.; Bernknopf, R.; Hearn, P.; Hogan, D.; Strong, D.; Pearlstine, L.; Wein, A.; Hallac, D.: THE SOUTH FLORIDA ECOSYSTEM PORTFOLIO MODEL (EPM) WEB TOOL Reilly, R.; Sharov, A.; Liao, H.; Jones, C. M.: SCALES OR OTOLITHS: AN AGE-OLD QUESTION Narvaez, D. A.; Klinck, J. M.; Hofmann, E. E.; Powell, E. N.; Hedgecock, D.: THE EFFECT OF IMMIGRATION ON DISEASE RESISTANCE IN AN OYSTER POPULATION: A NUMERICAL MODEL STUDY 1453. 1454. Johnson, C. N.; Russell, A.; Young, V. C.; GonzalezEscalona, N.; DePaola, A.; Grimes, D. J.: GENETIC RELATEDNESS AMONG TDH+ AND TRH+ VIBRIO PARAHAEMOLYTICUS CULTURED FROM GULF OF MEXICO OYSTERS (CRASSOSTREA VIRGINICA) AND SURROUNDING WATER AND SEDIMENT Shank, T. M.; Govenar, B.; Beaulieu, S.; Luther, G. W.; Seyfried, W.; Ding, K.; Vetriani, C.; Sievert, S.; Lutz, R. A.; Ward, N.: INTERACTION OF FLUID CHEMISTRY AND MICROBIAL BIOFILMS ON LARVAL SETTLEMENT AT HYDROTHERMAL VENTS ON THE EAST PACIFIC RISE AND THE GALÁPAGOS RIFT Davis, J.; Montalvo, N. F.; Hill, R. T.: CHARACTERIZATION OF NOVEL SPONGE-ASSOCIATED BACTERIA FROM THE GIANT BARREL SPONGE, XESTOSPONGIA MUTA Horak, R. E.; Distel, D.; Montoya, J. P.: CONTROLS ON SYMBIONT (TEREDINIBACTER TURNERAE) CONTRIBUTION TO HOST SHIPWORM (LYRODUS PEDICELLATUS) DIETARY N REQUIREMENTS 071: Predicting the Impact of Climate Change on Marine Population Connectivity Chair(s): Iliana B Baums, [email protected]; Claire Paris, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 69. 061: From Transcripts to Transcriptomes: RNA Abundance, Persistence and Degradation in the Marine Environment 70. Chair(s): Ian Hewson, [email protected]; Pia H. Moisander, [email protected] 71. Location: Poster Hall Ruiz-Ramos, D. V.; Schizas, N. V.: IS MONA PASSAGE A BIOGEOGRAPHIC BARRIER? A HYDROCORAL’S PERSPECTIVE Garcia, J.; Schizas, N.: GENETIC VARIABILITY OF ACROPORA CERVICORNIS AND A. PALMATA IN PUERTO RICO Konotchick, T. H.; Koch, S. E.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION EFFECTS ON MOLLUSC LARVAE (~) 134 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 72. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 089: Groundwater Inputs to the Ocean Thiebaut, E.; Ayata, S. D.; Beaugrand, G.; Jollivet, D.; Jolly, M. T.; Lazure, P.; Rigal, F.; Viard, F.: WORMS AND GLOBAL CHANGE: WHY COULD CLIMATIC CHANGES ALTER MARINE POPULATION CONNECTIVITY AT DIFFERENT TEMPORAL SCALES? Chair(s): Evgeny A. Kontar, [email protected]; Giovanni Barrocu, [email protected]; Georges L. Weatherley, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 073: Applications and Technological Developments of High Frequency Radar for Coastal Oceanography 691. Chair(s): Libe Washburn, [email protected]; Jeffrey D. Paduan, [email protected]; Lynn K. Shay, [email protected]; Scott Glenn, [email protected] 692. Location: Poster Hall 198. 199. 200. 201. 202. 203. 204. 205. 207. 208. 209. 693. 694. 695. 696. 697. 091: California Current Ecosystem Dynamics – The Role of Climate Variability Chair(s): Mark Ohman, [email protected]; Nick Bond, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 73. 076: Watersheds and Coral Reefs: Science, Policy and Implementation 74. Chair(s): Robert Richmond, [email protected]; Felix Martinez, [email protected]; Michael Dowgiallo, [email protected] 75. Location: Poster Hall 1571. 1572. 1573. Louchard, E. M.: SYNOPTIC MAPPING OF CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEMS OF THE MAIN EIGHT HAWAIIAN ISLANDS: STUDY RESULTS AND FUTURE REMOTE SENSING RESEARCH Shackeroff, J. M.: HISTORIC, HUMAN DIMENSIONS OF CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEMS: CONTRIBUTIONS TO MARINE ECOSYSTEM-BASED MANAGEMENT Withdrawn 76. 77. Manzano-Sarabia, M. M.; Ortega-García, S.; RodríguezSánchez, R.; Salinas-Zavala, C. A.; Kahru, M.: SPATIAL DYNAMICS OF THREE PELAGIC SPECIES IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM ON AN INTERANNUAL TIME SCALE: IS THERE A POLEWARD EXPANSION OF PELAGIC BIOTA? Henderson, E. E.; Hildebrand, J. A.; Barlow, J.; Calambokidis, J.; Douglas, A.: HAVE CLIMATE REGIME SHIFTS ALTERED OCCURRENCE PATTERNS OF MARINE MAMMALS IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM? Liu, H.; Peterson, W. T.: SUBARCTIC COPEPODS AS INDICATORS OF CLIMATE VARIABILITY OFF OREGON COASTAL UPWELLING ECOSYSTEM Décima, M. R.; Landry, M. R.: SELECTIVITY AND GRAZING IMPACT OF TWO DOMINANT SPECIES IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM: EUPHAUSIA PACIFICA AND CALANUS PACIFICUS Davison, P. C.; Checkley, D. M.; Koslow, J. A.: IS DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATION IMPORTANT TO OCEANIC CARBON EXPORT FLUX? * represents Invited presentations ( ) 135 THURDAY 206. Garfield, N.; Paduan, J.; Ohlmann, C.; Long, R.; Cook, M.: SURFACE CURRENT MAPPING PRODUCTS TARGETED FOR TWO EVENTS IN THE GULF OF THE FARALLONES. Nadai, A.: THE INFLUENCE OF SPATIAL CHANGE OF CURRENT FIELD ON CURRENT MEASUREMENT BY HF OCEAN SURFACE RADAR Styles, R.; Teague, C. C.; Barrick, D.: DEMONSTRATION OF A UHF RADAR IN AN INTERTIDAL SALT MARSH Potter, R. A.; Lipa, B. J.; Bray, A. P.; Weingartner, T. J.: PROCESSING HIGH FREQUENCY RADAR SPECTRA IN THE PRESENCE OF SEA ICE Martinez-Pedraja, J.; Shay, L. K.; Haus, B. K.; Brewster, J. K.; Grissom, K.; Bushnell, M.; Dussault, J. P.; Parks, B. K.: INTEROPERABILITY BETWEEN SEA-SONDE AND WELLEN HF RADARS IN THE FLORIDA CURRENT Park, K.; Chao, Y.; Li, Z.; Farrara, J.: APPLICATION OF HIGH FREQUENCY RADAR FOR SURFACE CURRETNS ANALYSIS AND DATA ASSIMILATION Merz, C. R.; Weisberg, R. H.: EVOLVING TECHNOLOGICAL IMPROVEMENTS OF THE USF/CMS HF RADAR NETWORK Amft, J. A.; Savidge, D. K.; Seim, H. E.; Wyatt, L. R.; Styles, R.; Smith, C. A.; Moore, T. C.; Bull, H.: WERA LONG-RANGE RADAR CURRENT AND WAVE FIELD VALIDATION STUDIES Alanko, J.; Belanger, C.; Weingartner, T.; Chao, Y.: PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND SURFACE CIRCULATION INFERRED FROM A HIGH-FREQUENCY SURFACE-CURRENT MAPPING RADAR AND DRIFTERS gough, m. k.; garfield, n.: A LOOK AT CROSS-SHORE VARIATIONS IN TIDAL CURRENTS USING HF RADAR Laws, K. E.; Paduan, J. D.; Vesecky, J. F.: THE IMPACT OF ANTENNA PATTERN DISTORTIONS ON THE ACCURACY OF HF RADAR-DERIVED NEAR-SURFACE OCEAN CURRENT RETRIEVALS: A SIMULATION-BASED ANALYSIS Reichert, K.; Lund, B.; Hessner, K.: X-BAND RADAR MEASUREMENTS OF DIRECTIONAL SURFACE WAVES Stewart, J. A.; Beutler, J. M.; Schwartz, M. C.: URBAN SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE TO A PENSACOLA, FL, BAYOU: IMPLICATIONS FOR CONTAMINANT TRANSFER AND NUTRIENTLOADING Hisashi Narita, H.; Yoko Tange, Y.; Yoko, Y.; Akihiro, A.; Jing Zhang, J.: FLOW SYSTEM AND DENITRIFICATION OF SHALLOW GROUNDWATER IN THE DOZEN PLAIN, SAIJO, JAPAN Bratton, J.; Crusius, J.; Kroeger, K.; Böhlke, J. K.; Bowen, J.; Cross, V.; Worley, C.; Erban, L.; Green, A.; Baldwin, S.: STEEP AGE AND SALINITY GRADIENTS IN SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER MEASURED IN A SMALL CHESAPEAKE BAY TRIBUTARY Herrera-Silveira, J. A.; Morales, S. M.; Merino, F. M.; Ramirez, J. R.; Osorio, I. M.; Alvarez, C. M.: GROUNDWATER INFLUENCES THE ECOLOGICAL COASTAL CONDITIONS IN THE YUCATAN PENINSULA (SE, MEXICO) Grindlay, N. R.; Moore, W. S.; PE06-45 Shipboard Scientific Party: A DEEP-TOWED CAMERA INVESTIGATION OF DEEP FLUID FLOW SITES OFFSHORE NORTHERN PUERTO RICO Esterson, K. A.: SALINITY PROFILES IN A SUBTERRANEAN ESTUARY IN QUINTANA ROO, MEXICO: IMPLICATIONS FOR SUBMARINE GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE AND SEAWATER INDUCTION Colman, J. A.; Masterson, J. P.; Lee, K. D.; McCobb, T. D.: SIMULATION OF FLOW AND NUTRIENT TRANSPORT FROM AN AQUIFER FLOW CELL TO A COASTAL EMBAYMENT ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. THURDAY 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 94. Chekalyuk, A. M.; Ohman, M. D.; Mitchell, B. G.; Wang, H.; Semyanov, K.; Seegers, B.; Hafez, M.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM: NEW UNDERWAY TECHNOLOGIES AND OBSERVATIONS Soldevilla, M. S.; Wiggins, S. M.; Oleson, E. M.; Rubio, N.; Ohman, M. D.; Davis, R. E.; Kahru, M.; Hildebrand, J. A.: CETACEAN HABITAT MODELING IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM Taylor, A. G.; Landry, M. R.; Selph, K. E.: CONTRASTING COASTAL AND OFFSHORE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES WITHIN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM Wang, H.; Mitchell, B. G.; Chekalyuk, A.; Seegers, B. J.: INFLUENCE OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE ON PHOTOSYNTHETIC PHYSIOLOGY AND BIO-OPTICS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM Thomas, A. C.; Henson, S.; Brickley, P.: COMPARISONS OF CHLOROPHYLL VARIABILITY BETWEEN THE CALIFORNIA AND HUMBOLDT CURRENT SYSTEMS: LINKAGES TO LOCAL VERSUS NON-LOCAL FORCING Goericke, R.; Roadman, M.; Dovel, S.: CCE-LTER: TEMPORAL VARIABILTIY OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM Pawlowski, L.; Chai, F.; Shi, L.; Chao, Y.; Chavez, F. P.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATION OF NUTRIENTS AND PLANKTON PRODUCTIVITY IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM: A MODEL-DATA COMPARISON STUDY Gilberto Jeronimo, G.; Jose Gomez-Valdes, J.: DIAGNOSTIC PATTERNS OF SEASONAL AND INTERANNUAL MIXED LAYER DEPTH CHANGE OFF BAJA CALIFORNIA Lavagnino, C. A.; Cortina, G. B.; Loftis, D.; Havens, A.; Lynaugh, L.; Bowers, C. A.; Chao, Y.; Holt, B.; Armstrong, E.: COMPARISON OF UPWELLING INDICES USING BLENDED WINDS (COAMPS/QUIKSCAT) AND NOAA PRESSURE FIELDS IN MONTEREY BAY, CALIFORNIA Romagnan, J. B.; Ohman, M. D.: VERTICAL HABITAT SHIFTS IN CALIFORNIA CURRENT MESOZOOPLANKTON: COPEPODS VS. CHAETOGNATHS Ohman, M. D.; Tsyrklevich, K.: MESOZOOPLANKTON GRAZING PRESSURE IN DIFFERENT SPATIAL DOMAINS IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM Bushinsky, S. M.; Friederich, G. E.; Chavez, F. P.: CARBON DIOXIDE AIR-SEA FLUX PATTERNS IN THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC: 1993-2007 Hsieh, C.; Kim, H.; Watson, W.; Di Lorenzo, E.: CLIMATE-DRIVEN CHANGES IN ABUNDANCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF LARVAE OF OCEANIC FISHES IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGION Labiosa, R. G.; MacWilliams, M. L.; Cloern, J. E.: THE INFLUENCE OF UPWELLING ON PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM DEVELOPMENT IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY: A MODELING AND REMOTE SENSING STUDY Cawood, A. M.; Ohman, M. D.: CROSS-SHORE DIFFERENCES IN MESOZOOPLANKTON EXAMINED USING DIGITAL IMAGE ANALYSIS Jahncke, J.; Elliott, M.; Saenz, B. L.; Galbraith, M. D.; Sydeman, W. J.: EFFECTS OF CLIMATE VARIABILITY ON ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE GULF OF THE FARALLONES, CALIFORNIA Taniguchi, D. A.; Landry, M. R.; Taylor, A. G.: SIZE SPECTRA OF EUKARYOTIC NANO- AND MICROPLANKTON IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT ECOSYSTEM 093: The Ocean Science, Technology, and Operations Workforce Chair(s): Tom Murphree, [email protected]; Deidre Sullivan, [email protected]; Leslie Rosenfeld, [email protected]; Melbourne Briscoe, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1574. 1575. 1576. 1577. 1578. Lane, T. G.; Brown, J. E.: THE US NAVY RESERVE’S OCEAN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMS: ONE RESOURCE FOR DEVELOPING THE OSTO WORKFORCE Valvo, L. M.; Lozier, M. S.: A COMMUNITYBASED MENTORING PROGRAM: PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHERS WORKING TO INCREASE RETENTION Franks, S.; Waters, R.: YOUR PH.D. IS A PHLEXIBLE DEGREE Richards, A. L.: NASA DEVELOP PROGRAM: STUDENTS UTILIZING EARTH SCIENCE RESEARCH RESULTS TO ADDRESS COMMUNITY NEEDS Murphree, T.; Ford, B.: ASSESSING THE PERFORMANCE AND OPERATIONAL IMPACTS OF THE OCEAN SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND OPERATIONS WORKFORCE 096: Trace Metal Cycling Along the Ocean-continent Boundary: Benthic-pelagic Coupling Chair(s): James McManus, [email protected]; Silke Severmann, [email protected]; Maeve Lohan, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 698. 699. 700. 701. 702. 703. Elrod, V. A.; Johnson, K. S.; Fitzwater, S. E.; Plant, J.: THE ANNUAL CYCLE OF IRON IN THE UPWELLING DRIVEN CENTRAL CALIFORNIA REGION Nishioka, J.; Ono, T.; Saito, H.; Nakatsuka, T.; Takeda, S.; Yoshimura, T.; Suzuki, K.; Kuma, K.; Tsumune, D.; Nakabayashi, S.; Mitsudera, H.; Johnson, K. W.; Tsuda, A.: IRON SUPPLY TO THE WESTERN SUBARCTIC PACIFIC: IMPORTANCE OF IRON EXPORT FROM THE SEA OF OKHOTSK Rodríguez-Figueroa, G. M.; Sapozhnikov, D.; Shumilin, E.: LANTHANIDES PROFILES OF THREE BROWN SEAWEEDS ON THE COASTAL ZONE OF SANTA ROSALIÁ MINING DISTRICT, BAJA CALIFORNIA PENINSULA , MEXICO Yokozawa, Y.; Buckwalter, P.; Gire, B.; Kang, S.; Williamson, A.; Abell, J.; Goldthwait, S.: BIOAVAILABLE IRON DEPOSITION ALONG THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CONTINENTAL SHELF FOLLOWING AN EEL RIVER FLOOD EVENT King, A. L.; Barbeau, K.: OPEN OCEAN VERSUS COASTAL UPWELLING: CONSEQUENCES FOR IRON AND MACRONUTRIENTS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM Jones, M. E.; Beckler, J. S.; Taillefert, M.: SATILLA RIVER ESTUARY SEDIMENTS PROVIDE A SOURCE OF SOLUBLE ORGANIC IRON(III) COMPLEXES TO OVERLYING WATERS (~) 136 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 097: Tsunami and Storm Inundation and Sediment Transport 1117. Chair(s): Bruce Jaffe, [email protected]; Vasily Titov, [email protected]; Guy Gelfenbaum, [email protected]; Pat Lynett, [email protected] 1118. Location: Poster Hall 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1119. Kowalik, Z.; Horrillo, J.; Knight, W.: INVESTIGATING TSUNAMI WAVE SCATTERING AND ENHANCEMENT USING ENERGY FLUXES Krentz, S.; Goodbred Jr., S.; Nitsche, F.; Carbotte, S.; Slagle, A.: TESTING THE APPARENT TSUNAMIGENIC ORIGIN OF 2300 YEAR OLD HIGH ENERGY DEPOSITS FROM LONG ISLAND, NY Jackson, K. L.; Amelung, F.; Eberli, G. P.; Jayasena, H. A. H.; Kehelpannala, K. V. W.; Moore, A. L.; Peterson, L. C.; Rankey, E. C.; Swart, P. K.: SEDIMENTARY SIGNATURES OF PALEOTSUNAMI DEPOSITS IN SRI LANKA Wulf, S.; Boon, R.; Hornbach, M.; Mann, P.; King, W.: DISTINGUISHING PALEO-TSUNAMI AND STORM DEPOSITS IN DISTAL LAGOON AND BAY SEDIMENTS IN CURACAO (NETHERLANDS ANTILLES) Kaji, T.; Yamazaki, H.; Kato, Y.; Tokuyama, H.: COMPARISON OF THE SUBMARINE LANDSLIDE OFF KAIMON VOLCANO WITH THE DEBRIS AVALANCHE OFF OSHIMA-OSHIMA ISLAND WHICH GENERATED THE TSUNAMI IN JAPAN. 106: Operational Applications of Ocean Satellite Observations Chair(s): Margaret Srinivasan, [email protected]; Robert Leben, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 228. 229. 230. 103: Physical and Biological Research Efforts to Evaluate the Use of Offshore Sand for Louisiana Coastal and Barrier Island Restoration 231. Chair(s): Colleen Finnegan, [email protected]; Gregory Stone, [email protected]; Richard Condrey, [email protected] 232. Location: Poster Hall 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. Evers, D. E.; Condrey, R.; Anderson, J.: “PLAY” TECTONICS: DETERMINING RATES OF SEA LEVEL CHANGE FROM HISTORIC DATA WITH A “MIGRATING LIGHTHOUSE” (SHIP SHOAL, LOUISIANA) Dubois, S.; Gelpi, C.; Condrey, R.; Grippo, M.; Fleeger, J.: DIVERSITY AND COMPOSITION OF BENTHIC COMMUNITIES ASSOCIATED WITH SAND AREAS ON LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL SHELF: EXAMPLE OF SHIP SHOAL Gelpi, C. G.; Condrey, R. E.; Dubois, S.; Fleeger, J. W.; Grippo, M.: BLUE CRAB FORAGING AND SPAWNING ON SHIP SHOAL, LOUISIANA: WHY 20 KM OFFSHORE? Fleeger, J. W.; Grippo, M. A.; Gelpi, C.; Condrey, R.: POTENTIAL FOR BENTHIC PRIMARY PRODUCTION ON SHIP SHOAL, LOUISIANA, USA Grippo, M. A.; Fleeger, J. W.; Dubois, S.; Gelpi, C.; Condrey, R.: THE ROLE OF SHOALS IN GULF OF MEXICO FOOD WEBS: A STABLE ISOTOPE STUDY CONDREY, R.; STONE, G. W.; FINNEGAN, C.; FLEEGER, J. W.; DUBOIS, S.; GELPI, C. G.; GRIPPO, M.; EVERS, D. E.; KOBASHI, D.; JOSE, F.: PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL RESEARCH EFFORTS TO EVALUATE THE USE OF OFFSHORE SAND FOR LOUISIANA COASTAL AND BARRIER ISLAND RESTORATION Kobashi, D.; Stone, G. W.; Jose, F.; Spaziani, A. L.: DYNAMICS OF SEDIMENTS WITHIN THE BOTTOM BOUNDARY LAYER OVER A TRANSGRESSIVE SHOAL INFLUENCED BY FLUVIAL SEDIMENTS AND WINTER STORMS: SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA 233. 234. 235. 236. 237. 238. 239. 240. 241. Ubelmann, C.; Brankart, J.; Brasseur, P.; Cosme, E.; Verron, J.: CONSTRAINING THE TROPICAL ATLANTIC OCEAN CIRCULATION BY ASSIMILATING SATELLITE ALTIMETRIC OBSERVATIONS: INSIGHTS FROM OBSERVING SYSTEM SIMULATION EXPERIMENTS TAKANO / AKIKO, A.; YAMAZAKI / HIDEKATSU, H.; NAGAI / TAKEYOSHI, N.: A METHOD TO ESTIMATE THREE DIMENSIONAL THERMAL STRUCTURE USING SATELLITE ALTIMETER DATA Shimada, T.; Kawamura, H.: LOW-LEVEL WIND JETS AND THEIR MODIFICATION BY SST FRONT IN THE WEST OF THE TSUGARU STRAIT da Silva, J. C.; Helfrich, K. R.: SAR OBSERVATIONS OF RESONANTLY GENERATED INTERNAL SOLITARY WAVES Jo, Y. H.; Oliveira, G. H.; Yan, X. H.; Liu, W. T.: SPATIAL ANALYSIS ON MARINE ATMOSPHERE BOUNDARY LAYER FEATURES OF SAR IMAGERY USING EMPIRICAL MODE DECOMPOSITION Franco, B. C.; Piola, A. R.; Rivas, A. L.; Baldoni, A.; Pisoni, J. P.: MULTIPLE COLD BRANCHES AND THERMAL FRONTS IN THE PATAGONIAN SHELF BREAK DERIVED FROM SATELLITE DATA Patterson, K. W.: THE OPTIMUM SATELLITE ZENITH ANGLE FOR NEAR-REAL-TIME SEAWIFS COMPOSITES Brewster, J. K.; Shay, L. K.; Mainelli, M.: EASTERN PACIFIC OCEAN HEAT CONTENT ESTIMATES FROM ALTIMETRY FOR OPERATIONAL HURRICANE INTENSITY FORECASTS Michel, D.; Andreu-Burillo, I.; Proctor, R.: DATA ASSIMILATION ON THE NW EUROPEAN SHELF Van de Voorde, N. E.; Rowley, C. E.: REAL-TIME MICROWAVE OCEAN SURFACE SPECIFIC HUMIDITY Gunn, J. T.; Bonjean, F.; Lagerloef, G.; Robinson, M.; Mitchum, G.: REAL-TIME SURFACE CURRENTS FOR THE GLOBAL OCEAN USING OSCAR ASANUMA, I.; HASEGAWA, D.; SPRINTALL, J.; GORDON, A. L.; LIU, A.; HARPER, S.: A CONTRIBUTION OF WIND FORCE TO A PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN THE PHILIPPINE ARCHIPELAGEOS Plagge, A. M.; Vandemark, D.; Long, D. G.: EVALUATION OF QUIKSCAT ULTRA-HIGH RESOLUTION WIND RETRIEVAL IN THE GULF OF MAINE Kurtz, J. C.; Miller, R. L.: CAN FAST REPETITION RATE FLUOROMETRY AND SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR DATA BE COMBINED TO EXAMINE GULF OF MEXICO HYPOXIA? * represents Invited presentations ( ) 137 THURDAY 1110. JOSE, F.; STONE, G. W.; KOBASHI, D.: IMPACT OF COLD FRONTS ON THE HYDRODYNAMICS OF SABINE BANK, OFF LOUISIANA-TEXAS COAST, USA Guidroz, W. S.; Stone, G. W.: HIGH ENERGY, WAVEINDUCED TURBULENCE AND SLOPE FAILURE ALONG THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER DELTA FRONT STONE, G. W.; JOSE, F.; KOBASHI, D.: CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR EXTRACTION OF SEDIMENTS FROM OFFSHORE FOR COASTAL LOUISIANA (USA) RESTORATION: CURRENT-WAVE INTERACTION AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 242. 243. 244. 245. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Perry, K. L.: COMBINING SATELLITE DATA SETS TO STUDY SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL WATERS Miles, T. N.; He, R.: COVARIATIONS OF SATELLITE SEASURFACE TEMPERATURE AND OCEAN-COLOR IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT AND GULF OF MEXICO. Kataoka, F.; Mitomi, Y.: RETRIEVAL OF OCEAN COLOR INFORMATION OVER THE TURBID WATER AREA Walker, N. D.; Leben, R. R.; Anderson, S. P.; Feeney, J. W.; Coholan, P. D.: NEW TOOLS FOR SATELLITE SURVEILLANCE OF RAPIDLY MOVING CYCLONES ALONG THE MARGIN OF THE LOOP CURRENT: GULF OF MEXICO 1466. 1467. 1468. 1469. 123: Molecular Approaches to Study Interactions Between Organisms in Aquatic Environments: Current Progress and Future Directions 1470. Chair(s): Jens C. Nejstgaard, [email protected]; Marc E. Frischer, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1455. 1456. 1457. THURDAY 1458. 1459. 1460. 1461. 1462. 1463. 1464. 1465. Van den Meersche, K.; Middelburg, J.; Van Rijswijk, P.: THE PLANKTONIC FOOD WEB OF THE SCHELDT ESTUARY: ZOOPLANKTON FEEDING PREFERENCES REVEALED BY 13C ANALYSIS. Girguis, P. R.; Cordes, E. E.; Kelley, D. S.; Wheat, G.; Baross, J. A.; Liu, M.: RELATING MICROBIAL DISTRIBUTION TO GEOCHEMICAL GRADIENTS IN DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENT CHIMNEYS Simonelli, P.; Troedsson, C.; Nejstgaard, J. C.; Frischer, M. E.: LOOKING FOR THE BEST QUANTITATIVE METHODS TO ISOLATE PREY DNA IN THE PLANKTON AND INSIDE COPEPOD GUTS Holmborn, T.; Lindell, K.; Holeton, C.; Hogfors, H.; Gorokhova, E.: INTERCALIBRATION OF BIOCHEMICAL MARKERS AS INDICES FOR EGG PRODUCTION AND METABOLIC ACTIVITY IN A COMMON BALTIC SEA COPEPOD UNDER VARYING FOOD AVAILABILITY Wada, S.; Hama, T.; Iseki, K.: ANALYSIS OF MONOSACCHARIDE COMPOSITION OF CARBOHYDRATE IN SEAWATER USING METHANOLYSIS METHOD Yoshimura, K.; Ogawa, T.; Hama, T.: CHANGES IN SIZE AND LIPID CLASS COMPOSITION IN EARLY DIAGENETIC PROCESS OF PHYTOPLANKTON PHOTOSYNTHETIC PRODUCTS Thor, P.: ASSESSING ZOOPLANKTON PREY SELECTIVITY USING REAL TIME PCR QUANTIFICATION OF PREY DNA Larsen, J. B.; Sandaa, R. A.; Bratbak, G.; Larsen, A.: A VIEW TO A KILL! DEVELOPMENT OF AN IN SITU BASED METHOD FOR IDENTIFICATION OF MARINE ALGAE SPECIES AND QUANTIFICATION OF VIRAL INFECTION Bouquet, J. M.; Troedsson, C.; Acuña, J. L.; Skinnes, R.; Thompson, E. M.: PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY IN THE FILTERING APPARATUS OF THE PELAGIC TUNICATE, OIKOPLEURA DIOICA, IN RESPONSE TO FOOD LIMITATION. Hubbard, K. A.; Banas, N. S.; Armbrust, E. V.: PSEUDONITZSCHIA COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN THE ESTUARY, PUGET SOUND, WA Bochdansky, A. B.; Huang, L.: A NEW FISH PROBE FOR KINETOPLASTIDS, AN IMPORTANT GROUP OF HETEROTROPHIC FLAGELLATES, AND THE EVALUATION OF A DOMAIN-SPECIFIC PROBE FOR EUKARYOTES 1471. 1472. Amrich, C.; Bliss, J.; Marston, M. F.: ASSESSMENT OF CYANOPHAGE DIVERSITY IN COASTAL WATERS USING PULSED FIELD GEL ELECTROPHORESIS AND MULTIPLE MOLECULAR MARKERS Chung, C. C.; Liao, C. W.; Gong, G. C.; Hwang, S. L.; Chang, J.: VIGOROUS GROWTH OF SYNECHOCOCCUS SPP. IN THE EAST CHINA SEA DURING AN ASIAN DUST STORM EVENT Romero, I. C.; Fuhrman, J. A.; Jacobson, M.; Fogel, M. L.; Steele, J. A.; Capone, D. G.: INTERACTION BETWEEN DIAZOTROPHIC BACTERIA AND MANGROVE ROOTS UNDER DIFFERENT NUTRIENT CONDITIONS Wrabel, M. L.; Rocap, G.: SPECIFICITY OF BACTERIAL ASSEMBLAGES ASSOCIATED WITH PSEUDONITZSCHIA AND OTHER MARINE DIATOMS IN PUGET SOUND, WASHINGTON Steele, J. A.; Countway, P. D.; Huang, J.; Jones, A. C.; Beman, J. M.; Schwalbach, M. S.; Vigil, P. D.; Rose, J. M.; O’Brien, S. G.; Hewson, I.; Brown, M. V.; Patel, A.; Ruan, Q.; Sun, F.; Caron, D. A.; Fuhrman, J. A.: ECOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS OF MARINE MICROBES DESCRIBED THROUGH INTERACTION NETWORKS AT THE SAN PEDRO CHANNEL, CALIFORNIA. White, D. M.; Stokes, N. A.; Hill, K. M.; Kroeck, M. A.; Hine, P. M.; Bejaoui, N.; Carnegie, R. B.; Reece, K. S.; Burreson, E. M.: EVOLUTION AND OCEANIC DISPERSAL OF BONAMIA PARASITES OF OYSTERS Brutemark, A.; Carvalho, W. F.; Bowers, H. A.; Granéli, E.: COMBINING FLOW CYTOMETRY AND REAL-TIME PCR TO DEMONSTRATE PHAGOTROPHY IN THE TOXIC HAPTOPHYTE PRYMNESIUM PARVUM 126: Coastal Region Dynamical Variability and Effects on Acoustics Chair(s): Alex Warn-Varnas, [email protected]; Stanley Chin-Bing, [email protected]; Kevin Lamb, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. Withdrawn* Hawkins, J.; Warn-Varnas, A.; Christov, I.: INTERNAL GRAVITY WAVES: ANALYSIS USING THE FOURIER, SCATTERING, AND CONTINUOUS WAVELET TRANSFORMS WITH APPLICATIONS TO LONG TIME SIMULATIONS Mohd Akhir, M. F.; Pattiaratchi, C. B.: THE INTERCONNECTION BETWEEN THE FLINDERS CURRENT AND LEEUWIN UNDERCURRENT Piacsek, S. A.; Warn-Varnas, A.; Smolarkiewicz, P.; Hawkins, J.; Martin, P.: GENERATION AND PROPAGATION OF TIDALLY-DRIVEN INTERNAL BORES AND SOLITONS IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA Etter, P. C.: USING OCEAN-ACOUSTIC MODELS TO DESIGN AND ANALYZE INVERSE-ACOUSTIC SENSING EXPERIMENTS IN COASTAL OCEANS~ Helber, R. W.; Barron, C. N.; Carnes, M. R.; Zingarelli, R. A.: EVALUATING THE SONIC LAYER DEPTH RELATIVE TO THE MIXED LAYER DEPTH Katsnelson, B. G.: TEMPORAL FLUCTUATIONS OF THE SOUND SIGNALS IN SHELF ZONE IN PRESENCE OF MOVING INTERNAL WAVES* Warn-Varnas, A. C.; Hawkins, J.; Chin-Bing, S.; King, D.; Coelho, E.; Ko, D.; Lamb, K.: PARAMETER RANGES ENCOUNTERED IN SOUTH CHINA SEA SOLITARY WAVE PREDICTIONS (~) 138 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 134: Toward Integrating Source-to-Sink Field Studies of Sediment Dispersal Systems 136: Past as Key to the Future: Using Late Holocene History to Predict the Future Response of Coastal Environments to Global Warming and Sea-level Rise Chair(s): Clark Alexander, [email protected]; Andre Droxler, [email protected]; Alan Orpin, [email protected]; John Swenson, [email protected] Chair(s): Ai Ning Loh, [email protected]; Michael Savarese, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 704. 705. 706. 707. 708. 709. 710. 712. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 1133. 1134. 142: Nutrient Cycling at the Sediment-water Interface Chair(s): Loreto De Brabandere, [email protected]; Thomas K. Frazer, [email protected]; Donald C. Behringer, [email protected]; Thomas J. Saunders, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 713. 135: What is Being Done in the Caribbean? Who, How and Why, Should We Be Partners? 714. Chair(s): Warner Ithier-Guzman, [email protected]; Ashanti J. Pyrtle, [email protected]; Marietta Mayo, [email protected]; Nekesha Williams, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1579. 1580. Stocchi, P.; Spada, G.: POST-GLACIAL REBOUND SIGNATURES ON LATE HOLOCENE AND PRESENT DAY SEA-LEVEL CHANGES ALONG THE COASTS OF ITALY Savarese, M.; Hoye, B.; Wohlpart, S. L.; Loh, A. N.: INFLUENCE OF LATE HOLOCENE SEA-LEVEL RISE ON THE GEOMORPHOLOGY OF THE GREATER EVERGLADES COAST: IMPLICATIONS FOR RESTORATION AND WATER MANAGEMENT Dennis-Duke, B. T.; Castillo, P.: CHARACTERIZING TAHITIAN MARINE SEDIMENTS: AN ANALYSIS OF COARSE AND FINE GRAINED VOLCANICLASTICS Nahm, W. H.; Yi, S.; Yang, D. Y.; Kim, J. Y.; Yu, K. M.: SEDIMENTARY AND PALEONTOLOGICAL RECORDS OF MID-HOLOCENE PALEOENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN YEONGSAN ESTUARY, SOUTHWESTERN KOREA Wingard, G. L.; Cronin, T. M.: APPLICATION OF PALEOECOLOGY TO THE 50-YEAR EVERGLADES RESTORATION PLAN AND BEYOND Mallinson, D. J.; Burdette, K.; Rink, J.; Parham, P. R.; Mahan, S.; Peltier, R.: NEW INSIGHTS INTO QUATERNARY SEA LEVELS AND ISOSTASY BASED ON OPTICAL DATING OF SILICICLASTIC PALEO-SHORELINE FEATURES ON THE U.S. ATLANTIC COASTAL PLAIN Hoover, K. J.; Hastings, D. W.; Flower, B. P.: HOLOCENE CLIMATIC AND HYDROLOGIC VARIABILITY AS RECORDED IN THE BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA AMMONIA BECCARII FROM TAMPA BAY, FL Kane, T. L.; Fong, P.: QUANTIFYING SEDIMENT NITROGEN FIXATION AND DENITRIFICATION RATES AND RESPONSES TO ABIOTIC CHARACTERISTICS OF A EUTROPHIC SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ESTUARY Diaz, J. M.; Ingall, E. I.; Benitez-Nelson, C. R.; Brandes, J. A.: A NOVEL MECHANISM FOR MARINE PHOSPHORUS SEQUESTRATION VIA BURIAL AND TRANSFORMATION OF DIATOM-DERIVED POLYPHOSPHATE IN SEDIMENTS 144: Coral Reefs: Impacts of Environmental Alterations and Climate Change on Coral Biology and Biogeochemistry, and Links Between Dissolved Organic Matter Hendee, J. C.; Gramer, L.; Manzello, D.; Jankulak, M.; Shoemaker, M.; Craynock, J.; Ash, N.; Langdon, C.; Adler, M.: A NEAR REAL-TIME MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING NETWORK FOR THE CARIBBEAN Mayo, M.; Pyrtle, A. J.: ASSESSING RADIOGEOCHEMICAL TECHNIQUES AS A TOOL FOR MANAGEMENT OF TWO MARINE PROTECTED AREAS IN PUERTO RICO: A CASE STUDY Chair(s): Andrea G. Grottoli, [email protected]; G. Christopher Shank, [email protected]; Ralph Mead, [email protected]; Tamara Pease, [email protected]; Kimberly Ritchie, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 97. Moustafa, Z. D.; Moustafa, M. S.; Moustafa, M. Z.: WHAT IS NORMAL? EXTREME TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY ON A HIGH LATITUDE, FRINGING RED SEA CORAL REEF * represents Invited presentations ( ) 139 THURDAY 711. Location: Poster Hall Walsh, J. P.; Sumners, B. W.; Alexander, C. R.; Orpin, A. O.; Gerber, T. P.: SEDIMENTATION AND MORPHOLOGY OF THE OUTER SHELF AND SLOPE OF THE WAIPAOA RIVER MARGIN: AN INTEGRATION OF GEOPHYSICAL AND RADIOCHEMICAL DATA Alexander, C. R.; Walsh, J. P.; Orpin, A. R.; Sumner, B. W.: INTEGRATING SEASONAL AND CENTENNIAL RATES OF SEDIMENTARY PROCESSES ON THE OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF AND SLOPE SEAWARD OF THE WAIPAOA RIVER, NEW ZEALAND Kuehl, S. A.; Miller, A.; Rose, L.: SEDIMENT BUDGET AND SHELF BYPASSING IN A TECTONICALY ACTIVE SETTING: MARGINS WAIPAOA FOCUS AREA McNinch, J. E.; Wadman, H. M.; Perkey, D. W.: SEDIMENT SEGREGATION AND DISPERSAL ACROSS THE LANDSEA INTERFACE: WAIPAOA SEDIMENTARY SYSTEM, NEW ZEALAND Bever, A. J.; McNinch, J. E.; Harris, C. K.: SHALLOW WATER HYDRODYNAMICS AND SEDIMENT DISPERSAL OFFSHORE OF A SMALL MOUNTAINOUS RIVER: THE WAIPAOA RIVER, NEW ZEALAND Orpin, A. R.; Alexander, C. R.; Walsh, J. P.; Sumners, B. W.; Palmer, A. S.: MARGIN-WIDE HOLOCENE SEDIMENT DISPERSAL ADJACENT TO THE MUDDY WAIPAOA RIVER, NORTHEASTERN NEW ZEALAND Kniskern, T. A.; Harris, C. K.; Kuehl, S. A.: HYDRODYNAMIC, FLUVIAL, AND TECTONIC CONTROLS ON SEDIMENT DISPERSAL AND DEPOSITION ON THE WAIAPU RIVER SHELF, NEW ZEALAND Pakenham, A. M.; Wheatcroft, R. A.; Goni, M. A.: SOURCETO-SINK SEDIMENTATION IN THE SILETZ RIVER, OREGON COAST RANGE McFadden, M. A.; Peterson, L. C.; Bentley, S. J.; Dickens, G.; Droxler, A.; Opdyke, B.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL PATTERNS OF CARBONATE AND SILICICLASTIC SEDIMENTATION ACROSS A TROPICAL CONTINENTAL MARGIN ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 98. 99. 100. 191. 192. 193. 194. 195. 196. THURDAY 197. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 148: Multi-Sensor Sea Surface Temperature Analyses ROGERS, J. E.; MARCOVICH, M.; CROSS, R.; GALLEHER, S.: DIFFERENTIAL GROWTH RATES OF SYMBIODINIUM ISOLATES EXPOSED TO THE COMBINED EFFECTS OF ELEVATED TEMPERATURE AND ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION Estep, L. L.; Spruce, J. P.: CORAL REEF REMOTE SENSING USING SIMULATED VIIRS AND LDCM IMAGERY Finelli, C. M.: PUMPING RATES OF THE GIANT BARREL SPONGE XESTOSPONGIA MUTA ON CARIBBEAN REEFS: SIZE SCALING, ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS, AND BLEACHING EFFECTS. Messing, C. G.; Brooke, S. D.; Reed, J. K.: A POSSIBLE ROLE FOR AGGLUTINATING FORAMINIFERANS IN THE GROWTH OF DEEP-WATER CORAL BIOHERMS Devlin, Q. B.; Mead, R. N.; Swart, P. K.: STABLE CARBON ISOTOPES OF LIPIDS IN CORAL AND ZOOXANTHELLAE TISSUES AND THEIR SUGGESTED CONTRIBUTION TO THE VARIATION OF RESPIRATORY CARBON DIOXIDE Prescott, R.; Aeby, G. S.; Richmond, R. H.: CORAL REEFS IN OAHU, HAWAII: RELATIONSHIPS AMONG WATERSHEDS, CHEMICAL POLLUTANTS, AND CORAL DISEASE Mitchelmore, C. L.; Yost, D. M.; Yuda, J. M.: DMSP & DMSP LYASE LEVELS IN THE CORAL ALGAL SYMBIONTS, SYMBIODINIUM SP. Rigby, P.; Pizarro, O.; Williams, S.; Johnson-Roberson, M.: AUTONOMOUS IMAGE SELECTION FOR BENTHIC CLASSIFICATION Muehllehner, N.; Edmunds, P. J.: RISING CO2 DISPROPORTIONATELY AFFECTS EXTENSION RATES VERSUS MASS DEPOSITION RATES IN REEF CORALS Cervino, J. M.; Lorence, E. A.; Thompson, F. l.: THE PATHOGENIC EFFECTS OF VIBRIO SPECIES ON CLONAL SYMBIODINIUM CLADE SUB-TYPES IN VITRO Chair(s): Chelle L. Gentemann, [email protected]; Gary A. Wick, [email protected]; Craig Donlon, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 264. 265. 266. 267. 268. 149: The Absolute Accuracy of Space-borne Sea Surface Temperature Chair(s): Gary K. Corlett, [email protected]; Peter J. Minnett, [email protected]; Kenneth S. Casey, Kenneth. [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 269. 270. 146: Changing Chemistry of Estuaries, Coasts, and the Ocean 271. Chair(s): Christopher M. Reddy, [email protected]; John W. Farrington, [email protected]; Donald L. Rice, [email protected] 272. Location: Poster Hall 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138. 1139. Vinogradova, N. T.; Zaccheo, T. S.: HIGH-RESOLUTION SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANALYSIS SYSTEM IN THE GULF OF MAINE Shang, S. L.; Sun, F. Q.; Zhang, C. Y.; Shang, S. P.: INTERCOMPARISON OF REMOTE SENSING SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE PRODUCTS DERIVED FROM MULTISENSORS IN THE CHINA SEA Matrui, E. M.; Harris, A. R.; Sapper, J.: NOAA NESDIS MULTI-SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANALYSIS Tomazic, I.; Kuzmic, M.: CONTRASTING GLOBAL AND LOCAL SATELLITE-DERIVED SST ESTIMATES IN A MARGINAL SEA Chao, Y.; Li, Z.; Farrara, J. D.: BLENDED SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE DATA SET FROM MULTIPLE SATELLITES AND IN-SITU OBSERVATIONS FOR COASTAL OCEANS Mao, J.; Tremblay, L.; Gagné, J.; Schmidt-Rohr, K.: PARTICULATE AND SEDIMENT ORGANIC MATTER IN TWO CANADIAN ESTUARIES INVESTIGATED BY SOLID-STATE NMR: VARIATIONS OF CHEMICAL STRUCTURES WITH LOCATION AND DEPTH Perez, H. N.; Ortiz, J. R.; Rivera, V. H.: NITROGEN SPECIATION AND DYNAMICS IN THE SAN JOSÉ AND PIÑONES LAGOONS OF THE SAN JUAN BAY ESTUARY, PUERTO RICO Mendoza, W. G.; Mead, R. N.; Brand, L. E.; Shea, D.: ANALYSIS AND DETECTION OF BREVETOXIN ANALOGS IN MARINE SEDIMENTS: A NEW BIOMARKER? Aono, T.; Takata, H.; Nakaguchi, Y.; Tagami, K.; Uchida, S.: DISTRIBUTIONS OF STABLE ELEMENTS AND RADIONUCLIDES IN SOME ESTUARINE AREAS OF JAPAN Panetta, R. J.; Mucci, A.; Lehmann, M.; Gelinas, Y.: HYPHENATION OF HIGH-TEMPERATURE CATALYTIC OXIDATION DOC ANALYZER TO IRMS: SIMULTANEOUS QUANTITATIVE AND ISOTOPE DETERMINATION OF DOC IN NATURAL SAMPLES 273. 274. Kilpatrick, K. A.; Podestá, G. P.; Reynolds, R. W.; Evans, R. H.: IMPACT OF IN SITU BUOY DISTRIBUTION ON COEFFICIENT ESTIMATION FOR THE PATHFINDER SST ALGORITHM: A CASE STUDY OF NOAA-7 AND NOAA-14 USING BUOY AND SHIP MATCHUPS Harris, A. R.; Mittaz, J. P.: A MODELING STUDY OF RETRIEVAL BIASES Petrenko/Boris, B. Z.; Heidinger/Andrew , A. K.; Ignatov/ Alexander, A.; Yury Kihai, Y.: THE CLOUD MASK FOR THE AVHRR CLEAR SKY PROCESSOR FOR OCEAN Corlett, G. K.: MEETING GCOS REQUIREMENTS FOR SST ACCURACY: ANALYSIS OF THE OVERLAP PERIODS OF THE (A)ATSR SERIES Mckenzie, B. D.; Olszewski, D. S.; May, D. A.; Willis, K. D.: OPERATIONAL METOP SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE PROCESSING AT THE NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHIC OFFICE Framinan, M. B.; Kilpatrick, K. A.; Minnett, P. J.; Evans, R. H.: ON THE ACCURACY OF MODIS SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE RETRIEVALS IN UPWELLING REGIONS 150: Terrestrial Impacts on Coastal Water Quality Chair(s): Drew Ackerman, [email protected]; Eric Stein, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1140. 1141. Mojzis, A. K.; Redalje, D. G.; Guo, L.; Cai, Y.: BACTERIOPLANKTON ABUNDANCES IN THE BAY OF ST LOUIS, MS, RELATIVE TO ENVIRONMENTAL WATER QUALITY PRIOR TO AND AFTER HURRICANE KATRINA Romnek, C. A.; Siefert, R. L.: FACTORS INLUENCING THE AMMONIUM AND NITRATE CONCENTRATIONS IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY (SEVERN RIVER). (~) 140 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 1142. 1143. 1144. 1145. 1146. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 287. Reifel, K. M.; Corcoran, A.; Jones, B. H.: THE EFFECTS OF A WASTEWATER PLUME ON PHYTOPLANKTON IN THE COASTAL OCEAN Idica, E. Y.; Dong, C. M.; McWilliams, J. C.; Stolzenbach, K. D.: MODELING THE DYNAMICS AND TRANSPORT OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA STORMWATER PLUMES Garske, L. E.; Largier, J. L.; Sheridan, M. M.: NEARSHORE TRANSPORT OF LAND-BASED CONTAMINANTS EXPORTED FROM ELKHORN SLOUGH, CALIFORNIA Fink, L. A.; Mason, A. Z.; Manley, S. L.: IDENTIFYING AND CHARACTERIZING POLLUTED SURFACE WATERS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT BASED ON METAL LEVELS IN KELP (M. PYRIFERA) SIEVE TUBE SAP Noble, R. T.; Piehler, M. F.; White, N. M.: UNDERSTANDING THE IMPACT OF STORMWATER ON THE COAST OF NORTH CAROLINA, USA 288. 289. 290. 291. 153: Research Ocean Observatories: Progress and Emerging Technologies 176: The Inner Shelf: Connecting the Shore to the Coastal Ocean Chair(s): Susan Banahan, [email protected]; Holly Given Location: Poster Hall 275. 276. 277. 279. 280. 281. 282. 283. 284. 285. 286. Chair(s): Jack Barth, [email protected]; Melanie Fewings, [email protected]; Anthony Kirincich, [email protected]; Margaret McManus, [email protected] Hazell, N. J.; Lecroart, A.: REGIONAL CABLE OBSERVATORY SOLUTIONS Easley, R. A.; Byrne, R. H.; Kaltenbacher, E. A.; Liu, X.: INSITU ANALYSIS OF NUTRIENTS AND PH USING THE SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS SYSTEM II (SEAS II): CASE STUDIES FROM RIVERINE AND OPEN OCEAN DEPLOYMENTS Fogaren, K. E.; Drupp, P.; De Carlo, E. H.; Pawlak, G.; Hanson, A.; Morin, E.; Sweetman, R.; Veitch, S.: NUTRIENT RESPONSE TO OCEANOGRAPHIC PROCESSES AT THE KILO NALU NEARSHORE OBSERVATORY, OAHU, HAWAII Gomes, K. J.; Edgington, D.; Herlien, R.; O’Reilly, T. C.; Liu, Y.; Butler, R.; Freemon, M.; Welch, V.; Arrott, M.; Howe, B.: CYBERINFRASTRUCTURE AND MIDDLEWARE APPLIED TO OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS Morin, J. P.; Voulgaris, G.; Perales, H.; Moore, T.: A LONG-TERM REAL TIME SEABED MORPHOLOGY EVOLUTION MONITORING SYSTEM IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC BIGHT Day, W. S.; Menden-Deuer, S.: APTITUDE - ALGORITHMS FOR PLANKTON TRACKING AND IDENTIFICATION OF TRAJECTORIES FOR UNDERWATER DEVICE ENSEMBLES Pirenne, B.; Guillemot, E.; Best, M.: AN OCEAN SCIENCEORIENTED SOCIAL NETWORK Soderqvist, L. E.; Byrne, M. J.: MONITORING THE STORM TIDE OF HURRICANE WILMA IN SOUTHWESTERN FLORIDA, OCTOBER 2005 Hussong, D. M.; Peat, D.: APPROPRIATELY DETAILED SURVEYS FOR EFFECTIVE SEAFLOOR SENSOR INSTALLATIONS Edgington, D. R.; Cline, D. E.; Mariette, J.: AN AUTOMATED VISUAL EVENT DETECTION SYSTEM FOR OBSERVATORY VIDEO Murphy, D. J.; Larson, N. G.; Edwards, B. C.: IMPROVEMENTS TO THE ALGORITHM FOR CTD OXYGEN CALIBRATION Feseker, T.; Brückmann, W.; Foucher,, J. P.; Schlüter, M.; Boetius, A.; Bohrmann, G.: LONG-TERM TEMPERATURE OBSERVATIONS PROVIDE USEFUL INSIGHTS INTO THE ACTIVITY OF MUD VOLCANOES Location: Poster Hall 1147. 1148. 1149. 1150. 1151. 1152. 1153. 1154. 1155. Goldman, E. A.; Liefer, J. D.; Smith, W.; Park, K.; MacIntyre, H. L.: SEASONAL VARIATION IN NUTRIENTS AND MICROALGAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION IN MOBILE BAY, ALABAMA, AND THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO Chapman, P.; DiMarco, S. F.; Nunnally, C.: EFFECTS OF SHORT TERM STABILITY VARIABILITY ON WATER COLUMN AND NEAR BOTTOM BIOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF THE WESTERN LOUISIANA SHELF Swanson, M.; Pawlak, G.; De Carlo, E. H.: SOURCES AND FORCES: WHAT DRIVES VARIABILITY IN SUSPENDED SOLID CONCENTRATIONS AT THE KILO NALU OBSERVATORY Newell, C. L.; Cowles, T. J.: THE SPATIAL-TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF NEARSHORE MYSID SWARMS AND THEIR PRIMARY PREDATOR, GRAY WHALES Schroeder, I. D.; Royer, T. C.; Grosch, C. E.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF THE ONSHORE FLOW OF HIGH SALINE, COLD WATER ONTO THE SHELF IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF ALASKA Wu, D.; Zhou, M.: ZOOPLANKTON BIOMASS TRANSPORT OFF OREGON COAST DURING THE UPWELLING SEASON Hoover, W.; Shenker, J. M.: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF LARVAL FISHES (SCOMBRIDAE, ISTIOPHORIDAE AND XIPHIIDAE) ACROSS THE WESTERN GULF STREAM BOUNDARY OFF FLORIDA Gan, J.; Cheung, Y.; Guo, X.; Li, L.: TOPOGRAPHICALLY INDUCED UPWELLING INTENSIFICATION OVER THE SHELF IN THE NORTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA Woodson, C. B.; Hoover, D. J.; Barth, J. A.; McManus, M. A.; Raimondi, P. R.; Carr, M. E.; Washburn, L.; Dudas, S.: RECRUITMENT IN UPWELLING-DOMINATED REGIONS DRIVEN BY THE MOVEMENT OF NEARSHORE FRONTS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 141 THURDAY 278. Orrico, C. M.; Barnard, A. H.; Johnson, C.; Mark Moline, M. A.; Koegler, J.; Struhbar, W.; Robbins, I.; Morgan, J.; Case, J. F.: THE UNDERWATER BIOLUMINESCENCE ASSESMENT TOOL (U-BAT), A NEW COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLE BIOLUMINESCENCE SENSOR FOR COASTAL AND OPEN OCEAN ENVIRONMENTS Gaardsted, F.; Tande, K. S.; Basedow, S.: MONITORING THE OVERWINTERING ZOOPLANKTON HABITATS IN THE NORTHEASTERN NORWEGIAN SEA Rhoades, B.; Barnard, A. H.; Derr, A.; Koegler, J.; Whiteman, D.; Barth, J. A.; Levine, M.; Waldorf, W.; Sullivan, J.; Donaghay, P.: AUTONOMOUS MOORED PROFILING SYSTEMS FOR COASTAL OBSERVATIONS Froysa, K. G.; Minken, H.; Jakobsen, T.: IMPROVING ACOUSTIC CURRENT MEASUREMENTS BY ZPULSEâ„¢ TECHNOLOGY Graybeal, J.; Headley, K.; O’Reilly, T. C.; Arrott, M.; Krueger, I. H.; Edgington, D. R.; Gomes, K. J.: SENSORS FOR OCEAN OBSERVATIONS: THE MISSING LINK(S) ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 1156. 1157. 1158. 1159. 1160. 1161. 1162. 1163. THURDAY 1164. 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 179: Marine Predator Hot Spots Wisniewski, G. L.; Hirons, A. C.; Soloviev, A. V.: ABUNDANCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF TWO IMPORTANT DECAPOD LARVAL SPECIES, CALLINECTES SAPIDUS AND MENIPPE MERCENARIA, IN THE GULF STREAM OFF SOUTHEAST FLORIDA, USA Wells, J. R.; Pawlak, G.; Merrifield, M. A.: OFFSHORE FORCING OF NEARSHORE CURRENTS: INTERNAL WAVE EFFECTS Kline, T. C.: OCEANIC CARBON SUBSIDIES IN PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND, ALASKA: EFFECTS ACROSS THE PELAGIC SYSTEM AND ON FISHERY RECRUITMENT Kirincich, A. R.; Barth, J. A.; Menge, B. A.; Dudas, S.; Lubchenco, J.: THE CONTROL OF VARIABLE INNERSHELF CIRCULATION ON ALONG-SHELF BIOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE CENTRAL OREGON COAST. Ainley, D. G.; Dugger, K. D.; Tynan, C. T.; Broduer, R.; Reese, D.; Barth, J.; Pierce, S.; Ford, R. G.; Spear, L. B.: BIO-PHYSICS OF SEABIRD OCCURRENCE IN THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT Decker, L. B.; Hebert, D.; Ullman, D.: OBSERVATIONS OF A MID-SHELF FRONT IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT DURING THE WINTER OF 2007 Fewings, M. R.; Lentz, S. J.: AN OBSERVED SUMMERTIME HEAT BUDGET ON THE INNER CONTINENTAL SHELF OFF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES Mokashi, M. P.; Hirons, A. C.; Soloviev, A. V.: INVESTIGATION OF RECRUITMENT PATTERNS OF SPINY AND SLIPPER LOBSTERS (FAMILY: PALINURIDAE AND SCYLLARIDAE) IN THE GULF STREAM, OFF SOUTHEAST FLORIDA, USA Walter, L. M.; Hench, J. L.; Leichter, J. J.; Monismith, S. G.: OBSERVATIONS OF CORAL REEF LAGOON/OCEAN EXCHANGE IN A NEARLY TIDELESS SYSTEM Chair(s): Steven Bograd, [email protected]; Barbara Block, [email protected]; Daniel Costa, [email protected]; Daniel Palacios, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 1473. 1474. 1475. 1476. 1477. 1478. 1479. 1480. 191: In Situ Optical Properties for the Investigation of Particle Dynamics 178: Structure and Function of River Plumes in Coastal Margins Chair(s): Grace Chang, [email protected] Chair(s): Tawnya Peterson, [email protected]; Alexander Horner-Devine, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 292. Location: Poster Hall 554. 555. 556. 557. 558. 559. 560. Huckstadt, L. A.; McDonald, B.; Burns, J.; Fedak, M. A.; Crocker, D. E.; Goebel, M. W.; Costa, D. P.: ENVIRONMENTAL CHARACTERIZATION OF CRABEATER SEAL FORAGING ZONES ALONG THE WESTERN ANTARCTIC PENINSULA Weise, M. J.; Costa, D. P.: ZONES OF AREA RESTRICTED SEARCHING IN MALE CALIFORNIA SEA LION (ZALOPHUS CALIFORNIANUS) IN RELATION TO OCEANOGRAPHIC FEATURES IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM Withdrawn Reuland, K. C.; Hardee, S. A.; Lance, M.; Jeffries, S.; Olesiuk, P.; Acevedo-Gutierrez, A.: HABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF HARBOR SEAL (PHOCA VITULINA) FORAGING LOCATIONS IN THE GEORGIA BASIN Williams, C. L.; Schillinger, G.; Paladino, F. V.: INTERNESTING MOVEMENTS OF COSTA RICAN LEATHERBACK TURTLES Kahn, B.: THE SAVU SEA OF EAST INDONESIA - SE ASIA’ S OPEN OCEAN WILDERNESS: OCEANIC CETACEAN ‘HOTSPOT’, TRADITIONAL SPERM WHALING AND INDO-PACIFIC MARINE CORRIDOR. Withdrawn Hardee, S. E.; Reuland, K.; Lance, M.; Jeffries, S.; Olesiuk, P.; Acevedo, A.: HARBOR SEAL MOVEMENTS AND HOTSPOTS IN THE GEORGIA BASIN REVEALED THROUGH THE USE OF SATELLITE-TELEMETRY. Rogers-Cotrone, J. D.; Yankovsky, A. E.; Weingartner, T. J.: THE EFFECTS OF SPATIALLY VARIABABLE WIND FORCING ON FRESHWATER TRANSPORT IN A BOUYANCY-DRIVEN COASTAL CURRENT Spahn, E. Y.; Horner-Devine, A. R.; Jay, D. A.; Nash, J.; Kilcher, L. F.: QUANTIFYING PARTICLE TRANSPORT IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER PLUME Sheridan, M. M.; Largier, J. L.; Halle, C. M.; Kaplan, D. M.; Garfield, N.: SAN FRANCISCO BAY OUTFLOW PATTERNS Seaton, C. M.; Baptista, A. M.: ESTUARINE FINGERPRINTS OF COASTAL UPWELLING Fulton, D. P.; Kurapov, A. L.; Springer, S. R.; Allen, J. S.; Hickey, B. M.; Barth, J. A.; Kosro, P. M.: EFFECTS OF THE COLUMBIA RIVER PLUME ON THE DYNAMICS OF UPWELLING OFF OREGON Frame, E. F.; Lessard, E. J.; Bernhardt, M. J.; Foy, M. S.: MICROPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE ON THE WASHINGTON COAST: IMPACT OF THE COLUMBIA RIVER PLUME ON TROPHIC INTERACTIONS Weber, M.; Abed, R.; De Beer, D.; Fabricius, K.; Lott, C.: MICROBIAL MECHANISMS OF CORAL DAMAGE BY SEDIMENTATION 293. 294. 295. 296. 297. 298. 299. Ohi, N.; Makinen, C. P.; Linkswiler, M.; Blattner, K. L.; Moisan, T. A.: PARTICULATE BACKSCATTERING, ABSORPTION AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT Chang, G.; Barnard, A. H.; Zaneveld, J. R.: PARTICLE EFFECTS ON OPTICAL CLOSURE Whitmire, A. L.; Chang, G.; Barnard, A. H.; Cowles, T. J.: DEVELOPING OPTICAL PROXIES AS TOOLS FOR COASTAL ECOSYSTEM MONITORING Slade, W. H.; Boss, E.: IS THE SPECTRAL SHAPE OF PARTICLE BACKSCATTERING A GOOD INDICATOR OF PARTICLE SIZE? Boss, E.; Slade, W. H.; Hill, P.; Curran, K.; Milligan, T.; Law, B.: OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF OCEANIC AGGREGATES; FIELD EXAMPLES AND A MODELING STUDY Toro-Farmer, G.; Jones, B.: MONITORING SEDIMENT RESUSPENSION IN CORAL REEFS AND SEAGRASS BEDS WITH IN-SITU OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS Rehm, E.; Mobley, C. D.: INVERTING LIGHT WITH CONSTRAINTS Donovan, C. D.; Younan, L.: TWO NEW SENSORS AVAILABLE FOR AQUATIC OPTICAL CHARACTERIZATION AND VARIABLE FLUORESCENCE (~) 142 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 300. ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Loos, E. A.; Costa, M.: INFLUENCE OF A LARGE RIVERINE SYSTEM ON THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF SURFACE WATERS OF WESTERN CANADA: IMPLICATIONS FOR SPECTRAL LIGHT AVAILABILITY 722. 723. 193: Seismic Oceanography 724. Chair(s): Richard Hobbs, [email protected]; Gerd Krahmann, [email protected]; Martin Visbeck, [email protected] 725. Location: Poster Hall 715. 716. 717. 718. 719. 720. 721. Buffett, G. G.; Biescas, B.; Sallàres, V.; Carbonell, R.; Pelegrí, J. L.: SEISMIC IMAGES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN UNDERCURRENT Alvarado Bustos, R.; Huthnance, J.; Krahmann, G.; Hobbs, R.: MIXING IN THE GULF OF CADIZ USING XBT DATA Papenberg, C.; Klaeschen, D.; Krahmann, G.; Hobbs, R.; Visbeck, M.: VERTICAL SEISMIC PROFILING (VSP) IN SEISMIC OCEANOGRAPHY - A PROOF OF CONCEPT Hobbs, R.; Geli, L.; Krahmann, G.; Vsemirnova, E.; Klaeschen, D.: MULTI-SPECTRAL SEISMIC IMAGES OF THE WATER STRUCTURE. Vsemirnova, E.; Papenberg, C.; Klaeschen, D.; Hobbs, R.: THE MOVING WATER QUANDARY Sheen, K. L.; White, N.; Hobbs, R. W.: IMAGING THE THERMOHALINE STRUCTURE OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN Klaeschen, D.; Sallares, V.; Buffett, G.; Papenberg, C.; Vogt, M.; Krahmann, G.; Carbonell, R.; Hobbs, R.; Visbeck, M.: SEISMIC IMAGES AND PROPERTIES OF MEDITERRANEAN OUTFLOW WATER (MOW) Vogt, M.; Krahmann, G.; Papenberg, C.; Silva, P.; Brandt, P.; Klaeschen, D.; Visbeck, M.; Hobbs, R.: COMBINING CTDYOYO DATA WITH SEISMIC REFLECTIONS Krahmann, G.; Gutscher, M. A.; Quentel, E.; Hobbs, R. W.: OBSERVATIONS OF A MEDDY WITH SEISMIC AND PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY METHODS Nakamura, Y.; Noguchi, T.; Tsuji, T.; Niino, H.; Itoh, S.; Chuda, T.: SEISMIC IMAGES OF KUROSHIO CURRENT OFF JAPAN Uenzelmann-Neben, G.; Klaeschen, D.; Krahmann, G.; Reston, T.; Visbeck, M.: SEISMIC REFLECTIONS WITHIN THE WATER COLUMN SOUTH OF SOUTH AFRICA: INDICATIONS FOR THE AGULHAS RETROFLECTION 198: Impacts and Interactions of Soft-bottom Benthic Systems Chair(s): Doug Miller, [email protected] Location: Poster Hall 726. 727. 728. Scheef, L. P.; Marcus, N. H.: THE RETENTION OF COPEPOD RESTING EGGS IN PATCHES OF SEAGRASS IN COMPARISON TO BARE SEDIMENT IN A HIGH ENERGY AREA Carter, A. P.; Hague, E. A.: THE EFFECTS OF INLET CHANNEL MODIFICATION ON THE BENTHIC INFAUNA IN THE VICINITY OF BOGUE INLET, NORTH CAROLINA Brauer, C. E.; Chapman, J.: TRAPPING BOPYRID ISOPOD CRYPTONISCANS FOR TAXONOMY THURDAY * represents Invited presentations ( ) 143 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Friday Oral Sessions 13:45 010: Physical Oceanography and Limnology: General 14:00 Chair(s): Janet Sprintall, [email protected]; Ed Dever, [email protected] 14:15 Location: W109 A 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 16:00 16:15 FRIDAY 16:30 16:45 17:00 14:30 Gordon, A. L.; Susanto, R. D.; Wijffels, S.; Sprintall, J.; Van Aken, H. M.; Molcard, R.; Ffield, A.; Supangat, A.; Jaya, I.: INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW [ITF] 2004-2006, AS OBSERVED BY INSTANT Susanto, R. D.; Gordon, A. L.; Ffield, A.; Pranowo, W. S.; Wirasantosa, S.: VELOCITY AND TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY OF THE MAKASSAR STRAIT THROUGHFLOW Sprintall, J.; Wijffels, S.; Molcard, R.; Jaya, I.: THE INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW IN THE OUTFLOW PASSAGES AS MEASURED BY INSTANT Drushka, K.; Sprintall, J.; Gille, S. T.: KELVIN WAVE ENERGY IN THE INDONESIAN ARCHIPELAGO Tillinger, D.; Gordon, A. L.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY IN THE INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW Wijffels, S. E.: THE INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF THE INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW Qu, T.; Du, Y.; McCreary, J. P.; Meyers, G.; Yamagata, T.: BUFFERING EFFECT AND ITS RELATED OCEAN DYNAMICS IN THE INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW REGION Zhou, L.; Murtugudde, R.; Jochum, M.: SEASONAL INFLUENCE OF INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW IN THE SOUTHWESTERN INDIAN OCEAN van Sebille, E.; Barron, C. N.; van Leeuwen, P. J.; Vossepoel, F. C.; de Ruijter, W.: AN INDEX FOR THE INTER-ANNUAL VARIABILITY IN AGULHAS LEAKAGE Witter, D. L.: CONNECTING THE CAPE BASIN WITH THE SOUTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE USING FOURTEEN YEARS OF SATELLITE ALTIMETRY: ASTTEX IN THE BROADER CONTEXT Yao, F.; Johns, W. E.: WATER MASS FORMATION AND CIRCULATION IN THE PERSIAN GULF van der Werf, P. M.; van Leeuwen, P. J.; de Ruijter, W. P.: THE ORIGIN OF INTERANNUAL SALINITY ANOMALIES IN THE SOUTHWESTERN INDIAN OCEAN Shoosmith, D. R.; Jenkins, A.: OCEANOGRAPHY OF THE BELLINGSHAUSEN SEA AND IMPLICATIONS FOR ANTARCTIC ICE SHELVES Ciasto, L. M.; Thompson, D. W.: REEMERGENCE OF WINTERTIME SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANOMALIES IN THE EXTRATROPICAL SOUTH PACIFIC Doi, T.; Tozuka, T.; Yamagata, T.: INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF THE GUINEA DOME AND ITS CLOSE LINK WITH THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL MODE 14:45 15:00 15:15 016: How Does the Subtropical North Atlantic Transfer Heat, Cycle Nutrients and Uptake Carbon? Chair(s): Ric Williams, [email protected]; Susan Lozier, [email protected]; Elaine McDonagh, [email protected]; Andy Watson, [email protected] Location: W109 B 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 015: Interactions Between the Kuroshio and Marginal Seas of China and Their Environmental Impact Chair(s): Dongliang Yuan, [email protected]; Fan Wang, [email protected]; Dongxiao Wang, [email protected] 16:00 Location: W109 A 13:30 Hsueh, Y.: THE KUROSHIO IMPINGEMENT ON THE CONTINENTAL SHELF IN THE CHINA MARGINAL SEAS AND ITS CONSEQUENCES* Yuan, D.: CROSS-SHELF CIRCULATION IN THE YELLOW AND EAST CHINA SEAS Wang, F.; Meng, Q.; Tang, X.; Hu, D.: LONG TERM TREND OF TEMPERATURE IN THE CHINA SEAS AND THE KUROSHIO REGION IN THE PAST 40 YEARS Wang, D.: ON THE COUNTER-WIND CURRENT IN THE NORTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA IN WINTER Ma, C.; Yang, J.: OPEN-OCEAN FORCING IN SHALLOW COASTAL SEAS: A MECHANISM FOR CIRCULATIONS IN THE EAST CHINA AND YELLOW SEAS Zheng, Z. P.; Wu, W. D.; Lin, L. X.; Yang, Y. J.: A MECHANISM FOR THE BIFURCATION OF THE TSUSHIMA WARM CURRENT IN THE JAPAN/EAST SEA Guo, J. S.: SURFACE INFLOW INTO THE SOUTH CHINA SEA CROSSING THE LUZON STRAIT HU, D. X.: RECENT PROGRESS IN STUDY OF LOW LATITUDE WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENTS * McDonagh, E. L.; King, B. A.; Bryden, H. L.; McLeod, P.; Williams, R.; Cunningham, S. A.; Torres, S.: CIRCULATION AND FLUXES OF HEAT AND FRESHWATER IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC. Johnson, R. J.; Bates, N. R.; Knap, A. H.; Whitefield, J. D.; Lomas, M. W.; Kadko, D.: COORDINATED CHANGE IN THE HEAT, SALINITY AND CO2 BUDGETS OF THE MESOPELAGIC ZONE AT THE BERMUDA TIME-SERIES SITES. Jenkins, W. J.; Stanley, R. H.: THE HELIUM-3 FLUX GAUGE IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC: WHAT DOES IT TELL US ABOUT NUTRIENT FLUXES AND NEW PRODUCTION IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC GYRE? Stanley, R. H.; Jenkins, W. J.; Doney, S. C.; Lott, D. E.: A TIME-SERIES OF FIVE NOBLE GASES AND TRITIUGENIC HELIUM-3 AS TRACERS FOR BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES Yool, A.; Oschlies, A.; Nurser, A. G.: WHAT DOES INFERRED OXYGEN UTILISATION RATE TELL US ABOUT OCEAN VENTILATION? Palter, J. B.; Lozier, M. S.: ON THE SOURCE OF GULF STREAM NUTRIENTS Williams, R. G.; Roussenov, V.; Sanders, R.; McDonagh, E.; Achterberg, E. P.; Wolff, G. A.; Mather, R. L.; Reynolds, S. E.; Torres, S. V.; Jickells, T.; Pan, X.; Mahaffey, C.; Lesworth, T.; Baker, A.: THE ROLE OF ORGANIC NUTRIENTS IN SUSTAINING EXPORT PRODUCTION AND CLOSING NUTRIENT BUDGETS OVER THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC Hansell, D. A.; Olson, D. B.; Zamora, L. M.: EXCESS NITRATE IN THE UPPER THERMOCLINE WATERS OF THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC: UNCERTAINTIES AND CONUNDRUMS Best, M. H.; Bates, N. R.: CHANGES IN SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-SEA CARBON DIOXIDE FLUXES AND CARBON STORAGE IN EIGHTEEN DEGREE MODE WATER OVER THE LAST TWO DECADES (~) 144 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Brown, P. J.; Schuster, U.; Watson, A. J.; Cunningham, S.; McDonagh, E.: UPDATED NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC CARBON TRANSPORT AND INVENTORY OF THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC Reverdin, G. P.; Mémery, L.; POMME team: POMME A SUBDUCTION PROCESS EXPERIMENT IN THE NORTH-EAST ATLANTIC Kremeur, A. S.; Levy, M.; Lehahn, Y.; Aumont, O.; Reverdin, G.; Memery, L.: MODE WATER SUBDUCTION: AN EFFICIENT CARBON PUMP IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC. Van Roekel, L. P.; Ito, T.; Randall, D. A.; Haertel, P. T.: UNDERSTANDING THE HEAT AND TRACER TRANSPORT OF SUBTROPICAL GYRES IN A LAGRANGIAN FRAMEWORK Charria, G.; Cipollini, P.; Theetten, S.; Dadou, I.; Garçon, V.: HOW DO PLANETARY WAVES INFLUENCE THE PRIMARY PRODUCTION IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN? 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 041: Juvenile Copepods in Planktonic Communities Chair(s): Gustav Paffenhofer, [email protected]; Don Deibel, [email protected] Location: W304 G/H 13:30 021: Biological Oceanography, Marine Biology: General Chair(s): John Reinfelder, [email protected] 13:45 Location: W101 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Lasley, R. S.; Yen, J.: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF MATE LIMITATION IN THE COASTAL MARINE COPEPOD, TEMORA LONGICORNIS Hentschel, B. T.; Hildebrand, A.; Sala, L. M.: SHORT-TERM FOOD VARIABILITY DURING MEROPLANKTONIC LARVAL DEVELOPMENT: EFFECTS ON THE SIZE AND AGE OF METAMORPHIC COMPETENCE Thompson, W. E.; Jones, C. M.; Smith, N. B.: USING STABLE ISOTOPES TO QUANTIFY DIFFERENTIAL VITAL RATES AND AS A MEASURE OF HABITAT QUALITY Lou, S.; Kourosh, C.; Rodríguez, C.: TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF CARDISOMA GUANHUMI LARVAE IN A SMALL ESTUARY IN PUERTO RICO Llopiz, J. K.; Cowen, R. K.: THE TROPHIC ECOLOGIES OF LARVAL FISHES IN THE LOW-LATITUDE OPEN OCEAN: PREDATION REFUGE AND A FULL TUMMY TO BOOT Kaltenberg, A. M.; Benoit-Bird, K. J.: THE INFLUENCE OF ZOOPLANKTON PREY ABUNDANCE AND DAYLIGHT ON PELAGIC SCHOOLING FISH BEHAVIOR 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Location: W108 Location: W304 A/B 14:00 14:15 16:00 Wentz, F. J.: SATELLITE MICROWAVE MEASUREMENTS OF THE HYDROLOGICAL CYCLE: WATER VAPOR, TROPOSPHERIC TEMPERATURE, PRECIPITATION, AND EVAPORATION Bakan, S.; Andersson, A.; Fennig, K.; Grassl, H.; Klepp, C.; Klocke, D.; Schulz, J.: HOAPS GLOBAL OCEAN WATER CYCLE CLIMATOLOGY COMPARED TO SATELLITE DATA, REANALYSIS AND CLIMATE MODEL RESULTS Leuliette, E. W.: INTERPRETING THE SEA LEVEL RISE RECORD FROM SATELLITE ALTIMETRY Andersen, O. B.; Barbosa, S. M.; Knudsen, P.: ESTIMATING TREND PARAMETERS FROM GLOBAL ALTIMETRIC SEA SURFACE HEIGHT DATA AND SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE DATA 16:15 16:30 Larkin, K. E.; Lampitt, R. S.; Hartman, S. E.; Billett, D. S.: SEASONAL AND INTER-ANNUAL VARIATION IN BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES AT THE PORCUPINE ABYSSAL PLAIN (PAP) OBSERVATORY (49°N, 16.5°W)* Karstensen, J.; Send, U.; Lampitt, R.; Koertzinger, A.; Meinecke, G.; Villagarcia, M.; Valdimarsson, H.; Pagnani, M.; Pouliquen, S.: FIVE YEARS OF NORTH ATLANTIC OPEN-OCEAN TIME SERIES STATIONS IN THE ANIMATE CLUSTER Migon, C.; Robin, T.; Dufour, A.; Gentili, B.; Coppola, L.: EVOLUTION OF LEAD CONCENTRATIONS IN THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN ATMOSPHIC AEROSOL DURING THE LAST TWENTY YEARS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 145 FRIDAY Chair(s): Juan Carlos Miquel, [email protected]; Laurent Coppola, [email protected] Chair(s): Carl Mears, [email protected]; Richard W. Reynolds, [email protected] 13:45 Durbin, E. G.; Casas, M. C.; Rynearson, T. A.; Smith, D. C.: MEASUREMENT OF COPEPOD PREDATION ON NAUPLII USING QPCR OF THE CYTOCHROME OXIDASE I GENE * Hofmann, E. E.; Wiggert, J. D.; Paffenhöfer, G. A.: A MODELING STUDY OF DEVELOPMENTAL STAGE AND ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABILITY EFFECTS ON COPEPOD FORAGING* Miller, C. B.; Zirbel, M. J.; Batchelder, H. P.: HIGH EGG MORTALITY RATES IN CALANOID COPEPODS, A TEST OF THE HYPOTHESIS Norrbin, M. F.: SEASONAL OCCURRENCE AND SURVIVAL OF NAUPLII IN A SUBARCTIC SEMIENCLOSED BAY Bradley, C. J.; Strickler, J. R.; Buskey, E. J.; Lenz, P. H.: DEVELOPMENT OF ESCAPE AND FREEZE RESPONSES IN JUVENILE COPEPODS Köster, M.; Paffenhöfer, G. A.: RESPIRATION RATES OF JUVENILE COPEPODS USING OPTICAL OXYGEN SENSOR SPOTS Andersen, N. G.; Nielsen, T. G.; Jakobsen, H. H.: MEASUREMENT OF COPEPODITE GROWTH RATE OVER THE FRONTAL AREA IN THE SARGASSO SEA Strickler, J. R.; Strunce, S. M.; Jumes, M. L.; Giebel, N. L.; Kasl, E. L.; Nihongi, A.; Bickel, S. L.: ADAPTING THE STRUCTURE OF THE HOP-AND-SINK SWIMMING PATTERN 049: Open Ocean Time-series Data: A Tool to Observe Temporal Variability of Biogeochemical Processes 023: Space-Based Measurements of Ocean Climate Change 13:30 Antoine, D.; Martinez, E.; d’Ortenzio, F.: GLOBAL ANALYSIS OF CONCURRENT DECADAL CHANGES IN THE WORLD OCEAN PHYTOPLANKTON AND THEIR FORCING VARIABLES (SST, WIND, IRRADIANCE) Hill, V. J.; Matrai, P.; Olsen, E.; Zimmerman, R. C.: PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY PATTERNS IN THE ARCTIC: THE 10 YEAR SEAWIFS RECORD Gregg, W.: OCEAN COLOR CLIMATE RECORDS USING MULTIPLE DATA SOURCES AND MODELS Reynolds, R. W.: A DAILY BLENDED ANALYSIS FOR SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE - VERSION 2 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 16:45 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Miquel, J. C.; Martin, J.; Gasser, B.; Rodriguez y Baena, A. M.; Toubal, T.; Fowler, S. W.: LONG-TERM STUDY OF SETTLING PARTICLE FLUX AND CARBON EXPORT AT THE DYFAMED STATION IN THE OPEN NORTHWESTERN MEDITERRANEAN Xue, J.; Armstrong, R. A.; Lee, C.; Liu, Z.; Wakeham, S. G.; Goutx, M.; Stewart , G. M.: MEDFLUX: USING 3D PLOTS FROM PRINCIPAL COMPONENT ANALYSIS TO VISUALIZE DEGRADATION TRAJECTORIES OF ORGANIC MATTER Beaupré, S. R.; Druffel, E. R.: OCEANIC TIMESERIES OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON (DOC) CONCENTRATIONS AND Δ 14C VALUES 08:30 08:45 09:00 055: Fidelity and Metrics of Ocean Models in Climate Simulations 09:15 Chair(s): Julie McClean, [email protected]; LuAnne Thompson, [email protected]; Steven Jayne, [email protected]; Anastasia Romanou, [email protected] 09:30 Location: W102 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 FRIDAY 09:45 10:00 10:15 Doney, S. C.; Yeager, S.; Danabasoglu, G.; Large, W. G.; McWilliams, J. C.: MECHANISMS GOVERNING INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF UPPER OCEAN TEMPERATURE IN A GLOBAL OCEAN HINDCAST SIMULATION* Sloyan, B. M.; Kamenkovich, I. V.: SIMULATION OF SUBANTARCTIC MODE AND ANTARCTIC INTERMEDIATE WATERS IN CLIMATE MODELS* Banks, H. T.; Vellinga, M.: A FRAMEWORK FOR OCEANICE METRICS TO ASSESS CLIMATE MODELS Penduff, T.; Juza, M.; Smith, G. C.; Barnier, B.; Molines, J. M.: COMPARATIVE ASSESSMENT OF THE DRAKKAR MULTI-RESOLUTION 1958-2004 GLOBAL SIMULATION ENSEMBLE Haines, K.; Palmer, M.; Liu, C.; Tett, S.: FURTHER IMPROVEMENT OF CLIMATE PREDICTION USING HADCM3 Ivanova, D. P.; McClean, J.; Bryan, F.: NORTH ATLANTIC DEEP WATER FORMATION AS DEPICTED BY COUPLED CLIMATE MODELS: BIASES AND VARIABILITY Tokmakian, R. T.: UNDERSTANDING THE PREDICTABILITY OF CLIMATE SIGNALS IN OCEAN MODELS Thompson, L.; Kelly, K. A.; McClean, J.; Greiner, E.: USING HIGH RESOLUTION PROGNOSTIC AND ASSIMILATIVE MODELS OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC TO EXAMINE THE ROLE OF THE GULF STREAM IN INTERANNUAL CHANGES IN HEAT TRANSPORT Cornillon, P.; Eichmann, A.; Howe, P.; Ullman, D.: AN EVALUATION OF THE PERFORMANCE OF HYCOM IN SIMULATING SURFACE THERMAL FRONTS Worcester, P. F.; Dushaw, B. D.: A DECADE OF ACOUSTIC THERMOMETRY IN THE NORTH PACIFIC (A): USING LONG-RANGE TRAVEL TIMES TO TEST GYRE-SCALE TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY DERIVED FROM OCEAN MODELS 09:45 10:00 10:15 Wethey, D. S.; Brin, L. D.; Jones, S. J.; Lima, F. P.; Helmuth, B.; Woodin, S. A.; Hilbish, T. J.: ECOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND HINDCASTING IN THE INTERTIDAL ZONE: FROM WEATHER AND OCEANOGRAPHY TO BODY TEMPERATURES, MORTALITY RISKS, AND BIOGEOGRAPHY Maloy, C. J.; Roberts, M.; Albertson, S.; Bos, J.; Pelletier, G.; McEliece, R.; Hoffer, S.: SOUTH PUGET SOUND DISSOLVED OXYGEN STUDY - AN OVERVIEW Nelson, T. A.; Van Alstyne, K. L.; Guerra, C.; Olson, J. K.; Imhoff, L. D.: USING UNDERWATER VIDEO TO EXAMINE THE OCCURRENCE OF GREEN MACROALGAL BLOOMS ON A REGIONAL SCALE IN WASHINGTON STATE, USA. Estevez, E. D.: A TIDAL CREEK CONDITION INDEX BASED ON ECOLOGICAL VARIABLES SAMPLED WITH RAPID SURVEY METHODS. Earls, J. K.; Dixon, B.: THE EFFECTS OF LANDUSE AND SOIL CHARACTERISTICS ON NUTRIENT LOADING USING THE SOIL & WATER ASSESSMENT TOOL (SWAT): A COMPARATIVE STUDY Snyder, R. A.; Karouna-Renier, N.; Ren, A.; Gibson, S.; Rao, K. R.: PATTERNS OF PCB DISTRIBUTION IN BIOTA OF PENSACOLA BAY, FL OTERO, E.: MULTISEASONAL ASSESSMENT OF WATER QUALITY IN CORAL REEF SYSTEMS OF SOUTHWESTERN PUERTO RICO. Davis, S. E.; Roelke, D. L.; Li, H. P.; Liu, K. J.; Pinckney, J.; Quigg, A.: RIVER INFLOW EFFECTS ON STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF TWO TEXAS ESTUARIES 062: Interaction of Riverine-Marine Systems Chair(s): Faiza Al-Yamani, [email protected]; Igor Polikarpov, [email protected]; Valeriy Skryabin, [email protected] Location: W204 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 056: Ecosystem Research Informing Management Decisions 15:00 Chair(s): Felix A. Martinez, [email protected]; Elizabeth Turner, [email protected]; Mike Dowgiallo, [email protected] Location: W103 Whitney, M. M.: A STUDY ON RIVER DISCHARGE AND SALINITY VARIABILITY IN THE MIDDLE ATLANTIC BIGHT Al-Yamani, F.; Al-Rifaie, K.; Ismail, W.; Al-Mansouri, H.; Al-Enezi, M.: THE EFFECTS OF RIVER DIVERSION, MESOPOTAMIAN MARSH MANIPULATIONS, AND RIVER DAMMING ON THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT OF THE ARABIAN GULF Oczkowski, A.; Nixon, S.; Granger , S.; Altabet, M.; Buckley, B.; McKinney, R.: AN ARTIFICIAL FISHERY? THE RECOVERY OF THE NILE DELTA FISHERY VIEWED THROUGH A STABLE ISOTOPIC LENS Foley, M. M.: FROM RIVERS TO KELP FORESTS IN BIG SUR, CALIFORNIA Thronson, A. M.; Hsiu-Ping, L.; Davis, S. E.; Roelke, D. L.; Quigg, A. S.: HOW WILL CHANGES IN FRESHWATER INFLOW (FREQUENCY VERSUS MAGNITUDE) IMPACT THE ECOSYSTEM HEALTH OF GALVESTON BAY? Polikarpov, I. G.; Al-Yamani, F.; Saburova, M. A.; AlRifaie, K.; Al-Anaze, M.; Al-Kandari, M.: LIGHT AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS OF PHYTOPLANKTON IN KUWAIT WATERS Soto, I. M.; Andréfouët, S.; Hu, C.; Muller Karger, F. E.; Wall, C.; Sheng, J.; Hatcher, B. G.: LAND-REEF AND REEF-REEF CONNECTIVITY IN MESO-AMERICA INFERRED FROM SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR OBSERVATIONS DURING 1998-2006 (~) 146 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 15:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Nezlin, N. P.; Polikarpov, I. G.; Al-Yamani, F.; Subba Rao, D. V.; Ignatov, A. M.: CLIMATIC CYCLES AND LOCAL METEOROLOGICAL FORCING REGULATING PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS IN THE ARABIAN GULF 14:00 14:15 065: Advances in the Application of Chemical Biomarkers in Aquatic Ecosystems 14:30 Chair(s): Thomas S. Bianchi, [email protected]; Elizabeth A. Canuel, [email protected] Location: W205 B/C 08:00 08:15 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 13:30 13:45 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 066: Linking Ecosystem Health to Marine Animal Health Chair(s): Nathalie Valette-Silver, [email protected]; Teri Rowles, [email protected]; Cheryl Woodley, [email protected] Location: W304 E/F 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 Schwacke, L. H.; Rowles, T. K.: MODELING TROPHIC TRANSFER OF TOXINS TO PREDICT HEALTH RISKS FOR MARINE MAMMAL POPULATIONS* Danil, K.; St. Leger, J.: LONG-TERM MORTALITY TRENDS IN STRANDED CALIFORNIA CETACEANS Jacobs, J. M.; Kelsey, R. H.; Leight, A. K.; Lewis, E. J.; McLaughlin, S. M.; Wood, R. J.: BIO-INDICATORS OF ESTUARINE HEALTH: A MULTIVARIATE APPROACH LINKING SOURCE TO RESOURCE Browder, J. A.; Nelson, C. M.; Kandrashoff, M.; Manduca, R.: THE PREVALENCE OF ABNORMAL FISH AS AN INDICATOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY * represents Invited presentations ( ) 147 FRIDAY 10:15 Canuel, E. A.; Bianchi, T. S.: NEW BIOMARKERS AND NOVEL APPLICATIONS OF CLASSIC BIOMARKERS IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS: AN OVERVIEW Hatcher, P. G.; McKee, G.; Sleighter, R. L.: CHEMICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF MUC (MOLECULARLY UNCHARACTERIZED CARBON) IN MARINE AND LACUSTRINE SYSTEMS: A NEW ANALYTICAL APPROACH~ Cooper, W. T.; D’Andrilli, J.; Dittmar, T.; Huettel, M.; Chipman, L.: ULTRAHIGH RESOLUTION MASS SPECTROMETRY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER: THE PATH TO GEOMICS Kujawinski, E. B.; Blough, N. V.; Del Vecchio, R.; Longnecker, K.: IDENTIFICATION OF TERRESTRIAL AND MICROBIAL INDICATOR COMPOUNDS WITHIN ULTRAHIGH RESOLUTION MASS SPECTRA OF AQUATIC DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER McKee, G. A.; Hatcher, P. G.: IDENTIFICATION OF PREVIOUSLY UNCHARACTERISED NATURAL SEDIMENT ORGANIC MATTER USING ULTRA-HIGH RESOLUTION MASS SPECTROMETRY AND NUCLEAR RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY Liu, Z.; Mao, J.; Peterson , M. L.; Lee, C.; Wakeham, S. G.; Hatcher, P. G.: CHARACTERIZATION OF SINKING PARTICLES FROM THE TWILIGHT ZONE USING ADVANCED SOLID-STATE NMR Minor, E. C.; Abdulla, H.; Dias, R. F.: COMPOUNDCLASS CHARACTERIZATION OF TOTAL DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER FROM SALTWATER SYSTEMS USING FTIR Wozniak, A. S.; Bauer, J. E.; Dickhut, R. M.; Hatcher, P. G.; Keesee, E. E.; Sleighter, R. L.: ISOTOPIC AND MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION OF TOTAL AND WATER-SOLUBLE AEROSOL ORGANIC MATTER: IMPLICATIONS FOR CARBON FLUXES AND BUDGETS IN WATERSHEDS AND RIVERS Olcott, A. N.; Eglinton, T. I.: CHEMICAL AND ISOTOPIC CHARACTERIZATION OF PRODUCTS FROM RUTHENIUM TETROXIDE OXIDATION OF MACROMOLECULAR ORGANIC MATTER IN MARINE SEDIMENTS Gregory Ventura, G. T.; Christopher Reddy, C. M.; Bernd Simoneit, B. T.; Robert Nelson, R. K.: RESOLVING THE UNRESOLVED COMPLEX MIXTURES OF HYDROTHERMAL PETROLEUM USING COMPREHENSIVE TWO-DIMENSIONAL GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY - TIME OF FLIGHT MASS SPECTROMETRY Pan, H.; Sun, M.: VARIABILITY OF LIPIDS AND THEIR DELTA-C13 COMPOSITIONS OF DIATOM (THALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA) DURING CELL GROWTH, AUTO-METABOLISM, AND MICROBIAL DEGRADATION Skoog, A.; Alldredge, A.; Passow, U.; Dunne, J.; Murray, J.: NEUTRAL ALDOSES AS SOURCE INDICATORS FOR MARINE SNOW Harvey, H. R.; Nunn, B. L.; Squier, A. H.; Freeman, T. L.; Goodlett, D. L.: PROTEINS AS BIOMARKERS: USING SHOTGUN PROTEOMIC MASS SPECTROMETRY TO TRACK THE FATE OF ALGAL PROTEINS IN MARINE SYSTEMS Orellana, M. V.; Hohmann, L.; Desaki, A. L.; Bare, C.; Repeta, D. J.; Armbrust, V.; Baliga, N.: SHOTGUN PROTEOMICS AND BIOMARKERS FOR DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON (DOC) IN THE OCEANS Moore, E. K.; Harvey, H. R.: LINKING GEOCHEMICAL AND PROTEOMICS APPROACHES TO CHARACTERIZE SEDIMENTARY PROTEINS AND MECHANISMS FOR PROTEIN PRESERVATION Wilson, S. E.; Steinberg, D. K.; Chu, F. L.; Bishop, J. K.: CHARACTERIZATION OF ZOOPLANKTON DIET AND PARTICLE FEEDING IN THE MESOPELAGIC ZONE USING FATTY ACID LIPID BIOMARKERS Smith, R. W.; Bianchi, T. S.; Savage, C.; Peterson, S. B.: A COMPARISON OF LIGNIN-PHENOLS AND BRANCHED/ISOPRENOID TETRAETHERS (BIT INDEX) AS INDICES OF TERRESTRIAL ORGANIC MATTER IN SURFACE SEDIMENTS Sleighter, R. L.; Liu, Z.; Abdulla, H.; Dias, R. F.; Hatcher, P. G.: EVIDENCE OF A LIGNIN SOURCE FOR PREVIOUSLY UNCHARACTERIZED COMPONENTS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) IN MARINE WATERS Bowles, K. M.; Sun, M.: EFFECTS OF PHOTOCHEMICAL AND MICROBIAL DEGRADATION ON CHEMICAL AND ISOTOPIC COMPOSITIONS OF LIGNIN-DERIVED PHENOLS IN GEORGIA COASTAL MARSH PLANTS Kaiser, K.; Benner, R.: MAJOR BACTERIAL CONTRIBUTION TO THE OCEAN RESERVOIR OF DETRITAL ORGANIC CARBON AND NITROGEN Veuger, B.; van Oevelen, D.: FATE OF CARBON AND NITROGEN IN MICROBIAL BIOMARKERS IN INTERTIDAL SEDIMENT Taylor, K. A.; Belicka, L. L.; Harvey, H. R.: INVESTIGATING THE SOURCES AND TRANSPORT OF ORGANIC CARBON USING INTACT BACTERIAL HOPANOIDS Louchouarn, P.; Kuo, L. J.; Herbert, B.: POTENTIAL IMPACTS OF CHARCOAL ON PALEORECONSTRUCTIONS OF ORGANIC MATTER INPUTS TO AQUATIC SYSTEMS ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 17:15 Voss, J. D.: BLACK BAND DISEASE DYNAMICS: ASSESSING NUTRIENT IMPACTS AND MICROBIAL COMMUNITY VARIATION* Dupont, J. M.; Jaap, W. C.; Hallock, P.: ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF THE 2005 RED TIDE ON ARTIFICIAL REEF COMMUNITIES IN THE EASTERN GULF OF MEXICO 073: Applications and Technological Developments of High Frequency Radar for Coastal Oceanography 071: Predicting the Impact of Climate Change on Marine Population Connectivity Chair(s): Iliana B Baums, [email protected]; Claire Paris, [email protected] Chair(s): Libe Washburn, [email protected]; Jeffrey D. Paduan, [email protected]; Lynn K. Shay, [email protected]; Scott Glenn, [email protected] Location: W102 Location: W304 E/F 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 FRIDAY Sommer, F.; Sandow, M.; Isla, A.; Lewandowska, A.; Javid Mohammed Pour, J.; Breithaupt, P.: WARMING AFFECTS IMPACT OF THE INVASIVE CTENOPHORE MNEMIOPSIS LEIDYI BY INCREASING INTERACTION STRENGTH AT INTERMEDIATE TROPHIC LEVELS 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 08:00 O’Connor, M. I.; Bruno, J. F.; Gaines, S. D.; Kinlan, B. P.; Halpern, B. S.; Lester, S.; O’Donnell, M.: POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF OCEAN TEMPERATURE ON CONNECTIVITY IN MARINE POPULATIONS* Paris, C. B.; Clement, A. C.; Cowen, R. K.: INFLUENCE OF PROJECTED TEMPERATURE CHANGES IN THE CARIBBEAN ON THE PELAGIC PHASE AND POPULATION NETWORKS OF A COMMON REEF FISH Irisson, J. O.; Cherubin, L.; Planes, S.: CONSEQUENCES OF INCREASED MOBILITY AND QUICKER DEVELOPMENT IN WARMER WATERS ON THE DISPERSAL TRAJECTORIES OF FISH LARVAE* Ridgway, T.; Riginos, C.; Hoegh-Guldberg, O.: CORAL CONNECTIVITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE - THE AUSTRALIAN STORY Rankin, T. L.; Sponaugle, S.: TEMPERATURE EFFECTS ON EARLY LIFE HISTORY TRAITS AND POPULATION REPLENISHMENT OF A REEF FISH Batchelder, H. P.: QUANTITATIVE METRICS FOR DESCRIBING SPATIAL-TEMPORAL PATTERNS AND PERSISTENCE OF RETENTIVE REGIONS, TRANSPORT AND CONNECTIVITY IN COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS Starger, C. J.; DeBoer, T. S.; Erdmann, M. V.; Barber, P. H.: CONSERVATION GENETICS OF REEF CORALS AND GIANT CLAMS AT THE CENTER OF MARINE BIODIVERSITY Causey, B. D.: THE ROLES OF REGIONAL CONNECTIVITY, CLIMATE CHANGE AND BIOGEOGRAPHY IN SHAPING THE CORAL REEF COMMUNITIES OF THE FLORIDA KEYS Baums, I. B.; Polato, N. R.: A GENETIC APPROACH TO DETECT ENSO-RELATED CHANGES IN CONNECTIVITY BETWEEN EASTERN AND CENTRAL PACIFIC CORAL POPULATIONS Watson, J. R.; Selkoe, K.; White, C.; Siegel, D. A.; Dong, C.; McWilliams, J. C.: SIMULATING THE IMPACT OF EL NINO ON THE GENE FLOW OF MARINE SPECIES IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BIGHT Sponaugle, S.; Grorud-Colvert, K.: ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON EARLY LIFE HISTORY TRAITS AND POPULATION CONNECTIVITY Fusaro, A. J.; Shank, T. M.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL GENETIC CONNECTIVITY OF A DEEP-SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENT SIBOGLINID TUBEWORM, RIFTIA PACHYPTILA Steppe, C. N.; Fredriksson, D.; Wallendorf, L.; Zepp, K.; Morgado, M.; Barlow, A.; Orr, J.; Pedersen, R.: CONNECTIVITY AMONG RESTORED CRASSOSTREA VIRGINICA BARS IN THE SEVERN RIVER ESTUARY; IMPLICATIONS FOR OYSTER RECOVERY EFFORTS 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 Haus, B. K.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF WAVE DIRECTIONAL SPECTRA IN A REGION OF HIGH SURFACE CURRENT VORTICITY USING WERA HF RADARS* Kim, S.; Cornuelle, B.; Terrill, E.: ANISOTROPIC RESPONSE OF SURFACE CURRENTS TO THE WIND IN A COASTAL REGION Long, R. M.; Barrick, D. E.; Lipa, B. J.: MULTI-YEAR STUDY OF WAVE MEASUREMENTS AND WAVE HOMOGENEITY FROM FIVE CENTRAL CALIFORNIA CODAR SYSTEMS Hisaki, Y.; Imadu, C.: OBSERVATIONS OF OCEAN SURFACE CURRENTS IN THE WEST OF OKINAWA, JAPAN Roarty, H. J.; Member, P.: HIGH FREQUENCY RADAR NETWORK WITHIN THE MID-ATLANTIC REGIONAL COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM Savidge, D. K.; Amft, J. A.; Smith, C. A.; Moore, T.; Styles, R.; Bull, H.: WERA LONG-RANGE RADAR ON THE SOUTHEAST U.S. COAST: SPATIAL CONSIDERATIONS Ohlmann, C.; Washburn, L.: SURFACE CURRENT TRAJECTORIES FROM HF RADAR; PARAMETERIZING SUB-GRID SCALE MOTIONS Shay, L. K.; Martinez-Pedraja, J.; Powell, M. D.; Haus, B. K.; Brewster, J.: COASTAL OCEAN SURFACE CURRENT RESPONSE TO HURRICANE JEANNE DETECTED BY WERA Kaplan, D. M.; Paduan, J. D.: HF RADAR 201: MOVING BEYOND THE STATUS QUO FOR HF RADAR DATA MANIPULATION, PROCESSING AND MANAGEMENT~ Yoshikawa, Y.; Masuda, A.: SURFACE CURRENT MEASUREMENT AND INTERIOR CURRENT ESTIMATION USING HF RADAR IN THE TSUSHIMA STRAIT* Harlan, J.; Terrill, E.; Otero, M.; Hazard, L.; Reuter, P.; Cook, T.; Lindquist, K.: UPDATE ON A SCALEABLE, REALTIME NETWORK FOR HF RADAR Seim, H. E.; Haines, S.; Muglia, M.: EXAMINING THE VALIDITY OF THE OUTER BANKS HF RADAR SYSTEM Andreu-Burillo, I.; Howarth, M. J.; Proctor, R.; Graff, J.: ASSIMILATING HF CURRENTS TO IMPROVE COASTAL PREDICTIONS Paduan, J. D.; Kaplan, D. M.; Halle, C.; Cook, M. S.; Largier, J. L.; Garfield, N.: CIRCULATION OFFSHORE CENTRAL CALIFORNIA FROM A LARGE ARRAY OF HF RADARS Ebuchi, N.; Fukamachi, Y.; Ohshima, K. I.; Wakatsuchi, M.: SEASONAL AND SUBINERTIAL VARIATIONS IN THE SOYA WARM CURRENT REVEALED BY HF RADARS, COASTAL TIDE GAUGES, AND A BOTTOM-MOUNTED ADCP (~) 148 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 15:00 15:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF GOPALAKRISHNAN, G.; BLUMBERG, A.; BRUNO, M.: ASSIMILATION OF HF RADAR DATA INTO OCEAN CIRCULATION MODEL DURING AN EXTREME WEATHER EVENT Halle, C. M.; Largier, J. L.; Paduan, J. D.; Kaplan, D. M.; Cook, M. S.: AN UPWELLING BESTIARY: OFFSHORE FLOW STRUCTURES REVEALED BY LONG-RANGE, HIGH FREQUENCY RADARS IN CALIFORNIA 10:00 10:15 085: The Nordic Seas and the North Atlantic’s Subpolar Gyre: Similarities, Differences, and Interconnection 076: Watersheds and Coral Reefs: Science, Policy and Implementation Chair(s): Fiammetta Straneo, [email protected]; Jonathan Lilly, [email protected]; Anna Wåhlin, [email protected]; Tor Eldevik, [email protected] Chair(s): Robert Richmond, [email protected]; Felix Martinez, [email protected]; Michael Dowgiallo, [email protected] Location: W110 08:00 Location: W103 16:00 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Richmond, R. H.; Rongo, T.; Golbuu, Y.; Victor, S.; Idechong, N.; Davis, G.; Kostka, W.; Neth, L.; Hamnett, M.; Wolanski, E.: WATERSHEDS AND CORAL REEFS: CONSERVATION SCIENCE, POLICY AND IMPLEMENTATION~ Idechong, N.; Victor, S.; Golbuu, Y.: COMBINING MODERN SCIENCE AND TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE FOR CORAL REEF PROTECTION IN MICRONESIA* Golbuu, Y.; Fabricius, K.; Richmond, R. H.: THE IMPACT OF WATERSHED DISTURBANCE ON ADJACENT CORAL REEF COMMUNITIES IN BABELDOAB, PALAU, MICRONESIA Victor, S.; Neth, L. K.; Golbuu, Y.; Wolanski, E.; Richmond, R. H.: UNDERSTANDING IMPACTS OF SEDIMENTATION ON MANGROVES AND CORAL REEFS TO IMPROVE LAND USE IN A WET TROPICAL ISLAND, POHNPEI, MICRONESIA Rongo, T.; Wolanski, E.: CORAL COMMUNITY CHANGE ALONG A SEDIMENT GRADIENT IN FOUHA BAY, GUAM, MICRONESIA 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 081: Ocean Salinity in Climate and Ocean Dynamics 09:45 Chair(s): Gary Lagerloef, [email protected]; Ray Schmitt, [email protected] Location: W109 B 08:00 08:15 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 Lagerloef, G. S.; Lilly, J.; Gunn, J. T.: ESTIMATING THE ROLE OF SALT DIVERGENCE TERMS IN THE MARINE FRESHWATER BUDGET USING ARGO DATA AS PRECURSOR TO AQUARIUS/SAC-D SATELLITE SALINITY DATA Yeager, S. G.; Large, W. G.: OBSERVED DIAPYCNAL INJECTION OF SALINITY ANOMALIES Nof, D.: INCREASED FRESH WATER FLUX AND THE SLOWING OF THE MOC-- WILL IT WARM OR COOL EUROPE? Yu, L.; Schmitt, R.: SALINITY AND THE OCEAN WATER CYCLE Ren, L.; Riser, S. C.: DECADAL SCALE SALT BUDGET EVALUATION 1993-2006 CRAVATTE, S.; DELCROIX, T.; MCPHADEN, M. J.; ZHANG, D.: SURFACE FRESHENING OF THE TROPICAL PACIFIC WARM POOL SINCE THE 1950S. Busalacchi, A. J.; Hackert, E. C.; Ballabrera-Poy, J.; Zhang, R. H.; Mutugudde, R.: ROLE OF SALINITY ASSIMILATION IN A HYBRID COUPLED MODEL FOR THE TROPICAL PACIFIC Foltz, G. R.; McPhaden, M. J.: IMPACT OF BARRIER LAYER THICKNESS ON TROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC SST 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Myers, P. G.; Kulan, N.; Donnelly, C. R.; Ribergaard, M. R.: THE WEST GREENLAND CURRENT AND THE LABRADOR SEA Rykova, T. A.; Straneo, F.; Lilly, J. M.: IRMINGER CURRENT ANTICYCLONES IN THE LABRADOR SEA OBSERVED IN THE HYDROGRAPHIC RECORD OF 1990-2004 Hatun, H.: SPRING BLOOM IN THE NORTHEASTERN LABRADOR SEA Frajka Williams, E. E.; Rhines, P. B.; Eriksen, C.: THE ROLE OF FRESHWATER ADVECTION, SUBPOLAR CIRCULATION AND ICE IN SPRING PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOMS IN THE LABRADOR SEA Johnson, H. L.; Wahlin, A. K.; Levermann, A.: THE SALINITY, HEAT AND BUOYANCY BUDGETS OF A COASTAL CURRENT IN A MARGINAL SEA Prater, M. D.; Rossby, T.; Soiland, H.: LAGRANGIAN STUDIES OF WARMWATER PATHWAYS IN THE NORDIC SEAS Walczowski, W.; Piechura, J.: THE WEST SPITSBERGEN CURRENT: STRUCTURE AND VARIABILITY Sutherland, D. A.; Pickart, R. S.; Jones, E. P.; Azetsu-Scott, K.; Olafsson, J.: COMPOSITION, TRANSPORT, AND VARIABILITY OF FRESHWATER IN THE BRANCHES OF THE EAST GREENLAND CURRENT Mork, K. A.; Skagseth, O.: VOLUME, HEAT AND SALT FLUXES IN THE NORWEGIAN SEA TOWARD THE ARCTIC DERIVED FROM ALTIMETER AND HYDROGRAPHIC DATA Hakkinen, S.; Rhines, P. B.: SHIFTING SURFACE CURRENTS IN THE NORTHERN NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN Spall, M. A.: ON THE DOWNWELLING LIMB OF THE THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION* Soiland, H.; Rossby, T.; Prater, M. D.: INTERMEDIATE CIRCULATION IN THE NORWEGIAN SEA Voet, G.; Quadfasel, D.; Latarius, K.; Maschwitz, G.; Mork, K. A.; Soiland, H.: THE MID-DEPTH CIRCULATION OF THE NORDIC SEAS FROM PROFILING FLOATS Withdrawn Gascard jean-claude, J. C.; Mork Kjell Arne, K. A.: INTENSE EDDY MIXING AND TRANSPORT IN THE LOFOTEN BASIN Nilsen, J. E.; Eldevik, T.: VENTILATION, PATHWAYS, AND OVERFLOWS OF THE NORDIC SEAS Jonsson, S.; Valdimarsson, H.: THE UPSTREAM PATH OF THE DENMARK STRAIT OVERFLOW WATER THROUGH THE ICELAND SEA Straneo, F.: WHY ARE THE DENSEST WATERS OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC FORMED IN THE NORDIC SEAS? * represents Invited presentations ( ) 149 FRIDAY 08:30 Riser, S. C.; Lagerloef, G.: HIGH-RESOLUTION SURFACE SALINITY AND TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS FROM ARGO FLOATS Kim, S. B.; Wentz, F. J.: SIMULATION OF SALINITY RETRIEVAL OVER OPEN OCEANS BY THE SPACEBORNE AQUARIUS INSTRUMENT ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 086: Nonlinear Internal Wave Observations, Dynamics, and Acoustic Impacts 15:15 Chair(s): Steven R Ramp, [email protected]; James Lynch, [email protected]; Oliver Fringer, [email protected] 16:00 Location: W203 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 FRIDAY 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 Duda, T. F.: SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF ACOUSTIC FIELDS IN NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVE ENVIRONMENTS * Simmons, H.; St. Laurent, L.: DYNAMIC MODELING OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA* St. Laurent, L. C.; Simmons, H. L.; Wang, Y. H.: ENERGY DISSIPATION OF LARGE AMPLITUDE NONLINEAR WAVES IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA Wang, Y.; Laurent, L.: OBSERVATIONS OF INTERNAL WAVE IMPINGING AT DONGSHA ATOLL IN SOUTH CHINA SEA Ramp, S. R.; Bahr, F. L.; Tang, T. Y.; Yang, Y. J.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF THE NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVE (NLIW) FIELD IN THE NORTHEASTERN SOUTH CHINA SEA Zhang, Z.; Fringer, O. B.: NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF THE GENERATION OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL GRAVITY WAVES IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA Ko, D. S.; Chao, S. Y.; Shaw, P. T.; Lien, R. C.: INFLUENCE OF THE KUROSHIO ON THE INTERNAL WAVE GENERATION AT LUZON STRAIT Gallacher, P. C.; Schaferkotter, M. R.: NONHYDROSTATIC HINDCASTS OF THE TRANSFORMATION AND INTERACTION OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES IN THE NORTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA Scotti, A.; Wendelbo, J.: IS THERE LIFE BEYOND HYDROSTATICS? SOME IDEAS ON NLIWS PARAMETERIZATION Rudnick, D. L.; Lee, C. M.: GLIDER-BASED OBSERVATIONS OF THE KUROSHIO Reeder, D. B.; Ma, B.; Wei, R. C.; Chen, C. F.: OBSERVATIONS OF LOW-FREQUENCY ACOUSTIC PROPAGATION PARALLEL TO NON-LINEAR INTERNAL ELEVATION WAVE FRONTS IN SHALLOW WATER IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA Reeves, J. M.; Chiu, C. S.: ACOUSTIC INTENSITY FLUCTUATIONS RESULTING FROM PULSE PROPAGATION THROUGH TIDAL AND SUPER-TIDAL INTERNAL WAVES ON THE SOUTH CHINA SEA SHELF Oba, R.; Hayward, T.; Finette, S.; Shen, C.; Evans, T.; Warn Varnas, A.; Piacsek, S.; Gallacher, P.; Schaferkotter, M.: SOLITON PACKET IMPACT ON ACOUSTIC PROPAGATION AND ARRAY PERFORMANCE DURING ASIAEX2001 Lavery, A. C.; Chu, D.: BROADBAND ACOUSTIC SCATTERING FROM NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES: IDENTIFICATION OF DOMINANT SCATTERING MECHANISMS Nash, J. D.; Shroyer, E. L.; Moum, J. N.; Duda, T. F.; Lynch, J. F.; Irish, J. D.: VARIABILITY OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES ON THE CONTINENTAL SHELF Williams, N. J.; Graber, H. C.; Caruso, M.; Ramos, R.; Lund, B.: COMPARISON OF IN SITU SURFACE MEASUREMENTS OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES WITH THOSE OBTAINED FROM REMOTE SENSING Graber, H. C.; Lund, B.; Williams, N. J.; Ramos, R.; Caruso, M.: COMPARISON OR MARINE X-BAND RADAR DERIVED SURFACE ELEVATIONS WITH ASIS BUOY ELVATIONS OF NON-LINEAR INTERNAL WAVE EVENTS 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Davis, K. A.; Leichter, J. J.; Hench, J. L.; Monismith, S. G.: EFFECTS OF WESTERN BOUNDARY CURRENT DYNAMICS ON THE INTERNAL WAVE FIELD OF THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA SHELF Peacock , T.; Dauxois , T.; Flynn , M. R.; Echeverri , P.; Mercier , M.: LABORATORY INVESTIGATIONS OF NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES Ostrovsky, L. A.; Irisov, V. G.: HAMILTONIAN DESCRIPTION OF STRONGLY NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES ON SHELF Diamessis, P. J.: BENTHIC TURBULENCE INDUCED BY NONLINEAR INTERNAL WAVES OF DEPRESSION Blokhina, M.; Bourgault, D.: NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS OF SHOALING INTERNAL SOLITARY WAVES OF ELEVATION Kakinuma, T.; Nakayama, K.: DERIVATION AND APPLICATION OF A SET OF EQUATIONS FOR STRONGLY NONLINEAR AND STRONGLY DISPERSIVE SURFACE/INTERNAL WAVES Hult, E. L.; Troy, C. D.; Koseff, J. R.: WAVE INSTABILITY CRITERIA FOR INTEFACIAL WAVES BREAKING OVER A RIDGE 090: UV Effects on Aquatic Ecosystems: Integration at Multiple Trophic Levels Chair(s): Wade H Jeffrey, [email protected]; Robert Sanders, [email protected]; Craig Williamson, [email protected]; Sandra Connelly, [email protected] Location: W304 G/H 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 Agustí­, S.; Carrillo-Elkin, N.: THE EFFECTS OF UVR ON THE NET METABOLISM OF PLANKTONIC COMMUNITIES Wulff, A.; Roleda, M. Y.; Zacher, K.; Al-Handal, A. Y.; Wiencke, C.: ARE ANTARCTIC BENTHIC MARINE DIATOMS UV TOLERANT? Speekmann, C. L.; Rose, J. M.; Sanders, R. W.: UV-B TOLERANCE OF TWO ANTARCTIC HETEROTROPHIC PROTISTS, THE CILIATE URONEMA MARINUM AND NANOFLAGELLATE PARAPHYSOMONAS IMPERFORATA Macaluso, A. L.; Porter, J. A.; Sanders, R. W.: DIRECT AND INDIRECT EFFECTS OF UV RADIATION AND CDOM ON A HETEROTROPHIC FLAGELLATE Spiese, C. E.; Kieber, D. J.; Nomura, C. T.; Kiene, R. P.: REDUCTION OF DIMETHYL SULFOXIDE BY MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON Olson, M. H.; Adams-Deutsch, T.; Mitchell, D. L.: DOSEDEPENDENCE OF PHOTOENZYMATIC REPAIR IN RAINBOW TROUT LARVAE Roleda, M. Y.; Mohlin, M.; Pattanaik, B.; Wulff, A.: INTERACTIVE IRRADIANCE AND NUTRIENT EFFECTS ON THE PHOTOSYNTHESIS OF NODULARIA SPUMIGENA Fischer, J. M.; Kessler, K.; Sanders, R. W.; Williamson, C. E.; Jeffrey, W. H.; Moeller, R. E.; Morris, D. P.; Porter, J. A.; Neale, P. A.; Saros, J. E.; Cooke, S. L.; Macaluso, A. L.; Overholt, E. P.; Pakulski, J.D.; Schoener, D.; Scott, C.: EFFECTS OF CDOM ADDITION ON CRUSTACEAN ZOOPLANKTON IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC LAKE: CARBON AND NUTRIENT SUBSIDY OR UV SCREEN? (~) 150 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 10:00 10:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Mitchell, D. L.; Connelly, C. J.; Jeffrey, W. H.; Macaluso, A.; Moeller, R. E.; Olson, M. H.; Porter, J. A.; Sanders, R. W.; Tucker, A. J.; Williamson, C. E.: PHOTOPROTECTION AGAINST UV-B RADIATION IN FRESHWATER PLANKTON: A COMPARATIVE APPROACH ACROSS A BROAD TROPHIC SPECTRUM Williamson, C. E.; Dee, G.; Shirey, L. J.; Saros, J. E.; Sanders, R. W.; Porter, J. A.; Palen, W. J.; Olson, M. H.; Neale, P. J.; Macaluso, A. L.; Kessler, K.; Jeffrey, W. H.; Guida, T.; Gilroy, S.; DeLange, M.; Connelly, S. J.; Clauser, A. S.; Moeller, R. E.: DO ULTRAVIOLET (UV) TOLERANCE AND PHOTOENZYMATIC REPAIR VARY ACROSS TROPHIC LEVELS FROM BACTERIA AND PHYTOPLANKTON TO ZOOPLANKTON AND FISH? 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 093: The Ocean Science, Technology, and Operations Workforce Chair(s): Tom Murphree, [email protected]; Deidre Sullivan, [email protected]; Leslie Rosenfeld, [email protected]; Melbourne Briscoe, [email protected] 123: Molecular Approaches to Study Interactions Between Organisms in Aquatic Environments: Current Progress and Future Directions Location: W103 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 Chair(s): Jens C. Nejstgaard, [email protected]; Marc E. Frischer, [email protected] Sullivan, D. E.; Murphree, T.; Rosenfeld, L. K.: UNDERSTANDING AND PREDICTING CHANGES IN THE OCEAN SCIENCES, TECHNOLOGY, AND OPERATIONS WORKFORCE Stone, P. J.; Colton, M. C.: CURRENT AND FUTURE PERSPECTIVES ON NOAA’S NATIONAL OCEAN SERVICE Gough, E. C.; Jeffries, R. A.; Jones, M. W.: THE NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHY PROGRAM: A BUSINESS MODEL TRANSITION AND WORKFORCE TRANSFORMATION COLLIDE Michel, D.; Gilman, B.: WORKFORCE SHORTAGES IN THE OFFSHORE INDUSTRY: CAN OOS COMPETE? Campbell, L.; DiMarco, S. F.; Guinasso, Jr., N. L.: TRAINING THE NEXT GENERATION OF OCEAN SCIENTISTS: AN UPDATE ON THE MASTER OF GEOSCIENCES CERTIFICATE IN OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEMS AT TEXAS A&M Moran, S. B.; Farmer, D. M.; Smith, D. C.; Higgins, M. M.; Rosen, D. E.: EDUCATING FUTURE BUSINESS LEADERS IN GLOBAL CHANGE OPPORTUNITIES Rosenfeld, L.; Sullivan, D.; Murphree, T.; Briscoe, M.: DOES THE U.S. NEED A CERTIFICATION PROGRAM FOR OCEANOGRAPHIC PROFESSIONALS? Mackenzie, B.; Wainwright, C.: DOES QUALIFICATION EQUAL COMPETENCE? Location: W101 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 Chair(s): Peter J. Statham, [email protected]; Mike Lucas, [email protected]; Stéphane Blain, [email protected] 09:30 Location: W304 G/H 16:15 Hiscock, M. R.; Schultz, P.; Sarmiento, J. L.: IMPACTS OF IRON-INDUCED ELEVATION OF MAXIMUM QUANTUM YIELD AND CHLOROPHYLL TO CARBON RATIO ON THE NUTRIENT UTILIZATION OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN Salter, I.; Pollard, R. T.; Sanders, R.; Lucas, M.; Statham, P. J.; Lampitt, R. S.: DEEP-WATER CARBON AND DIATOM FLUXES FROM A NATURALLY IRON FERTILISED PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM IN THE POLAR FRONTAL ZONE OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN 09:45 10:00 Bowers, H. A.: THE MANY APPLICATIONS OF REALTIME PCR IN THE HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM WORLD Harwood, J. D.: TROPHIC CONNECTIONS IN COMPLEX FOOD WEBS: INSIGHTS FROM TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS* Perdue, E. M.; Koprivnjak, J. F.; Ingall, E.; Vetter, T. A.; Pfromm, P. H.; Schmitt-Kopplin, P.; Hertkorn, N.; Frommberger, M.; Knicker, H.: CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF MARINE DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER ISOLATED USING THE COUPLED RO/ED METHOD - INSIGHTS FROM 13C NMR SPECTROMETRY AND FTICR MASS SPECTROMETRY Edge, S. E.; Morgan, M. B.; Snell, T. W.: APPLICATION OF MICROARRAY TECHNOLOGY TO INVESTIGATE CORAL RESPONSE TO STRESS AT DIFFERENT SCALES ON SOUTH FLORIDA REEFS Whitehead, K.; Orellana, M. V.; Pang, L.; Desaki, A.; Pan, M.; Baliga, N. S.: A SYSTEMS BIOLOGY APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING MICROBIAL INTERACTIONS BETWEEN DUNALIELLA SALINA AND THE HALOPHILIC ARCHEAON HALOBACTERIUM SALINARUM (NRC 1) Morgan-Smith, D.; Bochdansky, A. B.; Herndl, G. J.; Van Aken, H. M.: QUANTIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF DEEP-SEA EUKARYOTIC COMMUNITIES BASED ON MORPHOLOGY AND FLUORESCENCE IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION WITH A ROBOTIC MICROSCOPE Frischer, M. E.; Toedsson, C.; Lee, R. F.; Walters, T. L.; Brinkley, K.; Simonelli, P.; Stokes, V.; Naegele, V.; Nejstgaard, J. C.: DETECTION AND DISCOVERY OF CRUSTACEAN PARASITES BY 18S RDNA TARGETED DENATURING HIGH PERFORMANCE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY (DHPLC) Unal, E.; Bucklin, A.; Wiebe, P. H.: BASIN-SCALE POPULATION GENETIC STRUCTURE OF CALANUS FINMARCHICUS IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC Govenar, B.; Shank, T. M.: EXPLORING MECHANISMS OF SPECIES COEXISTENCE THROUGH MOLECULAR IDENTIFICATION OF GUT CONTENTS IN HYDROTHERMAL VENT GASTROPODS * represents Invited presentations ( ) 151 FRIDAY 09:15 112: Natural Iron Fertilization in the Southern Ocean, and Implications for the Biological Carbon Pump 16:00 Morris, P. J.; Sanders, R.; Turnewitsch, R.; Thomalla, S.: 234THDERIVED PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON EXPORT FROM AN ISLAND-INDUCED PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN Planquette, H.; Statham, P. J.; Fones, G. R.; Sanders, R.: DISTRIBUTION OF BIOACTIVE TRACE METALS IN LARGE PARTICLES (>53µM) AROUND THE CROZET ISLANDS, SOUTHERN OCEAN. Hatta, M.; Hiscock, W. T.; Selph, K. E.; Yang, J.; Zhou, M.; Measures, C. I.: IRON FLUXES FROM THE SHELF REGIONS NEAR ELEPHANT ISLAND IN THE DRAKE PASSAGE DURING AUSTRAL-WINTER 2006 Selph, K. E.; Measures, C. I.; Apprill, A.; Brown, M. T.; Hiscock, W. T.; Hatta, M.; Yang, J. J.: WINTER AND SUMMER COMPARISONS OF PHYTOPLANKTON AND TRACE METAL DISTRIBUTIONS AROUND THE SOUTH SHETLAND ISLANDS, ANTARCTICA ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 10:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Troedsson, C.; Simonelli, P.; Naegele, V.; Nejstgaard, J. C.; Frischer, M. E.: QUANTIFICATION OF COPEPOD GUT CONTENT BY DIFFERENTIAL LENGTH AMPLIFICATION PCR (DLA-QPCR). 14:15 14:30 144: Coral Reefs: Impacts of Environmental Alterations and Climate Change on Coral Biology and Biogeochemistry, and Links Between Dissolved Organic Matter 14:45 Chair(s): Andrea G. Grottoli, [email protected]; G. Christopher Shank, [email protected]; Ralph Mead, [email protected]; Tamara Pease, [email protected]; Kimberly Ritchie, [email protected] 15:00 Location: W202 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 FRIDAY 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 Kuffner, I. B.; Andersson, A. J.; Jokiel, P. L.; Rodgers, K. S.; Mackenzie, F. T.: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND CORAL REEFS: WILL CHANGES IN COMMUNITY STRUCTURE OVERWHELM SUB-LETHAL DECREASES IN CALCIFICATION RATES?* Apprill, A. M.; Rappé, M. S.: WATER QUALITY AND MICROBIAL COMMUNITY DYNAMICS IN REEF WATERS FOLLOWING NUTRIENT LOADING DUE TO CORAL SPAWNING Tanaka, Y.; Miyajima, T.; Koike, I.; Hayashibara, T.; Ogawa, H.: EFFECTS OF NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT ON RELEASE OF DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTAR FROM REEF-BUILDING CORALS Beauregard, A. Y.; Sharp, J. H.; Lipschultz, F.; Lomas, M. W.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING OF CARBON AND NITROGEN BY THE CORAL DIPLORIA STRIGOSA IN BERMUDA Grottoli, A. G.; Hughes, A. D.; Pease, T. K.; Matsui, Y.: ACQUISITION AND ALLOCATION OF CARBON IN BLEACHED HAWAIIAN CORALS Hughes, A. D.; Grottoli, A. G.; Pease, T. K.: RECOVERY FROM BLEACHING: AUTOTROPHIC AND HETEROTROPHIC CARBON ACQUISITION IN TWO HAWAIIAN CORALS DURING RECOVERY FROM THERMALLY-INDUCED BLEACHING Hughen, K.; Kneeland, J.; Cervino, J.; Bartels, E.: LIPID BIOMARKERS IN CORAL SYMBIONTS, HOST TISSUE AND ARAGONITE SKELETON: POTENTIAL FOR A NEW INDEX OF CORAL THERMAL STRESS Palandro, D. A.; Andrefouet, S.; Hu, C.; Hallock, P.; MullerKarger, F. E.: AN 18-YEAR TIME SERIES OF CORAL REEF DECLINE IN THE FLORIDA KEYS NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARY FROM SATELLITE DATA Eakin, C. M.; Morgan, J.; Liu, G.; Christensen, T.; Heron, S. F.; Skirving, W.; Strong, A. E.; Gledhill, D. K.: THE RECORD BREAKING 2005 CARIBBEAN CORAL BLEACHING AND MORTALITY: CLIMATE DRIVERS AND NEED FOR ACTION Kleypas, J. A.; Danabasoglu, G.; Lough, J. M.: THE POTENTIAL ROLE OF THERMOSTATIC MECHANISMS IN DETERMINING REGIONAL DIFFERENCES IN CORAL REEF BLEACHING EVENTS Shank, G. C.; Ritchie, K. B.; Zepp, R. G.; Bartels, E.: LINKING WATER COLUMN DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AND CORAL MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES Shank, B. V.; Kaufman, L.; Gopal, S.: SPATIAL VARIATION IN CORAL DISEASE ON THE MESOAMERICAN BARRIER REEF: BIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL CORRELATES GARCIA, R.; JOHNSON, M.; KRAMER, P.: LARGE SCALE CORAL HEALTH MONITORING ON THE SOUTH FLORIDA REEF TRACT: SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN CORAL BLEACHING AND DISEASE PREVALENCE 15:15 Smith, T. B.; Nemeth, R. S.: BLEACHING DURING UPRECEDENTED WARM WATER IN THE US VIRGIN ISLANDS AND DEGRADATION WITHIN POTENTIAL REFUGIA Camilli, L.; Pizarro, O.; Camilli, R.: SYNOPTIC ANALYSIS OF CORAL HABITATS AND COASTAL OCEAN CHEMISTRY TO INFORM REEF CONSERVATION IN PACIFIC PANAMÁ Ritson-Williams, R.; Paul, V. J.; Becerro, M. A.; Walters, L. J.; Kuffner, I. B.: ALGAL NATURAL PRODUCTS MEDIATE MULTIPLE ECOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS ON CORAL REEFS Shearer, T. L.: RANGE EXPANSION OF AN INTRODUCED CORAL: INVESTIGATING THE SOURCE AND ECOLOGICAL IMPACT OF THE INVASION Hurley, L. E.; Hughes, A. D.; Grottoli, A. G.; Pease, T. K.: VARIABILITY IN THE LIPID CLASS AND ISOTOPIC COMPOSITIONS OF THE HAWAIIAN CORAL, PORITES COMPRESSA, AND ITS SYMBIOTIC ZOOXANTHELLAE 145: Ocean Circulation Using Satellite Gravimetry and Altimetry Chair(s): Victor Zlotnicki, [email protected]; Donald P. Chambers, [email protected] Location: W204 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Han, W.: EFFECTS OF ATMOSPHERIC INTRASEASONAL OSCILLATIONS ON THE 40-60-DAY VARIABILITY OF SEA LEVEL AND THERMOCLINE IN THE EQUATORIAL ATLANTIC OCEAN Vianna, M. L.; Menezes, V. V.: DAILY ABSOLUTE DYNAMIC TOPOGRAPHY BASED ON GRACE IN A STUDY OF POSITIVE OCEAN-ATMOSPHERE FEEDBACKS BY WARM CORE SUBSURFACE EDDIES DURING HURRICANE CATARINA Ray, R. D.; Egbert, G. D.; Erofeeva, S. Y.; Han, S. C.; Luthcke, S. B.: ANTARCTIC OCEAN TIDES FROM GRACE INTERSATELLITE TRACKING DATA AND HYDRODYNAMIC ASSIMILATION Peralta-Ferriz, C.; Morison, J. H.; Wahr, J.; Zhang, J.; Proshutinsky, A.; Kwok, R.; Krishfield, R.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF MASS IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN USING GRACE, THE PIOMAS MODEL AND IN SITU BOTTOM PRESSURE MEASUREMENTS Park, J. H.; Watts, D. R.; Donohue, K. D.; Fearing, A. L.; Greene, A. D.; Tracey, K. L.: SEA SURFACE HEIGHT VARIABILITY OBSERVED BY PRESSURE-RECORDING INVERTED ECHO SOUNDERS AND SATELLITE ALTIMETRY IN THE KUROSHIO EXTENSION Chambers, D. P.: MODES OF LOW-FREQUENCY OCEAN BOTTOM PRESSURE VARIABILITY IN THE NORTH PACIFIC 146: Changing Chemistry of Estuaries, Coasts, and the Ocean Chair(s): Christopher M. Reddy, [email protected]; John W. Farrington, [email protected]; Donald L. Rice, [email protected] Location: W101 13:30 Hofmann, A. F.; Meysman, F. J.; Soetaert, K.; Middelburg, J. J.: QUANTIFYING THE INFLUENCES OF BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES ON THE PH OF NATURAL WATERS (~) 152 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Cutter, G. A.; Cutter, L. S.; Ranville, M. A.; Flegal, A. R.: SELENIUM: ESSENTIAL, TOXIC, AND INCREASINGLY BEING MOBILIZED TO COASTAL AND OPEN OCEAN WATERS Gkritzalis, A.; Palmer, M. R.; Mowlem, M. C.; Achterberg, E. P.; Fones, G.; Teagle, D. A.; Tranter, M.: DEVELOPMENT OF A LONG TERM IN-SITU WATER SAMPLER, NOCS OSMO-SAMPLER Zimmermann-Timm, H.: THE ELBE ESTUARY UNDER THE PRESSURE OF CLIMATE CHANGE - IMPACTS ON THE TRANSITION ZONE BETWEEN RIVER AND SEA Brandes, J. A.; Benner, R.; Wirick, S. .: COMPOSITION OF NEAR-SURFACE PARTICULATE MATTER IN THE NORTH SEA EXAMINED BY NANOSCALE X-RAY SPECTROMICROSCOPY Li, X.; Brownawell, B. J.: APPLICATIONS OF QUATERNARY AMINE SURFACTANTS AS BIOGEOCHEMICAL TRACERS IN ESTUARINE, COASTAL, AND DEEP WATER SYSTEMS. Pangallo, K.; Reddy, C. M.: NOT SO CONSERVATIVE? CHLORINE AND BROMINE IN CHEMICAL OCEANOGRAPHY Reddy, C. M.; Pangallo, K.: BIOACCUMULATION OF HALOGENATED NATURAL PRODUCTS 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 148: Multi-Sensor Sea Surface Temperature Analyses 10:15 Chair(s): Chelle L. Gentemann, [email protected]; Gary A. Wick, [email protected]; Craig Donlon, [email protected] 153: Research Ocean Observatories: Progress and Emerging Technologies Location: W304 A/B 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 17:00 Chair(s): Susan Banahan, [email protected]; Holly Given Wick, G. A.; Castro, S. L.; Jackson, D. L.: THE IMPACT OF SENSOR RETRIEVAL ERRORS AND DIURNAL WARMING ON THE ACCURACY OF BLENDED MULTISENSOR SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE PRODUCTS Beggs, H. M.; Alves, O.; Brassington, G. B.; Merchant, C. J.; Filipiak, M. J.: A NEW MULTI-SENSOR FOUNDATION SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANALYSIS SYSTEM OVER THE AUSTRALIAN REGION Stark, J. D.; Donlon, C.: THE OSTIA MULTI-SENSOR, HIGH RESOLUTION SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANALYSIS. Barron, C. N.; Kara, A. B.; Rowley, C.; Dastugue, J. M.: GLOBAL EVALUATION OF SINGLE SOURCE AND MULTI-SENSOR SST ANALYSES Donlon, C. J.; Stark, J. S.; Barton, I. J.: THE GHRSST-PP AND THE MULTI-PRODUCT ENSEMBLE (GMPE) OF SST ANALYSES Sienkiewicz, J. M.; Ji, M.: APPLICATION OF MISST L4P ANALYSES PRODUCT FOR OPERATIONAL MARINE FORECASTING AT NOAA OCEAN PREDICTION CENTER Location: W304 C/D 08:00 08:15 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 149: The Absolute Accuracy of Space-borne Sea Surface Temperature Chair(s): Gary K. Corlett, [email protected]; Peter J. Minnett, [email protected]; Kenneth S. Casey, [email protected] 09:30 Location: W304 A/B 08:00 08:15 09:45 Kennedy, J. J.; Rayner, N. A.: WHAT CLIMATE SCIENCE NEEDS FROM A SPACE-BORNE MONITORING SYSTEM* Casey, K. S.: ASSESSING THE ACCURACY OF SATELLITE-DERIVED SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE CLIMATOLOGIES 10:00 Banahan, S.; Given, H. K.: THE OCEAN OBSERVATORIES INITIATIVE (OOI) NETWORK: INTEGRATING ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES. Dewey, R. K.; Tunnicliffe, V.: VENUS: TWO YEARS OF EXPERIENCE AND RESULTS FROM A CABLED OBSERVATORY* Phibbs, P. G.; Lentz, S.: DESIGN OF THE NEPTUNE CANADA NETWORK Barnes, C. R.; Best, M. M.; Johnson, F.; Phibbs, P.; Pirenne, B.: LESSONS LEARNED BY NEPTUNE CANADA IN INSTALLING THE WORLD’S FIRST REGIONAL CABLED OCEAN OBSERVATORY, NORTH-EAST PACIFIC Scholin, C. A.; Jensen, S.; Roman, B.; Pargett, D.; Preston, C.; Greenfield, D.; Marin III, R.; Jones, W.; Everlove, C.; Doucette, G.: REMOTE DETECTION OF MARINE MICROBES, SMALL INVERTEBRATES AND HARMFUL ALGAE USING MOLECULAR PROBE TECHNOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLE PREOCESSOR (ESP)* MacIntyre, H.; Stutes, A.; Cox, R.: FLUORESCENCE EXCITATION AND EMISSION SIGNATURES AS A MEANS FOR RAPID TAXONOMIC CLASSIFICATION OF MICROALGAE Sosik, H. M.; Olson, R. J.: SUBMERSIBLE FLOW CYTOMETRY FOR TIME SERIES OBSERVATIONS OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY DYNAMICS McGinnis, T. M.; Howe, B. M.; Gobat, J. I.: ALOHAMARS MOORING SENSOR NETWORK FOR OCEAN OBSERVATORIES Luther, D. S.; Sanford, T. B.: HPIES - MEASURING WATER COLUMN CURRENTS AND PROPERTIES FROM THE SEA FLOOR * represents Invited presentations ( ) 153 FRIDAY 17:15 Rice, J. P.; Neira, J. E.; O’Connell, J. J.: PROSPECTS FOR IMPROVING STANDARDS USED FOR CALIBRATION AND VALIDATION OF INFRARED REMOTE SENSING SYSTEMS* Vazquez, J.; Armstrong, E. M.: COMPARISONS OF THE PATHFINDER SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE DATA SETS Mittaz, J. P.; Harris, A. R.: A RECALIBRATION OF AVHRR: TOWARDS A HIGH QUALITY AND ACCURATE DATASET FOR SST RETRIEVAL Smith, D. L.; Mutlow, C. T.; Delderfield, J.; Llewellyn-Jones, D.: DESIGN AND CALIBRATION PRINCIPLES FOR HIGH ACCURACY SST RADIOMETRY Wimmer, W.; Donlon, C. J.; Robinson, I. S.: VALIDATION OF AATSR USING THE ISAR RADIOMETER - RESULTS SINCE 2004 AND A NEW APPROACH FOR A MATCHUP QUALITY INDICATOR. Le Borgne, P.; Marsouin, A.; Orain, F.; Roquet, H.; Autret, E.; Piolle, J. F.: OPERATIONAL SST BIAS CORRECTION USING AATSR DATA Llewellyn-Jones, D. T.: USING THE 16-YEAR ATSR SST TIME-SERIES, TOGETHER WITH SST DATA FROM OTHER SPACEBORNE SOURCES, FOR THE INVESTIGATION OF CLIMATICALLY IMPORTANT OCEANIC PROCESSES Kumar, A.; minnett, P.: ERROR CHARACTERIZATION OF MODIS IR SST RETRIEVALS ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 14:45 15:00 15:15 16:00 16:15 16:30 16:45 FRIDAY 17:00 17:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting 08:15 Cullen, J. J.; Ritchie, H.: LIFE CYCLE OF AN OCEAN OBSERVATORY: THE LUNENBURG BAY PROJECT Kaneda, Y.; DONET Group: ADVANCED OCEAN FLOOR NETWORK SYSTEM AROUND THE NANKAI TROUGH IN SOUTHWESTERN JAPAN Howarth, M. J.; Proctor, R.; Knight, P. J.; Holt, M.; Mills, D. K.: THE LIVERPOOL BAY COASTAL OBSERVATORY Delaney, J. R.; Barletto, P.; Kelley, D.; Harkins, G.; Kelly, M.; Harrington, M.; Howe, B.; McGuiness, T.: THE POWER AND THE BANDWIDTH: OOI’S REGIONAL (CABLED) SCALE NODES. Plueddemann, A.; Weller, R.; Send, U.; Barth, J.; Signell, E.: THE COASTAL AND GLOBAL SCALE NODES OF THE OCEAN OBSERVATORIES INITIATIVE Kerfoot, J. M.; Glenn, S. M.; Schofield, O. M.; Roarty, H. J.; Chant, R.; Kohut, J. T.: THE VIEW FROM THE COOL ROOM: THE RUTGERS UNIVERSITY COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVATORY Person, R.; Puillat, I.; Waldmann, C.; Favali, P.; Bernt, C.; Lykousis, V.; Dañobeitia, J. J.; Van Weerig, T.; Gillooly, M.; Miranda, J. M.: DEMONSTRATION MISSIONS IN ESONET NOE Frolov, S.; Baptista, A. M.; Wilkin, M.: OPTIMAL, MODEL-BASED DESIGN OF A COASTAL-MARGIN OBSERVATORY: LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE COLUMBIA RIVER ESTUARY AND PLUME Guillemot, E. M.; Pirenne, B.: TAXONOMY OF OCEAN OBSERVATORIES BASED ON THEIR CAPACITY OF PARTICIPATION IN A VIRTUAL OBSERVATORY Sansone, F. J.; Pawlak, G. R.; Stanton, T. P.; Hebert, A. B.; McManus, M. A.; DeCarlo, E. H.; Merrifield, M. A.: KILO NALU NEARSHORE REEF OBSERVATORY, OAHU, HAWAII: INTERDISCIPLINARY OBSERVATIONS OF PHYSICAL, GEOCHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS Jochens, A. E.; Nowlin, W. D.: OPERATING SYSTEMS PLAN FOR THE GULF OF MEXICO COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM Belabbassi, L.; DiMarco, S. F.; Du Vall, K.; Jochens, A. E.; Howard, M. K.: OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM IN THE GULF OF OMAN Yarincik, K. M.; O’Dor, R. K.: CENSUS OF MARINE LIFE: TECHNOLOGIES FOR BIOLOGICAL RESEARCH THROUGH OCEAN OBSERVATORIES Widder, E. A.; Raymond, E. H.; Sutton, T. T.: THE IMPORTANCE OF STEALTH: RECENT FINDINGS WITH THE EYE-IN-THE-SEA DEEP-SEA OBSERVATORY Khelif, D.; Friehe, C.; Bluth, R.; Barge, J.; Morse, T.; Bierly, D.: A NEW AIRCRAFT-TOWED PLATFORM FOR AIR-SEA INTERACTION MEASUREMENTS 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 13:30 13:45 14:00 14:15 14:30 158: Time-series Observations of Biogeochemical Processes and Their Long Term Trends Chair(s): Susanne Neuer, [email protected]; Frank Muller-Karger, [email protected]; Laura Lorenzoni, [email protected]; Michael W. Lomas, [email protected] 14:45 Location: W108 15:00 08:00 Wallace, D. W.; Koertzinger, A.; Cotrim da Cunha, L.; Visbeck, M.; Santos, C.; Melicio, O.; Carpenter, L.; Read, K.; Faria, B.; Mendes, L.: THE TROPICAL EASTERN NORTH ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES OBSERVATORY AT CAPE VERDE (TENATSO). STATUS AND INITIAL RESULTS* Conte, M. H.; Weber, J. C.: THE OCEANIC FLUX PROGRAM (OFP) TIME-SERIES TURNS THIRTY Lee, C.; Peterson, M. L.; Wakeham, S. G.; Armstrong, R. A.; Cochran, J. K.; Miquel, J. C.; Fowler, S. W.; Beck, A.; Xue, J.: PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTER AND BALLAST FLUXES MEASURED USING TIME-SERIES AND SETTLING VELOCITY SEDIMENT TRAPS IN THE NORTHWESTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEA* Neuer, S.; Helmke, P.; Lomas, M. W.; Conte, M. H.: THE ROLE OF CARBONATE IN INFLUENCING PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON EXPORT IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC GYRE Abramson, L.; Lee, C.; Aller, R. C.: SINKING FECAL PELLETS AND AGGREGATES: DIFFERENCES IN EXCHANGE WITH SURROUNDING MATERIAL Steinberg, D. K.; Lomas, M. W.; Madin, L. P.: A LONGTERM INCREASE IN ZOOPLANKTON BIOMASS AT THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY (BATS) SITE IN THE SARGASSO SEA Bronk, D. A.; Emerson, S.; Carlson, C.; Johnson, K.; McGillicuddy, D.; Sabine, C.: EXPLORING THE FUTURE OF U.S. OCEAN TIME SERIES Church, M. J.; Bidigare, R. R.; Dore, J. E.; Karl, D. M.; Landry, M. R.; Letelier, R. M.; Lukas, R.: THE HAWAII OCEAN TIME-SERIES (HOT) PROGRAM: SENSING ECOSYSTEM VARIABILITY IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN Muller-Karger, F. E.; Varela, R.; Thunell, R.; Astor, Y.; Scranton, M.; Taylor, G.; Lorenzoni, L.; Weisberg, R.; Fanning, K.: THE CARIACO OCEAN TIME SERIES PROGRAM Lomas, M. W.; Bates, N. R.; Johnson, R. J.; Knap, A. H.: THE BERMUDA ATLANTIC TIME-SERIES STUDY: A RESEARCH PLATFORM TO STUDY CHANGE IN THE OLIGOTROPHIC SUBTROPICAL NORTH ATLANTIC Silverberg, N.; Shumilin, E.; Rodriguez-Castañada, A. P.; Aguirre-Bahena, F.: THE COMPOSITION OF SETTLING PARTICLES IN CUENCA ALFONSO DURING 2002-2005 AND A COMPARISON WITH GUAYMAS BASIN Toole, D. A.; Neeley, A.; Nemcek, N.; Dacey, J. W.; Bates, N. R.; Percy, D.; Levine, N. M.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY IN DMS AND DMSP BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING RATES IN THE SARGASSO SEA: A MONTHLY TIME-SERIES McKinley, G. A.; Bates, N. R.; Bennington, V.; Ullman, D.; Dutkiewicz, S.: CARBON CYCLE VARIABILITY AT BERMUDA AND IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE Olafsson, J.; Takahashi, T.; Arnarson, T. S.; Olafsdottir, S. R.; Danielsen, M.: TIME SERIES OBSERVATIONS, 1983-2006, OF INORGANIC CARBON AND NUTRIENTS IN HIGH LATITUDE NORTH ATLANTIC Kress, N.; Gertman, I.; Herut, B.: LONG TERM IMPACT OF EAST MEDITERRANEAN TRANSIENT ON THE VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DISSOLVED OXYGEN AND NUTRIENTS IN THE LEVANTINE BASIN Lukas, R.; Santiago-Mandujano, F.: UPPER OCEAN STRATIFICATION AT THE HAWAII OCEAN TIMESERIES STATION ALOHA Solomon, R. F.; Ostrander, C. O.; Fagan, K. E.; De Carlo, E. H.; Mackenzie, F. T.; Mc Manus, M. A.; Sabine, C. L.; Feely, R. A.: THE EFFECTS OF LOCAL CLIMATIC FORCING ON NUTRIENT DELIVERY, PHYTOPLANKTON PRODUCTIVITY AND AIR-SEA EXCHANGE OF CO2 IN SOUTHERN KANEOHE BAY, HAWAII (~) 154 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program 15:15 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Gould, R. W.; Martinolich, P. M.; Green, R. E.; Arnone, R. A.; Smith, R. D.; Ladner, S. D.: TEN YEARS OF SATELLITE OCEAN COLOR IMAGERY: ASSESSING SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL OPTICAL VARIABILITY IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO 08:45 09:00 176: The Inner Shelf: Connecting the Shore to the Coastal Ocean 09:15 Chair(s): Jack Barth, [email protected]; Melanie Fewings, [email protected]; Anthony Kirincich, [email protected]; Margaret McManus, [email protected] 09:30 Location: W204 08:00 08:30 08:45 09:00 09:15 09:30 09:45 10:00 10:15 Lentz, S. J.: A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF INNER SHELF CIRCULATION AND DYNAMICS~ Gaylord, B.; Reed, D. C.; Raimondi, P. T.; Washburn, L.: NEARSHORE SPORE DISPERSAL OF GIANT KELP: INSIGHTS FROM THEORY AND EXPERIMENT* Gargett, A. E.; Savidge, D. K.: THE ROLE OF LANGMUIR SUPERCELLS IN SEASONALLY TUNED CROSS-SHELF TRANSPORT OF BIOACTIVE MATERIAL Greenan, B. J.; Petrie, B. D.; Harrison, W. G.; Strain, P. M.: OBSERVATIONS OF THE SPRING BLOOM ON THE INNER SCOTIAN SHELF Morey, S. L.; Dukhovskoy, D. S.; Bourassa, M. A.: CONNECTIVITY BETWEEN VARIABILITY OF THE APALACHICOLA RIVER FLOW AND THE BIOPHYSICAL OCEANIC PROPERTIES OF THE NORTHERN WEST FLORIDA SHELF Kiselkova, V.; Hetland, R. D.; DiMarco, S. F.: INSTABILITIES IN BUOYANCY DRIVEN FLOW OVER A SUBMARINE DELTA Nickols, K. J.; Gaylord, B. P.; Largier, J. L.: NEARSHORE FLOWS IN CALIFORNIA: THE PRESENCE OF A COASTAL BOUNDARY LAYER Washburn, L.; Melton, C. R.; Gotschalk, C. C.; Blanchette, C. A.; Cudaback, C. N.: THE PROPAGATING RESPONSE OF INNER SHELF CIRCULATION TO WIND RELAXATIONS IN A COASTAL UPWELLING SYSTEM Dudas, S. E.; Rilov, G.; Tyburczy, J. A.; Kirincich, A. R.; Menge, B. A.; Lubchenco, J.; Barth, J. A.: EXPLORING LINKAGES BETWEEN NEARSHORE OCEANOGRAPHY, ONSHORE LARVAL SUPPLY AND SETTLEMENT 09:45 10:00 10:15 194: Hypoxia in Estuaries and the Coastal Ocean: Commonalities, Comparisons, Contradictions, Climate Change Chair(s): Nancy Rabalais, [email protected]; Jan Newton, [email protected]; James O’Donnell, [email protected]; George Voulgaris, [email protected] Location: W105 13:30 13:45 187: Mercury Pollution: Towards a Holistic Appraisal of Sources, Environmental Cycling, Biotic Exposure, Consequences, and Management 14:00 Location: W105 08:15 08:30 14:15 Fitzgerald, W. F.; Hammerschmidt, C. R.; Engstrom, D. R.; Lamborg, C. H.; Balcom, P. H.; Reddy, C. M.: MODERN AND HISTORIC MERCURY DEPOSITION: INSIGHTS FROM DATED LAKE SEDIMENTS AND A VARVED ESTUARINE CORE Gilmour, C. C.; Heyes, A.; Mitchell, C. P.; Krabbenhoft, D. P.; Orem, W.; Aiken, G.; Mason, R. P.: A CROSS-ECOSYSTEM SYNTHESIS OF THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL CONTROLS ON MERCURY METHYLATION Driscoll, C. T.; Dittman, J.; Selvendiran, P.; Demers, J.; Choi, H. D.; Holsen, T. M.: ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF MERCURY DEPOSITION IN THE ADIRONDACK REGION OF NEW YORK: CRITICAL ISSUES FOR RECOVERY 14:30 14:45 15:00 Newton, J. A.; Bassin, C.; Devol, A.; Ruef, W.; Warner, M.; Hannafious, D.: AN EVALUATION OF VARIOUS DRIVERS FOR INCREASING HYPOXIA IN HOOD CANAL, WASHINGTON Connolly, T. P.; Hickey, B. M.; Geier, S. L.: SEASONAL AND EVENT-SCALE PROCESSES CONTRIBUTING TO HYPOXIA ON THE CONTINENTAL SHELF OF WASHINGTON Barth, J. A.; Shearman, R. K.; Erofeev, A. Y.; Peery, T.: SUMMERTIME HYPOXIA OFF CENTRAL OREGON AS OBSERVED USING AUTONOMOUS UNDERWATER GLIDERS Sanay, R.; Voulgaris, G.: LOW OXYGEN EVENTS IN LONG BAY, SC, USA DiMarco, S. F.; Dellapenna, T.; Shormann, D.; Denton, W.; Howard, M. K.; May, N.; Quigg, A. S.: HYPOXIA FORMATION ALONG COASTAL TEXAS DUE TO BRAZOS RIVER FLOODING: SUMMER 2007 Brunner, C.; Howden, S.; Gundersen, K.: MAPPING OF HYPOXIC ZONE IN THE MISSISSIPPI BIGHT IN THE SUMMER OF 2006 Roman, M.; Kimmel, D.; Pierson, J.; Boicourt, W.; Loveland, B.; Zhang, X.: SPATIAL PATTERNS IN HYPOXIA AND ZOOPLANKTON IN THE GULF OF MEXICO * represents Invited presentations ( ) 155 FRIDAY Chair(s): Chad Hammerschmidt, [email protected]; James Wiener, [email protected] 08:00 Zvalaren, S. D.; Kieber, R. J.; Skrabal, S. A.; Willey, J. D.: DISTRIBUTION OF MERCURY SPECIES IN THE CAPE FEAR RIVER ESTUARY, NORTH CAROLINA Bouchet , S.; Bridou , R.; Rodriguez-Gonzalez, P.; Tessier , E.; Monperrus , M.; Amouroux , D.: COMBINING MICROCOSM EXPERIMENT AND ISOTOPIC TRACERS TO STUDY MERCURY TRANSFORMATIONS UNDER REDOX OSCILLATIONS IN COASTAL SEDIMENTS Eagles-Smith, C. A.; Ackerman, J. T.; Takekawa, J. Y.; Adelsbach, T. L.: MERCURY RISK TO BIRDS IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY ESTUARY Wang, F.; Stern , G.; Macdonald, R.; Ferguson, S.; Outridge, P.; Leitch, D.; Loseto, L.; Carrie, J.: TOWARD A MERCURY MASS BALANCE MODEL IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN: WHAT CAUSED THE MERCURY CONTAMINATION IN BEAUFORT SEA BELUGA WHALES? Schijf, J.; Heyes, A.; Suzuki, M. T.: EVIDENCE FOR BACTERIAL MERCURY METHYLATION AT THE OXIC/ ANOXIC INTERFACE OF THE HYPERSALINE ORCA BASIN Cossa, D.; Averty, B.; Kérouel, R.; Pirrone, N.: THE NUTRIENT TYPE DISTRIBUTION OF METHYLMERCURY IN THE MEDITERRANEAN WATERS: RELATIONSHIPS WITH PHOSPHATE Sunderland, E. M.; Mason , R. P.; Selin, N. E.; Strode, S.; Krabbenhoft, D. P.: ESTIMATING RESPONSE TIMES OF OCEANS TO MERCURY EMISSION REDUCTIONS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR EXPOSURE FROM MARINE FISH ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 15:15 16:00 Pierson, J. J.; Roman, M. R.; Kimmel, D. G.; Zhang, X.; Boicourt, W. C.; Loveland, B.: QUANTITATIVE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN ZOOPLANKTON VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION AND OXYCLINE DEPTH: COMPARISONS BETWEEN REGIONS, SIZE CLASSES, AND TIME OF DAY Lavrentyev, P. J.; Jochem, F. J.; Duff, R. J.; Moats, K. M.; Chang, R.: MICROZOOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTION AND TROPHIC INTERACTIONS DURING ANNUAL HYPOXIA IN LAKE ERIE AND THE GULF OF MEXICO Osterman, L. E.; Poore, R. Z.; Swarzenski, P. W.: 1000 YEARS OF RECURRING NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC LOW-OXYGEN WATER ON THE LOUISIANA SHELF, GULF OF MEXICO 16:30 16:45 17:00 17:15 Brandenberger, J. M.; Crecelius, E. A.; LOUCHOUARN, P.; COOPER, S.; LEOPOLD, E.; MCDOUGALL, K.: NATURAL FLUCTUATIONS IN COASTAL HYPOXIA: RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN LARGE-SCALE CLIMATE DRIVERS AND OXYGEN LEVELS RECORDED IN SEDIMENT CORES FROM PUGET SOUND Briggs, K. B.; Vaughan, W. C.: EFFECTS ON SEDIMENT PHYSICAL AND ACOUSTIC PROPERTIES DUE TO HYPOXIA-GENERATED BENTHIC COMMUNITY SUCCESSION Vaquer, R.; Duarte, C. M.: THRESHODS OF HYPOXIA FOR MARINE BENTHIC COMMUNITIES Sturdivant, S. K.; Diaz, R. J.; Seitz, R. M.: THE EFFECTS OF HYPOXIA ON SECONDARY PRODUCTION FRIDAY 16:15 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting (~) 156 represents Tutorial presentations Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Author Index Æ Ærtebjerg, G. 128 A Aakerman, H. J. 83 Aarnos, H. 70 Abarca del Rio, R. 105 Abbot, P. 109 Abbott, M. R. 126 Abdel Fattah, H 46 Abdelzaher, A. 61 ABDELZAHER, A. M. 46 Abdul, N. A. 89 Abdulla, H. 110, 147 Abdulla, H. A. 110 Abed, R. 142 Abell, J. 136 Abraham, W. 47 Abramson, L. 154 Acevedo, A. 142 Acevedo, M. 107 Acevedo-Gutierrez, A. 90, 142 Achilles, K. 75, 84 Achilles, K. M. 84 ACHTERBERG, E. 40 Achterberg, E. P. 39, 40, 78, 104, 144, 153 Acker, J. G. 82, 102 Ackerman , J. D. 67 Ackerman, J. T. 155 Ackerman, S. D. 134 Acuña, J. L. 138 Adams, A. J. 78 Adams, L. E. 96 Adams, P. N. 75 Adams-Deutsch, T. 150 Adcroft, A. J. 126 Adduce, C. 43 Adelsbach, T. L. 155 Adkison, D. L. 106 Adler, M. 139 Adolf, J. E. 49, 71 Aeby, G. S. 140 Agawin, N. 124 Agboola, J. I. 119 Aghaei, O. 103 Agrawal, Y. C. 129 Aguilar, C. 54, 56 Aguilar-Islas, A. M. 40, 66 Aguirre-Bahena, F. 154 Agusti, S. 39 Ahmed, S. 61, 62, 100 Aiken, G. 59, 69, 70, 100, 155 Aiken, G. R. 69, 100 Aiki, H. 58 Aikman, F. 46 Ainley, D. G. 69, 92, 142 Aita, M. N. 53 Aitken, A. 126 Akihiro, A. 135 Akob, D. M. 40 Aksnes, D. L. 123 Al-Anaze, M. 146 Al-Azri, A. R. 50 Al-Enezi, M. 146 Al-Handal, A. Y. 150 AL-HASHMI, K. 60 Al-Kandari, M. 146 Al-Mansouri, H. 108, 146 Al-Mansouri, H. A. 108 Al-Rifaie, K. 108, 146 Al-Rifaie, K. S. 108 Al-Yamani, F. 108, 146, 147 Al-Yamani, F. Y. 108 Alain LEFEBVRE, A. 49 Alanko, J. 135 AL AZRI, A. R. 60 Alber, M. 129 Albert, D. 134 Albertson, S. 146 Albright, J. 75 Albright, R. 66 Albusaidi, F. B. 99 Alderkamp, A. C. 79 Aleman-Diaz, A. 78 Aleszczyk, M. L. 114 Alexander, C. R. 139 Alexander, M. A. 112, 119 Alexeev, V. A. 116 Alfonso, J. A. 107, 114 Alford, M. 57, 80, 83, 91, 92, 93, 126 Alford, M. E. 83 Alford, M. H. 57, 80, 91, 92, 126 Alikas, K. 74 Alin, S. 97 Alkire, M. B. 83 Allam, B. 61 Allan, K. M. 42 Allard, R. 87, 95 Alldredge, A. 147 Alleau, Y. 73, 122 Allen, A. A. 96 Allen, A. L. 99 Allen, J. I. 96, 97 Allen, J. S. 45, 72, 87, 142 Allen, L. 78 Allen, S. 42, 56, 87, 96 Allen, S. E. 42, 87 Allen, S. S. 96 Allende-Arandia, M. E. 86 Allende-Arandía, M. E. 86 Aller, R. C. 72, 133, 154 Allison, L. C. 51 Allison, M. 63, 93, 100, 121, 123 Allison, M. A. 63, 100, 121, 123 Allison, P. A. 45, 72 Alonso-Hernández, C. M. 94 ALSAID, T. T. 40 Alsdorf, D. 52, 91 Alsdorf, D. E. 52 alsheimer, f. 95 Altabet, M. 53, 116, 146 Altabet, M. A. 53, 116 Altieri, K. E. 70 Alupay, J. S. 65 Alvarado Bustos, R. 103, 143 Alvarez, C. 98, 135 Alvarez, C. M. 135 Alvarez, F. 117 Alvera Azcarate, A. 60 Alverson, K. 96 Alves, O. 105, 153 Amado, A. M. 51 Amano, H. 60 Amaral-Zettler, L. A. 103 Amat, A. 65 Ambar, I. 103 Ambler, J. W. 132 Ambrose, W. G. 56 Amelung, F. 137 Amft, J. 133, 135, 148 Amft, J. A. 135, 148 Amin, R. 100 Amin, S. A. 61 Amirbahman, A. 64 Ammerman, J. 42, 54 Ammerman, J. W. 42 Amon, R. 100, 122 Amon, R. M. 100 Amos, A. F. 60 Amouric, A. 133 Amouroux , D. 155 Amrhein, D. 57 Amrich, C. 138 Anders, E. 104 Andersen, N. G. 145 Andersen, O. B. 113, 145 Andersen, R. 83 ANDERSON, A. 97 Anderson, C. M. 40 Anderson, C. R. 73, 92 Anderson, D. M. 45, 47 Anderson, G. H. 50 Anderson, I. J. 40 Anderson, J. 137 Anderson, L. 69, 127, 131 Anderson, L. A. 69 Anderson, L. G. 131 Anderson, M. R. 121 Anderson, P. A. 71 Anderson, S. 72, 100, 131, 138 Anderson, S. C. 72 Anderson, S. P. 138 Anderson, T. R. 42, 66 Anderson, W. 53, 95, 120 Anderson, W. G. 95 Anderson, W. T. 53 Andersson, A. 65, 66, 125, 128, 145, 152 Andersson, A. J. 65, 128, 152 Andersson, L. S. 89 Andersson, P. 58, 85 Andersson, P. S. 85 Ando, K. 105, 109 Andrade, F. A. 98 Andradóttir, H. O. 112 Andreadis, K. 52, 91 Andreadis, K. M. 91 Andrefouet, S. 152 Andréfouët, S. 146 Andres, M. 113 Andresen, C. G. 55 Andreu-Burillo, I. 137, 148 Andrews, J. L. 70, 115 Andrey Shcherbina, A. 109 Angel, D. L. 120 Angel, I. F. 114 Angel, M. 83 Ann, D. 109 Ansko, I. 62 ANTOINE, D. 132 Antoine, D. 129, 145 Antoun, H. 97, 112 Aoki, K. 56 Aono, T. 140 Aoyama, M. 131 Apotsos, A. A. 93 Apprill, A. 151, 152 Apprill, A. M. 152 Aramaki/Takafumi, T. 119 Arango, H. 42, 96, 98, 121 Arango, H. A. 96 Arango, H. G. 42, 121 Arbic, B. K. 42, 118 Archambault, P. 120 157 Archer, D. E. 87 Archerd, S. 102 Ardhuin, F. 82 Arendt, K. E. 79 Aretxabaleta, A. L. 44 Arias, P. A. 69 Armaiz-Nolla, K. E. 65 Armand, L. 40 Armbrust, E. V. 40, 54, 76, 106, 122, 138 Armbrust, V. 147 Armstrong, E. 46, 125, 136, 153 Armstrong, E. M. 46, 153 Armstrong, J. 46 Armstrong, R. 46, 65, 76, 95, 146, 154 Armstrong, R. A. 65, 95, 146, 154 Arnarson, T. S. 154 Arndt, S. 72 Arneson, L. K. 65 Arnold, M. C. 81 Arnold, N. P. 45, 113 Arnold, W. S. 128 Arnone, R. 61, 70, 74, 97, 124, 155 Arnone , R. A. 46, 61, 70, 155 Arnosti, C. 97, 110 Arp, G. 66 Arrigo, K. R. 66, 79, 84, 90 Arrott, M. 141 Arsenault, M. A. 131 Arst, H. 74 Arthur, K. E. 58, 59 ARTIGAS, L. F. 103 Arzayus, K. M. 60 ASANUMA, I. 137 Ascani, F. 42, 106 Ascani, P. 57 Ash, N. 139 Ashcraft, K. 102 Ashjian, C. J. 126 Ashton, A. D. 75 Ashvini Chauhan, A. 131 Asioli, A. 94 Asper, V. L. 63 Assmann, K. M. 118 Astor, Y. 76, 108, 122, 154 Atilla, N. 125 Atkins, E. 102 Atsushi Matsuoka, A. M. 121 Attrill, M. J. 50 Auad, G. 72 Aucan, J. 82, 99 Auer, M. T. 129 Aufdenkampe, A. K. 63 Auladell, M. 55 Aulenbach, D. L. 132 Aultman, T. 102 AUMONT, O. 53 Aumont, O. 125, 145 Aurin, D. A. 61 Auster, P. J. 42 Austin, J. 84, 114, 121, 128 Austin, J. A. 121, 128 Autret, E. 153 Aveni-DeForge, K. 73 Aveni-Deforge, K. 73 Averty, B. 155 Avery, D. 71 Awaji, T. 84 Ayata, S. D. 102, 135 Ayoub, N. K. 86 Azad Hossain, A. K. 52 Azetsu-Scott, K. 118, 149 Azocar, J. A. 107 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF B Babbin, A. R. 89 Babin, M. 66 Babson, A. L. 99 Bachraty, B. C. 51 Backer, L. C. 47, 85 Baco-Taylor, A. R. 103 Bacon, R. 44 Baden, D. 47 Badin, G. 43 BADRAN, F. 53 Badylak, S. 90 Bae, H. 132 Baehr, J. 63, 94 Baer, S. 100 Bagheri, S. 85 Bagley, P. M. 49 Bahr, F. 109, 150 Bahr, F. L. 150 Bahrou, A. 53 Bailey, A. 68 Bailey, D. M. 49, 116 Bailey, H. 48 Baines, P. 87 Baines, S. 39, 76 Baines, S. B. 39, 76 Bajt, O. 118 Bak, R. 91 Bakan, S. 145 Baker, A. 124, 144 Baker, A. R. 124 Baker, D. J. 126 Bakker, D. 104, 131 Balachandran, K. K. 125 Balasubramanian, R. 86 Balch, W. M. 65 Balcom, P. 106, 155 Balcom, P. H. 155 Baldock, J. A. 69 Baldoni, A. 137 Baldwin, A. J. 109 Baldwin, S. 120, 135 Baldwin, W. 123 Baldwin, W. E. 123 Baliga, N. 147, 151 Baliga, N. S. 151 Ballabrera, J. 55 Ballabrera-Poy, J. 109, 149 Ballance, L. T. 49, 65 Ballantine, D. L. 54 Balsillie, J. H. 123 Bammler, T. 47 Banahan, S. 153 Banas, N. S. 42, 128, 138 Bandet-Chavanne, M. D. 41, 119 Bane, J. M. 123 Bang, I. 71, 87 Banks, H. T. 146 Banner, M. L. 129 Banzon, P. V. 64 Banzon, V. 124 Bao, S. 71, 72 Baptista, A. M. 82, 84, 121, 124, 130, 142, 154 Barad, M. F. 73 Barba, K. 97 Barbara Springer, B. M. 68 Barbeau, K. 40, 54, 72, 136 Barbeau, K. B. 54 Barber, D. C. 133 Barber , D. G. 48 Barber, P. H. 89, 148 Barber, R. T. 45, 50, 106 Barbero-Muñoz, L. 107 Barbosa, S. M. 145 Barcelos e Ramos, J. 65 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Bare, C. 147 Bareille Gilles, B. G. 54 Barge, J. 154 Baringer, M. O. 59, 69, 96, 98, 101, 104, 131 Baringer, W. 98 Barkay, T. 64 Barkby, S. 63 Barletto, P. 154 Barlow, A. 81, 148 Barlow, J. 135 Barnard, A. 96, 129, 141, 142 Barnard, A. H. 96, 141, 142 Barnard, P. L. 100, 115 Barnes, C. R. 153 Barnes, J. 50 Barnett, B. 49, 79, 129 Barnett, B. A. 79 Barnier, B. 70, 71, 146 Baross, J. A. 138 Barquín, J. A. 98 Barrick, D. 135, 148 Barrick, D. E. 148 Barron, C. N. 48, 55, 104, 124, 138, 144, 153 Barrow, T. 74 Barry, J. 100 Barry, K. M. 133 Barseghian, D. 72 Barsugli, J. 101 Bartels, E. 71, 152 Barth, A. 60, 100 Barth, J. 114, 141, 142, 154, 155 Barth , J. A. 92, 114, 141, 142, 155 Barton, I. J. 153 Bartsch, S. 120 Basedow, S. 68, 141 Basedow, S. L. 68 Bassin, C. 155 Bastidas-Salamanca Martha, M. 85 Batchelder, H. P. 145, 148 Bates, J. R. 76 Bates, N. 65, 69, 78, 98, 104, 107, 114, 125, 128, 131, 144, 154 Bates, N. R. 65, 69, 78, 104, 107, 114, 125, 128, 131, 144, 154 Bates, P. 91 Bates, S. C. 101 Bathmann, U. 53, 56 Batson, B. L. 67 Battisti, D. 101 Bauer, J. 58, 110, 125, 147 Bauer, J. E. 58, 125, 147 Baumert, H. Z. 58, 92 Baumgarten, J. M. 134 Baumgartner, E. P. 88 Baumgartner, M. F. 49 Baums, I. B. 148 Baustian, M. M. 130 Beal, L. M. 69, 96, 98, 101 Beall, B. F. 92 Beardsley, R. C. 41, 72, 99, 122 Beard Tisdale, K. 72 Bearman, J. A. 115 Beauchesne, K. 47 Beaufort, L. 47 Beaugrand, G. 135 Beaulieu, S. 134 Beaupré, S. R. 146 Beauregard, A. Y. 152 Becerro, M. A. 152 Beck, A. 154 Becker, B. 89, 102 Becker, B. J. 102 Becker, E. 95, 106 Becker, E. L. 95, 106 Becker, J. M. 99 Beckert, K. A. 81 Beckler, J. S. 136 Beckley, B. 52 Beddick, D. 81 BEDDICK, JR., D. L. 81 Beggs, H. M. 153 Beghetto, R. 41 Beg Paklar, G. 127 Behera, S. K. 56 Behrenfeld, M. J. 39 Behringer, D. C. 108 Beinart, R. 109, 110 Beinart, R. A. 110 Bejaoui, N. 138 Belabbassi, L. 154 Belanger, C. 135 Belanger, S. 100 Bélanger, S. 66, 126 Belchier, M. 102 Beletsky, D. 47, 71 Belicka, L. L. 79, 147 Belkin, I. M. 57, 85 Bell, G. R. 80 Bell, M. J. 95 Bell, P. S. 82, 115 Bell, S. J. 114 Bell, T. G. 124 Bellingham, J. G. 96 Bellmund, S. 50, 53 Bellmund, S. A. 50 BELMONT, P. 55 Belz, M. 132 Beman, J. M. 40, 138 Benbow, T. A. 82 Bench, S. R. 134 Bender, L. C. 63, 98 Bender, M. L. 49, 79, 106, 129 Bender, S. J. 54 Benfield, M. C. 45, 83 Benitez-Nelson, C. 40, 64, 76, 114, 123, 139 Benitez-Nelson, C. R. 40, 76, 114, 123, 139 Benkwitt, C. 81 Benner, R. 104, 147, 153 Bennett, D. C. 114 Bennett, K. C. 102 Bennington, V. 104, 105, 125, 154 Bennington, V. S. 104 Benoit, N. 128 Benoit-Bird, K. J. 93, 145 Benson, B. 60 Benson, J. 47 Benthuysen, J. A. 84 Bentley, S. J. 127, 139 Bentsen, M. 118 Bentzen, P. 89, 102 Benzo, Z. 107 Berelson, W. 72, 81, 108, 114, 129 Berelson, W. M. 72, 81, 108, 129 Beresford, R. 128 Berg, C. J. 53, 130 Berg, G. M. 79 Berg, M. 71 Berg, P. 93 Bergamaschi, B. A. 62, 96 Berger, C. J. 107 Berger, J. 59, 96 Berges, J. 71 Bergh, G. v. 91 Bergren, R. L. 130 Bergstad, O. A. 103 Berkenkamp, K. 81 Berloff, P. S. 113, 126 Bermingham, E. 128 Bernard, B. 95, 106 Bernard, B. B. 106 Bernard, C. 50 Bernardino, A. F. 110 158 Bernd Simoneit, B. T. 147 Bernhard, J. M. 78, 89, 90 Bernhardt, M. J. 142 Bernhardt, P. 40, 71, 109, 124 Bernhardt, P. W. 40, 71, 109, 124 Bernier, G. 54, 106 Bernier, N. 132 Bernknopf, R. 134 Bernt, C. 154 Beron-Vera, F. J. 47, 91 Berry, D. L. 71 Berthiaume, C. 122 Berthold, R. 46 Bertics, V. J. 40 Bertino, L. 101 Best, B. 54 Best, M. 141, 144, 153 Best, M. H. 144 Best, M. M. 153 Bett, B. J. 49 Betzer, P. 67 Beucher, C. 76 Beusekom van, J. 133 Beusen, A. 125 Beutler, J. M. 135 Bever, A. J. 139 Beversdorf, L. J. 131 Beyenal, H. 72 Beyer, R. 47 Bhansali, S. 67 Bhatia, M. P. 79 Bi, H. 42 Biancamaria, S. 91 Bianchi, D. 116, 118 Bianchi, T. S. 58, 94, 129, 147 Biastoch, A. 70, 123, 126 Bickel, S. L. 145 Biddle, J. F. 132 Bidigare, R. R. 68, 107, 154 Bidle, K. D. 76 Bienfang, P. 46 Bierly, D. 154 Biermann, J. 128 Biescas, B. 143 Biffinger, J. 73 Bigorre, S. 69, 128 Billett, D. S. 49, 103, 145 Bindoff, N. 118 Bindoff, N. L. 118 Bingham, F. M. 108 Bintz, J. 48, 96 Birch, D. A. 93 Birden, L. 66, 78 Birkemeier, W. A. 82 Birkett, C. M. 52 Bisagni, J. J. 43, 122 Bishop, J. K. 72, 131, 147 Bishop, K. O. 88 Bissett, A. 66 Bissett, P. 87 Bissett, W. P. 74 Biswas, S. K. 130 Biton, E. 43 Bitz, C. 101 Bjerklie, D. 52 Bjorkman, K. 51, 124, 131 Björkvald, L. 55 Blachly, C. R. 46 Black, B. A. 87 Black, D. 122 Blackwell, S. M. 93 Blaha, J. 57, 96 Blain, C. A. 63 Blain, S. 87, 88 blain, S. 39 Blair, A. 76 Blair, N. 47, 75, 111 Blair, N. E. 47, 75 Meeting Program Blanchette, C. A. 155 Blanco, J. L. 85 Blanks, J. K. 78 Blanton, B. O. 63, 101 Blanton, J. O. 98 Blasco, S. 126 Blattner, K. L. 85, 142 BLAYO, E. 48 Bliss, J. 138 Blitch, S. B. 108 Block, B. A. 48, 49 Bloetscher, F. 61 Blokhina, M. 150 Blondeau-Patissier, D. 74 Bloom, N. 64 Blottman, P. 46 Blough, N. V. 59, 71, 147 Blount, C. 99 Blower, J. D. 95 Bluhm, B. 121 Bluhm, B. A. 121 BLUMBERG, A. 77, 149 Blumberg, A. F. 48 Bluth, R. 154 Boa, S. 44 Bober, C. A. 106 Bochdansky, A. 82, 93, 119, 138, 151 Bochdansky, A. B. 119, 138, 151 Boehm, A. B. 40, 90, 120 Boehm, P. D. 122 Boehme, J. R. 104 Boening, C. 101, 126 Boening, C. W. 101, 126 Böer, S. I. 133 Boetius, A. 106, 133, 141 Bogden, P. 48, 96 Bogden, P. S. 96 Bogle, R. C. 53 Bogomolni, A. 46 Bograd, S. J. 48, 49, 123 Bohlen, S. 90 Bohlen, W. F. 114, 129 Böhlke, J. K. 135 Bohrmann, G. 141 Boicourt, W. 155, 156 Boicourt, W. C. 156 Boland, G. 116 Bolanos , Y. 94 Bollens, S. M. 82, 92, 93 Boller, A. J. 105 Bombar, D. 97, 110 Bond, N. A. 123 Bondur, V. G. 80 Boneillo, G. 40, 71 Boneillo, G. E. 40 Bonilla, A. 61 Bonilla, F. 46 Bonilla, T. 46, 61 Bonilla-Rosso, G. 110 Böning, C. 101, 116, 123 Böning, C. W. 101, 116 Bonjean, F. 137 BONNET, M. P. 52 Bonnet, S. 106 bonnet, S. 39 Bontes, B. M. 78 Book, J. 113, 127 Book, J. W. 113, 127 Boon, R. 137 Boone, A. 91 Booth, A. C. 50 Booth, E. S. 65 Boothroyd, J. C. 62 Bootsma, H. 113 BOPP, L. 53 Bopp, L. 95, 97, 125 Borg, H. 55 Borges, A. V. 125 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Borkman, D. G. 49 Borlace, S. 43 Borrelli, M. 62 Bors, E. 81 Bos, J. 146 Bosc, C. 107 Boss, E. 75, 79, 89, 96, 107, 129, 142 Boss, E. S. 75, 89, 96 Bothner, M. H. 53, 130 Botsford, L. W. 92, 133 Bottjer, D. 110 Boucayrand, C. 118 Bouchard, V. L. 75 Bouchet, P. 119 Bouchet , S. 155 Bouma, T. J. 67, 79, 98 Bouquet, J. M. 138 Bourassa, M. A. 57, 62, 69, 155 Bourdon, B. 76 Bourgault, D. 97, 109, 150 Bourgoin, L. H. 58 BOURRIN, F. 92 Bouruet-Aubertot, P. 70 Bouruet Aubertot, P. 92 Boutin, J. 107 Bouwman, A. F. 125 Bowen, A. J. 68 Bowen, J. 54, 135 Bowen, J. L. 54 Bower, A. S. 116, 127 Bowers, C. A. 136 Bowers, H. A. 71, 138, 151 Bowers, L. 92 Bowker, R. 92 Bowler, B. C. 65 Bowles, K. M. 147 Bowles, M. W. 95, 106 Bowlin, E. M. 79 Bowman, M. J. 92 Bowman, N. 90 Boyd, P. W. 39, 40, 124 Boyd, T. J. 57, 91 Boyer, D. 87 Boyer, G. 56 Boyer, J. 49, 61 Boyer, J. N. 49 Boykin, P. O. 84 Boyle, E. 39, 71, 94 Boyle, E. A. 39, 94 Bozec, A. 58 Brabets, T. 122 Bracchini, L. 100 Bradbury, I. R. 89, 102 Bradley, C. J. 145 Bradley, R. W. 123 Bragg, J. 51, 95 Bragg, J. G. 51 BRAJARD, J. 53 Branco, A. B. 115 Branco, B. F. 61 Brand, L. E. 47, 140 Brandenberger, J. M. 117, 156 Brandes, J. A. 139, 153 Brandini, N. 53 Brando, V. E. 46, 61, 74 Brandt, A. 86, 113 Brandt, P. 49, 101, 143 Brankart, J. 45, 96, 101, 137 Brankart, J. M. 45, 96, 101 Brasseur, L. H. 73 Brasseur, P. 45, 96, 101, 137 Brassington, G. B. 153 Bratbak, G. 138 Bratton, J. 120, 135 Bratton, J. F. 120 Brauer, C. E. 143 Brauer, S. 84 Braun, A. 91 Braund, S. R. 126 Bravo, H. R. 61 Bray, A. P. 135 Breaker, L. C. 85 Brearley, J. A. 104 Breckenridge, J. K. 82 Breitbart, M. 46 Breitbarth, E. 53 Breithaupt, P. 148 Brenchley , J. E. 132 Brend, M. A. 128 Brewster, J. 135, 137, 148 Brewster, J. K. 135, 137 Brey, J. A. 88 Bricelj, V. M. 111 Briceno, H. O. 49 Bricheno, L. M. 57 Bricker, J. D. 119 Bricker, S. B. 129 Brickley, P. 136 Bridou , R. 155 Briegleb, B. P. 43 Brierley, C. 119 Brietbart, M. 122 Briggs, K. B. 156 Brigham-Grette, J. 83 Bright, K. J. 71 Brin, L. D. 146 Bringas, F. 46, 62, 113 Brink, K. H. 70 Brinkhoff, T. 131 Brinkley, K. 151 Brinkman, R. M. 93 Briscoe, M. 151 Briseño-Avena, C. 45 Bristow, G. 60 Brito, M. 132 Brito de Azevedo, E. 53 Brocco, B. 97, 112 Brocco, B. A. 112 Brock, J. 108 Brockmeyer, R. 55 Brodersen, J. G. 114 Brodeur, R. 46, 81, 92 Brodeur, R. D. 46, 92 Brodie, K. L. 85, 115 Broduer, R. 142 Brody, S. R. 113 Brodziak, J. 45 Broms, C. 68 Bronk, D. 71, 97, 112, 154 Bronk, D. A. 71, 112, 154 Brook, F. Z. 123 Brook, G. A. 123 Brook, R. D. 102 Brooke, S. D. 140 Brooks, C. 82 Brooks, G. R. 91 Brooks, J. 95, 106 Brooks, J. M. 95, 106 Brooks, M. L. 100 Broquet, G. 48, 101 Broquet, G. H. 48 Brostrom, G. 42 Broström, G. 86 Brotas, V. 54 Browder, J. A. 89, 147 Brown, C. 46, 72, 105, 115, 132 Brown, C. A. 115 Brown, C. W. 46, 72, 105, 132 Brown, J. E. 97, 136 Brown, J. F. 45 Brown, J. N. 120 Brown, J. S. 122 Brown, K. L. 41 Brown, M. T. 53, 151 Brown, M. V. 138 Brown, M. W. 45 159 Brown, P. J. 104, 145 Brown, R. B. 117 Brown, R. S. 68 Brown, S. L. 107, 124 Brown, W. S. 86 Brown, Z. 68 Brownawell, B. J. 153 Brownell, D. K. 107 Brownstein, J. D. 55 Brubaker, J. M. 73 BRUCE E./LOGAN, B. E. 60 Brückmann, W. 141 Bruechert, V. 47 Bruland, K. W. 42, 53, 72, 107, 128 Brulet, B. 47 Brumbaugh, D. 89 Brun, F. G. 98 Brunner, C. 155 Bruno, B. C. 75, 84, 88 Bruno, J. F. 148 BRUNO, M. 149 Bruno, M. 77 Brusch, S. 85 Brutemark, A. 138 Bryan, F. 108, 126, 146 Bryan, F. O. 108, 126 Bryden, H. 69, 96, 101, 104, 118, 144 Bryden, H. L. 69, 96, 101, 104, 144 Brzezinski, M. 73, 76, 92 Brzezinski, M. A. 73, 76, 92 Buat, P. 88 Bub, F. 95, 124 Bub, F. L. 95 Buck, C. S. 39 Buck, K. N. 72 Buck, N. L. 134 Buckingham, C. 50 Buckley, B. 146 Buckley, E. 71 Buckley, L. J. 45 Bucklin, A. 83, 94, 117, 151 Buckner, S. C. 111 Buckwalter, P. 136 Budeus, G. 86 Budéus, G. 86 Buesseler, K. O. 76, 107 Buffa, J. 123 Buffett, G. 143 Buffett, G. G. 143 Buijsman, M. C. 109 Buitenhuis, E. T. 95 Buitenhuys, C. W. 39 Bull, H. 135, 148 BULLERDICK, S. 97 Bullister, J. L. 118, 127, 131 Bulos, A. M. 54 Bulusu, S. 109 Bump, J. K. 69 Bunge, L. 105 Buonassissi, C. 129 Burdette, K. 139 Burdige, D. 60 Burdloff, D. 68 Burgman, R. J. 57 Burke, A. 107 Burke, P. B. 82, 108 Burkill, P. H. 40 Burnes , R. M. 56 Burnett, W. C. 120 Burns, J. 49, 142 Burns, J. M. 49 Burns, K. 88 Burrage, D. 127 Burrell, C. T. 78 Burreson, E. M. 138 Bury, S. 124 Busalacchi, A. 39, 78, 109, 131, 149 Busalacchi, A. J. 39, 78, 109, 149 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Buscail, R. 66, 79 Buschman, F. 91 Bushinsky, S. M. 136 Bushnell, M. 135 Buskey, E. J. 67, 145 Butler, R. 141 Butterfield, D. A. 65 Butterworth, M. 110 Button, J. 102 Byers, J. E. 76 Byfield, V. 63 Byrne, D. A. 132 Byrne, M. J. 141 Byrne, R. H. 87, 97, 112, 141 Byun, D. S. 104 Byun, S. K. 52 C Cabanes, C. 94 Cabrera, A. 97, 112 Caceres, R. I. 82 Cadavid, L. 50 Cadden, D. D. 113 Caffrey, J. M. 81 Cahill, B. 87 Cahoon, D. R. 99 Cai, W. 92, 106, 125 Cai, W. J. 92, 125 Cai, Y. 110, 125, 140 Cai, Y. H. 110, 125 Caissie, B. E. 83 Calabretta, C. J. 64 Calado, L. 86 Calambokidis, J. 135 Calantoni, J. 41 Caldeira, K. 78 Caldwell, R. L. 102 Calienes, R. 50 Calil, P. 70 CALLIER, M. D. 120 CALMANT, S. 52 Cambazoglu, M. K. 68 Camilli, L. 152 Camilli, R. 102, 152 Campana, S. 89, 102 Campana, S. E. 89 Campbell, J. W. 100, 125 Campbell, L. 151 Campbell, R. G. 126 Campbell, T. J. 87, 115 Campos Baeta Neves, M. H. 59 CANALS, M. 92 Canals, M. F. 97 Cane, M. A. 88 Canion, A. K. 72 Cannon, D. 61 Cantoni, C. 124 Cantwell, M. 94 Canuel, E. A. 47, 58, 94, 147 Canuto, V. M. 126 CAO, L. 78 Capella, J. 57, 63 Capella, J. E. 63 Capello, H. E. 62, 63 Capet, X. 42, 70 Capone, D. G. 40, 109, 124, 138 Capps, S. B. 57 Caraco, N. F. 61 Carbonell, R. 143 CarboSchools Consortium 84 Carbotte, S. 137 Cardenas, H. 89 Carder, K. L. 63 Cardinal, D. 40 Caress, D. W. 100 Carey, A. E. 75 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Carilli, J. E. 91 Carlozo, N. 129 Carlsen, W. S. 41 Carlson, C. 81, 100, 154 Carlson, C. A. 81, 100 Carlson, D. F. 73 Carmack, E. 48, 88, 126 Carmack, E. C. 126 Carman, J. C. 108 Carnegie, R. B. 138 Carnes, M. R. 55, 138 Carney, R. 95, 103, 106 Carney, R. S. 95, 103 Carniel, S. 113 Carniello, L. 98 Caron, D. A. 138 Carpenter, E. J. 124 Carpenter, L. 154 Carpenter, S. J. 89 Carr, M. 111, 126, 141 Carr, M. E. 141 Carr, M. L. 126 Carrano, C. J. 61 Carrasco, G. G. 40 Carrie, J. 155 Carrillo-Elkin, N. 150 Carroll, J. 98 Carroll, S. 84 Carrroll, M. L. 56 Carruthers, T. 81, 88 Carruthers, T. J. 81 Carson, B. 47 Carson, M. L. 52 Carstensen, J. 56, 128 Carta, A. 113 Carter, A. P. 143 Carter, B. J. 109 Carter, B. R. 127 Carter, G. 59, 91 Carter, G. S. 91 Carter, M. 73 Carter, R. 88 Carton, J. 39, 94, 105 Carton, J. A. 94, 105 carton, J. A. 69 Caruso, M. 90, 109, 150 Caruso, M. J. 109 Carvalho, F. 94 Carvalho, G. R. 102 Carvalho, W. F. 138 Carvalho, Z. L. 94 Carvalho-Knighton, K. M. 74 Casas, M. C. 145 Casciotti, K. 120 Case, J. F. 141 Casey , B. 46 Casey, J. 54 Casey, K. S. 44, 153 Cashman, K. E. 116 Casillas, E. 42, 112 Casillas-Maldonado, J. I. 78 Casper, A. F. 56 Cassar, N. 79, 106 Cassis, D. 56 Casso, M. 53 Casso, M. A. 53 CASSOU, C. 39 Castanedo, S. 98 Castanon, A. D. 65 Castelao, G. P. 62 Castelao, R. 92, 99, 114 Castelao, R. M. 99, 114 Castelin, M. 119 Castillo, A. 110 Castillo, K. D. 46 Castillo, P. 139 Castleton, M. 48 Castner, A. 90 Castro, C. G. 123 Castro, S. L. 111, 153 Castruccio, F. 101 Catalan, P. 68, 119 Catana, D. 96 Cathalot, C. 66 Catton, K. B. 80 Causey, B. D. 148 Cavanagh, R. D. 56 Cavanaugh, C. M. 105 Cawley, K. 59, 115 Cawley, K. M. 59 Cawood, A. M. 136 Cazenave, A. 105 Celebioglu, T. K. 95 Celussi, M. 110 Cembella, A. D. 71 Cenedese, C. 43, 44, 57 Cermeno, P. 41 Cerovecki, I. 127 Cerrato, J. M. 78 Cerrato, R. 112 Cerrina, F. 122 Cerritos, R. 110 Cervino, J. 140, 152 Cervino, J. M. 140 Cessi, P. 43, 126 Chaffey, T. F. 68 CHAI, F. 112 Chai, F. 45, 53, 76, 107, 110, 116, 136 Chaillou, G. 80 Chambers, D. 96, 152 Chambers, D. P. 152 Chan, K. 93 Chandler, G. T. 78 Chandra, S. 55, 56 Chang, G. 60, 142 Chang, J. 55, 119, 138 Chang, K. 85, 113 Chang, K. I. 85 Chang, M. 134 Chang, P. 119 Chang, R. 156 Chang, Y. S. 43 Chang-Spada, G. 92 Channell, J. 47 Chanson, M. 131 Chant, R. 80, 92, 99, 114, 133, 154 Chant, R. J. 80, 92, 99, 114, 133 Chanton, J. P. 120 Chao, S. Y. 150 CHAO, Y. 112 Chao, Y. 45, 72, 75, 76, 113, 135, 136, 140 Chapman, D. C. 68 Chapman, J. 143 Chapman, P. 117, 141 Chappell, P. D. 134 Chapron, B. 109 Chapron, E. 94 Charette, M. A. 120 Charpentier, M. 55 Charria, G. 145 Chase, A. C. 49 Chassignet, E. P. 58, 97, 100, 101, 118 Chattopadhyay, S. 46 Chatziefthimiou, A. 64 Chaudhuri, A. H. 43, 86 Chauvaud, L. 81 Chavanne, C. 43, 68 Chavanne, C. P. 43 CHAVEZ, F. 112 Chavez, F. P. 45, 50, 123, 136 Chavez, P. S. 53 Chazottes, A. 104 Checkley, D. M. 66, 123, 135 Chekalyuk, A. 136 Chekalyuk, A. M. 136 160 Chelton, D. B. 52, 114, 126 Chen, B. 129 Chen, C. 41, 45, 64, 72, 79, 98, 99, 102, 122, 150 Chen, C. F. 150 Chen, C. S. 99 Chen, C. Y. 64 Chen, D. 58, 106 Chen, D. F. 106 Chen, F. 126 Chen, G. 94 Chen, H. 55 Chen, J. 43, 57, 69, 107 Chen, J. P. 107 Chen, L. 71 Chen, M. 129 Chen, Q. J. 63, 121 Chen, R. 60, 74, 92, 97, 100 Chen, R. F. 74, 92, 97, 100 Chen, S. 42, 57, 87, 121, 128 Chen, S. N. 121 Chen, X. 129 Chen, Y. 90, 99 Chen, Z. 74 Cheng, J. O. 85 Cheng, K. 91 Cheng, L. 83 Cheng, P. 114 Cheng, W. 42, 44 Cheng, Y. S. 47 Chepurin, G. 105 Chepurin, G. A. 105 Chereskin, T. 43, 116, 127 Chereskin, T. K. 43, 116, 127 Cheriton, O. M. 93 Cheroske, A. G. 102 Cherubin, L. 148 Cherukuru, N. R. 46, 61, 74 Cheung, I. S. 47 Cheung, Y. 141 Chiang, K. 79 Chiao, S. 46 Chiba, S. 83 Chickadel, C. 73 Chickadel, C. C. 73 Chien, S. H. 104 Chiffoleau, J. F. 54 Chiggiato, J. 113, 127 Childers, D. L. 73 Childers, J. 46 Childress, L. B. 47, 75 Chin, K. J. 40 Chin, T. M. 55, 101 Chin, Y. 58, 71, 115 Chin, Y. P. 58, 71 Chin-Bing, S. 138 Chini, G. P. 57 Chinn, P. I. 62 Chiou, T. H. 102 Chipman, L. 120, 132, 133, 147 Chipman, L. E. 132, 133 Chiswell, S. M. 75 Chiu, C. S. 150 Cho, K. H. 99 Cho, Y. 48, 55, 104, 106, 111 Cho, Y. K. 55, 88, 104, 106, 111 Choboter, P. F. 84 Choi, B. 55, 106 Choi, B. J. 55, 88, 106 Choi, D. H. 106 Choi, H. D. 155 Choi, J. 56 CHOMAZ, J. M. 68 Chou, Y. J. 41 Choumiline, K. 54 Chow, C. T. 40, 54 Christensen, B. A. 90 Christensen, S. 107 Meeting Program Christensen, T. 65, 125, 152 Christensen, T. R. 125 Christensen, V. 112 Christian, R. R. 96 Christian Mohn, C. 68 Christie, A. 81 Christopher Reddy, C. M. 147 Christov, I. 138 Christy, J. H. 128 Chu, D. 150 Chu, F. L. 147 Chu, P. C. 113 Chuang, W. 60, 86 Chuang, W. S. 86 Chuda, T. 143 Chung, C. C. 138 Chung, E. 120 Chung, K. H. 84 Church, M. 124, 131, 154 Church, M. J. 131, 154 Church, T. 39, 40, 53 Church, T. M. 39, 40, 53 Churchill, J. H. 45, 102 Churnside, J. H. 82 Ciais, P. 125 Cialino, K. T. 100 Ciannelli, L. 42, 46 Ciasto, L. M. 144 Cicchetti, G. 55 Cicirelli, E. M. 96 Cieciel, K. D. 83 Cipollini, P. 145 Cisewski, B. 87 Civitarese, G. 124 Claisse, D. 54 Clark, D. 119, 124 Clark, D. B. 119 Clark, D. R. 124 Clark, M. R. 117 Clarke, A. J. 73, 105, 123 Clarke, J. 49 Clarke, M. E. 85 claude, c. 44 Clauser, A. S. 151 CLAUSTRE, H. 69 Claustre, H. 115, 129 Clay, T. 90, 128 Clay, T. W. 128 Clayson, C. A. 45, 56, 69, 84, 126 Clement, A. 57, 119, 148 Clement, A. C. 148 Clement Kinney, J. 48, 83 Clement Kinney, J. L. 48 Clementson, L. 74 Clifford, M. A. 86 Cline, A. H. 84 Cline, D. E. 141 Cline, E. 64 CLIVAR Atlantic Implementation Panel 101 Cloern, J. E. 136 Coble, P. G. 66, 100 Cochenour, B. 63 Cochlan, W. 40, 73, 92, 123 Cochlan, W. P. 40, 73, 92 Cochran, J. K. 79, 121, 154 Cochran, J. R. 81 Cochran, M. A. 109 Cochran, S. A. 53, 91, 130 Coco, G. 100 Codiga, D. L. 114 Coelho, E. 138 Cohen, A. B. 68 Cohen, A. L. 65 Cohen, J. H. 119 Coholan, P. D. 138 Coiro, L. L. 117 Col, L. A. 45 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Colas, F. 54, 70 Cole, J. J. 61, 118 Cole, K. L. 58 Cole, S. 58, 127 Cole, S. T. 58 Colebank, Y. 112 Coleman, R. 52, 116 Coles, V. J. 105, 117, 124 Coletti, L. J. 110 Colgrove, C. 120 Colin, S. P. 80 Collado, C. 53 Collado-Mercado, E. 132 Collay, R. 41 Collier, J. 71, 132 Collier, J. L. 132 Collier, R. W. 44, 83 Collier, T. K. 61 Collins, A. K. 42 Collins, C. A. 113, 123 Collins, G. 120 Collins, L. E. 81, 108 Collins, M. 47, 102, 116 Collins, M. A. 116 Collins, M. E. 47 Colman, J. A. 135 Colton, M. 111, 151 Colton, M. C. 151 Comiso, J. C. 66 Compton, S. S. 65 Comstock, S. 84 Comtet, T. 76 CONDREY, R. 137 Condrey, R. 137 Condrey, R. E. 137 Condron, A. 83 Conlan, K. E. 126 Conley, D. J. 128 Conmy, R. N. 56, 66, 100 Connelly, C. J. 151 Connelly, S. 109, 151 Connelly, S. J. 109, 151 Connolly, T. P. 155 Conover, H. T. 72 Consalvey, M. 117 Consi, T. 82 Conte, M. H. 107, 154 Cook, J. 95 Cook, L. L. 122 Cook, M. 135, 148, 149 Cook, M. S. 148, 149 Cook, P. L. 120 Cook, S. 98 Cook, T. 148 Cooke, R. D. 82 Cooke, S. L. 150 Cooley, C. P. 82 Cooper, D. W. 128 Cooper, G. A. 126 Cooper, L. 68, 69, 83, 84, 122 Cooper, L. W. 68, 69, 83, 84 COOPER, S. 156 Cooper, S. 90, 117 Cooper, S. R. 117 Cooper, T. F. 91 Cooper, W. J. 59, 71 Cooper, W. T. 59, 147 Copley, N. J. 94 Copoeland, A. C. 40 Coppola, L. 58, 145 Corbett, D. R. 121 Corbière, A 98 Corcoran, A. 141 Cordes, E. E. 95, 106, 138 Cordoba, F. 94 Corlett, G. K. 140 Cornet-Barthaux, V. 40 Cornillon, P. 146 Cornuelle, B. 52, 102, 148 Cornuelle, B. D. 52 Coronado, C. 50 Corrada-Emmanuel, A. 129 Corredor, J. 57, 66, 78, 97, 112, 114 Corredor, J. E. 66, 78, 97, 112 Correggiari, A. 94 CORSACS Science Team 66 Cortina, G. B. 136 Cory, R. 51, 71 Cory, R. M. 51 Cosca, C. E. 62 COSME, E. 48 Cosme, E. 45, 137 Cosquer, E. 103 Cossa, D. 155 Costa, D. P. 48, 49, 142 Costa, M. 62, 74, 143 Costa, M. P. 62 Costa, O. S. 75 COSTAGLIOLA, M. 103 COSTAS, S. 115 Costello, C. J. 102 Costello, D. K. 63 Costello, J. H. 80 Costello, M. J. 103 Cote, J. M. 93 Cothran, J. 85 Cotner, J. B. 51 Cotrim da Cunha, L. 154 Cotter, C. J. 57 Counillon, F. 101 Countway, P. D. 138 Cousin, R. 75 Cousins, J. L. 78 Cousins, M. 117 Cousteau, P. 98 Couture, R. M. 54 Covault, J. A. 100 Cowan, E. A. 47 Cowart, D. A. 65 Cowen, E. A. 73, 121 Cowen, J. P. 104 Cowen, R. K. 48, 75, 145, 148 Cowles, D. L. 131 Cowles, G. 66, 99, 102 Cowles, G. W. 66, 102 Cowles, T. J. 83, 92, 93, 141, 142 Cox, A. M. 46 Cox, A. T. 95 Cox, D. 41 Cox, R. 153 Coyle, K. 42, 68, 83 Coyle, K. O. 68, 83 Cozzi, S. 124 Craig, M. 55 Craig M. Lee, C. M. 104 Cramer, W. 62 Crandall, E. D. 89 Crane, G. 96 CRAVATTE, S. 149 Craw, V. 51 Crawford, C. M. 120 Crawford, D. 61 Cray, B. 60 Craynock, J. 139 Creager, G. J. 95 Crecelius, E. A. 117, 156 Crespo-Medina, M. 64 Cresswell, J. J. 130 Cretaux, J. F. 91 Criales, M. M. 89 Criss, T. B. 113 Croal, L. 110 Crocker, D. E. 49, 142 Crockett, E. L. 131 Croft, A. L. 73 Cronin, M. F. 43 161 Cronin, T. M. 139 Cronin, T. W. 102 Croot, P. 53, 76 Croot, P. L. 76 Cross, J. 121 CROSS, R. 140 Cross, V. 135 Crowell, J. 60 Cruikshank, K. 124 Crump, B. 122 Crusius, J. 120, 135 Cruz, C. 101 Cucchiara, D. 62 Cudaback, C. N. 84, 89, 155 Cuhel, R. L. 54, 56 Cui, X. 69 Cuker, B. E. 65, 67 Cullen, J. J. 154 Culley, A. I. 122 Cullison, S. E. 78 Cummings, J. 48, 55, 88, 96, 100, 101 Cummings, J. A. 48, 55, 96, 100 Cummings, S. 62 Cummins, P. F. 112 Cunningham, A. 61, 101 Cunningham, S. 63, 69, 96, 101, 104, 144, 145 Cunningham, S. A. 63, 69, 96, 101, 104, 144 Curchitser, E. N. 42, 56, 113 Curran, K. 142 Curran, M. C. 82, 102 Currie, K. I. 65 Currier, R. D. 85 Currin, C. A. 99 Curry, R. 101, 123 Curry, R. G. 101 Curtiss, G. M. 82 Cushman, E. 76 Cutter, G. A. 67, 89, 153 Cutter, L. S. 89, 153 Cuypers, Y. 92 Czajkowski, K. 55 Czeschel, L. 101 D D’Adamo, N. 96 D’Alelio, D. 90 D’Alpaos, A. 98 D’Asaro, E. A. 43, 57 d’Orgeville, M. 63 D’ORTENZIO, F. 69 d’Ovidio, F. 69, 70 D’Sa, E. J. 46 D’Andrilli, J. 147 d’Ortenzio, F. 145 Dabiri, J. O. 80 Dacey, J. 79, 107, 114, 154 Dacey, J. W. 107, 114, 154 Dachs, J. 39 Da Costa, A. 81 Dade, W. B. 120, 121, 134 Dadic, V. 127 Dadou, I. 145 Dagg, M. J. 50 Dagorne, D. 107 Dahl, E. E. 59, 70 Dahle, S. 98 Dahlen, D. 129 Dahlqvist, R. M. 85 Dai, M. H. 79 Dailer, M. L. 120 Dall’Olmo, G. 74 Daly, E. 81 Daly, M. 117 Dalziel, S. 57 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Dam, H. G. 71, 129 Damatto, S. 94 Danabasoglu, G. 43, 101, 146, 152 Daniel L. Rudnick, D. L. 104 Daniels, C. 104 Danielsen, M. 154 Danielson, S. 42, 83, 85 Danielson, S. L. 42, 83, 85 Danielssen, D. S. 89 Danil, K. 147 Danioux, E. 126 Dañobeitia, J. J. 154 Darby , D. A. 89 Darby, F. 50 Darecki, M. 62 Darelius, E. 44 Darnell, J. T. 115 DART Consortium 113 Das, H. S. 58 Das, S. B. 79 da Silva, J. C. 137 Dastugue, J. M. 55, 153 Dattilo, A. M. 100 Dauxois, T. 109, 150 Dave, A. 41 Davey, E. W. 117 Davey, M. 110 Davidson, F. J. 55 Davidson, K. 88, 102 Davidson, K. G. 88 Davies, D. M. 79 Davies, H. C. 86 Davies, K. T. 65 Davies, M. H. 127 Davila, N. K. 81 Davis, A. J. 70 Davis, B. C. 44 Davis, C. O. 74 Davis, C. S. 41, 122 Davis, E. E. 76 Davis, G. 149 Davis, J. 84, 95, 106, 134 DAVIS, J. R. 99 Davis, J. R. 84, 95, 106 Davis, K. 103, 109, 150 Davis, K. A. 103, 150 Davis, R. 96, 136 Davis, R. E. 136 Davis, S. E. 146 Davis, X. J. 131 Davison, P. C. 135 Dawe, J. T. 87 Day, O. 70 Day, R. M. 65 Day, W. S. 141 De’ath, G. 91 Deal, C. 84 DeAlteris, J. 125 Dean, A. F. 88 Deane, G. B. 116 Deans, N. L. 88 Dearman, J. 104 de Baar, H. 78 De Beer, D. 142 de Beer, D. 66, 120 de Boer, A. M. 77 DeBoer, T. S. 148 de Boyer Montegut, C. 56 De Brabandere, L. C. 47, 108 De Buen Kalman, R. C. 86 Debure, K. R. 132 DeBusk, T. A. 73 DeCarlo, E. H. 78, 85, 141, 154 DeCarlo, S. H. 95 deCharon, A. 75 Décima, M. R. 135 Decker, L. B. 142 Decker, M. B. 83 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Dee, G. 151 Deese, H. 72 DeFelice, S. 46 DeFelice, S. V. 46 Deflandre, B. 66, 79 De Forest, L. 98 DeGeest, A. L. 47 DeGrandpre, M. 78, 116 DeGrandpre, M. D. 78 DeHaan, C. J. 107 Dekker, A. G. 46, 61, 74 Delaney, J. A. 134 Delaney, J. R. 154 DeLange, M. 151 Delaux, S. 67 Delavan, S. K. 67 DELCROIX, T. 62, 149 Delcroix, T. 107 Delderfield, J. 153 de Leeuw , G. 99 de Leeuw, J. W. 103 Delgardio, J. 40, 54 Delgardio, J. D. 40 Dellapenna, T. 100, 115, 155 Dellapenna, T. M. 100, 115 DeLong, E. F. 131 Del Vecchio, R. 59, 71, 115, 147 Delworth, T. L. 39, 101 Demers, J. 155 De Mey, P. 72 DeMezza, M. 98 Deming, J. W. 79 Demirov, E. 55 Deng, Y. 46 Dengg, J. 41, 84 Denisenko, S. G. 56 Dennett, M. R. 46 Dennis-Duke, B. T. 139 Denton, W. 155 Deonarine, A. 64 DePaola, A. 134 deRada, S. 72, 100 deRadda, S. 72 DERENNE, S. 97 Derr, A. 141 de Ruijter, W. 60, 144 de Ruijter, W. P. 60, 144 Desai, A. 125 Desaki, A. 147, 151 Desaki, A. L. 147 DeSalle, R. 89 Deser, C. 39 Deshayes, J. 123 Desiderio, R. 83, 93 Desiderio, R. A. 83 De Sieyes, N. R. 120 Desmalades, M. 66, 79 de Souza, G. F. 76 DESSAILLY, D. 132 de Steur, L. 86 de Swart, H. E. 121 de Szoeke, R. A. 126 Detracey, B. M. 99 Dettmann, E. H. 112 Deutsch, C. 49 Deutschman, D. H. 90 Devaliere, E. 71 de Valk, C. F. 125 Dever, E. 92, 128 Dever, E. P. 92 DEVEREUX, R. 81 Devereux, R. 81 Devine, B. 91 Devlin, Q. B. 140 Devol, A. 117, 126, 130, 155 Devol, A. H. 126, 130 De Vries, M. B. 98 de Vries, M. B. 98 DeVries, T. J. 89 Dewan, A. 72 Dewar, H. 49 Dewar, W. K. 70, 131 Dewey, R. 67, 153 Dewey, R. K. 153 DeWitt, L. 125 deYoung, B. 133 Diamessis, P. J. 150 Dias, J. F. 58, 117 Dias, R. F. 110, 147 Diaz, F. 61 Diaz, G. 46 Diaz, J. M. 139 Diaz, R. J. 92, 129, 156 Díaz-Asencio , M. 94 DiBacco, C. 102 DiBono, P. E. 67 Dickens, A. 55, 69 Dickens, A. F. 69 Dickens, G. 139 Dickens, J. 47 Dickey, T. 68, 129 Dickey, T. D. 68 Dickhoff, W. W. 61 Dickhut, R. M. 94, 147 Dickinson, S. 101 Dickman, B. D. 67 Dickson, A. G. 66, 127 Dickson, R. R. 123 DiDonato, G. T. 46 Diederick, L. K. 102 Dierberg, F. E. 73 Dierssen, H. 60, 61, 64, 129 Dierssen, H. M. 60, 61 Dieser, M. 71 Dieterle, D. A. 60 Dietrich, A. M. 78 Dietrich, D. 87, 92, 99, 104 Dietrich, D. E. 92, 99 Dietz, M. E. 117 Dietze, H. 105, 124 DiFiore, P. J. 79 Diggs, S. C. 131 DiGiacomo, P. 59, 74, 96 DiGiacomo, P. M. 74, 96 Dijkstra, H. A. 66, 102 Dijkstra, J. A. 82 Dijkstra, J. T. 98 Dikovskaya, N. 126 Dileanis, P. 62 Di Lorenzo, E. 42, 98, 123, 136 DiMarco, S. 58, 87, 98, 111, 117, 141, 151, 154, 155 DiMarco, S. F. 58, 87, 98, 111, 117, 141, 151, 154, 155 Dimova, N. 120 Dindo, J. 102 DINEZIO, P. N. 91 DiNezio, P. N. 113 Ding, K. 134 Dinnel, P. 81 Dinniman, M. S. 41, 43, 56 Dippner, J. W. 110 Distel, D. 134 Dittert, N. 95, 131 Dittman, J. 155 Dittmar, T. 147 DiTullio, G. 66, 79 DiTullio, G. R. 66 DIVERRES, D. 62 Divoky, G. J. 85 Dix, N. G. 69 Dixon, B. 56, 62, 108, 146 Dixon, K. W. 101 Dmitrenko, I. A. 116 Doan, H. N. 97, 110 Dobslaw, H. 119 162 Dodd, D. W. 63 Doering, P. H. 50 Doi, T. 131, 144 Dolan, J. R. 94 Dolor, M. K. 94 Domingues, C. M. 95 Dommasnes, A. 98 Domokos, R. 98 Donaghay, P. 83, 93, 141 Donaghay, P. L. 93 Donard Olivier, D. O. 54 Donat, J. R. 40 Donelan, M. 99 DONET Group 154 Doney, S. C. 40, 41, 65, 69, 105, 107, 128, 131, 144, 146 Dong, C. 52, 54, 68, 141, 148 Dong, C. M. 141 Dong, S. 127 Donlon, C. 111, 153 Donlon, C. J. 111, 153 Donnelly, C. R. 149 Donnelly, J. P. 124 Donnelly, M. J. 55 Donoghue, J. F. 123 Donohue, K. 42, 98, 128, 152 Donohue, K. A. 42 Donohue, K. D. 152 Donovan, C. 72, 142 Donovan, C. D. 142 Donovan, E. W. 96 Doos, K. 42 Dore, J. E. 154 Dorman, C. E. 92 Dorsey, C. 70 Dortch, Q. 49 Dorton, J. 44, 85 Dorton, J. R. 85 Dottori, M. 123 Dou, F. 55 Doucette, G. 153 Douglas, A. 135 Douglass, E. M. 94 Dovel, S. 136 Dowd, M. 111 Dower, J. 56, 67 Dower, J. F. 67 Downes, S. M. 118 Downing, B. D. 62, 96 Dowsett, H. J. 89 Doyle, J. 101, 127 Doyle, J. D. 101, 127 Drake, L. A. 60 Drange, H. 101 Drapeau, D. T. 65 Draut, A. E. 53, 130 Drayer, C. L. 53 Drazen, J. 49, 98, 117 Drazen, J. C. 49, 117 Drennan, W. M. 111 Drennan, William, W. M. 80 Dresback, K. M. 101 Dreschel, T. W. 64 Drexler, T. M. 47 Drijfhout, S. 70 Drinkwater, K. 68 Drinkwater, K. F. 68 Driscoll, C. T. 155 Driskell, W. B. 115 Droxler, A. 47, 139 Droxler, A. W. 47 Druffel, E. R. 54, 119, 146 Druffel-Rodriguez, K. C. 119 Drupp, P. 141 Drushka, K. 144 Du, X. 124 DU, Y. 133 Du, Y. 144 Meeting Program Duan, S. 100, 129 Duan, X. 113 Duarte, C. M. 58, 66, 100, 125, 156 Duarte, P. 47 Dubilier, N. 106 DUBOIS, S. 137 Dubois, S. 102, 137 DuBois, S. L. 114 DUBOS, T. 68 Dubovikov, M. S. 126 Dubroca, L. 90 Duchez, A. 70 Ducklow, H. W. 111 DUDA, T. F. 109 Duda, T. F. 96, 150 Dudas, S. 141, 142, 155 Dudas, S. E. 155 Duff, R. J. 156 Duffy, J. E. 47 Duffy-Anderson, J. T. 128 DUFORET, L. 132 Dufour, A. 145 Dugdale, F. 76 Dugdale, R. 76, 92, 128 Dugdale, R. C. 92 Dugger, K. D. 142 Dukhovskoy, D. S. 63, 155 Dulaiova, H. 120 Dumas, F. 102 Dumont, E. 125 Dumousseaud, C. C. 78 Dunbar, R. B. 119 Duncan, B. E. 69 Duncan, D. A. 121 Dunn, J. C. 125 Dunne, J. 39, 95, 97, 111, 118, 147 Dunne, J. P. 39, 95, 97, 111, 118 Dunphy, M. 123 Dunton, K. H. 122 Duperron, S. 106 Dupont, J. M. 148 Dupuis, J. 132 Durand, D. D. 98 Durand, M. 52 Durbin, E. G. 41, 145 Durell, G. S. 85, 122 Durkin, C. 40, 122 Durkin, C. A. 40 Dürr, H. 50, 86 Dürr, H. H. 86 DURRIEU DE MADRON, X. 92 Duryea, A. N. 102 Dushaw, B. D. 96, 108, 146 Dussault, J. P. 135 Dutkiewicz, S. 51, 66, 95, 104, 105, 154 Dutrieux, P. 42, 57, 106 Du Vall, K. 154 Dwivedi, R. M. 50 Dyble, J. 47 Dyhrman, S. 54, 71, 81 Dykes, J. 87, 113 Dykes, J. D. 113 Dziemiela, K. 72 Dzwonkowski, B. 85 E Eagle Gonneea, M. 120 Eagles-Smith, C. A. 155 Eakin, C. M. 65, 125, 152 Earls, J. K. 146 Easter, H. D. 71 Easton, E. E. 132 Eastwood, N. 66 Eberli, G. P. 137 Ebuchi, N. 148 Echeverri, P. 109, 150 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Echeveste, P. 39 Echols, E. 74 Ecke, R. 43 Eckert, G. L. 102 Eckert, S. A. 48, 49 Eckman, J. E. 49 Edd, A. 102 Eddie, B. J. 67 Edelvang, K. 134 Eden, C. 70, 132 Edge, S. E. 151 Edgington, D. 141 Edgington, D. R. 141 Edhlund, B. 51 Edinger, J. E. 133 Edmunds, P. J. 140 Edson, J. B. 111, 128 Edwards, B. C. 141 Edwards, C. A. 42, 48, 66, 113 Edwards, C. R. 45 Edwards, K. 73, 85, 87, 112, 119, 120 Edwards, K. A. 73, 112 Edwards, K. L. 87 Edwards, K. l. 85 Edwards, M. 50 Effler, S. W. 129 Egbert, G. D. 45, 72, 80, 87, 91, 152 Egerton, T. A. 59, 71, 90 Egli, P. E. 93 Eglinton, T. 55, 58, 67, 69, 125, 147 Eglinton, t. 66 Eglinton, T. I. 58, 67, 69, 125, 147 Eguiarte, L. E. 110 Ehrenreich, I. M. 124 Ehret, L. L. 86 Eiane, K. 83 Eichmann, A. 146 Eileen E Hofmann, E. E. 56 Eisenkolb, N. 66 Eisner, L. B. 68, 83 Eldevik, T. 101, 149 Eldin, G. 107 Eldridge, P. 81 ELDRIDGE, P. M. 81 Elgar, S. 93, 119 Elias, E. 82, 100 Elipot, S. 42, 75 Ellena, J. A. 116 Ellien, C. 102 Ellien, c. 75 Elliott, D. T. 131 Elliott, J. K. 130 Elliott, M. 136 Elliott, S. 84 Ellis, E. 63, 97 Ellis, E. E. 63 Ellis, G. S. 117 Ellis, J. C. 46 Ellis, J. T. 132 Ellisman, M. H. 39 Ellison, R. M. 60 Ellwood, M. J. 39, 76 Elmir, S. 46 Elmoznino, J. 80 Eloe, E. 110 Elrod, A. K. 55 Elrod, V. A. 136 Elsa BRETON, E. 49 Elthon, D. 44 Elwany, H. 65 Emanuelson, L. 88 Embley, R. W. 65 Emerson, S. 49, 116, 154 Emerson, S. R. 49, 116 Emery, W. J. 111, 113 Enachesku, M. 103 Enfield, D. B. 39, 105 Engel, A. 65, 78, 104 Engel, V. 50, 61 Engels, M. S. 83 England, M. 126 English, C. A. 51 Engstrom, D. R. 155 ENJOLRAS, V. M. 52 Erb, A. 102 Erban, L. 120, 135 Erdmann, M. V. 148 Erdner, D. 55, 81 Eriksen, C. 86, 116, 149 Eriksen, C. C. 116, 123 Erikson, L. 100, 115 Erikson, L. H. 100 Erik W Chapman, E. W. 56 Erofeev, A. 114, 155 Erofeev, A. Y. 155 Erofeeva, S. Y. 87, 152 Escalante, A. E. 110 Escobar, E. 106 Escobar-Briones, E. G. 116 Escoubeyrou, K. 66, 79 Eshleman, J. L. 115 Eslinger, S. 44 Espinosa-Asuar, L. 110 Esslinger, K. 57 Estapa, M. L. 59 Estep, L. L. 140 Esterson, K. A. 135 Estevez, E. D. 146 Esther, T. 76 Esther, T. A. 76 ESTOURNEL, C. 92 Estradé, S. 44 Ethe, C. 125 Etter, P. C. 138 Evans, C. T. 79 Evans, R. H. 140 Evans, S. 53 Evans, T. 44, 150 Evans, T. E. 44 Everlove, C. 153 Evers, D. C. 64 EVERS, D. E. 137 Evers, D. E. 137 Everson, I. 102 Evrard, V. 120 evsich , r. 95 Ewing, T. 131 Ezer, T. 108, 133 F Fabricius, K. 91, 142, 149 Fabricius, K. E. 91 Fach, B. 42, 56, 102 Fach, B. A. 56, 102 Fackler, C. J. 98, 102 Fagan, K. E. 78, 154 Faganeli, J. 118 Fagherazzi, S. 124 Fahnenstiel, G. L. 47, 92 Fairall, C. W. 111 Fairbanks, R. 127 Falcao, M. 47 Falck, E. 86, 107 Falcon, L. 110 Falk-Petersen, J. 98 Falkenhaug, T. 94 Falkinham, J. O. 78 Falkner, K. K. 83 Falkowski, P. G. 41, 132 Falls, J. A. 117 Falnoga, I. 118 Falster, A. U. 64 Faluotico, S. 128 Fan, C. W. 113 163 Fan, Y. 99 Fang, F. 45 Fang, L. S. 85 Fanning, K. 60, 76, 122, 154 Fanning, K. A. 60 Fanton d’Andon, O. H. 74 Farcy, S. 102 Faria, B. 154 Faries, J. W. 82 Farin, F. 47 Farley, E. V. 83 Farmer, A. 87 FARMER, D. M. 109 Farmer, D. M. 151 Farrar, J. T. 42, 45, 57 Farrar, P. D. 88 Farrara, J. 48, 72, 113, 135, 140 Farrara, J. D. 48, 72, 140 Farrington, J. W. 125 Fauci, L. J. 79 Faulkner, C. M. 45 Faure, V. 86, 107 Favali, P. 154 Fay, V. 46 Fearing, A. L. 152 FeAST Science Team 39 Fedak, M. A. 142 Fedak, M. E. 49 Feddersen, F. 92, 119 feddersen, f. 119 Fedele, F. 44 Fedorov, A. V. 119, 120 Feely, R. A. 62, 65, 78, 118, 131, 154 Feeney, J. W. 138 Feifel, K. M. 46 Fekete, B. 125 Feldman, M. 102 Feldmann, A. 83 Felix, L. G. 133 Fell, J. 46 Feller, R. J. 50 Feng, D. 106 Feng, H. 55, 70 Feng, M. 125 Feng, Y. 117, 124 Fennel, K. 87, 111 Fennig, K. 145 Fer, I. 80, 103 Ferguson, S. 155 Fernandes, A. M. 52 Fernandes, F. P. 86 Fernandez, E. R. 78 Fernández-Eguiarte, A. 86 Fernandez I., C. 124 Fernando, H. J. 80 Ferrari, R. 43, 92 Ferrow, A. 42, 86 Ferrow, A. E. 86 Fertig, B. 81 Feseker, T. 141 Feunteun, e. 75 Fewings, M. R. 142 Ffield, A. 144 Fichot, C. G. 70, 100 Fiechter, J. 42, 56 Field, M. E. 53, 91, 130 Fielder, B. R. 100, 115 Fields, J. C. 131 Fielman, K. 111 Figueiras, P. 73 Figueiredo, R. J. 84 Filipiak, M. J. 111, 153 Filipiak, M. K. 45 Filippino, K. C. 71, 109 Filipsson, H. L. 89 Fimmen, R. 71 FINE, R. A. 63 Fine, R. A. 116 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Finelli, C. M. 140 Finette, S. 44, 150 Finette, S. I. 44 Fink, L. A. 141 Finkl, C. W. 70, 115 Finn, J. 82 FINNEGAN, C. 137 Firing, E. 42, 49, 57, 106 Firth, J. V. 76 Fischer, A. M. 74 Fischer, A. S. 96 Fischer, J. 86, 101, 109, 150 Fischer, J. M. 109, 150 Fischer, P. F. 43 Fisher, C. 41, 95, 106, 117 Fisher, C. R. 41, 95, 106, 117 Fisher, N. S. 53 Fisher, T. R. 74, 117, 129 Fitz-Gibbon, S. 132 Fitz-Randolph, K. 84 FitzGerald, D. M. 98, 123 Fitzgerald, W. F. 64, 106, 155 Fitzsimmons, J. 120 Fitzwater, S. E. 136 Flagg, C. 98, 122 Flagg, C. N. 98 Flament, P. 43, 68 Flampouris, S. 127 Flannery, J. A. 78 Fleeger, J. 137 FLEEGER, J. W. 137 Fleeger, J. W. 137 Flegal, A. R. 117, 153 Fleming, L. E. 47, 85 Flick, R. E. 65 Flierl, G. 42, 43, 70 Flierl, G. R. 42, 43, 70 Flindt, M. R. 134 Flocks, J. 123 Flocks, J. G. 123 Flood, R. D. 112 Florian Peine, F. 68 Flower, B. P. 89, 139 Flynn , M. R. 150 Flynn, P. 46 Focardi, S. 100 Fodrie, F. J. 78 Fogaren, K. E. 141 Fogarty, C. 40 Fogarty, M. J. 112 Fogel, M. L. 138 Fogleman, T. 102 Foglini, F. 94 Foley, D. 45, 46, 48, 61, 98 Foley, D. G. 46, 48 Foley , J. 41 Foley, J. M. 83 Foley, M. M. 146 Folkard, A. 67, 79 Follows, M. 51, 66, 95 Follows, M. J. 51, 66, 95 Follows/Mick, M. F. 95 Foltz, G. R. 149 Fones, G. 39, 87, 151, 153 Fones, G. R. 87, 151 Fong, D. A. 73, 112, 119 Fong, P. 88, 139 Fonseca, C. 47, 131 Fonseca, C. A. 131 Fonseca, M. S. 99 Font, J. 55 Fontana, C. 61 Fontana, S. 98 Forand, J. L. 77 FORBES, M. C. 95 Forbes, S. E. 120 Forcada, J. 56 Ford, B. 136 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Ford, R. G. 92, 142 Foreman, C. 71, 115 Foreman, K. 120 Foreman, M. G. 73 Forest, A. 126 Forget, G. 94, 127, 128 Forrest, B. M. 70, 115, 123 Forrest, D. R. 106 Forte, J. 133 Fortich, R. 62 Fortier, L. 126, 127 Fortner, R. W. 88 Forward, R. B. 102 FOSTER, D. L. 82 Foster, D. L. 41 Foster, N. R. 84 Foster, R. A. 41, 112 Foucher,, J. P. 141 Fournier, G. R. 77 Fowler, S. W. 146, 154 Fox, J. 40 Fox, M. 60 Fox-Kemper, B. 43 Foxgrover, A. 85, 115 Foxgrover, A. C. 85 Foy, M. S. 142 Frajka Williams, E. E. 149 Fram, J. P. 61 Frame, E. F. 142 Frame, E. R. 128 Framinan, M. B. 140 France, S. C. 117 France-Lanord, c. 66 Francesco Peri, F. 72 Francis, C. A. 40 Francis, J. 47, 90 Francis, J. E. 90 Franco, B. C. 137 FRANK, D. 82 Frank, M. 76 Frank, T. M. 130 Frankcombe, L. 102 Frankignoul, C. 101 Franklin, D. S. 100 Franklin, H. 96 Franks, P. J. 67, 92, 93, 97, 119, 123 Franks, S. 136 Frants, M. 56 Fraser, C. A. 112 Frasier, S. J. 82 Fratantoni, D. M. 81, 83, 93 Fratantoni, P. S. 52, 81, 85 Fraunie, P. 71 Frazer, T. K. 47, 70, 92, 100, 108 Frederiksen, L. 134 Frédérique BARBET, F. 49 Fredj, E. 75 Fredricks, H. F. 40 Fredrickson, K. A. 93 Fredriksson, D. 148 Freeman, S. 129 Freeman, T. L. 147 Freemon, M. 141 Freibauer , A. 84 Frenzel, H. 125 Frew, R. D. 124 Frey, K. E. 68, 69 Fricke, R. 98 Friebel, H. C. 71, 99 Friederich, G. E. 136 Friedland, K. 45, 68 Friedland, K. D. 45 Friedrich, T. 132 Friedrichs, C. T. 48, 92, 115, 127 Friedrichs, M. 66, 97, 98, 111 Friedrichs, M. A. 66, 97, 111 Friehe, C. 154 Fries, D. P. 134 Fringer, O. B. 41, 73, 113, 120, 150 Fripiat, F. 40 Frischer, M. E. 138, 151, 152 Fritsen, C. 42, 56 Fritsen, C. H. 42 Fritz, H. M. 99, 124 Froelicher, T. 97 Frölicher, T. 49, 65 Frölicher, T. L. 49 Frolov, S. 154 Frommberger, M. 151 Froysa, K. G. 141 Fry, B. 81 Fu, F. X. 124 FU, L. L. 94 Fu, L. L. 91, 105 Fu, R. 69 Fuchs, B. M. 40 Fuckar, N. S. 101 Fuentes, D. 97 Fuentes, G. 122 Fuentes-Figueroa, D. 66 Fugate, D. C. 134 Fuhrman, J. A. 40, 54, 133, 138 Fujii, M. 107 Fujii, T. 120 Fujii, Y. 105, 106, 109, 113 Fujiki, T. 129 Fujimoto, H. 87 Fujioka, R. S. 46 Fukamachi, Y. 148 Fukasawa, M. 131 FUKUCHI, Y. 112 Fukuhara, T. 78 Fukumori, I. 94 Fukushima, T. 57 Fulton, D. P. 142 FULWEILER, R. W. 128 Fulweiler, R. W. 40, 108 Fuqua, C. 96 Fuqua, L. M. 44 Furuichi, N. 119 Furuya, K. 110 Fusaro, A. J. 148 G Gaard, E. 94 Gaardsted, F. 141 Gaas, B. M. 42 Gabelli, S. B. 65 Gabersek, S. 87 Gaffney, D. A. 70 Gagaev, S. 121 Gage, S. H. 130 Gagné, J. 140 Gagosian, R. B. 125 Gaichas, S. 98 Gaines, S. D. 102, 148 Gaiser, E. E. 50 Galbraith, E. D. 116 Galbraith, M. D. 136 Galeron, J. 103 Galginaitis, M. S. 85 Gallacher, P. 109, 150 Gallacher, P. C. 109, 150 Gallagher, E. 47 GALLARDO, V. A. 103 Gallegos, C. L. 49 Gallegos, S. 109 Gallegos-Garcia, A. 87 GALLEHER, S. 140 Gallerani, A. 94 Gallinari, M. 76 Galloway, J. N. 124 Galluppi, K. 63, 80 Galperin, B. 80, 126 164 Galván, C. 98 galy, v. 66 Gamiel, K. 63 Gamo, T. 53 Gan, J. 141 Gangopadhyay, A. 43, 54, 81, 86, 116 Ganzin, N. J. 74 Gao, H. 120 Gao, Z. 46 García, A. 98 Garcia, C. E. 81 Garcia, J. 134 GARCIA, R. 152 Garcia, R. F. 59, 101 Garcia, S. 46, 65 Garcia, S. F. 65 Garcia, V. M. 81 Garcia-Ladona, E. 55 Garcia-Orellana, J. 44, 76 Garcia-Pineda, O. 95, 106 Garcia-Rubio, L. H. 129 Garcia-solsona, E. 44 Garcias-Bonet, N. 58 Garcon, V. 124 Garçon, V. 145 Gardner, B. 97, 100 Gardner, B. G. 97 Gardner, G. B. 74, 92, 100 Garfield, N. 92, 135, 142, 148 garfield, n. 135 Gargett, A. E. 112, 133, 155 Garibotti, I. 84 Garraffo, Z. 43, 58, 69, 101, 127 Garraffo, Z. D. 43, 127 Garreau, P. 71 Garrison, D. 46 Garske, L. E. 141 Garvey , M. 76 Garvine, R. W. 85 Garvis, C. A. 81 Gary, S. F. 116 Gascard jean-claude, J. C. 149 Gaspar, A. P. 79 Gasser, B. 107, 146 Gast, R. J. 46 Gattuso, J. P. 130 Gauns, M. 39 Gawarkiewicz, G. 109, 121 Gawarkiewicz, G. G. 121 Gawlickowski, G. J. 45 Gay III, S. M. 114 Gaylord, B. 155 Gaylord, B. P. 155 Gaytan Aguilar, S. 125 Ge, P. 101 Geary, E. E. 88 Geer, I. W. 88, 98 Gehlen , M. 97 Gehrman, E. A. 85 Geider, R. 110 Geier, S. L. 128, 155 Geiszler, D. 95 Gelado, M. D. 53 Gelfenbaum, G. 48, 82, 100, 124 Gelfman, C. 108 Geli, L. 143 Géli, L. B. 103 Gelinas, Y. 96, 129, 140 Gélinas, Y. 80 Gelpi, C. 93, 137 GELPI, C. G. 137 Gelpi, C. G. 93, 137 Gelsleichter, J. 81 Gemmell, A. L. 95 Gemmell, B. 67 Gemmrich, J. 127 Genin, A. 56, 83, 103 Gentemann, C. L. 45, 111 Meeting Program Gentili, B. 115, 145 George, A. M. 84 George, D. A. 115 George, J. C. 126 George Triantafyllou, G. 96 Georgiou, I. Y. 123 Gerasimo Korres, G. 96 Gerber, T. P. 139 Gerbi, G. P. 80 Gernez, P. 129 Gerrodette, T. 49 Gershey, R. M. 118 Gersman, R. 81 Gertman, I. 154 Geyer, W. R. 73, 112, 121, 124 Giardino, C. 74 Giblin, A. 120 Gibson, A. 93 Gibson, C. H. 80 Gibson, D. 67, 88 Gibson, D. M. 67 Gibson, G. 98 Gibson, J. 122 Gibson, K. 70 Gibson, P. J. 102 Gibson, S. 132, 146 Giddings, S. N. 73, 112 Gidley, M. 46 Giebel, H. A. 131 Giebel, N. L. 79, 145 Gierach, M. M. 52 Giese, B. S. 94, 105 Gieskes, J. M. 90 Gifford, S. 110, 134 Gifford, S. M. 134 Gihring, T. 40, 54, 79, 120 Gihring, T. M. 54, 79, 120 Gilbert, D. 49, 80, 129 Gilbert, S. 44, 60, 72 Gilbert, S. A. 60, 72 Gilberto Jeronimo, G. 123, 136 Gilbes, F. 46 Gilcoto, M. 54 Gildor, H. 43, 75 Gilerson, A. 61, 62, 100 Gill, J. P. 85 Gill, S. K. 99 Gille, S. 44, 45, 56, 113, 127, 144 Gille, S. T. 44, 45, 56, 113, 144 Gillibrand, P. A. 133 Gilligan, M. 67 Gilligan, M. R. 67 Gillis, N. K. 131 Gillooly, M. 154 Gilman, B. 151 Gilman, M. 62, 98 Gilmour, C. C. 155 Gilroy, S. 151 Ginis, I. 99 Ginsburg, R. N. 74 Giosan, L. 50, 55 Gire, B. 136 Gireesh , R. 94 Girguis, P. 60, 73, 95, 106, 138 Girguis, P. R. 60, 73, 106, 138 Girton, J. B. 58, 91, 113 Gislason, A. 94 Gist, N. 49 Gitelson, A. A. 74 Given, H. K. 153 Gjoesaeter, H. 98 Gkritzalis, A. 153 Gleason, A. 46, 63 Gleason, A. C. 63 Glebushko, K. 82, 108 Gleckler, P. 132 Gledhill, D. K. 65, 125, 152 Gledhill, M. 40 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Gleeson, R. A. 69 Glenn, S. 44, 86, 92, 99, 114, 154 Glenn, S. M. 44, 92, 99, 114, 154 Glessmer, M. S. 70 Glibert, P. M. 64, 71, 73 Glomb, K. A. 134 Gloor, M. 94 Glover, D. M. 69 Gnanadesikan, A. 76, 77, 95, 112, 118 Gobat, J. I. 153 Gobeil, C. 54 Gobler, C. 71 Gobler, C. J. 71 Goddard, A. J. 45 Godin, M. 96 Godin, O. A. 113 Godoy, J. M. 94 Godoy, M. L. 94 Goebel, M. E. 49 Goebel, M. W. 142 Goehring, E. 41 Goericke, R. 123, 136 GOES, J. 60 Goes, J. I. 50 Goetz, F. E. 81 Goh, G. 80, 111 Golan Duncan, R. 44 Golbuu, Y. 149 Goldberg, S. J. 100 Goldfinger, C. 85, 124 Goldgof, D. B. 44 Goldman, E. 81, 141 Goldman, E. A. 141 Goldsmith, S. T. 75 Goldstein, H. 53 Goldthwait, S. 136 Golet, W. J. 48 GOMES, H. 60 Gomes, H. R. 50 Gomes, K. J. 141 GOMEZ, M. L. 103 Gómez-Batista , M. 94 Gomez-Consarnau, L. 110 Gong, D. 99 Gong, G. 60, 79, 138 Gong, G. C. 138 Goni, G. 46, 62, 91, 98, 113 GONI, G. J. 91 Goni, G. J. 62, 91, 98, 113 Goni, M. A. 75, 81, 122, 139 Gonneea, M. E. 120 Gonsior, M. 59 Gontz, A. M. 121 Gonzales-Davila, M. 98 Gonzalez, J. G. 66 Gonzalez-Escalona, N. 134 González-Lagoa, J. G. 90 Gonzalez-Lopez, J. O. 57 González-Marrero, R. L. 134 Gooday, A. J. 49 Goodbred, S. L. 47, 64 Goodbred Jr., S. 137 Goodkin, N. F. 94 Goodlett, D. L. 147 Goodman, J. 46 Goodman, L. 88, 93, 126 Goodman, P. J. 69, 89 Goodman, P. K. 50 Goodwin, K. 47, 61 Goodwin, K. D. 47 Gopal, S. 152 GOPALAKRISHNAN, G. 149 Gopalan, B. 67 Gordeev, V. 54 Gordo, C. 54 Gordon, A. 52, 58, 118, 144 GORDON, A. L. 137 Gordon, A. L. 52, 58, 118, 144 Gordon, E. 62, 110 Gordon, E. S. 62 Gordon, J. D. 116 Gorgues, T. 107 Gorleski, E. S. 70 Gorman, G. J. 45 Gorokhova, E. 138 Gosselin, M. 67 Gostiaux, L. 109 Gotschalk, C. C. 155 Gough, E. C. 151 gough, m. k. 135 Gouillon, F. 118 Gould, R. 46, 59, 61, 155 Gould, R. W. 46, 61, 155 Gourcuff, C. 86 GOURIOU, Y. 62 Gourley, J. 71 Gourrion, J. 109 Goutx, M. 146 Govenar, B. 134, 151 Gowing, M. M. 108 Graber, H. C. 90, 95, 109, 111, 150 Grablow, K. R. 117 Grabowski, M. N. 84 Grace, K. A. 73 Gradinger, R. 121 Graf, G. 98 Graff, J. 83, 93, 148 Graham, R. T. 64 Graham, S. 59, 66 Graham, S. L. 59 Gramer, L. 139 Grandi, L. 113 Graneli, E. 71 Granéli, E. 59, 71, 138 Graneli, W. 97 Granger , S. 146 Grant, D. 76, 84 Grant, S. R. 110 Grassl, H. 145 Grassle, F. 103 Graves, S. J. 72, 95 Gray, A. 57 Gray, D. 74, 77, 129 Gray, D. J. 129 Graybeal, J. 141 Greb, S. R. 74 Grebmeier, J. M. 68, 69, 83, 84 Greely, T. 41 Green, A. 135 Green, D. H. 61 Green, J. A. 92 Green, M. 100 Green, R. 46, 155 Green, R. E. 155 Green, V. L. 84 Greenan, B. J. 155 Greenan, B. W. 103 Greenberg, D. A. 88 Greene, A. D. 152 Greene, C. H. 45, 85 Greene, M. 99 Greene, R. 46, 117 Greene, R. M. 117 Greenfield, D. 153 Greening, H. 128 Greening, W. 55 Greenlaw, C. F. 83, 93 Gref, B. 85 Greganti, K. 44 Gregg, M. C. 57, 91 Gregg, W. 55, 145 Gregg, W. W. 55 Gregorio, S. O. 128 Gregory, T. K. 74, 110 Gregory Ventura, G. T. 147 Greiner, E. 146 165 Gremare, A. 66 Gremaré, A. 79 Gremes-Cordero, Silvia, S. B. 80 Gremillet, D. 68 Grenz, G. 61 Griesel, A. 113 Griffa, A. 43, 97 Griffin, S. 119 Griffiths, C. R. 43, 75 Grigorev, I. 71 Grimes, D. J. 134 Grindlay, N. R. 135 GRIPPO, M. 137 Grippo, M. 137 Grippo, M. A. 137 Grischenko, A. V. 84 Grissom, K. 135 Grodsky, S. 39, 69, 105 Grodsky, S. K. 105 Gronell, A. M. 95 Grorud-Colvert, K. 148 Grosch, C. E. 112, 141 Gross, B. 61, 62, 100 Gross, T. F. 46 Grossart, H. F. 118 Grossart, H. P. 65, 78 Grosse, J. 97 Grossi, M. D. 116 Grossman, A. R. 131 Grossman, E. E. 53 Grottoli, A. G. 91, 152 Gruber, N. 94, 95, 114, 118, 125 Gruber, N. P. 95 Gruenler, S. 52, 91 Grumet, N. 91 Grunbaum, D. 93 Grünbaum, D. 128 Grupe, B. 102 Gryschka, M. 111 Gualdesi, L. 113 Guan, X. 58 Guannel, G. E. 82 Guarnieri, A. 113 Guay, C. 122 Gudgel, R. 94 Gudmundsdottir, R. 83 Guentzel, J. G. 64 Guentzel, J. L. 64 Guerard, J. J. 71 Guerra, C. 146 Guerra, J. V. 133 Guerrero-Zorilla Diego, D. 85 Guerriero, N. 59 Guichard, F. 128 Guida, S. M. 65 Guida, T. 151 Guidroz, W. S. 137 Guieu, C. 109 guieu, C. 39 Guild, L. 46 Guillemot, E. 141, 154 Guillemot, E. M. 154 Guillocheau, N. 92, 129 Guinasso, Jr., N. L. 151 Guinasso, N. L. 63 Guinda, X. 98 Gunasekera, S. P. 58 Gundersen, K. 155 Gunderson, T. 109, 124 Gunn, J. T. 137, 149 Guntenspergen, G. 99 Guo, J. S. 144 Guo, J. Y. 113 Guo, L. 110, 125, 140 Guo, L. D. 110, 125 GUO, P. F. 104 Guo, X. 52, 99, 106, 141 Gurgel, K. W. 43, 113 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Gurlin, D. 74 Gustavo A. Carvalho, G. 47 Gutscher, M. A. 143 Guza, R. T. 75, 92, 93, 119 Guzman, L. 122 Gypens, N. 72 H Haak, H. 63 Haas, K. A. 68, 93 Haase, A. T. 89 Hacker, P. 42, 57, 95, 128 Hacker, P. W. 95 Hackert, E. C. 109, 149 Hackett, E. E. 111, 119 Haertel, P. T. 126, 145 Haese, R. R. 47 Hafez, M. 136 Hagen, S. C. 95 Hagerty, N. 82 Hague, E. A. 143 Hagy, J. 46, 80, 81, 117 Hagy, J. D. 80, 81, 117 Haidvogel, D. B. 42, 56 Haine, T. 43 Haines, K. 95, 101, 113, 146 Haines, S. 148 Hains, J. J. 55 Hakkinen, S. 149 Halanych, K. 76, 117 Halanych, K. M. 76 Hale, S. A. 132 Hales, B. 65 Haley, P. J. 86 Haley, S. 81 Halka, J. P. 122 Halkides, D. J. 105 Halkyard, J. 59, 96 Hall, C. M. 117 Hall, J. 124 Hall, L. 44, 56 Hall, L. O. 44 Hall, M. L. 56 Hall, M. M. 86 Hall, R. A. 92 Hall, W. 88 Hallac, D. 134 Halladja, S. 59 Hallberg, R. 43, 58 Hallberg, R. W. 43 Halle, C. 142, 148, 149 Halle, C. M. 142, 149 Haller, M. 68, 82, 119 Haller, M. C. 68, 82 Halley, R. B. 50 Halliwell, G. 58, 100, 101 Halliwell, G. R. 100 Hallock, P. 78, 148, 152 Halonen, J. R. 81 Halpern, A. L. 110 Halpern, B. S. 148 Halsband-Lenk, C. 83 Halversen, C. 67, 97 Halverson, M. J. 128 Hama, T. 100, 104, 132, 138 Hamazaki, T. 83 hamelin, b. 44 Hamersley, M. R. 122 Hamlington, B. D. 91 Hamm, N. T. 121, 134 Hammann, A. C. 112 Hammerschmidt, C. R. 64, 155 Hammond, D. 45, 76, 81, 114 Hammond, D. E. 76, 81 Hammond, D. L. 45 Hammond, L. M. 66 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Hamner, W. M. 88 Hamnett, M. 149 Hamski, J. P. 52 Han, C. S. 40 Han, G. 45 Han, S. C. 152 Han, W. 57, 69, 152 Hanawa, K. 56, 116, 128 Hancock, L. P. 81 Hancock, M. J. 68 Händel, N. 104 Hanes, D. M. 68, 82, 100 Hanisak, M. D. 69 Hannafious, D. 130, 155 Hannah, C. 115 Hannides, C. C. 124 Hansard, S. P. 58, 64, 71 Hansell, D. 69, 108, 144 Hansell, D. A. 69, 144 Hanselman, D. H. 61 Hanselman, J. 102 Hansen, A. T. 73 Hansen, C. 41, 56 Hansen, E. 86 Hansen, J. E. 115 Hanson, A. 93, 141 Hanson, A. K. 93 Hanson, J. 71, 99 Hanson, J. L. 71 Hanson, T. 53 HAPPELL, J. 63 Happell, J. 116 Hara, T. 81, 99 Harada, K. 78, 115 Harcourt, R. 43, 57 Harcourt, R. R. 57 Hardee, S. A. 142 Hardee, S. E. 90, 142 Hardin, J. L. 85, 122 Harding, A. 68 Harding, F. 134 Harding, J. M. 95 Harding, Jr., L. W. 49 Harding, L. W. 128 Hardison, D. R. 71 Hardy, D. 39, 103 Hardy, K. R. 53, 59, 71 Hardy, M. L. 81 Hardy, R. J. 103 Hare, J. 45, 68, 112 Hare, J. A. 45, 112 Hare, M. P. 89, 94 Hare, R. D. 88 Hargis, J. 90 Harkins, G. 154 Harlan, J. 148 Harmon, R. S. 75 Haro, R. J. 64 HARPER, S. 137 Harrington, M. 154 Harris, A. R. 140, 153 Harris, C. K. 81, 92, 121, 127, 133, 139 Harris, E. L. 82 Harris, M. S. 44, 115 Harris, R. P. 41 Harrison, D. E. 52, 96 Harrison, J. 125 Harrison, M. 94 Harrison, P. J. 39, 129 Harrison, W. G. 155 Hart, D. E. 104 Hart, M. C. 61 Harter, B. B. 85 Hartin, C. 116, 127 Hartin, C. A. 116 Hartman, S. E. 145 Hartz, A. J. 110 Hartzell, K. 81 Harvey, H. R. 79, 147 Harvey, J. W. 73, 133 Harwood, J. D. 151 Harwood, V. 46 Hasan, K. 52 HASEGAWA, D. 137 Hasegawa, D. 54 Hasegawa, T. 105 Hashioka, T. 56 Hassellöv, M. 118 Hassett, R. P. 131 Hassrick, J. 49 Hastings, D. W. 89, 139 Hastings, M. G. 124 Hasumi, H. 53, 58, 112 Hasumi, T. 48 Hasumi/Hiroyasu, H. H. 127 HASUMI HIROYASU, H. 48 Hatcher, B. G. 128, 146 Hatcher, P. G. 147 Hathaway, K. K. 82 Hatta, M. 151 Hatun, H. 149 Haus, B. 99, 111, 113, 135, 148 Haus, B. K. 111, 113, 135, 148 Hauser, L. 102 Hausman, J. K. 52 Hautala, S. 76 Havens, A. 136 Havens, H. 64, 72 Havens, H. H. 72 Havens, J. 71 Hawkins, E. 102 Hawkins, J. 138 Hawkyard, D. M. 78 Hawley, N. 121 Hay, A. E. 68 Hayase, R. 55 Hayashibara, T. 152 Hayden, J. T. 82 Hayden, M. H. 87 Hayes, J. M. 58 Hayes, K. C. 59 Haygood, M. G. 40, 54 Haymet, A. D. 126 Haynes, L. 50 HAYNES, S. 64 Haynes, S. 67 Hayward, T. 150 Haza, A. C. 127 Hazard, L. 148 Hazeleger, W. 101 Hazell, N. J. 141 He, M. 45 He, R. 47, 60, 72, 86, 87, 138 He, Z. 58 Head, E. 68, 85 Head, E. H. 85 Headley, K. 141 Healy, G. F. 84 Heaphy, M. 132 Hearn, C. J. 62, 99 Hearn, P. 134 Hebel, D. V. 104 Hebert, A. B. 120, 154 Hebert, D. 142 Hecht, M. W. 112, 126 Heck, K. L. 78 Hedgecock, D. 134 Hedstrom, K. 42, 56, 83 Hedtkamp, S. I. 133 Heffner, D. M. 109 Heger, A. 117 Heidelberg, J. F. 81 Heidelberg, K. 81, 110 Heidelberg, K. B. 81 Heidinger, A. K. 132 Heidinger/Andrew , A. K. 140 166 Heigthon, L. 59 Heil, C. A. 60, 64, 71, 72 Heilman, D. J. 115 Heimbach, P. 63, 66, 94 Heinze, A. 109 Heinze, C. 50, 65, 95, 118 Heip, C. H. 120 Heitsenrether, R. M. 86 Helber, R. W. 48, 55, 124, 138 Helenbrook, B. T. 66 Helfrich, K. 43, 126, 137 Helfrich, K. R. 126, 137 Helman, D. 120 Helmke, P. 154 Helms, J. 59, 71 Helms, J. R. 59 Helmuth, B. 46, 146 Helz, G. R. 94 Hemphill, N. 46 Hemscheidt, T. 46 Hench, J. 73, 93, 102, 103, 142, 150 Hench, J. L. 73, 93, 102, 103, 142, 150 Hendee, J. C. 139 Henderson, E. E. 135 Henderson, J. M. 48 Henderson, P. 120 Henderson, P. B. 120 Henderson, S. M. 119 Hendrickson, J. C. 129 Hendriks, I. E. 67, 79 Hendrycks, E. 126 Henkes, G. 56 Henriksen, P. 128 Henry, K. M. 108 Henry, M. S. 61 Henry-Edwards, A. G. 118 Henry Williams, H. N. 131 Hensel, P. F. 99 Henson, S. 43, 136 Henson, S. A. 43 Henthorn, R. 49, 96 Henthorn, R. G. 49 Hentschel, B. T. 145 Hepburn, C. D. 65 Herbers, T. H. 93, 119 Herbert, B. 147 Herfort, L. 84 Herlien, R. 141 Herman, P. M. 98 Hermann, A. J. 42 Hernández, J. J. 53 Hernandez, J. L. 74 Hernández-Albernas , J. 94 Hernandez-Ayon, J. M. 65 Hernández-Cruz, L. R. 62 HERNANDEZ BECERRIL, D. U. 103 Herndl, G. J. 103, 151 Herndon, J. 73 Heron, S. 65, 125, 152 Heron, S. F. 125, 152 Herraiz-Borreguero, L. 116 Herrera-Silveira, J. 120, 135 Herrera-Silveira, J. A. 135 Herring, D. 102 Herrington, T. 77, 86 Herrington, T. O. 86 Herrmann, M. 79 Herron, S. E. 64 Hersch, N. 53 Herter, H. L. 102 Hertkorn, N. 151 Herut, B. 154 Herzfeld, I. 120 Herzog, A. P. 113 Hesser, T. J. 82 Hessner, K. 135 Hetland, H. 126 Hetland, R. D. 87, 110, 121, 126, 155 Meeting Program Hewes, C. D. 56 Hewson, I. 109, 134, 138 Heyes, A. 155 Heywood, J. 40 Heywood, K. J. 42, 127 Hibbert, A. 90 Hibiya, T. 119 Hibler, L. F. 70 Hickey, B. 46, 73, 121, 123, 128, 142, 155 Hickey, B. M. 46, 73, 123, 128, 142, 155 Hickman, A. E. 80, 92 Hicks, B. S. 82 Hicks Johnson, T. 88 Hidayat, R. 107 Higgins, M. M. 151 Higgs, M. 120, 132, 133 Higgs, M. K. 132, 133 Higuchi, T. 87 Hilbish, T. J. 46, 128, 146 Hilburn, K. A. 69 Hildebrand, A. 145 Hildebrand, J. A. 135, 136 Hill, C. H. 66 Hill, C. N. 94 Hill, D. F. 102 Hill, K. M. 138 Hill, P. 121, 142 Hill, P. S. 121 Hill, R. T. 96, 134 Hill, V. J. 64, 145 Hill, V. L. 59 HILLAIRE-MARCEL, C. 94 Hillier, L. E. 55 Hilton, M. R. 89 Hilton, T. 66 Himmer, T. M. 122 Hinckley, S. 42 Hinds, A. K. 70 Hine, P. M. 138 Hinkelmann, R. 120 Hintz, C. J. 78 Hirabara, M. 108 Hirano, D. 80 Hirons, A. C. 58, 142 Hirose, N. 87 Hiroto Abe, H. 113 Hiroyasu Hasumi, H. 52 Hirschberg, D. J. 79, 121 Hirschi, J. 69, 96, 101 Hisaki, Y. 148 Hisashi Narita, H. 135 Hiscock, M. R. 39, 151 Hiscock, W. T. 151 Hitchcock, G. L. 50, 61 Hlaing, S. 61 Hmelo, L. 110 Ho, A. 129 Ho, D. T. 61 Ho, T. 40 Hoare, A. M. 64 Hobbie, J. E. 54 Hobbs, R. 103, 133, 143 Hobbs, R. W. 143 Hobson, B. W. 49 Hoch, M. P. 55 Hochberg, E. 46 Hodder, J. 41 Hodges, B. A. 81, 83, 93 Hodges, B. R. 112 HODSON, D. 39 Hodur, R. 87 Hoegh-Guldberg, O. 148 Hoeke, R. 53, 82 Hoeke, R. K. 82 Hoekstra, P. 48, 91 Hoff, K. 84 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Hoffer, S. 146 Hoffman, E. A. 131 Hoffman, M. 88 Hoffman, R. N. 48 Hoffman, S. 79 Hoffmann, B. 53 Hoffmann, L. 53 Hoffmann, L. J. 53 Hofmann, A. F. 152 Hofmann , B. N. 81 Hofmann, E. 41, 56, 111, 134, 145 Hofmann, E. E. 41, 56, 111, 134, 145 Hofmann, G. E. 66 Hofton, M. 52 Hogan, D. 134 Hogan, P. 48, 100, 101, 133 Hogan, P. J. 48, 100, 101 Hogfors, H. 138 Hogg, A. M. 70 Hogg, N. 42, 57 Hogg, N. G. 42 Hogue, V. 128 Hohmann, L. 147 Hoitink, A. 91 Holbrook, W. S. 103 Holby, O. 67 Holderied, K. 83 Holeton, C. 138 Holiday, D. 59 Holland, A. F. 46 Holland, C. L. 42 Holland, K. T. 41, 68, 119 Hollander, D. 40, 47, 64, 78, 108, 117 Hollander, D. J. 40, 47, 64, 78, 117 Hollibaugh, J. T. 66 Holliday, D. V. 93 Holliday, L. 56 Holligan, P. M. 80, 92 Holloway, G. 42, 112 Holm, D. D. 126 Holm-Hansen, O. 41, 56 Holman, R. 41, 68, 93, 119 Holman, R. A. 41, 68, 119 Holmborn, T. 138 Holmer, M. 120 Holmes, C. W. 50, 91 Holmes, K. 89 Holmes, R. M. 122 Holsen, T. M. 155 Holt, B. 125, 136 Holt, C. A. 46 Holt, J. 72 Holt, M. 72, 154 Holt, T. R. 101 Holtappels, M. 47 Holte, J. 116, 127 Holte, J. W. 116 Holtermann, K. 122 Holtzman, R. 56, 83, 103 Holyoke, R. R. 116 Holz, J. 74 Holzer, M. 116 Homoky, W. B. 72, 87 Honda, M. C. 129 Hondzo, M. 73 Hong, H. S. 63 Hong, X. 72 Honjo, S. 67 Honrado, M. V. 54 Hood, R. R. 46, 65, 72, 105, 124 Hooker, S. 111 Hoover, D. J. 141 Hoover, K. J. 139 Hoover, W. 141 Hopcroft, R. R. 94, 121 Hopkins, E. J. 88 Hopkinson, B. M. 40 Hopkinson, C. 125 Hoppema , M. 118 Hoque, A. Z. 52 Horak, R. E. 134 Hori, M. 48 Hornbach, M. 137 Horner-Devine, A. R. 73, 82, 128, 142 Horowitz, M. 57 Horrillo, J. 137 Horton, C. W. 86, 88 Horwitz, M. 108 Hosaka, T. 131 Hosegood, P. J. 57 Hoskins, D. L. 67 Hosoda, S. 105, 107, 108 Hossain, F. 52 HOT/C-MORE Team 124 Hoteit, I. M. 52 Hou, A. 132 Hou, W. 63, 77 Hou, Y. 39 Hougham, A. L. 44 Houghton, R. W. 80, 99 Houk, A. 114 Houk, A. E. 114 Hourdez, S. 95, 106 House, C. H. 132 Howard, K. 46 Howard, M. K. 154, 155 Howarth, M. J. 148, 154 Howd, P. 48, 68 Howden, S. 63, 155 Howden, S. D. 63 Howe, B. 96, 141, 153, 154 Howe, B. M. 96, 153 Howe, P. 128, 146 Howe, P. J. 128 Howe, W. 82, 84 Howell, E. 46 Howell, K. 73 Howlett, E. M. 96 Hoye, B. 139 Hoyt, K. 62 Hristova, H. G. 57 HSIA, M. 47 Hsieh, C. 136 Hsin, Y. 104 Hsiu-Ping, L. 146 Hsu, L. 85 Hsu, T. 41, 82, 134 HSU, T. J. 82 Hsu, Y. 87 Hsu-Kim, H. 64 Hsueh, Y. 144 Hu, A. 63 Hu, C. 44, 74, 146, 152 Hu, D. 144 HU, D. X. 144 Hu, H. 48, 69 Hu, W. 120 Hu, X. 106, 125 Hu, Y. 99 HUA, B. L. 42, 118 Hua, B. L. 57 Huang, C. 40, 107 Huang, C. W. 107 Huang, H. 98, 113 Huang, H. P. 113 Huang, J. 138 Huang, L. 138 Huang, W. 92, 97, 100, 111 Hubbard, K. A. 138 Hubbard, R. 74 Hubbard, V. 70 Huckstadt, L. 49, 142 Huckstadt, L. A. 142 Hudon, A. L. 44 Hudson, H. 93 Huebert, K. B. 128 167 Huemmer, D. 110 Huettel, M. 93, 120, 132, 133, 147 Huettl, S. 101 Huffman, D. 129 Hufford, G. L. 69 Hughen, K. 91, 152 Hughen, K. A. 91 Hughes, A. D. 152 Hughes, C. W. 90 Hughes, J. A. 103 Hughes, M. 53, 54 Hughes, M. P. 53 Hughes, P. J. 57 Hughes, Z. J. 98 Huijts, K. H. 121 Huisman, J. 124, 129 Hulbert, M. S. 99 Hull, P. M. 89 Hult, E. L. 150 Hume, A. 93 Hummon, J. 57, 98, 106 Hummon, J. M. 57, 106 Humphrey, A. B. 83 Humphrey, C. 91 Humphrys, M. 40, 54 Humphrys, M. S. 54 Huncik, K. 46, 47 Hung, C. 54, 60 Hunke, E. 84, 112 Hunke, E. C. 112 Hunsinger, G. 125 Hunt, C. 45, 49, 100, 129 Hunt, C. D. 49 Hunt , G. 68 Hunt, G. L. 83 Hunt, Jr., J. 95 Hunter, A. 75 Hunter, E. 87, 92, 99, 133 Hunter, E. J. 133 Hunter, K. A. 40 Hunter, M. 61 Hunter, N. 44 Huot, Y. 115, 129 Hurd, C. L. 65, 73 Hurlburt, H. 100, 101 Hurlburt, H. E. 100, 101 Hurley, L. E. 152 Hurlin, W. J. 101 Hurst, T. 81, 128 Hurst, T. P. 128 Husrevoglu, J. S. 43 Hussong, D. M. 141 Hutchins, D. A. 124 Hutchinson, W. F. 102 Huthnance, J. 92, 103, 143 Huthnance, J. M. 92 Huttlin, E. L. 122 Huussen, T. N. 118 Hwang, J. 67, 125 Hwang, S. C. 52 Hwang, S. L. 138 HYCOM Consortium 100 Hyde, K. J. 57 Hyde, N. 121 Hyder, P. 72 Hydes, D. J. 78 Hynes, A. M. 41 Hyun, K. 101 Hyun/Sangmin, S. 54 I Iannuzzi, R. 79, 84 Iannuzzi, R. A. 79 Ianson, D. 65 Ibanez, A. 44 Ibaraki, M. 91 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Ibarra, S. N. 82 Ibello, V. 124 Ibisanmi, E. 40 Ibrahim Hoteit, I. 96 Ichikawa, H. 57 Ichikawa, K. 57 Ide, K. 44, 48 Idechong, N. 149 Idica, E. Y. 141 Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. D. 39, 65, 66 Ignatov, A. M. 147 Ignatov/Alexander, A. 140 IHILY, J. M. 62 Ikeda, M. 87 Iken, K. 121 Iken, K. B. 121 Ikumi, Y. 113 Ilicak, M. 58 Ilyina, T. P. 65 Im, H. 68 Imadu, C. 148 Imai, K. 90 Imai/Keiri, K. 119 Imhoff, L. D. 146 Inall, M. 75, 133 Inall, M. E. 75 Inazu, D. 87 Incardona, J. P. 46 Incze, L. S. 42, 45 Inderbitzen, K. 76 Ingall, E. 110, 139, 151 Ingall, E. D. 110 Ingall, E. I. 139 Ingole, B. 103 Ingram, E. L. 41, 81 Ingram, R. G. 126 Inman, D. L. 75 Inomata, S. 90 Inoue, J. 48 Inoue, T. 59, 60 Ioannou, I. 61, 62, 100 Iovino, D. 86, 101 Iredell, D. 116 Ireland, B. 42 Irish, J. D. 150 Irisov, V. G. 150 Irisson, J. O. 148 Irvine, G. V. 89 Irwin, A. 132 Irwin, A. J. 132 Isbrecht, J. 53 Iseki, K. 138 Ishida, A. 53, 56, 57, 105, 107 Ishida, H. 114 Ishii, M. 100, 116, 118, 131 Ishitobi, T. 120 Ishiwata, Y. 131 ISHIZAKA, J. 90 Ishizaka, J. 114 Ishizaki, H. 106 Ishizaki, S. 105 Ishizu Miho, M. 111 Iskandar, I. 52 Iskandarani, M. 58, 97 Iskandarini, M. 58 Isla, A. 148 Ismail, W. 146 Isoguchi, O. 54 Ithier, W. 67 Ithier-Guzman, W. 67 Ito, T. 49, 66, 145 Ito/Taka, T. I. 95 Itoh, M. 48, 88 Itoh, S. 143 Iturriaga, R. 109 Ivanov, L. M. 127 Ivanov, V. V. 116 Ivanova, D. P. 127, 146 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Iverson, V. 122 Ivey, G. N. 93 Iwamae, N. 119 Iwasaka, N. 52 Izaguirre, M. A. 70 Izumo, T. 56 Javed, K. 102 Javid Mohammed Pour, J. 148 Jay, D. A. 128, 142 Jaya, I. 144 Jayasena, H. A. 137 Jayasena, H. A. H. 137 Jayce G, J. 54 Jayne, S. 42, 57, 128 Jayne, S. R. 42, 128 Jean-Michel BRYLINSKI, J. M. 49 Jeansson, E. 131 Jedlovec, G. 125 Jeffery, C. D. 45, 111 Jeffery, N. 112 Jeffrey, W. F. 109 Jeffrey, W. H. 109, 150, 151 Jeffries, M. 65, 128, 131 Jeffries, M. A. 128, 131 Jeffries, R. A. 151 Jeffries, S. 142 Jelenak, A. 132 Jellison, K. L. 109 Jenkins, A. 99, 144 Jenkins, A. D. 99 Jenkins, B. D. 40 Jenkins, W. J. 107, 120, 144 Jenkyns, R. L. 92 Jennifer Cherrier, J. 131 Jennings, R. M. 94 Jensen, H. S. 50 Jensen, J. K. 86 Jensen, R. E. 95 Jensen, S. 153 Jensen, T. 126 Jeon, D. 104, 107 Jeon, D. C. 104 Jeong, J. H. 133 Jerosch, K. 67 Jessup, A. T. 73, 112, 127 Jetten, M. 122 Jewett, S. 83 Ji, M. 153 Ji, R. 41, 122 Jiang, C. 108 Jiang, G. S. 59 Jiang, H. 79 Jiang, L. 85, 125 Jiang, L. Q. 125 Jiang, M. 81 Jiang, X. 55 Jiang, Y. L. 39 Jickells, T. 124, 144 Jickells, T. D. 124 Jin, H. 87 Jin, M. 40, 84 Jin, X. 52 Jing Zhang, J. 135 Jinping/Zhao, J. 68 Jo, Y. H. 69, 137 Jochem, F. J. 40, 156 Jochens, A. E. 154 Jochum, M. 113, 144 Johannesen, J. 113 Johannessen, O. M. 116 Johannessen, T. 98 Johansen, A. M. 54, 107 Johengen, T. 60 John, D. E. 112, 122 Johns, E. M. 50, 64 Johns, W. E. 69, 96, 101, 113, 144 Johnson, A. C. 93 Johnson, B. 75, 99 Johnson, B. M. 75 Johnson, C. 59, 85, 86, 134, 141 Johnson, C. G. 59 Johnson, C. N. 134 Johnson, E. A. 70 Johnson, E. R. 70 J Jaanus, A. 74 Jaap, W. C. 148 Jaccard, P. 43, 98 Jaccard, P. F. 98 Jachec, S. M. 62 Jackman, L. M. 114 Jackson, C. L. 110 Jackson, D. L. 153 Jackson, D. R. 92 Jackson, G. 40, 103 Jackson, J. L. 67 Jackson, K. L. 137 Jackson, L. 39, 43 Jackson, L. C. 43 Jackson, N. L. 67 Jackson, P. R. 102 Jackson, S. D. 73 Jackson, T. L. 89 Jacob, J. P. 96 Jacob, S. D. 109 Jacobs, G. 45, 87, 124 Jacobs, G. A. 45, 87, 124 Jacobs, J. 88, 147 Jacobs, J. M. 147 Jacobsen, H. P. 83 Jacobson, A. R. 94, 105 Jacobson, M. 138 Jacoby, C. A. 70, 92, 108 Jacqueline/Grebmeier, J. M. 68 JACQUIN, S. 62 Jadot, C. 53 Jaeger, J. M. 47 Jaffe, B. 115, 124 Jaffe, B. E. 115, 124 Jaffe, J. S. 67, 119 Jaffé, R. 40, 110 Jahncke, J. 83, 136 Jahnke, D. B. 93 Jahnke, R. A. 93, 125 Jai Kumar, M. 125 Jaimes, B. 43 Jain, A. 119 Jakobsen, H. H. 145 Jakobsen, T. 141 James, C. 91 Jampana, V. S. 111 Jan, S. 87, 99, 104 Janes, D. C. 97 Jang, K. 42 Jang, M. C. 132 Janicki, A. 128 Jankulak, M. 139 Janout, M. 42, 68 Janout, M. A. 42 Jansen, S. 53 Janssen, F. 120 Janssen, J. 82, 132 Janssen, J. J. 82 Janssen, P. 47 Janssen, T. T. 93 Janzen, C. 108, 116, 122 Janzen, C. D. 108, 116 Jaramillo, S. 93, 121 Jarosz, E. 99 Jarrett, J. N. 132 Jarvis, B. S. 47 Jaspers, C. 56 Jauhari, P. 74 168 Johnson, F. 153 Johnson, G. C. 49, 57, 118, 130 Johnson, G. E. 67 Johnson, H. L. 51, 101, 149 Johnson , H. P. 76 johnson, j. 95 Johnson, J. I. 106 Johnson, K. 49, 72, 110, 136, 154 Johnson, K. S. 49, 72, 110, 136 Johnson, K. W. 136 JOHNSON, M. 152 Johnson, M. 60, 83 Johnson, R. 39, 90, 104, 107, 109, 114, 128, 144, 154 Johnson, R. J. 39, 104, 109, 114, 144, 154 Johnson, R. R. 114 Johnson, S. 74, 127 Johnson, Z. 106 Johnson, Z. I. 106 Johnson-Roberson, M. 63, 140 Johnson-Robeson, M. K. 64 Johnston, A. 70 Johnston, G. E. 79 Johnston, N. M. 56 Johnston, S. 57, 113, 127 Jokiel, P. L. 152 Jolicoeur, J. L. 50 Jolliff, J. K. 59, 60, 72 Jollivet, D. 135 Jolly, M. T. 135 Jones, A. C. 138 Jones, B. 39, 74, 141, 142 Jones, B. H. 74, 141 Jones, B. M. 39 Jones, C. 72, 92, 121, 134, 145 Jones, C. A. 121 Jones, C. M. 134, 145 Jones, C. S. 72 Jones, D. 85 Jones, E. P. 86, 118, 149 Jones, H. 43 Jones, J. P. 88 Jones, M. B. 72 Jones, M. E. 136 Jones, M. S. 50 Jones, M. W. 151 Jones, N. L. 119 Jones, O. P. 63 Jones, P. E. 131 Jones, R. J. 45, 81, 110 Jones, R. P. 70, 71 Jones, S. J. 146 Jones, S. M. 103 Jones, W. 153 Jonsson, B. F. 100, 125 Jonsson, S. 149 Joo, W. 130 Joos, F. 49, 65, 97 Jordan, T. E. 50 Jorgenson, M. T. 55 Jorge R. Ortiz-Zayas, J. R. 52 Jorry, S. 47 JOSE, F. 137 Jose, F. 137 Jose Gomez-Valdes, J. 123, 136 Jouandet, M. 88 Jouanneau Jean-Marie, J. J. 54 Jouini, M. 70 Joyce, E. H. 120 Joyce, T. 101 Joyce, T. M. 101 Joye, M. J. 106 Joye, S. 95, 106, 129 Joye, S. B. 95, 129 Joyner, J. J. 59 Ju, S. 56 Juanes, J. A. 98 Meeting Program Jue, N. K. 76 Juhl, A. 55, 67, 79 Juhl, A. R. 79 Julien, K. 57 Jullion, L. 127 Jumars, P. 67, 79 Jumars, P. A. 79 Jumes, M. L. 79, 145 Jung, H. 52 Jung, K. T. 133 Jung, L. 102 Jungclaus, J. 102, 105 JUNG RAE/KIM, J. R. 60 Jurisa, J. 92, 99 Jurisa, J. T. 99 Juston, J. 73 Jutterström, S. 131 Juza, M. 146 K Kabiling, M. B. 124 Kading, T. J. 54 Kadko, D. 128, 144 Kadko, D. C. 128 Kaempf, J. 43 Kagimoto, T. 48, 131 Kahl, L. A. 60 Kahn, A. S. 49 Kahn, B. 142 Kahru, M. 49, 123, 135, 136 Kai-Chieh Cathy Yang, K. C. 104 Kaihatu, J. 82, 121 Kaihatu, J. M. 82 Kaiser, J. 49 Kaiser, K. 147 Kaitala, S. J. 74 Kaji, T. 137 Kakajiwala, M. 54 Kakinuma, T. 109, 150 Kalachikov, S. 55 Kalanetra, K. M. 66 Kallas, T. 122 Kalnay, E. 55 Kalogeropoulou, V. 49 Kaltenbacher, E. 63, 141 Kaltenberg, A. M. 145 Kamachi, M. 105, 109, 113 Kamenkovich, I. V. 113, 126, 146 Kamenkovich, V. M. 85 Kameyama, S. 90 Kaminsky, G. 48 Kamiya, H. 116, 118 Kamoshida, T. 48, 88 Kämpf, J. 70 Kamykowski, D. 92 Kanarska, Y. 109 Kandrashoff, M. 147 KANE, A. 53 Kane, J. 45, 122 Kane, T. L. 139 Kaneda, Y. 154 Kaneko, I. 131 Kang, D. 113 KANG, H. 50 Kang, H. 101 Kang, J. 80 Kang, S. 84, 136 Kang, S. H. 84 Kang, X. 55 Kantha, l. h. 113 Kanzow, T. 69, 94, 96, 101 Kaplan, A. 45, 57, 88, 113 Kaplan, D. M. 92, 133, 142, 148, 149 Kappa, J. 131 Kappes, M. A. 48 Kapur, A. 119 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Kara, A. B. 100, 153 kara, B. 101 Karaköylü, E. M. 119 Karl, D. 51, 124, 131, 154 Karl, D. M. 124, 131, 154 Karleskind, P. 104 Karnauskas, K. B. 78 Karnovsky, N. J. 68 Karouna-Renier, N. 146 Karp-Boss, L. 67, 71, 75, 79, 89 Karsh, K. L. 79 Karspeck, A. R. 88 Karstensen, J. 86, 116, 118, 145 Kashino, Y. 105, 107 Kasl, E. L. 145 Kasper, J. 85 Kasper, J. L. 85 Kasten, E. P. 130 Kastler, J. A. 102 Kastner, R. 60 Katagiri, M. 69 Kataoka, F. 138 Kato, T. 105 Kato, Y. 137 Katsnelson, B. G. 138 Katsumata, K. 131 Kattawar, G. W. 63 Kattner, G. 86 Katz, B. 66 Katz, J. 60, 67, 111, 119 Kauffman, P. 73 Kaufman, L. 152 Kaufmann, M. J. 54 Kaufmann, R. S. 49 Kavanaugh, M. T. 74, 111 Kawaguchi, Y. 89, 113 Kawai, Y. 131 Kawakami, H. 129 Kawamiya, M. 105 Kawamura, H. 54, 137 Kawamura, K. 79 Kawamura, Y. 113 Kawano, T. 131 Kawasaki, N. 104 Kawase, M. 99, 130, 133 Keafer, B. A. 45, 47 Kearney, K. A. 112 Kearns, E. J. 50, 64 Keaten, R. 100 Keay, K. 129 Kedra, M. 121 Keegstra, P. 59 Keeler, R. N. 80 Keen, T. R. 134 Keene, W. C. 70 Keener-Chavis, P. 102 Keenlyside, N. 39, 102, 105 Keesee, E. E. 147 Keesee, E. J. 125 Kehelpannala, K. V. 137 Kehelpannala, K. V. W. 137 Keiser, K. R. 72 Keith, D. J. 115 Keith, E. O. 64 Kelble, C. R. 50, 64 Kelleher, K. 71 Keller, B. D. 50, 51 Keller, S. R. 92 Kelley, D. 109, 138, 154 Kelley, D. E. 109 Kelley, D. S. 138 Kelley, J. J. 133 Kelly, A. E. 94 Kelly, B. 76 Kelly, K. 101, 108, 146 Kelly, K. A. 101, 146 Kelly, M. 154 Kelly, S. 80, 92 Kelly, S. M. 80 Kelsey, R. H. 41, 147 Kemp, P. F. 75 Kemp, W. M. 79 Kempa, M. 81 Kempes, C. 95 Kempler, S. 102 Kendall, B. E. 102 Kenna, T. 69, 134 Kenna, T. C. 69 Kennedy, J. J. 153 Kenney, R. D. 45 Kennish, M. J. 129 Kenyon, K. E. 57 Keppenne, C. 55, 96 Keppenne, C. L. 96 Kerfoot, J. 92, 154 Kerfoot, J. M. 154 Kerkhof, L. J. 112 Kermani, A. 52 Kérouel, R. 155 Kerr, J. 46 Kershner, J. 66 Kessler, K. 150, 151 Kessler, W. S. 43, 119 Keteles, K. 42 Kettle, H. 45, 111 Kettle, H. R. 45 Key, R. M. 94, 105, 118 Khalili, A. 120 Khan, A. S. 52 Kharbanda, M. 73 Khatiwala, S. 53, 63, 118 Khelif, D. 154 Khim, B. K. 60 Kieber, D. 58, 70, 71, 79, 150 Kieber, D. J. 58, 70, 150 Kieber, R. J. 71, 155 Kieke, D. 123, 127 Kiene, R. 79, 150 Kiene, R. P. 150 Kikas, V. 62 Kilbourne, B. F. 111 Kilcher, L. 126, 142 Kilcher, L. F. 142 Kilpatrick, K. A. 140 Kim, B. C. 52 Kim, B. O. 115 KIM, C. 88 Kim, C. 52, 55 Kim, C. S. 55 Kim, E. 104, 107 Kim, G. 115 Kim, H. 55, 68, 73, 116, 129, 136 KIM, H. C. 90 KIM, H. S. 60 Kim, J. 139 Kim, J. Y. 139 Kim, K. 85, 133 Kim, K. J. 133 Kim, M. 115 Kim, S. 55, 94, 148, 149 Kim, S. B. 149 Kim , S. I. 88 KIM, T. 111, 117 KIM, T. W. 111 Kim, W. 56, 132 Kim, W. S. 132 Kim, Y. 55, 80, 85, 121, 133 Kim, Y. B. 85 Kim , Y. H. 88, 121 Kim, Y. N. 80 Kim, Y. T. 133 Kimio Hanawa, K. 113 Kimmel, D. 155, 156 Kimmel, D. G. 156 Kimura, N. 125 Kincaid, C. R. 114 169 Kindle, J. 59, 72 Kindle, J. C. 59, 72 kindle, J. C. 100 Kineke, G. C. 127 King, A. L. 136 King, B. A. 104, 127, 144 King, D. 138 King, E. L. 132 King, G. R. 76 King, N. J. 103 King, S. 85 King, T. M. 76 King, W. 137 Kingsley, G. 98 Kinkade, , C. 59 Kinkade, D. B. 131 Kinlan, B. P. 148 Kirby, J. 82, 119 Kirby, J. T. 82 Kirchgeßner, N. 53 Kirchner, K. 101 Kirillov, S. A. 116 Kirincich, A. R. 142, 155 Kirkpatrick, B. 47, 85 Kirkpatrick, B. A. 85 Kirkpatrick, G. 47, 65, 92 Kirkpatrick, G. J. 92 Kirkpatrick, J. B. 106 Kirtman, B. P. 105 Kiselkova, V. 155 Kish, J. 46 Kish, S. A. 123 Kishi, M. J. 53 Kishi, Y. 78 KITADE, Y. 112 Kitade, Y. 80, 113 Kitade Yujiro, Y. 111 Kitagawa, T. 116 Kitasei, S. 83 Kitazato, H. 103 Kitidis, V. 110 Kiyomatsu, K. 89 Kiyosawa/Hiroshi, H. 119 Kizu, S. 56, 107 Kjellerup, B. 65 Klaeschen, D. 103, 143 Klaus, A. D. 76 Klein, B. 127 Klein, P. 42, 43, 57, 119, 126 Klein, S. 120 Kleiss, J. K. 63 Kleiss, J. M. 99 Klepp, C. 145 Kletou, D. 50 Kleypas, J. 87, 152 Kleypas, J. A. 152 Kliem, N. 101 Klimov, D. 66 Klinck, J. M. 41, 56, 111, 134 klinck, J. M. 43 Kline, T. C. 142 Kling, H. J. 88 Klingelhoefer, F. 103 Klinger, B. 101 Klinger, T. 66 Klocke, D. 145 Klump, J. V. 61 Klump, V. 93 Klymak, J. 91, 92, 103, 113 Klymak, J. M. 91, 92, 103 Knap, A. H. 109, 114, 144, 154 Knapp, A. N. 124 Kneeland, J. 152 Knicker, H. 151 Knickmeier, K. 41 Knight, P. J. 154 Knight, W. 137 Kniskern, T. A. 139 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Kniss, C. D. 84 Knoery, J. 54 Knowlton, A. R. 110 Knowlton, C. W. 98 Knowlton, N. 103 Knudsen, P. 113, 145 Knuijt, A. 114 Ko, D. 46, 61, 104, 138, 150 Ko, D. S. 46, 61, 104, 150 KOBASHI, D. 137 Kobashi, D. 137 Kobashi, F. 52 Kobayashi, N. 99 Koblížek, M. 40 Kocak, H. 47 Koch, A. O. 87 Koch, G. 70 Koch, M. S. 50 Koch, S. E. 134 Kodama, T. 110 Koegler, J. 141 Koertzinger, A. 98, 145, 154 Kofoed-Hansen, H. 63 Kohler, D. 74 Kohut, J. 44, 85, 86, 92, 99, 114, 154 Kohut, J. T. 44, 85, 99, 114, 154 Kohut, O. 92 Koike, I. 90, 152 Koji Shimada, K. S. 121 Kokubu, Y. 80 Kolar, R. L. 101 Kolasa, K. 51 Kolber, Z. 66, 67 Kolber, Z. S. 66 Kolker, A. S. 123 Kollars, N. M. 81 Kolosovich, A. 56 Koltermann, K. P. 127 Kolts, J. M. 69 Komada, T. 107 Komatsu, K. 48, 99 Komick, N. 62 Komori, N. 119 Konda, M. 52, 57 Kono, S. 46 Konotchick, T. H. 134 Konovalov, S. K. 122 Kontar, Y. A. 44 Koprivnjak, J. F. 151 Korablev, A. A. 116 Korn, P. 66 Kornblueh, L. 102 Korneev, O. 98 Korobkin, M. 46 Korosov, A. A. 69 Korty, R. L. 107 Körtzinger, A. 116 Koseff, J. R. 56, 73, 83, 120, 150 Koskelo, A. I. 117 Koslow, J. A. 135 Kosobokova, K. N. 121 Kosro, P. M. 87, 91, 142 Kostadinov, T. S. 59, 92, 129 Kostelich, E. J. 48 Köster, M. 145 Kostka, J. E. 40, 54, 79, 120 Kostka, W. 149 Kotun, K. 50 Kouketsu, S. 131 Kourafalou, V. 50, 101, 133 Kourafalou, V. H. 50, 101, 133 Kourosh, C. 65, 145 Kovac, N. 118 Kovach, R. M. 96 Kowalik, Z. 83, 133, 137 Kowarzyk, J. 80 Koyne, C. 71 Kozlowski, W. 56, 79, 84, 90 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Kozlowski, W. A. 56, 79, 90 Kozyr, A. 131 Kraatz, L. M. 85, 115 Krabbenhoft, D. P. 64, 155 Kraegefsky, S. 53 Kraeuter, J. N. 111 Krahmann, G. 103, 143 Kramer, B. 47 KRAMER, P. 152 Kratzer, C. 62 Krause, J. W. 76 Kreis, Jr., R. G. 111 Krembs, C. 67, 79 Kremer, J. N. 115, 129 Kremeur, A. S. 145 Krentz, S. 137 Kress, N. 154 Krezel, A. 62 Krishfield, R. 48, 67, 80, 89, 152 Krishfield, R. A. 80, 89 Krishnamurthy, A. 40 Kristiansen, T. 41 Kristov, V. 80 Kroeck, M. A. 138 Kroeger, K. 120, 135 Kroeger, K. D. 120 Kroeze, C. 125 Kroll, S. 96 Kropuenske, L. R. 79 Krost, P. 120 Krueger, I. H. 141 Krug, P. J. 76 Krumhardt, K. 39 Krumholz, J. S. 53 Krusche, A. K. 97 Krusche, A. V. 63 Krylova, E. M. 103 Krynen, D. 55, 95, 96 Krynen, D. G. 55, 95 KRYSTA, M. 48 Krysta, M. 45 Ku, T. 55 Kubaryk, J. M. 78 Kudela, R. 42, 71, 73, 74, 92, 128 Kudela, R. M. 42, 71, 73, 74, 92, 128 Kudo, I. 119 Kuebel Cervantes, B. T. 127 Kuehl, S. A. 47, 92, 94, 139 Kuepper, F. C. 61 Kuffner, I. B. 152 Kuhn-Hines, A. 115 Kujawinski, E. B. 40, 59, 79, 81, 147 Kukovec, K. 118 Kukulka, T. 99 Kulan, N. 149 Kulis, P. S. 112 Kulka, D. W. 45 Kulp, M. 123 Kulp, M. A. 123 Kuma, K. 136 Kumamoto, Y. 131 Kumar, A. 62, 153 Kunze, E. 43, 67, 80, 92, 113 Kunze, E. L. 92 Kuo, C. 91 Kuo, J. 85 Kuo, L. J. 147 Kuo, w. 54 Kurapov, A. L. 45, 72, 87, 142 Kurien, S. 112 Kuriyama, M. 94 Kurogi, M. 112 Kurtz, A. C. 75 Kurtz, J. 60, 80, 117, 137 Kurtz, J. C. 60, 80, 117, 137 Kustka, A. B. 76 Kutser, T. 74 Kutsuwada, K. 56 Kuvaldina, N. 80 Kuwae, T. 121 Kuwahara, V. S. 68 Kuwata, A. 119 Kuypers, M. 47, 79, 120, 122 Kuypers, M. M. 120 Kuzmic, M. 140 Kveven, A. 90 Kwasniewski, S. 68, 126 Kwok, R. 105, 152 Kwon, E. 105 Kwon, Y. 39 L Laane, R. W. 114 Labiosa, R. G. 136 Labiosa, W. B. 134 LaBonté , A. 76 LaBrecque, J. 96, 114 LaBRECQUE, J. J. 107 LaBrecque, J. J. 114 LaCasce, J. H. 126 LaCasce, J. L. 113 Lachkar, Z. 125 Lacroix, G. 72 Lacy, J. R. 61 Ladner, S. 46, 61, 85, 127, 155 Ladner, S. D. 46, 61, 155 Ladner, S. L. 85 Laferriere, A. M. 102 Lagerloef, G. 109, 137, 149 Lagerloef, G. S. 109, 149 LAGLERA, L. M. 40 Lahet, F. 62 Lai, J. 106 Lai, Z. 99 Lake, S. J. 85 Lakshmi, V. 46 Lalande, C. 127 Lam, P. 72, 122 Lam, P. J. 72 Lamarque, J. F. 65 Lamb, J. 42 Lamb, K. 53, 138 Lamb, K. A. 53 Lambert, J. L. 90 Lamberton, N. 46 Lamborg, C. H. 64, 107, 155 Lamouroux, J. 91 Lampitt, R. 49, 68, 145, 151 Lampitt, R. S. 49, 68, 145, 151 Lance, M. 142 Lance, V. 106 Lance, V. P. 106 Lancelot, C. 72 Lander, H. 63 Landing, W. M. 39, 40, 64 Landis, E. D. 46 Landolfi, A. 124 Landry, B. J. 68 Landry, M. R. 123, 124, 135, 136, 154 Lane, T. G. 136 Lane-Serff, G. F. 44 Lanerolle, L. 46, 72 Lanerolle, L. W. 72 Lang, G. A. 71 lang, J. C. 74 Langdon, C. 66, 78, 139 Langdon, C. J. 78 Langerwisch, F. 62 Langlais, C. 71 Langlois, R. J. 110 Langone, L. 94 Lansard, B. 66 Lantoine, F. 66 Lanzoni, S. 98 170 Lapeyre, G. 42 Lara, J. L. 41 Large, W. G. 43, 56, 146, 149 Largier, J. L. 92, 102, 123, 141, 142, 148, 149, 155 Larkin, K. E. 145 LaRoche, J. 110 Larsen, A. 138 Larsen, C. F. 87 Larsen, J. 41, 88, 138 Larsen, J. B. 138 Larsen, J. L. 41 Larsen, L. G. 73 Larsen, M. C. 91 Larson, N. G. 108, 116, 141 Larson, R. A. 91 Laruelle, G. 76, 81, 86 Laruelle, G. G. 76, 86 Laschet, M. 120, 132, 133 Laschet, M. F. 132 Lasley, R. 132, 145 Lasley, R. S. 145 Latarius, K. 86, 149 Latif, M. 101, 102, 105 Latimer, J. S. 55 Latz, M. 65, 67 Latz, M. I. 67 Lau, B. 64 Laudon, H. 55 Lauffenburger, N. E. 81 Laurel, B. J. 128 laurel, B. J. 89 Laurent, L. 150 Laurs, M. 46 Laursen, S. 75 Lauvernet, C. 101 Laux, A. 63 Lavagnino, C. A. 136 Lavelle, J. W. 102 Lavender, K. L. 83 Lavender, S. J. 50, 74 Lavery, A. 80, 150 Lavery, A. C. 150 Lavik, G. 47, 79, 120, 122 Lavrado, H. P. 103 Lavrentyev, P. J. 156 Law, B. 121, 142 Law, B. A. 121 Law, C. S. 70, 110, 124 Laws, K. E. 135 Lawson, G. L. 48 Lawson, P. W. 42 Layton, B. A. 120 Lazarus, S. M. 46 Lazure, P. 135 Lbby, S. 49 Lea, C. E. 83 Lea, D. 101, 122 Leach, H. 90 Leadbetter, S. J. 79 Leaman, K. D. 48, 58 Leard, C. S. 98 LEATHERMAN, S. 115 Lebaron, P. 40 Lebedev, K. V. 95 Leben, R. R. 58, 91, 138 Leblanc, K. 40 Lebon, G. T. 62 Lebonitte, J. T. 62 Le Borgne, P. 111, 153 Lebrato, M. 66 Leckie, R. M. 76, 90 Lecroart, A. 141 Leder, N. 127 Ledesma, J. 50 Ledwell, J. R. 69, 75, 102 Lee, C. 43, 57, 65, 91, 106, 115, 123, 146, 147, 150, 154 Meeting Program Lee, C. K. 115 Lee, C. M. 43, 57, 91, 106, 123, 150 Lee, E. 133 Lee, G. 115 Lee, H. 91 Lee, I. 85 LEE, J. 60, 114 Lee, J. 52, 72, 97, 114 LEE, J. B. 60 Lee, J. H. 52 Lee, J. M. 72 Lee, K. 63, 131, 135 Lee, K. D. 135 Lee, K. M. 63 Lee, M. 129 Lee, R. 117, 125, 151 Lee, R. F. 151 Lee, S. 39, 84, 105 Lee, S. H. 84 Lee, S. K. 39 Lee, T. 50, 64, 94, 105 Lee, T. N. 50, 64 Lee, W. 133 Lee, Y. J. 117 Lee, Z. 46, 70, 72, 74, 85, 129 Lee, Z. P. 46, 72, 74, 85 Lees, D. C. 84, 115 Lefebvre, K. A. 47 LeFevre, A. J. 106 Lefèvre, N. 95, 98 Legault, K. R. 70 Legendre, L. 130 Le Gentil, S. 57 Legg, S. 43, 92 Leggett, S. R. 61 Lehahn, Y. 145 Le Henaff, M. 72 Lehman, P. W. 56 Lehmann, M. 80, 87, 129, 140 Lehmann, M. F. 80, 129 Lehmann, M. K. 87 Lehner, S. 85 Lehrter, J. 60, 80, 81, 117 LEHRTER, J. C. 81 Lehrter, J. C. 60, 80, 81, 117 Leichter, J. J. 92, 116, 142, 150 Leight, A. K. 147 Leinen, M. 76 Leinheiser, A. 132 Leinweber, A. 114 Leitch, D. 155 Leithold, E. L. 47, 75 Lelong, P. 43, 88 Leloup, J. 120 Lembke, C. E. 87 Lemus, J. 88 Lenaker, P. L. 108 Lenes, J. M. 60 Lengaigne, M. 120 Lenihan, H. S. 93 Lenington, M. J. 54 Lenn, Y. D. 43 Lentz, S. 70, 142, 153, 155 Lentz, S. J. 70, 142, 155 Lenz, P. H. 145 LEON, J. G. 52 Leon, L. K. 65 Leonard, L. A. 73 Leong, D. N. 80 Leong, S. 131, 132 Leong, S. C. 131, 132 Leonov, D. A. 133 LEOPOLD, E. 156 Leopold, E. 117 Leptoukh, G. 102 Le Quéré, C. 95 Lerberg, E. W. 94 Lerczak, J. A. 112, 121 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Lerman, A. 66 Lermon, M. 127 Lermusiaux, P. F. 86, 96 lescinski, j. 99 Le Sommer, J. 70, 126 Lessard, E. 42, 73, 93, 123, 128, 142 Lessard, E. J. 42, 73, 128, 142 Lessard-Pilon, S. 106 Lessard-Pilon, S. A. 106 Lessmann, J. 117 Lester, S. 148 Lesworth, T. 124, 144 Letelier, R. M. 109, 111, 154 Lethaby, P. 114 Lettenmaier, D. 52, 91 Lettenmaier, D. P. 52, 91 Leuliette, E. W. 145 Leung, P. T. 80 Levermann, A. 149 Levin, L. A. 89, 102, 103, 117 Le Vine, D. M. 109 Levine, E. R. 60 Levine, M. 91, 127, 141 Levine, M. D. 91, 127 Levine, N. M. 107, 154 Levy, M. 42, 104, 145 Lévy, M. 69, 70 Lewandowska, A. 148 Lewandowski, Z. 72 Lewis, C. V. 42 Lewis, E. J. 147 Lewis, M. 54 Lewitus, A. J. 59 Leynaert, A. 81 Lherminier, P. 86 Li, C. 40, 99, 101 Li, C. C. 99 Li, H. 69, 146 Li, H. P. 146 Li, J. 42 Li, L. 81, 141 LI, M. 121, 133 Li, M. 66, 86, 115, 121 Li, M. Z. 115 Li, P. 72, 75, 113 LI, Q. 109 Li, X. 52, 120, 122, 125, 131, 153 Li, X. N. 122, 131 LI, Y. 121 Li, Y. 51 Li, Z. 48, 72, 113, 135, 140 Liang, W. D. 86 Liao, C. W. 138 Liao, H. 134 Liao, Q. 113 Liblik, T. 80 Lichtenwalner, C. S. 44 Liefer, J. 70, 71, 81, 141 Liefer, J. D. 70, 71, 141 Lien, R. C. 150 Lightbody, A. F. 61 Liles, M. 111 Lilly, J. 43, 149 Lilly, J. M. 43, 149 Lillycrop, W. J. 82 Lima, F. P. 46, 128, 146 Lima, I. 65, 105 Lima, I. D. 105 Limm, M. 51 Lin, C. 59, 99 Lin, C. Y. 59 Lin, I. 69, 107 Lin, I. I. 107 Lin, L. X. 144 Lin, S. 39, 71 Lin, X. 99, 108 Lin/Xiaopei, L. X. 57 Lindahl, O. 89 Lindehoff, E. 71 Lindell, K. 138 Linden, P. F. 128 lindner, b. l. 95 Lindquist, K. 148 Lindquist, N. 102, 103 Lindquist, N. L. 103 Lindsay, K. T. 108 Link, J. S. 98 Linkswiler, M. 85, 142 Linkswiler, M. A. 85 Linneman, S. 90 Linville, A. 64, 72 Lipa, B. J. 135, 148 Lipcius, R. N. 117 Lipphardt, B. L. 85 Lippiatt, S. M. 107 Lippmann, T. C. 82, 119 Lips, I. 62, 80 Lips, U. 62, 80 Lipschultz, F. 124, 152 Lipscomb, J. 55 Liss, P. S. 124 List, J. H. 48, 75 Litaker, R. W. 47 LIU, A. 137 Liu, B. 120 Liu, C. 146 Liu, G. 65, 110, 125, 152 Liu, H. 39, 71, 112, 119, 129, 135 Liu, J. T. 85 Liu, K. J. 146 Liu, L. 55, 116 Liu, M. 138 Liu, Q. 69 Liu, S. M. 120 Liu, W. T. 69, 137 Liu, X. 97, 141 LIU, Y. 133 Liu, Y. 85, 110, 121, 133, 141 Liu, Y. S. 85 Liu, Z. 80, 146, 147 Livermont, E. A. 86 Lizotte, M. 60 Llewellyn-Jones, D. 153 Llewellyn-Jones, D. T. 153 LLinás, O. 53 Llopiz, J. K. 48, 145 Llovel, W. 105 Lloyd, K. G. 134 Lloyd, K. H. 75 Lloyd, R. 98 Lobitz, B. 46 Lochte, K. 53 Lockwood, D. E. 62 Lockwood, M. E. 55 Loder, J. W. 123 Lodge, A. 41 Loeb, V. J. 41 Loftis, D. 136 Logan, A. 67 Logan, J. B. 53, 91, 130 Logan, J. M. 48 Logutov, O. G. 86 Logvinov, E. 87 Loh, A. N. 58, 139 Lohan, M. C. 39, 66, 72, 128 Loher, D. 125 Lohrenz, S. E. 63, 92 Loick, N. 110 LOISEL, H. 132 Loiselle, S. A. 100 Lojkovic, M. 102 Loman Chiodo, K. M. 90 Lomas, D. 114, 124 Lomas, D. A. 114 Lomas, M. W. 40, 54, 76, 107, 114, 144, 152, 154 171 Lombard, A. 105 Lombrozo, A. 56 Londry, K. 88 Long, C. E. 99 Long, D. G. 137 Long, J. W. 82, 97 Long, M. 70, 93 Long, M. S. 70 Long, R. 135, 148 Long, R. M. 148 Long, W. 46, 72 Longnecker, K. 40, 81, 147 Longval, B. A. 117 Longworth, H. R. 104 Lonhart, S. I. 39 Lonin, S. 74 Lonsdale, M. 130 Loos, E. A. 143 Lopes, R. T. 94 Lopez, J. 57, 112 Lopez, J. M. 57 López, J. M. 97, 112 López, P. 53 Lopez, R. 57 López, R. 97 López-Cortés, D. J. 123 Lopez-Duarte, P. C. 128 Lopez-Gasca, M. 131 Lopez Gasca, M. 108 Lorence, E. A. 140 Lorens, R. B. 95 Lorenzoni, L. 76, 108, 122, 154 Lorke , A. 99 Losada, I. J. 41 Losch, M. 87 Losekoot, M. 78 Loseto, L. 155 Lott, C. 142 Lott, D. E. 144 Lott III, D. E. 107 Lou, J. Y. 109 Lou, S. 65, 145 Loucaides, S. 66 Louchard, E. M. 135 LOUCHOUARN, P. 156 Louchouarn, P. 117, 147 Louden, K. E. 103 Lough, J. M. 152 Lough, R. G. 41, 45 Lovejoy , C. 121 Loveland, B. 155, 156 Lovenduski, N. S. 66, 118 Lovvorn, J. R. 68, 69, 100 Lowe, R. J. 93, 119 Lozano, C. 55, 116 Lozier, M. S. 41, 79, 116, 127, 128, 136, 144 Lozier, S. 58 Lozovatsky, I. D. 80 Lu, Z. 91 Lubchenco, J. 142, 155 Lubunski, E. A. 69 Lucas, M. 86, 151 Lucas, M. A. 86 Lucasik, G. 46, 61 Lucotte, M. 96 LUDWIG, W. 92 Lueck, R. G. 80 Luengen, A. C. 117 Luettich, R. 63, 71, 101, 102 Luettich, R. A. 63, 101, 102 Luis Felipe ARTIGAS, L. F. 49 Lukas, R. 114, 154 Lukovich, J. V. 48 Lumpkin, C. 68 LUMPKIN, C. F. 91 Lumpkin, R. 42, 43, 75 Lunau, M. 65, 78 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Lund, B. 90, 109, 135, 150 Lund, J. M. 81, 83, 93 Lundberg, P. 86 Lunde, B. N. 55, 96 Lundkvist, M. 134 Lundsten, L. 117 Luneva, M. V. 84, 126 Luo, J. 50, 56 Luo, J. J. 56 Luo, Y. 111 Luthcke, S. B. 152 Luther, D. S. 91, 153 Luther, G. W. 64, 70, 116, 122, 134 Luther, M. E. 44, 60, 64, 72 Luther III, G. W. 133 Lutjeharms, J. 126 Lutz, R. A. 134 Luznik, L. 111, 119 Lwiza, K. M. 117 Lykousis, V. 154 Lyman, J. M. 130 Lynaugh, L. 136 Lynch, D. D. 47 Lynch, D. R. 44, 111 Lynch, J. F. 150 Lynn, L. A. 55 Lyon, G. S. 94 Lyon, P. E. 70, 85 Lyons, G. C. 114 Lyons, M. M. 61 Lyons, W. B. 75 Lysiak, N. S. 110 M M. Gupta, G. V. 125 Ma, B. 109, 150 Ma, B. B. 109 Ma, C. 144 MA, G. 61, 99 Ma, M. 81 Ma, Y. 127 Maas, A. 66, 78 Maas, A. E. 78 Maben, J. R. 70 Macaluso, A. 109, 150, 151 Macaluso, A. L. 150, 151 MacCready, P. 42, 70, 73, 84, 121, 128 Macdonald , A. 63 Macdonald, A. M. 105 MacDonald, D. G. 121, 126 MacDonald, I. R. 95, 106, 121 MacDonald, N. J. 93 Macdonald, R. 155 Mace, P. 41 MacFadyen, A. 73 Machado, W. T. 53 Machida, R. J. 94 MacIntyre, H. 59, 70, 71, 72, 81, 141, 153 MacIntyre, H. L. 71, 72, 141 MacIntyre, S. 61 Mackensen, A. 89 Mackenzie, B. 151 MacKenzie, F. T. 65 Mackenzie, F. T. 66, 78, 152, 154 Mackey, K. R. 131 MacKinnon, J. 91 MacKinnon, J. A. 91 Macko, S. A. 95, 106 Macleod, C. K. 120 MacMahan, J. H. 82 Macoy, V. 84 MacVean, L. J. 74 MacWilliams, M. L. 136 Madden, C. J. 50 Maddux, T. B. 119 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Madec, G. 126 Madhu, N. V. 125 Madhusudhana Gupta , G. V. 125 Madin, L. 89, 117, 154 Madin, L. P. 89, 154 Madison, A. S. 116 Madran, M. 120 Madry, S. L. 80 Madsen, K. S. 87 Maeda , M. 131, 132 Maeda, N. 78, 114 Maeda, Y. 115 Maenner, S. 65 MAES, C. 62 Maes , C. 107 Magaldi, M. G. 97 Magi, M. 114 Mahadevan, A. 69, 74, 87, 98, 100, 125 Mahaffey, C. 124, 144 Mahan, S. 139 Mahdon, R. 72 Maher, W. A. 76 Mahon, I. 63 Mahowald, N. 40, 65 Maie, N. 110 Maier, A. 49 Maier, D. 82 Maier, K. L. 100 Maier-Reimer, E. 65 Mainelli, M. 137 Mainsant, G. 96 Maiti, K. 76 Majzlik, E. M. 100 Makinen, C. P. 85, 132, 142 Makino, M. 132 Malanotte-Rizzoli, P. 72 Maldonado, E. 65, 67 Maldonado, E. M. 67 Malej, A. 133 Malhotra, A. 99 Malkiel, E. 67 Malkin, E. M. 47 Mallela, J. 70 Mallinson, D. J. 121, 139 Malone, T. C. 96 Maloy, C. J. 146 Maltrud, M. 42, 84, 86, 112, 113, 126 Maltrud, M. E. 42, 112, 113, 126 Manduca, R. 147 Manganini, S. J. 67, 125 Mangin, A. H. 74 Manizza, M. 66 Manley, S. L. 59, 141 Mann, E. 40, 54 Mann, E. L. 40, 54 Mann, M. 66 Mann, P. 137 Manning, C. A. 45, 110 Manning, J. P. 45 Mannino, A. 111 Manov, D. V. 60 Mansfield, N. 90 Mantua, N. 46 Mantua, N. J. 46 Manzano-Sarabia, M. 123, 135 Manzano-Sarabia, M. M. 135 Manzello, D. 139 Mao, J. 140, 147 Maranger, R. 80, 129 Maranhao, M. 54 Marani, M. 98 Marbà, N. 58 Marcano-Rivas, A. S. 62 Marchese, P. 65 Marchesiello, P. 107 Marchetti, A. 106 Marchi, A. 128 MARCOVICH, M. 140 Marcus, N. H. 143 MARGELOWSKY, G. R. 82 Margolina, T. 113 Margvelashvili, N. 46 Mariano, A. 44, 45, 55, 113, 124 Mariano, A. J. 44, 45, 55, 113 Mariette, J. 141 Marinelli, R. L. 120 Maring, H. 70 Marin III, R. 153 Maritorena, S. 39, 129 Mark Moline, M. A. 141 Marohl, R. L. 40 Marotzke, J. 66, 69, 96, 101, 105 Marquette, C. 109 Marriner, A. 124 Marron, C. A. 58 Marsaleix, P. 72 Marsay, C. M. 39, 66 Marsh, A. G. 65 Marsh, R. 87 Marshak, J. 96 Marshall, D. P. 51, 54, 80, 101, 126 Marshall, F. E. 50 Marshall, H. G. 59, 71, 90 Marshall, J. 42, 43, 127, 128 Marshall, J. C. 43 Marsouin, A. 153 Marsset, B. 103 Marston, M. F. 138 Martens, C. S. 96, 102, 103 Martin, A. P. 97, 124 Martin, B. T. 72 Martin, J. 40, 90, 91, 107, 146 Martin, J. B. 90 Martin, J. P. 91 Martin, M. 44, 75, 98, 102 Martin, M. J. 98 Martin, P. 72, 96, 104, 113, 127, 138 Martin, P. J. 96, 104, 127 Martin, W. R. 72 Martinez, C. 102 Martinez, E. 145 Martínez-López, B. 86 Martinez-Pedraja, J. 113, 135, 148 MARTINEZ-RIVERA, E. 64 Martinez-Rivera, N. 55 Martinez Arbizu, P. 49 Martinez Avellaneda, N. 44 Martini, K. I. 80, 92 Martino-Cardona, D. M. 55 Martinolich, P. M. 61, 70, 85, 155 Martinson, D. 79, 84 Martinson, D. G. 79 Martynov, O. V. 129 Martz, T. R. 49 Maruiz Marrero, M. 107 Mary, I. 40 Masahisa/Kubota, K. 57 Maschwitz, G. 149 Mask, A. C. 86 Maslowski, W. 48, 83 Mason, A. Z. 141 Mason, B. 66 Mason, C. T. 110 Mason, E. 54, 55 Mason, R. 54, 106, 155 Mason, R. P. 54, 155 Masque, P. 76 Masqué, P. 44, 107 Massana, R. 40 Masserini, R. T. 60 Masson, S. 56 Masterson, J. P. 135 Masuda, A. 148 Masumoto, Y. 52 Mata, M. M. 83 Mate, B. R. 49 172 Mateos-Jasso, A. 86, 87 Mather, R. L. 104, 144 Mathieu, P. 77 Mathis, J. T. 69 Matondkar, S. G. 50 Matrai, P. 79, 145 Matrui, E. M. 140 Matsui, Y. 152 Matsumoto, K. 84, 105, 129 Matsumoto, S. 105, 109 Matsumura, Y. 58 Matsuno, T. 105 Matsuura, H. 94 MATSUYAMA, M. 112 Matsuyama Masaji , M. 111 Matt, S. 58 Mattern, J. 111 Matthews, D. K. 113 Matthews, J. P. 84 MATTOCKS, C. A. 95 Maul, G. A. 93 Mauritzen, C. 123 Mawji, E. 40 Maximenko, N. 42, 95 Maximenko, N. A. 95 Maxwell, A. R. 70 Maxwell, C. 62 May, D. 124, 140 May, D. A. 140 May, N. 155 May, P. 101, 127 May, P. W. 101 Mayer, A. 44 Mayer, L. M. 59, 71 Mayo, C. 45 Mayo, C. A. 45 Mayo, M. 67, 139 Mayorga, E. 125 Maza, M. A. 74 Maze, G. 127, 128 Mazloff, M. 127 McCabe, R. 128 McCabe, R. M. 128 McCammon, M. 88 McCartney, M. S. 52 McClain, C. R. 81 McClean, J. 42, 43, 86, 108, 113, 127, 146 McClean, J. L. 42, 86, 108, 113, 127 McClelland, C. 126 McClelland, J. 66, 122 McClelland, J. W. 122 McCobb, T. D. 135 McConaugha, C. S. 90 McConnell, M. C. 122 McCorkle, D. C. 65, 78, 89 McCormick, B. 62 McCormick, M. J. 47 McCreary, J. P. 42, 144 McCreedy, C. 42 McDaniel, L. D. 122 McDonagh, E. 104, 118, 144, 145 McDonagh, E. L. 104, 144 McDonald, B. 49, 142 McDonald, C. 97, 103, 125 McDonald, C. P. 97, 125 McDonald, N. R. 70 McDonald, P. S. 81 McDonnell, J. 44, 97 McDonnell, J. D. 44, 97 McDonough, W. F. 94 McDougall, C. A. 44 MCDOUGALL, K. 156 McDougall, K. 117 McDowell, W. H. 100 McEliece, R. 146 McElroy, K. 79 McElwee, G. T. 75 Meeting Program McEwen, R. 96 McFadden, L. 68 McFadden, M. A. 139 McFarland, M. 83, 93 McGann, C. 96 McGill, P. R. 49 McGillicuddy, D. 39, 44, 45, 47, 69, 104, 111, 154 McGillicuddy, D. J. 39, 44, 45, 47, 69, 104, 111 McGillis, W. 45, 55, 61, 112 McGillis, W. R. 45, 61, 112 McGinnis, T. M. 153 McGowan, J. 42, 73 McGowan, J. A. 42 McGuiness, T. 154 McGuinness, L. M. 112 McGuinness, L. R. 112 McIntyre, M. 72 Mckee, B. A. 66 McKee, D. 61 McKee, G. 147 McKee, G. A. 147 Mckenzie, B. D. 140 McKindsey, C. W. 120 McKinley, G. 104, 105, 125, 154 McKinley, G. A. 104, 105, 154 McKinley, R. S. 103 McKinney, R. 146 McKnight, D. M. 59, 71, 115 McLaughlin, F. 48, 88, 126 McLaughlin, F. A. 126 McLaughlin, S. M. 147 McLellan, S. L. 47, 61 McLeod, P. 144 McMahon, K. W. 56 McManus, J. 72, 89, 129 McManus, J. F. 89 McManus, M. A. 83, 93, 141, 154 McManus, M. M. 72 McMillan, P. 89, 102 McNamara, D. E. 115 McNeill, K. 51 McNichol, A. P. 107, 131 McNinch, J. E. 47, 75, 92, 115, 139 McPhaden, J. 108 MCPHADEN, M. J. 149 McPhaden, M. J. 63, 94, 105, 106, 118, 119, 149 McPhee, M. G. 88 McPhee-Shaw, E. E. 92 McPherson, M. L. 64 McQuaig, S. 46 McQuatters-Gollop, A. 50 McRoberts, D. 59 McWillams , J. C. 113 McWilliams, J. 42, 43, 48, 52, 54, 68, 70, 74, 97, 109, 141, 146, 148 McWilliams, J. C. 42, 43, 48, 52, 70, 74, 97, 109, 141, 146, 148 Mead, R. N. 140 Mears, C. A. 132 Measures, C. 53, 56, 64, 72, 151 Measures, C. I. 53, 56, 72, 151 Mecking, S. 118 Meckler, A. N. 78 Medeiros, P. M. 58 Medina, J. 102, 132 Medina, J. M. 132 Medina, R. 98 Mee, L. D. 50 Meehl, G. A. 63 Meeroff, D. 61 Meeson, B. 97, 98 Meeson, B. W. 97 Megonigal, P. J. 110 Megrey, B. A. 98 MEHDIZADEH , M. M. 119 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Mehra, A. 116 Mei, C. C. 68 Mei, Z. 69 Meickle, T. 58 Meiggs, D. 60, 133 Meiggs, D. J. 60 Meile, C. 132 Meinecke, G. 145 Meinen, C. 59, 69, 96, 101, 131 Meinen, C. S. 59, 96, 101, 131 Meiners, K. 67 Melicio, O. 154 Melle, W. 68 Melling, H. 126 Melnichenko, O. 42 Melo, N. 50, 64 Melton, C. R. 155 Melville, W. K. 63, 99 Melvin, W. 121 Member, P. 148 Memery, L. 104, 145 Mémery, L. 145 Mendelssohn, R. 125 Menden-Deuer, S. 93, 141 Mendes, L. 154 Méndez, M. 97 Mendlovitz, H. P. 102 Mendoza, G. 117 Mendoza, J. A. 75 Mendoza, W. G. 140 Menemenlis, D. 66, 94, 105, 131 MENESGUEN, C. 42, 118 Menezes, V. V. 152 Meng, P. J. 85 Meng, Q. 144 Menge, B. A. 142, 155 Menkes, C. 106, 107 Menkes, C. E. 106 Menot, L. 103 Merchant, C. J. 45, 111, 132, 153 Mercier, H. 86 Mercier, M. 109, 150 Meredith, M. M. 56 Meredith, M. P. 102, 118 MERIAUX, X. 132 Merico, A. 112 Merino, F. M. 135 Merkel, R. 53 Merlivat, L. 69, 107 Merrifield, M. 91, 96, 99, 142, 154 Merrifield, M. A. 91, 99, 142, 154 Merritt, K. A. 64 Merryfield, W. J. 126 Mertens, C. 101, 118 Merz, C. R. 44, 135 MESSIAS, M. J. 104 Messie, M. 107 Messié, M. 50 Messing, C. G. 140 Mestas-Nunez, A. 106 Metaxas, A. 67 Methot, R. 46 Metsamaa, L. 74 Metzger, E. 66, 79, 100, 101 Metzger, E. J. 100, 101 Metzl, N. 88, 98 Meurer, A. M. 121 Meybeck, M. 86 Meyer, B. 56 Meyer, C. 103 Meyers, G. 52, 60, 96, 144 Meyers, G. A. 60, 96 Meyers, S. D. 64, 72 Meysman, F. 60, 152 Meysman, F. J. 152 Miao, A. 104, 118 Michaelson, G. J. 55 Michal Pollard, M. 72 Michel, C. 67 Michel, D. 137, 151 Mickelson, M. L. 49 Mickett, J. B. 126 Mickinney, R. 55 Middelburg, J. 60, 78, 114, 120, 138, 152 Middelburg, J. J. 60, 78, 114, 120, 152 Middelkoop, H. 86 Middleton, J. F. 87 Midorikawa, T. 116, 118, 131 Migon, C. 145 Mihanovic, H. 127 Mikaloff Fletcher, S. E. 94 Mike Savarese, M. 115 Mikulak, S. E. 44 Miles, S. G. 89 Miles, T. N. 138 Millar, J. 81 Miller, A. 48, 72, 73, 109, 139 Miller, A. J. 72, 73 Miller, A. L. 109 Miller, C. B. 145 Miller, C. M. 133 Miller, D. H. 111 Miller, G. 46 miller, g. 95 Miller, J. K. 86 Miller, J. R. 90 Miller, L. 96 Miller, P. L. 41, 71, 81, 115 Miller, R. L. 132, 137 Miller, R. N. 72, 86, 87 Miller, W. D. 49 Miller, W. L. 70, 100, 115 Millero, F. J. 65, 78, 131 Millie, D. F. 92 Milliff, R. 98 Milligan, T. 94, 121, 142 Milligan, T. G. 121 Mills, D. K. 154 Mills, E. W. 88, 98 Mills, H. 40, 54, 120 Mills, H. J. 40, 54 Mills, M. 79, 110 Mills, M. M. 79 Mills, R. A. 87 Millward, N. 110 Milne, A. 40 Min, D. 60 Minakawa, M. 60 Miner, M. 123 Miner, M. D. 123 Minken, H. 141 minnett, P. 153 Minnett, P. J. 45, 140 Minobe, S. 131 Minor, E. 71, 110, 147 Minor, E. C. 110, 147 Minster, J. 126 Mioni, C. 106 Miquel, J. C. 107, 146, 154 Miranda, J. M. 154 Miranda, L. N. 39 Mirshak, R. 103, 109 Miselis, J. L. 75 Miserocchi, S. 94 Mitarai, S. 68, 102 Mitas, C. 57 Mitasova, H. 80 Mitchell, B. G. 56, 123, 136 Mitchell, C. P. 155 Mitchell, D. L. 109, 150, 151 Mitchelmore, C. L. 140 Mitchum, G. 42, 132, 137 Mitchum, G. T. 42, 132 Mito, S. 78 Mitomi, Y. 138 173 Mitra, S. 58, 125 Mitsudera, H. 84, 89, 113, 136 Mittaz, J. P. 140, 153 Miura, S. 87 Miyajima, T. 152 Miyama, T. 39 Miyazawa, Y. 48, 89, 99 Mizobuchi, A. 131, 132 Mizuno, K. 108 Moate, B. 103 Moats, K. M. 156 Mobley, C. D. 142 Mock, T. 40, 122 Moeller, P. 46, 47 Moeller, P. D. 46, 47 Moeller, R. 109, 150, 151 Moeller, R. E. 109, 150, 151 Moerman, M. M. 99 Moffett, J. W. 39, 134 Mognard, N. 91 Mognard, N. M. 91 Mohamed, N. M. 96 Mohammed, F. 124 Mohd Akhir, M. F. 138 Mohler, J. A. 40 Mohlin, M. 59, 150 Mohn, C. 55 Mohrig, D. 124 Moisan, T. A. 39, 85, 142 Moisander , P. H. 110, 134 Moita, T. 73 Mojzis, A. K. 140 Mokashi, M. P. 142 Molcard, A. 71 Molcard, R. 144 Molemaker, J. 54 Molemaker, M. J. 43 Molina, M. 70 Molina, V. 110 Molinari, R. 98 Moline, M. 92, 93 Moline, M. A. 92, 93 Molines, J. M. 70, 146 Moller, D. 52, 91 Molne, M. A. 70 Moltschaniwskyj, N. A. 120 Monaco, M. 46 Monahan, E. C. 80 Mondragon, E. 109, 122 Monfort, C. L. 82 Monger, B. 45 Mongin, M. 88 Monismith, S. G. 56, 73, 74, 83, 93, 103, 112, 119, 142, 150 Monoe, D. 57 Monperrus , M. 155 Montagna, P. A. 129 Montalvo, N. F. 96, 134 Montes, E. 108 Montes, M. 74 Montlucon, D. 55, 69 Montluçon, D. 58 Montlucon, D. B. 69 Montoya, J. P. 123, 134 Montresor, M. 90 Mooers, C. 71, 87 Mooers, C. N. 87 Moore, A. L. 137 Moore, A. M. 42, 48, 66, 98 Moore, C. 39, 80, 87, 92, 129 Moore, C. M. 39, 80, 87, 92 Moore, E. A. 75 Moore, E. K. 147 Moore, J. 40, 82 Moore, J. K. 40 Moore, K. 62 Moore, L. 39, 90 Moore, L. R. 39 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Moore, M. 46, 98, 110 Moore, M. J. 110 Moore, R. M. 107, 124 Moore, S. E. 68, 126 Moore, S. K. 46 Moore, T. 84, 116, 122, 135, 141, 148 Moore, T. C. 135 Moore, T. S. 84, 116, 122 Moore, W. S. 135 Mopper, K. 58, 59, 70, 71 Morabito, R. 94 Morais, D. B. 117 Morales, S. 120, 135 Morales, S. M. 135 Moran, J. M. 88, 98 Moran, M. A. 70, 107, 134 Moran, S. B. 151 Mordy, C. W. 68 Moreau, J. W. 64 Morell, J. 57, 66, 97, 112, 114 Morell, J. M. 66, 97, 112 Morell-Rodriguez, J. M. 57 Morello, A. 76 Moret-Ferguson, S. E. 132 Morey, S. L. 63, 155 Morford, J. L. 72 Morgado, M. 148 Morgan, J. 65, 125, 141, 152 Morgan, J. A. 125 Morgan, M. B. 151 Morgan-Smith, D. 151 Moriceau, B. 76, 81, 95 Morin, E. 93, 141 Morin, E. N. 93 Morin, J. 133, 141 Morin, J. P. 141 Morin, P. 86 Morison, J. 48, 83, 152 Morison, J. H. 152 Moritz, H. 100 Mork, K. A. 149 Mork Kjell Arne, K. A. 149 Morozova, I. 55 MORRIS, D. P. 55 Morris, D. P. 110, 150 Morris, E. P. 67, 79 Morris, L. 56 Morris, P. J. 151 Morrison, C. L. 106 Morrison, H. G. 54 Morrison, J. R. 74, 110 Morrison, W. 49 Morrisone, R. 70 MORROW, R. 62 Morrow, R. 127 Morrow, r. 43 Morse, R. 59, 71 Morse, R. E. 59, 71 Morse, T. 154 Mörth, M. 55 Mortiz, H. M. 82 Mortlock, R. 127 Morton, P. L. 40 Morton, S. L. 102 Moseley, S. L. 46 Moseman, S. 65, 117 Moseman, S. M. 117 Moser, M. S. 134 Moses, W. 74 Moshary, F. 61, 62, 100 Mosier, A. C. 40 Moskalski, S. 81, 98 Moskalski, S. M. 98 Moss, A. G. 96 Moss, J. H. 83 Motohiko Tsugawa, M. 52 Motokawa, S. 132 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting N Moulin, A. J. 93 MOULIN, C. 53 Moulin, C. 104 Moulton, E. L. 44, 90 Moum, J. N. 80, 109, 118, 126, 150 Mountain, D. G. 45, 122 Mourre, B. 55 Moustafa, M. S. 139 Moustafa, M. Z. 139 Moustafa, Z. D. 139 Moutin, T. 40, 124 Mouw, C. B. 90 Mowlem, M. 78, 153 Mowlem, M. C. 153 Moyer, R. P. 91 Mozetic, P. 118 Msadek, R. 101 Mucci, A. 129, 140 Muccino, J. 89 Muehllehner, N. 140 Muelbert, J. H. 96 Mueller-Spitz, S. 47, 61 Mueller-Spitz, S. R. 47 Muench, R. D. 58 Mueter, F. 68, 98 Muglia, M. 148 Mulholland, M. 40, 59, 71, 109, 124 Mulholland, M. M. 71 Mulholland, M. R. 40, 59, 71, 109, 124 Mull, J. M. 83 Mull, K. 125 Mullarney, J. C. 68 Mullen, L. J. 63 Mullenbach, B. L. 47 Müller, W. H. 104 Muller-Kager, F. E. 45 Muller-Karger, F. 44, 48, 74, 76, 108, 122, 152, 154 Muller-Karger, F. E. 44, 48, 74, 108, 152, 154 Muller Karger, F. E. 146 Mulligan, R. P. 68 Mulsow, S. 94 Munday, D. R. 54 Munoz, E. 39 Muñoz-Hincapié, M. F. 114 Munoz Chesler, V. 41 Munro, D. R. 125 Munschy, C. 54 Murakami, K. 57, 131 Murasko, S. 72 Murasko, S. M. 72 Murata, A. 131, 132 Murawski, K. W. 59 Murayama, T. 52 Murphree, T. 136, 151 Murphy, D. J. 108, 141 Murphy, E. J. 56, 102 Murphy, J. M. 83 Murphy, P. L. 114 Murray, A. B. 100, 115 Murray, E. J. 47 Murray, J. 106, 107, 147 Murray, J. W. 106, 107 Murray, L. 88, 98 Murrell, M. 80, 81 Murrell, M. C. 80, 81 Murtugudde, R. 41, 46, 109, 131, 144 Murtugudde, R. G. 46 MURTY, V. S. 109 Mutlow, C. T. 153 Mutugudde, R. 149 Muus, D. 131 Mwashote, B. 120 Myers, E. 82 Myers, P. G. 149 Nace, T. 81 Nadai, A. 135 Nadarajah, P. 44 Nadiga, B. T. 88 Naegele, V. 151, 152 Nagai, N. 114 Nagai, T. 69, 80 NAGAI / TAKEYOSHI, N. 137 Nagano, A. 57 Nagata, T. 104 Nagura, M. 57 Nahm, W. H. 139 Naidu, A. S. 133 Nair, S. 125 Nair , V. R. 94 Najjar, R. 66, 79 Najjar, R. G. 66 Nakadate, A. 118, 131 Nakagawa, Y. 121 Nakaguchi, Y. 140 Nakamura, K. 87 Nakamura, T. 84, 113 Nakamura, Y. 143 Nakano, H. 108, 113 Nakano, T. 105, 109, 114, 118, 120 Nakata, K. 57 Nakatsuka, T. 136 Nakayama, K. 109, 150 Napp, J. M. 68 Naqvi, S. W. 39 Narita, H. 78 Naro-Maciel, E. 89 Narvaez, D. A. 134 Nash, J. 80, 92, 109, 118, 126, 142, 150 Nash, J. D. 80, 92, 109, 118, 126, 150 Natacha GUISELIN, N. 49 Natarov, A. 88 Naugolnykh, K. 62 Naustvoll, L. J. 89 Naveira-Garabato, A. 118 Naveira Garabato, A. C. 118, 127 Navon, I. M. 45 Nayegandhi, A. 62, 108 Naylor, R. L. 120 Neale, P. A. 150 Neale, P. J. 109, 110, 151 Nebel, S. H. 115 Nedimovic, M. R. 103 Needham, D. M. 81 Needoba, J. A. 72, 110 Neeley, A. 79, 107, 114, 154 Neeley, A. R. 107 Neely, J. K. 128 Neely, K. 104 Neely, M. B. 72 Nees, H. A. 116 Neff, J. M. 85, 122 Neilan, R. 96 Neilson, J. D. 48 Neira, J. E. 153 Nejstgaard, J. C. 138, 151, 152 Nelson, C. M. 147 Nelson, D. 76 Nelson, D. M. 76 Nelson, H. 133 Nelson, J. 41, 93, 115, 133 Nelson, J. R. 93, 115, 133 Nelson, K. 95 Nelson, N. B. 59, 69, 100 Nelson, R. J. 126 Nelson, T. A. 146 Nelson, T. R. 67 Nemcek, N. 114, 154 Nemerson, D. 99 174 Nemeth, R. S. 152 Nencioli, F. 68 Nepf, H. M. 61, 73 Nerger, L. 55 Neth, L. 149 Neth, L. K. 149 Neuer, S. 40, 62, 67, 154 Neuhaus, R. 41, 84 Neumann, U. 86 Newell, C. L. 141 Newman, J. M. 50 Newman, S. 50 Newman, X. 46 Newsome, S. D. 82 Newton, J. 117, 130, 155 Newton, J. A. 155 Newton, R. 84, 89, 127 Newton III, F. C. 85 Nezlin, N. P. 74, 147 Ngoc, G. T. 97 Ngoc, L. N. 97, 110 Ngodock, H. E. 45, 87 Nguyen, A. T. 105 NICHOLS, C. S. 82 Nicholson, D. P. 116 Nickols, K. J. 155 Nidzieko, N. 73, 74, 90, 103 Nidzieko, N. J. 73, 74, 90 Niedoroda, A. 58 Nielsdóttir, M. C. 39 Nielsen, M. E. 60, 73 Nielsen, O. I. 50 Nielsen, T. G. 56, 79, 145 Niemi, A. 67 Niencheski, L. F. 120 Nierenberg, K. 47, 85 Nieves, V. 44 Niewiadomska, K. 69 Nigro, L. M. 83, 94 Nigro, O. D. 46 Nihongi, A. 145 Niiler, P. 42, 75 Niino, H. 143 Nikurashin, M. 92 Ni Longphuirt, S. 81 Nilsen, J. E. 101, 149 Nilsson, J. 42, 86 Nimmo, M. 53 Ning, F. L. 59 Nishida, S. 94 Nishihara, G. N. 67 Nishikawa, S. 113 Nishino, S. 88 Nishioka, J. 119, 136 Nishioka/Jun, J. 119 Nitsche, F. 134, 137 Nitsche, F. O. 134 Nittrouer, C. A. 47, 63, 127 Niwa, Y. 119 Nixon, S. 40, 146 NIXON, S. W. 128 Nixon, S. W. 40 Noble, R. T. 141 Nodder, S. D. 60 Noe, G. B. 73 Nof, D. 57, 149 Noguchi, T. 143 Nogueira, J. 48 Noh, J. H. 106 Noh, Y. 57, 80, 111 Nojiri, Y. 90 Nojiri/Yukihiro, Y. 119 Nolan, K. M. 114 Noll, C. J. 100, 115 Nomura, C. T. 150 Nonaka, M. 52, 131 Nordberg, K. 89 Meeting Program Nordine Souaidia, N. 64 Nordstrom, K. F. 67 Noriki, S. 60 Normark, W. R. 100 Norrbin, F. 83 Norrbin, M. F. 83, 145 Norris, K. E. 93 Norris, R. D. 89, 91 North, C. A. 69 North, E. W. 128 North, T. 102 Norton, K. 45 Nosach, C. R. 117 Novak, M. G. 74, 110 Novo, E. M. 74 Novoveska, L. 71 Nowacki, D. 73 Nowlin, W. D. 154 Nowocin, K. J. 102 NUGRAHA, A. 64 Nunez, J. M. 56 Nunn, B. L. 147 Nunnally, C. 141 Nurser, A. G. 144 Nuzzio, D. B. 60, 116, 133 Nycander, J. 42, 68 Nylen, C. 84 O O’Brien, S. G. 138 O’Connell, J. J. 153 O’Connor, B. L. 73, 133 O’Connor, D. 39 O’Connor, M. I. 148 O’Dea, E. 72 O’Donnell, D. 129 O’Donnell, J. 114, 129 O’Donnell, M. 66, 148 O’Donnell, M. J. 66 O’Dor, R. K. 103, 154 O’Driscoll, K. T. 85 O’Hern, J. 63 O’Higgins, L. A. 50 O’Mullan, G. D. 55 O’Neal, M. A. 82 O’Neil, J. M. 81, 117 O’Neill, J. D. 62 O’Reilly, J. E. 57, 85 O’Reilly, T. C. 141 O’Reilly, W. C. 75 O’Rielly, W. C. 119 O’Sullivan, J. 59 Oakes, S. A. 84 Oba, R. 44, 150 Oba, R. M. 44 Obata, H. 53, 59, 60 Obata, M. 131, 132 Obernosterer, I. 40 Ochs, C. A. 62, 63 Oczkowski, A. 146 Oddo, P. 113 Odier, P. 43 Oey, L. 133 Ogawa, H. 90, 104, 152 Ogawa, N. O. 83 Ogawa, T. 104, 138 Ogawa/Hiroshi, H. 119 Ogburn, M. B. 102 Ogrinc, N. 118 Ogston, A. O. 91 Ogston, A. S. 47, 63, 127 Oguz, T. 42, 102 Oguz, T. I. 102 OH, I. S. 90 Oh, J. 68 Ohfuchi, W. 119 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Ohi, N. 85, 142 Ohlmann, C. 135, 148 Ohman, M. D. 123, 136 Ohshima, K. I. 93, 148 Ohsumi, T. 115 Oka, A. 53 Oka, E. 52 Okazaki, R. R. 78 Oke, P. 105 Okkonen, S. 83, 126 Okkonen, S. R. 126 Okumura, Y. 39 Olafsdottir, S. R. 154 Olafsson, J 98, 149, 154 Olafsson, J. 149, 154 Olascoaga, M. J. 47, 91 Olcott, A. N. 147 Oldham, C. E. 61 Olesiuk, P. 142 Oleson, E. M. 136 Olhede, S. C. 43 Olivares, R. U. 54 Oliveira, G. H. 137 Oliver, M. J. 132 OLLIVIER, P. 92 Ollivier, P. 53 Ollivier, P. R. 53 ollivier, p. r. 44 Olsen, A. 98, 118, 131 Olsen, C. F. 94 Olsen, C. R. 121 Olsen, E. 145 Olson, D. B. 43, 144 Olson, J. K. 146 Olson, M. 73, 109, 150, 151 Olson, M. B. 73 Olson, M. H. 109, 150, 151 Olson, R. J. 153 Olsson, K. A. 101 Olszewski, D. S. 140 Omand, M. M. 92 Omar, A. 98 Omori , Y. 100 Ondiviela, B. 98 Ondrusek, M. E. 59 Ono, J. 93 Ono, T. 136 Onodera, S. 120 Onthank, K. L. 131 Oomi, T. 57 Oost, A. P. 48 Opdyke, B. 139 Orain, F. 153 Orange, D. L. 106 Orcutt, B. 76 Orcutt, J. 59, 96, 126 Orellana, M. V. 147, 151 Orem, W. 155 Orians, K. J. 54 Oris , J. T. 109 Orlic, M. 113, 127 Orpin, A. O. 139 Orpin, A. R. 139 Orr, J. 81, 148 Orr, J. A. 81 Orrico, C. 44, 93, 96, 141 Orrico, C. M. 93, 141 Ortega-García, S. 135 Ortega-Retuerta, E. 100 Ortiz, J. R. 140 Ortiz-Zayas, J. 62, 82 Ortman, B. D. 83, 94 Ortner, P. B. 50, 64 Ortoleva, P. 132 Orton, P. M. 112 Orvik, K. A. 43 Osborn, S. 61 Osborn, T. R. 111, 119 Osborne, J. 131 Osborne, P. D. 93 Osborne, P. O. 82 Osburn, C. L. 60, 100 Oschlies, A. 70, 105, 124, 132, 144 Osorio, I. M. 135 Osowski, J. V. 44 Osterman, L. E. 156 Ostrander, C. O. 154 Ostrovsky, L. A. 150 Ota/Takashi, O. 119 OTERO, E. 103, 146 Otero, E. 54, 66 Otero, M. 148 Oti, L. 98 Otosaka, S. 60 Ou, H. W. 58 Ouellet, A. 96 Outram, D. M. 108 Outridge, P. 155 Overholt, E. P. 109, 150 Overholtz, W. 98 Overland, J. E. 68 Oviatt, C. A. 64, 117 Owens, J. 72 Owens, P. 73 Owens, S. A. 107 Ozdemir, C. E. 134 Ozgokmen, T. 43, 58, 127 Özgökmen, T. 43, 58, 97 Ozgokmen, T. M. 43, 127 Özgökmen, T. M. 58, 97 Ozkan-Haller, H. T. 82, 93, 97 P Pace, M. L. 118 Padin, X. A. 98 Padman, L. 58 Paduan, J. 135, 148, 149 Paduan, J. D. 135, 148, 149 Paerl, H. W. 59, 62, 104, 117, 129 Paerl, R. W. 41, 110 Paffenhofer, G. A. 84 Paffenhöfer, G. A. 79, 145 Pages, F. 83 Pagnani, M. 145 Pain, C. C. 45, 72, 80 PAIRAUD, I. 119 Pakenham, A. M. 139 Pakulski, J. D. 109, 150 Pal, S. 106 Palacios, D. M. 48, 49, 74 Palacios, S. 74 Palacios, S. L. 74 Palacz, A. P. 53 Paladino, F. V. 48, 142 Palandro, D. 51, 152 Palandro, D. A. 152 PALANQUES, A. 92 Palaseanu_Lovejoy, M. E. 108 Palen, W. J. 151 Palinkas, C. M. 94, 127 Palladino, D. 119 Palmer, A. S. 139 Palmer, C. 46, 61 Palmer, M. 70, 79, 80, 92, 146, 153 Palmer, M. A. 79 Palmer, M. R. 70, 80, 92, 153 Palmsten, M. L. 119 Palter, J. B. 144 Pan, H. 147 Pan, M. 151 Pan, S. 82 Pan, X. 104, 111, 144 Panetta, R. J. 140 Paneva, R. 114 175 Pang, L. 151 Pangallo, K. 153 Pante, E. G. 117 Paola, C. 130 Papenberg, C. 143 Pappenberg, C. 103 Papst, M. 88, 126 Papst , M. H. 88, 126 Paramygin, V. 84, 106 PARAMYGIN, V. A. 99, 105 Paramygin, V. A. 106 PARANHOS, R. 103 Paranjpye, R. N. 46 Parekh, P. 39 Pargett, D. 153 Parham, P. R. 139 Paris, C. 50, 148 Paris, C. B. 148 Parisot, J. P. 133 PARK, B. K. 90 Park, G. 131 Park, J. 85, 113, 152 Park, J. H. 85, 152 Park, J. J. 85 Park, K. 68, 72, 113, 135, 141 Park, W. 102, 105 Park, Y. 105, 106 Parker, A. 76, 128 Parkinson, R. 70 Parks, A. B. 113 Parks, B. K. 135 Parsons, C. 75, 97 Parsons, M. L. 46, 49 Parsons, R. J. 81 Pasaric, M. 127 Pasaric, Z. 127 Pascual, A. 54, 55 Pasquer, B. 67 Passow, U. 76, 147 Pasternack, G. B. 75 Pastor, L. 66, 79 Pastor, L. C. 79 Patchen, R. 46 Patchineelam, S. R. 53 Pate, R. D. 47, 64 Patel, A. 54, 138 Paternoster, J. M. 102 Paternostro, C. L. 52, 82, 108 Paterson, G. L. 49 Patrick, P. L. 100 Pattanaik, B. 59, 150 Patten, J. 87 Patterson, D. J. 103 Patterson, K. W. 137 Patterson, L. 66 Patterson, M. R. 85, 102 Patterson, W. F. 132 Pattiaratchi, C. B. 93, 138 Paul, B. 107 Paul, J. H. 40, 112, 122, 134 Paul, V. J. 58, 59, 152 Paulic, J. 88, 126 Paulic, J. E. 126 Paull, C. K. 100 Pavelsky, T. 52 Pavic, M. 104 Pawlak, E. 85 Pawlak, G. 41, 72, 83, 97, 119, 120, 141, 142, 154 Pawlak, G. R. 120, 154 Pawlowicz, R. 56, 80, 128 Pawlowski, L. 136 Paytan, A. 89 Paytan, P. 131 Payton, J. R. 78 PE06-45 Shipboard Scientific Party 135 Peach, C. 44 Peacock, C. 51 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Peacock, S. 108, 126 Peacock, S. L. 108 Peacock, T. 63, 109, 150 Peacock, T. G. 63 Peake, B. M. 59, 71 Pearcy, W. 46 Pearlstine, L. 134 Pearre, N. S. 82 Peart, L. 76, 90 Pease, T. K. 60, 152 Peat, D. 141 Peck, A. T. 132 Pedersen, O. P. 59 Pedersen, R. 81, 148 Pederson, B. A. 92 Pedlosky, J. 57, 70, 87, 113, 126 Peebles, E. B. 47 Peeken, I. 53 Peeler, K. A. 107 Peery, A. T. 114 Peery, T. 114, 155 Pegau, W. S. 83 Peierls, B. L. 62, 129 Pelegrí ­, J. L. 119 Pellerin, B. A. 96 Pelletier, G. 146 Peloquin, J. A. 79, 95 Peltier, R. 139 Peltier, W. R. 63 Pena, A. 73 Pena-Molino, B. 101 Pendleton, D. E. 45 Pendleton, E. A. 123 Penduff, T. 70, 105, 146 Peng, F. 129 Peng, G. 50, 101 Peng, M. 71, 72, 87 Peng, T. H. 131 Penko, A. M. 41 Pennebaker, K. 109, 122 Pennebaker, K. M. 109 Pennings, S. C. 98 Pennington, J. T. 50 Penta, B. 72 Pepin, P. 68 Pequignet, A. C. 99 Perales, H. 141 Peralta, G. 67 Peralta-Ferriz, C. 48, 152 Percy, D. 45, 114, 154 Perdue, E. M. 151 Pereira, J. 83 Pereira Filho, W. 74 Perez, E. M. 90 Perez, F. 98 Pérez, F. F. 86 Perez, H. N. 140 Perez, R. C. 43, 119 Peri, F. 100 Perkey, D. W. 125, 139 Perkins, C. R. 64 Perkovic, D. 82 PERRET, G. 68 Perri, M. J. 70 Perrie, W. 63, 99, 115 Perry, K. L. 138 Perry, M. J. 123 Perry, W. B. 50 Pershing, A. J. 45, 85 Person, R. 154 Pesant, S. 130 Peter J. Minnett, P. 47 Peters, A. J. 78 Peters, H. 43, 58, 92, 97 Peters, M. 78 Petersen, M. R. 126 Petersen, W. 98 Peterson, B. J. 66, 122 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Peterson, C. 124 Peterson, I. K. 48 Peterson, J. O. 128 Peterson, K. A. 133 Peterson, L. C. 122, 137, 139 Peterson, M. G. 90 Peterson , M. L. 147, 154 Peterson, R. 120 Peterson, S. B. 147 Peterson, T. D. 74, 128 Peterson, W. T. 42, 50, 112, 123, 135 Petrenko/Boris, B. Z. 140 Petrie, B. D. 155 Petrik, C. 62 Petrone, C. J. 85 Petruncio, E. T. 82 Petsch, S. T. 62, 110 Pettersson, L. H. 69 Pettigrew, N. R. 45, 72, 133 Pfaff, S. R. 85 Pfeil, B. 98, 131 Pfeil, B. G. 131 Pfirman, S. 84 Pfitsch, D. W. 67 Pfitsch, W. 60 Pfromm, P. H. 151 Pheldgun, E. 70 Phibbs, P. 153 Phibbs, P. G. 153 Phillips-Kress, J. 109 Phipps, S. W. 72 Phlips, E. J. 56, 69, 90 Piacsek, S. 92, 138, 150 Piacsek, S. A. 92, 138 PICCINI, C. 103 Piccirillo, P. 82 Pichel, W. 125 Pickart, R. 43, 86, 89, 149 Pickart, R. S. 43, 86, 149 Pickell, L. D. 39 Piechura, J. 127, 149 Piedeleu, M. 54 Piehler, M. F. 141 Pierce, R. H. 61 Pierce, S. 83, 93, 142 Pierce, S. D. 83 Piercy, S. 131 Pierson, B. K. 70 Pierson, J. 155, 156 Pierson, J. J. 156 Pietrafesa, L. 71, 72, 87 Pietrafesa, L. J. 71, 72 Pietro, L. S. 82 Piggott, M. D. 45, 54, 57, 72 Pilskaln, C. H. 45 Pinardi, N. 113 Pinazo, C. 61 Pinchuk, A. I. 68, 83 Pinckney, J. 129, 146 Pinckney, J. L. 129 Pineda, J. 75 Pineiro, S. A. 65 Ping, C. L. 55 Pinkel, R. 91, 92, 113 Piñones, A. 56 Piola, A. R. 137 Piolle, J. F. 153 Piomelli, U. 121 Piontek, J. 78, 104 Piovano, E. 94 Pirenne, B. 141, 153, 154 Pirrone, N. 155 Pirtle, J. L. 82 Pirtle-Levy, R. 68 Pisano, T. 59 Pisoni, J. P. 137 Pitcher, G. 71, 73 Pitcher, G. A. 71 Pitkewicz, J. 100 Pitman, R. L. 49, 65 Piwinski, S. K. 83 Pizarro, M. 65, 109 Pizarro, M. A. 65 Pizarro, O. 63, 64, 140, 152 Pizay, M. D. 94 Place, A. 71 Place, A. R. 71 Plagge, A. 115, 137 Plagge, A. M. 137 Plaisance, L. 103 Plancherel, Y. 105 Planes, S. 148 Plano, L. 46 Planquette, H. 151 Plant, J. 110, 136 Plant, J. N. 110 Plant, N. 68, 119 Plant, N. G. 68, 119 Plattner, G. 49, 65, 125 Plattner, G. K. 49, 65, 125 Plouhinec, J. B. 96 Plueddemann, A. 80, 128, 154 Plueddemann, A. J. 80, 128 Pnyushkov, A. V. 116 Podell, S. 40 Podestá, G. P. 140 Podlaska, A. 108, 131 Pohlmann, H. 105 Poje, A. C. 127 Pokras, M. A. 46 Pokrovsky, O. S. 118 Polansky, L. Y. 61 Polato, N. R. 148 Poleresky, L. 120 Polikarpov, I. G. 108, 146, 147 Polito, P. S. 56, 69 Pollard, B. 91 Pollard, R. T. 87, 151 Polly, J. A. 107 Polonichko, V. 82 Polovina, J. 46 Polyakov, I. V. 116 Polyakov, O. 111 Polzin, K. L. 118 Pomeroy, L. R. 129 POMME team 145 PONDAVEN, P. 64 Ponte, A. L. 99 Ponte, R. M. 48, 52 Poore, G. C. 103 Poore, R. Z. 123, 156 Pope, N. 67, 79 Pope, N. D. 79 Popendorf, K. 40 Popinet, S. 111 Popova, E. E. 87 Popp, B. N. 49, 96, 102, 124 Poppe, L. J. 134 Poray, A. 99 Porcelli, D. 85 Poretsky, R. 134 Poretsky, R. S. 134 Porter, D. E. 85 Porter, J. A. 109, 150, 151 Porter, J. H. 109 Porter, J. M. 48 Porter, M. D. 106 Portilla, E. 133 Portune, K. 124 Posey, P. G. 100 Potemra, J. T. 85, 95 Potter, C. W. 58 Potter, R. A. 135 Potvin, M. 121 Pouliquen, S. 145 Poulter, B. 62 176 Poulter, D. J. 111 Poulton, N. 40, 133 Poulton, N. J. 133 Pous, s. p. 75 Powell, B. 91, 98 Powell, B. S. 91 Powell, E. N. 111, 134 Powell, M. D. 148 Powell, T. M. 42, 56 Pozdnyakov, D. V. 69 Pradhan, Y. 50 Prager, E. J. 102 Prahl, F. 71 Prairie, J. C. 67 Prandke, H. 113 Pranowo, W. S. 144 Prasad, T. G. 101 Prater, M. D. 149 Pratt, L. 43, 44 Pratt, L. J. 43, 44 Preaux, S. 52 Preller, R. 113 Prescott, R. 115, 140 Presto, M. K. 53, 91 Preston, C. 153 Price, J. 43 Price, L. M. 81 Price, R. M. 44, 50, 64 Pride, C. 65, 89, 90 Pride, C. J. 89 Priede, I. G. 49, 103, 116 Priest, G. P. 124 Prieto, S. 53 PRIEUR, L. 69 Primeau, F. 52, 89, 105, 116 Primeau, F. W. 89, 116 Pringle, J. 76, 114, 128 Pringle, J. M. 76, 128 Pritchard, M. 99 Probyn, T. 71, 73 Probyn, T. A. 71 Procise, L. 71, 110 Procise, L. A. 71, 110 Proctor, R. 137, 148, 154 Proshutinsky, A. 48, 67, 80, 89, 126, 152 Prospero, J. M. 60 Pruski, A. 66, 79 Pruski, A. M. 66 Prytle, A. J. 74 Puebla, O. 128 Puente, A. 98 Puillat, I. 154 Pujiana, K. 52 Puleo, J. 82 Puleo, J. A. 82 Pullen, J. 101, 127 Pullen, J. D. 101 Pun, I. 69 Punshon, S. 124 Punt, A. 46 Purvis, C. 46 Py, F. 60, 96 Pyrtle, A. 54, 62, 67, 74, 107, 108, 139 PYRTLE, A. J. 64 Pyrtle, A. J. 67, 108, 139 Q Qiao, F. L. 80, 108 Qiu, B. 42, 57, 128 Qu, J. 55 Qu, T. 107, 144 Quadfasel, D. 86, 149 Quagliariello, J. A. 85 Quaid, A. J. 99 Quay, P. D. 51, 62, 63, 125 Meeting Program Quaye, E. 46 Quéguiner, B. 40 Quenette, J. 82, 93 Quentel, E. 103, 143 Quetin, L. B. 42, 56, 84 Quigg, A. 60, 117, 118, 146, 155 Quigg, A. S. 60, 117, 146, 155 R R, T. 119 Raasch, S. 80, 111 Rabalais, N. N. 42, 49, 130 Rabinowitz, P. 79 Rabouille, C. 66, 79 Rabouille, S. 122, 124 RADAKOVITCH, O. 92 Radakovitch, O. 44 radakovitch, o. 44 Radan, R. L. 110 Radcliffe, G. 129 Radenac, M. H. 107 Radhakrishnan, S. 121 Radich, J. A. 66 Radko, T. 80 Rafael J. Benítez-Joubert, R. J. 52 Ragaz, P. 67 Raggi, L. 106 Rago, T. A. 113 Ragueneau, O. 76, 81, 95 Rahter, B. A. 118 Raimondi, P. R. 141 Raimondi, P. T. 117, 155 Raimonet, M. 81 Raineault, N. A. 67 Rainville, L. 42, 91, 128 Raitsos, D. E. 50 Rajan, K. 60, 96 Rakesh, M. 125 Ralston, D. K. 121 Ralston, S. 123 Ramage, L. 61 Raman, A. V. 125 Ramana Murthy, M. V. 124 Ramette, A. 133 Ramirez, A. 55 Ramirez, J. R. 135 Ramlal, P. S. 88 Ramos, R. 90, 109, 150 Ramos, R. J. 90 Ramp, S. R. 150 Randall, D. A. 145 Randle, N. R. 89 Ranelli, P. 113 Ranhofer, M. L. 40 Rankey, E. C. 137 Rankin, T. L. 148 Ranville, M. A. 153 Rao, A. 120 Rao, A. F. 120 Rao, K. R. 132, 146 Rao, S. A. 128 Raphael, M. 83 Rapien, M. 108 Rappé, M. S. 152 Rasch, P. J. 65 Rascle, N. 82 Rasmussen, L. 89, 102 Rasmussen, L. L. 102 Rasmussen, T. S. 101 Rathburn, A. E. 90 Rau, G. H. 60 Raubenheimer, B. 75, 93, 119 Rauser, F. 66 Raval, A. Y. 86 Ravens, T. M. 133 Ray, G. C. 69 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Ray, R. D. 87, 91, 152 Ray, S. 86 Raymond, B. 67 Raymond, E. H. 154 Raymond, P. 122, 125 Raymond, P. A. 125 Rayner, D. 96, 101 Rayner, N. A. 153 Read, K. 154 Reader, H. E. 115 Rear, L. V. 108 Rebuck, N. D. 122 Reche, I. 100, 118 Recio, M. 98 Record, N. R. 45 Redalje, D. G. 140 Reddy, C. M. 153, 155 Redfern, J. V. 49 Reece, K. S. 138 Reed, A. H. 120 Reed, D. C. 155 Reed, J. K. 140 Reed, M. 63 Reed, S. A. 50 Reeder, D. B. 109, 150 Rees, A. P. 110 Rees, M. E. 62 Reese, D. 92, 142 Reeves, J. M. 150 Regaudie-de-Gioux, A. 66 Regnier, P. 72, 81 Rego, J. L. 99 Regula, C. M. 80 Rehm, E. 142 Rehmann, C. R. 80, 126 Reich, A. 47, 85 Reich, A. R. 47 Reichert, K. 135 Reid, K. 56 Reid, M. C. 61 Reid, P. C. 122 Reid, R. P. 63, 79 Reid, W. 49 Reidenbach, M. A. 51 Reifel, K. M. 55, 74, 141 Reilly, R. 134 Reimer, A. 66 Reimers, C. E. 60, 73 Reinart, A. 62, 74 Reinfelder, J. 64, 76, 92, 119 Reinfelder, J. R. 76, 92, 119 Reison, D. 112 Reiss, C. 56 Relles, N. J. 85 Rember, R. D. 40 Remia, A. 94 Remsen, A. 83 Ren, A. 146 Ren, L. 149 RENEWZI Scientific Party 103 Renfro, A. A. 121 reniers, a. j. 99 Renner, A. H. 42 Rennie, S. E. 113 Renshaw, A. 50, 64 Renshaw, C. E. 120, 121 Repeta, D. J. 147 Repina, I. A. 116 Resing, J. 39, 107 Resing, J. A. 39 Resio, D. 63, 99 Resio, D. T. 99 Resplandy, L. 69 Reston, T. 143 Retamal, L. 100 Reuer, M. K. 94 Reul, N. 109 Reuland, K. 142 Reuland, K. C. 142 Reuter, P. 148 Reveillac, e. 75 REVERDIN, G. 62 Reverdin, G. 70, 145 Reverdin, G. P. 145 Revilla, J. A. 98 Reynolds, B. C. 76 Reynolds, R. L. 53, 130 Reynolds, R. W. 125, 140, 145 Reynolds, S. E. 104, 144 Reyns, N. 75 Reyss, J. L. 68 Rhea, J. 74 Rhein, M. 101, 118, 127 Rhines, P. B. 86, 149 Rhoades, B. 141 Ribera d’Alcalà, M. 90, 124 Ribergaard, M. R. 149 Rice, J. P. 153 RICHARD, C. 59 RICHARD, M. 120 Richards, A. L. 136 Richards, C. 133 Richards, K. J. 70, 88, 118 Richards, M. E. 93 Richardson, D. E. 48 Richardson, J. P. 47 Richardson, M. D. 92 Richardson, T. L. 40 Riche, O. 56, 80 Richey, J. E. 62, 63, 97 Richey, J. N. 78, 123 Richman, J. G. 87 Richman, S. E. 69 Richmond, K. 122 Richmond, R. H. 140, 149 Richter, I. 39 Rickard, G. J. 75 Rickli, J. 76 Ridame, C. 110 Rideout, C. 65 Ridgway, K. 95 Ridgway, T. 148 Riebesell, U. 65, 78, 104 Riedel, G. F. 40 Riedel, T. 72, 129 Riedel, T. E. 72 Riedlinger, S. 95, 104 Riedlinger, S. N. 104 Riemenschneider, U. 43 Riemer, N. 133 Rienecker, E. V. 93 Rienecker, M. 55, 96 Rienecker, M. M. 96 Ries, J. B. 65 Rigal, F. 76, 135 Rigby, P. 63, 64, 140 Riginos, C. 148 Rigney, J. P. 95 Rii, Y. M. 68 Riihimaki, C. A. 133 Rilov, G. 155 Rinaldo, A. 98 Rinehimer, J. P. 81, 133 Rines, J. 83, 93 Ringeisen, B. R. 73 Rink, J. 139 Rintoul, S. 116, 118, 126 Rintoul, S. R. 118 Rio, M. H. 113 Rios, A. 98 Rippeth, T. P. 92, 99 Riser, S. C. 49, 57, 149 Ritchie, A. E. 106 Ritchie, H. 154 Ritchie, J. 71 Ritchie, K. B. 152 177 Ritchie, M. E. 94 Ritson-Williams, R. 58, 152 Rivas, A. L. 137 Rivera, A. P. 57 Rivera, M. 43, 88 Rivera, V. H. 140 Rivero, C. 46 Riviere, P. 123 Rivord, J. 81 Rixen, M. 113, 127 Rizzoli, P. M. 113 Roache-Johnson, K. 39 Roadman, M. 136 Roarty, H. J. 148, 154 Robbins, B. 117 Robbins, I. 93, 141 Robbins, I. C. 93 Robbins, L. L. 78 Robbins, M. C. 104 Robblee, M. B. 89 ROBERT, C. 48 Robert Nelson, R. K. 147 Roberts, H. H. 95, 106 Roberts, J. B. 45 Roberts, M. 107, 146 Roberts, M. L. 107 Roberts, P. L. 119 Roberts, S. B. 61 Robertson, C. Y. 93, 115, 133 Robertson, D. L. 41 Robertson, R. 84 Robertson, W. 70, 115 Robert Turnewitsch, R. 68 ROBIGOU, V. 97 Robigou, V. 44 Robin, R. S. 125 Robin, T. 145 Robinet, t. 75 Robinson, A. R. 44 Robinson, C. 49, 134 Robinson, C. L. 134 Robinson, D. 39, 79 Robinson, D. H. 79 Robinson, I. S. 111, 153 Robinson, K. L. 70 Robinson, M. 41, 81, 89, 137 Robinson, M. A. 41, 81 Robinson, M. M. 89 Robinson, P. 49 Robinson, S. 121 Robison, M. 122 Roblou, L. 91 Robson, B. 46, 61 Robson, B. J. 46 Rocap, G. 39, 138 Rocha, M. L. 58, 117 Rock, J. 102 Rödenbeck, C. 95 Rodesch, M. 122 Rodgers, K. B. 118 Rodgers, K. S. 152 Rodhouse, P. 102 Rodríguez, C. 65, 145 RODRIGUEZ, E. 52 Rodriguez, E. 52, 59, 91 Rodríguez, E. 117 Rodriguez, E. G. 59 Rodriguez, G. E. 39 Rodríguez-Calderón, C. 85 Rodriguez-Castañada, A. P. 154 Rodríguez-Figueroa, G. M. 136 Rodriguez-Gonzalez, P. 155 Rodriguez-Rubio Efrain, E. 85 Rodríguez-Sánchez, R. 135 Rodriguez y Baena, A. M. 146 Roe, K. L. 40, 54 Roeckner, E. 102 Roehrig, R. 56 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Roelke, D. L. 146 Roelvink, J. A. 68, 115 roelvink, j. a. 99 Roemmich, D. 56, 94 Roesler, C. R. 115 Roesler, C. S. 96 Roffer, M. A. 45 Rogel, P. 105 Rogers, A. L. 57 Rogers, D. 120 Rogers, E. 93 ROGERS, J. E. 140 Rogers, K. G. 64 Rogers, R. E. 104 Rogers-Cotrone, J. D. 142 Roldão, L. A. 94 Roleda, M. Y. 59, 150 Rolfhus, K. R. 64 Rollwagen-Bollens, G. 82, 93 Rolph, J. J. 62 Rom, E. L. 44 Romagnan, J. B. 136 Roman, B. 153 Roman , D. 63 Roman, M. 155, 156 Roman, M. R. 156 Romanou, A. 56 Romeiser, R. 52, 91 Romero, I. C. 138 Romero, L. 63, 99 Romnek, C. A. 140 Romsos, C. G. 85 RONG, Z. 133 Rongo, T. 149 Roquet, H. 153 Rosa, R. 66 Rosa, S. N. 65 Rosario, K. 46 Rosario-Llantin, J. 133 Rosati, A. 94, 101 Rosati, A. J. 94, 101 Rosch, K. 50 Rose, J. M. 46, 138, 150 ROSE, K. 112 Rose, K. C. 109 Rose, L. 47, 139 Rose, L. E. 47 Roseli, J. P. 62 Rosen, D. E. 151 Rosen, G. P. 47 Rosenberger, K. 100 Rosener, M. 91 Rosenfeld, L. 151 Rosenfeld, L. K. 151 Rosenheim, B. E. 107 Rosman, J. H. 73, 103 Ross, C. 58, 59 Ross, M. M. 120 Ross, M. S. 64 Ross, R. M. 42, 56, 84 Ross, T. 67, 80 Rossby, H. T. 98 Rossby, T. 98, 149 Rossignol, K. L. 129 Rossmann, R. 121 Rossow, W. B. 56 Rost, S. 62 Rothstein, L. M. 131 Roughan, M. 92 Roullet, G. 57 Roussenov, V. 144 ROUSSIEZ, V. 92 Routti, H. 68 Rowden, A. A. 103, 117 Rowe, G. T. 49, 103, 116 Rowe, S. 44 Rowles, T. K. 147 Rowley, C. 48, 55, 72, 88, 96, 137, 153 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Rowley, C. D. 48 Rowley, C. E. 137 Roy, E. G. 39 Royer, T. C. 42, 141 Ruan, Q. 138 Rubiano-Gomez, L. 110, 114 Rubin, D. M. 100 Rubio, N. 136 Rubner, W. 53 Rucheng Tian, R. T. 75 Ruddick, B. R. 103 Rudnick, D. 50, 57, 58, 92, 113, 127, 150 Rudnick, D. L. 57, 58, 92, 150 Rudnick, D. T. 50 Rueda, M. J. 53 Rueda-Roa, D. T. 108 Ruef, W. 117, 155 Ruggiero, P. 48, 119 Ruhl, H. A. 49, 116 RUIZ-FERNANDEZ, A. C. 94 Ruiz-Ramos, D. V. 134 Rundquist, D. C. 74 Runge, J. A. 45, 102, 110 Rusak, S. A. 71 Rusch, D. B. 110 Rusello, P. J. 121 Russ, M. 111 Russell, A. 134 Russell, D. R. 87 Russell, G. L. 90 Russell, J. L. 69, 89 Russell, M. J. 50 Russo, A. 113 Russo, C. R. 129 Russo, J. 55 Rutgers van der Loeff, M. M. 67 Rutledge, G. 125 Ryan, E. H. 44 Ryan, J. 60, 74, 83, 93 Ryan, J. P. 74, 83, 93 Ryer, C. H. 65 Rykaczewski, R. R. 123 Rykova, T. A. 149 Rynearson, T. A. 41, 145 Salisbury, J. 45, 78, 115, 125, 133 Sallares, V. 143 Sallàres, V. 143 Sallee, J. B. 127 Sallée, J. B. 107 sallee, j. b. 43 Sallenger, A. 48, 68, 82, 123 Sallenger, A. H. 48, 82, 123 Salomon, P. S. 59 Salter, I. 49, 151 Samanta, M. P. 122 Samarkin, V. A. 95, 106 Sambrotto, R. 55, 68 Sambrotto, R. N. 68 Samelson, R. M. 72, 126 Sameoto, J. 67 Sampei, M. 126 Sampere, T. P. 58, 129 Sampson, M. 62 Samuelsen, A. 41, 56 Sanay, R. 155 Sanchez, M. 53 Sanchez-Cabeza, j. a. 94 Sancho, G. 44 Sandaa, R. A. 138 Sander, R. 70 Sander, S. 40 Sanders, C. J. 53 Sanders, J. G. 40 Sanders, L. M. 53 Sanders, R. 39, 104, 109, 144, 150, 151 Sanders, R. W. 109, 150, 151 Sanderson, K. M. 69 Sandery, P. 54 Sandidge, J. C. 61 Sandifer, P. A. 46 Sandø, A. B. 101 Sandoval, L. 79 Sandow, M. 148 Sanford, L. 92, 121, 122 Sanford, L. P. 92, 121, 122 Sanford, T. B. 91, 153 SANG-EUN/OH, S. 60 Sanger, D. M. 46 Sangrà , P. 54, 55, 119 Sansone, F. J. 120, 154 Santer, B. D. 132 Santiago-Mandujano, F. 114, 154 Santinelli, C. 100 Santoleri, R. 124 Santorelli , A. 105 Santoro, A. 40, 90, 103 Santoro, A. E. 40, 90 Santos, C. 154 Santos, I. 120 Santos, P. 46 Santos, S. 111 Santschi, P. 104, 118 Santschi, P. H. 104, 118 Sapiano, M. 132 Sapozhnikov, D. 136 Sapper, J. 140 Saraceno, M. 91, 111 Saraceno, M. C. 111 Sargent, F. 51 Sarkar, N. 49 Sarkodee-Adoo, J. 65 Sarmiento, J. 39, 76, 94, 95, 105, 112, 116, 118, 151 Sarmiento, J. L. 39, 76, 94, 95, 105, 112, 116, 118, 151 Sarno, D. 90 Sarnowski, K. 55, 96 Saros, J. E. 150, 151 Sasai, Y. 56 Sasaki, H. 56, 57, 119, 126, 131 Sasaki, Y. N. 131 Sasano, D. 116, 118, 131 S S.S.Sarma, V. V. 125 Saas, E. J. 75 Saba, G. K. 71, 81 Saba, V. S. 111 Sabine, C. 45, 65, 78, 118, 154 Sabine, C. L. 45, 65, 78, 118, 154 Saburova, M. A. 108, 146 Sachdeva, R. 54 Sachs, O. 67, 79 Sackmann, B. S. 83, 93, 123 Sacks, P. E. 111 Saenz, B. L. 84, 136 SAFAK, I. 82 Sahlsten, E. 89 Saino, T. 83, 128, 131 Saito, H. 119, 136 Saito, S. 100, 118, 131 Saito/Hiroaki, H. 119 Sakagami, T. 45 Sakaida, F. 54 Sakamoto, C. M. 110 Sakamoto, T. T. 56 Sakova, I. V. 52 Sala, L. M. 145 Salahuddin, Z. Q. 65 Salihoglu, B. 42, 102, 124 Salinas-Zavala, C. A. 135 SALIOT, A. 97 Salisbury, E. 100 178 Sasaoka, K. 56, 83 Sato, K. 116 Sato, O. T. 56, 69 Sato, T. 87 Satoshi Kimura, S. 80 Saucier, F. 69 Sauer, M. J. 115 Saugier, P. 84 Saunders, C. J. 50 Saunders, L. V. 47 Saunders, T. J. 47 Sauter, E. 67, 79 Sauter, E. J. 67 Sautter, L. R. 44, 115 Savabi, R. M. 50 Savage, C. 147 Savarese, M. 50, 139 Savelyev, I. 99 Savidge, D. 93, 133, 135, 148, 155 Savidge, D. K. 93, 135, 148, 155 Savidge, W. 93, 133 Savidge, W. B. 93, 133 Savoie, M. A. 85, 122 Scanlan, D. J. 40 Scarcella, K. 121 Schaaf, J. M. 89 Schaefer, S. C. 129 Schaeffer, A. 71 Schaeffer, B. A. 80, 81 Schaeffer, S. W. 95 Schaferkotter, M. 109, 150 Schaferkotter, M. R. 109, 150 Schaffner, H. 102 Schaffner, L. C. 51, 67, 92 Schaffranek, R. W. 73 Schankat , M. 120 Scharffenberg, Martin, M. G. 52 Scheef, L. P. 143 Scheinert, M. 123, 126 Scheinert, M. M. 123 Scheingross, J. S. 128 Schell, J. M. 132 Scheltema, R. S. 76 Schemel, L. E. 55 Schenck, R. 41 Scheurer, D. 111 Schewe, I. 79 Schick, L. L. 71 Schiel, D. R. 67 Schijf, J. 81, 155 Schillawski, S. E. 62, 110 Schiller, R. V. 133 Schillinger, G. 142 Schizas, N. 134 Schizas, N. V. 134 Schlag, Z. 128 Schlax, M. G. 114, 126 Schlitzer, R. 76 Schlosser, P. 89, 118, 127 Schlueter, M. 47, 120 Schlüter, M. 67, 141 Schmidt, R. 65 Schmidt, S. 86 Schmidt, T. C. 117 Schmidt-Rohr, K. 140 Schmieder, P. J. 61 Schmitt, R. 81, 103, 126, 149 Schmitt, R. W. 103, 126 Schmitt-Kopplin, P. 151 Schneider, B. 97 Schneider, N. 123, 131 Schneider, R. J. 107 Schock, T. 47 Schodlok, M. 105 Schodlok, M. P. 105 Schoener, D. 150 Schofield, O. 41, 44, 60, 71, 87, 92, 99, 114, 129, 132, 154 Meeting Program Schofield, O. E. 92 Schofield, O. M. 44, 92, 154 Scholin, C. A. 153 Schollaert Uz, S. 132 Schonberg, S. V. 122 Schoon, R. 66 Schoonmaker, J. E. 85 Schopmeyer, S. 50 SCHOPP, R. 42, 118 Schott, F. 101 Schouten, S. 103 Schreiber, F. 120 Schroeder , D. 40 Schroeder, I. D. 141 Schroeder, T. 74 Schubel, J. R. 76 Schuiteman, M. 102 Schultz, H. 129 Schultz, P. 39, 151 Schulz, J. 145 Schulz, K. L. 108 Schulz-Stellenfleth, J. 85 Schuman, C. 114 Schuster, S. 132 Schuster, U. 98, 104, 145 Schuttelaars, H. M. 121 Schvarcz, C. R. 81 Schwab, D. 47, 61, 71 Schwab, D. J. 47, 71 Schwacke, L. H. 147 Schwalbach, M. S. 138 Schwartz, M. C. 47, 135 Schwartz, R. J. 76, 81 Schwartze, G. 98 Schwehr, K. 104, 118 Schwehr, K. A. 104 Schweighofer, K. 134 Schwing, F. 125 SCHWING, P. 64 Schwing, P. T. 91 Schymura, G. 127 Sciarra, R. 124 Scinto, L. J. 64 Sclavo, M. 113 Scorzetti, G. 46 Scott, B. 61 Scott, C. 150 Scott, G. A. 99 Scott, J. D. 119 Scott, J. R. 107 Scott, K. M. 105 Scott, N. V. 41 Scott, R. B. 42, 118, 126 Scott, T. 46, 61 Scott, V. 105 Scotti, A. 126, 150 Scowcroft, G. A. 98 Scranton, M. 76, 122, 154 Scranton, M. I. 122 Scudder, J. 44 Scully, M. E. 73, 112, 121 Seale, E. M. 128 Seaton, C. M. 142 Seaton, C. Y. 121 Seaver, K. 121 Sedwick, P. N. 39, 40, 66 Seegers, B. 136 Seegers, B. J. 136 Seeyave, S. 71 Segovia, L. 110 Segschneider, J. 97 Segura, W. 63 Séguret, M. 53 Sehn, J. 132 Sei-Ichi Saitoh, S. S. 121 Seibel, B. A. 66, 78 Seim, H. E. 45, 101, 135, 148 Seitz, R. M. 156 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Seitzinger, S. P. 70, 71, 125 Selby, W. L. 81 Selin, N. E. 155 Selkoe, K. 148 Sellner, K. G. 128 Selph, K. E. 106, 107, 136, 151 Selvendiran, P. 155 Semcheski, M. 90 Semmler, C. M. 122 Sempier, T. T. 88 Semyanov, K. 136 Sen, A. 42, 118 Send, U. 86, 116, 145, 154 Seo, G. 55 Seo , G. H. 88 Seo, H. 113 Serdula, J. A. 109 Serpa, D. 47 Setou, T. 48 Seung, Y. H. 52 Sevadjian, J. C. 83 Severinghaus, J. P. 79 Severmann, S. 72, 87, 129 Sewell, M. A. 66 Sexton, M. 65 Seyfried, W. 134 SEYLER, F. 52 Seymour, J. R. 40 Seymour, R. J. 75 Shackeroff, J. M. 135 Shaffer, S. A. 48, 49 Shah, S. 65, 106 Shah, S. I. 65 Shaked, Y. 53 Shang, S. L. 140 Shang, S. P. 63, 140 Shank, B. V. 152 Shank, G. C. 71, 152 Shank, L. M. 54, 107 Shank, T. M. 134, 148, 151 Shanks, A. 41 Sharma, S. 60 Sharma, T. 62 Sharov, A. 134 Sharp, D. 46 Sharp, J. H. 107, 133, 152 Sharp, K. H. 96 Sharples, J. 70, 80, 92 Shaw, P. 104, 150 Shaw, P. T. 150 Shaw, T. J. 78 Shaw, W. J. 89 Shay, L. K. 43, 113, 135, 137, 148 Shay, T. J. 101 Shchepetkin, A. 54, 68, 97 Shchepetkin, A. F. 97 Shcherbina, A. Y. 121 She, J. 87 Shea, D. 140 Shearer, T. L. 152 Shearman, R. K. 114, 155 Shedd, W. 95 Sheen, K. L. 143 Sheil, A. E. 54 Sheldon, J. E. 129 Shellito, S. 45 Shen, C. 44, 150 Shen, C. Y. 44 Shen, J. 51 Shen, L. 52 Shen, S. 102 Shen, T. 85 Sheng, J. 60, 67, 128, 146 SHENG, Y. P. 63, 99, 105, 114, 117 Sheng, Y. P. 61, 62, 84, 95, 106 Shenker, J. M. 141 Shepard, A. K. 81 SHEREMET, A. 82 Sheremet, A. 82, 93, 121 Sheridan, M. M. 141, 142 Sherman, A. D. 49 Sherman, T. D. 58 Sherr, B. F. 126 Sherr, E. B. 126 Shertzer, K. 71 Sherwin, T. 43, 86 Sherwin, T. J. 43 Shi, F. 99, 119, 133 Shi, L. 136 SHI, M. C. 104 Shi, T. 122 Shi, W. 74 Shiah, F. 79 Shields, A. R. 79, 131 Shih, P. 46 Shikama, N. 108, 128 Shiller, A. M. 69 Shillinger, G. L. 48 SHIMADA, K. 89 Shimada, K. 48, 88, 126 Shimada, M. 54 Shimada, T. 137 Shimeld, J. W. 103 Shimmield, T. 86 Shimotori, K. 132 Shin, C. W. 52, 107 Shin, H. 52, 68 Shin, H. R. 52 Shin, K. 132 Shiozaki, T. 110 Shipe, R. 114 Shipton, J. 80 Shirey, L. J. 151 Shitashima , K. 115 Shoemaker, M. 139 Sholkovitz, E. R. 40 Shoosmith, D. R. 144 Shormann, D. 155 Short, A. D. 48 Shostell, J. M. 55 Shotwell, S. K. 61 Shriver, J. F. 100, 101, 124 Shroyer, E. L. 150 Shroyer, E. S. 109 Shuckburgh, E. F. 43 Shulman, I. 72, 88, 100 Shulman, I. G. 72 Shulz, K. G. 78 Shum, C. 91, 113 Shum, C. K. 113 Shuman, H. 55 Shumilin, E. 54, 136, 154 Shyam, R. 106 Shybanov, E. B. 129 Sibuet, M. 103 Siddorn, J. 72 Siedlecki, S. A. 87 Siedler, G. 126 Siefert, R. L. 140 Siegel, D. A. 39, 59, 68, 73, 92, 100, 102, 107, 129, 148 Sienkiewicz, J. M. 153 Sieracki, M. E. 40 Sievert, S. 134 Sigman, D. M. 79, 124 Signell, E. 154 Signorini, S. R. 81 Sigray, P. 86 Sikes, E. L. 58, 60 Sill, A. S. 102 Sills, N. 89 Silva, A. 109 Silva, P. 103, 143 SILVA, R. 103 Silveira, I. A. 86 Silveira, I. C. 86 179 Silver, M. W. 47 Silverberg, N. 154 Silverman, J. 43 Silverthorne, K. E. 92 Sim, J. 115 Sime, P. 50 Simeon, J. 76 Simmons, C. 74 Simmons, H. 150 Simmons, H. L. 150 Simmons, S. E. 49 Simms, E. 41 Simó, R. 79 Simon, M. 81, 131 Simon, M. W. 81 Simon, N. S. 47 Simoncelli, S. 113 Simonelli, P. 138, 151, 152 Simoniello, C. 44 Simpson, J. H. 67, 92, 99 Sindlinger, L. R. 128 Sines, K. 56, 79, 84 Sines, K. A. 79 Sinha, B. 42 Sinigalliano, C. 46, 61 Sinigalliano, C. D. 61 Sinnen, W. 46 Sipler, R. E. 71 Sirenko, B. 69, 84 Sirenko, B. I. 69 Siringan, F. P. 54 Sisson, G. M. 51 Siuda, A. N. 132 Skachko, S. 96 Skagseth, O. 149 Skandrani, C. 96 Skaret, G. 98 Skarke, A. D. 75 Skinnes, R. 138 Skipp, P. J. 39 Skirving, W. 65, 125, 152 Skirving, W. J. 125 Skjelvan, I. 107 Sklar, F. H. 50, 64 Skoog, A. 147 Skrabal, S. A. 71, 155 Skryabin, V. A. 108 Slade, W. H. 142 Slagle, A. 137 Sleighter, R. L. 147 Slemons, L. O. 107 Slinn, D. N. 41, 82, 95 Slomp, C. P. 86 Sloyan, B. M. 116, 146 Sluss, T. D. 102 Smart, T. 102 Smedsrud, L. H. 48 Smedstad, L. F. 48, 55, 100 Smedstad, O. 48, 100, 101 Smedstad, O. M. 48, 100, 101 Smethie, Jr., W. M. 101 SMETHIE, W. M. 63 Smethie, W. M. 101, 127, 131 Smethie Jr., W. M. 63 Smirnov, A. V. 116 Smirnov, S. 87 Smith, A. 98, 115 Smith, A. W. 115 Smith, C. 47, 103, 117, 120, 135, 148 Smith, C. A. 135, 148 Smith, C. M. 120 Smith, C. R. 103 Smith, C. S. 47 Smith, D. C. 76, 111, 145, 151 Smith, D. L. 153 Smith, D. R. 98 Smith, D. T. 50 Smith, D. W. 89 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Smith, G. 80, 95, 101, 146 Smith, G. C. 95, 101, 146 Smith, J. A. 97 Smith, J. N. 63, 101 Smith, Jr., K. L. 49 Smith, Jr., W. O. 79 Smith, K. 42, 43, 44, 46, 49, 96, 111, 116 Smith, K. A. 46 Smith, K. L. 49, 116 Smith, K. S. 42, 43 Smith, K. W. 44, 111 Smith, L. K. 75 Smith , M. 95 Smith, M. C. 41 Smith, M. D. 115 Smith, M. R. 72, 95 Smith, N. B. 145 Smith, O. P. 133 Smith, P. C. 99 Smith, P. S. 96 Smith, Q. T. 102 Smith, R. C. 84 Smith, R. D. 155 Smith, R. H. 50, 64 Smith, R. W. 147 Smith, S. 39, 45, 48, 53, 57, 62, 87, 102 Smith, S. C. 48 Smith, S. L. 53 Smith, S. R. 39, 45, 57, 62, 87 Smith, T. B. 51, 152 Smith, W. 66, 67, 70, 71, 131, 141 Smith, W. L. 71 Smith, W. O. 66, 67, 131 Smith III, T. J. 50 Smoak, J. M. 53 Smolarkiewicz, P. 138 Smolowitz, R. 61 Smoydzyn, L. 70 Smyth, T. 72, 96 Smyth, T. J. 96 Smythe-Wright, D. 86 Snelgrove , P. V. 50, 89 Snell, T. W. 151 Snowden, D. P. 62, 98 Snyder, H. D. 44, 97 Snyder, R. A. 132, 146 Soares, F. L. 133 Soden, B. J. 119 Soderqvist, L. E. 141 Soetaert , K. 76, 78, 114, 120, 152 Sogin, M. L. 54, 103 Sohm, J. 40, 109, 124 Sohm, J. A. 40, 124 Soiland, H. 149 Sokurenko, E. V. 46 Soldevilla, M. S. 136 Solé, J. 86 Soler-Figueroa, B. M. 90 Solo-Gabriele, H. 61, 73 SOLO-GABRIELE, H. M. 46 Solomon, R. F. 78, 154 Soloviev, A. 62, 98, 142 Soloviev, A. V. 142 Soltwedel, T. 79 Sombrito, E. Z. 54 Sommer, F. 148 Sommerfield, C. 81, 98 Sommerfield, C. K. 98 SOMMERIA, J. 119 Son, M. 134 Son, S. 56 Song, Y. T. 124 Song, Z. Y. 80, 108 SONNERUP, R. E. 131 Sonnerup, R. E. 118, 131 Soracco, M. 59 Sørensen, K. 98 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Sorey, M. N. 54 Sosik, H. 70, 153 Sosik, H. M. 153 Sosinsky, G. E. 39 Sotka, C. 46 Sotka, E. E. 76 Soto, E. H. 49 Soto, I. 44, 108, 146 Soto, I. M. 44, 146 Sottolichio, A. 133 Southon, J. R. 89 Southwell, M. 96, 103 Southwell, M. W. 96 Souza, A. C. 60 Souza, A. J. 73, 82, 99 Souza, V. 110 Sowers, K. 65 Spada, F. W. 60 Spada, G. 139 Spahn, E. Y. 142 Spall, M. 44, 57, 86, 123, 149 Spall, M. A. 44, 57, 123, 149 Sparrow, M. 71 Spaziani, A. L. 137 Spear, A. H. 129 Spear, L. B. 142 Spears, T. 132 Spector, B. S. 98 Speekman, C. L. 109 Speekmann, C. L. 150 speer, g. 43 Speer, K. 86, 127 Spence, L. 44, 67, 98 Spence, L. L. 67 Spencer, R. G. 96 Spier, C. R. 85 Spiering, B. A. 117 Spiese, C. E. 150 Spitz, Y. H. 111, 123, 124 Spivak, A. C. 47 Splinter, K. D. 68 Splinter BonDurant, S. 122 Splitt, M. E. 46, 116 Sponaugle, S. 128, 148 Spotila, J. R. 48 Spranger, M. 44, 102 Spranger, M. S. 102 Springer, S. R. 72, 142 SPRINTALL, J. 137 Sprintall, J. 43, 113, 118, 127, 144 Spruce, J. P. 140 Spydell, M. S. 119 Squier, A. H. 147 Srinivasan, A. 101 Srinouanprachanh, S. 47 Srokosz, M. 63, 97 Srokosz, M. A. 97 St. John, K. E. 76 St. Laurent, L. 118, 150 St. Laurent, L. C. 150 St. Leger, J. 147 St.Louis, J. 78, 115 St.Louis, J. L. 78 Sta. Maria, E. J. 54 Stabenau, E. R. 50 Stabeno, P. J. 68 Stacey, M. S. 93 Stacey, M. T. 51, 74, 93, 117 Stal, L. J. 103 Stalker, J. C. 44, 50 Stammer, D. 44, 52, 91, 94 Stammer, D. B. 91 Stammer, Detlef, D. 52 Stammerjohn, S. 84 Staneva, J. 112 Stanley, R. 80, 81, 106, 107, 144 Stanley, R. H. 106, 144 Stanley, R. S. 80, 81 Stanton, T. 41, 89, 120, 154 Stanton, T. P. 41, 89, 154 Stapor, F. W. 123 STAQUET, C. 119 Starger, C. J. 148 Stark, J. D. 153 Stark, J. S. 153 Statham, P. J. 87, 151 Stathoplos, L. 59 Stavn, R. H. 64 Stebbins, M. L. 102 Stecher, H. A. 73 Stedmon, C. 60, 100 Stedmon, C. A. 60, 100 Steele, J. A. 54, 138 Steen, A. D. 110 Stefanova, N. 118 Steffen, P. 44 STEGNER, A. 68 Stegner, A. 84 Steimle, E. T. 56 Stein, E. D. 94 Steinacher, M. 49, 65 Steinberg, D. K. 71, 81, 107, 147, 154 Steinbuck, J. V. 56, 83, 93, 103 Steiner, N. S. 100 Steinfeldt, R. 127 Steinhoff, T. 98 Stengel, E. 59 Stepanauskas, R. 40 Stephens, B. M. 110 Stephens, M. C. 50 Steppe, C. N. 81, 148 Stern , G. 155 Stern, W. 94 Sternberg, R. W. 127 Stevens, C. 67, 111, 124 Stevens, C. L. 67, 111 Stevens, D. P. 127 Stevens, H. J. 115 Steward, G. F. 46, 122 Stewart, G. 65, 107 Stewart, G. M. 107, 146 Stewart, H. F. 134 Stewart, J. 55, 61, 135 Stewart, J. A. 135 Stiell, B. D. 65 Stierhoff, K. L. 120 Stillwell, L. 80 Stöber, U. 118 Stocchi, P. 139 Stock, C. 97, 111, 112 Stock, C. A. 97 Stock, J. D. 91 Stockdon, H. 68 Stocker, R. 40 Stockhausen, W. 98 Stocks, K. I. 117 Stockwell, D. A. 84, 132 Stoessel, A. 87 Stokes, M. D. 116 Stokes, N. A. 138 Stokes, V. 151 Stolpe, B. 118 Stolzenbach, K. D. 141 Stomp, M. 129 Stone, B. 55 STONE, G. W. 137 Stone, G. W. 137 Stone, P. J. 151 Stoner, J. 47 Storck, S. J. 75 Storer, C. 89 Storksdieck, M. 75 Storlazzi, C. D. 53, 91, 130 Storlazzi, C. S. 53 Strain, P. M. 155 Straka, A. M. 81 180 Stramma, L. 49, 101, 127 Stramski, D. 62, 129 Straneo, F. 86, 123, 149 Strang, C. 67, 97 Strass, V. 87 Strickler, J. R. 79, 145 Striegl, R. 122 Strode, S. 155 Stroeh, A. 105 Strom, M. S. 46 Strom, S. L. 59, 71 Strong, A. E. 125, 152 Strong, D. 134 Strub, P. T. 41, 91 Struck, J. M. 106 Struhbar, W. 141 Strunce, S. M. 79, 145 Strutton, P. G. 61 Strzepek, R. F. 71 Stubbins, A. 59, 70, 71 Stubbins, A. P. 59 Stubbs, C. C. 115 Stuckey, M. J. 87 Stuebe, D. 102 Stukel, M. R. 123 Stumbaugh, M. 61 Stumpf, R. 46, 61, 85 Stumpf, R. P. 46, 61 Sturdivant, S. K. 85, 156 Sturges, W. 57 Stutes, A. 153 Styles, R. 135, 148 Su, C. 134 Su, J. 112 Su, S. 82 SUAREZ, P. 103 Suarez-Bosche, N. E. 66 Subaramanian, B. R. 124 Subba Rao, D. V. 147 Subrahmanyam, B. 52, 109, 113 Subramaniam, A. 97, 112, 115 Subramanian, B. R. 125 Subramanian, V. 72 Sucsy, P. 129 Suga, T. 108, 116, 128 Suk, M. S. 104 Sukigara, C. 128 Sukop, M. 61 Sukoriansky, S. 80, 126 Sullivan, D. 75, 97, 151 Sullivan, D. E. 151 Sullivan, D. S. 97 Sullivan, J. 83, 93, 129, 141 Sullivan, J. M. 83, 93 Sullivan, P. L. 64 SUMATA, H. 89 Sumner, B. W. 139 Sumners, B. W. 139 Sun, C. 113 Sun, F. 138, 140 Sun, F. Q. 140 Sun, M. 147 Sun, O. M. 91 Sun, S. 134 Sun, T. 119 Sunda, W. G. 71 Sundby, S. 41, 68 Sunderland, E. 64, 155 Sunderland, E. M. 155 Sundermeyer, M. A. 75 Supangat, A. 144 Suryan, R. 123 Susanto, R. D. 144 Sussman, M. R. 122 Sutherland, D. A. 149 Sutherland, S. C. 107 Sutor, M. M. 83, 93 Suttles, S. E. 121 Meeting Program Sutton, P. 124 Sutton, R. 102 SUTTON, R. T. 39 Sutton, T. T. 117, 154 Sutyrin, G. 70, 84, 99 Sutyrin, G. G. 84 Suzuki, K. 119, 136 Suzuki, M. T. 155 Suzuki, T. 107 Suzuki/Koji, K. 119 Suzumura, M. 90, 115 Swan, B. K. 55 Swan, C. M. 59, 100 Swank, D. 125 Swanson, M. 141 Swart, P. K. 44, 53, 78, 84, 137, 140 Swarzenski, P. W. 156 Swaters, G. E. 58 Sweetman, R. 93, 141 Swenson, J. B. 47 Swenson, K. 68 Swift, J. H. 131 Swift, J. S. 118 Swithenbank, A. L. 48 Sydeman, W. J. 123, 136 Sylvan, J. 42, 54 Sylvan, J. B. 42 Symon, E. 102 Symonds, E. M. 46 Symonds, G. 93 Syvitski, J. P. 50 Szathmary, P. L. 46 Szlosek, J. 65 Szunyogh, I. 48 T Taalba, A. N. 130 Tabita, F. R. 105 Tadokoro, K. 83 Taebi, S. 93 Taffel, J. R. 89 Tagami, K. 140 Tagliabue, A. 95 Taguchi, B. 119 Taguchi, S. 131, 132 Taillefert, M. 60, 133, 136 Tailleux, R. 118 Takagi, M. 67 Takahashi, K. 58, 70 Takahashi, M. 66 Takahashi, T. 95, 107, 154 Takano, A. 43, 69 TAKANO / AKIKO, A. 137 Takata, H. 140 Takatsuji, H. 132 Takeda, S. 59, 60, 110, 136 Takeda/Shigenobu, S. 119 Takekawa, J. Y. 155 Takesue, R. K. 53 Takeuchi, R. 57 Talaue-McManus, L. 96 Talke, S. 73, 121 Talke, S. A. 73, 121 Talley, L. 116, 118, 127, 131 Talley, L. D. 116, 118, 131 Tamburri, M. 60 Tamone, S. L. 78 Tamura, H. 99 Tanaka, H. 116 Tanaka, T. 60 Tanaka, Y. 119, 152 Tanaka/Yukio, Y. T. 127 Tande, K. S. 68, 141 Tandon, A. 69, 74 Tang, C. L. 99 Tang, E. 89 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Tang, K. W. 67, 131 Tang, T. Y. 86, 150 Tang, X. 144 Tanhua, T. 127, 131 Taniguchi, D. A. 136 Taniguchi, M. 120 Tanimoto, H. 90 Tanimoto, Y. 52 Tankersley, R. A. 102, 128, 132 Tanoue, E. 110 Tarrant, P. E. 62 Tarya, A. 91 Taupier-Letage, I. 84 Tauxe, K. S. 90 Tawes, R. 63 TAYLOR, A. 40 Taylor, A. G. 136 Taylor, B. 42 Taylor, D. I. 67, 129 Taylor, G. 108, 122, 131, 154 Taylor, G. T. 108, 122, 131 Taylor, K. A. 147 Taylor, K. E. 132 Taylor, M. 68 Taylor, S. L. 87 Teagle, D. A. 153 Teague, C. C. 135 Teague, W. J. 99 TECHINE, P. 62 Teh, S. 56 Teinturier, S. 84 Teixeira, C. E. 87 Tejada-Martinez, A. E. 112 Telmer, K. 74 Telszewski, M. 98, 104 Temmerman, S. 98 Tender, L. M. 72 Tenenbaum, D. R. 59 Tengberg, A. 79 ten Haaf, M. E. 48 Teran Cobo, P. 82 Teranishi, G. 59, 60 Terbio, M. C. 78 ter Halle, A. 59 Terrado, R. 121 Terray, E. A. 75, 80 Terrill, E. 148 Terry, A. 71 Terwisscha van Scheltinga, A. D. 45 Tesi, T. 94 Teske, A. 134 Tessier , E. 155 Tessler, Z. D. 58 Tester, P. A. 71 Tett, P. 133 Tett, S. 146 TEW, K. S. 85 Thacker, W. C. 101 Theetten, S. 145 Theresa Reichelt, T. 68 Thiallet, A. 59 Thibodeau, B. 80 Thiebaut, E. 135 Thigpen, J. 44 THIRIA, S. 53 Thiry, H. 75 Thistle, D. 49, 132 Thoma, J. N. 117 Thomalla, S. 151 Thomas, A. 43, 110, 136 Thomas, A. C. 43, 136 Thomas, D. J. 90 Thomas, F. I. 73 Thomas, H. 96 Thomas, L. 43, 68, 84 Thomas, L. N. 43 Thomas, M. 71, 119 Thomas, M. A. 71 Thomas, P. J. 67, 105, 128 Thomas, R. 96, 115 Thomas, R. C. 115 Thompson, A. 42, 79 Thompson, A. F. 42 Thompson, C. 47, 75 Thompson, C. E. 75 Thompson, D. W. 144 Thompson, E. M. 138 Thompson, F. l. 140 Thompson, J. B. 40 Thompson, K. 98 Thompson, L. 101, 108, 146 Thompson, N. L. 88 Thompson, P. A. 79 Thompson, W. E. 145 Thomson, J. M. 127 Thomson, R. E. 73 Thoppil, P. 50, 52, 100 Thoppil, P. G. 50 Thor, P. 138 Thorne, P. D. 82 Thornhill, D. 117 Thornton, E. B. 119 Thornton, P. 102 Thorpe, S. E. 42, 56, 102 Thorrold, A. 44 Thottathil, S. D. 125 Thouzeau, G. 81 Thronson, A. M. 146 Thunell, R. 64, 76, 108, 114, 122, 154 Thunell, R. C. 76, 122 Thunell, R. T. 122 Thurber, A. 117 Thurnherr, A. M. 43, 102 Thurston, W. 99 Tiahlo, M. 114 Tian, C. 80 Tian, J. 80 Tian, T. 111, 112 Tian, Y. 74, 97, 100 Tian, Y. Q. 74, 97 Tian, Z. L. 53 Tiffany, M. A. 55 Tilbrook, B. 79, 118 Tilburg, C. E. 101 Tilbury, G. 87 Tillinger, D. 144 Tilton, S. 47 Timmermann, A. 39 Timmermann, R. 56 Timmermans, K. R. 78 Timmermans, M. L. 80 timmons, d. 95 Ting, F. C. 41 Tinoco Lopez, R. O. 73 Tinta, T. 133 Tintoré, J. 86 Tittensor, D. 117 Tixier, C. 54 Tjiputra, J. F. 52 Tobin, E. 93 Todd, B. R. 54 Todd, R. 92, 127 Todd, R. E. 92 Todgham, A. E. 66 Toedsson, C. 151 Togawa, O. 60 Tokieda, T. 116, 118, 131 Tokinaga, H. 52 Tokmakian, R. T. 146 Tokos, K. 105 Tokuyama, H. 137 Tolley, S. G. 50 Toltin, A. C. 107 Tomazic, I. 140 Tomczak, M. 43, 54 Tomlinson, M. C. 46, 61 181 Toner, M. S. 48 Tonizzo, A. 62 Toole, D. A. 92, 107, 114, 154 Toole, J. M. 63, 80, 92, 101, 125 Toro-Farmer, G. 142 Torres, D. J. 86 Torres, R. J. 96 Torres, S. 104, 144 Torres, S. V. 104, 144 Torres-Freyermuth, A. 41 Toshi Shinoda, T. 101 Toubal, T. 146 Touhey, K. 46 Toulany, B. 99, 115 Tovar-Sanchez, A. 107 Townsend, D. W. 71, 122 Townsend, T. L. 48, 55, 58 Toyama, K. 128 Tozuka, T. 52, 107, 144 Tozzi, S. 67 Tracey, K. L. 152 Trainer, A. 102 Trainer, J. 102 Trainer, V. 46, 53, 73, 92 Trainer, V. L. 46, 53, 73 Tranter, M. 153 Trasvina Castro, A. 42 Trathan, P. N. 56 Traykovski, P. A. 134 Trees, C. 90 Trefry, J. H. 85, 122 TREGUER, P. 64 Tréguer, P. J. 76 Treguier, A. M. 126 TREIGNIER, C. 97 Trembanis, A. C. 48, 75, 115 Tremblay, B. 84 Tremblay, L. 58, 140 Tremblay, Y. 48, 49 Treml, E. A. 89 Trenary, L. L. 57 Treude, T. 40 Tribble, G. W. 53, 91 Trick, C. G. 39, 40, 53, 73, 92 Trienekens, J. A. 40 Trincardi, F. 94 Trocine, R. P. 85, 122 Troedsson, C. 138, 152 Tronczynski, J. 54 Trouwborst, R. E. 70 Trowbridge, J. H. 67, 73, 79, 80 Trowbridge, P. 74 Troy, C. D. 150 Trull, T. W. 79 Truong, G. 89 Tseitkin, F. 105 Tseng, F. 46 Tseng, Y. 85, 87, 92, 99, 104 Tseng, Y. H. 85, 92, 99, 104 Tsubouchi, T. 116 Tsuda, A. 90, 136 Tsuda/Atsushi, A. 119 Tsuji, T. 143 Tsujino, H. 108, 113 Tsumune, D. 136 Tsunogai, U. 57, 90 Tsurushima, N. 90, 115 Tsuyoshi/Watabe, W. 57 Tsyrklevich, K. 136 Tucker, A. J. 109, 151 Tuddenham, P. 88 Tuddenham, P. D. 88 Tudor, M. 113, 127 Tulloch, R. T. 43 Tunberg, B. G. 50 Tuncay, K. 132 Tunin, A. 94 Tunnicliffe, V. 50, 65, 153 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Turiel, A. 44 Turk, V. 133 Turner, E. 111 Turner, J. T. 49 Turner, R. E. 49, 50 Turner, T. 111 Turnewitsch, R. 68, 151 Turnherr, A. 70 Turpin, B. J. 70 Tutak, B. 62, 84 Twardowski, M.S. 92, 129 Tweddle, J. F. 61, 92 Tweedie, M. S. 44, 97 Twichell, D. 123 Twichell, D. C. 123 Twilley, R. R. 108 Twining, B. 39, 76 Twining, B. S. 39, 76 Tyack, P. L. 132 Tyburczy, J. A. 155 Tynan, C. T. 92, 142 Tyrrell, T. 78 Tzeng, M. 115, 133 Tzortziou, M. 110 U Ubelmann, C. 137 Uchida, H. 131 Uchida, S. 140 uchida/masao, M. 58 Uchiyama, Y. 97 Ueda, N. 111 Uehara, H. 56 Ueki, I. 109 Uenzelmann-Neben, G. 143 Uher, G. 70 Uhle, M. E. 60 Ullman, D. 81, 104, 105, 114, 142, 146, 154 Ullman, D. J. 104 Ullman, D. S. 114 Ulrich, R. M. 134 ULSES, C. 92 Umek, J. W. 55 Unal, E. 151 Ung, M. 62 Upstill-Goddard, R. G. 70 Upton, M. A. 45 Urban, N. 97, 125 Urban, N. R. 97, 125 Urban-Rich, J. 100, 114 Usha, T. 124 Ussher, S. 53 Ussler, W. 100 Usui, N. 113 Uthicke, S. 91 V v. Broeckel, K. 54 Vagle, S. 81 Vähätalo, A. 71 Vahatalo, A. V. 70 Vaknin, R. 56 Valavala, D. 39 Valdemarsen, T. B. 120 Valderrama, A. 118 Valdes, E. 82 Valdes, J. R. 107 Valdimarsson, H. 145, 149 Valdmets, K. 62, 74 Vale, C. 47 Valentine, D. L. 55 Valette-Silver, N. 58, 111 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Valette-Silver, N. J. 58 Valiela, I. 110 Valladeau, G. 86 Valle-Levinson, A. 99, 114 Vallino, J. 61 Vallis, G. K. 101 Valois, F. 124 Valsala, V. K. 87 Valvo, L. M. 136 Van Aken, H. M. 144, 151 van Aken, H. M. 123 Van Alstyne, K. L. 146 van Beusekom, J. 120 Van Cappellen, P. 66, 76 Vandehey, A. K. 41 Van De Koppel, J. 98 Vandemark, D. 45, 70, 100, 137 VAN DEN BERG, C. M. 40 Vanden Berghe, E. 103 Vandenbulcke, L. 113 Van den Meersche, K. 138 Vanderploeg, H. A. 47 Van der Wegen, M. 115 van der Werf, P. M. 144 Vander Woude, A. J. 92, 121 Van de Voorde, N. E. 137 Van Dijken, G. L. 79 van Dijken, G. L. 66, 90 van Dongeren, A. 48 van dongeren, a. 99 Van Dongeren, A. R. 68 van Duren, L. A. 67, 79 Van Engeland, T. 114 Van Guelpen, L. 48 Van Kempen, C. 86 Van Leeuwen, P. J. 45 van Leeuwen, P. J. 144 Van Mooy, B. A. 40 van Oevelen, D. 147 van Ormondt, M. 48 Vanreusel, A. 49, 103 Van Rijswijk, P. 138 Van Roekel, L. P. 145 van Sebille, E. 144 van thiel de vries, j. s. 99 Van Vleet, E. S. 117 Van Wambeke, F. 40 Van Weerig, T. 154 van Wesenbeeck, B. K. 98 Vaquer, R. 110, 156 Varanasi, U. 61 Vardaro, M. F. 49 Vardi, A. 60 Varela, D. E. 53, 76, 106, 107 Varela, R. 76, 108, 154 Vargas, J. M. 86 Vargas, M. 132 Variano, E. A. 61 VARILLON, D. 62 Vasquez, Y. 107 Vásquez, Y. E. 114 Vaughan, P. P. 109 Vaughan, W. C. 156 Vazquez, J. 125, 153 Vázquez-Rodríguez, M. 86 Vecchi, G. A. 119 Veeramony, J. 85, 87 Veitch, S. 93, 141 Veitch, S. P. 93 Vellinga, M. 56, 146 Venables, H. J. 87 Venayagamoorthy, S. K. 120 Venegas, R. M. 111 Veneziani, M. 43, 66 Venter, C. 110 Verdeny , E. 76, 107 Verdugo, P. 118 Verduin, J. 67, 79 Verdy, A. 42 Vermeij, M. J. 120 Vermilyea, A. W. 58, 71 Vernet, M. 42, 56, 79, 84, 90 Verney, R. 133 Vernieres, G. 86 Veron, A. J. 53 VERRON, J. 48 Verron, J. 45, 87, 96, 101, 137 Vertes, P. S. 48 Vesecky, J. F. 135 Vetion, G. 66 Vetriani, C. 64, 134 Vetter, O. J. 99 Vetter, T. A. 151 Veuger, B. 147 Vianna, M. L. 152 Viard, F. 76, 102, 135 Vickery, S. S. 80 Victor, K. 81 Victor, S. 149 VIDARD, A. 48 Viers, J. 118 Vigil, P. D. 138 Vigliotti, L. 94 Vila-Costa, M. 79 Villagarcia, M. 145 Vimont, D. J. 119 Vincent, M. 46 Vincent, W. F. 100 Vinogradov, S. 48, 52 Vinogradov, S. V. 52 Vinogradova, N. T. 140 Viollier, E. 66, 79 Visbeck, M. 86, 101, 143, 154 Vithanage, G. 46 Viva Banzon, V. 47 Vizoso, G. 86 Vlahos, P. 80, 125 Vlhahos, P. 129 Vlietstra, L. 83 Voelker, B. M. 58, 71 Voet, G. 86, 149 Vogel, C. 53 Vogt, M. 143 Vogt, S. 39, 76 Volbers, A. N. 84 Volety, A. K. 50 Volkov, D. 105 Volkov, D. L. 105 Volpe, G. 124 von der Heydt, A. S. 102 von Eye, M. 57 von Glasow, R. 70 von Harbou, L. 53 von Reden, K. F. 107 Voronkov, A. 56 Vorosmarty, C. 50, 125 Vorosmarty, C. J. 125 Voss, J. D. 148 Voss, K. J. 63, 64 Voss, M. 65, 97, 110 Vossepoel, F. C. 144 Voulgaris, G. 67, 74, 133, 141, 155 Voynova, Y. 133 Voytek, M. A. 64 Vsemirnova, E. 143 Vu, Q. 72, 75, 113 W Wada, S. 138 Wadman, H. M. 47, 139 Wagawa, T. 68 Waggett, R. J. 71 Waggoner, J. D. 90 Wagner, E. 93 182 Wåhlin, A. 58 Wahlin, A. K. 44, 149 Wahr, J. 96, 152 Wain, D. J. 80 Wainer, I. 83 Wainwright, C. 151 Wakatsuchi, M. 148 Wakefield, W. W. 85 Wakeham, C. 40 Wakeham, S. G. 58, 94, 146, 147, 154 Walczowski, W. 127, 149 Waldbusser, G. G. 120 Waldmann, C. 154 Waldorf, W. 141 Walker, N. D. 138 Walker, S. A. 100 Walker, S. H. 88, 102 Walkusz, W. 68, 88, 126 Wall, C. 146 Wallace, B. P. 48 Wallace, D. 98, 116, 125, 131, 154 Wallace, D. W. 154 Wallcraft, A. 48, 100, 101 Wallcraft, A. J. 48, 100 Wallendorf, L. 148 Wallhead, P. J. 97 Walli, A. 48 Wallis, A. 69 Walls, A. 49 Walpert, J. 63 Walpert, J. N. 63 Walsh, C. J. 61 Walsh, E. J. 65 Walsh, J. J. 60 Walsh, J. P. 121, 139 Walter, L. M. 142 Walter, M. 118 Walters, L. J. 55, 58, 111, 117, 131, 152 Walters, T. L. 151 Wang, B. 40, 73 Wang, C. 39, 105 Wang, D. 99, 113, 122, 133, 144 Wang, D. P. 122, 133 Wang, D. W. 99, 113 Wang, F. 144, 155 Wang, G. Y. 46 Wang, H. 51, 95, 99, 136 Wang, H. V. 51, 95, 99 Wang, J. 48, 50, 61, 84, 113 Wang, J. B. 113 Wang, J. D. 50, 61 Wang, K. 66, 124 Wang, L. 63 Wang, M. 74 Wang, P. 108 Wang, S. 72 Wang, W. 58, 59, 80 Wang, X. 72, 99, 110, 113, 125, 131 Wang, X. B. 99 Wang, X. J. 131 Wang, X. R. 110, 125 Wang, Y. 79, 85, 106, 125, 132, 150 Wang, Y. H. 150 Wang, Z. 88, 93, 97 Wang, Z. A. 97 Wang/Yue, W. Y. 109 Wankel, S. D. 106 Wanless, D. 46, 61 Wanless, D. R. 61 Wanninkhof, R. 65, 98, 118, 131 Ward, A. 98 Ward, B. 45, 66 Ward, B. A. 66 Ward, J. E. 61 Ward, N. 134 Ware, J. 128 Wares, J. P. 76 Warn-Varnas, A. 138 Meeting Program Warn-Varnas, A. C. 138 Warner, J. C. 67, 93, 121 Warner, M. 124, 155 Warner, M. E. 124 Warner, R. R. 102 Warner, S. J. 84 Warner Baringer , W. 47 Warner Ithier-Guzman, W. 54, 74 Warn Varnas, A. 150 Warren, C. E. 84 Warrick, J. A. 75, 92, 115, 127 Warrior, H. V. 53 Warwick, P. E. 40 Waseda, T. 89, 99 Washburn, L. 92, 141, 148, 155 Washington, T. 117 Watanabe, E. 48 Watanabe, M. 119 Watanabe, S. 129, 131 Watanabe, Y. 78, 114 Watanabe, Y. W. 114 WATANABE EIJI, E. 48 Waterbury, J. B. 41, 124, 134 WATER HM Participants 91 Waterhouse, A. F. 114 Waterman, S. N. 42 Waters, R. 93, 136 Waters, R. L. 93 Watkins, J. L. 56 WATSON, A. J. 104 Watson, A. J. 98, 104, 145 Watson, J. R. 148 Watson, W. 136 Watts, D. R. 42, 85, 128, 152 Waugh, D. W. 75 Weaver, R. J. 95 Weavers, L. K. 58 Webb, B. M. 41 Webb, D. 92 Webb, E. A. 41, 124, 134 Webb, R. M. 91 Weber, J. C. 107, 154 Weber, K. M. 65 Weber, M. 142 Weber Olivier, W. O. 54 Webster, D. R. 67, 80, 93 Webster, I. W. 46 Webster, R. K. 115 Weeks, E. 99 Weersing, K. A. 84 Wegner, K. E. 130 Wehde, H. 98 Wehner, M. F. 132 Wei, C. 116 Wei, H. 80 Wei, J. 72 Wei, R. C. 150 Wei, W. 55 Weidemann, A. 63, 74, 77, 129 Weidemann, A. D. 63, 129 Weijer, W. 57 Wein, A. 134 Weinbeck, R. S. 88, 98 Weingartner, T. 42, 83, 85, 135, 142 Weingartner, T. J. 42, 83, 85, 135, 142 Weinman, B. A. 64 Weisberg, R. 60, 87, 100, 122, 135, 154 Weisberg, R. H. 60, 87, 135 Weisberg, R. L. 100 Weise, M. J. 142 Weiss, E. 67 Weiss, J. 82 Weissberger, E. J. 117 Weissburg, M. 67, 81, 93 Weissburg, M. J. 67, 93 Weissman, D. E. 69 Weisz, J. B. 103 Weitzman, J. S. 73 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Welch, K. A. 75 Welch, V. 141 Welcker, J. 68 Weller, D. E. 50 Weller, H. 75, 89 Weller, R. 45, 69, 128, 154 Weller, R. A. 45, 128 Wells, A. J. 57 Wells, J. R. 142 Wells, M. G. 44 Wells, M. L. 39, 40, 53, 73, 92, 104 Wells, R. S. 84 Welschmeyer, N. A. 39 Wen, X. 86 Wendelbo, J. 150 Wentz, F. J. 69, 132, 145, 149 Wenzel, F. 49 Wenzhoefer, F. 120 Werner, F. 41, 86, 101 Werner, F. E. 41, 101 Weslawski, J. M. 121 West, N. J. 40 Westberry, T. K. 39 Westby, G. 79 Westhaver, D. C. 45 Wethey, D. S. 46, 50, 128, 146 Wetz, M. S. 104, 117, 129 Wetzel, L. R. 84 Whalen, R. 121 Wheat, G. 138 Wheatcroft, R. A. 75, 94, 121, 139 Whelan, J. 48 Whicker, P. J. 84 White, A. E. 109, 124 White, B. A. 84 White, B. L. 73, 126 White, C. 148 White, D. 46, 138 White, D. J. 46 White, D. M. 138 White, E. M. 58, 59, 70 White, H. K. 60, 73 White, M. 55 White, N. 141, 143 White, N. M. 141 White, W. B. 41 Whitefield, J. D. 109, 144 Whitehead, K. 151 Whitehead, R. F. 71 Whiteman, D. 141 Whitledge, T. E. 43, 84, 132 Whitman, D. 115 Whitmire, A. L. 142 Whitney, M. M. 129, 146 Whitney, V. 67 Whritenour, C. A. 108 Wiberg, P. L. 121 Wick, G. A. 111, 153 Wicksten, M. K. 116 Widder, E. A. 154 Wiebe, P. H. 45, 94, 117, 151 Wiencke, C. 150 Wiener, J. G. 64 Wiese, F. K. 88 Wiggert, J. D. 46, 72, 145 Wiggins, S. M. 136 Wijffels, S. 95, 144 Wijffels, S. E. 95, 144 Wiktor, J. 68 Wild-Allen, K. 125 Wilde, S. B. 59 Wiles, P. 99 Wilhelm, S. W. 71 Wilken, S. 53 Wilkerson, C. N. 65 Wilkerson, F. 76, 92, 128 Wilkerson, F. P. 92 Wilkin, J. 80, 86, 87, 92, 96, 114, 133 Wilkin, J. L. 80, 96, 133 Wilkin, M. 154 Willard, D. A. 50 Willers, V. 53 Willey, D. A. 116 Willey, J. D. 155 William, T. 88 William R Fraser, W. R. 56 Williams, C. J. 40 Williams, C. L. 142 Williams, C. R. 54 Williams, E. 62, 88, 98 Williams, E. J. 88 Williams, H. 53 Williams, J. C. 55 Williams, N. 90, 108, 109, 150 Williams, N. B. 108 Williams, N. J. 109, 150 Williams, R. 43, 92, 104, 108, 144 Williams, R. G. 43, 92, 104, 144 Williams, S. 63, 64, 78, 81, 134, 140 Williams, S. B. 63 Williams, S. J. 134 Williams, S. L. 81 Williams, S. Y. 78 Williams, W. J. 126 William Smyth, W. D. 80 Williamson, A. 136 Williamson, C. E. 109, 150, 151 Willis, J. 63, 95, 96 Willis, J. K. 63 Willis, K. D. 140 Willis, Z. S. 44 Willoh, K. 82 Wilson, A. M. 44, 120 Wilson, B. A. 94, 121 Wilson, C. 98, 124 Wilson, C. A. 98 Wilson, G. 93 Wilson, M. 64, 72 Wilson, M. C. 72 Wilson, S. 96, 147 Wilson, S. E. 147 Wilson, W. W. 104 Wiltsey, C. 90 Wimbush, M. 113 Wimmer, W. 153 Winant, B. 41 Winant, C. 99, 114 Winant, C. D. 114 Windom, H. L. 120 Windsor, J. G. 102 Wing, S. R. 116 Wingard, C. 83, 93 Wingard, C. E. 83 Wingard, G. L. 139 Wingate, B. 112, 126 Wingate, B. A. 126 Winguth, A. 52 Winsor, K. 89 Winsor, M. A. 132 Winsor, P. 83 Winters, K. 91, 102 Winters, K. B. 102 Wirasantosa, S. 144 Wirick, S. . 153 Wirth, A. 87 Wirtz, K. 112 Wisegarver, D. P. 62, 118 Wishner, K. F. 108 Wisniewski, G. L. 142 Witherspoon, C. 88 Witter, D. L. 144 Witter, R. 124 Woebken, D. 122 Woerner, W. 125 Wohlers, J. 104 Wohlpart, S. L. 139 183 Wolanski, E. 149 Wolf, J. 82 Wolf-Gladrow, D. 56 Wolfe, C. 62, 126 Wolfe, C. L. 126 Wolfe, G. 90 Wolfe, M. 42 Wolff, G. A. 49, 104, 144 Wolff, L. B. 129 Wolinsky, D. I. 84 Wolinsky, M. A. 47 Wong, A. P. 57 Wong, G. T. 107 Wong, S. 88, 126 Wood, A. M. 61 Wood, G. B. 45 Wood, R. A. 123 Wood, R. J. 147 Wood, R. W. 41 Wood, T. J. 72 Woodgate, R. A. 116 Woodin, S. A. 46, 50, 146 Woodman, R. 108 Woodruff, J. D. 124 Woodson, C. B. 141 Woodward, E. M. 40, 104, 110, 124 Woodward, M. 55, 96 Woodward, M. E. 55 Woodworth, M. P. 122 Woodworth, P. L. 90 Woolf, D. K. 111 Worcester, P. F. 108, 146 Worley, C. 135 Worsfold, P. 40, 53 Worsfold, P. J. 40 Worster, M. G. 57 Woyke, T. 40 Wozniak, A. S. 147 Wozniak, B. 62 Wrabel, M. L. 138 Wren, P. A. 82 Wright, C. W. 48, 108 Wright, D. D. 92 Wright, D. G. 123 Wright, E. 88 Wright, L. D. 48, 96, 127 WRIGHT, M. 46 Wright, M. 61 Wu, C. 69, 86, 98, 104, 125 Wu, C. H. 98 Wu, C. R. 86 Wu, D. 99, 141 Wu, J. 40 Wu, L. 54, 101 Wu, L. Y. 54 Wu, P. 56, 123 Wu, P. L. 123 WU, T. R. 68 Wu, W. D. 144 Wu, X. 71, 87 Wu/Dexing, W. D. 109 Wulf, S. 137 Wulff, A. 59, 150 Wunsch, C. 94, 125 Wurst, M. 65, 78 Wurzel, W. W. 82 Wyatt, L. R. 135 Wyllie-Echeverria, S. 61 Wynne, T. T. 46, 61 Wysocki, L. A. 129 X Xenopoulos, M. A. 120 Xia, C. S. 80 Xia, M. 71 Xia, X. 111 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF Xie, G. 40 Xie, H. 70 Xie, L. 80 Xie, S. 39, 101 Xie, S. P. 39 Xie, X. 69 Xing, J. 70 Xu, C. 104, 118 Xu, D. 88 Xu, F. 133 Xu, J. 46, 72, 82, 100, 129 Xu, J. P. 100 Xu, K. 121 Xu, X. 58 XU, Y. 112, 114 Xu, Z. 63, 106 XUE, H. 133 Xue, H. 88, 110 Xue, J. 146, 154 Y Yager, P. L. 112 Yalcin, J. 129 Yamada, N. 115 Yamagata, T. 52, 56, 58, 107, 144 Yamahara, K. M. 120 Yamamoto-Kawai, M. 88, 126 Yamanaka, G. 106 Yamanaka, Y. 53, 56, 105 Yamashita, Y. 110 Yamazaki, H. 43, 69, 80, 137 Yamazaki, T. 57 YAMAZAKI / HIDEKATSU, H. 137 Yan, X. H. 69, 85, 137 Yanagimoto, D. 128 Yang, B. 128 Yang, C. 101 Yang, D. 52, 139 Yang, D. Y. 139 Yang, E. 56 Yang, J. 48, 59, 106, 144, 151 Yang, J. G. 106 Yang, J. J. 151 Yang, L. 80 Yang, Q. 80 Yang, S. C. 55 Yang, Y. 80, 86, 87, 104, 109, 144, 150 Yang, Y. J. 86, 109, 144, 150 Yang, Y. Z. 80 Yankovsky, A. 87, 99, 142 Yankovsky, A. E. 99, 142 Yannick Huot, Y. H. 121 Yao, F. 144 Yarincik, K. M. 154 Yarmey, L. 56 Yashayaev, I. 123, 127 Yasuda, T. 105, 106, 109 YATES, D. F. 81 Yates, M. L. 75 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Yau, P. 99 Yaun, H. 98 Ye, Y. X. 85 Yeager, S. 146, 149 Yeager, S. G. 149 Yeh, J. 117 Yeh, S. 105, 106 Yen, J. 80, 93, 132, 145 Yi, H. 80 Yi, S. 139 Yigiterhan, O. 106 Yim, B. Y. 57 Yin, K. 39, 129 YIN, K. D. 129 Yin, K. D. 39 Yin, Y. 105 Ylostalo, P. 70 Yoder, J. A. 90 Yoko, Y. 135 Yoko Tange, Y. 135 Yokozawa, Y. 136 Yoo, S. 56 YOO, S. J. 90 Yool, A. 124, 144 Yoon, J. H. 57 Yoshie, N. 53, 119 Yoshikawa, C. 105 Yoshikawa, Y. 56, 68, 148 Yoshimura, K. 138 Yoshimura, T. 90, 136 Yoshimura/Takeshi, T. 119 Yoshinaga, M. Y. 110 Yoshinari, H. 95 Yoshioka, P. M. 134 Yost, D. M. 140 Yost, J. 92 You, S. H. 57 You, Y. 99 Younan, L. 142 Young, E. F. 102 Young, K. 62, 80, 98 Young, V. C. 134 Young, W. R. 93 Youngbluth, M. 70, 83 Youngbluth, M. J. 70 Youngs, P. 47 Yousoufian, K. S. 58 Ysebaert, T. 67 Yu, F. 82 Yu, K. M. 139 Yu, L. 55, 149 Yu, Q. 74, 97, 110 Yu, X. 82 Yu, Z. 55, 99 Yuan, D. 144 YUAN, D. Y. 104 Yucel, M. 122 Yuda, J. M. 140 Yue, D. K. P. 57 Yue, K. P. 63 Yule, S. 88 Yuming, L. 57 Yury Kihai, Y. 140 Yusifov, M. 79 Yutian/Jiao, Y. 68 Yvon-Lewis, S. A. 63 Z Zablocki, J. 125 Zabotina, L. 113 Zaccheo, T. S. 140 Zacher, K. 150 Zachos, J. C. 65 Zafiriou, O. C. 59, 70 Zakardjian, B. 69 Zakharova, E. 107 Zamora, L. M. 144 Zamudio, L. 101 Zande, J. M. 97 Zaneveld, J. R. 129, 142 Zantopp, R. 101 Zappa, C. J. 57, 99, 112, 129 Zaragoza, M. 84 Zarillo, G. 46, 133 Zarillo, G. A. 133 Zaron, E. D. 80 Zavala-Garay, J. 86, 96, 119 Zavala-Hidalgo, J. 86, 87 Zavala Lopez , A. 78 Zavorotny , V. U. 113 Zawada, D. G. 62 Zeebe, R. E. 65 Zehr, J. 41, 109, 110, 112, 122, 123, 124, 134 Zehr, J. P. 41, 109, 110, 112, 122, 123, 124, 134 Zelnio, K. A. 117 Zemb, O. 40 Zender, C. S. 57 Zepp, K. 148 Zepp, R. G. 70, 71, 152 Zhai, F. 80 Zhai, P. 63 Zhai, W. D. 79 Zhai/Ping, Z. P. 57 Zhang, C. 119, 140 Zhang, C. Y. 140 ZHANG, D. 149 Zhang, D. 63 Zhang, F. 44 zhang, f. 111 Zhang, G. 104 Zhang, H. 39, 71, 72, 94, 105, 125 Zhang, H. M. 125 Zhang, J. 57, 78, 152 ZHANG, K. 115 Zhang, K. 115 Zhang, P. 103 Zhang, R. 39, 48, 109, 149 Zhang, R. C. 48 184 Zhang, R. H. 109, 149 Zhang, S. 94, 101, 104, 118 Zhang, W. 55, 63, 80, 86, 92 Zhang, W. G. 80 Zhang, W. Z. 63 Zhang, X. 41, 73, 111, 118, 129, 155, 156 Zhang, x. 105 ZHANG, Y. 63, 99 Zhang, Y. 70, 84, 96, 99, 121, 124 Zhang, Y. J. 124 Zhang, Z. 54, 150 Zhao, B. 59 Zhao, H. 63, 121 Zhao, W. 80 Zhao, Z. 91, 105 Zharkov, V. 57 Zheng, L. 60 Zheng, Y. 65 Zheng, Z. P. 144 Zhong, L. 66, 121 ZHOU, H. 104 Zhou, J. 61, 100 Zhou, L. 144 Zhou, M. 56, 81, 141, 151 Zhou, T. 39 Zhou, X. 70 Zhu, J. 94, 121 ZHU, J. R. 90 Zhu, Q. 59, 133 Zhu, W. N. 74 Zhu, X. 61 Zhulidov, A. 122 Ziebis, W. 40, 90, 117 Zielinski, B. 40, 112, 122 Zielinski, B. L. 112, 122 Ziemer, F. 127 Ziervogel, K. 97 Zika, R. G. 62 Zilberman, N. V. 91 Zimmer, B. 106 Zimmer, W. X. 132 Zimmerman, A. 58, 125 Zimmerman, A. R. 58 ZImmerman, R. C. 66 Zimmerman, R. C. 60, 64, 145 Zimmerman, T. D. 97 Zimmermann, S. 48, 126 Zimmermann-Timm, H. 62, 153 Zimov, S. 122 Zingarelli, R. A. 138 Zingone, A. 90 Zinser, E. R. 106 Ziolkowski, L. A. 54 Zippay, M. L. 66 Zirbel, M. J. 111, 145 Zlotnicki, V. 52, 105, 113 Zong, H. 133 Zou, Q. 115 Zubkov, M. V. 40 Zuur, A. F. 116 Zvalaren, S. D. 155 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF TOS Announcements 2008 TOS FeLLOW The Oceanography Society would like to congratulate Dr. Charles H. greene Professor, Earth & Atmospheric Sciences and Director, Ocean Resources and Ecosystems Program, Cornell University Monday, March 3, 2008 7:30 – 10:00 p.m. Room W311B Orange County Convention Center Orlando, Florida on being named a Fellow of The Oceanography Society. The Fellows program recognizes individuals who have attained eminence in oceanography through their outstanding contributions to the field of oceanography or its applications during a substantial period of years. To learn more about the Fellows Program and nominating procedures, please visit www.tos.org/awards_honors/fellows_program.html Please join your fellow TOS members to celebrate our first twenty years! Hors d’oeuvres will be served and two drink tickets for the no-host bar will be provided. The cost for this event is $35 per person. Please contact Jenny Ramarui at 301-251-7708 for more information. Oceanography MAGAZINE UPCOMING SPECIAL ISSUE TOPICS Richard Spinrad, President Carolyn Thoroughgood, President-Elect H. Lawrence Clark, Past-President Susan Cook, Secretary Susan Banahan, Treasurer Ellen Kappel, Editor, Oceanography VOLUME 21 • No. 1, March 2008: Salinity • No. 2, June 2008: Celebrating 50 Years of International Partnerships in Ocean Research • No. 3, September 2008: 20th Anniversary of The Oceanography Society • No. 4, December 2008: Coastal Ocean Processes COUNCILLOR S Tommy Dickey Kate Moran Percy L. Donaghay Susan Lozier Giséle Muller-Parker Claudia Benitez-Nelson Mary Jane Perry FUTURE TOPICS • Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment • Celebrating the Tenth Anniversary of the National Oceanographic Partnership Program • Ocean Acidification (tentative) • HERMES: Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European Seas (tentative) • Future of Satellite Oceanography TO S B U S I N e S S M e e T I N g TOS Members are invited to atttend the Business Meeting of The Oceanography Society, which will be held on Thursday, March 6, 2008, 12:00 noon - 1:00 pm, Orange County Convention Center, Room W311A. 185 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting The Nils Gunnar Jerlov Award Awarded in recognition of contributions made to the advancement of our knowledge of the nature and consequences of light in the ocean. www.tos.org/awards_honors/jerlov_award.html TOS Nils Gunnar Jerlov Award Call for Nominations PREVIOUS RECIPIENTS Nils Gunnar Jerlov was an early leader in the area of ocean optics research. His name is recognized widely within the entire international oceanographic research community. Jerlov’s theoretical and experimental work on ocean optical and related processes helped form the foundation of modern ocean optical research. He proposed the concept of an optical ocean water mass classification and the Jerlov water types are familiar to many outside of the ocean optics community. His book, Marine Optics, published in 1976, remains widely referenced and is considered required reading for all students of ocean optics and ocean color remote sensing. The Oceanography Society (TOS) commemorates Dr. Jerlov and his many contributions to the study of light in the ocean with an international award, established in his name, to recognize outstanding achievements in ocean optics and ocean color remote sensing research. TOS is responsible for setting award policy, garnering nominations from the international research community, and selecting a recipient from those nominated. To be eligible for nomination, the recipient’s work must deal directly with the processes governing the interaction of light with the ocean and/or the consequences of such interactions. The award may be issued in recognition of research (theoretical or applied, field-based or laboratory-based, a landmark paper or lifetime achievement), a pattern of excellence in education, a history of service to the international ocean optics research community, or contributions to all of the above. In the end, the nominated individual must have significantly advanced our knowledge of how light interacts with the ocean. The award consists of a bronze medallion designed by Judith Munk, a lapel pin, and a cash award of $2,500. This award is supported by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the U.S. Office of Naval Research. • 2006: J. Ronald V. Zaneveld, Oregon State University, USA • 2004: Howard R. Gordon, University of Miami, USA • 2002: Raymond C. Smith, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA • 2000: André Morel, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, France 2008 AWARD PRESENTATION The Jerlov Award will be presented at the XIX Ocean Optics Meeting to be held in Tuscany Italy, October 6-10, 2008. Please visit the following link for more information: http://oceanopticsconference.org/introduction NOMINATION PROCEDURE Nomination packages shall consist of: • a single master nominating statement (no more than 5 pages), • a suggested one-paragraph citation of no more than 100 words, • an abbreviated CV of the nominee, and • up to 5 additional letters of endorsement (2 page maximum) solicited by the master nominator (only one of which may be from the candidate’s institution—international endorsements are encouraged). The master nominator serves as the point of contact. Submission of materials in electronic format is required. Submit all nomination materials and direct all questions to: [email protected]. NOMINATION DEADLINE The deadline for nominations is June 1, 2008. THE OCEANOGRAPHY SOCIETY The Oceanography Society, P.O. Box 1931, Rockville, MD 20849-1931, USA Telephone: 301/251-7708, Fax: 301/251-7709; E-mail: [email protected]; Web Site: www.tos.org 186 Meeting Program w ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF nline! l Apply O _tos.htm in jo / g r ww.tos.o The Oceanography Society membership application The Oceanography Society (TOS) was founded in 1988 to disseminate knowledge of oceanography and its application through research and education, to promote communication among oceanographers, and to provide a constituency for consensus-building across all the disciplines of the field. The Oceanography Society is a non-profit, tax-exempt organization incorporated in the District of Columbia. Regular membership is available to oceanographers, scientists, engineers, or educators active in ocean-related fields, or to persons who have advanced oceanography by management or other public service. With proper certification, student membership is available for students enrolled at least half-time in an oceanography or ocean-related program at the baccalaureate or higher level. Sponsoring membership is available to individuals who wish to provide enhanced support annually. In the United States, $50 of the annual dues in this category is tax-deductible as a charitable contribu- TOS Membership Application tion, as are any additional contributions, over and above the annual regular member dues. Organizations and companies may subscribe annually as Corporate/Institutional Sponsors and annual library subscriptions are also available (please contact the TOS office for information and sponsorship/ subscription rates). All members will receive a subscription to Oceanography, the Society’s quarterly magazine. Members are also entitled to exercise the right and responsibilities of active participation in the Society, including: • the right to vote; • the right to express your opinion on all matters of interest to the Society; • the right to register at discounted rates for meetings sponsored or co-sponsored by the Society. All applications for membership are subject to approval by the TOS Membership Committee. Annual membership dues support costs associated with carrying out the Society’s mission, including conference planning, elections, Oceanography production, web site and archive maintenance, and communication and management expenses. The membership period is October 1 through September 30 of each year. The full membership fee is paid upon joining. Upon payment, members will receive any back issues of the magazine to which they are entitled for that membership period. Renewal notices are sent in July of each year, and payment is due within three months. Please accept my application for membership to The Oceanography Society. I would like to join in the following category (choose one): Regular Member (US $60) Student Member (US $30)* Sponsoring Member (US $110) Applicant Information *Additional Student Applicant Information Name: Enrolled At: Department/Division: Major Subject: Institution/Organization: Certified By: Address: Certifier’s Signature: Date: City/State/Postal Code: Country: Phone: Email: Your primary discipline(s): Biology Chemistry Physics Geology/Geophysics Applied Technology Policy Other (please fill in) Payment Information My check payable to The Oceanography Society (in US $, drawn on a U.S. bank) is enclosed OR Charge my credit card: Visa Mastercard Card Number: Name on the card (print): Expiration Date: Signature: Address (if different from above): Mail or Fax Completed Form To: The Oceanography Society, P.O. Box 1931, Rockville, MD 20849-1931 USA, Fax: (301) 251-7709 187 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting ASLO Board, Staff & Information 2007-2008 ASLO Board Members ASLO Staff Members Sybil Seitzinger, President Rutgers University Everett Fee, Editor-in-Chief Limnology & Oceanography Carlos Duarte, President-Elect Instituto Mediterraneo de Estudios Avanzados Lucille Doucette, Journals Manager Limnology & Oceanography Jonathan Cole, Past-President Institute of Ecosystem Studies John Dolan, Co-editor, L&O: Bulletin Lab Oceanogr Villefranche, CNRS M. Robin Anderson, Secretary Fisheries and Oceans Canada Adrienne Sponberg, Co-editor, L&O: Bulletin & Director of Public Policy Lynda Shapiro, Treasurer Oregon Institute of Marine Biology Paul Kemp, Web Editor and Editor, L&O: Methods Stony Brook University Beatrix Beisner, Member-at-Large Université du Québec à Montréal Susana Feng, Managing Editor L&O: Methods Carla Caceres, Member-at-Large University of Illinios Helen Schneider Lemay, Business Manager sg Meeting & Marketing Services John Downing, Member-at-Large Iowa State University Mark Your Calendar: ASLO 2008 Summer Meeting June 8-13, 2008 St. Johns, Newfoundland, Canada http://www.aslo.org/stjohns2008 Marta Estrada, Member-at-Large Institut de Ciències Del Mar, CMIMA (CSIC) Wilhelm Graneli, Member-at-Large Lund University ASLO 2009 Aquatic Sciences Meeting January 25-30, 2009 Nice, France http://www.aslo.org/nice2009 Patricia Matrai, Member-at-Large Bigelow Laboratory ASLO 2010 Summer Meeting June 6-11, 2010 Santa Fe, New Mexico James McManus, Member-at-Large Oregon State University Wayne Wurtsbaugh, Member-at-Large Utah State University ASLO 2011 Aquatic Sciences Meeting March 13-18, 2011 San Juan, Puerto Rico Alexandre Poulain, Student Board Member Université de Montréal Lynn Abramson, Student Board Member Stony Brook University 188 Meeting Program ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF � � � � � � � �� � � �� � � � � � � �� � �� � � � � � � � � �� � � �� � � � � � � � � � � � �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� � � � � � � � � � � � �� � � � � � � � � � � � � � �� � � � � � � � � �������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������ �������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������ ����������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������� �������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ������������������������ � � � � � � � � �� � � � � � � � ������������������������ ���������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������������� �������������� ����������������������������� �������������������������������� ����������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������� ������������������������ ������������������������������������� � �� � � � �� � � � � � �� �� � �� � � �� � � �� ��� � � � �� � �� � � � � �� �� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �� �� � �� � � � � � � � � 189 ASLO/AGU/TOS/ERF 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting Membership Application 2008 Your Information: Membership Dues: (Please indicate category.) ASLO Membership Application ASLO membership is based on a calendar year (January-December) and includes the L&O Bulletin, discounts on publications, and discounts on meeting registration fees. Members with print or electronic subscription to L&O will continue to recieve L&O: Methods at no additional cost for 2008. Members without a subscription will not have access to L&O: Methods. P MEMBERSHIP ID NUMBER FIRST NAME MIDDLE INITIAL LAST NAME  Regular Member with Subscription to the Journal, Limnology and Oceanography  Printed Version - North America.....................................................$165.00  Printed Version - Outside North America ......................................$200.00  Electronic Version Only......................................................................$80.00  Regular Member without Journal Subscription....................................$55.00  Student Member with Subscription to the Journal, Limnology and Oceanography (5-year limit for graduate students)  Printed Version .................................................................................$120.00  Electronic Version Only......................................................................$35.00  Student Member without Journal Subscription....................................$25.00 ADDRESS LINE 1 ADDRESS LINE 2 ADDRESS LINE 3 ADDRESS LINE 4 CITY STATE ZIP/POST CODE  Emeritus Member with Subscription to the Journal, Limnology and Oceanography  Printed Version .................................................................................$120.00  Electronic Version Only......................................................................$40.00 COUNTRY Demographic Information: Please complete and/or indicate any changes to the following in the space provided below.  Institution/Organization: Emeritus Member without Journal Subscription.......................... No Charge NOTE: Subscription to printed version includes access to electronic version. Use your ASLO Member ID Number (P#) to access the electronic version via the ASLO website - www.aslo.org. Dept/School: Telephone: Society Fund Contributions: Fax:  Donation to Student Travel Fund ................................. $ E-Mail:  Donation to Endowment Fund .................................... $  Donation to Education & Outreach Fund.................. $ Gender (M/F): Highest Degree: Birth Year: Year Completed:  C - Chemical (This fund supports awards, special projects, and programs.) (Contributors to be recognized in the L&O Bulletin.) Limnology and Oceanography CD-ROM Offer: Discipline: Enter in order of priority B - Biological O - Optical (This fund supports student members at ASLO meetings.) P - Physical L&O Archival CD-ROM set (1956-1998, Volumes 1-43) ......................$150.00   G - Geological Disciplinary Specialty (Use no more than 30 characters.): Shipping Charges—North America.................................................$10.00 Shipping Charges—Outside North America ..................................$15.00 Membership Directory: The memberhsip directory is available to members online. If you would prefer to have a printed biennial directory mailed to you, please check below  Printed Biennial Membership Directory........................................ $10.00 Field: Total Amount Enclosed ................................ $ LIM (Limnology) or OCE (Oceanography). Enter primary first if listing both. (Total includes dues, contributions, and any special offers) Environmental Specialty: Enter no more than four in order of priority. 1 - Lakes/Reservoirs/Ponds 4 - Wetlands 2 - Rivers/Streams 5 - Estuaries 3 - Great Lakes 6 - Coastal Ocean  Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin  Printed Version ...................................................................No Charge  Electronic Version Only .....................................................No Charge 7 - Open Ocean 8 - Most or all  I DO NOT wish to be included in third-part mailings. Please list recent awards and/or honorariums received:  Please add me to the mailing list of the ASLO Policy Action Network.  I would like to receive future notices primarily by e-mail. You can also apply online at www.aslo.org! Payment Information:  Check enclosed Make your check payable in US dollars to: ASLO.  Credit card payment:  VISA  MasterCard  American Express  Discover Checks must be drawn on a US or Canadian bank. Send remittance to: ASLO 5400 Bosque Blvd., Suite 680 Waco, Texas 76710-4446 USA Voice: 800-929-ASLO or 254-399-9635 Fax: 254-776-3767 Email: [email protected] CARDHOLDER NAME CARD NUMBER SIGNATURE 190 ExP. DATE Convention Center Campus Map 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting March 2-7, 2008 · Orlando, Florida · www.aslo.org/orlando2008 Co-sponsored by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, the American Geophysical Union, The Oceanography Society, and the Estuarine Research Federation Conference Managment: ASLO Business Office 5400 Bosque Blvd., Suite 680 Waco, TX 76710 http://www.aslo.org