Climate Change and resource exploitation of Arctic benthic ecosystems workshop and seminar

Climate Change and resource exploitation of Arctic benthic ecosystems workshop and seminar
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This is a past event

Rapid climate change on Arctic marine ecosystems will be discussed at a 3-day workshop with international and UK scientists. The seminar will be open to the public.

Scientists from Canada, Norway and United Kingdom will meet at Oceanlab in Newburgh, Aberdeenshire from 31 August 2016 to 2 September 2016.

Meeting organisers: Professor Ursula Witte and Dr Solveig Bourgeois, Oceanlab

The first day of this workshop is on Climate Change, Resource exploitation and the diversity and functioning of Arctic benthic ecosystems dedicated to a series of seminars on  Arctic Biodiversity and Ecosystem functioning and Anthropogenic impacts and Ocean observation.

The second and third day will be devoted to working groups to synthesize results, gaps and future research needs for an assessment of the Arctic benthic ecosystem functioning in the context of climate change.

  • Climate change is clearly and fundamentally altering marine ecosystems and the most striking impacts can be seen in the Arctic Ocean; air and water temperatures have risen two times faster than for the rest of the world.
  • The most noticeable sign of disruption is the drastic loss of sea ice and many experts fear the Arctic might experience of sea-ice-free summers before mid-century.
  • In terms of ecosystem functioning, these rapid changes would affect the patterns of primary production, i.e. the resource availability for pelagic and benthic communities, and in consequence rates and pathways of organic matter processing.
  • Benthic ecosystems at the ocean floor, that depend on food sinking down from the water column, could be strongly affected by these changes.
  • Moreover, the ice retreat will open new navigation routes (e.g. Northwest Passage) and increase the opportunities to access to natural resources (e.g. extraction of oil and natural gas), which will exacerbate human pressures on this sensitive environment.

The seminar day, being held on 31 August 2016, is free and open to everyone.  Seminar venue: Oceanlab, University of Aberdeen, Main Street, Newburgh AB41 6AA, Scotland, UK. 

Seminar Programme 31 August 2016

09:25-09:30 Welcome (Open to the public)

09:30-10:30 Marine biodiversity and its influence on the functioning of benthic Arctic ecosystems. Professor Philippe Archambault, Québec-Ocean, University of Québec, Canada 

10:30-11:15 Benthic food web structure across the Canadian Arctic Ocean and Chukchi Sea Insights from stable isotopes and the IP25 biomarker. Professor Christian Nozais, University of Québec at Rimouski (UQAR), Canada

Coffee Break (15 minutes)

11:30-12:15 Arctic seafloor community responses to ice algae and phytoplankton – Can climate change benefit the deep sea ecosystem? Anni Makela, Oceanlab, University of Aberdeen, UK

12:15-13:00 Structure and functioning of cold-water coral reefs: a sponge's view. Dr Georgios Kazanidis, Oceanlab, University of Aberdeen, UK

Lunch Break (1 hour)

14:00-14:45 The natural capacity for oils spill remediation of subarctic deep-sea sediments. Dr Evina Gontikaki, Oceanlab, University of Aberdeen, UK

14:45-15:30 Impact of changes in ice cover on pelagic benthic coupling and ecosystem functioning on arctic shelves.  Dr Nathalie Morata, Akvaplan-niva, Fram Centre for Climate and the Environment, Norway; LEMAR, University of Western Brittany, France

Coffee Break (15 minutes)

15:45-16:30 Organic matter remineralization in marine sediments: a Pan-Arctic comparison. Dr Solveig Bourgeois, Oceanlab, University of Aberdeen, UK

Contact: Professor Ursula Witte, u.witte@abdn.ac.uk  01224274402

Dr Solveig Bourgeois, s.bourgeois@abdn.ac.uk 01224274525

Hosted by
Professor Ursula Witte
Venue
Oceanlab