Changes (Jan. 20, 2010):
P1 and D1 Sessions have been joined into P1-D1 (April 26)
A2 Session will be held on Apr. 26 (afternoon) and Apr. 27 (morning)
B2 Session will be held on Apr. 28
Submit your name for participation
in the public seminar (April 30) here (Japanese,
English)
Detailed
schedule (pdf, 1
Mb, Last update - April 14, 2010)
Outcomes from the Symposium by Dr.
Steven Murawski
12:20
Comments from the audience
12:40
Best presentations Awards
12:50
Closing remarks by Symposium Convenors
13:00
Session ends
* Two evening poster sessions (with appetizers and drinks)
will be held from 18:30-20:30 on April 27 and 28, when poster presenters
are expected to be available to answer questions. Maximum poster
dimensions are 1.6 m high and 1 m wide (Portrait-oriented).
Please add your photo to the Poster.
* Welcome Reception and Poster Sessions are included into the Registration
Fee Payment.
P1-D1 Session:
Forecasting impacts: From climate to fish
P2 Session:
Forecasting impacts: From fish to markets
A1 Session:
Downscaling variables from global models
A2 Session:
Species-specific responses: Changes in growth, reproductive success,
mortality, spatial distribution, and adaptation
B1 Session:
Assessing ecosystem responses: Impacts on community structure, biodiversity,
energy flow and carrying capacity
B2 Session:
Comparing responses to climate variability among nearshore, shelf
and oceanic regions
C1 Session:
Impacts on fisheries and coastal communities
C2 Session:
Evaluating human responses, management strategies and economic implications
D2 Session:
Contemporary and next generation climate and oceanographic models,
technical advances and new approaches
P3 Session:
Sustainable strategies in a warming climate
W1
Reducing global and national vulnerability to climate change in
the fisheries sectors: Policy perspectives post Copenhagen
W2
Potential impacts of ocean acidification on marine ecosystems and
fisheries
W3
Coupled climate-to-fish-to-fishers models for understanding mechanisms
underlying low frequency fluctuations in small pelagic fish and projecting
its future
W4
Salmon workshop on climate change
W5
Networking across global marine "hotspots"
W6
Examining the linkages between physics and fish: How do zooplankton
and krill data sets improve our understanding of the impacts of climate
change on fisheries?
Poster Session
Two evening poster sessions (with appetizers and drinks) will
be held from 18:30-20:30 on April 27 and 28, when poster presenters
are expected to be available to answer questions. Maximum poster
dimentions are 1.6 m high and 1 m wide (Portrait-oriented).