With a growing number of reports show that climate change will impact
human health, economic and national security, and agricultural and
natural resource management, scientists and policymakers are now
considering how to regulate carbon emissions and mitigate the effects of
climate change. Legislation has been introduced to implement cap and
trade systems and carbon taxes, and to promote carbon sequestration.
Informed policy decisions require that policymakers understand the
potential role of ecosystems in mitigating the problems caused by carbon
emissions.
Join internationally recognized ecosystem researchers to learn what
ecosystem science can tell us about carbon sequestration.
Speakers
- Dr. Robin Graham – Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National
Laboratory: Environmental Policy and Carbon Sequestration by
Ecosystems
- Ken Buesseler, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution: Ocean
Fertilization: Ironing Out Uncertainties in Climate Engineering
- Peter Curtis: The Ohio State University: Forest carbon storage in the
upper Midwest: Lessons from the past and predictions for the future
- J. Patrick Megonigal, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center:
Carbon In, Methane Out: The Greenhouse Gas Balance of North American
Wetlands
- Charles Rice, Kansas State University: Carbon Sequestration in
Agro-ecosystems
- John Arnone, Desert Research Institute: Carbon Sequestration in
Deserts
- Dr. Thomas E. Jordan – Smithsonian Environmental Research Center;
President, Association of Ecosystem Research Centers, Moderator
RSVP’s please contact Megan Kelhart at
[email protected].
For more information about this science briefing or the Association of
Ecosystem Research Centers, please contact [email protected].
Room 3111, Smithsonian Institution Ripley Center
(Entrance is adjacent to the Smithsonian Castle on the National Mall)
Association of Ecosystem Research Centers
District of Columbia
25/09/2008 at 09:30AM
The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) invites you to learn
about the impacts climate change is having on ecosystems, in particular
those changes that are rapid, large, and potentially irreversible. We
now have evidence that there may be thresholds that, once crossed, will
present serious coping challenges to humans. This raises a major
strategic challenge in the climate policy debate before this Congress:
What concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere might lead to
environmentally, socially and economically unacceptable impacts?
In response to this question, a project was developed jointly by the H.
John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics,
and the Environment, the Joint Global Change Research Institute, and The
Nature Conservancy, entitled “Understanding the Consequences of
Thresholds in Global Change and Their Implications for Decision-Making.”
The project promotes understanding of the physical, natural, and social
dynamics that underlie ecological thresholds in order to better inform
ongoing adaptation measures and response options across scales of
decision-making. Our panel will focus on the work of this important
initiative and its draft report, which is based on the first of a series
of meetings that took place in 2006. Case studies presented at the
meeting included impacts on the critical ecosystems of the American
Rockies and Alaska such as: drought in the Colorado River Basin; bark
beetles in Western Canada; and forest die-off and die-back in the West.
Our speaker panel includes Ecothresholds Project participants and other
experts:
- Dr. Anthony Janetos (Moderator), Director, Joint Global Change
Research Institute, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory/University
of Maryland
- Dr. Ed Miles, Virginia and Prentice Bloedel Professor of Marine
Studies and Public Affairs, University of Washington
- Dr. Neil Cobb, Director, Merriam-Powell Center for Environmental
Research, Northern Arizona University
- Dr. Mark Eakin, Coordinator, NOAA Coral Reef
Watch, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
- Dr. John Wiens, Lead Scientist, The Nature Conservancy
- Michael Bradley, Canfor Pulp Limited Partnership
The Ecothresholds Project envisions
workshops and conferences to engage resource managers and practitioners
to explore responses to threshold effects that challenge the condition
of ecosystem services and the foundation of a range of natural resource
management practices. Creating a dialogue between this project and
policymakers will help ensure that the major strategic questions being
addressed by this project will be incorporated into the federal policy
debate on climate change.
This briefing is open to the public and no reservations are required.
For more information, contact Fred Beck at 202-662-1892 ([email protected])
Environmental and Energy Study Institute
210 Cannon
20/09/2007 at 03:00PM