Synthesis paper #4:
Title/subject: The
relative importance of climate change and local processes in controlling zooplankton populations in
the GB/GoM region.
Possible Authors: Davis,
Durbin, Runge, Madin, Wiebe et al.
Synopsis: This paper
summarizes and reviews what we learned about processes contolling zooplankton dynamics,
including data synthesis and modeling results with predictions of how global change is likely to affect
these populations. This synthesis
paper also includes the zooplankton predators.
Synthesis paper #5:
Title/subject: Multi-scale
biological-physical interactions controlling recruitment processes in cod and haddock on Georges
Bank.
Possible Authors: Lough,
Fogarty, Buckley, Kristiansen, Petrik et al.
Synopsis: This paper
compiles all the factors controlling survival and growth of larval cod and haddock including local and
remote forcing, top-down vs bottom up effects, and presents a synthesized view of how
these populations may be impacted in the future. It should include discussion of how the
results will be used to better manage the fisheries by links with the full-life
cycle and stock
assessments.
Synthesis paper #6:
Title/subject: Multiscale
biological-physical modeling of the GB-GoM region.
Possible Authors: Ji, Chen,
Beardsley, McGillicuddy, Gangopadhyay, Runge, Werner, Davis et al.
Synopsis: This paper
summarizes and reviews what we learned through numerical modeling about how multi-scale physical
forcing of the region, including climate forcing (NAO-LSW-WSW, salinity anomalies) and local
physics (tides, winds, heat flux) affects biological dynamics including NPZD-copepod species-fish
species. This paper also includes predictions of how biological dynamics will change with future physical
forcing scenarios and more generally how temperate marine ecosystems are likely to
respond mechanistically to climate change.