Individuals may nominate themselves or other scientists. However, election/selection etiquette demands that those nominating others alert their potential candidates, and determine, in advance, that these candidates are willing to stand for (s)election to the SSC. Furthermore, the nominators should ascertain that their nominees are informed about the U.S. GLOBEC program, and that they (the nominees) are willing to submit the requisite statement and C.V. (see above) when asked.
The deadline for receipt of nominations and supporting documentation is 20 December 1996. All materials should be sent to:
Prof. Thomas M. Powell Chair, Scientific Steering Committee, U.S. GLOBEC Department of Integrative Biology University of California Berkeley, CA 94720-3140Materials communicated via electronic mail (zackp@violet.berkeley.edu) or FAX (510-643-1142) will be accepted.
Those nominated will be informed on or before 31 January 1997 about this years selections.
The approach of U.S. GLOBEC is to understand how physical processes, both directly and indirectly, influence the success of individual animals in the sea, their feeding, growth, reproduction, and survivorship. It is believed that from this information one can derive the consequences of changing physical processes on animal populations, communities, and ecosystems. Models of global climate can then be used to relate global change to changes in regional ocean physics and, subsequently, changes in regional scale physics to shifts at the scales of events that influence individual organisms. Effects on zooplanktonic life stages will be emphasized because so many marine animals undergo at least one planktonic life stage, and because the planktonic size classes are most at the mercy of the physics of their fluid environment.
U.S. GLOBEC studies involve four major elements: 1) the development of coupled physical/biological models; 2) field studies that incorporate appropriate feedback between the observations and the modeling efforts; 3) retrospective data analysis and 4) the development of new technology and instrumentation to address fundamental processes (i.e., feeding, growth, reproduction, and survivorship) in a varying physical environment.
U. S. GLOBEC presently supports twenty-nine research efforts for phase II studies on the physical-biological dynamics of the Georges Bank ecosystem in the NW Atlantic. Phase II field studies, focusing on the source, retention and loss of water and organisms to/from the bank. will occur during 1997.
In late November 1996, U.S. GLOBEC in conjunction with the Coastal Ocean Processes program of NSF, released an Announcement of Opportunity (AO) for initial modeling, retrospective analysis, and pilot monitoring projects in the northeast Pacific Ocean. This is the first of a series of AOs that will support studies in this region over the next 5-7 years.
Plans are also under development for internationally coordinated field investigations in the Southern Ocean. Several Southern Ocean modeling projects have been funded already.
U.S. GLOBEC is a joint effort of N.S.F. and N.O.A.A. The project is administered by an Interagency Program Office.
The Scientific Steering Committee (SSC) is presently chaired by Prof. Thomas M. Powell; the Coordinating Office of the SSC is located in the Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3140. All inquiries about U.S. GLOBEC publications should be directed to the SSC Coordinating Office. Those wishing to be placed on the U.S. GLOBEC mailing list should contact Ms. Kay Goldberg [phone: 510-643-0877; FAX: 510-643-1142; e-mail: kaygold@uclink4.berkeley.edu] at the SSC Coordinating Office.