Dear Colleagues,

We are organizing a special session on Hydroclimatic Extremes (S08) at the
2016 Society for Freshwater Science meeting in Sacramento, California (May
21-26, 2016). Please see below for the special session abstract.

We encourage presentations from studies that span population, community,
and ecosystem scales that specifically address how data-model integration
can enhance understanding of the effects of hydrological variability.
Deadline for abstract submissions is January 29, 2016.

If you are interested in participating, please e-mail us by December 1st
with 1) your commitment to submit an abstract to present in this special
session at SFS, and 2) your tentative abstract title.

We are looking forward to seeing you at SFS.

Sincerely,

Albert RUHI, Arizona State University (albert.r...@asu.edu)
John S. KOMINOSKI, Florida International University (jkomino...@gmail.com)
John L. SABO, Arizona State University (john.l.s...@asu.edu)

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Title: New approaches to assessing and predicting the impacts of
hydroclimatic extremes of freshwater populations, communities, and
ecosystems

S08: Hydroclimatic Extremes

Climate-driven intensification of the global hydrologic cycle is increasing
the frequency and magnitude of extreme events (droughts and floods) and
this increasing environmental variability poses threats on biodiversity and
ecosystem functioning. In lotic ecosystems, alterations to baseline
discharge variation regimes may erode native biodiversity, affect food-web
structure, and alter nutrient pulse dynamics. In lentic ecosystems,
hydroclimatic extremes control hydroperiod length and timing, which are
critical drivers of meta-population and meta-community structure and
dynamics. Nevertheless, ecological impacts of increasing hydroclimatic
variability are difficult to anticipate from discrete observations alone
because the influences of extreme events occur through a wide range of
mechanisms (abiotic and biotic) and spatio-temporal scales. Within this
context, statistical models (e.g., state-space models on time-series data)
may be important tools to increase understanding of these mechanisms and
potentially anticipate effects of increasing hydroclimatic variability on
freshwater biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Although the use of
these models is still limited - partly due to the scarcity of
temporally-extensive data sets - increasing availability of long-term
ecological data sets and "big data" may open many opportunities in the near
future. This session will be devoted to the discussion of statistical
modeling approaches that may effectively link hydroclimatic forcing to
ecological responses, and to their data requirements, potential, and
limitations. Ultimately, we would like to exemplify and synthesize the
range of tools that are available to freshwater ecologists to anticipate
impacts of hydroclimatic extremes, across spatio-temporal scales and levels
of biological organization.

-- 
John Stephen Kominoski
Assistant Professor
Department of Biological Sciences and
Southeast Environmental Research Center
Florida International University
11200 SW 8th Street
Miami, Florida 33199, USA

Email: jkomi...@fiu.edu
Office: +1 305.348.7117
Lab: +1 305.348.6512
Fax: +1 305.348.1986
kominoskilab.wordpress.com

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