September 28 – 29, 2018
A3-206, Zhou Long Quan Building
Xiamen University Xiang’an campus, Xiamen, China
AGENDA
Time
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Subject
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Speaker
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Day 1: September 28 (Friday)
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Opening Ceremony
Chairs: Minhan Dai & Gray A Williams
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08:30-09:00
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Opening ceremony
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09:00-09:20
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科学基金对港合作与交流工作概况
(An overview of NSFC-sponsored academic cooperation and exchanges in Hong Kong)
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Wenze Wang
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PART 1: Information & Knowledge Sharing
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Theme1: The challenges for effective coastal ecosystem observation
Chairs: Bayden Russell and Guizhi Wang
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09:20-09:32
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Challenges in observing the coastal ocean
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Minhan Dai
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09:32-09:44
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Geochemistry as a tool for environmental monitoring: A multidisciplinary approach
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Benoit Thibodeau
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09:44-09:56
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Symbiosis in the sea: Frontiers in functional diversity amidst global change
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David Baker
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09:56-10:08
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A call for establishing long-term monitoring of coastal contaminants in China
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Wenxiong Wang
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10:08-10:40
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Group photo and Coffee break
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10:40-10:52
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Quaternary Asian marine paleoecology
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Moriaki Yasuhara
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10:52-11:04
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Research on ocean three-dimensional observation technology and its application
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Yanhu Chen
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10:04-11:16
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The stable element: isotopes
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Naomi Geeraert
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11:16-11:28
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Groundwater monitoring around D-SMART
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Guizhi Wang
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11:28-11:40
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Atmospheric observation at costal area in the changing environments
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Bingbing Wang
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11:40-11:52
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Challenges for effective coastal ecosystem observation: a case study from the mangroves in Hong Kong
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Henrique Miguel Bravo Gouveia
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11:52-13:30
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Lunch
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Theme 2: The design of simulated experiments to evaluate coastal ecosystems responses to environmental stress
Chairs: Stefano Cannicci and Weiwei You
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13:30-13:42
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Going back to basics: monitoring and experimental approaches to sustain coastal biodiversity
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Gray A Williams
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13:42-13:54
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Eco-Evo dynamics in individual variation in thermal performance
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Tommy Hui
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13:54-14:06
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Biogeography and range limits of marine organisms
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Sam Crickenberger
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14:06-14:18
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Predicting changes to subtidal ecosystems under changing environmental conditions over biogeographic scales
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Bayden Russell
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14:18-14:30
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Building blue networks: Measuring and conserving marine biodiversity
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Shelby Mcilroy
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14:30-14:42
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Scaling up resolution to understand coastal dynamics in changing oceans: Lessons from international networks
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Juan Diego Gaitan Espitia
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14:42-14:54
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The role of macrofauna in functioning of mangroves impacted by intense activity and climate change
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Stefano Cannicci
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14:54-15:06
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Tidal wetland resilience to sea level rise increases their carbon sequestration capacity in the conterminous United States
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Faming Wang
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15:06-15:18
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Marine Photosynthetic organisms under influence of ocean acidification and its combined impacts with other stressors
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Kunshan Gao
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15:18-15:40
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Coffee break
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15:40-15:52
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The physiological responses of juvenile Pocillopora damicornis to diurnal pCO2 fluctuations
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Hui Huang
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15:52-16:04
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Incorporating variability in predictions of organism responses to ocean acidification
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Laura Falkenberg
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16:04-16:16
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Quantifying interactive stressors impact on early development of marine invertebrates
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Karen Chan
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16:16-16:28
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Fast adaptation of tropical phytoplankton to increased warming
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Peng Jin
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16:28-16:40
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Interactive network configuration maintains bacterioplankton community structure under elevated CO2 in a eutrophic coastal mesocosm experiment
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Xin Lin
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16:40-16:52
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Coral calcification and its responses to ocean acidification
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Xiangcheng Yuan
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16:52-17:04
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Expanding multigenerational studies to evaluate long-term response of coastal organisms to environmental stress
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Ashley Hemraj
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17:04-17:16
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Corals’ response to environmental change: A symbiotic view of resilience
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Tuo Shi
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17:16-17:28
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New challenges for oyster aquaculture in China: the ways forward
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Rajan Vengatesen
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17:28-17:40
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Adapting abalone aquaculture to the changing ocean: Ocean warming, acidification and low oxygen
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Weiwei You
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17:40-17:52
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The oyster adaptation to the climate change: divergence or plasticity?
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Li Li
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18:00
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Departure for dinner
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Day 2: September 29 (Saturday)
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Theme 3: Modeling and prediction of climate and environmental impacts on coastal ecosystems
Chairs: Juan Diego Gaitan Espitia and Bingbing Wang
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08:30-08:42
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Progress of biophysical study over China shelf sea: observation and modeling
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Jianping Gan
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08:42-08:54
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Modelling coastal marine ecosystems
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Fei Chai
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08:54-09:06
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The pace of climate change and its marine ecological effects in eastern China
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Rongshuo Cai
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09:06-09:18
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Towards a common framework for marginal socioecological system research
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Richard Bellerby
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09:18-09:30
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High-frequency floating algae watch from Himawari-8
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Shaoling Shang
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09:30-09:42
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Physical processes of sediment transport and geomorphology in the southern Yellow Sea: in-situ measurements and modelling
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Yaping Wang
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09:42-09:54
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The separation of China coastal current and its biological responding in the Taiwan strait
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Yuwu Jiang
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09:54-10:20
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Coffee break
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PART 2: Discussion
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Topic1: Continuous observations of coastal Chinese waters: developing autonomous and interdisciplinary platforms
Discussion leaders: Jianping Gan, Benoit Thibodeau and Yuwu Jiang
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10:20-10:35
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Brief description
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Discussion leaders
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10:35-11:50
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Discussion and summary
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12:00-13:30
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Lunch
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Time
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Subject
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Speaker
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Topic2: Approaches to understand the functioning of coastal ecosystems under the coupled impacts of intensive human activity and climate change
Discussion leaders:Gray A. Williams, Bayden Russell, Hui Huang, Kunshan Gao and Yunwei Dong
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13:30-13:45
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Brief description
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Discussion leaders
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13:45-15:00
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Discussion and summary
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15:00-15:20
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Coffee break
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Topic3: The future of coastal ecosystems and human communities under 3°C warming: predictive modeling and empirical approaches to maximize adaptation
Discussion leaders: Chai Fei, Richard Bellerby, David Baker, Yuwu Jiang and Jilan Su
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15:20-15:35
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Brief description
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Discussion leaders
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15:35-16:50
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Discussion and summary
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16:50-17:10
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Closing
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Gray A Williams & Yunwei Dong
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**Overall meeting design:
This unique workshop is composed of information and knowledge sharing via short talks (10+2 mins) in Day One and Discussion in Day Two. The goals of the predefined discussion topics are to frame large scale initiatives possible for funding support from mainland and/or Hong Kong agencies. Discussion leaders are expected to give an introduction as a group or individually of no more than 15 mins. What follows will be free discussions with/without PowerPoints with no more than 3 mins/each. The final stage of 10 mins is the summary of the discussion. Among others, we hope to have as a preproposal-type of summary by the discussion leaders which includes, but is not limited to, their relevance to scientific and societal challenges, main hypotheses, prior research links from mainland and Hong Kong, possible collaborations, or network teams.
DISCUSSION TOPICS
Topic #1: Continuous observations of coastal Chinese waters: developing autonomous and interdisciplinary platforms
This discussion topic is to bring together new perspectives of technology advancement and interdisciplinary understanding to the coastal system aiming for integrative and sustainable ways of observing the coastal system.
Brief description: Recent advances in observation technology, as well as a number of interdisciplinary field studies carried out by different institutes, have led to significant advances in our understanding of China coastal ocean patterns and processes. The water masses, nutrients and marine species can be transported and transformed on the China coastal currents, which are driven by the seasonal monsoons. Although individual observations in regionally important locations can give snapshots for understanding the physical and biogeochemical patterns and processes, e.g., coastal upwelling, downwelling and water-mass separation points, there are challenges for developing an integrated understanding of these complex processes. Importantly, these coastal processes underly and drive biological and ecological patterns and are therefore fundamental for predicting the future of these systems (Topic #2). In order to capture the diverse and dynamic nature of coastal ocean processes, this theme will focus on the development of long-term interdisciplinary and synchronous observations along China’s coasts, emphasizing the development of integrated observation platforms (shipboard, profiler, seafloor cable, remote-sensing, etc.) using state-of-the-art technology, but also integrating these observations with biological patterns and processes. These observations and the integrated data can play a vital role in advancing our understanding of China’s continental shelf, near-shore coastal, and estuarine conditions and processes, how these drive biological processes, and provide essential information for complex coastal ocean stewardship issues.
Discussion leaders: Jianping Gan, Benoit Thibodeau and Yuwu Jiang
Topics #2: Approaches to understand the functioning of coastal ecosystems under the coupled impacts of intensive human activity and climate change
This topic will highlight the coupled impacts of human activity and climate change on different ecosystems (intertidal, subtidal, coral and rocky reefs, and mangroves). The topic will integrate discussion of impacts on natural systems and their functioning by considering impacts on the ecosystem services that these systems provide, such as carbon capture and storage (Blue Carbon), aquaculture production (e.g., abalone and oysters) and wild-catch fisheries.
Brief description:Most of the world’s coastal ecosystems are heavily impacted by multiple anthropogenic stressors, and the fingerprints of these stressors on these economically and ecologically important ecosystems are already evident. Concomitantly, accelerating development of commercial (e.g., aquaculture, fisheries and transportation), residential and tourist activities, is driving unprecedented transformation of coastal ecosystems world-wide. The extraordinary coastal development and anthropogenic stressors along China’s coastline provide a unique opportunity to study how climate change and habitat modification, two of the most important contemporary anthropogenic drivers, interact to change coastal biodiversity, ecosystem functioning and the services provided, and subsequent impacts on food security and sustainability.
In order to achieve the sustainable development of coastal ecosystems under the impacts of human activity and climate change, there are many knowledge gaps which need addressing, from observations to determine patterns to experiments to identify key processes. Addressing these knowledge gaps at different spatial scales will provide data for development of predictive models which can be used for management and incorporated into the predictive frameworks developed in Topic #3.
Discussion leaders: Gray Williams, Bayden Russell, Kunshan Gao, Hui Huang and Yunwei Dong
Topic #3: The future of coastal ecosystems and human communities under 3°C warming: predictive modeling and empirical approaches to maximize adaptation.
This topic is to discuss the changing coastal ecosystem with unique regional or even localized settings under multiple stressors in the general context of climatic changes. This topic would also be interested in identifying challenges both the scientific community and the society are facing to live in the coastal regions under 3°C. Among others, it is particularly challenging to perform regional forecast of the coastal ecosystem and thus both numerical predictive modeling and empirical upscaling approaches are significant and important.
Brief description: The world is currently on course to warm by 3°C by the end of this century. In a 3°C world, there will be more harsh droughts, more extreme weather, increased disruption of food production, rising sea levels, and heightened storm surges. These latter two effects, in particular, threaten many current coastlines and underwater habitats critical for human habitation and coastal production. This is especially important in China, as 3°C warming by 2100 is predicted to raise sea levels by 2 m, threatening 275 million city dwellers in Asian coastal megacities and industrial hubs such as Shanghai and Shenzhen.
Local preparations for a 3°C world are woefully inadequate, partly because of inadequate predictions with which to make management decisions. It is, therefore, critical to identify the potential responses and resilience of Chinese coastal regions to help design and implement adaptation strategies and maintain the health of coastal habitats and human infrastructure in a 3°C world.
Discussion leaders: Fei Chai, Richard Bellerby, David Baker, Yuwu Jiang, and Jilan Su