Conference Program

June 5-10, 2016 Santa Fe Community Convention Center Santa Fe, new mexiCo, uSa

This program is produced for information and assistance on site at the meeting. It contains the most up-to-date program information. Changes received after the printing of the program will be available using the meeting app. Additional information can also be found on the conference website. Sponsored by the Association for the www.sgmeet.com/aslo/santafe2016 Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography We encourage you to use the meeting website and mobile app for all current information and to navigate the meeting.

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Changes to the scientific program will also be published on an addendum that will be posted on message boards. PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

Contents

ASLO 2016 Summer Meeting...... 2 Student Presentation Evaluations ...... 12 Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography...... 2 Career Bulletin Board...... 12 Meeting Organizers...... 2 Early Career Workshop: Writing a Winning Proposal: Co-Chairs...... 2 Vital Tips from Program Officers for Early Career Scientists ...... 13 Program Committee...... 2 Early Career Social Mixer ...... 13 Conference Management...... 2 Mentor Program...... 13 ASLO Board of Directors...... 2 Optional Events and Activities...... 13 Officers/Executive Committee...... 2 Fun Runs around Santa Fe...... 13 Members-at-Large...... 2 Early Morning Yoga...... 13 Student Board Members...... 2 Tapas Night...... 13 ASLO Staff...... 2 Bandelier National Monument Excursion – Indian Cliff Dwellings, Questions or Comments? ...... 3 Views, and Volcanoes...... 14 Wednesday Afternoon Activities...... 14 Plenary Session Presentations...... 3 Conference Events...... 14 Opening Session and Presidential Address...... 3 ASLO Editors Forum...... 14 Opening Remarks: ASLO 2.0 Is Underway: On A Steady Course for Productive Waters...... 3 Opening Mixer and Welcome Reception...... 14 Video Presentation: Chasing Water by Peter McBride...... 3 ASLO Fellows and Membership Reception Followed by the Annual Membership Meeting...... 14 Mobile App & Social Media ...... 3 ASLO Policy Panel Discussion – Make it Matter: Success Stories Recording Policy ...... 3 from the Science Policy Interface ...... 14 Monday Plenary Presentation - Taking a Long Look at Lakes...... 4 Poster Session and Reception...... 14 Tuesday Plenary Presentation - Metabolic Signatures of Streams and Rivers...... 4 Closing Reception...... 14 Wednesday Plenary Presentation - The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Understanding Evolution with Multiple Environmental Drivers...... 4 Workshops, Meetings, Working Groups, and Town Halls...... 15 Thursday Plenary Presentation - Resource and Consumer Control CSI Limnology Santa Fe Working Group...... 15 of Cross-habitat Trophic Interactions in Shallow Lakes...... 4 NSF Funding Opportunities in Aquatic Sciences ...... 15 Friday Plenary Presentation - Carbon, Carbon, Carbon, and More Carbon...... 5 Restoring Our Living Bond with Nature Workshop...... 15 Society Award Presentations...... 5 Daphnia Working Group Meeting ...... 15 Poster Advertisements...... 6 Responses to Environmental Change in Mountain Aquatic Ecosystems Working Group Meeting...... 15 Public Events ...... 6 Additional Participant and Attendee Information...... 15 AquaScience Theater 2016: Films, Videos, Movies Receipts ...... 15 That Communicate Water Science ...... 6 Letters of Participation...... 15 The omplexityC of Aquatic Invasions in the Colorado River Basin – Session 39 Parts 1 and 2...... 7 ADA Statement/Special Needs...... 15 About Santa Fe and The Meeting Sites...... 7 Childcare During the Meeting ...... 15 Nursing Mothers Room ...... 15 Internet Access ...... 7 Printing...... 16 Parking in Santa Fe...... 7 Getting Around Santa Fe...... 7 Instructions for Presenters...... 16 Walking Around Santa Fe...... 7 Poster Presenters...... 16 Taxi Service...... 7 Poster Set Up and Teardown...... 16 Bus Service...... 7 Poster Session...... 16 The Santa Fe Pickup Shuttle...... 7 Oral Presenters...... 16 Lunch and Dinner in Santa Fe...... 7 Speaker/Presentation Room Hours ...... 16 Message Boards...... 7 Reviewing Your Presentation...... 16 Special Needs...... 7 During Your Presentation...... 16 Coffee Breaks...... 7 SFCCC Map...... 17 Meeting Schedule...... 8-10 El Dorado Map...... 18 Conference Registration and Check In...... 11 Meeting At-A-Glance...... 19-23 Exhibitors ...... 11 Monday Orals...... 24-27 Student and Early Career Participant Information...... 12 Tuesday Orals...... 28-31 Student Orientation ...... 12 Tuesday Posters...... 32-35 Student Volunteer Training Session ...... 12 Wednesday Orals...... 36-37 Student Social Mixer...... 12 Thursday Orals...... 38-41 ASLO 2016 Santa Fe Pub Crawl...... 12 Friday Orals...... 42-45 Student Career Development Workshops...... 12 Author Index...... 46-52 Workshop: Scientific Speed Networking...... 12 Santa Fe Hotel Map...... Inside Back Cover Workshop: Ethical Dilemmas: What is intellectual property and who gets authorship? ...... 12

1 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

Kendra Spence Cheruvelil, Michigan State University, Department of ASLO 2016 Summer Meeting Fisheries and Wildlife, East Lansing, Michigan, USA, [email protected] ASLO is returning to Santa Fe! Designated a UNESCO Creative City Spencer Hall, Indiana University, Department of , Bloomington, in 2005, the city continues to be a top-ten city in many categories. A rich Indiana, USA, [email protected] history has left its unique mark on Santa Fe’s day-to-day lifestyle. From the arts, to cuisine, to architecture, Santa Fe is a wonderful location. The Per Juel Hansen, University of Copenhagen, Department of Biology, ASLO 2016 Summer Meeting brings together both freshwater and salt Copenhagen, Denmark, [email protected] water scientists, educators, policy makers and students to meet and learn Stuart Jones, University of Notre Dame, Department of Biological Sci- from each other about the many issues that face aquatic scientists today. ences, Notre Dame, Indiana, USA, [email protected] The committee has partnered with the city of Santa Fe on organizing field Karin Rengefors, Lund University, Department of Biology, Lund, Swe- trips, cultural experiences, and local experiences that are characteristic to den, [email protected] the city and unique to the region. The meeting features two sessions that Steven Thomas, University of Nebraska - Lincoln, School of Natural will be open to the public. Both of these sessions will highlight present Resources, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA, [email protected] day freshwater challenges around the world and will raise awareness about these issues. Bernhard Wehrli, ETH Zurich, Department of Environmental Systems Science, Zurich, Switzerland, [email protected] Association for the Grace Wilkinson, University of Virginia, Department of Environmental Sciences, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA, [email protected] Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography CONFERENCE MANAGEMENT The purpose of ASLO is to foster a diverse, international scientific Conference management for the ASLO 2016 Summer Meeting is pro- community that creates, integrates and communicates knowledge across vided by sg Meeting and Marketing Services, Waco, Texas. the full spectrum of aquatic sciences, advances public awareness and education about aquatic resources and research, and promotes scientific Helen Schneider Lemay, ASLO Business Manager, [email protected] stewardship of aquatic resources for the public interest. Its products and Lynda West, ASLO Meeting Project Manager, [email protected] activities are directed toward these ends. For more than 50 years, ASLO has been the leading professional ASLO Board of Directors organization for researchers and educators in the field of aquatic science. ASLO traces its roots to the Limnological Society of America (LSA), OFFICERS/EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE which was established in 1936 to further interest and research in limnologial James J. Elser, President science. While the LSA had members working in both freshwater and John A. Downing, Past-President marine systems, the name did not reflect this diversity until 1948 when the Linda Duguay, President-Elect Oceanographic Society of the Pacific merged with the LSA to become the Lisa Campbell, Secretary American Society of Limnology and Oceanography. ASLO is incorporated Phillip Taylor, Treasurer as a non-stock (non-profit) corporation in the State of Wisconsin. Member- ship in the society is presently more than 3,800 members. Members are MEMBERS-AT-LARGE drawn from 58 countries including the United States, and more than a quar- Robinson “Wally” Fulweiler ter of the members reside outside the U.S. In 2011, ASLO members voted Miguel-Angel Mateo to change its name to the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Susanne Menden-Deuer Oceanography, reflecting the increasingly international nature of the society. Elizabeth Minor Gillian Stewart Kim Wickland Meeting Organizers David Caron CO-CHAIRS Beatrix Beisner, University of Quebec at Montreal, Department of STUDENT BOARD MEMBERS Biological Sciences, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, [email protected] Grace Wilkinson Tiara Moore Tammi Richardson, University of South Carolina, Department of Biologi- cal Sciences, Columbia, South Carolina, USA, [email protected] ASLO STAFF PROGRAM COMMITTEE Jennifer Cherrier, Editor, Limnology and Oceanography e-Lectures Teresa Curto, Executive Director Shelley Arnott, Queen’s University, Department of Biology, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, [email protected] Bob Howarth, Editor-in-Chief, Limnology and Oceanography Wiebke Boeing, New Mexico State University, Department of Fish, Paul Kemp, Web Editor and Editor-in-Chief, Limnology and Wildlife and Conservation , Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA, Oceanography: Methods [email protected] Chris Filstrup, Deputy Editor, Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin

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Helen Schneider Lemay, Business Manager Biological Station with a joint appointment as Research Professor in the School of Life Sciences & the School of Sustainability, Arizona State Uni- Patricia Soranno, Editor-in-Chief, Limnology and Oceanography Letters versity. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement Adrienne Sponberg, Co-Editor, Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin of Science and a foreign associate of the Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Director of Communications and Science and Letters. Elser holds a BS degree from the University of Notre Dame, an MS degree from the University of , and a Ph.D. (in Ecology) from the University of California – Davis. Recipient of ASLO’s 2012 Questions or Comments? G. Evelyn Hutchinson Award for research accomplishment and its 1990 Have a question about ASLO or the meeting? Members of the organizing Lindeman Award, he now serves as ASLO’s President. Author or co- committee along with the ASLO board members will be wearing ribbons. author of more than 220 scientific articles, co-author of the bookEcological Please feel free to ask if you have a question. Stoichiometry, and co-editor of the recent book Phosphorus, Food, and Our Future, Elser is co-founder of ASU’s Sustainable Phosphorus Initiative and leader of an NSF-funded Plenary Session MOBILE APP & Research Coordination Network (RCN) on Phos- Presentations SOCIAL MEDIA phorus Sustainability. Concurrent sessions will start each day (Monday We encourage you to use the meeting through Friday) at 8:30. The ASLO president’s website and mobile app for all current VIDEO PRESENTATION: address will kick off the meeting on Monday morning information and to navigate the meet- CHASING WATER BY PETER MCBRIDE beginning at 11:15. A plenary session will follow later ing. Check the inside front cover for Peter McBride is an award-winning photographer, that afternoon. Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday will instructions. feature ASLO award talk presentations in the morn- writer, and filmmaker who spent over four years ing followed by plenary sessions in the afternoon. Facebook: documenting the Colorado River. In this award- Wednesday’s schedule includes a plenary session facebook.com/SantaFe2016 winning film, McBride sets out to document the starting at 11:00. There are no concurrent sessions on flow of the Colorado River from source to sea, a Tw i t t e r : Wednesday afternoon so that meeting attendees can 1500-mile journey. A Colorado native, McBride hails @ASLOMtg (#ASLOMtg) have free time to enjoy Santa Fe. from a ranching family that depends on the Colorado for irrigation, and this is the story of his backyard. RECORDING POLICY His simple desire is to find out where the irrigation OPENING SESSION AND water of his youth went after his family used it, and Please! No recording of individual how long it took the water to reach the ocean. Follow PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS talks or sessions (oral or poster). Monday, 6 June 2016 its path with an artistic, aerial view on a personal 11:15 to 12:00 Audio taping, videotaping, or journey to understand this national treasure. McBride Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC photographing of presentations teamed up with his bush-pilot father to capture is not allowed at the meeting. unique footage. Welcome by Meeting Co-Chairs – Beatrix Beisner, University of Quebec at Montreal, Department of Thank you for your cooperation. Peter McBride will not be able to attend in person, Biological Sciences, Montreal, Quebec, Canada and but this film is being shown as one of the outstanding Tammi Richardson, University of South Carolina, highlights of his work. Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia, South Carolina, USA Biographical Information: Peter McBride has spent two decades studying the world with a camera. A self-taught, award-winning photographer, OPENING REMARKS: ASLO 2.0 IS UNDERWAY: writer, and filmmaker, he has traveled on assignment to over 70 coun- ON A STEADY COURSE FOR PRODUCTIVE WATERS tries for the publications of the National Geographic Society, Smithsonian, James J. Elser, ASLO President, Outside, Esquire, Audubon, Stern, and GEO and companies like Patagonia, Director, Flathead Lake Biological Station, University Microsoft, The Nature Conservancy, and more. After a decade working of Montana, Polson, Montana, abroad and completing a Knight fellowship for journalism at Stanford and Research Professor, School University, Peter decided to focus his cameras closer to home on a subject of Life Sciences & School of Sustainability, Arizona State closer to his heart. Combining his passion for aviation and his belief in University, Tempe, Arizona conservation, he spent over four years documenting his backyard river — the Colorado. This journey culminated in a coffee table book:The Colorado Presentation Description: In this talk, ASLO River: Flowing Through Conflict, and a series of short films “Chasing Water,” President Jim Elser will bring meeting “I AM RED,” and “Delta Dawn.” attendees up to speed on all of the exciting developments that have flowed during the Peter now focuses his lenses and energies on watershed issues and related past few years as ASLO comes into a new era, including the society’s pub- stories around the world to raise awareness about freshwater challenges. lishing platform with Wiley, the new journal Limnology & Oceanography His work as a photographer, writer, and filmmaker have garnered awards Letters, and the ASLO Fellows program, as well as continued emphasis on from the Banff Mountain Film Festival, North American Society of excellence in its flagship journals and meetings. Journalists, Lowell Thomas Travel Writing, and many more.American Photo Magazine named Peter as one of the top five water photographers in Biographical Information: James Elser is Bierman Professor of Ecology the nation and in 2014, after he completed a story following the length of and Director of the University of Montana’s century-old Flathead Lake India’s Ganges River, The National Geographic Society named McBride a

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“Freshwater Hero.” When not lost on assignment or doing public speak- methods enables conversion of these data into time series of gross primary ing, you can find McBride exploring the creeks and mountains in the production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (ER), with the outcome of Rocky Mountains or practicing mandolin on his back porch in Colorado. many more long time series of metabolism than currently exist. My pre- sentation will address how to ecologically interpret these metabolism time MONDAY PLENARY PRESENTATION - series and show how we can use them to address questions of C cycling in TAKING A LONG LOOK AT LAKES rivers and assess human impacts to rivers. Emily Stanley, University of Biographical Information: Bob Hall is a limnologist at University of Wyoming Wisconsin-Madison, Center for where he started in 1998. Since graduate school at University of Georgia Limnology, Madison, Wisconsin, he has been interested in stream carbon cycling and food webs, but with a USA career trajectory of studying ever larger rivers. Current work links geomor- Monday, 6 June 2016 phology to stream metabolism and nitrogen cycling, statistical analyses of 16:15 to 17:30 river metabolism, isotope tracers, and DOC dynamics in streams. Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC Presentation Description: In an era of increas- WEDNESDAY PLENARY PRESENTATION - THE GOOD, THE ing human influence and sometimes slow and sometimes rapid environmental change, BAD AND THE UGLY: UNDERSTANDING EVOLUTION WITH lakes have proven to be excellent study MULTIPLE ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS systems for observing and understanding temporal dynamics over multiple Sinead Collins, Royal Society University Research Fellow, time scales. Maintaining long-term data sets comes with a variety of chal- University of Edinburgh, lenges, but the value of the investment becomes increasingly apparent as Ashworth Laboratories, these records lengthen. I will provide several examples of environmental Edinburgh, United Kingdom changes revealed by long-term data sets from the North Temperate Lakes Wednesday, 8 June 2016 Long-Term Ecological Research site and from other long-term lake studies 11:00 to 12:30 to demonstrate the diversity of types, patterns, and rates of change – and Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC thus to highlight the value of these records for understanding basic eco- Environmental logical phenomena as well as lake responses to human activities. Presentation Description: changes seldom occur alone, and while Biographical Information: Emily Stanley is a professor in the Department evolutionary theory tends to focus on cases of and Center for Limnology at the University of Wisconsin - where the environment worsens from the point of view of organisms, there Madison. She received her B.S. degree from Yale University and Ph.D. are many cases where the environment also improves organismal fitness. from Arizona State University. Stanley’s research group investigates bio- Dr. Collins will discuss recent experiments that deal with limits to evolu- geochemistry and ecosystem processes in streams and lakes, and how they tion under environmental enrichment, as well as empirical and theoretical are affected by human and physical drivers. She is the lead PI of the North results for understanding how evolution in the presence of several drivers Temperate Lakes Long Term Ecological Research program, and is also differs from evolution in response to single environmental changes. involved in projects examining long-term and large-scale dynamics in lakes Sinead Collins has been a Royal Society and streams. She is an author on over 100 peer-review articles, has served Biographical Information: University Research Fellow in the Institute of Evolutionary Biology at the on the editorial boards of Journal of Geophysical Research, Marine and University of Edinburgh since 2010. This is her second fellowship at the Freshwater Research, and Ecological Applications, and will be a senior editor University of Edinburgh, with the first being a NERC Research Fellow. for ASLO’s new journal, Limnology and Oceanography Letters. Stanley was After receiving her Ph.D. at McGill University in Montréal, Québec, named an Aldo Leopold Fellow in 2006 and was one of nine faculty to Canada, Dr. Collins was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Max Planck Institute receive a Kellett mid-career fellowship in recognition of her distinguished for Plant Breeding in Cologne, Germany. Her research focuses on build- research contributions at the University of Wisconsin in 2015. ing the theory needed to predict the evolutionary potential of microbial populations TUESDAY PLENARY PRESENTATION - METABOLIC SIGNATURES OF STREAMS AND RIVERS THURSDAY PLENARY PRESENTATION - RESOURCE AND Bob Hall, Professor, Department of Zoology and , CONSUMER CONTROL OF CROSS-HABITAT TROPHIC University of Wyoming, Laramie, INTERACTIONS IN SHALLOW LAKES Wyoming, USA Sebastian Diehl, Professor, Tuesday, 7 June 2016 University of Umeå, Department 16:15 to 17:30 of Ecology and Environmental Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC Science, Umeå, Sweden Thursday, 9 June 2016 Presentation Description: Metabolism of 16:15 to 17:30 streams and rivers in part controls the Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC degree to which the process downstream transport of organic carbon. Additionally Presentation Description: Dr. Sebastian Diehl primary production supports a large fraction of animal production in riv- presents a lake ecosystem model where ers. Long term oxygen monitoring coupled with new statistical modeling producers and grazers in benthic and pelagic

4 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO habitats are coupled through carnivore movement and fluxes of resources Universidad de Buenos Aires, and then moved on to McGill University (light, nutrients). This system exhibits an intriguing mix of top-down in Montréal, Québec, Canada, where he completed a Ph.D. exploring the and bottom-up regulation. Within each habitat, primary production is patterns of metabolism and carbon cycling in lakes. He later expanded top-down controlled by carnivores, but the cross-habitat interaction is these interests into the ecology of aquatic microbes and their role in the driven from the bottom-up by spatially asymmetric resource competition. functioning of freshwater and marine ecosystems. In recent years, his Producers mutually inhibit fluxes of the resources that most limit produc- group has increasingly focused on carbon and greenhouse dynamics in tion in the other habitat: pelagic producers shade out light and benthic boreal surface waters, including rivers, lakes and wetlands, their connec- producers intercept sediment nutrients. The resulting positive feedbacks tions to the terrestrial landscape, and the role that these aquatic ecosystems cause abrupt transitions between dominance of benthic vs. pelagic primary play in regional and global C budgets. His group is also exploring the large and secondary production along environmental gradients. Model predic- scale biogeography of freshwater bacterioplankton, and the interactions tions are largely congruent with data from unproductive lakes covering between microbes and organic matter across the boreal waterscape. Paul a wide gradient of colored dissolved organic matter (cDOM). Notably, is currently professor at the University of Quebec at Montreal (Québec, the model correctly predicts a negative correlation of pelagic nutrients Canada), where he also holds the NSERC Industrial Research Chair in with primary and fish production, the underlying mechanism being that Carbon Biogeochemistry in Boreal Aquatic Systems (CarBBAS Chair). cDOM-shading suppresses primary production and releases nutrient transport from the sediment to the pelagic habitat. Society Award Presentations Biographical Information: Dr. Diehl is a Professor of Ecology at Umeå The ASLO 2016 society awards will be presented during the award University. He studied at the Universities of Constance, Göttingen and talk sessions Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday mornings. Biographical Lund, and holds a Ph.D. in Animal Ecology from Umeå University. He information and award citations are included in the May issue of the was a postdoc at the University of California at Santa Barbara and a Pro- L&O: Bulletin. fessor of Aquatic Ecology at the University of Munich before returning to Umeå in 2009. His research focuses on understanding how environmental factors, organismal traits, and the presence/absence of particular species TUESDAY AWARD TALK SESSION or functional groups drive and constrain consumer-resource interactions Tuesday, 7 June 2016 and the resulting community and ecosystem dynamics. He frequently 11:15 to 12:00 translates assumptions into dynamical models and uses numerical and Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC analytical tools to derive qualitative and quantitative expectations that are Erin Hotchkiss, Postdoctoral subsequently tested with experiments and comparative studies. Fellow, University of Quebec at Montreal, Montreal, Québec, Canada FRIDAY PLENARY PRESENTATION - CARBON, CARBON, 2016 Raymond L. Lindeman Award CARBON, AND MORE CARBON presented to Erin Hotchkiss, Postdoctoral Paul del Giorgio, Professor, Fellow, University of Quebec at Montreal, Department of Biological Montreal, Québec, Canada for her paper, Sciences, University of Québec at Montréal, Montréal, “High rates of daytime respiration in three 18 Québec, Canada streams: Use of OO2 and OO2 to model Friday, 10 June 2016 diel ecosystem metabolism.” 16:15 to 17:30 δ About the Award: The Raymond L. Lindeman Award honors a young Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC author for an outstanding peer-reviewed, English-language paper in the Presentation Description: There is a growing aquatic sciences. This annual award is given in honor of Raymond L. realization that inland waters are major Lindeman (1915-1942) and was first presented in 1987 to recognize an contributors to the global C balance, as outstanding paper written by a young scientist at 35 years of age or less. transporters of material from land to the oceans, and also as sites for intense C processing, storage and emission to the atmosphere. This is Jonathan Cole, Distinguished Senior Scientist, Emeritus, Carey an area of extremely active research and debate, clearly evidenced by the Institute of Ecosystem Studies, multiple sessions that in one way or another touch upon C-related issues Millbrook, New York in this ASLO meeting in Santa Fe. This talk will include an outline of The 2016 John H. Martin Award accepted some of the major questions concerning C and greenhouse gas dynamics on behalf of all of the authors by Jonathan in inland waters that are the current focus of attention of the community. Cole, Distinguished Senior Scientist, The presentation has some examples drawn from the work by Dr. del Emeritus, Carey Institute of Ecosystem Giorgio’s group, as well as an attempt to summarize and integrate some Studies, Millbrook, New York, for “Carbon of the developments and highlights that will be presented in the various dioxide supersaturation in the surface waters C-centric sessions during this ASLO meeting. The talk is addressed to of lakes” by Jonathan Cole, Nina Caraco, the less carbonaceous audience to provide the broader ASLO community George Kling and Tim Kratz. with an overview of this issue of global importance. About the Award: The John H. Martin Award recognizes a paper in aquat- Biographical Information: Paul del Giorgio is originally from Argentina. ic sciences that is judged to have had a high impact on subsequent research He carried out his undergraduate studies in biology and ecology at the in the field. The model for such a paper is Martin et al (1991), which laid

5 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING out the case for iron limitation of phytoplankton productivity in the ocean. About the Award: The Ruth Patrick Award honors outstanding research The Martin Award is for papers at least 10 years old. by a scientist in the application of basic aquatic science principles to the identification, analysis, and/or solution of important environmental THURSDAY AWARD TALK SESSION problems. The award is given to aquatic scientists who have made either sustained contributions or a single, but critical, contribution towards solv- Thursday, 9 June 2016 ing an environmental problem. 11:15 to 12:00 Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC Kenneth H. Dunton, Professor, University of Texas at Austin’s Angelicque White, Assistant Marine Science Institute, Austin, Professor, Oregon State Texas, USA University, Corvallis, Oregon The 2016 Ramón Margalef Award for Ex- The 2016 Yentsch-Schindler Early Career cellence in Education presented to Kenneth Award presented to Angelicque White, As- H. Dunton, Professor, University of Texas sistant Professor, Oregon State University, at Austin’s Marine Science Institute, Austin, Corvallis, Oregon Texas, USA About the Award: In 2012, the ASLO Board About the Award: The Ramón Margalef initiated a new annual award in honor of Award for Excellence in Education is early career scientists. The Yentsch-Schindler targeted to honor ASLO members at any stage in their careers and is Early Career Award honors an aquatic scien- presented to the member who best exemplifies the highest standards of tist within 12 years of the completion of their terminal degree for outstand- excellence in education. The Ramón Margalef Award was first presented ing and balanced contributions to research, science training, and broader in 2009 and is presented annually. societal issues such as resource management, conservation, policy, and public education. The award was presented for the first time in 2013. Complete biographical information and award citations are included in the May issue of the L&O: Bulletin. Evelyn Sherr and Barry Sherr, Professors Emeriti, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon Poster Advertisements The 2016 Alfred C. Redfield Lifetime Poster presentations are an important and anticipated aspect of all ASLO Achievement Award presented to Evelyn meetings. The ASLO 2016 Summer Meeting will have one designated Sherr and Barry Sherr, Professors Emeriti, poster session and reception on Tuesday, 7 June, from 17:30 to 19:00. In Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon addition to this, posters will be publicized at the beginning of each concur- About the Award: The Lifetime Achievement rent session through special one-slide advertisements. We encourage you Award recognizes and honors major, long- to look for these advertisements that highlight the posters to be presented term achievements in the fields of limnology at this meeting. and oceanography, including research, educa- tion, and service to the community and society. In 2004 the ASLO Board renamed the Lifetime Achievement Award in honor of Alfred C. Redfield. Public Events Emphasis in selection is given to established aquatic scientists whose work is The ASLO 2016 Summer Meeting will include two events that are open recognized for its importance and long-term influence. to the public. Residents of Santa Fe and the surrounding communities are encouraged to attend. FRIDAY AWARD TALK SESSION Friday, 10 June 2016 AQUASCIENCE THEATER 2016: FILMS, VIDEOS, 11:15 to 12:00 MOVIES THAT COMMUNICATE WATER SCIENCE Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC Tuesday, 7 June 2016 Josette Garnier, Research 19:00 - 21:30 Director, National Center of Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC Scientific Research, Parisian University Pierre and Marie The advent of YouTube, Vimeo, Vine and other online video outlets have Curie (UPMC), Paris, France made it easier than ever to communicate scientific discovery and the scien- and Gilles Billen, Professor, Biogeochemistry, Parisian tific process to various audiences, from the general public to policy makers University Pierre and Marie Curie to students at all levels. This event is hosted by Jim and Monica Elser and (UPMC), Paris, France will feature short videos and excerpts and trailers from longer films. Film, The 2016 Ruth Patrick Award presented to theater and video works to be shown and discussed will include: Josette Garnier, Research Director, National Center of Scientific Research, Parisian Uni- · Xenopoulos, M. A.; Soutar, A.; Abraham, C. J.; The Watershed: The versity Pierre and Marie Curie (UPMC), Story of the Shuttering—and the Ensuing Movement to Save—the Experi- Paris, France and Gilles Billen, Professor, Biogeochemistry, Parisian mental Lakes Area As Told Through the Lens of Theatre University Pierre and Marie Curie (UPMC), Paris, France · Kirby, R.; Ocean Drifters: A Secret World Beneath the Waves

6 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

· Harner, M.; Brinley-Buckley, E.; Brocious, A.; Cuppens Bates, V.; PARKING IN SANTA FE Lundgren, M.; Farrell, M.; Forsberg, M.; Seeing A Watershed in Motion Metered parking spots in downtown Santa Fe cost approximately $1.00 an Through the Platte Basin Time-lapse Project hour and are in operation from 08:00 to 18:00 Monday through Saturday, · Jaramillo, D.; Souza, V.; Eguilarte, L.; Cuatro Cienegas: A Cosmic excluding major holidays. Meter parking is free after 18:00 Monday through Blink of the Eye Saturday and all day on Sunday. For additional information on public park- · Elser, J.; Davis, S.; The Long Alchemy of Becoming (Aqua Es Vida): A ing, including lot and garage locations, see https://www.santafe.org. Short Science-Art Film The convention center has an underground parking garage accessible by Federal St. Cost to park is $18 per day and includes in and out privileges. THE COMPLEXITY OF AQUATIC INVASIONS IN THE COLORADO RIVER BASIN – SESSION 39 PARTS 1 AND 2 GETTING AROUND SANTA FE Thursday, 9 June 2016 and Friday, 10 June 2016 Santa Fe is a very “walk-able” city. Most places of interest are within walk- 15:00 to 16:00 ing distance. For longer trips there are local taxi services, public transporta- Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh Room - SFCCC tion systems, charter vans, and limousine services. Your hotel may offer shuttle services to and from the Railyard District to Downtown. The The Colorado River Basin covers six million hectares in the United States “Santa Fe Pickup” is free. Please inquire at your hotel. and Mexico. The river crosses Native American Tribal Lands and public lands including Canyonlands and Grand Canyon National Parks and Curecanti, Glen Canyon and Lake Mead National Recreation Areas. WALKING AROUND SANTA FE The Colorado River is a lifeline across a spectacular and arid landscape, For a convenient map of walking paths to and from some of Santa Fe’s supplying water to more than 27 million people, irrigating 1.2 million most popular destinations, such as the Historic Plaza and the Railyard, hectares of farmland and generates hydro-electric power used throughout see https://www.santafe.org. the Southwest. More than 20 million visitors use the park lands within the TAXI SERVICE basin for recreation annually. Aquatic invasive species have emerged as a Taxi service is available from Capital City Cab 505-438-0000. significant issue facing the basin. Quagga Mussels in particular represent a case study of invasion of the west; BUS SERVICE with early discovery in the Lower Colorado River and subsequent discoveries Santa Fe has public transportation called Santa Fe Trails Bus Service. in California, Nevada and Utah systems. While mussels have successfully (http://www.santafenm.gov/route_maps_and_schedules) invaded, the ecosystem impacts have been less predictable than in other areas; degrading water quality in some while seemingly not impacting others. Inva- THE SANTA FE PICKUP SHUTTLE sive species can cause significant economic losses, as well as ecological change This is a free shuttle service that starts and ends in front of the former including reductions to overall system resiliency. Addressing aquatic invasive New Mexico Film Museum (the Jean Cocteau Cinema) on Montezuma species within the basin has required a diverse, inter-agency response that in- Avenue and runs counter-clockwise with various stops around downtown. tegrates knowledge and promotes scientific stewardship of aquatic resources. (http://www.santafenm.gov/santa_fe_pickup_shuttle) This session discusses ecosystem changes, management issues, and current research related to aquatic invasive species in the Colorado River Basin. LUNCH AND DINNER IN SANTA FE For a complete list of the presentations in this session, please see Pages 41 and Santa Fe has some great places to dine and enjoy time with friends and 45 of this program. colleagues. A list of restaurants and establishments is available at the conference registration desk. About Santa Fe and The Meeting Sites MESSAGE BOARDS There will be a message board located near the conference registration desk All activities will take place at two locations in Santa Fe: area where you may post or check for messages throughout the conference. Santa Fe Community Convention Center (SFCCC) 201 W. Marcy Street SPECIAL NEEDS Santa Fe, NM 87501 If you have a disability or limitation that may require special consideration Eldorado Hotel in order to ensure your full participation in this meeting, please see a staff 309 West San Francisco Street person at the conference registration desk. You also may send an email to Santa Fe, NM 87501 [email protected] prior to your arrival at the meeting. INTERNET ACCESS COFFEE BREAKS Complimentary wireless Internet access is limited but is available at the Coffee breaks are planned Monday through Friday from 9:30 to 10:00 and SFCCC in all public areas. To connect to Wi-Fi at the convention center you in the afternoon from 14:30 to 15:00. Complimentary coffee and tea will should enable your wireless access on your device. You will connect to the be served. Water will be provided in coolers, and attendees are encouraged network using the following username: CONVENTIONCENTERWIFI. to bring their own water bottles. Breaks will be set in the courtyard at the (no password necessary). convention center.

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Meeting Schedule SATURDAY, 4 JUNE 2016 08:00 – 17:00 ASLO Board Meeting Zia A/B/C – Eldorado Hotel SUNDAY, 5 JUNE 2016 08:00 – 16:00 ASLO Board Meeting Zia A/B/C – Eldorado Hotel 13:00 – 18:00 CSI Limnology Santa Fe Working Group (Invitation Only) Peralta/Lamy – SFCCC 15:00 – 19:00 Registration Open Lobby – SFCCC 15:00 – 21:00 Presentation Room Open O’Keeffe Room – SFCCC 16:00 – 17:00 Student Orientation Meeting Sweeney Ballroom A – SFCCC 17:00 – 18:00 ASLO Editors Forum Sweeney Ballroom B - SFCCC 17:45 – 18:00 Student Volunteer Training Lobby - SFCCC 18:00 – 20:00 Opening Mixer Reception Courtyard - SFCCC MONDAY, 6 JUNE 2016 07:00 – 08:15 Mentor Program Breakfast Zia A/B/C – Eldorado Hotel 07:30 – 17:30 Registration Open Lobby – SFCCC 07:30 – 17:30 Presentation Room Open O’Keeffe Room - SFCCC 08:30 – 09:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 09:30 – 10:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 10:00 – 11:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 11:15 – 12:00 Opening Session: ASLO President’s Address by Jim Elser Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC and Video Presentation: Peter McBride’s Chasing Water 12:00 – 13:30 Lunch Attendees on their own 12:00 – 13:30 Early Career Workshop: Writing a Winning Proposal Sweeney Ballroom A – SFCCC 12:00 – 17:00 Exhibitor Set Up Lobby Area - SFCCC 12:00 – 17:00 Poster Set Up by Presenters Sweeney Ballroom C/D – SFCCC 13:30 – 14:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 14:30 – 15:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 15:00 – 16:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 16:15 – 17:30 Plenary Presentation: Emily Stanley Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC 17:30 – 19:30 ASLO Fellows and Membership Reception and annual Business/Membership Meeting Courtyard, Sweeney Ballroom E/F - SFCCC 19:30 – 21:00 ASLO Student Mixer Anasazi South Ballroom – Eldorado Hotel 19:30 – 21:00 ASLO Early Career Mixer Anasazi North Ballroom – Eldorado Hotel TUESDAY, 7 JUNE 2016 07:00 – 7:45 Early Morning Yoga (Optional) 2nd Level Terrace - SFCCC 07:30 – 17:30 Presentation Room Open O’Keeffe Room - SFCCC 08:00 – 17:30 Registration Open Lobby Area - SFCCC 08:30 – 09:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 08:30 – 19:00 Exhibits Open Lobby Area - SFCCC

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08:30 – 19:00 Poster Area Open Sweeney Ballroom C/D – SFCCC 09:30 – 10:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 10:00 – 11:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 11:15 – 12:00 2016 Lindeman Award Acceptance Presentation: Erin Hotchkiss Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC and 2016 Martin Award Acceptance Presentation: Jon Cole 12:00 – 13:30 Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings Attendees on their own 12:00 – 13:30 ASLO Policy Panel Discussion Coronado/DeVargas – SFCCC 12:00 – 13:30 Student Workshop: Scientific Speed Networking Zia Room A/B/C – Eldorado Hotel 12:00 – 13:30 NSF Funding Opportunities in Aquatic Sciences Milagro/Kearny - SFCCC 13:30 – 14:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 14:30 – 15:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 15:00 – 16:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 16:15 – 17:30 Plenary Presentation: Bob Hall Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC 17:30 – 19:00 Poster Session and Reception Sweeney Ballroom C/D – SFCCC 19:00 – 21:00 Evening Meetings / Workshops Various Rooms - SFCCC 19:00 – 21:30 AquaScience Theater 2016: Films, Videos, and Movies that Communicate Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC Water Science (Open to the Public) 19:00 – 21:00 Restoring Our Living Bond with Nature Workshop Milagro/Kearny - SFCCC 19:00 – 21:00 Daphnia Working Group Meeting Coronado/DeVargas - SFCCC 19:00 – 21:00 Working Group Organized by Steve Sadro (Invitation Only) Peralta/Lamy - SFCCC 20:00 – 23:00 Off-site Activity: Santa Fe Pub Crawl Gather at the SFCCC lobby at 19:50 WEDNESDAY, 8 JUNE 2016 6:30 – 7:30 Morning Fun Runs Around Santa Fe (Optional) Meet at Marcy Street entrance of SFCCC 07:00 – 07:45 Early Morning Yoga (Optional) 2nd Level Terrace - SFCCC 07:30 – 13:00 Presentation Room Open O’Keeffe Room - SFCCC 08:00 – 13:00 Registration Open Lobby Area - SFCCC 08:30 – 09:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 08:30 – 13:00 Exhibits Open Lobby Area - SFCCC 08:30 – 13:00 Poster Area Open Sweeney Ballroom C/D – SFCCC 09:30 – 10:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 10:00 – 11:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 11:00 – 12:30 Plenary Presentation: Sinead Collins Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC THURSDAY, 9 JUNE 2016 07:00 – 07:45 Early Morning Yoga (Optional) 2nd Level Terrace - SFCCC 07:30 – 17:30 Presentation Room Open O’Keeffe Room - SFCCC 08:00 – 17:30 Registration Open Lobby Area - SFCCC 08:30 – 09:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 08:30 - 17:30 Exhibits Open Lobby Area - SFCCC 08:30 – 17:30 Poster Area Open Sweeney Ballroom C/D – SFCCC 09:30 – 10:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 10:00 – 11:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC

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11:15 – 12:00 2016 Yentsch-Schindler Early Career Award Acceptance Presentation: Angelicque Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC White and 2016 Redfield Award Acceptance Presentation: Evelyn and Barry Sherr 12:00 – 13:30 Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings Various Rooms - SFCCC 12:00 – 13:30 Student Workshop: Ethical Dilemmas Sweeney Ballroom A – SFCCC 13:30 – 14:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 14:30 – 15:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 15:00 – 16:00 SS39: The Complexity of Aquatic Invasions in the Colorado River Basin – Part 1 Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh - (Session open to the Public) SFCCC 15:00 – 16:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 16:15 – 17:30 Plenary Presentation: Sebastian Diehl Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC 20:00 – 23:00 Tapas Night (Optional Ticketed Event) Courtyard - SFCCC FRIDAY, 10 JUNE 2016 07:30 – 16:00 Presentation Room Open O’Keeffe Room - SFCCC 08:00 – 17:30 Registration Open Lobby Area - SFCCC 08:00 – 15:00 Poster Teardown by Presenters Sweeney Ballroom C/D – SFCCC 08:30 – 09:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 08:30 – 15:00 Exhibits Open Lobby Area - SFCCC 09:30 – 10:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 10:00 – 11:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 11:15 – 12:00 2016 Patrick Award Acceptance Presentation: Josette Garnier Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC and 2016 Margalef Award Acceptance Presentation: Ken Dunton 12:00 – 13:30 Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings Various Rooms - SFCCC 13:30 – 14:30 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 14:30 – 15:00 Break Courtyard - SFCCC 15:00 – 16:00 SS39: The Complexity of Aquatic Invasions in the Colorado River Basin – Part 2 Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh - (Session open to the Public) SFCCC 15:00 – 16:00 Concurrent Sessions Various Rooms - SFCCC 15:00 – 19:00 Exhibitor Teardown Lobby Area - SFCCC 16:15 – 17:30 Plenary Presentation: Paul del Giorgio Sweeney Ballroom E/F – SFCCC 17:30 – 18:30 Post-Plenary Closing Reception Courtyard - SFCCC SATURDAY, 11 JUNE 2016 08:00 – 13:00 Bandelier National Monument Excursion (Optional) Meet at SFCCC - Loading zone at the West end of the building

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LOLIGO SYSTEMS (BOOTH E08) Conference Registration Niels Pedersens Alle 2 and Check In Tjele, Denmark 8830 Registration and check in for the meeting will be available all week in the Contact: Jannik Herskin lobby area of the Santa Fe Community Convention Center. Please check Phone: +45 8999 2545 in upon your arrival at the meeting in order to receive your name badge Email: [email protected] and other important materials and information. URL: http://www.loligosystems.com In order to facilitate easier check in at the meeting, it is very important NOAA SEA GRANT (BOOTH E05) that you bring a copy of the email confirmation that you received when you registered and a copy of the email message that you received in April 31 West College Street, Room 132 with your name badge information. This will allow us to locate your name Duluth, MN, USA 55812 badge quickly and efficiently. Badges are filed alphabetically under the last Contact: Sharon Moen name (family name) as entered and included on those messages. Phone: 218-726-6195 Email: [email protected] REGISTRATION DESK HOURS PLANKTOS INSTRUMENTS, LLC (BOOTH E07) Sunday ...... 15:00 to 19:00 603 Mandy Court Monday ...... 07:30 to 17:30 Morehead City, NC, USA 28557 Tuesday ...... 08:00 to 17:30 Contact: Scott Ensign Wednesday...... 08:00 to 13:00 Phone: 252-422-6226 Thursday...... 08:00 to 17:30 Email: [email protected] Friday...... 08:00 to 17:30 URL: http://planktosinstruments.com ROYAL SOCIETY PUBLISHING (BOOTH E01) Exhibitors The Royal Society Exhibits will be in the lobby area at the SFCCC. Exhibitors will set up by 6 Carlton House Terrace Monday at 17:00 and will be in place over the following days and times: London, United Kingdom SW1Y 5AG Tuesday, June 7, 2016...... 08:30 to 19:00 Contact: Raminder Shergill Wednesday, June 8, 2016...... 08:30 to 13:00 Phone: +44 20 7451 2694 Thursday, June 9, 2016...... 08:30 to 17:30 Email: [email protected] Friday, June 10, 2016...... 08:30 to 15:00 URL: https://royalsociety.org/journals/ Attendees will have access to the exhibits during the exhibit hours listed TURNER DESIGNS (BOOTH E04) above. 845 W. Maude Avenue ASLO appreciates the support of the following organizations who are Sunnyvale, CA, USA 94085 exhibiting at the summer meeting: Contact: Tom Brumett Phone: 408-749-0994 FLUID IMAGING TECHNOLOGIES (BOOTH E06) Email: [email protected] 200 Enterprise Drive URL: http://www.turnerdesigns.com Scarborough, ME, USA 04074 Contact: Joyce Brown UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS (BOOTH E02) Phone: 207-289-3200 2204 Griffith Drive Fax: 207-289-3101 Champaign, IL, USA 61820 Email: [email protected] Contact: David Gay URL: http://www.fluidimaging.com Phone: 217-244-0462 Fax: 217-244-0462 JFE ADVANTECH CO., LTD (BOOTH E03) Email: [email protected] 3-48, Takahata-Cho URL: http://nadp.isws.illinois.edu/ Nishinomiya, Hyogo, Japan 663-8202 Contact: Hua Li Phone: 81-798-66-1783 Fax: 81-798-66-1654 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.jfe-advantech.co.jp/eng/

11 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

aquatic sciences. A range of topics will be covered to address different Student and Early Career career paths in the aquatic sciences, skills or expertise important for Participant Information these careers, and strategies for successfully competing for jobs, grants, or fellowships – all of which are particularly applicable to students. STUDENT ORIENTATION Scientific Speed Networking was first organized for the meeting in Sunday, 5 June 2016 Japan. A huge success in both New Orleans and Granada! 16:00 to 17:00 A limited number of box lunches will be provided for students Sweeney Ballroom A - SFCCC who participate in the following workshops on a “first come/first This event will provide a short presentation about “How to succeed in served” basis. science” followed by some advice on how to navigate a scientific meeting and how to network. This session will provide plenty of time for ques- WORKSHOP: SCIENTIFIC SPEED NETWORKING tions and introducing each other. This is a great opportunity to meet peers that are attending their first meeting and may feel as lost as you Tuesday, 7 June 2016 do. For more information about this event, please contact Wiebke 12:00 to 13:30 Boeing, New Mexico State University, [email protected]. Zia Room A/B/C – Eldorado Hotel It can be daunting for a student to try to introduce himself/herself to STUDENT VOLUNTEER TRAINING SESSION someone at a large scientific meeting, but given the right opportunity, a qual- ity exchange can have a lasting impression. Scientific speed networking is a Sunday, 5 June 2016 twist on the popular singles speed-dating phenomenon, but the goal here is 17:45 to 18:00 to foster an interactive environment between small groups of advanced sci- Meet at Conference Registration Desk in Lobby - SFCCC entists and students in hopes of creating some short, high-impact exchanges. Students who have signed up to serve as student volunteer room moni- It’s amazing what can be accomplished in five minutes! We hope that partici- tors must attend this training session. Attendance is mandatory. Meet pation in this workshop will be a catalyst for improved student engagement at the registration area in the lobby of the Santa Fe Community Con- throughout the meeting and beyond. The workshop is a structured, though vention Center. Please contact Sue Rulla at [email protected] for more informal meet and greet and is intended to be fun. All are welcome to at- information or if you have a travel conflict and will not be available to tend. Please contact Grace Wilkinson at [email protected] or attend the training session on Sunday. Tiara Moore at [email protected] for more information. WORKSHOP: ETHICAL DILEMMAS: WHAT IS INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY STUDENT SOCIAL MIXER AND WHO GETS AUTHORSHIP? Monday, 6 June 2016 Thursday, 9 June 2016 19:30 to 21:00 12:00 to 13:30 Anasazi South Ballroom – Eldorado Hotel Sweeney Ballroom A – SFCCC An informal student social mixer will be held on Monday evening The ethical dilemmas that we encounter as scientists may be nuanced with following the ASLO Membership Meeting. Senior scientists will be no clear “right” and “wrong” answer. During this workshop we will explore invited to attend and meet with students on an informal basis. Bever- two common ethical dilemmas that students often face: 1) ownership of ages and snacks will be available. All students, whether ASLO members knowledge and idea sharing and 2) how cultural and lab-specific norms or non-members, are invited to attend. inform authorship status. Join us for this lunchtime workshop to explore solutions to these ethical dilemmas using case-based, group discussion. ASLO 2016 SANTA FE PUB CRAWL All are welcome to attend. For more information about this workshop, Tuesday, 7 June 2016 please contact Grace Wilkinson at [email protected] or Tiara 20:00 to 23:00 Moore at [email protected]. Gather at the SFCCC lobby at 19:50. Join us on Tuesday evening for a pub crawl through Santa Fe. We will con- gregate at the convention center lobby to head out for the evening or join us at any stop along the way! There will be live music and drink specials at the STUDENT PRESENTATION EVALUATIONS final stop on the tour. Following are the itinerary and map for the evening: Student presentations will be evaluated on the basis of innovation/scien- tific insight, quality of experimental design/methods, and clarity/effective- 19:50 - Gather at the convention center lobby ness of presentation. Only those students who indicated a desire to have 20:00 - Draft Station (60 East San Francisco Street) their ASLO student presentation considered will be judged. All eligible 21:00 - Del Charro (101 W Alameda St) presentations will be evaluated. 22:00 - Cowgirl (319 South Guadalupe Street) STUDENT CAREER DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS CAREER BULLETIN BOARD There will be a Career Bulletin Board set up at the meeting where pro- Students are encouraged to participate in the following workshops spective employers are invited to post job announcements, and students led by senior scientists on a variety of topics relating to careers in the and early career professionals can post a one-page CV.

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EARLY CAREER WORKSHOP: WRITING A WINNING Optional Events and Activities PROPOSAL: VITAL TIPS FROM PROGRAM OFFICERS FOR EARLY CAREER SCIENTISTS FUN RUNS AROUND SANTA FE Wednesday, 8 June 2016 Monday, 6 June 2016 Meeting 6:30 , Return Approximately 7:30 12:00 to 13:30 Meet at the Marcy Street entrance of the SFCCC Sweeney Ballroom A – SFCCC $15 per person Early career scientists can struggle to secure federal grants as they transi- Advance registration is required for this event and is limited to 25 runners tion to Principal Investigator roles. Early career scientists may not be aware per course. Join the Santa Fe Striders for a morning fun run around Santa of key attributes of proposals that are critical to funding success or may Fe. Runners can choose either a three- or six-mile run. The meeting place make common mistakes that result in lower panel rankings and reduced for the runs is a short walking distance of most hotels. Each running funding chances, often because they have not had the opportunity to serve group will be led by a member of the Santa Fe Striders who will guide on review panels or serve as external ad hoc reviewers. In this workshop, a the group. Another will be at the rear for those who wish to run at a more panel of current and recent program officers will provide insight into com- leisurely pace. The Santa Fe Striders are excited to offer you the chance to mon characteristics of funded and unfunded proposals, as well as discuss- see Santa Fe in a different perspective - as one of the locals! ing special funding opportunities for early career scientists through their programs. The format for the workshop will primarily consist of a ques- tion and answer session and lunch will be provided, so please come hungry EARLY MORNING YOGA and bring plenty of questions for the panel. This will also provide a great Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, 7 – 9 June 2016 opportunity to meet program officers and to discuss opportunities to serve Sessions will begin at 7:00, end at 7:45 on review panels or provide ad hoc reviews, which can be very informative 2nd level Terrace – SFCCC when drafting proposals. For more information about this event, contact $6 per person Dr. Christopher Filstrup, Iowa State University, [email protected]. Early morning yoga sessions will take place on the 2nd level Terrace at the SFCCC. This location is within easy walking distance to most of the EARLY CAREER SOCIAL MIXER hotels near the square in Santa Fe. Groups are limited to 30 participants Monday, 6 June 2016 per day. In order to participate, you must sign up in advance. A minimum 19:30 to 21:00 number of participants will be required for each session. Participants will Anasazi North Ballroom - Eldorado Hotel need to bring their own yoga mats or a towel. If you would like to learn more about what will be included in the morning yoga sessions, please A “meet and mix” reception is planned and organized by members of contact Barbara Powell, Yoga Ma, at [email protected]. the ASLO early career (EC) committee to give early career members an opportunity to provide feedback on various topics relevant to them, For those who would like to participate in an activity other than the early including any concerns or expectations as an early career member. This is a morning sessions described above, we encourage you to contact Barbara social gathering for early career members to get to know each other and to directly about her Wild Yoga offering. This takes place in an ideal setting network. Refreshments will be served. Come and meet the ASLO Board for nature-lovers, meditators, writers, artists and yogis. Yoga Ma will and members of the EC committee! guide visitors on her Wild Yoga adventures with wilderness hikes, yoga, meditation and more in a pristine mountain forest setting (yet within walking distance of the Plaza) for individuals wishing to immerse in Mentor Program personal retreat and connect with the deep stillness of New Mexico’s ASLO MEETING MENTOR PROGRAM BREAKFAST natural world. For more information, you can visit Barbara’s web site: www.yogamabarbara.com Monday, 6 June 2016 7:00 to 8:15 Zia Room A/B/C – Eldorado Hotel TAPAS NIGHT Thursday, 9 June 2016 A breakfast for ASLO summer meeting mentors and mentees will take 20:00 to 23:00 place first thing Monday morning prior to the first concurrent sessions. Courtyard - SFCCC The ASLO Meeting Mentor Program is open to any participant looking for Professionals: $35.00 USD, Students: $25.00 USD guidance on navigating the meeting and making new connections. Mentees Inspired by Santa Fe’s food culture, this fun Tapas Night will provide will be grouped with experienced scientists (mentors) who will provide guid- an opportunity to mingle with your peers and experience the colorful ance on navigating the meeting and introduce them to other scientists. The and vibrant array of Santa Fe’s tapas - “snacks or appetizers.” Join us Meeting Mentor Program debuted at the 2013 Aquatic Sciences Meeting in after dinner for a fun evening including local band, JJ and the Hooligans New Orleans. If you would like more information on the Meeting Mentor (http://www.jjandthehooligans.com/). The evening is casual with light Program, contact Adrienne Sponberg ([email protected]), ASLO Director snacks and a cash bar. Tickets must be purchased in advance. of Communications and Science. Please wear your badge ribbon that identi- fies you as a participant in the Meeting Mentor Program. Ribbons will be available at registration when you pick up your badge and meeting materials.

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BANDELIER NATIONAL MONUMENT EXCURSION – ASLO FELLOWS AND MEMBERSHIP RECEPTION INDIAN CLIFF DWELLINGS, VIEWS, AND VOLCANOES FOLLOWED BY THE ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING Saturday, 11 June 2016 Monday, 6 June 2016 Departure: Please arrive at 8:00; The group will load and leave by 8:15. 17:30 to 19:30 Return: Approximately 13:00 Sweeney Ballroom E/F and Courtyard Departure from Santa Fe Convention Center, loading zone at the West The annual ASLO Business Meeting for the membership will be held end of the building during the conference on Monday, 6 June, in Ballroom E/F at the SFCCC. $85 per person A reception honoring ASLO fellows and sustaining fellows will precede What’s included: Transportation, guides, snacks, water, and entrance fees. the business meeting. This will be a great time to meet and talk to ASLO (Lunch is not included.) officers and board members. Reception food and drinks will be served. We encourage everyone to attend the business meeting and membership Comfortable walking shoes, hat/sunglasses, light What to wear/bring: reception -- especially new ASLO members and student members (before weight comfortable clothing, and a camera. you head over to the student or early career mixer!!) The Bandelier trip provides visitors with a wonderful taste of the interest- ing landscapes and rich cultural and natural history of northern New ASLO POLICY PANEL DISCUSSION – Mexico. Departing Santa Fe by vehicle we descend a bit in elevation and cross the Rio Grande valley with excellent views of the southern end of MAKE IT MATTER: SUCCESS STORIES FROM the Rocky Mountains. We then climb up the side of a huge super volcano, THE SCIENCE POLICY INTERFACE the Jemez, where we visit Bandelier National Monument, a site set aside to Tuesday, 7 June 2016 protect the cliff dwellings that were home to the ancestors of present day 12:00 to 13:30 Pueblo Indians. Guides will share information en route & make stops for Coronado/DeVargas – SFCCC photos & discussion. Once at Bandelier, we will split into smaller groups to walk the trail to visit the cliff dwellings, remnants of an early village As environmental threats and pressures have increased, so has the aware- and petroglyphs (rock art carvings). There will also be time to visit the ness and interest in the aquatic science community in communicating National Park Service visitor center and museum which are housed in science to the public and policy-makers. The need and desire for scientist historic buildings constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps. engagement is there, but there’s no guidebook yet on how to MAKE IT MATTER. Therefore, let’s discuss examples of success in the science/ policy interface. Join the ASLO Public Policy Committee in a lunchtime WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ACTIVITIES discussion with aquatic scientists who’ve had success in influencing policy. The City of Santa Fe has a tourism office at the convention center that is Jon Sharp, emeritus Oceanography professor from the University of staffed from 8:00 to 17:00 most days. This office is just off the main lobby Delaware, will lead panelists in a discussion of their success stories, lessons area near the meeting registration desk. If you are interested in an activity or learned and advice to scientists just getting started in the policy realm. in doing some sightseeing on Wednesday afternoon, we encourage you to go by and talk with the tourism staff. They can make some great suggestions POSTER SESSION AND RECEPTION and provide you with information for activities in and around Santa Fe. Tuesday, 7 June 2016 17:30 to 19:00 Conference Events Sweeney Ballroom C/D – SFCCC ASLO EDITORS FORUM Though posters will be on display and available for viewing throughout Sunday, 5 June 2016 the week, poster presentations will take place during one evening session 17:00 to 18:00 on Tuesday. Those who are presenting their research will do so during Sweeney Ballroom B – SFCCC the reception at this time. A cash bar will be available, and light reception foods will be served during the poster sessions. Join ASLO staff, leadership, and ASLO publication editors for an open forum on new developments within their respective publications and a discussion of editorial objectives and future plans. An open question and CLOSING RECEPTION answer session will follow. Light refreshments, wine, and soft drinks will 17:30 to 18:30 be available on a first-come, first-served basis. Friday, 10 June 2016 Courtyard - SFCCC OPENING MIXER AND WELCOME RECEPTION ASLO will close the 2016 Summer Meeting in rich Santa Fe tradition. Sunday, 5 June 2016 The reception will have a cash bar. 18:00 to 20:00 Courtyard-SFCCC Enjoy this time to get caught up with friends and colleagues! This recep- tion is hosted by the City of Santa Fe as a welcome to this wonderful city and a great start to the 2016 Summer Meeting.

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This meeting is for researchers who incorporate Daphnia into any compo- Workshops, Meetings, nent of their work to meet and exchange ideas and experiences. For more Working Groups, and information about this event, contact Jeff Dudycha at [email protected]. Town Halls RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN MOUNTAIN CSI LIMNOLOGY SANTA FE WORKING GROUP AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS WORKING GROUP MEETING Sunday, 5 June 2016 13:00 to 18:00 Tuesday, 7 June 2016 Peralta/Lamy - SFCCC 19:00 to 21:00 Peralta/Lamy - SFCCC THIS IS AN INVITATION ONLY WORKING GROUP for CSI Organized by Steve Sadro Limnology project participants coming from all over North America to Santa Fe for the ASLO meeting. This will be a working-group format, THIS IS AN INVITATION ONLY WORKING GROUP. This with a mixture of small and large group brainstorming and discussion, working group will explore responses to environmental change in moun- short presentations, and analysis/writing. For more information about tain aquatic ecosystems. For more information about this event, contact: this event, contact: Kendra Cheruvelil, Michigan State University. Please Steve Sadro, UC Davis at [email protected]. address inquiries to: [email protected]. Additional Participant NSF FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES IN AQUATIC SCIENCES and Attendee Information Tuesday, 7 June 2016 12:00 to 13:30 RECEIPTS Milagro/Kearny - SFCCC Your registration confirmation that was emailed to you when you registered for the meeting will serve as your receipt. In keeping with our The purpose of this town hall session is to provide information on the op- conservation efforts, we will not provide printed receipts to attendees on portunities for research funding available at the National Science Founda- site at the meeting. If you have misplaced your original receipt and need tion, to answer questions about proposal submission and the review process, another copy, you may print your own receipt by going to: and to receive comments and suggestions on how the Foundation can best https://www.sgmeet.com/aslo/santafe2016/userlogon.asp. Select serve the aquatic sciences. The focus will be on opportunities relevant to the option to Re-print/Re-send Your Receipt and Confirmations. Your aquatic sciences supported by the Directorate for Biological Sciences and username is your email address, and your password is your registration the Directorate for Geosciences, including cross-cutting programs such ID number which is printed on your conference name badge. as Dynamics of Coupled Natural and Human Systems, Dimensions of Biodiversity, MacroSystems Biology, and Innovations at the Nexus of Food, Energy and Water. Most of the event time will be reserved to address ques- LETTERS OF PARTICIPATION tions from participants. For more information about this event, contact Likewise, letters of participation only will be provided to those who are Alan Tessier, National Science Foundation, [email protected]. registered for the meeting, and copies cannot be provided on site. If you need a letter of participation, please go to https://www.sgmeet.com/aslo/ RESTORING OUR LIVING BOND WITH NATURE WORKSHOP santafe2016/userlogon.asp Tuesday, 7 June 2016 19:00 to 21:00 ADA STATEMENT/SPECIAL NEEDS Milagro/Kearny - SFCCC If you have a disability or limitation that may require special consideration in order to fully participate, please contact the conference management This workshop seeks to create a space for those who wish to reflect on office to see how we can accommodate your needs. Call +1 800-929-3756 our relationship with the living Earth and revise our ways of addressing (USA, Canada & Caribbean) or +1 254-399-9635 (all other countries) or environmental problems. Through the lens of the emerging field of ecopsy- contact via e-mail at [email protected]. chology, we will explore the evolution of the Western worldview and the forging of the modern self, which have affected everything from contem- porary religion and psychology to politics and the environmental crisis. For CHILDCARE DURING THE MEETING more information about this event, contact: Vincente Lopes, Texas State ASLO is not able to provide licensed childcare at this meeting. If you have University. Please address inquiries to: [email protected]. any questions, please feel free to contact Helen Schneider Lemay, ASLO Business Manager, at [email protected]. DAPHNIA WORKING GROUP MEETING Tuesday, 7 June 2016 NURSING MOTHERS ROOM 19:00 to 21:00 If you are a nursing mother and need a private place for you and your Coronado/DeVargas - SFCCC infant, a quiet room is available for you. Please inquire at the conference From ecosystem ecology through evolutionary genomics, Daphnia are an registration desk. important model system for integrating diverse fields of organismal biology.

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PRINTING ORAL PRESENTERS Printing is not available at the SFCCC. If you would like to print your All oral presentations will need to be submitted in the O’Keeffe Room on poster or make copies of any handouts or materials in Santa Fe, a FedEx the main floor of the Santa Fe Community Convention Center. This is the Office is located approximately 3 blocks from the Convention Center. presentation room for the meeting. This room will be staffed and run by They can do large format printing of posters. Contact them directly if you audio visual technicians. Presenters may submit their presentations begin- are interested in finding out prices and more details. ning at 15:00 on Sunday, 5 June 2016. FedEx Office Print and Ship Center 301 N. Guadalupe Street SPEAKER/PRESENTATION ROOM HOURS Santa Fe, NM 87501 Sunday, 5 June...... 15:00 to 21:00 Phone: (505) 982-6311 Monday, 6 June...... 07:30 to 17:30 Tuesday, 7 June ...... 07:30 to 17:30 Wednesday, 8 June ...... 07:30 to 13:00 Instructions for Presenters Thursday, 9 June ...... 07:30 to 17:30 POSTER PRESENTERS Friday, 10 June ...... 07:30 to 16:00 Each poster will be assigned a number. You will put your poster next to All presenters are required to check in at the presentation room at least this number. There will be two (2) posters per side of each panel-board. 24 hours before your assigned presentation day to submit your talk. An Therefore posters must be no larger than the maximum (45 inches wide audio-visual technician will be available in the room to assist you. by 44 inches high) or (114 cm wide by 111 cm high). If your poster exceeds these specifications, it may be subject to removal. Posters will be Please note: If your presentation is on Monday, please plan to go to the pre- affixed to the panel-boards using push pins. It is suggested that you apply sentation room on Sunday during the hours specified to submit your talk. at least one push pin in each of the four corners of your poster. (Note: An adequate supply of push pins will be available throughout the poster hall.) REVIEWING YOUR PRESENTATION When reviewing your presentation in the presentation room make sure POSTER SET UP AND TEARDOWN all fonts, images, and animations appear as expected and that all audio or Posters will be displayed in Sweeney Ballroom C/D at the Santa Fe Com- video clips are working properly. munity Convention Center. They will be organized in session groupings IF THE PRESENTATION DOES NOT PLAY PROPERLY IN for the entire meeting to maximize opportunities for viewing. Posters THE SPEAKER/PRESENTATION ROOM, IT WILL NOT PLAY can go up Monday, 6 June, from 12:00 to 17:00 and will remain in place PROPERLY IN THE MEETING ROOM. PERSONAL LAPTOPS through 17:30 on Thursday, 9 June. They should be removed by Friday, CANNOT BE USED IN THE SESSION ROOMS. between the hours of 08:00-15:00. Posters that remain after 15:00 on When you are finished submitting, reviewing and/or making changes to Friday will be discarded. your presentation, you must tell the A/V technician you have finalized your presentation file before you leave the Speaker/Presentation Room. Be POSTER SESSION sure to bring a backup copy of your presentation with you to the meeting. The poster session is Tuesday, 7 June, from 17:30 to19:00 in the Sweeney USB/Flash drives are preferred. Internet access will not be available in the Ballroom C/D at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center. Refresh- session rooms. Please make sure you have all power, video, and networking ments and snacks will be available during the poster session. Specific times adapters with you. for interaction between the presenters and attendees have been assigned in order not to conflict with oral presentations. DURING YOUR PRESENTATION Each meeting room will have a projector, screen, laptop computer, audio, lectern, hardwired lectern microphone, timer, and laser pointer. Once the presentation is started, you can control the program from the lectern using a computer mouse or the up/down/right/left keys on a keyboard. For more information on preparing your presentation, go to: https:// www.sgmeet.com/aslo/santafe2016/oral-presenter-instructions.asp

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SFCCC Map

17 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

El Dorado Map

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SS04 SS04 SS04 SS04 changing climate changing climate changing climate changing climate implications for water implications for water implications for water implications for water processes across scales: processes across scales: processes across scales: processes across scales: processes across scales: processes across scales: resource management in a resource management in a resource management in a resource management in a Cyanobacterial patterns and Cyanobacterial patterns and Cyanobacterial patterns and Cyanobacterial patterns and SS08 SS08 SS08 SS08 carbon cycle carbon cycle carbon cycle carbon cycle Plugging leaks in the Plugging leaks in the Plugging leaks in the Plugging leaks in the SWEENEY BALLROOM A SWEENEY BALLROOM B plumbing of the inland water plumbing of the inland water plumbing of the inland water plumbing of the inland water SS24 SS24 SS24 SS24 global change global change global change global change OHKAY OWINGEH OHKAY POJOAQUE/NAMBE/ POJOAQUE/NAMBE/ management in a context of management in a context of management in a context of management in a context of Water regulationWater and reservoir regulationWater and reservoir regulationWater and reservoir Water regulationWater and reservoir Coffee Break (Courtyard) Coffee Break (Courtyard) SS35 SS35 SS35 SS17 ecosystems ecosystems ecosystems ecosystems Mentor/Mentee Breakfast (Eldorado Hotel-Zia A/B/C) Mentor/Mentee Breakfast (Eldorado Hotel-Zia Developing and testing Developing and testing Developing and testing ecological theory in aquatic ecological theory in aquatic ecological theory in aquatic change in mountain aquatic Responses to environmental Plenary Session: Emily Stanley-“Taking a Long Look at Lakes” (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) a Long Look at Lakes” Emily Stanley-“Taking Plenary Session: SS31 SS31 SS31 SS30 the world the world the world Research Techniques Presidential Address by Jim Elser and Film Presentation: Chasing Water by Peter McBride (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) by Peter Water Chasing Presentation: Address by Jim Elser and Film Presidential Ecosystems: Advances Ecosystems: in sizes and its influence on sizes and its influence on sizes and its influence on aquatic ecosystems around aquatic ecosystems around aquatic ecosystems around deposition of all shapes and deposition of all shapes and deposition of all shapes and Wildfire Effects on Freshwater Wildfire Effects on The sky is falling: atmospheric falling: is sky The atmospheric falling: is sky The atmospheric falling: is sky The ASLO Student Mixer (Eldorado Hotel-Anasazi South Ballroom) and ASLO Early Career Mixer (Eldorado Hotel-Anasazi North Ballroom) ASLO Student Mixer (Eldorado Hotel-Anasazi South Ballroom) and Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings including: Writing a Winning Proposal: Vital Tips From Program Officers for Early Career Scientists (Sweeney Ballroom A) Program Officers for Early Career Scientists (Sweeney Ballroom From Tips Vital Winning Proposal: Writing a Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings including: ASLO Fellows and Membership Reception and Annual Business Meeting Honoring ASLO Fellows and Sustaining Fellows (Courtyard and Sweeney Ballroom E/F) and Sustaining Fellows ASLO Fellows Annual Business Meeting Honoring and Membership Reception ASLO Fellows SS03 SS03 SS03 SS37 ecology ecology ecology geomorphology MILAGRO/Kearny CORONADO/DE VARGAS PERALTA/LAMY influence in zooplankton influence in zooplankton influence in zooplankton From biogeochemistry to From Investigating the ecosystem Physical processes and their Physical processes and their Physical processes and their effects of seawater intrusion into tidal freshwater wetlands: into tidal freshwater wetlands: ROOM Session # Session # Session # 07:00-08:15 08:30-09:30 09:30-10:00 10:00-11:00 11:15-12:00 12:00-13:30 13:30-14:30 14:30-15:00 15:00-16:00 16:15-17:30 17:30-19:30 19:30-21:00 Monday At-A-Glance Monday

19 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING SS18 SS18 SS04 SS04 changing climate changing climate Abiotic Challenges implications for water implications for water Memoriam of Val Smith Val Memoriam of Algae Cultivation: Biotic Algae Cultivation: processes across scales: processes across scales: processes across scales: processes across scales: and Abiotic Challenges In and resource management in a resource management in a Algae Cultivation: Biotic and Algae Cultivation: Cyanobacterial patterns and Cyanobacterial patterns and SS12 SS12 SS08 SS08 carbon cycle carbon cycle Plugging leaks in the Plugging leaks in the SWEENEY BALLROOM A SWEENEY BALLROOM B Reductionist approaches to Reductionist approaches to large-scale carbon cycling- large-scale carbon cycling- opportunities and limitations opportunities and limitations plumbing of the inland water plumbing of the inland water

SS32 SS32 SS32 and open science and open science and open science OHKAY OWINGEH OHKAY POJOAQUE/NAMBE/ POJOAQUE/NAMBE/ Data-intensive aquatic Data-intensive aquatic Data-intensive aquatic research: Networks, teams, teams, Networks, research: research: Networks, teams, teams, Networks, research: research: Networks, teams, teams, Networks, research: sensors, harmonized datasets, datasets, harmonized sensors, sensors, harmonized datasets, datasets, harmonized sensors, sensors, harmonized datasets, datasets, harmonized sensors, Coffee Break (Courtyard) Coffee Break (Courtyard) Off-Site Activity-Santa Fe Pub Crawl Activity-Santa Fe Off-Site SS17 SS17 CS06 CS06 Poster Area Open (Sweeney Ballroom C/D) Poster ecosystems ecosystems Communities Communities Exhibits Open (SFCCC-Prefunction/Lobby Area) Exhibits Open (SFCCC-Prefunction/Lobby Functioning of Bacterial Functioning of Bacterial Diversity, Structure, and Structure, Diversity, and Structure, Diversity, change in mountain aquatic change in mountain aquatic Responses to environmental Responses to environmental Poster Session and Reception (Sweeney Ballroom C/D Courtyard) Poster Bob Hall-“Metabolic Signatures of Streams and Rivers” (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) Plenary Session : Bob Hall-“Metabolic Signatures of Streams and Rivers” SS15 SS15 SS15 SS15 Public Public Public Public Aquatic Science: Informing Aquatic Science: Informing Aquatic Science: Informing Aquatic Science: Aquatic Science: Informing Aquatic Science: Policy, Management, and the Management, Policy, and the Management, Policy, and the Management, Policy, Policy, Management, and the Management, Policy, Award Talk Session: Lindeman Award Acceptance by Erin Hotchkiss and Martin Award Acceptance by Jonathan Cole (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) Award Acceptance by Erin Hotchkiss and Martin Award Lindeman Session: Talk Award SS37 SS23 SS23 SS23 Aqua Science Theater: Films, Videos, and Movies that Communicate Water Science Hosted by Jim and Monica Elser (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) - Open to the public. Water and Movies that Communicate Videos, Films, Theater: Aqua Science geomorphology MILAGRO/Kearny CORONADO/DE VARGAS PERALTA/LAMY Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings including: ASLO Policy Panel Discussion (Coronado/De Vargas) and Scientific Speed Networking Student Workshop (Eldorado Hotel-Zia A/B/C) Workshop (Eldorado Hotel-Zia and Scientific Speed Networking Student Vargas) Discussion (Coronado/De Panel ASLO Policy Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings including: From biogeochemistry to From Investigating the ecosystem effects of seawater intrusion Aquatic Evolutionary Ecology Aquatic Evolutionary Ecology Aquatic Evolutionary Ecology into tidal freshwater wetlands: into tidal freshwater wetlands: Room Session # Session # Session # Session # 9:30-10:00 08:30-19:00 08:30-19:00 08:30-09:30 10:00-11:00 11:15-12:00 12:00-13:30 13:30-14:30 14:30-15:00 15:00-16:00 16:15-17:30 17:30-19:00 19:00-21:30 20:00-23:00 Tuesday At-A-Glance Tuesday

20 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO SS01 SS01 Ecology under ice Ecology under ice SWEENEY BALLROOM B BALLROOM A SS25 SS25 watersheds. watersheds. lessons learned across lessons learned across SWEENEY aquatic environments and aquatic environments and applications, methods, and methods, applications, and methods, applications, Continuous nutrient sensing Continuous nutrient sensing in research and management: in research and management: in research and management: SS09 SS09 OHKAY OWINGEH OHKAY POJOAQUE/NAMBE/ microbial communities microbial communities Host-parasite interactions in Host-parasite interactions in Coffee Break (Courtyard) SS38 SS38 Poster Area Open (Sweeney Ballroom C/D) Poster PERALTA/LAMY Exhibits Open (SFCCC - Prefunction/Lobby Area) Exhibits Open (SFCCC - Prefunction/Lobby Ecosystem Studies Ecosystem Studies Use of Natural Abundance Use of Natural Abundance Use of Natural 14C in Aquatic Food Web and Web Aquatic Food 14C in and Web Aquatic Food 14C in Wednesday afternoon schedule is open to provide free time attendees. Wednesday SS20 SS20 Sublethal Stressors and Sublethal Stressors and CORONADO/DE VARGAS death by a thousand cuts death by a thousand cuts quantifying, and modeling quantifying, and modeling quantifying, Ecotoxicology: Investigating, Investigating, Ecotoxicology: Investigating, Ecotoxicology: Plenary Session: Sinead Collins - “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Understanding Evolution with Multiple Environmental Drivers” (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) Understanding Evolution with Multiple Environmental Drivers” the Bad and Ugly: “The Good, Sinead Collins - Plenary Session: SS23 SS23 MILAGRO/Kearny Aquatic Evolutionary Ecology Aquatic Evolutionary Ecology Room Session # Session # 08:30-9:30 9:30-10:00 08:30-13:00 08:30-13:00 10:00-11:00 11:00-12:30 Wednesday At-A-Glance Wednesday

21 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING SS14 SS14 SS14 SS14 systems systems systems systems to understanding the to understanding the to understanding the to understanding the of Wayne Gardner and Wayne of of Wayne Gardner and Wayne of of Wayne Gardner and Wayne of of Wayne Gardner and Wayne of to celebrate the career to celebrate the career to celebrate the career to celebrate the career his broad contributions his broad contributions his broad contributions his broad contributions SWEENEY BALLROOM B Wayne’s World: A session World: Wayne’s Wayne’s World: A session World: Wayne’s Wayne’s World: A session World: Wayne’s Wayne’s World: A session World: Wayne’s biogeochemistry of aquatic biogeochemistry of aquatic biogeochemistry of aquatic biogeochemistry of aquatic BALLROOM A SS28 SS28 SS28 SS28 continuum continuum continuum continuum Methane processes and Methane processes and Methane processes and Methane processes and SWEENEY ynamics across the aquatic dynamics across the aquatic dynamics across the aquatic dynamics across the aquatic d

SS02 SS02 SS39 SS02 OHKAY OWINGEH OHKAY metabolism, food metabolism, metabolism, food metabolism, metabolism, food metabolism, Open to the public River Basin (Part 1) River Basin (Part Bridging ecosystem Bridging ecosystem Bridging ecosystem POJOAQUE/NAMBE/ web interactions, and web interactions, web interactions, and web interactions, web interactions, and web interactions, biogeochemistry using biogeochemistry using biogeochemistry using the common language of the common language of the common language of Invasions in the Colorado The Complexity of Aquatic The Complexity of stoichiometry: can it be done? stoichiometry: stoichiometry: can it be done? stoichiometry: stoichiometry: can it be done? stoichiometry: Coffee Break (Courtyard) Coffee Break (Courtyard) SS26 SS26 SS26 SS26 Poster Area Open (Sweeney Ballroom C/D) Poster Headwaters to Headwaters to Headwaters to Headwaters to PERALTA/LAMY Exhibits Open (SFCCC - Prefunction/Lobby Area) Exhibits Open (SFCCC - Prefunction/Lobby oceans: ecological and oceans: oceans: ecological and oceans: oceans: ecological and oceans: ecological and oceans: biogeochemical processes biogeochemical processes biogeochemical processes biogeochemical processes across the aquatic continuum across the aquatic continuum across the aquatic continuum across the aquatic continuum Tapas Night, Band, and Dancing (SFCCC - Courtyard) - Ticketed Optional Activity Optional Ticketed and Dancing (SFCCC - Courtyard) - Band, Night, Tapas CS38 CS39 CS39 CS38 communities communities Aquatic Food Webs 1: 1: Webs Aquatic Food Aquatic Food Webs 1: 1: Webs Aquatic Food CORONADO/DE VARGAS on consumer - resource on consumer - resource Environmental influences Environmental influences interactions and energetics interactions and energetics structuring populations and structuring populations and Aquatic Food Webs 2: Forces Forces 2: Webs Aquatic Food Forces 2: Webs Aquatic Food Plenary Session: Sebastian Diehl - “Resource and Consumer Control of Cross-habitat Trophic Interactions in Shallow Lakes” (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) Interactions in Shallow Lakes” Trophic “Resource and Consumer Control of Cross-habitat Sebastian Diehl - Plenary Session: SS13 SS13 SS13 CS23 Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings including: Student Workshop "Ethical Dilemmas: What is intellectual property and who gets authorship?" (Sweeney Ballroom A) What is intellectual property and who gets authorship?" (Sweeney Ballroom "Ethical Dilemmas: Workshop Student Lunch/Workshops/Auxiliary Meetings including: Macrophytes Award Talk Session: Yentsch-Schindler Award Acceptance by Angelicque White and Redfield Award Acceptance by Evelyn Sherr and Barry Sherr (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) Award White and Redfield Angelicque Acceptance by Award Yentsch-Schindler Session: Talk Award MILAGRO/Kearny management and climate management and climate management and climate management and climate Disentangling the effects of Disentangling the effects of Disentangling the effects of change in aquatic ecosystems change in aquatic ecosystems change in aquatic ecosystems Room Session # Session # Session # Session # 9:30-10:00 08:30-17:30 08:30-17:30 08:30-09:30 10:00-11:00 11:15-12:00 12:00-13:30 13:30-14:30 14:30-15:00 15:00-16:00 16:15-17:30 20:00-23:00 Thursday At-A-Glance Thursday

22 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO SS14 SS14 SS14 SS14 systems systems systems systems to understanding the to understanding the to understanding the to understanding the of Wayne Gardner and Wayne of Gardner and Wayne of of Wayne Gardner and Wayne of of Wayne Gardner and Wayne of to celebrate the career to celebrate the career to celebrate the career to celebrate the career his broad contributions his broad contributions his broad contributions his broad contributions SWEENEY BALLROOM B Wayne’s World: A session World: Wayne’s A session World: Wayne’s Wayne’s World: A session World: Wayne’s Wayne’s World: A session World: Wayne’s biogeochemistry of aquatic biogeochemistry of aquatic biogeochemistry of aquatic biogeochemistry of aquatic tterns BALLROOM A SS10 SS10 SS10 SWEENEY Bridging local processes Bridging local processes Bridging local processes and large-scale patterns and large-scale patterns and large-scale pa cycles across landscapes cycles across landscapes cycles cycles across landscapes cycles in aquatic biogeochemical in aquatic biogeochemical in aquatic biogeochemical

SS33 SS33 SS39 SS33 OHKAY OWINGEH OHKAY Open to the Public River Basin (Part 2) River Basin (Part POJOAQUE/NAMBE/ understanding of aquatic understanding of aquatic understanding of aquatic Invasions in the Colorado Invasions in the Colorado Cross-scale perspectives: Cross-scale perspectives: Cross-scale perspectives: Cross-scale perspectives: Cross-scale perspectives: integrating long-term and integrating long-term and integrating long-term and The Complexity of Aquatic The Complexity of high-frequency data into our high-frequency data into our high-frequency high-frequency data into our high-frequency communities and ecosystems communities and ecosystems communities and ecosystems Lunch Coffee Break (Courtyard) Coffee Break (Courtyard) Closing Reception (Courtyard)

SS26 SS26 SS26 Headwaters to Headwaters to Headwaters to PERALTA/LAMY Exhibits Open (SFCCC - Prefunction/Lobby Area) Exhibits Open (SFCCC - Prefunction/Lobby oceans: ecological and oceans: ecological and oceans: ecological and oceans: biogeochemical processes biogeochemical processes biogeochemical processes across the aquatic continuum across the aquatic continuum across the aquatic continuum CS10 CS10 CS10 CS40 function Plenary Session: Paul del Giorgio - “Carbon, Carbon, Carbon, and More Carbon” (Sweeney Ballroom E/F) and More Carbon” Carbon, Carbon, “Carbon, del Giorgio - Paul Plenary Session: Anthropocene Anthropocene Anthropocene Aquatic Food Webs 3: 3: Webs Aquatic Food Aquatic Sciences in the Aquatic Sciences in the Aquatic Sciences in the CORONADO/DE VARGAS Diversity and ecosystem Award Talk Session (Sweeney Ballroom E/F): Patrick Award Acceptance by Josette Garnier and Margalef Award Acceptance by Ken Dunton Award Acceptance by Josette Garnier and Margalef Award Patrick Session (Sweeney Ballroom E/F): Talk Award SS21 SS21 SS21 freshwaters freshwaters freshwaters MILAGRO/Kearny Sources, transformation Sources, transformation Sources, transformation Sources, and importance of iron in and importance of iron in and importance of iron in Room Session # Session # Session # Session # 9:30-10:00 08:30-15:00 08:30-09:30 10:00-11:00 11:15-12:00 12:00-13:30 13:30-14:30 14:30-15:00 15:00-16:00 16:15-17:30 17:30-18:30 Friday At-A-Glance Friday

23 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

SS04 CYANOBACTERIAL PATTERNS AND PROCESSES ACROSS Monday Orals SCALES: IMPLICATIONS FOR WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN SS03 PHYSICAL PROCESSES AND THEIR INFLUENCE IN A CHANGING CLIMATE ZOOPLANKTON ECOLOGY Chair(s): Matthew Waters, [email protected] Chair(s): Howard Riessen, [email protected] Alan Wilson, [email protected] Gary Sprules, [email protected] Location: Sweeney Ballroom B Location: Milagro/Kearny 08:30 Rosen, B. H.: ECOLOGICAL STRATEGIES THAT HELP MONDAY 08:30 Koehl, M.; Cooper, T.; Pepper, R.: SWIMMING IN A CYANOBACTERIA DOMINATE THE WORLD (27771) TURBULENT WORLD: HOW ZOOPLANKTON 08:45 JI, X.; Sandrini, G.; Verspagen, J. M.; Matthijs, H. C.; INTERACT WITH THE BENTHOS* (27779) Huisman, J.: RAPID EVOLUTIONARY ADAPTATION OF 08:45 Webster, D. R.; True, A. C.; Weissburg, M. J.; Yen, J.; Genin, HARMFUL CYANOBACTERIA TO CHANGES IN CO2 A.: BEHAVIORAL RESPONSE OF TROPICAL COPEPODS AVAILABILITY (27782) TO SIMULATED FRONTAL FLOWS (27855) 09:00 Verspagen, J.; Ji, X.; Stomp, M.; Huisman, J.: CHANGES 09:00 Strickler, J. R.; Jiang, H. S.: OLFACTION IN CALANOID IN COMPETITIVE INTERACTIONS BETWEEN COPEPODS?* (27987) CYANOBACTERIA AND CHLOROPHYTES IN RESPONSE TO RISING CO CONCENTRATIONS (27787) 09:15 Riessen, H. P.: WATER TEMPERATURE ALTERS 2 PREDATION IMPACTS IN ZOOPLANKTON 09:15 Urrutia Cordero, P.; Zhang, H.; Hansson, L. A.: EXTREME COMMUNITIES (27768) TEMPORAL TEMPERATURE VARIATION ALTERS CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOM RESPONSES TO 10:00 ; Sprules, W. G.: TEMPORAL VARIABILITY Reid, A. H. STATIONARY MEAN CLIMATIC WARMING (27873) IN ALGAL CONCENTRATION AS A SURROGATE FOR SPATIAL VARIABILITY, AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE 10:00 White, J. D.; Hamilton, S. K.; Sarnelle, O.: OPPOSING GROWTH OF DAPHNIA* (27829) RESPONSES OF STRONGLY INTERACTING SPECIES TO ELEVATED TEMPERATURES SUPPRESS THE 10:15 ; Lucas, C. H.; Thatje, S.: TEMPERATURE Höhn, D. P. HARMFUL PHYTOPLANKTER MICROCYSTIS (28021) EFFECT ON RESPIRATION RATE OF THE SCYPHOZOAN AURELIA AURITA: DIFFERENCES 10:15 Lehman, P. W.; Kurobe, T.; Lesmeister, S.; Mizel, M.; Baxa, BETWEEN POPULATIONS FROM LOWER AND D.; Teh, S. J.: IMPACTS OF THE 2014 SEVERE DROUGHT HIGHER LATITUDES IN NW EUROPE (27818) ON MICROCYSTIS BLOOMS IN SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY (28153) 10:30 Urmy, S. S.; Williamson, C. E.; Leach, T. H.; Schladow, S. G.; Overholt, E. P.; Warren, J. D.: WILDFIRE SMOKE 10:30 Paerl, H. W.; Hall, N. S.; Havens, K.; Otten, T.; Zhu, M.; CHANGES THE VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF Xu, H.; Zhu, G.; Qin, B.: MITIGATING A GLOBAL ZOOPLANKTON IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC LAKE BY EXPANSION OF CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS: THE REDUCING ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION (27935) CONFOUNDING IMPACTS OF * (27824) 10:45 Williamson, C. E.; Overholt, E. P.; Leach, T. H.; Brentrup, J. A.; Mette, E. M.; Pilla, R. M.; Knoll, L. B.: 13:45 Ebrahimi, S.; Quesada, A.: QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LONG-TERM RESPONSES THE LATITUDINAL GRADIANT OF TEMPERATURE OF ZOOPLANKTON AND CHANGES IN PHYSICAL ON CYANBACTERIAL HARMFUL ALGAE BLOOMS HABITAT STRUCTURE DURING LAKE BROWNING IN (CYANOHABS) (28134) TWO TEMPERATE LAKES* (28020) 14:00 Waters, M. N.: RECONSTRUCTING CYANOBACTERIA 13:30 Leach, T. H.; Williamson, C. E.; Warren, J. D.: ARE TOXIN PRODUCTION FROM THE SEDIMENT HORIZONTAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF ZOOPLANKTON RECORD: EVIDENCE FROM SHALLOW, SUBTROPICAL THE RESULT OF INTERACTIONS BETWEEN LAKE LAKE GRIFFIN, FLORIDA, USA (27791) MORPHOLOGY AND ZOOPLANKTON RESPONSE TO 14:15 Fitzpatrick, M. A.; Munawar, M.; Niblock, H.; Rozon, VERTICAL HABITAT GRADIENTS? (28181) R.: WHAT’S IN A BLOOM? EXAMPLES OF DIVERSE 13:45 Färber Lorda, J.; Athié, G.: SEASONAL VARIABILITY ALGAL ASSEMBLAGES FROM TWO EUTROPHIC OF ZOOPLANKTON DISTRIBUTION AND EMBAYMENTS OF LAKE ONTARIO AND THEIR HYDROGRAPHY IN DEEP WATERS OF THE ECOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE (27974) SOUTHERN GULF OF MÉXICO. (27826) 15:00 Palladino, D.; Johengen, T. H.; Ruberg, S. A.; Miller, 14:00 Ostaszewska, K.; Trudnowska, E.; Wichorowski, R. J.; Purcell, H. L.; Stuart, D. G.; Burtner, A. B.: A M.; Blachowiak-Samolyk, K.: HOW DO THE RETROSPECTIVE LOOK AT ALGAL BLOOMS IN HYDROGRAPHIC CONDITIONS DETERMINE WESTERN LAKE ERIE USING HIGH FREQUENCY ZOOPLANKTON SIZE STRUCTURE? A CASE STUDY REAL-TIME MONITORING NETWORK (28150) FROM FIVE SUMMER SEASONS ON THE SOUTHERN 15:15 Butitta, V. L.; Carpenter, S. R.; Pace, M. L.; Uppgaard, WEST SPITSBERGEN SHELF (28017) A.; Stanley, E. H.: DETECTING EARLY WARNING 14:15 Sprules, W. G.; Barth, L. E.: BODY SIZE-DEPENDENT INDICATORS OF BLUE-GREEN ALGAE BLOOMS TRANSPORT OF LAKE ZOOPLANKTON BY WIND- USING SPATIAL ANALYSIS (27981) INDUCED SURFACE WATER CURRENTS (27982) 15:30 Evans, M. A.; Duris, J. W.; Givens, C. E.; Stelzer, E. A.; Ecker, C. D.; Larson, J. H.; Loftin, K.; Lenaker, P.: CYANOBACTERIA AND ALGAL COMMUNITY COMPOSTION ACROSS NUTRIENT GRADIENTS: A WITHIN AND ACROSS SYSTEM COMPARISON (27811)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 24 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

15:45 Brugel, S.; Andersson, A.; Båmstedt, U.: SPATIO- 15:15 Jane, S. F.; Winslow, L. A.; Rose, K. C.: LONG-TERM TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF PICOPLANKTONIC TRENDS IN DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON MONDAY AND FILAMENTOUS CYANOBACTERIA IN A CHARACTERISTICS IN WISCONSIN LAKES (28109) BRACKISH WATER SYSTEM, THE NORTHERN BALTIC 15:30 Corman, J. R.; Bertolet, B. L.; Casson, N. J.; Sebestyen, S. SEA (28034) D.; Kolka, R. K.; Stanley, E. H.: FROM WHENCE THE SS08 PLUGGING LEAKS IN THE PLUMBING OF THE INLAND WATER CARBON: WATERSHED LEACHATE POTENTIAL OF CARBON CYCLE LAKES IN NORTHERN WISCONSIN (27933) 15:45 Casas-Ruiz, J. P.; Catalán, N.; Gómez-Gener, L.; von Chair(s): Jacob Zwart, [email protected] Schiller, D.; Obrador, B.; Kothawala, D. N.; López, P.; Sabater, Grace Wilkinson, [email protected] S.; Marcé, R.: A TALE OF PIPES AND REACTORS: Dominic Vachon, [email protected] CONTROLS ON THE PROCESSING OF DISSOLVED Steven Sadro, [email protected] ORGANIC MATTER IN RIVERS (28008) Location: Sweeney Ballroom A SS17 RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN MOUNTAIN 08:30 Heathcote, A. J.; Prairie, Y. T.; del Giorgio, P. A.: THE AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS ROLE OF BOREAL LAKES IN THE PROCESSING OF TERRESTRIAL ORGANIC CARBON (28042) Chair(s): Steven Sadro, [email protected] 08:45 Dunn, S. T.; Spawn, S. A.; von Fischer, J. C.; Natali, S.; Kevin Rose, [email protected] Schade, J.: SIBERIAN STREAMS ARE STRONG SOURCES Sudeep Chandra, [email protected] OF CH4 TO THE ATMOSPHERE (28192) Location: Peralta/Lamy 09:00 Blodau, C.; Burger, M.; Schmiedeskamp, M.; Berger, 15:00 Catalan, J.: MOUNTAIN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS AS S.; Esders, E.: WHERE’S THE FLUX? NORTHERN SENTINELS OF GLOBAL CHANGET (27842) PEATLAND PONDS AS HOT SPOTS OF CO2 AND CH4 15:30 Saros, J. E.; Burpee, B. T.; Slemmons, K. E.; Warner, K. A.: EMISSIONS. (27934) TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN THE EFFECTS 10:00 Kling, G. W.; Neilson, B. T.; Cardenas, B.; Cory, R. M.: OF NITROGEN SUBSIDIES IN GLACIAL MELTWATER ON CONTROLS ON DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER ALPINE AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS* (28023) PHOTO-DEGRADATION IN SURFACE WATERS: 15:45 McKnight, D. M.; Sokol, E.; Preston, D.; Johnson, P.; RESIDENCE TIME AND THE ROLE OF LIGHT VERSUS Hell, K.: CLIMATE AND HYDROLOGIC DRIVERS SUBSTRATE LIMITATION (27931) OF PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS IN AN ALPINE 10:15 Brentrup, J. A.; Williamson, C. E.; Dempsey, C.; Knoll, L. B.: CATCHMENT, COLORADO, USA* (28230) PHOTODEGRADATION EXCEEDS BIODEGRADATION IN PROCESSING DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN SS24 WATER REGULATION AND RESERVOIR MANAGEMENT IN A ONE SUB-TROPICAL AND THREE TEMPERATE LAKES CONTEXT OF GLOBAL CHANGE (28039) Chair(s): Katrine Turgeon, [email protected] 10:30 Cory, R. M.; Ward, C. P.; Crump, B. C.; Kling, G. W.: Irene Gregory-Eaves, [email protected] PHOTODEGRADATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC Alex Latzka, [email protected] CARBON IN ARCTIC INLAND WATERS* (27949) Location: Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh 10:45 Kothawala, D. N.; Kellerman, A. M.; Catalán, N.; Tranvik, L. 08:30 Turgeon, K.; Latzka, A. W.; Solomon, C. T.; Nozais, C.; J.: ALLEVIATING THE UNCERTAINTIES REGARDING Gregory-Eaves, I.: QUANTIFYING THE LONG-TERM DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER REACTIVITY IN THE EFFECTS OF IMPOUNDMENT ON FISH POPULATION AQUATIC LANDSCAPE (28009) DYNAMICS, DIVERSITY AND COMMUNITY 13:30 Hanson, P. C.; Carey, C. C.; Dugan, H. A.: EXPLORING COMPOSITION IN BOREAL AND TEMPERATE THE CONTROLS OVER CARBON STORAGE AND RESERVOIRST (28111) EMISSION IN LAKES THROUGH SIMULATION 09:00 Latzka, A. W.; Solomon, C. T.; Nozais, C.; Elchyshyn, L.; MODELS* (28127) Thomas, R.; Trottier, G.; Turgeon, K.; Gregory-Eaves, I.: 13:45 Vachon, D.; Prairie, Y. T.; Guillemette, F.; del Giorgio, P. RELATIONSHIPS AMONG RESERVOIR DRAWDOWN A.: MODELING ALLOCHTHONOUS DISSOLVED AMPLITUDE, LITTORAL HABITAT LOSS, AND FISH ORGANIC CARBON MINERALIZATION GROWTH (28208) UNDER VARIABLE HYDROLOGIC REGIMES: 09:15 Budy, P.; Klobucar, S.; Winters, L.; Strohm, D.; Thiede, UNDERSTANDING THE BASELINE PRODUCTION OF G.: CROWDED RESERVOIR TROPHIC NICHE SPACE CO2 IN BOREAL LAKES (27846) UNDER A WARMER, DRIER CLIMATE.* (28149) 14:00 Hanson, Z. J.; Zwart, J. A.; Chiu, C. M.; Bolster, D. 10:00 Klobucar, S. L.; Budy, P.: CONSEQUENCES OF T.; Hamlet, A. F.; Jones, S. E.: NEW TOOLS FOR SEASONAL VARIATION IN RESERVOIR WATER SIMULATING REGIONAL-SCALE LAKE LEVEL FOR PREDATORY FISHES: LINKING VISUAL AND CARBON BUDGETS OVER HISTORICAL AND FORAGING AND PREY DENSITIES (28044) FUTURE CLIMATE (28201) 10:15 Volke, M. A.; Johnson, W. C.; Scott, M. L.; Dixon, M. D.: 14:15 Rowland, J. C.; Shelef, E.; Stauffer, S.; Muss, J.; Sutfin, N. A.: EMERGING RESERVOIR DELTAS IN A CONTEXT OF THE FLUX OF SOIL ORGANIC CARBON INTO ARCTIC GLOBAL CHANGE (27925) RIVERS FROM RIVER BANK EROSION (28152) 10:30 Rich, M. W.; Scott, J. T.: RECONSTRUCTING 15:00 Kritzberg, E. S.: REVERSED ACIDIFICATION AS THE PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS TRENDS THROUGH MAIN DRIVER OF SURFACE WATER BROWNING – IS THE APPLICATION OF RESERVOIR LIMNOLOGY IT SUPPORTED BY HISTORICAL DATA? (28117) THEORY IN BEAVER LAKE, ARKANSAS. (28116)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 25 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

10:45 Abirhire, O.; Hudson, J.: DO CHANGES IN 15:45 Jaramillo, L. V.; Stone, M. C.; Mattern, D.: ASSESSMENT HYDROLOGIC FLOW AFFECT SUMMER ALGAL OF POST-FIRE WATERSHED RECOVERY IN KASHE- BIOMASS? ASSESSMENT OF A CHANGING CLIMATE KATUWE TENT ROCKS NATIONAL MONUMENT* ON LAKE DIEFENBAKER, CANADA. (27954) (28105) 13:30 Paterson, M. J.; Findlay, D. L.; Beaty, K. G.: THE EFFECT SS31 THE SKY IS FALLING: ATMOSPHERIC DEPOSITION OF OF CHANGES IN HYDROLOGY ON NUTRIENT DYNAMICS AND PLANKTON IN AN EXPERIMENTAL ALL SHAPES AND SIZES AND ITS INFLUENCE ON AQUATIC RESERVOIR (27886) ECOSYSTEMS AROUND THE WORLD MONDAY 13:45 Groeger, A. W.; Bass, D.: RESPONSE OF MIXING, Chair(s): Natalie Mladenov, [email protected] STRATIFICATION AND WATER TEMPERATURE TO Elizabeth Boyer, [email protected] CLIMATE IN A SUBTROPICAL TEXAS RESERVOIR Kevin Bishop, [email protected] (28155) Location: Coronado/DeVargas 14:00 Jones, J.; Obrecht, D.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON 08:30 Iavorivska, L.; Boyer, E.; Grimm, J.: ATMOSPHERIC IN MISSOURI RESERVOIRS (27926) DEPOSITION OF ORGANIC MATTER TO 14:15 Castelo Branco, C. W.; Kozlowsky-Suzuki, B.; Guarino, A. WATERSHEDS IN THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED W.; Portugal, S. M.; Rocha, M. I.; Sousa-Filho, I. F.; Rocha, R. STATES: RATES AND TEMPORAL VARIATION* (27822) J.: GLOBAL WARMING AND TROPICAL RESERVOIRS: 08:45 Kopacek, J.; Posch, M.: PRECIPITATION CHEMISTRY PROLONGED STRATIFICATION AND CHANGES IN IN CENTRAL EUROPE SINCE 1850: AN EFFECT OF WATER IONIC COMPOSITION (27986) INDUSTRIAL DUST. (27795) 15:00 Gaeta, J. W.; Landom, K.: PHOSPHORUS TO FISHES: 09:00 Oldani, K. M.; Mladenov, N.; Williams, M. W.; Bigelow, WHOLE-ECOSYSTEM RESPONSE OF A SHALLOW A.; Lipson, D.: DRY DEPOSITION AS A SOURCE OF RESERVOIR TO DROUGHT AND AN INVASIVE CARP ORGANIC CARBON AND NUTRIENTS TO HIGH REMOVAL WITH AN EMPHASIS ON ENDANGERED ELEVATION CATCHMENTS (27896) FISH CONSERVATION (28185) 09:15 Walsh, E. J.; Rivas, J. A.; Mohl, J.; Leung, M. Y.; Wallace, R. 15:15 Barouillet, C.; Laird, K. R.; Selbie, D. T.; Perrin, L.; Gill, T. E.: AEOLIAN TRANSPORT OF BIOTA WITH C. J.; Cumming, B. F.: PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL DUST: CAPTURING DIVERSITY USING A MULTIPLE INVESTIGATION OF THE IMPACT OF THE BRIDGE- FACETED APPROACH (28232) RIVER DIVERSION ON THE PRODUCTIVITY OF 10:00 Driscoll, C. T.; Funk, C.; Lynch, J.: LONG-TERM TRENDS SETON LAKE, A SOCKEYE SALMON LAKE IN BRITISH AND SPATIAL PATTERNS OF ATMOSPHERIC COLUMBIA,CANADA (27865) DEPOSITION AND THE RESPONSE OF SURFACE 15:30 Harris, S. L.; Hebert, A.; Weir, T.: AN INNOVATIVE WATER CHEMISTRY IN REMOTE FOREST NUTRIENT RESTORATION AND BIOMANIPULATION WATERSHEDS OF THE EASTERN, U.S.* (27955) EXPERIMENT IN WAHLEACH RESERVOIR, A 10:15 Celis-Salgado, M. P.; Yan, N. D.; Keller, W.; Bailey, J. L.; MONTANE HYDROELECTRIC RESERVOIR IN BRITISH Arnott, S. E.: DETERMINING THE POTENTIAL OF COLUMBIA. (28213) DAPHNIID RECOVERY IN A METAL IMPACTED SOFT 15:45 Hebert, A. S.; Harris, S. L.; Scott, D. C.; Weir, T.: WATER LAKE IN SUDBURY, ON., CANADA USING RESTORING ANADROMY IN ALOUETTE RESERVOIR MULTIGENERATION BIOASSAYS. (28135) (BRITISH COLUMBIA): UNDERSTANDING NUTRIENT 10:30 Nelson, S. J.; Chen, C. Y.; Krabbenhoft, D. P.; Kahl, J. FLUXES OF OUR MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES IN THE S.: BEYOND “HOTSPOTS” – DRAGONFLY BIO- CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE (28215) SENTINELS DESCRIBE VULNERABILITY (OR NOT) SS30 WILDFIRE EFFECTS ON FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS: OF NORTHEASTERN LAKES AND THEIR FOODWEBS ADVANCES IN RESEARCH TECHNIQUES TO MERCURY DEPOSITION AND ACCUMULATION (28110) Chair(s): Justin Reale, [email protected] 10:45 Gay, D. A.; Kerschner, B. M.: DISTINCT DIFFERENCES Lauren Jaramillo, [email protected] IN PRECIPITATION MERCURY CONCENTRATIONS Dave Van Horn, [email protected] BETWEEN URBAN AND RURAL MEASUREMENTS IN Mark Stone, [email protected] THE MERCURY DEPOSITION NETWORK* (28074) Location: Coronado/DeVargas 13:30 Anas, M.; Meegahage, B.; Evans, M.; Keating, J.; Jeffries, 15:00 Cerrato, J. M.; Hirani, C.; Clark, A. L.; Blake, J.; Ali, A. M.; D.; Wissel, B.: EFFECTS OF ATMOSPHERIC EMISSIONS Artyushkova, K.; Peterson, E.; Bixby, R. J.: IMPACT OF FROM ATHABASCA OIL SANDS ON ADJACENT METALS ASSOCIATED TO WILDFIRE ASH ON WATER BOREAL LAKES: INFERENCES FROM CRUSTACEAN QUALITY* (28063) ZOOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES (27790) 15:15 Reale, J. K.; Van Horn, D. J.; Dahm, C. N.: DIFFERENTIAL 13:45 Mushet, G. R.; Laird, K. R.; Hesjedal, B.; Leavitt, P. RESPONSES IN WHOLE-STREAM METABOLISM IN R.; Scott, K. A.; Simpson, G. L.; Wissel, B.; Wolfe, J.; TWO SECOND-ORDER STREAMS IMPACTED BY A Cumming, B. F.: INVESTIGATING THE ROLES OF CATASTROPHIC WILDFIRE * (28183) NITROGEN DEPOSITION AND CLIMATE CHANGE ON 15:30 Clark, A. L.; Bixby, R. J.: RECOVERY OF DIATOM CHRYSOPHYTES AND DIATOMS IN LAKE SEDIMENT COMMUNITIES IN A HIGH MONTANE GRASSLAND CORES DOWNWIND OF THE ATHABASCA OIL SANDS STREAM IN NORTHERN NEW MEXICO FOLLOWING (27866) AN EXTREME WILDFIRE FLOW.* (28193)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 26 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

14:00 Wolfe, J. D.; Hesjedal, B.; Cumming, B. F.; Das, B.; Laird, 10:45 Graham, E. B.; Resch, C. T.; Crump, A. R.; Kennedy, K. R.; Leavitt, P. R.; Mushet, G.; Scott, K. A.; Simpson, G. D. W.; Arntzen, E. V.; Fredrickson, J. K.; Stegen, J. MONDAY L.; Wissel, B.: DIFFERENITAL CHANGES IN BOREAL C.: SPATIOTEMPORAL AND PHYLOGENETIC LAKE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES RESULTING VARIATION IN COMMUNITY ASSEMBLY PROCESSES FROM CLIMATE CHANGE AND ATHABASCA OIL UNDER HIGHLY DYNAMIC HYDROLOGIC MIXING SANDS EMISSIONS (27867) CONDITIONS (28246) 14:15 Hesjedal, B. L.; Wolfe, J. D.; Cumming, B. F.; Das, B.; Laird, 13:30 St-Gelais, N. F.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Beisner, B. E.: THE K. R.; Leavitt, P. R.; Mushet, G.; Scott, K. A.; Simpson, G. FUNCTIONAL BIOGEOGRAPHY OF ZOOPLANKTON L.; Wissel, B.: THE ROLES OF NITROGEN DEPOSITION AND PHYTOPLANKTON IN BOREAL LAKES (28079) AND CLIMATE CHANGE ON ZOOPLANKTON 13:45 Zhao, X.; Hicks, R. E.: TESTING THE THEORY OF ASSEMBLAGES IN LAKE SEDIMENTS DOWNWIND OF ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY USING BACTERIAL THE ATHABASCA OIL SANDS REGION (28141) COMMUNITIES ON FRESHWATER “MICROSCOPIC SS35 DEVELOPING AND TESTING ECOLOGICAL THEORY IN AQUATIC ISLANDS” (28035) ECOSYSTEMS 14:00 Morán, X. A.; Gasol, J. M.; Pernice, M. C.; Massana, R.; Lara, E.; Vaqué, D.; Duarte, C. M.: TEMPERATURE CONTROL Chair(s): Stuart E. Jones, [email protected] OF MARINE HETEROTROPHIC PROKARYOTES: A Patrick T. Kelly, [email protected] LATITUDINAL GAP BETWEEN BOTTOM-UP AND Christopher T. Solomon, [email protected] TOP-DOWN CONTROLS (27883) Location: Peralta/Lamy 14:15 Segura, A. M.; Lopez-Urrutia, A.; Calliari, D.; Arím, M.: 08:30 Spanbauer, T. L.; Fritz, S. C.; Eason, T.; Garmestani, A.: PREDICTABLE VARIABILITY IN THE SIZE-STRUCTURE USING PALEOLIMNOLOGY TO TEST RESILIENCE OF THE MICROBIAL PRODUCERS IN THE OCEAN THEORY (28032) (28058) 08:45 Nojavan A., F.; Kreakie, B. J.; Hollister, J. W.; Qian, SS37 INVESTIGATING THE ECOSYSTEM EFFECTS OF SEAWATER S. S.: ASSESSING LAKE TROPHIC STATUS: A INTRUSION INTO TIDAL FRESHWATER WETLANDS: FROM PROPORTIONAL ODDS LOGISTIC REGRESSION MODEL (28113) BIOGEOCHEMISTRY TO GEOMORPHOLOGY 09:00 Kelly, P. T.; Solomon, C. T.; Weidel, B. C.; Zwart, J. Chair(s): Ellen R. Herbert, [email protected] A.; Jones, S. E.: USING LOAD DOC:PHOSPHORUS Joseph P. Schubauer-Berigan, [email protected] STOICHIOMETRY AND LAKE MORPHOMETRY IN Christopher B. Craft, [email protected] A PROCESS MODEL TO PREDICT LAKE PRIMARY Location: Milagro/Kearny PRODUCTIVITY (28198) 15:00 Bernhardt, E. S.; Ardón, M.; Helton, A. M.; BenDor, T.; 09:15 Bukaveckas, P. A.: SUBSIDY EFFECTS ON CONSUMER Burgin, A. J.; Emanuel, R. E.; Payn, R. A.; Poole, G. C.; CONTROL OF PRIMARY PRODUCTION – DO Wright, J. P.: SALTWATER INTRUSION: THE LEADING AQUATIC AND TERRESTRIAL FOOD WEBS DIFFER? EDGE OF CLIMATE CHANGE FOR COASTAL PLAIN (27938) ECOSYSTEMST (27851) 10:00 O’Malley, B. P.; Stockwell, J. D.: DOES OMNIVORY 15:30 Ensign, S. H.; Noe, G. B.; Hupp, C. R.: TIDAL CHALLENGE CONVENTIONAL THEORIES ABOUT FRESHWATER WETLAND LANDSCAPES AND DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATION? (28065) SALINITY INTRUSION* (28100) 10:15 Howeth, J. G.; Sferra, C. S.; Black, S. D.; Huryn, A. D.; 15:45 Herbert, E. R.; Craft, C. B.: RIVER DISCHARGE Lozier, J. D.: SUCCESSION IN METACOMMUNITIES: AND TIDAL WETLAND RESILIENCE TO RISING DIVERSITY-AGE RELATIONSHIPS ACROSS TROPHIC SEA LEVELS: SALINIZATION INFLUENCES LEVELS IN POND ECOSYSTEMS (27772) ECOGEOMORPHIC FEEDBACKS IN THE ALTAMAHA 10:30 Strecker, A.; Holgerson, M.; Crisafulli, C.; Gawel, RIVER ESTUARY, GEORGIA, USA* (27799) J.: PRIMARY SUCCESSION AND COMMUNITY ASSEMBLY IN PONDS CREATED BY THE MOUNT ST. HELENS ERUPTION (28102)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 27 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

10:45 Xiao, X.; Huang, H. M.: HARMFUL CYANOBACTERIA Tuesday Orals CONTROL BY BARLEY STRAW – ALLELOPATHIC CS06 DIVERSITY, STRUCTURE, AND FUNCTIONING MECHANISM AND APPLICATION (28235) OF BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES SS08 PLUGGING LEAKS IN THE PLUMBING OF THE INLAND WATER Chair(s): Randall E. Hicks, [email protected] CARBON CYCLE Location: Peralta/Lamy Chair(s): Jacob Zwart, [email protected] 13:30 Niederdorfer, R. T.; Peter, H. M.; Battin, T. J.: GEO- Grace Wilkinson, [email protected] PHYSICAL CONDITIONS AND MICROBIAL Dominic Vachon, [email protected] LIFESTYLES IN STREAM ECOSYSTEMS (27915) Steven Sadro, [email protected] 13:45 Raub, S. C.: MICROBIAL DIVERSITY AND Location: Sweeney Ballroom A FUNCTIONING OF LOAGAN BUNUT PEATSWAMP, 08:30 Leavitt, P. R.; Haig, H. A.; Wiik, E.; Finlay, K.; Pham, S. V.; MALAYSIA (27792) Simpson, G. L.; Wissel, B.; Cumming, B. F.; laird, K. R.; Smol, 14:00 ALotaibi, N. A.; Viegas, M.; Morán, X. A.; Irigoien, J. P.; Hodder, K. R.: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL ANALYSIS X.: AUTOTROPHIC AND HETEROTROPHIC OF THE ROLE OF HARDWATER AND SALINE LAKES PICOPLANKTON IN THE RED SEA: SEASONAL AND IN ATMOSPHERIC CO2 EXCHANGE (27983) DIEL VARIABILITY (27815) 08:45 Deirmendjian, L.; Anschutz, P.; Abril, G.: RAPID CO2 14:15 Zhao, X.; Hicks, R. E.: DYNAMICS OF WATER AND OUTGASSING AND ISOTOPIC EQUILIBRATION

TUESDAY PARTICLE-ASSOCIATED BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES OF DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON AT THE IN NEARSHORE LAKE SUPERIOR AND THE DULUTH- GROUNDWATER-STREAM-ATMOSPHERE INTERFACE SUPERIOR HARBOR (28054) IN A TEMPERATE CATCHMENT (27910) 15:00 Coban, O.; Bebout, B. M.: INVESTIGATIONS ON KEY 09:00 Voss, B. M.; Wickland, K. P.; Striegl, R. G.: PLAYERS OF NITROGEN CYCLE IN MICROBIAL MATS CONSTRAINING AQUATIC CARBON FLUXES IN 13 (27977) THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI RIVER BASIN USING C: EVIDENCE FOR ENHANCED SUMMERTIME 15:15 Eguiarte, L. E.; Souza, V.; Heres, A.: MEXICAN PACIFIC SHRIMP FARMS SURVEY: MICROBIAL DIVERSITY, PROCESSING OF DOM (27996) MOLECULAR MARKERS OF THE WATER QUALITY 09:15 Wiik, E.; Finlay, K.; Simpson, G. L.; Vogt, R. J.; Leavitt, AND VIBRIOSIS. (27959) P. R.; Baulch, H. M.: TEMPORAL VARIATION IN THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF PH AND LAKE 15:30 McDermott, T. R.; Jones, R. T.; Mitchell, D.: UV RADIATION: AN ENVIRONMENTAL MUTAGEN METABOLISM ON ATMOSPHERIC CO2 EXCHANGE IN FUELING MICROBIAL GENETIC DIVERSITY? (27890) HARDWATER LAKES (28170) 10:00 Stets, E. G.; Striegl, R. G.: THE IMBALANCED SS04 CYANOBACTERIAL PATTERNS AND PROCESSES ACROSS STOICHIOMETRY OF CARBON DIOXIDE AND SCALES: IMPLICATIONS FOR WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN OXYGEN IN STREAMS (28123) A CHANGING CLIMATE 10:15 Wilkinson, G. M.; Buelo, C. D.; Cole, J. J.; Pace, M. L.: EXOGENOUSLY PRODUCED CO Chair(s): Matthew Waters, [email protected] 2 DOUBLES THE CO2 Alan Wilson, [email protected] EFFLUX FROM THREE NORTH TEMPERATE LAKES (27833) Location: Sweeney Ballroom B 10:30 Bogard, M. J.; del Giorgio, P. A.: EXAMINING THE 08:30 Kiyoko, Y.; Hastings, C.; Davidson, E. G.; Waterfield, H. ROLE OF INTERNAL VERSUS EXTERNAL INPUTS A.; Kwietniewski, E. J.; Wells, B.: DO MICROPLASTICS SUPPORTING CO2 EMISSIONS ACROSS BOREAL LAKES DIRECTLY INTERACT WITH CYANOBACTERIA? (27990) (27919) 10:45 Sutfin, N. A.; Lynch, L.; Fegel, T.; Wohl, E. E.: SEDIMENT 08:45 Harris, T. D.; Smith, V. H.: DO PERSISTENT ORGANIC TRAPS IN FLUVIAL PLUMBING: RIPARIAN POLLUTANTS STIMULATE CYANOBACTERIAL RETENTION AND TRANSFORMATION OF RIVERINE BLOOMS? (27912) CARBON (28177) 09:00 Chen, K.: THE MEASURES OF POLLUTANTS REDUCTION IN NANFEI RIVER FOR WATER QUALITY SS12 REDUCTIONIST APPROACHES TO LARGE-SCALE CARBON IMPROVEMENT IN LAKE CHAOHU, A LARGE CYCLING - OPPORTUNITIES AND LIMITATIONS EUTROPHIC SHALLOW LAKE IN CHINA (27882) Chair(s): Lars Tranvik, [email protected] 09:15 Yu, L.; Zhu, G.; Xu, H.; Zhu, M.; Qin, B.: DYNAMICS OF Cristian Gudasz, [email protected] MICROCYSTIN CONCENTRATIONS IN DRINKING Dolly Kothawala, [email protected] WATER INTAKES OF LAKE TAIHU, CHINA (27895) Nuria Catalan, [email protected] 10:00 Thomas, S.: PONDS OF SOUTHWEST FLORIDA: Birgit Koehler, [email protected] TICKING TIME BOMBS (28223) Location: Sweeney Ballroom A 10:15 Nelson, N. G.; Muñoz-Carpena, R.; Kaplan, D.; Phlips, E. J.: 13:30 Berggren, M.: AN EXPERIMENTALIST’S APPROACH MANAGING CYANOBACTERIA IN THE SUBTROPICS: TO GLOBAL LIMNOLOGY: FILLING THE GAPS IN CAUSAL ANALYSIS OF TEMPORAL SHIFTS IN PROCESS UNDERSTANDING OF LARGE-SCALE CYANOBACTERIA DRIVER IMPORTANCE (27943) ORGANIC MATTER TRANSFORMATIONS (27848) 10:30 Finlay, K.; Vogt, R. J.: MANAGEMENT FOR CONTINUED WATER QUALITY IN A PRODUCTIVE, MACROPHYTE DOMINATED RESERVOIR (27965)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 28 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

13:45 Hensgens, G.; Arellano, C.; Smith, B.; Poska, A.; Berggren, 15:00 Moen, S.: WHALE BURPS AND OTHER SCIENCE STUFF M.: HIGH VARIABILITY IN THE DECAY OF DISSOLVED THE PUBLIC SEEMS TO LIKE: LESSONS FROM SEA ORGANIC CARBON FROM DIFFERENT BOREAL GRANT’S SCIENCE COMMUNICATORS (28059) LITTER SOURCES; A CHALLENGE TO LAND-WATER 15:15 Nanayakkara, L.; Jurdi, R.; Leavitt, P.; Wissel, B.: HUMAN CARBON FLUX MODELING (27902) DIMENSIONS OF COMPLEX SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL 14:00 Hutchins, R. H.; Prairie, Y. T.; del Giorgio, P. A.: LARGE- SYSTEMS: INSIGHTS FOR SCIENTISTS AND SCALE LANDSCAPE DRIVERS OF CO2, CH4 AND DOC MANAGERS FROM PRAIRIE LAKES (27989) IN BOREAL RIVER NETWORKS (27961) 15:30 Bocast, C. S.: SOUND AND SOUNDSCAPE IN WATER 14:15 Marcé, R.; Hartmann, J.; Obrador, B.: TEMPERATURE RESOURCE SCIENCE AND COMMUNICATION– EFFECTS ON METABOLISM AND THE DISSOLVED CHALLENGES, TECHNIQUES, STRATEGIES (27880) INORGANIC CARBON EQUILIBRIA CONSTRAIN 15:45 Peterson, C. M.; Rahel, F. J.; Walters, A. W.: DIVISION OF GLOBAL CO2 SUPERSATURATION IN RIVERS (28143) WYOMING STREAM THERMAL COMMUNITIES INTO 15:00 Kamjunke, N.; Musolff, A.; Oosterwoud, M. R.; Selle, B.; MANAGEMENT CLUSTERS (27966) TUESDAY Opitz, M.; Büttner, O.; Herzsprung, P.; Tittel, J.: RELEASE AND PROCESSING OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER SS17 RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN MOUNTAIN IN CATCHMENTS OF DRINKING WATER RESERVOIRS AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS (27806) Chair(s): Steven Sadro, [email protected] 15:15 Morling, K.; Kamjunke, N.; Tittel, J.: THE ROLE OF PRE- Kevin Rose, [email protected] DAMS IN THE DOC PROBLEM (28012) Sudeep Chandra, [email protected] 15:30 Gu, Y.; Vuorio, K.; Tiirola, M.; Perämäki, S.; Vähätalo, A. Location: Peralta/Lamy V.: PHOTOCHEMICAL REACTIVITY OF DISSOLVED 08:30 Sadro, S.; Sickman, J. O.; Lucero, D.: THE ORGANIC CARBON IN FINNISH LAKE WATER: CONSEQUENCES OF CLIMATE CHANGE FOR IMPACT OF DISSOLVED IRON AND PH (27913) AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM ENERGETICS IN MOUNTAIN 15:45 McTigue, N. D.; Currin, C. A.: DECOMPOSITION OF SYSTEMS: FROM CARBON FLUXES TO FOOD WEBS SEMI-PERMANENT STORED SEDIMENT ORGANIC (27998) CARBON FROM ERODING SALT MARSHES (28142) 08:45 Ulseth, A. J.; Bertuzzo, E.; Singer, G. A.; Schelker, J.; Battin, SS15 AQUATIC SCIENCE: INFORMING POLICY, MANAGEMENT, T. J.: SPRING SNOWMELT DRIVES ECOSYSTEM AND THE PUBLIC METABOLISM AN ALPINE STREAM NETWORK (28007) 09:00 Vlah, M. J.; Holtgrieve, G. W.: PREDICTORS OF Chair(s): Michelle McCrackin, [email protected] RESOURCE USE BY LENTIC CONSUMERS AT HIGH Adrienne Sponberg, [email protected] ELEVATION (28207) Lesley Smith, [email protected] 09:15 Symons, C. C.; Shurin, J. B.: HISTORY AFFECTS THE Jennifer Salerno, [email protected] RESPONSE OF MOUNTAIN LAKE PLANKTON Location: Coronado/DeVargas COMMUNITIES TO COMBINED EFFECTS OF CLIMATE 08:30 Sponberg, A. J.: AN ECOSYSTEM-BASED APPROACH AND PREDATION (27940) T TO MAKING SCIENCE INFLUENCE POLICY (28159) 10:00 Vinebrooke, R. D.; Loewen, C.; MacLennan, M. M.: 09:00 Vicente Lopes, V. L.: MANAGING WATERSHEDS REGIONAL DIVERSITY REQUIRED TO RESCUE ALPINE THROUGH ECOLOGICAL GOVERNANCE (28038) BUT NOT LOWER MONTANE LAKE COMMUNITIES 09:15 Smith, L. K.: LOCAL WATER BOARDS – HOW FROM IMPACTS OF MULTIPLE STRESSORS (28225) SCIENTISTS CAN INTERFACE BETWEEN THE 10:15 Chiapella, A. M.; Strecker, A. L.; Eagles-Smith, C.; COMMUNITY AND LOCAL POLICY MAKERS (27798) Gundersen, D.: UNTOUCHED? NOT SO MUCH: 10:00 Howarth, R. W.: GETTING SCIENCE INTO THE THE FACTORS INFLUENCING CONTAMINANT POLICY DEBATE ON HIGH-VOLUME HYDRAULIC CONCENTRATIONS IN MOUNTAIN LAKE FOOD FRACTURING (“FRACKING”) AND SHALE GAS * WEBS (28062) (27932) 10:30 Luek, A.; Rasmussen, J.: MULTIPLE STRESSOR EFFECTS 10:15 Oliver, J. L.; John, F.; Joseph, S.; Jessup, B.; Paul, M. J.; Walsh, OF COAL-MINING ON AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS IN J. B.: HOMEWARD BOUND: TAKING A WATER SAMPLE THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS OF ALBERTA, CANADA OVER THE HORIZON INTO PUBLIC POLICY AND (28221) AQUATIC RESOURCE MANAGEMENT (27963) SS18 ALGAE CULTIVATION: BIOTIC AND ABIOTIC CHALLENGES - 10:30 McCrackin, M. L.: BALTIC EYE: SCIENCE AND IN MEMORIAM OF VAL SMITH COMMUNICATION TO IMPROVE POLICY MAKING FOR THE BALTIC SEA ENVIRONMENT (27793) Chair(s): Wiebke Boeing, [email protected] 13:30 Davidson, M. A.: SEARCHING FOR THE UNICORN: Alina Corcoran, [email protected] SCIENCE AND DECISION MAKING (28205) Location: Sweeney Ballroom B 14:00 Runkel, R. L.: CLEANING UP AMERICA’S ABANDONED 13:30 Shurin, J. B.; Szyjka, S. J.; Mandal, S.; Yohn, C. B.; Burkart, MINELANDS: THE ANIMAS RIVER & BEYOND* (27810) M. D.; Mayfield, S. P.: EVALUATION OF PHENOTYPE STABILITY AND ECOLOGICAL RISK OF GENETICALLY 14:15 Bukaveckas, P. A.: COMMUNICATING RISKS TO T AQUATIC LIFE POSED BY HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS MODIFIED ALGAE (27804) (27942)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 29 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

14:00 Boeing, W. J.; Holguin, F. O.; Niu, R.; Seger, M.; Chavez, 15:30 Park, G.; Dam, H. G.: A TRADE-OFF BETWEEN CELL G.; Lammers, P. J.: DIRECT COMPETITIVE CONTACT GROWTH AND TOXIN PRODUCTION DRIVEN NEEDED FOR PRODUCTION OF ALLELOPATHIC BY BOTH NUTRIENT STOICHIOMETRY AND CHEMICAL (27831) GRAZER-INDUCED DEFENSE IN DINOFLAGELLATE 14:15 Canton, M. C.; Holguin, F. O.; Boeing, W. J.: ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE (27956) ALLELOPATHIC ORGANIC ALKALOID GRAMINE: 15:45 Dam, H. G.; Park, G.: COST AND BENEFIT OF TOXIN EFFICACY AS AN ALGAE INHIBITOR AND PRODUCTION IN A MARINE DINOFLAGELLATE IN DEGRADATION (27832) RESPONSE TO COPEPOD GRAZING (28076) 15:00 Nielsen, S. L.: OPTIMIZATION OF RHODOMONAS SS32 DATA-INTENSIVE AQUATIC RESEARCH: NETWORKS, TEAMS, SALINA AS FEEDSTOCK FOR THE PRODUCTION OF LIVE FEED FOR AQUACULTURE, BASED ON SENSORS, HARMONIZED DATASETS, AND OPEN SCIENCE COPEPODS (28019) Chair(s): Kendra Spence Cheruvelil, [email protected] 15:15 Yan, J.: CULTIVATING ALGAE ON AN OUTDOOR C. Emi Fergus, [email protected] ALGAL TURF SCRUBBER FROM DAIRY MANURE Paul Hanson, [email protected] EFFLUENTS (28226) Stephanie Melles, [email protected] 15:30 Taub, F. B.; Tran, C. H.; McLaskey, A. K.: CAN Emily Read, [email protected] VARIATIONS IN C:N:P ALGAL UPTAKE MIMIC Zofia Taranu, [email protected] CARBON LIMITATIONS? (27997) Location: Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh

TUESDAY 08:30 Spence Cheruvelil, K.: DATA-INTENSIVE SS23 AQUATIC EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY AQUATIC RESEARCH: NETWORKS, TEAMS, Chair(s): Hans Dam, [email protected] SENSORS, HARMONIZED DATASETS, AND OPEN David Avery, [email protected] SCIENCE T (27953) Dagmar Frisch, [email protected] 09:00 Scott, C. E.; Parker, S.; Goodman, K.; Vance, J.; Bohall, Marcin Wojewodzic, [email protected] C.: CURRENT AND FUTURE INSTRUMENTATION Location: Milagro/Kearny AND OBSERVATIONAL DATA AVAILABILITY 10:00 Dudycha, J. L.; Brandon, C. S.; James, T.; Hickman, A.; ACROSS LAKES IN THE NATIONAL ECOLOGICAL Duvall, N.: ON THE REDUCIBLE COMPLEXITY OF THE OBSERVATORY NETWORK (28087) DAPHNIA EYE: SELECTION, HERITABILITY, AND 09:15 Fergus, C. E.; Lapierre, J. F.; Oliver, S. K.; Skaff, N.; Scott, C.; MUTATIONT (27857) Cheruvelil, K. S.; Soranno, P. A.; Webster, K.: PATTERNS OF 10:30 Rengefors, K.; Ahrén, D.; Annenkova, N.; Härnström Aloisi, LAKE, STREAM, AND WETLAND CONNECTIVITY AT K.; Kremp, A.; Logares, R.: RECENT DIVERSIFICATION MACROSCALES (28220) OF A DINOFLAGELLATE – A CASE OF ADAPTIVE 10:00 Hein, C. L.: LONG-TERM WATER QUALITY TRENDS IN RADIATION? (27899) WISCONSIN LAKES (28166) 10:45 Aranguren-Gassis, M.; Litchman, E.: INTERACTIVE 10:15 Lottig, N. R.; Tan, P. N.; Cheruvelil, K. S.; Scott, C. E.; EFFECTS OF HIGH TEMPERATURE AND NITROGEN Soranno, P. A.; Stanley, E. H.; Stow, C. A.; Wagner, T.; Yuan, LIMITATION INFLUENCE THE POTENTIAL FOR S.: DECADAL PATTERNS AND DRIVERS OF WATER EVOLUTION OF WARM WATER MARINE DIATOMS CLARITY AT THE SUB-CONTINENTAL SPATIAL (27970) SCALE (28051) 13:30 Johnston, M. K.: ENDLESS FORMS MOST BEAUTIFUL 10:30 Melles, S. J.; Pilla, R.; Richardson, D.; Knoll, L.; AND WONDERFUL: AQUATIC MICROALGAE AS A Hetherington, A. L.; Williamson, C.: COLLABORATING MODEL FOR TEACHING EVOLUTION (28176) TO EXPLORE HOW LAKE THERMAL STRUCTURE 13:45 Derry, A. M.; Charette, C.: CLIMATE ALTERS HAS CHANGED IN RECENT DECADES FOR NORTH INTRASPECIFIC VARIATION IN COPEPOD EFFECT EASTERN NORTH AMERICAN LAKES (28210) TRAITS THROUGH POND FOOD WEBS (27858) 10:45 Oliver, S. K.; Collins, S.; Cheruvelil, K. S.; Soranno, P. 14:00 Caceres, C. E.; Holmes, C. J.; Lee, P.; Menel, I. A.; A.; Stanley, E. H.; Lapierre, J. F.; Lottig, N. R.; Wagner, Duffy, M. A.; Hall, S. R.: GENETIC DIVERSITY IN T.: LONG-TERM CHANGES IN LAKE NUTRIENT POPULATIONS OF DAPHNIA DENTIFERA BEFORE CONCENTRATIONS: WHERE ARE WE NOW? (28203) AND AFTER OUTBREAKS OF THE FUNGAL 13:30 Brown, S. W.: AUTOMATED POST WILDFIRE STREAM PATHOGENMETSCHNIKOWIA BICUSPIDATA (27992) DISCHARGE MEASUREMENTS IN EPHEMERAL 14:15 Sierszen, M. E.; Vinson, M. R.; Harvey, C. J.; Myers, J. TRANSIENT BED SYSTEMS (28239) T.; Yule, D. L.: EXPLORING TRENDS, CAUSES, AND 13:45 Helsel, D. R.: MULTIVARIATE METHODS FOR CONSEQUENCES OF DECLINING LIPIDS IN LAKE ENVIRONMENTAL DATA WITH NONDETECTS (27769) SUPERIOR LAKE TROUT (27980) 14:00 Zwart, J. A.; Jones, S.; Solomon, C.; Li, Y.; Pfrender, M. E.: 15:00 Koch, H.; Becks, L.: CAN PREDATION SELECT FOR SEX PHYTOPLANKTON TRAITS PREDICT ECOSYSTEM IN A PREY? (27845) FUNCTION IN A GLOBAL SET OF LAKES (27984) 15:15 Avery, D. E.: CAN RAPID EVOLUTION EXPLAIN 14:15 Taranu, Z. E.; Winegardner, A.; Elmasri, M.; Roger, J.; COMMON OBSERVATIONS OF ZOOPLANKTON Farrell, M.; Araclides, E.; Poisot, T.; Steele, R.; Legendre, POPULATIONS IN SITU? A MODELING STUDY (27891) P.; Gregory-Eaves, I.: USING NETWORKS TO DETECT REGIME CHANGES IN AQUATIC COMMUNITIES ACROSS NUTRIENT GRADIENTS (28139)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 30 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

SS37 INVESTIGATING THE ECOSYSTEM EFFECTS OF SEAWATER 09:00 Herbert, E. R.; Craft, C. B.; Schubauer-Berigan, J. P.: INTRUSION INTO TIDAL FRESHWATER WETLANDS: FROM DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF PRESS AND PULSED BIOGEOCHEMISTRY TO GEOMORPHOLOGY SIMULATED SEAWATER INTRUSION ON TIDAL FRESHWATER MARSH BIOGEOCHEMISTRY * (28082) Chair(s): Ellen R. Herbert, [email protected] 09:15 Wilson, B. J.; Servais, S.; Mazzei, V.; Sklar, F.; Joseph P. Schubauer-Berigan, [email protected] Troxler, T.; Kominoski, J.; Gaiser, E.; Coronado, C.: Christopher B. Craft, [email protected] BIOGEOCHEMICAL AND PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS Location: Milagro/Kearny OF SIMULATED SEA LEVEL RISE IN THE COASTAL 08:30 Zhai, L.: PREDICTION OF PLANT VULNERABILITY TO EVERGLADES* (27814) SALINITY INCREASE IN A COASTAL ECOSYSTEM BY STABLE ISOTOPE COMPOSITION OF PLANT STEM WATER: A MODEL STUDY* (28053)

08:45 Li, F.; Pennings, S. C.: RESPONSES OF TIDAL MARSH TUESDAY MACROPHYTES TO SALINITY PRESSES AND PULSES SIMULATING SEA LEVEL RISE AND DROUGHT (27778)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 31 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

51 Marino, R.; Hayn, M.; McGlathery, K. J.; Howarth, R. Tuesday Posters W.: NITROGEN FIXATION IN A SHALLOW NEW CS07 BENTHIC ECOLOGY ENGLAND COASTAL LAGOON: IMPORTANCE TO THE NITROGEN BUDGET (28211) Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D 52 Stegen, J. C.; Johnson, T.; Fredrickson, J. K.; Wilkins, M. J.; 38 Ammendolia, J.; Hamel, J.; Mercier, A.: LIFE UNDER Konopka, A. E.; Nelson, W. C.; Arntzen, E. V.; Chrisler, W. B.; PRESSURE: AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF Chu, R. K.; Fansler, S. J.; Kennedy, D. W.; Resch, C. T.; Tfaily, BEHAVIOURAL RESPONSES TO HYDROSTATIC M.: COUPLED SPATIOTEMPORAL DYNAMICS OF PRESSURE IN ECHINODERMS (27908) HYDROLOGY, BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, AND MICROBIAL 39 Thompson, C.; Ebanks, S. C.: THE EFFECT OF BENZO[a] ECOLOGY (28245) PYRENE ON THE CLUTCH SIZE AND EMBRYONIC 53 Porcal, P.; Kovarikova, M.: PRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE DAGGERBLADE GRASS DECOMPOSITION OF ORGANIC ACIDS DURING SHRIMP PALAEMONETES PUGIO (27945) PHOTOCHEMICAL DEGRADATION OF DISSOLVED 40 Arsenault, E. R.; Bowes, R. E.; deNoyelles, F. J.; Martin, B.; ORGANIC MATTER (27794) Thorp, J. H.: NOT ALL DEPTHS ARE CREATED EQUAL: 54 Fukuda, F.; Ichikawa, K.; Abe, M.; Hashimoto, S.: LINKING A DEEP WATER ALGAE BELT TO DIVERSITY DECOMPOSITION OF BROMOFORM BY CULTURES IN LAKE BENTHOS (27968) OF ALPHAPROTEOBACTERIA. (27840) 41 Scharold, J. V.; Bartsch, W. M.; Corry, T. D.: STATUS OF 55 Zhu, L.; Qin, B.: EFFECTS OF ALGAL DEPOSITION ON THE AMPHIPOD DIPOREIA SPP. IN COASTAL WATERS DENITRIFICATION IN EUTROPHIC LAKES (27922) TUESDAY OF THE LAURENTIAN GREAT LAKES (28118) 56 Papacek, J. R.; Phlips, E. J.; Lasi, M. A.; Inglett, P. W.: A CS10 AQUATIC SCIENCES IN THE ANTHROPOCENE SURVEY OF NITROGEN FIXATION POTENTIAL IN A SUBTROPICAL ESTUARY (INDIAN RIVER LAGOON, Chair(s): Shelley Arnott, [email protected] FL) (27928) Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D CS18 FISH 42 Chin, T.; Strock, K. E.; Knoll, L.; Williamson, C. E.: DIFFERING SEASONAL SUCCESSION OF PHYTOPLANKTON IN Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D LAKES WITH HIGH AND LOW DISSOLVED ORGANIC 57 Perez-Fuentetaja, A.; Clapsadl, M. D.; Snyder, R. J.; CARBON CONCENTRATIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR Cochran, J.; Osborne, C.; Lang, J.: THE EMERALD SHINER LONG-TERM COMMUNITY SHIFTS (28171) (NOTROPIS ATHERINOIDES) AS A KEY FOOD WEB 43 Fox, A. F.: ALGAL INDICATORS OF ACIDIC INPUTS LINK IN THE UPPER NIAGARA RIVER (27812) AND INTERMITTENT FLOW IN STREAMS IN THE 58 Clapsadl, M. D.; Pérez-Fuentetaja, A.; Snyder, R.; Lang, VALLES CALDERA NATIONAL PRESERVE, NEW J.; Cochran, J.; Osborne, C.; Fisher, J.: SEASONAL MEXICO (28227) COMPARISON OF ENERGY CONTENT OF EMERALD 44 Williamson, F. A.; Halbur, J.; Ozersky, T.: ROLE SHINERS (NOTROPIS ATHERINOIDES) FROM FOUR OF INVASIVE DREISSENID MUSSELS IN DIFFERENT SYSTEMS IN THE GREAT LAKES (27821) BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF MINNESOTA LAKES (27830) 59 Osisami, O. O.; Ndimele, C. C.: POLLUTION OF 45 North, R. L.; Barbour, S. L.; Carey, S.; Lindsay, NIGERIAN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS BY INDUSTRIAL M.; Dompierre, K.: LAKES FROM WASTE: ARE EFFLUENTS: EFFECTS ON FISH PRODUCTIVITY FRESHWATER-CAPPED TAILINGS PONDS SOURCES (27850) OR SINKS FOR MAJOR IONS? (27856) 60 Wiegand, M. D.; Muise, K. A.; Johnston, T. A.: ATYPICAL 46 Vishwranjan, V.: A STUDY ON SARYU RIVER WATER FATTY ACID PROFILES IN THE OVA OF TWO QUALITY IN CHAPRA CITY, INDIA. (27881) INVERTEBRATE-EATING FRESHWATER FISH SPECIES, WHITE SUCKER AND CISCO (27879) 47 Swaney, D. P.; Hong, B.; Howarth, R. W.: PROJECTED IMPACTS OF CLIMATIC CHANGE ON HUDSON RIVER 61 Mooney, R. J.; Kraemer, B. M.; Vadeboncoeur, Y.; HYDROLOGY (27936) McIntyre, P. B.: INTRA- AND INTER-SPECIFIC STOICHIOMETRIC VARIATION OF TWO 48 Van Goethem, R. R.; Marcarelli, A. M.; Juneau, K. J.; Huckins, C. J.: LEGACY DISTURBANCE EFFECTS IN A LAKE TANGANYIKA CICHLIDS, TROPHEUS LAKE LITTORAL ZONE: EFFECTS OF STAMP SANDS BRICHARDI ANDPETROCHROMIS KASUMBE (28024) ON STRUCTURE MACROPHYTE COMMUNITIES IN 62 Snyder, R.; Pérez-Fuentetaja, A.; Clapsadl, M.; Osborne, C.; THE KEWEENAW WATERWAY OF MI (27958) Lang, J.; Cochran, J.: GROWTH AND MORTALITY OF EMERALD SHINERS (NOTROPIS ATHERINOIDES) IN CS15 ECOSYSTEM ECOLOGY THE UPPER NIAGARA RIVER, NEW YORK (28088) Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D CS23 MACROPHYTES 49 Baloza, M. M.; Monroy, C. R.; Plaza, D. O.; Tenorio, S. Y.; Bailey, J. V.; Hanselmann, K. W.: A NOVEL APPROACH FOR Chair(s): Miguel A. Mateo, [email protected] THE ENRICHMENT OF “MACROBACTERIA” FROM Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D ANOXIC SEDIMENTS IN COLIUMO BAY, CHILE (28173) 63 Thompson, V. F.; Bixby, R. J.; Dahm, C. N.: SUBMERGED 50 Rafalski, A. V.; Sarnelle, O.; Peacor, S. D.: THE ROLE AQUATIC MACROPHYTES (SAMS) IN THE SKY: AT OF POSITIVE ABIOTIC-BIOTIC FEEDBACKS IN HOME IN HIGH ELEVATION STREAMS (28136) PERPETUATING TURBID WATER STATE IN A PLANKTONIC SYSTEM (28196)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 32 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

CS28 PHYTOPLANKTON 79 Kim, B. S.; Fields, D. M.: THE EFFECTS OF MICROPLASTICS ON GRAZING AND FECAL SINK Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D RATES OF MARINE COPEPODS (28125) 64 Richardson, T. L.; Dudycha, J. L.; Greenwold, M. J.: LINKING SPECTRAL IRRADIANCE AND SS01 ECOLOGY UNDER ICE CRYPTOPHYTE BIODIVERSITY IN ENVIRONMENTS Chair(s): Stephanie E. Hampton, [email protected] FROM PONDS TO OCEANS (28252) Ted Ozersky, [email protected] 65 Golda, R. L.; Needoba, J. A.; Peterson, T. D.: Emily H. Stanley, [email protected] ASSESSING THE EFFICACY OF FLUORESCENT PH Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D INDICATORS FOR MEASURING INTERNAL PH OF 1 Hrycik, A. R.; Stockwell, J. D.: LAKE THERMAL PHYTOPLANKTON (28190) STRUCTURE VARIABILITY UNDER ICE BETWEEN 66 Cooney, E. C.: THE EFFECT OF VISIBLE LIGHT STRESS EXTREME COLD AND WARM WINTERS (27927)

ON PHYSIOLOGY AND DMSP PRODUCTION IN TWO TUESDAY 2 Barrett, D. C.; Wrona, F. J.; Prowse, T. D.; Suzanne, PHOTOSYNTHETIC DINOFLAGELLATES (27784) C. L.: USING CONTROLLED EXPERIMENTAL 67 Hong, H.; Li, D.; Lin, W.; Li, W.; Shi, D.: NITROGEN ENVIRONMENTS TO ASSESS IMPACTS OF ICE- NUTRITION AFFECTS DIATOM’S RESPONSES TO COVER ON UNDER-ICE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND ELEVATED CO2 (27816) RADIATION REGIMES (27973) 68 Okuda, Y.; Shibazaki, A.; Abe, M.; Hashimoto, S.: SS04 CYANOBACTERIAL PATTERNS AND PROCESSES ACROSS VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUND PRODUCTION IN SCALES: IMPLICATIONS FOR WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN THE CULTURE OF DITYLUM SP. (27837) A CHANGING CLIMATE 69 Zhang, F.; Hong, H.; Shi, D.: PROTEOMIC RESPONSES OF THE MARINE DIAZOTROPH TRICHODESMIUM TO Chair(s): Matthew Waters, [email protected] OCEAN ACIDIFICATION UNDER IRON LIMITATION Alan Wilson, [email protected] (27838) Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D 70 Abe, M.; Hashimoto, S.: PRODUCTION OF 3 Hallett, S. J.; Baker, B. C.; Scott, J. T.: HETEROCYTE MONOHALOMETHANE AND ISOPRENE BY DENSITIES AS PROXIES FOR QUANTIFYING DUNALIELLA SP. (27894) NITROGEN FIXATION IN OZARK LAKES (27930) 71 Gao, Y.; Richlen, M.; Anderson, D.; Erdner, D.: A THREE-YEAR 4 Chmiel, R. J.; Kim, B. S.; Rothschild, H. T.; Bruesewitz, D. A.; STUDY OF TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL POPULATION King, D. W.; Countway, P. D.: CYANOBACTERIA BLOOMS GENETIC STRUCTURE OF ALEXANDRIUM SPP. IN LOW-NUTRIENT MAINE LAKES: DEVELOPMENT DINOFLAGELLATE BLOOMS (27916) OF A QPCR ASSAY FOR GLOEOTRICHIA

72 Paquette, C.; Beisner, B. E.: CO2 AND ZOOPLANKTON ECHINULATA USING THE ITS REGION (28130) GRAZING INFLUENCE THE DEEP CHLOROPHYLL 5 Gay, M. T.; Steffen, M. M.; Wright, T. L.: A SYSTEMS MAXIMUM (28027) BIOLOGY APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING AN 73 Villareal, T. A.; Wilson, C.; Anderson, E.: PROJECT MAGI: ECOLOGICALLY THREATENED RIVER ECOSYSTEM IN A LONG-ENDURANCE WAVE GLIDER MISSION THE CHESAPEAKE BAY WATERSHED (28158) TRACKING PHYTOPLANKTON IN THE NORTH SS08 PLUGGING LEAKS IN THE PLUMBING OF THE INLAND WATER PACIFIC GYRE (28081) CARBON CYCLE CS37 AQUATIC FOOD WEBS Chair(s): Jacob Zwart, [email protected] Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D Grace Wilkinson, [email protected] 74 Wallace, R. L.; May, L.; Walsh, E. J.: HOW WIDESPREAD Dominic Vachon, [email protected] IS THE PRODUCTION OF DIAPAUSING EMBRYOS Steven Sadro, [email protected] IN MONOGONONT ROTIFERS? A PROPOSAL TO Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D CONSTRUCTION AN INTERNET BASED CATALOG OF 6 Bertolet, B. L.; Corman, J. R.; Casson, N. J.; Sebestyen, S. D.; RESOURCES (27766) Kolka, R. K.; Stanley, E. H.: EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE 75 Wuerz, M.; Huebner, J.; Huebner, E.; Whyard, S.; AND WATER AVAILABILITY ON THE WATERSHED Loadman, N.; Wiegand, M.: FROM ASEXUAL TO LEACHATE POTENTIAL OF LAKES IN NORTHERN SEXUAL: THE EFFECTS OF JUVENILE HORMONE WISCONSIN (27993) ON THE REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGY IN DAPHNIA SS12 REDUCTIONIST APPROACHES TO LARGE-SCALE CARBON MAGNA (27825) CYCLING - OPPORTUNITIES AND LIMITATIONS 76 Hudson, J. M.; Loadman, N. L.; Huebner, J. D.: MICROPLASTICS IN FRESHWATER: THE EFFECTS Chair(s): Lars Tranvik, [email protected] OF POLYETHYLENE MICROBEADS ON DAPHNIA Cristian Gudasz, [email protected] MAGNA (27868) Dolly Kothawala, [email protected] 77 Huebner, E.; Huebner, J. D.: POLARIZED SYNCYTIAL Nuria Catalan, [email protected] GERM TISSUE DURING OOGENESIS IN DAPHNIA Birgit Koehler, [email protected] MAGNA (27871) Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D 78 Taub, F. B.; Archibald, J.; Tran, C. H.: STUDENT 7 Panneer Selvam, B.; Lapierre, J. F.; Soares, A.; Berggren, M.: RESPONSES TO A CLOSED ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS PHOTO-REACTIVITY (APPARENT QUANTUM YIELD) EXPERIMENT (28067) OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON DURING THE FRESHWATER TRANSIT FROM LAND TO SEA (27774)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 33 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

8 Luo, Y. W.: WHY DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON IS 17 Kelsey, M. K.; White, B.; Bowden, L.; Fretz, P.; NOT UTILIZED IN THE DEEP OCEAN? (27817) Stockwell, J. D.: USING PUBLIC INPUT TO DESIGN 9 Li, X.; Wu, K.; Gu, S.; Chen, W.; Dai, M.: MICROBIAL SCIENCE EXHIBITS THAT PROMOTE PUBLIC DEGRADATION OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER UNDERSTANDING OF INVASIVE SPECIES (27775) DERIVED FROM KUROSHIO INTRUSION BY THE 18 Martinez, G.; Pérez-Alegria, L.; Sotomayor, D.: OUTFALL MICROORGANISMS IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA (27872) RECONNAISSANCE INVENTORY OF THE SAN JUAN SS13 DISENTANGLING THE EFFECTS OF MANAGEMENT AND ESTUARY BAY WATERSHED (27780) 19 Mills, J. L.; Connelly, S. J.: IMPLEMENTATION OF AN CLIMATE CHANGE IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS ADVANCED INTERDISCIPLINARY CHEMISTRY- Chair(s): Bridget Deemer, [email protected] BIOLOGY WORKSHOP (27892) Nicole Hayes, [email protected] Kristin Strock, [email protected] SS17 RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN MOUNTAIN Jessica Corman, [email protected] AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS Roxanne Razavi, [email protected] Chair(s): Steven Sadro, [email protected] Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D Kevin Rose, [email protected] 10 Egener, M.; Strock, K. E.: THE EFFECTS OF EXTREME Sudeep Chandra, [email protected] RAIN EVENTS ON WATER TRANSPARENCY AND Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D STRATIFICATION IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA 20 Sherk, T. E.: EMERGENCE OF EPHEMEROPTERA FROM

TUESDAY RESERVOIRS (28180) SUBALPINE FINDLEY LAKE AFTER EARLY AND LATE SS14 WAYNE’S WORLD: A SESSION TO CELEBRATE THE CAREER THAWS (27765) OF WAYNE GARDNER AND HIS BROAD CONTRIBUTIONS TO 21 Baron, J. S.; Oleksy, I.: WHAT’S A TYPICAL CONDITION UNDERSTANDING THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF AQUATIC SYSTEMS FOR SMALL ROCKY MOUNTAIN LAKES? (27979) 22 Oleksy, I. A.; Baron, J. S.: ALGAL BLOOMS IN THE Chair(s): Mark J. McCarthy, [email protected] ALPINE – INVESTIGATING THE COUPLED EFFECTS Robert Heath, [email protected] OF CHRONIC NITROGEN DEPOSITION AND CLIMATE James Cotner, [email protected] CHANGE ON ALPINE LAKES (28092) Denise Bruesewitz, [email protected] 23 Koch, B. J.: EXPLORING THE EFFECTS OF ALPINE Silvia Newell, [email protected] LAKE MORPHOMETRY AND CATCHMENT Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D CHARACTERISTICS ON STREAM OUTLET FOOD 11 Lee, J.; An, S.: EFFECT OF A DAM ON NITROGEN WEBS (28119) CYCLING AND PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN A 24 Diamond, S.; Plascencia, E.; Kochtitzky, W.; Edwards, B.; TURBID ESTUARY (28202) Marino, J.; Strock, K. E.: DIATOM COMMUNITY SHIFTS 12 Light, T.; Melton, S.; McClelland, J.; Hardison, A.: IN RESPONSE TO VOLCANIC ACTIVITY AND LONG- DOWNSTREAM CHANGES IN ORGANIC MATTER TERM CLIMATIC CHANGE IN A HIGH ALTITUDE DECOMPOSITION AS REVEALED BY POREWATER SOUTH AMERICAN LAKE (28156) OXYGEN AND AMMONIUM IN MISSION AND ARANSAS SS18 ALGAE CULTIVATION: BIOTIC AND ABIOTIC CHALLENGES - RIVER TIDAL FRESHWATER ZONES (TX) (27823) IN MEMORIAM OF VAL SMITH 13 Melton, S. M.; Light, T. M.; Hardison, A. K.; McClelland, J. W.: ORGANIC MATTER AND GRAIN SIZE Chair(s): Wiebke Boeing, [email protected] COMPARISONS IN SEDIMENTS OF TIDALLY- Alina Corcoran, [email protected] INFLUENCED FRESHWATER RIVERS (27834) Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D 14 Eberhard, E. K.; Marcarelli, A. M.; Ortiz, J. E.; Baxter, C. V.: 25 Byrne, P.: OPTIMAL MUTAGEN DOSES FOR DO NITROGEN FIXATION AND DENITRIFICATION EMILIANIA HUXLEYI (28247) CO-OCCUR ACROSS A GRADIENT OF STREAM NITROGEN CONCENTRATIONS IN A WESTERN 26 Jojola, M. E.; Bean, R.; Holguin, F. O.: PRODUCTION WATERSHED? (27951) OF ALLELOPATHIC CHEMICAL UNDER DIFFERENT TEMPERATURES (27937) SS15 AQUATIC SCIENCE: INFORMING POLICY, MANAGEMENT, AND SS20 SUBLETHAL STRESSORS AND ECOTOXICOLOGY: THE PUBLIC INVESTIGATING, QUANTIFYING, AND MODELING DEATH BY A Chair(s): Michelle McCrackin, [email protected] THOUSAND CUTS Adrienne Sponberg, [email protected] Lesley Smith, [email protected] Chair(s): Marj L. Brooks, [email protected] Jennifer Salerno, [email protected] Richard E. Connon, [email protected] Susanne M. Brander, [email protected] Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D Nathan P. Nibbelink, [email protected] 15 Haig, H. A.; Symons, C.; Pittman, J.; Alexander, S.; Bass, M.; Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D Burke, M.; Filbee-Dexter, K.: WHAT DRIVES SURPRISE IN SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS? (28184) 27 Bilak, J. D.; Brooks, M. L.: PHYSIOLOGICAL PERFORMANCE OF A WARM-WATER FISH 16 Walsh, E. J.; Doser, D.; Jin, L.; Lougheed, V.; Hamdan, L. SPECIES COPING WITH SUBLETHAL TOXICANTS K.; Corral, G.: AUTHENTIC RESEARCH EXPERIENCES COMPOUNDED LOSS OF NIGHTTIME COOLING: IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE TO ADDRESS IMPLICATIONS FOR CLIMATE CHANGE (28167) ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES (28238)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 34 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

28 Layman, A. W.; Mills, J. L.; Connelly, S. J.: ASSESSMENT SS32 DATA-INTENSIVE AQUATIC RESEARCH: NETWORKS, TEAMS, OF CRUMB RUBBER DEGRADATION PRODUCTS SENSORS, HARMONIZED DATASETS, AND OPEN SCIENCE UNDER CONTROLLED CONDITIONS (27861) Chair(s): Kendra Spence Cheruvelil, [email protected] 29 ; Svoboda, K. R.; Guo, L.: EFFECTS Kteeba, S. M. C. Emi Fergus, [email protected] OF NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER ON ZNO Paul Hanson, [email protected] NANOPARTICLE TOXICITY IN EMBRYONIC Stephanie Melles, [email protected] ZEBRAFISH (28133) Emily Read, [email protected] SS26 HEADWATERS TO OCEANS: ECOLOGICAL AND Zofia Taranu, [email protected] BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES ACROSS THE AQUATIC CONTINUUM Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D Chair(s): John A. Downing, [email protected] 33 Jenny, J.; Taranu, Z. E.; Gregory-Eaves, I.; Francus, Susanne Menden-Deuer, [email protected] P.; Normandeau, A.; Lapointe, F.; Jotzy, J.; Nzekwe,

Marguerite Xenopoulos, [email protected] O.: IDENTIFYING PRIORITY AREAS OF TUESDAY Maren Voss, [email protected] PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL RESEARCH: MAPPING THE Dileep Kumar, [email protected] DISTRIBUTION OF EXISTING RECORDS AS WELL Robert W. Howarth, [email protected] AS HOTSPOTS OF CLIMATE AND HUMAN IMPACTS (28086) Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D 30 Summers, B. M.; González-Pinzón, R.; Covino, T.; SS33 CROSS-SCALE PERSPECTIVES: INTEGRATING LONG-TERM Garayburu-Caruso, V.; Herrington, C.; Mortensen, J.: AND HIGH-FREQUENCY DATA INTO OUR UNDERSTANDING OF QUANTIFYING AND PREDICTING IN-STREAM AQUATIC COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS NUTRIENT PROCESSING USING TASCC ALONG THE RIVER CONTINUUM (28234) Chair(s): Cayelan Carey, [email protected] Kathryn Cottingham, [email protected] SS28 METHANE PROCESSES AND DYNAMICS ACROSS THE Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D AQUATIC CONTINUUM 34 Mix, K.; Groeger, A.; Lopes, V.: EXCEPTIONAL Chair(s): Tonya DelSontro, [email protected] DROUGHT AND THE IMPACT OF DAMS ON FLOWS Daniel F. McGinnis, [email protected] IN THE COLORADO RIVER, TEXAS (28031) Kimberly P. Wickland, [email protected] SS37 INVESTIGATING THE ECOSYSTEM EFFECTS OF SEAWATER Bradford Sherman, [email protected] INTRUSION INTO TIDAL FRESHWATER WETLANDS: FROM Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D BIOGEOCHEMISTRY TO GEOMORPHOLOGY 31 Amorim, M. A.; Santos, M. A.; Pereira, J. P.: METHANE DIFFUSIVE FLUXES AT THE DRAWNDOWN ZONE OF Chair(s): Ellen R. Herbert, [email protected] A RESERVOIR IN A DRY SEASON: FUNIL RESERVOIR, Joseph P. Schubauer-Berigan, [email protected] RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL. (27847) Christopher B. Craft, [email protected] 32 Gubbins, N. J.; Loken, L. C.; Butitta, V. L.; Crawford, J. Location: Sweeney Ballroom C-D T.; Stanley, E. H.: HETEROGENEOUS DISTRIBUTION 35 McCallister, S. L.; McIntosh, H.; Gonsior, M.: IMPACT OF METHANE IN SURFACE WATERS OF MULTIPLE OF SALT WATER INTRUSION ON DISSOLVED NORTHERN WISCONSIN LAKES: A HIGH FREQUENCY ORGANIC CARBON CYCLING IN TIDAL FRESHWATER SPATIAL APPROACH (28107) WETLANDS (28216) 80 Delwiche, K.; Hemond, H.: HIGH TEMPORAL 36 Mukherjee, R.; Kumar, S.; Muduli, P. R.: EFFECT OF RESOLUTION DATA OF METHANE BUBBLING FLUX ANTHROPOGENIC AND NATURAL FORCINGS ON IMPROVES BUBBLE DISSOLUTION MODELS FOR NITROGEN BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF INDIA’S LARGEST SHALLOW, FRESHWATER LAKES (28254) COASTAL LAGOON (27900)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 35 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

10:30 Genitsaris, S.; Rachic, S.; Li, L.; Kormas, K.; Sime-Ngando, Wednesday Orals T.; Monchy, S.; Christaki, U.: SYMBIONTS AND SS01 ECOLOGY UNDER ICE DECOMPOSERS - THE HIDDEN DIVERSITY OF A WELL STUDIED AREA (27887) Chair(s): Stephanie E. Hampton, [email protected] 10:45 Sime-Ngando, T.; Gerphagnon, M.; Colombet, J.; Latour, D.: Ted Ozersky, [email protected] IMPRINTS OF FUNGAL PARASITISM ON FRESHWATER Emily H. Stanley, [email protected] CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS (27796) Location: Sweeney Ballroom B SS20 SUBLETHAL STRESSORS AND ECOTOXICOLOGY: INVESTIGATING, 08:30 Joung, D. J.; Leduc, M.; Ramcharitar, B.; Xu, Y.; Isles, P.; Gearhart, T.; Stockwell, J.; Druschel, G. K.; Schroth, A. QUANTIFYING, AND MODELING DEATH BY A THOUSAND CUTS W.: DRIVERS OF INTER-ANNUAL AND SPATIAL Chair(s): Marj L. Brooks, [email protected] VARIABILITY IN THE BEHAVIOR OF IRON, Richard E. Connon, [email protected] MANGANESE AND PHOSPHORUS IN THE SEDIMENT Susanne M. Brander, [email protected] AND WATER COLUMN OF FROZEN LAKES (28045) Nathan P. Nibbelink, [email protected] 08:45 Stockwell, J. D.; O’Malley, B. P.; Joung, D. J.; Xu, Y.; Isles, P. Location: Coronado/DeVargas D.; Gearhart, T. A.; Schroth, A. W.: LAKE PRODUCTIVITY 08:30 Brander, S. M.: MULTIPLE STRESSORS IN AQUATIC THROUGH A LENS OF ICE: IS LAKE TROPHIC STATUS ECOSYSTEMS: LETHAL AND SUB-LETHAL RESPONSES A SEASONALLY-DEPENDENT CONCEPT? (28018) RESULTING FROM A THOUSAND CUTS. T (28033) 09:00 Baulch, H. M.; North, R. L.; Armstrong, M.; Casson, N.; 09:00 Brooks, M. L.; Behnke, J. H.; Anderson, E. M.; Lovvorn, Cavaliere, E.; Hudson, J.; Orihel, D.; Seckar, D.; Westbrook, C.: J. R.: BODY CONDITION OF DECLINING SURF AND WINTER, WATER CHEMISTRY, AND THE POTENTIAL WHITE-WINGED SCOTER POPULATIONS IN PUGET IMPLICATIONS OF DECLINING PERIODS OF ICE SOUND: INNOVATIVE STATISTICS FOR ASSESSMENT COVER (27988) OF CHRONIC SUBLETHAL STRESSORS* (27869) 09:15 North, R. L.; Venkiteswaran, J.; Pernica, P.; Kehoe, M.; Silsbe, 09:15 Connon, R. E.; Bjelde, B. E.; Komoroske, L. M.; Britton, M. G. M.; Guildford, S. J.; Sereda, J.; Hudson, J. J.; Baulch, H. M.: T.; Sommer, T.; Todgham, A. E.; Fangue, N. A.; Jeffries, K. METABOLISM UNDER ICE: THE REST OF THE STORY M.: THERMAL TOLERANCE OF TWO THREATENED (27828) CALIFORNIA FISH SPECIES. (28242) 10:00 Ozersky, T.; Shapov, K.; Wilburn, P.; Litchman, E.: 10:00 Hasenbein, S.: SUBLETHAL RESPONSES AND LIMNOLOGICAL DRIVERS OF ZOOPLANKTON CONTAMINANTS – FROM SINGLE SPECIES TO COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN MINNESOTA LAKES: POPULATION EFFECTS* (27878) CONTRASTING WINTER AND SUMMER PATTERNS WEDNESDAY (27947) 10:15 Kamenir, Y. G.: CONSISTENT PATTERNS OF PHYTOPLANKTON BIODIVERSITY IN MULTI- 10:15 Hampton, S. E.; Galloway, A. W.; Powers, S. M.; Batt, R. D.; STRESSOR SYSTEMS AND THEIR CONNECTION TO Ozersky, T.; Stanley, E. H.; Read, J. S.; Lottig, N. R.; Labou, THE WATER TROPHIC LEVEL (28005) S. G.; Woo, K. H.; O’Reilly, C. M.; Sharma, S.: UNDER-ICE ECOLOGY IN LAKES: A SYNTHESIS OF WINTER 10:30 Kangabam, R. D.; Munisamy, G.: DISTRIBUTION PLANKTON DATA FROM 102 LAKES (27972) AND ECOTOXICOLOGICAL RISK ASSESSMENT OF PESTICIDES RESIDUES IN WATER OF LOKTAK LAKE IN 10:30 Powers, S. M.; Labou, S. G.; Stanley, E. H.; Hampton, INDO-BURMA BIODIVERSITY HOTSPOT* (27875) S. E.: DISSOLVED NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS DYNAMICS UNDER LAKE ICE REVEALED FROM 10:45 Connelly, S. J.; Layman, A. W.; Mills, J. L.: AQUATIC LONG-TERM MEASUREMENTS (27952) ECOTOXICOLOGY STUDIES OF CRUMB RUBBER SUBSTRATES (27862) SS09 HOST-PARASITE INTERACTIONS IN MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES SS23 AQUATIC EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY Chair(s): Telesphore Sime-Ngando, [email protected] Chair(s): Hans Dam, [email protected] Urania Christaki, [email protected] David Avery, [email protected] Dagmar Frisch, [email protected] Location: Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh Marcin Wojewodzic, [email protected] 08:30 Roux, S.; Brum, J. R.; Dutilh, B. E.; Sunagawa, S.; Duhaime, M. Location: Milagro/Kearny B.; Duarte, C. N.; Gasol, J. M.; Vaquè, D.; Bork, P.; Acinas, S. G.; Wincker, P.; Sullivan, M. B.; The TARA ocean consortium, 08:30 Crawford, J. W.; Schrader, M.; Hall, S. R.; Cáceres, C. E.: INTRASPECIFIC VARIATION IN SENSITIVITY TO T.: ECOGENOMICS AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL IMPACTS DAPHNIA PULICARIA OF GLOBALLY ABUNDANT OCEAN VIRUSEST (28030) RESOURCE QUALITY IN (28140) 08:45 ; Becker, D.; Shala, N.; Zhou, X.; Zhao, J.; 09:00 Meziti, A.; Danielidis, D.; Karayanni, H.; Christaki, U.; Kormas, Wojewodzic, M. W. Tominaga, K.; Colbourne, J. K.; Hessen, D. O.: SEEKING FOR K. A.: MOLECULAR TAXONOMIC DIVERSITY OF UNICELLULAR EUKARYOTIC PARASITES ACROSS TRANSGENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF DIET QUALITY SEVEN AEGEAN SEA, GREECE, COASTAL SYSTEMS IN CLONES –ECOPHYSIOLOGICAL AND RNA-SEQ WITH DIFFERENT TROPHIC STATUST (28001) APPROACHES (28120) 09:00 ; Roy Chowdhury, P.; Becker, D.; Jeyasingh, 10:00 Li, L.; Monchy, S.; Gerphagnon, M.; Delgado-Viscogliosi, Frisch, D. P.; Viscogliosi, E.; Sime-Ngando, T.; Christaki, U.: A P. D.; Weider, L. J.; Wojewodzic, M.: COMPARATIVE COMPREHENSIVE INSIGHT INTO TAXONOMIC TRANSCRIPTOME-BASED NETWORK ANALYSIS - CONNECTING GENE EXPRESSION AND PHENOTYPES AND FUNCTIONAL DYNAMICS DURING CHYTRID DAPHNIA EPIDEMICS IN AN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMT (27905) OF ANCIENT AND MODERN (28029)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 36 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

09:15 Sasaki, M. C.; Burton, R. S.; Pereira, R.: INTRASPECIFIC 10:15 Koch, C. R.; Dewey, M.; Rhodes, B.; Halsey, N.: ADAPTATION TO LATITUDINAL TEMPERATURE HYDROCYCLE-PO4: FISH STICKS AND FERTILIZER GRADIENT: THE INFLUENCE OF GENETIC MEET THEIR MATCH. (28178) DIVERGENCE AND PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY IN A 10:30 Stauffer, B. A.; Shaw, D. M.; Tamburri, M.: BUILDING WIDESPREAD COPEPOD (27924) A BASE FOR NUTRIENT SENSING ACROSS 10:00 Hall, E. K.; Pepe-Ranney, C.: THE RELATIVE INFLUENCE APPLICATIONS: LESSONS FROM THE NUTRIENT OF ECOLOGICAL AND EVOLUTIONARY FACTORS IN SENSOR CHALLENGE (28233) STREAM MICROBIAL COMMUNITY ASSEMBLY (28214) 10:45 Holdsworth, S.; Goodwin, J.; Kelly, K.; Hochheimer, J.; Boling, 10:15 Souza, V.; Eguiarte, L.; Moreno-Letelier, A.; Travisano, B.; Phillips, L.: OPPORTUNITIES AND IMPLICATIONS M.; Olmedo, G.: CUATRO CIENEGAS BASIN, AN OF NEW WATER MONITORING TECHNOLOGIES/ ANCESTRAL REFUGIA AND A HYPERDIVERSE OASIS TECHNIQUES: REGULATORY AND POLICY IN THE CHIHUAHUAN DESERT, COAHUILA MEXICO. CONSIDERATIONS (28204) (28057) SS38 USE OF NATURAL ABUNDANCE 14C IN AQUATIC FOOD WEB 10:30 Morris, J. J.: EVOLUTION OF MICROBIAL BODYGUARDS IN AN OPEN OCEAN FREE MARKET AND ECOSYSTEM STUDIES (28168) Chair(s): Amber Bellamy, [email protected] 10:45 Kerfoot, W. C.; Hobmeier, M. M.; Yousef, F.; Moraska Jim Bauer, [email protected] Lafrancois, B.; Maki, R. P.; Hirsch, J. K.: PLAGUE OF Location: Peralta/Lamy WATERFLEAS (BYTHOTREPHES): IMPACTS ON 08:30 Bellamy, A. R.; Bauer, J. E.: USE OF NATURAL MICROCRUSTACEAN COMMUNITY STRUCTURE, ABUNDANCE 14C IN AQUATIC FOOD WEB AND SEASONAL BIOMASS, AND SECONDARY ECOSYSTEM STUDIES - A TUTORIAL SYNTHESIS PRODUCTION IN A LARGE INLAND-LAKE COMPLEX

(27781) WEDNESDAY (28169) 08:45 Smits, A. P.; Schindler, D. E.; Holtgrieve, G.: GEOMORPHIC SS25 CONTINUOUS NUTRIENT SENSING IN RESEARCH AND INFLUENCES ON AGE OF CARBON SOURCES TO MANAGEMENT: APPLICATIONS, METHODS, AND LESSONS STREAM DIC AND AQUATIC FOOD WEBS (27939) LEARNED ACROSS AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTS AND WATERSHEDS. 09:00 Ishikawa, N. F.; Tayasu, I.; Ohkouchi, N.; Eglinton, T. I.: APPLICATION OF BULK AND COMPOUND-SPECIFIC Chair(s): Beth A. Stauffer, [email protected] RADIOCARBON ANALYSES TO ECOLOGICAL Brian Pellerin, [email protected] RESEARCH IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS* (27835) Mario Tamburri, [email protected] Denice Shaw, [email protected] 09:15 Kruger, B. R.; Werne, J. P.; Branstrator, D. K.; Hrabik, T. Tom Johengen, [email protected] R.; Chikaraishi, Y.; Ohkouchi, N.; Hershey, R.; Moser, D.; Minor, E. C.: APPLYING NATURAL ABUNDANCE Location: Sweeney Ballroom A RADIOCARBON ANALYSIS TO UNDERSTAND 08:30 Perzan, Z. M.; Manley, P. L.; Manley, T. O.; Manary, T.; ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS IN SURFACE- AND GROUND- Kraft, M.; Juteau, J. P.; Singer, J.: SEDIMENT TRANSPORT WATER: INSIGHTS AND PRECAUTIONS (28157) DYNAMICS IN A SHALLOW, EUTROPHIC BAY: 10:00 Keaveney, E. M.; Reimer, P. J.; Foy, R. H.: IDENTIFYING MISSISQUOI BAY, LAKE CHAMPLAIN, VT (28090) TERRESTRIAL CARBON SUPPORT OF THE FOOD WEB 08:45 Johengen, T. H.; Palladino, D.; Miller, R.; Stuart, D.; Purcell, IN AN ALKALINE HUMIC LAKE: A NOVEL USE OF H.; Ruberg, S. A.: CONTINUOUS WATER QUALITY RADIOCARBON AND STABLE ISOTOPES. * (27906) MONITORING TO UNDERSTAND DRIVERS OF 10:15 Zigah, P. K.: RADIOCARBON INVESTIGATION OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN LAKE ERIE (28060) WHAT FEEDS AQUATIC FOOD WEBS* (28016) 09:00 Elkin, K. R.; Veith, T.; Kennedy, C.; Buda, A. R.; Folmar, G. J.; 10:30 Bauer, J. E.; Canuel, E. A.; Weber, A. M.; McIntosh, Kleinman, P. J.; Bryant, R. B.: MANAGEMENT AND LAND H. A.; Ferer, E.; Hossler, K.: DISTRIBUTIONS, USE IMPLICATIONS OF CONTINUOUS NITROGEN TRANSFORMATIONS AND REACTIVITY OF AND PHOSPHORUS MONITORING IN A SMALL NON- DISSOLVED AND PARTICULATE LIPIDS IN A LARGE KARST CATCHMENT IN SOUTHEASTERN PA (28145) TEMPERATE ESTUARY USING NATURAL ABUNDANCE 09:15 Loken, L. C.; Crawford, J. T.; Dornblaser, M. M.; Striegl, R. 14C AND 13C (28217) G.; Butitta, V. L.; Stanley, E. H.: NITRATE LOADING AND 10:45 Chanton, J. P.; Patterson, W.; Passow, U.; Hollander, PROCESSING IN THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI RIVER: AN D.; Bosman, S.; Rogers, K.; Montoya, J.; Barnett, B.; ODYSSEY FROM MINNESOTA TO KENTUCKY (28151) Joye, S.: TRACERS IN THE GULF: TRACKING THE 10:00 Downing, B. D.; Bergamaschi, B. A.; Kraus, T.; O’Donnell, PETROCARBON RELEASED FROM OIL SPILLS IN THE K.: USING CONTINUOUS SENSOR DATA TO INFER GULF OF MEXICO WITH NATURAL ABUNDANCE NITRIFICATION RATES OF WASTEWATER-DERIVED RADIOCARBON* (27893) AMMONIUM (28182)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 37 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

13:45 Bowes, R. E.; Thorp, J. H.; Reuman, D. C.: Thursday Orals MULTIDIMENSIONAL METRICS FOR ANALYZING CS23 MACROPHYTES COMMUNITY PROPERTIES (28036) 14:00 Mausbach, W. E.; Dzialowski, A. R.: LONGITUDINAL Chair(s): Miguel A. Mateo, [email protected] HETEROGENEITY GRADIENT DRIVES Location: Milagro/Kearny ZOOPLANKTON METACOMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN 08:30 Mateo, M. A.; Serrano, O.; Belshe, E. F.; Thoran, A.; A LARGE DUNE SYSTEM (28068) Lavery, P. S.; Milani, A.; Leiva, C.: CONCEPTS AND 14:15 Holmes, C. J.; Pantel, J. H.; Schulz, K. L.; Cáceres, C. E.: REFLECTIONS ON SEAGRASS BLUE CARBON: INITIAL GENETIC DIVERSITY INCREASES FOUNDER THE POSIDONIA OCEANICA PARADIGM (28050) EFFECTS AND ALTERS GENETIC STRUCTURING OF A 08:45 Belyaeva, A. M.; Downing, J. A.: LAKE HABITAT NEWLY ESTABLISHED DAPHNIA METAPOPULATION ALTERATION AND THE IMPORTANCE OF (27962) MACROPHYTES IN PROVIDING DIVERSE NICHES FOR 15:00 Northington, R. M.; McCue, J.; Saros, J. E.: EPIFAUNA (28131) EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATION OF LAKE 09:00 Huang, W.; Chen, K.: BIOLOGICAL MECHANISM OF MIXING DEPTH ALTERS PHYTOPLANKTON NYMPHOIDES PELTATA EXPANSION IN LAKE TAIHU COMMUNITIES AND BIOMASS IN AN ARCTIC LAKE (28025) IN SOUTHWESTERN GREENLAND (27946) 09:15 Bellinger, B. J.; Davis, S. L.: GROWTH POTENTIAL OF 15:15 Mallin, M. A.; McIver, M. R.; Wambach, E. J.; Robuck, A. R.: HYDRILLA AND CABOMBA IN TWO TEXAS, USA, ALGAL BLOOMS, CIRCULATORS, WATERFOWL AND RESERVOIRS (28121) EUTROPHIC GREENFIELD LAKE, NC (27860) 15:30 Stewart, T. E.; Torchin, M. E.; Cáceres, C. E.: ZARET CS38 AQUATIC FOOD WEBS 1: ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON REVISITED: A CLOSER LOOK REVEALS A ROLE FOR CONSUMER - RESOURCE INTERACTIONS AND ENERGETICS PARASITES IN CERIODAPHNIA COMPETITION (27914) Chair(s): Gus Paffenhofer, [email protected] 15:45 Hall, S. R.; Hite, J. L.; Penczykowski, R. M.; Shocket, M. Location: Coronado/DeVargas S.; Strauss, A. T.; Duffy, M. A.; Caceres, C. E.: DISEASE EPIDEMICS SHIFT STAGE STRUCTURE AND 08:30 Köster, M.; Paffenhofer, G. A.: HOW EFFICIENTLY CAN ALLOCATION TO SEX IN A ZOOPLANKTON HOST DOLIOLIDS UTILIZE FECAL PELLETS AS A SOLE OR (28229) ADDITIONAL FOOD SOURCE? (27885) 08:45 Paffenhofer, G. A.; Koester, M.: CAN HIGH METABOLIC SS02 BRIDGING ECOSYSTEM METABOLISM, FOOD WEB EXPENSES LEAD TO MORTALITY OF CALANOID INTERACTIONS, AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY USING THE COMMON NAUPLII (27918) LANGUAGE OF STOICHIOMETRY: CAN IT BE DONE? 09:00 Rock, A. M.; St-Pierre, J. D.; Hayes, N. M.; Vanni, M. Chair(s): Nina Welti, [email protected] J.; González, M. J.: EVALUATING HOW LIGHT AND Maren Striebel, [email protected] NUTRIENT SUPPLY CONSTRAIN HERBIVORE Amber Ulseth, [email protected] GROWTH VIA CHANGES IN PHYTOPLANKTON Helmut Hillebrand, [email protected] QUANTITY AND QUALITY (28041) Location: Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh 09:15 De Stasio, B. T.; Huizenga, K. N.; Moore, M. V.: TROPHIC COUPLING OF THE MICROBIAL FOOD WEB AND THE 08:30 Striebel, M.; Welti, N.; Ulseth, A.; Hillebrand, H.: CLASSICAL FOOD WEB IN LAKE BAIKAL (SIBERIA) BRIDGING ECOSYSTEM METABOLISM, FOOD WEB (27948) INTERACTIONS, AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY USING THE

THURSDAY COMMON LANGUAGE OF STOICHIOMETRY (27889) 10:00 Charpentier, C. L.; Angell, C. S.; Duffy, P. I.; Cohen, J. H.: QUANTIFYING FISH KAIROMONES IN ESTUARINE 08:45 Elser, J. J.; Lee, Z.; Corman, J.; Poret-Peterson, A.; Okie, WATER: IS KAIROMONE-INDUCED ALTERATION OF J.; Steger, L.; Learned, J.; Neveu, M.; Dupont, C.; Siefert, J.; ZOOPLANKTON PHOTOBEHAVIOR A LABORATORY Anbar, A.; Souza, V.: NUTRIENTS, RIBOSOMES, AND ARTIFACT? (27767) GENOMES: A DESERT SURVIVAL TEST FOR THE GROWTH RATE HYPOTHESIST (27884) 10:15 Leech, D. M.: A FISH EYE VIEW OF BROWNIFICATION: FISH-ZOOPLANKTON INTERACTIONS IN 09:15 Hirst, A. G.; Lilley, M. K.; Glazier, D. S.; Atkinson, D.: A INCREASINGLY BROWN COLOR (28112) NEW MODEL TO EXPLAIN THE BODY MASS SCALING OF DIVERSE BIOLOGICAL RATES IN AQUATIC 10:30 Iacarella, J. C.; Giani, A.; Beisner, B.; Gregory-Eaves, I.: INVERTEBRATES (28015) SHIFTS IN ALGAL DOMINANCE IN FRESHWATER EXPERIMENTAL PONDS ACROSS NUTRIENT AND 10:00 Glibert, P. M.: INCREASING N:P IN ESTUARIES: MACROPHYTE GRADIENTS (27864) CONSEQUENCES FOR DIATOMS AND BENEFITS FOR CYANOBACTERIA AND HABS (28172) CS39 AQUATIC FOOD WEBS 2: FORCES STRUCTURING 10:15 MacNeill, K. L.; Collins, S. M.; Encalada, A. C.; Kohler, B. POPULATIONS AND COMMUNITIES S.; Thomas, S. A.; Rosi-Marshall, E.; Flecker, A. S.: ARSENIC CONTROLS ON STOICHIOMETRY AND NUTRIENT Chair(s): Spencer Hall, [email protected] CYCLING IN TROPICAL STREAMS (28047) Location: Coronado/DeVargas 10:30 DeVilbiss, S.; Guo, L.: CHARACTERIZATION AND 13:30 Covich, A. P.; Crowl, T. A.; Perez-Reyes, O.: DROUGHT YIELDS OF NUTRIENTS AND ORGANIC MATTER EFFECTS ON TROPICAL MONTANE RAIN FOREST EXCRETED FROM INVASIVE QUAGGA MUSSELS IN STREAM NETWORKS AND FOODWEB STRUCTURE LAKE MICHIGAN (28069) (27976)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 38 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

10:45 Vogt, R. J.; Fortin St-Gelais, N. F.; Beisner, B. E.; del 14:15 Fork, M. L.; Heffernan, J. B.; McManamay, R. A.: PULSES Giorgio, P. A.: PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY OF STORMWATER DISRUPT RESERVOIR CHEMICAL COMPOSITION ALONG PCO2 GRADIENTS IN AND PHYSICAL STRUCTURE ACROSS LAND USES NORTHERN LAKES (28083) (28188) 13:30 Mehring, A. S.; Levin, L. A.; Evrard, V.; Grant, S. B.; 15:00 Strock, K. E.; Hayes, N.; Deemer, B.; Corman, J.; Razavi, N. Cook, P. L.: ENHANCEMENT OF CARBON DIOXIDE, R.: WHAT TO DO WITH RESERVOIRS: ASSESSING THE METHANE, AND NITROUS OXIDE FLUX BY APPLICABILITY OF CURRENT CLIMATE CHANGE OLIGOCHAETES AND CHIRONOMIDS IN URBAN CONCEPTUAL MODELS FOR MANMADE RESERVOIRS WETLANDS (28250) (28186) 13:45 Kominoski, J. S.; Rosemond, A. D.; Benstead, J. P.; Gulis, V.; 15:15 Isles, P. D.; Scroth, A. W.; Verhamme, E.; Mohammed, I.; Maerz, J. C.; Manning, D. W.: NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT Bucini, G.; Beckage, B.; Bomblies, A.; Clemins, P.; Hamed, STIMULATES WHOLE-STREAM ECOSYSTEM A. A.; Rodgers, M.; Turnbull, S.; Zia, A.: INTEGRATED RESPIRATION DESPITE A REDUCED CARBON BASE MODELING OF CLIMATE-WATERSHED-LAKE (27809) INTERACTIONS IN A LARGE SHALLOW BAY OF LAKE 14:00 Hood, J. M.; Benstead, J. P.; Cross, W. F.; Gíslason, G. CHAMPLAIN (28043) M.; Huryn, A. D.; Johnson, P. W.; Junker, J. R.; Nelson, D.; 15:30 Carpenter, S. R.; Booth, E. G.; Chen, X.; Kucharik, Ólafsson, J. S.; Welter, J. R.; Williamson, T. J.: INFLUENCE C.; Motew, M.: CLIMATE, LAND USE, AND LAND OF TEMPERATURE ON THE COUPLING OF MANAGEMENT EFFECTS ON LAKE TOTAL ECOSYSTEM METABOLISM AND NUTRIENT UPTAKE* PHOSPHORUS: SCENARIOS FOR THE YAHARA (28200) WATERSHED (27820) 14:15 Seybold, E. C.; McGlynn, B. L.: EXPLORING ECOSYSTEM SS14 WAYNE’S WORLD: A SESSION TO CELEBRATE THE CAREER METABOLISM AS A DRIVER OF COUPLED CARBON AND NITROGEN CYCLING AND CATCHMENT-SCALE OF WAYNE GARDNER AND HIS BROAD CONTRIBUTIONS TO BIOGEOCHEMICAL FLUXES (28144) UNDERSTANDING THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF AQUATIC SYSTEMS SS13 DISENTANGLING THE EFFECTS OF MANAGEMENT AND Chair(s): Mark J. McCarthy, [email protected] Robert Heath, [email protected] CLIMATE CHANGE IN AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS James Cotner, [email protected] Chair(s): Bridget Deemer, [email protected] Denise Bruesewitz, [email protected] Nicole Hayes, [email protected] Silvia Newell, [email protected] Kristin Strock, [email protected] Location: Sweeney Ballroom B Jessica Corman, [email protected] 08:30 Liu, Z.; Liu, S.: PHOSPHORUS IS KEY TO AFFECTING Roxanne Razavi, [email protected] DECOMPOSITION OF LABILE ORGANIC MATTER IN Location: Milagro/Kearny HYPOXIC COASTAL WATERS * (27802) 10:00 Carey, C. C.; Doubek, J. P.; Gerling, A. B.; Hamre, K. D.; 08:45 Mortazavi, B.: HOW WILL URBANIZATION AND THURSDAY McClure, R. P.; Munger, Z. W.; Birgand, F.; Hanson, P. SEA LEVEL RISE IMPACT NITROGEN REDUCTION C.; Little, J. C.; Schreiber, M. E.: WHOLE-ECOSYSTEM PATHWAYS IN MOBILE BAY AND ITS BORDERING CONSEQUENCES OF HYPOLIMNETIC OXYGENATION MARSHES* (27923) ON WATER QUALITY AND CARBON BALANCE IN A 09:00 Hou, L.: NITRATE TRANSFORMATION AND FATE IN MANAGED RESERVOIR (27783) THE SEDIMENTS OF THE YANGTZE ESTUARY* (27836) 10:15 Heinze, A. W.; Rothharpt, P.: THERMOTAXIS: MINOR 09:15 Fulweiler, R. W.; Foster, S. Q.: TWO SIDES OF THE TEMPERATURE CHANGE IMPACTS SWIMMING SAME COIN: EXPLORING SIMULTANEOUS BEHAVIOR OF PROTIST DINOBRYON (28161) DENITRIFICATION AND N-FIXATION IN COASTAL 10:30 Barrett, N. J.; González, M. J.: INTERACTIVE EFFECTS MARINE SEDIMENTS* (27971) OF WARMING AND INCREASED SEDIMENT INPUTS 10:00 Scott, J. T.; McCarthy, M. J.; Paerl, H. W.; Smith, V. H.: ON AQUATIC FOOD WEBS (28093) IT’S THE PROCESS RATES! THE BALANCE BETWEEN 10:45 Gu, X. Z.; Chen, K. N.; Wang, Z. D.: RESPONSE OF NITROGEN FIXATION AND DENITRIFICATION IN N2O EMISSIONS TO ELEVATED WATER DEPTH LAKE ECOSYSTEMS* (27863) REGULATION: COMPARISON OF RHIZOSPHERE VS. 10:15 Hayes, N. M.; Patoine, A.; Leavitt, P. R.: EVALUATION OF NON-RHIZOSPHERE OF PHRAGMITES AUSTRALIS IN THE ROLE OF NITROGEN FIXATION IN MEETING A FIELD-SCALE STUDY (27789) THE NITROGEN DEMANDS OF PHYTOPLANKTON 13:30 Rose, K. C.; Greb, S. R.; Turner, M. G.: PRECIPITATION COMMUNITIES IN EUTROPHIC LAKES (28072) MEDIATES LANDSCAPE CONTROLS ON LAKE WATER 10:30 Cotner, J. B.; Godwin, C. M.: HE’S A LITTLE BIT CLARITY (28037) COUNTRY AND I’M A LITTLE BIT ROCK ‘N ROLL: N, 13:45 Williamson, T. J.; Vanni, M. J.; Lash, K.; Brandt, J.; P AND MICROBIAL STOICHIOMETRY IN WAYNE’S Renwick, W.: A DARK AND STORMY FUTURE: WORLD* (28209) UNDERSTANDING HOW INCREASING STORM 10:45 Paerl, H. W.; Xu, H.; Hall, N. S.; Zhu, G.; McCarthy, M. SEVERITY AND FREQUENCY WILL ALTER NUTRIENT J.; Newell, S. E.; Qin, B.; Gardner, W. S.; Joyner, A. R.: CYCLING AND LAKE METABOLISM (28114) CONTROLLING HARMFUL CYANOBACTERIAL 14:00 Haig, H. A.; Simpson, G. L.; Wissel, B.; Leavitt, P. R.: BLOOMS IN EUTROPHIC LAKE TAIHU, CHINA: WILL QUANTIFICATION OF HYDROLOGICAL VARIABILITY NITROGEN REDUCTIONS CAUSE REPLACEMENT OF IN RIVERINE LAKES USING STABLE ISOTOPES OF NON-N2 FIXING BY N2 FIXING TAXA?* (27800) WATER (28179)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 39 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

13:30 Gardner, W. S.; McCarthy, M. J.; Newell, S. E.; Lu, K.; 10:15 Praise, S.; Ito, H.; Watanabe, K.; Jian, P.; Watanabe, T.: Hoffman, D.; Lavrentyev, P. J.; Hellweger, F. L.; Wilhelm, S.; MANGANESE CONCENTRATION AND DISSOLVED Liu, Z.; Paerl, H. W.: PHOTIC AMMONIUM DEMAND, ORGANIC MATTER COMPOSITION CHANGES IN A NEW CONCEPT IN EXAMINING N-LIMITATION IN SURFACE WATER OF MOUNTAINOUS STREAMS EUTROPHIC ECOSYSTEMS:POTENTIAL IMPLICATIONS WITH SABO DAMS. (28006) TO REGIONAL CYANOHABS IN LARGE LAKES* (27797) 10:30 Alves Soares, A. R.; Berggren, M.: RESPIRATION OF 13:45 Dunton, K. H.; Schonberg, S. V.; Whiteaker, T. L.: TERRESTRIALLY-DERIVED ORGANIC MATTER PATTERNS IN FOOD WEB STRUCTURE BASED ON PLAYS A RELATIVE SMALL ROLE IN COASTAL STABLE ISOTOPE RATIOS: ISOSCAPES FROM THE ACIDIFICATION (28010) WESTERN ARCTIC OCEAN* (28243) 10:45 Longnecker, K.; Kido Soule, M. C.; Kujawinski, E. B.: 14:00 Hardison, A. K.; McTigue, N. D.; Gardner, W. S.; Dunton, K. COMPARING THE IMPACT OF VIRAL LYSIS AND D.: BENTHIC REMINERALIZATION IN ARCTIC SHELF PREDATION ON MARINE DISSOLVED ORGANIC

SEDIMENTS: NET N2, O2, AND NUTRIENT FLUXES* MATTER (28056) (28128) 13:30 Tank, S. E.; Giesbrecht, I.; Oliver, A. A.; Floyd, W.; Korver, 14:15 Brandes, J. A.; Bittar, T.; Edwards, C. R.; Robertson, C. Y.; M. C.; Frazer, G.; Sanborn, P.; Arriola, S. G.: A SYNOPTIC Savidge, W. B.; Stubbins, A.: THE SALT MARSH OXYGEN ASSESSMENT OF CARBON EXPORT FROM COASTAL BATTERY-A MASS SPECTROMETRY STORY* (27807) TEMPERATE RAINFORESTS TO THE COASTAL 15:00 Hoffman, D. K.; McCarthy, M. J.; Davis, T. W.; Newell, OCEAN OF THE BRITISH COLUMBIA CENTRAL S. E.: WATER COLUMN AMMONIUM DYNAMICS COAST (28103) AFFECTING HARMFUL CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS 13:45 Oliver, A. A.; Kellogg, C.; Tank, S. E.; Floyd, W.; IN LAKE ERIE (28095) Giesbrecht, I.; Korver, M.: BOGS TO BAYS: LINKING 15:15 Townsend-Small, A.; Disbennett, D.; Fernandez, J.; FRESHWATER CARBON EXPORTS FROM PACIFIC Ransohoff, R.; Mackay, R.; Watson, S.; Bourbonniere, R.: COASTAL TEMPERATE RAINFORESTS TO MARINE EUTROPHICATION AND HYPOXIA IN LAKE ERIE ECOSYSTEMS (28026) LEAD TO ATMOSPHERIC METHANE EFFLUX IN 14:00 Connolly, C. T.; Khosh, M. S.; Burkart, G.; Holmes, R. M.; A POSSIBLE POSITIVE FEEDBACK TO CLIMATE McClelland, J. W.: PATTERNS IN FLUVIAL ORGANIC WARMING (27801) MATTER CONCENTRATIONS AND WATERSHED 15:30 Steffen, M. M.; Neitzey, M.; Paerl, H. W.; Tang, X.; Wilhelm, YIELDS ACROSS SPACE AND SCALE IN THE ARCTIC S. W.: LAKEWIDE METATRANSCRIPTOMICS IN (28124) LAKE TAI ELUCIDATES POTENTIAL ROLES FOR 14:15 Li, M. F.; Prairie, Y. T.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Nahas, R.: THE HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA IN CYANOBACTERIAL GLOBAL RIVERINE EXPORT OF CARBON SPECIES TO BLOOMS (28138) THE OCEANS (28096) 15:45 McCarthy, M. J.; Strope, E. K.; Myers, J. A.; Gardner, W. S.; 15:00 Catalán, N.; Marcé, R.; Kothawala, D. N.; Tranvik, L. J.: Newell, S. E.: MESSAGES IN A BOTTLE: IMPLICATIONS TIME CONTROLS THE REACTIVITY OF ORGANIC OF RAPID NUTRIENT RECYCLING FOR WATER CARBON ACROSS INLAND WATERS (27904) SAMPLE COLLECTION METHODS (28061) 15:15 Kellerman, A. M.; Guillemette, F.; Aiken, G. R.; Podgorski, SS26 HEADWATERS TO OCEANS: ECOLOGICAL AND D. C.; Spencer, R. G.: MOLECULAR-LEVEL INSIGHTS INTO THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF DISSOLVED BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES ACROSS THE AQUATIC CONTINUUM ORGANIC MATTER FROM A DIVERSE ARRAY OF Chair(s): John A. Downing, [email protected] AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS, FROM INLAND WATERS TO Susanne Menden-Deuer, [email protected] THE OCEAN (27995) THURSDAY Marguerite Xenopoulos, [email protected] 15:30 Vick-Majors, T. J.; Michaud, A. B.; Skidmore, M.; Priscu, J. Maren Voss, [email protected] C.: SUBGLACIAL CARBON AND NUTRIENT FLUXES Dileep Kumar, [email protected] FERTILIZE THE SOUTHERN OCEAN UNDER THE ROSS Robert W. Howarth, [email protected] ICE SHELF (28091) Location: Peralta/Lamy 15:45 Cottrell, B. A.; Pinto, M. I.; Burrows, H. D.; Sontag, 08:45 McNaughton, C.; Cook, P.; Woodland, R.; Cartwright, I.; G.; Vale, C.; Soulsby, D.; Noronha, J. P.; Cooper, W. J.: Beardall, J.: THE ROLE OF GROUNDWATER DERIVED CORRELATING THE CHANGES IN THE CHEMICAL NUTRIENTS IN DRIVING ESTUARINE PRODUCTIVITY COMPOSITION AND PHOTOCHEMISTRY OF (27985) DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER IN ESTUARIES (28195) 09:00 Vizza, C.; Zwart, J. A.; Jones, S. E.; Tiegs, S. D.; Lamberti, SS28 METHANE PROCESSES AND DYNAMICS ACROSS THE G. A.: WETLAND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION FROM AQUATIC CONTINUUM GLACIERS TO OCEAN IN THE COPPER RIVER DELTA, ALASKA (27994) Chair(s): Tonya DelSontro, [email protected] 09:15 Hamre, K. D.; Gerling, A. B.; Munger, Z. W.; Doubek, Daniel F. McGinnis, [email protected] J. P.; McClure, R. P.; Cottingham, K. L.; Carey, C. C.: Kimberly P. Wickland, [email protected] SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN ALGAL Bradford Sherman, [email protected] RECRUITMENT RATES ALONG A RESERVOIR Location: Sweeney Ballroom A CONTINUUM (27853) 08:30 McGinnis, D. F.: EMERGING TOPICS: METHANE 10:00 Maranger, R.: DAMMING THE COASTS: THE SOURCES, TRANSPORT AND FATE IN INLAND TRADEOFFS OF ECOSERVICES BETWEEN RESERVOIRS WATERST (28075) AND DELTAS (28231)

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09:00 Deemer, B. R.; Harrison, J. A.; Li, S.; Beaulieu, J. J.; 15:15 Miller, B. J.; Holtgrieve, G. W.: SUPPORT OF THE DelSontro, T.; Barros, N.; Neto, J. B.; Powers, S. M.; dos AQUATIC FOOD WEB ON A LARGE, TROPICAL Santos, M. A.; Vonk, J. A.: EUTROPHICATION LEADS TO FLOODPLAIN BY METHANOGENESIS (TONLE SAP ENHANCED METHANE EMISSIONS FROM RESERVOIR LAKE, CAMBODIA) (28248) SURFACES: A NEW GLOBAL SYNTHESIS (28066) 15:30 Melack, J. M.; Barbosa, P. M.; Amaral, J. H.; Forsberg, B. R.: 09:15 West, W. E.; Evans, S.; Jones, S. E.: CONNECTING METHANE CONCENTRATIONS AND FLUXES FROM MICROBIAL SCALE PROCESSES TO ECOSYSTEM AMAZON RIVERS AND FLOODPLAINS* (27876) FUNCTION: A STORY OF EUTROPHICATION DRIVEN 15:45 Sherman, B.; Ford, P.: QUANTIFYING CH4 REMOVAL INCREASE OF FRESHWATER LAKE METHANE RATES IN A FLOWING RIVER. (28148) EMISSIONS* (28106) 10:15 Beaulieu, J. J.; Balz, D. A.; Harrison, J. A.; Birchfield, M. K.; OPEN TO THE PUBLIC : Nietch, C. T.; Young, J. L.: WATER LEVEL DRAWDOWN SS39 THE COMPLEXITY OF AQUATIC INVASIONS TRIGGERS SYSTEM-WIDE BUBBLE RELEASE FROM IN THE COLORADO RIVER BASIN - PART 1 RESERVOIR SEDIMENTS* (28089) Chair(s): Todd Tietjen, [email protected] 10:30 Harrison, J. A.; Deemer, B. R.; Birchfield, M. K.: Theresa A. Thom, [email protected] CONTROLS ON RESERVOIR METHANE EBULLITION: A CASE STUDY (28174) Location: Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh 10:45 Thottathil, S. D.; Prairie, Y. T.: THE EXTENT OF 15:00 Seagle, D. E.: “EDUCATION AND PROTECTION IN THE METHANE OXIDATION IN BROWN AND CLEAR- UPPER COLORADO RIVER BASIN, THE CURECANTI WATER LAKES (28132) NATIONAL RECREATION AREA AQUATIC INVASIVE SPECIES PROGRAM.” (27805) 13:30 DelSontro, T.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Prairie, Y. T.: TOWARDS A PROCESS-BASED UNDERSTANDING OF METHANE 15:15 Omana Smith, E.; Trammell, M.; Healy, B.; Anderson, DISTRIBUTION IN LAKE SURFACE WATERS (27941) M.; Sucec, R.; Anderson, M.; Ward, D.: MULTI-AGENCY RAPID RESPONSE TO GREEN SUNFISH INVASION IN 13:45 Domine, L. M.; Novaczyk, Z. B.; Curran, E. M.; Rohlf, THE COLORADO RIVER, GLEN CANYON NATIONAL M. L.: CAPTURING SPATIAL HETEROGENEITY OF RECREATION AREA (28244) METHANE EMISSIONS FROM PRAIRIE POTHOLE SHALLOW LAKES (27929) 15:30 Bair, L. S.; Yackulic, C. B.; Springborn, M. R.; Reimer, M. N.; Bond, C. A.: BIOECONOMIC MODEL OF RAINBOW 14:00 Eugster, W.; DelSontro, T.; Shaver, G. R.; Kling, G. W.: TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) AND HUMPBACK METHANE CONCENTRATION VARIATIONS IN CHUB (GILA CYPHA) MANAGEMENT IN THE GRAND WATER AND EFFLUXES MEASURED ABOVE THE CANYON (28154) WATER SURFACE AT TOOLIK LAKE, ALASKA* (28004) 15:45 Thom, .T A.; Whitesides, H. J.; Smith, B. R.; Senegal, T. J.; 14:15 Windham-Myers, L.; Anderson, F.; Bergamaschi, B.: Gaiz, K.: AQUATIC INVASIVE SPECIES AT LAKE MEAD METHANE EMISSIONS FROM A BRACKISH TIDAL

NATIONAL RECREATION AREA: A MULTI-AGENCY THURSDAY MARSH IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY-DELTA: APPROACH (28175) INSIGHTS ON FLUX DYNAMICS FROM LONG-TERM MONITORING WITH EDDY COVARIANCE * (28240) 15:00 Wallin, M. B.; Campeau, A.; Billett, M. F.; Laudon, H.; Leach, J. A.; Nilsson, M. B.; Öquist, M. G.; Bishop, K.: LINKING STREAM METHANE TO TERRESTRIAL SOURCES IN A BOREAL LANDSCAPE* (27827)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 41 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

CS40 AQUATIC FOOD WEBS 3: DIVERSITY Friday Orals AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION CS10 AQUATIC SCIENCES IN THE ANTHROPOCENE Chair(s): Bea Beisner, [email protected] Chair(s): Shelley Arnott, [email protected] Location: Coronado/DeVargas Location: Coronado/DeVargas 08:30 Westwood, N. E.; Derry, A. M.: THE RELATIONSHIP 10:00 Arnott, S. E.; Azan, S. S.; Ross, A. J.: DECLINING BETWEEN DECOMPOSER DIVERSITY AND CALCIUM REDUCES ZOOPLANKTON PER CAPITA DECOMPOSITION IN METAL-CONTAMINATED GROWTH RATES (28206) STREAMS (27975) 10:15 Razavi, N. R.; Cleckner, L. B.; Cushman, S. F.; Halfman, J. D.; 08:45 Gröndahl, S.; Fink, P.: CONSUMER SPECIES RICHNESS Foust, J.; Gilman, B.: MERCURY DYNAMICS IN AQUATIC AND NUTRIENTS DETERMINE PRODUCER DIVERSITY FOOD WEBS OF THE FINGER LAKES, NEW YORK (27849) (27964) 09:00 Hutchins, B. T.; Nowlin, W. H.; Loney, L. L.; Engel, A. S.; 10:30 Ndimele, P. E.; Whenu, O. O.; Chukwuka, K. S.; Ndimele, Schwartz, B. F.: INVERTEBRATE BIODIVERSITY EFFECTS C. C.: ASSESSMENT OF HEAVY METALS IN OLOGE ON NUTRIENT USE AND NUTRIENT RECYCLING IN LAGOON, THEIR BIOACCUMULATION BY WATER GROUNDWATER SYSTEMS (27978) HYACINTH {EICHHNORNIA CRASSIPES} AND THE SS10 BRIDGING LOCAL PROCESSES AND LARGE-SCALE PATTERNS SOCIO-EGOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS (27819) IN AQUATIC BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES ACROSS LANDSCAPES 10:45 Miller, C. A.; Love, B. A.; Yang, S. A.: AN EXPERIMENTAL COMPARISON OF THE EFFECTS OF (ZOSTERA Chair(s): Jean-Francois Lapierre, [email protected] MARINA) AND (ZOSTERA JAPONICA) ON THE David Seekell, [email protected] DIURNAL VARIABILITY OF THE CARBONATE SYSTEM Sarah Collins, [email protected] (28219) Francois Guillemette, [email protected] Christopher Filstrup, [email protected] 13:30 Scott, W. C.; Haddad, S. P.; Burket, S. R.; Breed, C.; Pearce, P.; Du, B.; Chambliss, C. K.; Brooks, B. W.: TIDAL Location: Sweeney Ballroom A INFLUENCES ON SPATIOTEMPORAL AQUATIC 10:00 Jones, S. E.; Zwart, J. A.; Kelly, P. T.; Hanson, Z.; Bolster, HAZARDS OF PHARMACEUTICALS, NUTRIENTS, D.; Hamlet, A. F.; Solomon, C. T.: SMOOTH SCALING AND PATHOGENS IN DICKINSON BAYOU, TEXAS, AHEAD: USING FIRST PRINCIPLES AND PROCESS USA (28073) MODELS TO UNDERSTAND SPATIAL PATTERN IN T 13:45 Delesantro, J. M.; Blaszczak, J. R.; Urban, D. L.; Bernhardt, LAKE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY (28187) E. S.: ROAD DENSITY AMPLIFIES THE HYDROLOGIC 10:30 Xenopoulos, M. A.; Lee, K.; Young, J.: EFFECTS OF AND CHEMICAL IMPACTS OF IMPERVIOUS LOCAL AND REGIONAL LANDSCAPE INFLUENCE SURFACES ON URBAN STREAMS (28099) ON DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON DYNAMICS IN A 14:00 Fraser, L.; Bellemare, M. C.; Garand, G.; Beisner, LARGE LAKE (27957) B. E.: DEPLETED BIODIVERSITY OF BENTHIC 10:45 Collins, S. M.; Oliver, S. K.; Lapierre, J. F.; Stanley, E. H.; Jones, MACROINVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES BY J. R.; Wagner, T.; Soranno, P. A.: WHAT DRIVES LAKE URBANIZATION IN SOUTH-EASTERN CANADIAN NUTRIENTS AT CONTINENTAL SCALES, AND WHY IS STREAMS. (27852) IT SO HARD TO PREDICT NUTRIENT RATIOS? (27921) 14:15 Montoya, E.; Martinez, E.: ASSESSING AQUATIC 13:30 Soranno, P. A.: LANDSCAPE LIMNOLOGY: BRIDGING HABITAT QUALITY IN RESTORED ARROYOS AT RIO LOCAL AND REGIONAL SCALES TO UNDERSTAND MORA NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE (27944) FRESHWATERS* (28189) 15:00 Poikane, S.; Gassner, H.; Ritterbusch, D.: FISH IN 13:45 Jean-Francois Lapierre, J.; Sarah Collins, S. M.; David LAKE ECOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT IN EUROPE: Seekell, D. A.; Patricia Soranno, P. A.; Kendra Cheruvelil, CONSTRUCTION OF MULTIPLE PRESSURE INDICES K. S.; Pang-Ning Tan, P.; Nicholas Skaff, N.; C. Emi Fergus, (27843) E.; Tyler Wagner, T.: ALIGNING SPATIAL SCALES 15:15 Thyrring, J.; Sejr, M. K.: EDGE-POPULATIONS CAN BE IMPROVES UNDERSTANDING OF RELATIONSHIPS MORE RESILIENT TO CLIMATE VARIATION: LOCAL BETWEEN CLIMATE, LANDSCAPE AND ADAPTATION AFFECTS THE DISTRIBUTION OF BLUE LIMNOLOGICAL PROPERTIES (27920) MUSSELS (MYTILUS EDULIS) IN THE ARCTIC (27777) 14:00 Seekell, D. A.; Lapierre, J. F.; Karlsson, J.: A UNIMODAL 15:30 Feijo-Lima, R.; Tromboni, F.; Silva-Junior, E. F.; Zandoná, E.; RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN WHOLE-LAKE PRIMARY FRIDAY Moulton, T. P.; Thomas, S. A.: CASCADING EFFECTS OF PRODUCTION AND DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON DEFORESTATION ON ECOSYSTEM STRUCTURE AND EMERGES WHEN COMPARING LAKES FROM FUNCTIONING OF TROPICAL STREAMS. (28070) DIFFERENT BIOMES (27969) 15:45 Thomas, S. A.; Tromboni, F.; Lima, R. F.; de Silva, Jr., E. F.; 14:15 Filstrup, C. T.; Wagner, T.; Stow, C. A.; Oliver, S. K.; Stanley, Moulton, T.; Zandona, E.: DOWNSTREAM SHADOWS E. H.; Webster, K. E.; Downing, J. A.: NITROGEN STRESS OF UPSTREAM LANDUSE: THE INSTREAM EFFECTS EFFECTS ON LAKE PHYTOPLANKTON VARY BY OF ABRUPT CHANGES ON RIPARIAN CONDITIONS REGION BASED ON LAND USE (28046) (28253) 15:00 Guillemette, F.; Lapierre, J. F.; Kothawala, D. N.; Tranvik, L. J.; del Giorgio, P. A.; Mann, P. J.; Aiken, G. R.; Frey, K.; Ziegler, S. E.; Bonnell, J.; Spencer, R. G.: CROSS-BIOME PATTERNS IN AQUATIC DOM COMPOSITION: INSIGHTS FROM A UNIFIED BOREAL-ARCTIC PARAFAC MODEL (28129)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 42 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

15:15 Mzobe, P. N.; Berggren, M.; Schubert, P.; Pilesjö, P.; Persson, 14:15 Yang, L. Y.; Zhang, L.; McCarthy, M. J.; Qin, B. Q.; Gardner, A.: DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON (DOC) EXPORT W. S.: PRELIMINARY STUDY OF TOTAL NITROGEN FROM SUBARCTIC AREAS ANALYZED USING A GIS/ AND PHOSPHORUS EXCHANGE CHARACTERITICS REMOTE SENSING APPROACH (28028) AT THE SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE IN MEILIANG 15:30 Chwalek, T.; Müller, B.; Schmid, M.; Wehrli, B.: WHAT BAY, LAKE TAIHU, CHINA* (27776) DETERMINES THE FLUX OF REDUCED SUBSTANCES 15:00 Qin, B.: DYNAMICS OF SPATIAL-TEMPORAL FROM LAKE SEDIMENTS? (28014) VARIABILITY OF HARMFUL CYANOBACTERIA SS14 WAYNE’S WORLD: A SESSION TO CELEBRATE THE CAREER BLOOM IN LAKE TAIHU, CHINA* (27785) 15:15 Hampel, J. J.; McCarthy, M. J.; Gardner, W. S.; Lu, Z.; Zhu, OF WAYNE GARDNER AND HIS BROAD CONTRIBUTIONS TO G.; Xu, H.; Newell, S. E.: AMMONIUM CYCLING RATES UNDERSTANDING THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF AQUATIC SYSTEMS AND THE NITRIFIER COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN Chair(s): Mark J. McCarthy, [email protected] HYPEREUTROPHIC LAKE TAIHU, CHINA (28094) Robert Heath, [email protected] 15:30 Hu, W.: AN INTRODUCTION TO A CAS’S PROJECT James Cotner, [email protected] OF LAKE TAIHU WATER-QUALITY TARGET Denise Bruesewitz, [email protected] MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGY PLATFORM Silvia Newell, [email protected] DEVELOPING AND THE PLATFORM OPERATIONAL Location: Sweeney Ballroom B VERIFICATION (27898) 08:30 Murphy, A. E.; Nizzoli, D.; Anderson, I. C.; Bartoli, 15:45 Lu, K.; McCarthy, M. J.; Liu, Z.; Newell, S. E.; Song, B.; Zhu, M.: BIOGEOCHEMICAL RESPONSES TO CLAM G.; Xu, H.; Paerl, H. W.; Gardner, W. S.: UREA CYCLING AQUACULTURE: SACCA DI GORO, ITALY AND IN RELATION TO CYANOBACTERIAL (MICROCYSTIS) EASTERN SHORE, VA, USA (28097) BLOOMS IN LAKE TAIHU, YANGTZE RIVER DELTA, CHINA (27854) 08:45 Anderson, I. C.; Murphy, A. E.; Song, B.: THE INFLUENCE OF HARD CLAM (MERCENARIA MERCENARIA) SS21 SOURCES, TRANSFORMATION AND IMPORTANCE AQUACULTURE ON BENTHIC NITROGEN CYCLING: OF IRON IN FRESHWATERS REMOVAL VS. RETENTION * (27859) 09:00 Jenkins, J. D.; Liu, Z.: HOW DO DRYING-REWETTING Chair(s): Emma Kritzberg, [email protected] EVENTS AFFECT NUTRIENT FLUXES AND Gesa Weyhenmeyer, [email protected] BACTERIA DYNAMICS FROM SUBTROPICAL MARSH Pirkko Kortelainen, [email protected] SEDIMENTS? (28104) Irena Creed, [email protected] 09:15 Bruesewitz, D. A.; Zarnoch, C. B.; Hoellein, T. J.: Location: Milagro/Kearny ECOSYSTEM RESPONSE TO ENHANCED NUTRIENT 10:00 Trick, C. G.: IRON – THE AGENT OF CHANGE IN LOADING FOLLOWING HURRICANE SANDY IN THE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND LONG ISLAND SOUTH SHORE ESTUARY: INCREASED FUNCTION IN WATERS OF THE WORLDT (28078) NITROGEN REMOVAL OR AVAILABILITY?* (28071) 10:30 Erratt, K. J.; Yan, X.; Czikkel, B.; Creed, I. F.; Trick, C. 10:00 Wurtsbaugh, W. A.; Maszczyk, P.: BRINE SHRIMP GRAZING G.: MOLYBDENUM AND IRON INTERACTIONS AND FECAL PRODUCTION INCREASE SEDIMENT AS MICRONUTRIENTS FOR GROWTH OF A EXPORT TO THE DEEP BRINE LAYER (MONIMOLIMION) FRESHWATER CYANOBACTERIUM, MICROCYSTIS OF THE GREAT SALT LAKE, UTAH (28040) AERUGINOSA (28077) 10:15 Lavrentyev, P. J.; McCarthy, M. J.; Gardner, W. S.: 10:45 Creed, I. F.: LINKING WETLANDS TO THE NITROGEN CYCLING AND THE MICROBIAL FOOD FORMATION OF CYANOBACTERIA BLOOMS: IT’S WEB IN LARGE LAKES AND THE COASTAL OCEAN: ABOUT TIME (28064) INTERACTIONS, FEEDBACK CONTROLS, AND 13:30 Molot, L. A.: CHANGING PERSPECTIVES IN THE IRON CURRENT KNOWLEDGE GAPS* (28115) AGET (27888) 10:30 Vanderploeg, H. A.; Johengen, T. H.; Sarnelle, O.: AN 14:00 Björnerås, C.; Kritzberg, E.; Weyhenmeyer, G.: ECOLOGICAL STOICHIOMETRY STORY: IMPACTS WHERE AND WHY ARE IRON CONCENTRATIONS FRIDAY OF DREISSENID MUSSEL FEEDING AND NUTRIENT INCREASING? (27903) EXCRETION ON NUISANCE AND HARMFUL ALGAL 14:15 Kortelainen, P.; Mattsson, T.; Räike, A.; Ekholm, P.; BLOOMS* (28122) Lehtoranta, J.: LAND USE AND CLIMATE CONTROL 10:45 XU, H.: CRITICAL NUTRIENT THRESHOLDS NEEDED THE EXPORT OF IRON FROM BOREAL CATCHMENTS TO CONTROL HARMFULCYANOBACTERIAL (27911) BLOOMS IN EUTROPHIC LAKE TAIHU, CHINA (28241) 15:00 Lehtoranta, J.; Ekholm, P.; Taskinen, A.; Häkkilä, K.; Ulvi, 13:30 Zhang, L.; Mark, M. J.; Wayne, G. S.: NITROGEN BUDGET T.; Kortelainen, P.: LAKES MODIFY THE EXPORT OF AND PROCESSES IN LAKE TAIHU* (28003) TERMINAL ELECTRON ACCEPTORS IN BOREAL 13:45 Zhu, G.; Qin, B.; Xu, H.; Zhu, M.; Zhang, Y.; Zhang, L.; Paerl, CATCHMENTS (28013) H. W.: CHALLENGES OF NUTRIENT REDUCTION 15:15 Schroth, A. W.; Rosenberg, B.; Nagorski, S.; Hood, E.; IN EUTROPHIC LAKE TAIHU, CHINA UNDER THE 7 Fellman, J.; Vermilyea, A.: IRON SPECIATION AND YEARS RESTORATION (27841) PROVENANCE CONTROL POTENTIAL REACTIVITY 14:00 Hudson, J. J.; Hunter, K.; Sutey, P.; Evans, D.: A COMPARISON AND IMPACT ON CARBON AND PHOSPHORUS OF SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC TECHNIQUES FOR CYCLING FROM CATCHMENTS TO RECEIVING NITRATE ANALYSES IN PRAIRIE AND PRECAMBRIAN WATERS (28126) SHIELD LAKES AND PONDS (28237)

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 43 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

15:30 Simon David Herzog, S. D.; Per Persson, P.; Daniel Conley, 15:30 Tomlinson, M. S.; De Carlo, E. H.; Carton, G. L.; Helsel, D. D.; Emma Kritzberg, E. S.: HIGH TRANSPORT CAPACITY R.: USING MULTIVARIATE STATISTICS TO IDENTIFY OF RIVERINE IRON ALONG SALINITY GRADIENTS – ANALYTE SOURCES IN SEDIMENTS AT A SHALLOW- THE ROLE OF IRON SPECIATION (27844) WATER, MILITARY MUNITIONS DISPOSAL SITE OFF 15:45 Lee, Y. P.; Fujii, M.; Kikuchi, T.; Terao, K.; Yoshimura, C.: LEEWARD OAHU, HAWAII (27770) THE INFLUENCE OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER 15:45 Zhao, H.; Zhou, L. J.: SEASONAL VARIATION AND FLUX PROPERTIES ON FE(II) OXIDATION IN NATURAL AND ESTIMATION OF DISSOLVED PHARMACEUTICALS IN ENGINEERED WATERS (27788) THE YANGTZE ESTUARY (27897) SS26 HEADWATERS TO OCEANS: ECOLOGICAL AND SS33 CROSS-SCALE PERSPECTIVES: INTEGRATING LONG-TERM BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES ACROSS THE AQUATIC CONTINUUM AND HIGH-FREQUENCY DATA INTO OUR UNDERSTANDING OF Chair(s): John A. Downing, [email protected] AQUATIC COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS Susanne Menden-Deuer, [email protected] Chair(s): Cayelan Carey, [email protected] Marguerite Xenopoulos, [email protected] Kathryn Cottingham, [email protected] Maren Voss, [email protected] Location: Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh Dileep Kumar, [email protected] 08:30 ; Renwick, W. H.; Fisher, T.; Morris, E. L.: Robert W. Howarth, [email protected] Vanni, M. J. CONTRASTING RESPONSES OF STREAM NITROGEN, Location: Peralta/Lamy PHOSPHORUS, AND SEDIMENT CONCENTRATIONS 10:00 Pilcher, D. J.; McKinley, G. A.; Kralj, J.; Bootsma, H. A.: TO TWO DECADES OF CHANGING WATERSHED MECHANISTIC UNDERSTANDING OF LAKEWIDE AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES (28197) BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES AND STRESSORS IN 08:45 Currie, W. J.; Bowen, K. L.; Niblock, H. A.; Munawar, M.; LAKE MICHIGAN USING MODELS (27870) Koops, M. A.; Hoyle, J.: LESSONS LEARNED ON FOOD- 10:15 Prater, C.; Frost, P. C.; Howell, E. T.; Watson, S. B.; WEB LINKAGES MADE POSSIBLE BY SAMPLING King, S. E.; Vogt, R. J.; Xenopoulos, M. A.: CHANGES THE ENTIRE AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM DURING THE IN PARTICULATE C:N:P STOICHIOMETRY FROM LONG-TERM PROJECT QUINTE. (27803) TRIBUTARIES TO NEARSHORE AND OFFSHORE 09:00 Ewing, H. A.; Weathers, K. C.; Cottingham, K. L.; Leavitt, AREAS OF LAKE ERIE (28052) P. R.; Fiorillo, A. U.; Sowles, J. P.; MacKenzie, J. E.; Carey, C. 10:30 King, S. S.; Vogt, R. J.; Watson, S. B.; Xenopoulos, M. A.: C.; Greer, M. L.: ASYNCHRONY IN THE EXPANSION CHANGES IN DISSOLVED ORGANIC PHOSPHORUS OF THE CYANOBACTERIUMGLOEOTRICHIA AND CARBON COMPOSITION ACROSS THE STREAM ECHINULATA REVEALED IN SEDIMENT RECORDS TO LAKE TRANSITION IN LAKE ERIE (28055) FROM LAKES IN THE NORTHEASTERN USA (28085) 10:45 Burson, A.; Stomp, M.; Akil, L.; Brussaard, C. P.; Huisman, 10:00 Buskey, E. J.; Scheef, L. P.; Hyatt, C. J.: LONG TERM J.: UNBALANCED REDUCTION OF NUTRIENT LOADS MONITORING OF THE MISSION-ARANSAS ESTUARY: HAS CREATED AN OFFSHORE GRADIENT FROM EFFECTS OF PULSED FRESHWATER INFLOWS ON PHOSPHORUS TO NITROGEN LIMITATION IN THE ECOSYSTEM STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION (27808) NORTH SEA (27907) 10:15 Munn, M. D.; Konrad, C. P.; Miller, M.: THE USE 13:30 Garayburu-Caruso, V. A.; Mortensen, J.; Covino, T.; OF CONTINUOUS WATER QUALITY SENSORS Van Horn, D.; Gonzalez-Pinzon, R.: UNDERSTANDING FOR ASSESSING TEMPORAL VARIABLITY AND NUTRIENT PROCESSING UNDER SIMILAR ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES IN REGIONAL-SCALE HYDROLOGIC CONDITIONS ALONG A RIVER STUDIES (27999) CONTINUUM (28080) 10:30 Brown, R. F.; Van Horn, D. J.; Reale, J. K.; Parmenter, 14:00 Gonzalez-Pinzon, R.; Summers, B.; Van Horn, D.; Covino, R. R.; Dahm, C. N.: HIGH-FREQUENCY WATER T.: HOW DO METABOLISM AND NITRATE UPTAKE QUALITY MONITORING ACROSS SPATIOTEMPORAL VARY ACROSS A DRYLAND RIVER CONTINUUM SCALES USING COLLABORATIVELY MANAGED IN (1ST – 8TH ORDER STREAMS)? (28162) SITU AQUATIC SENSOR NETWORKS (28048) 14:15 Mortensen, J. G.; González-Pinzón, R.; Van Horn, D.: 10:45 Summers, B. M.; Van Horn, D. J.; Gonzalez-Pinzon, NUTRIENT CYCLING IN ARID LAND RIVERS: R.; Bixby, R.; Grace, M.; Dahm, C.: SEASONAL ADVANCING THE FOOD-ENERGY-WATER NEXUS BY AND CLIMATIC DRIVERS OF WHOLE-STREAM CLOSING NUTRIENT LOOPS (28084) METABOLISM (28218) 15:00 Trudnowska, E.; Blachowiak-Samolyk, K.; Kwasniewski, 13:30 Cottingham, K. L.; Carey, C. C.; Eliassen, M.; Ewing, H. FRIDAY S.: THE SIZE RESPONSE OF ZOOPLANKTON TO A.; Greer, M. L.; Weathers, K. C.: LEVERAGING HIGH- VARIOUS TEMPERATURE REGIMES ACROSS FREQUENCY MEASUREMENTS TO UNDERSTAND LATITUDINAL GRADIENT FROM 60 UP TO 80° N AND PREDICT SEASONAL CYANOBACTERIAL (28022) BLOOMS IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC LAKE (28146) 15:15 Marin, F. D.: MULTIVARIATE ANALYSES ON SPATIAL 13:45 Pace, M. L.; Carpenter, S. R.; Cole, J. J.; Batt, R. D.; AND TEMPORAL VARIATION OF PLANKTON Wilkinson, G. M.; Buello, C.; Kuztweil, J. T.: A WHOLE- COMMUNITIES AND MARINE SNOW IN THE GULF LAKE TEST OF EARLY WARNINGS: REVERSAL OF A OF MEXICO USING HIGH RESOLUION IMAGING AND CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOM (27874) NET DATA (28222)

T REPRESENTS TUTORIAL PRESENTATIONS 44 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

14:00 Rusak, J. A.; Tanentzap, A. J.; Klug, J. L.; Rose, K. C.; OPEN TO THE PUBLIC : Hendricks, S.; Jennings, E.; Laas, A.; Pierson, D.; Ryder, SS39 THE COMPLEXITY OF AQUATIC INVASIONS E.; Smyth, R.; White, D.; Winslow, L.: WHAT EXPLAINS THE TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF IN THE COLORADO RIVER BASIN - PART 2 CHLOROPHYLL IN LAKES? (28228) Chair(s): Todd Tietjen, [email protected] 14:15 Carey, C. C.; Gougis, R. D.; Richardson, D. C.; Klug, J. L.; Theresa A. Thom, [email protected] O’Reilly, C. M.: INTEGRATING HIGH-FREQUENCY Location: Pojoaque/Nambe/Ohkay Owingeh LIMNOLOGY DATA AND DISTRIBUTED 15:00 Walker, D. B.: BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS IN THE COMPUTING INTO UNDERGRADUATE & GRADUATE LOWER COLORADO RIVER: LESSONS IN THE CLASSROOMS BUILDS QUANTITATIVE REASONING ECOLOGY OF CONSTRUCTED ECOSYSTEMS (28212) AND MODELING SKILLS (27786) 15:15 McMaster, H. A.; Kirsch, J.; Anat, D. M.; Maynard, M.: LAKE HAVASU QUAGGA MUSSEL MONITORING STUDY (28160) 15:30 Tietjen, T. E.: QUAGGA MUSSELS IN LAKE MEAD: HISTORY OF INVASION AND THE DIFFICULTY OF DETERMINING ECOLOGICAL IMPACTST (28108) FRIDAY

* REPRESENTS INVITED PRESENTATIONS 45 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

Baron, J. S. 34 Bohall, C. 30 Campeau, A. 41 Author Index Barouillet, C. 26 Boling, B. 37 Canton, M. C. 30 Barrett, D. C. 33 Bolster, D. 25, 42 Canuel, E. A. 37 A Barrett, N. J. 39 Bolster, D. T. 25 Cardenas, B. 25 Barros, N. 41 Bomblies, A. 39 Carey, C. C. 25, 39, 40, 44, 45 Abe, M. 32, 33 Barth, L. E. 24 Bond, C. A. 41 Carey, S. 32 Abril, G. 28 Bartoli, M. 43 Bonnell, J. 42 Carpenter, S. R. 24, 39, 44 Acinas, S. G. 36 Bartsch, W. M. 32 Booth, E. G. 39 Carton, G. L. 44 Ahrén, D. 30 Bass, D. 26 Bootsma, H. A. 44 Cartwright, I. 40 Aiken, G. R. 40, 42 Bass, M. 34 Bork, P. 36 Casas-Ruiz, J. P. 25 Akil, L. 44 Battin, T. J. 28, 29 Bosman, S. 37 Casson, N. 25, 33, 36 Alexander, S. 34 Batt, R. D. 36, 44 Bourbonniere, R. 40 Casson, N. J. 25, 33 Ali, A. M. 26 Bauer, J. E. 37 Bowden, L. 34 Catalan, J. 25 ALotaibi, N. A. 28 Baulch, H. M. 28, 36 Bowen, K. L. 44 Catalán, N. 25, 40 Alves Soares, A. R. 40 Baxa, D. 24 Bowes, R. E. 32, 38 Cavaliere, E. 36 Amaral, J. H. 41 Baxter, C. V. 34 Boyer, E. 26 Celis-Salgado, M. P. 26 Ammendolia, J. 32 Bean, R. 34 Brander, S. M. 36 C. Emi Fergus, E. 42 Amorim, M. A. 35 Beardall, J. 40 Brandes, J. A. 40 Cerrato, J. M. 26 Anas, M. 26 Beaty, K. G. 26 Brandon, C. S. 30 Chambliss, C. K. 42 Anat, D. M. 45 Beaulieu, J. J. 41 Brandt, J. 39 Chanton, J. P. 37 Anbar, A. 38 Bebout, B. M. 28 Branstrator, D. K. 37 Charette, C. 30 Anderson, D. 33 Beckage, B. 39 Breed, C. 42 Charpentier, C. L. 38 Anderson, E. 33, 36 Becker, D. 36 Brentrup, J. A. 24, 25 Chavez, G. 30 Anderson, E. M. 36 Becks, L. 30 Britton, M. T. 36 Chen, C. Y. 26 Anderson, F. 41 Behnke, J. H. 36 Brooks, B. W. 42 Chen, K. 28, 38 Anderson, I. C. 43 Beisner, B. 27, 33, 38, 39, 42 Brooks, M. L. 34, 36 Chen, K. N. 39 Anderson, M. 41 Beisner, B. E. 27, 33, 39, 42 Brown, R. F. 44 Chen, W. 34 Andersson, A. 25 Bellamy, A. R. 37 Brown, S. W. 30 Chen, X. 39 Angell, C. S. 38 Bellemare, M. C. 42 Bruesewitz, D. A. 33, 43 Cheruvelil, K. S. 30 Annenkova, N. 30 Bellinger, B. J. 38 Brugel, S. 25 Chiapella, A. M. 29 An, S. 34 Belshe, E. F. 38 Brum, J. R. 36 Chikaraishi, Y. 37 Anschutz, P. 28 Belyaeva, A. M. 38 Brussaard, C. P. 44 Chin, T. 32 Araclides, E. 30 BenDor, T. 27 Bryant, R. B. 37 Chiu, C. M. 25 Aranguren-Gassis, M. 30 Benstead, J. P. 39 Bucini, G. 39 Chmiel, R. J. 33 Archibald, J. 33 Bergamaschi, B. 37, 41 Buda, A. R. 37 Chrisler, W. B. 32 Ardón, M. 27 Bergamaschi, B. A. 37 Budy, P. 25 Christaki, U. 36 Arellano, C. 29 Berger, S. 25 Buello, C. 44 Chukwuka, K. S. 42 Arím, M. 27 Berggren, M. 28, 29, 33, 40, 43 Buelo, C. D. 28 Chu, R. K. 32 Armstrong, M. 36 Bernhardt, E. S. 27, 42 Bukaveckas, P. A. 27, 29 Chwalek, T. 43 Arnott, S. E. 26, 42 Bertolet, B. L. 25, 33 Burger, M. 25 Clapsadl, M. 32 Arntzen, E. V. 27, 32 Bertuzzo, E. 29 Burgin, A. J. 27 Clapsadl, M. D. 32 Arriola, S. G. 40 Bigelow, A. 26 Burkart, G. 40 Clark, A. L. 26 Arsenault, E. R. 32 Bilak, J. D. 34 Burkart, M. D. 29 Cleckner, L. B. 42 Artyushkova, K. 26 Billett, M. F. 41 Burke, M. 34 Clemins, P. 39 Athié, G. 24 Birchfield, M. K. 41 Burket, S. R. 42 Coban, O. 28 Atkinson, D. 38 Birgand, F. 39 Burpee, B. T. 25 Cochran, J. 32 Avery, D. E. 30 Bishop, K. 41 Burrows, H. D. 40 Cohen, J. H. 38 Azan, S. S. 42 Bittar, T. 40 Burson, A. 44 Colbourne, J. K. 36 Bixby, R. 26, 32, 44 Burtner, A. B. 24 Cole, J. J. 28, 44 B Bixby, R. J. 26, 32 Burton, R. S. 37 Collins, S. 30, 38, 42 Bailey, J. L. 26 Bjelde, B. E. 36 Buskey, E. J. 44 Collins, S. M. 38, 42 Bailey, J. V. 32 Björnerås, C. 43 Butitta, V. L. 24, 35, 37 Colombet, J. 36 Bair, L. S. 41 Blachowiak-Samolyk, K. 24, 44 Büttner, O. 29 Connelly, S. J. 34, 35, 36 Baker, B. C. 33 Black, S. D. 27 Byrne, P. 34 Connolly, C. T. 40 Baloza, M. M. 32 Blake, J. 26 Connon, R. E. 36 Balz, D. A. 41 Blaszczak, J. R. 42 C Cook, P. 39, 40 Båmstedt, U. 25 Blodau, C. 25 Caceres, C. E. 30, 38 Cook, P. L. 39 Barbosa, P. M. 41 Bocast, C. S. 29 Cáceres, C. E. 36, 38 Cooney, E. C. 33 Barbour, S. L. 32 Boeing, W. J. 30 Calliari, D. 27 Cooper, T. 24 Barnett, B. 37 Bogard, M. J. 28 Cooper, W. J. 40

46 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

Corman, J. 25, 33, 38, 39 Disbennett, D. 40 Evans, M. A. 24 Garayburu-Caruso, V. A. 44 Corman, J. R. 25, 33 Dixon, M. D. 25 Evans, S. 41 Gardner, W. S. 39, 40, 43 Coronado, C. 31 Domine, L. M. 41 Evrard, V. 39 Garmestani, A. 27 Corral, G. 34 Dompierre, K. 32 Ewing, H. A. 44 Gasol, J. M. 27, 36 Corry, T. D. 32 Dornblaser, M. M. 37 Gawel, J. 27 Cory, R. M. 25 Doser, D. 34 F Gay, D. A. 26 Cotner, J. B. 39 dos Santos, M. A. 41 Fangue, N. A. 36 Gay, M. T. 33 Cottingham, K. L. 40, 44 Doubek, J. P. 39, 40 Fansler, S. J. 32 Gearhart, T. 36 Cottrell, B. A. 40 Downing, B. D. 37 Färber Lorda, J. 24 Gearhart, T. A. 36 Countway, P. D. 33 Downing, J. A. 38, 42 Farrell, M. 30 Genin, A. 24 Covich, A. P. 38 Driscoll, C. T. 26 Fegel, T. 28 Genitsaris, S. 36 Covino, T. 35, 44 Druschel, G. K. 36 Feijo-Lima, R. 42 Gerling, A. B. 39, 40 Craft, C. B. 27, 31 Duarte, C. M. 27 Fellman, J. 43 Gerphagnon, M. 36 Crawford, J. T. 35, 37 Duarte, C. N. 36 Ferer, E. 37 Giani, A. 38 Crawford, J. W. 36 Du, B. 42 Fergus, C. E. 30 Giesbrecht, I. 40 Creed, I. F. 43 Dudycha, J. L. 30, 33 Fernandez, J. 40 Gill, T. E. 26 Crisafulli, C. 27 Duffy, M. A. 30, 38 Fields, D. M. 33 Gilman, B. 42 Cross, W. F. 39 Duffy, P. I. 38 Filbee-Dexter, K. 34 Gíslason, G. M. 39 Crowl, T. A. 38 Dugan, H. A. 25 Filstrup, C. T. 42 Givens, C. E. 24 Crump, A. R. 27 Duhaime, M. B. 36 Findlay, D. L. 26 Glazier, D. S. 38 Crump, B. C. 25 Dunn, S. T. 25 Fink, P. 42 Glibert, P. M. 38 Cumming, B. F. 26, 27, 28 Dunton, K. D. 40 Finlay, K. 28 Godwin, C. M. 39 Curran, E. M. 41 Dunton, K. H. 40 Fiorillo, A. U. 44 Golda, R. L. 33 Currie, W. J. 44 Dupont, C. 38 Fisher, J. 32 Gómez-Gener, L. 25 Currin, C. A. 29 Duris, J. W. 24 Fisher, T. 44 Gonsior, M. 35 Cushman, S. F. 42 Dutilh, B. E. 36 Fitzpatrick, M. A. 24 González, M. J. 38, 39 Czikkel, B. 43 Duvall, N. 30 Flecker, A. S. 38 Gonzalez-Pinzon, R. 44 Dzialowski, A. R. 38 Floyd, W. 40 González-Pinzón, R. 35, 44 D Folmar, G. J. 37 Goodman, K. 30 Dahm, C. 26, 32, 44 E Ford, P. 41 Goodwin, J. 37 Dahm, C. N. 26, 32, 44 Eagles-Smith, C. 29 Fork, M. L. 39 Gougis, R. D. 45 Dai, M. 34 Eason, T. 27 Forsberg, B. R. 41 Grace, M. 44 Dam, H. G. 30 Ebanks, S. C. 32 Fortin St-Gelais, N. F. 39 Graham, E. B. 27 Daniel Conley, D. 44 Eberhard, E. K. 34 Foster, S. Q. 39 Grant, S. B. 39 Danielidis, D. 36 Ebrahimi, S. 24 Foust, J. 42 Greb, S. R. 39 Das, B. 27 Ecker, C. D. 24 Fox, A. F. 32 Greenwold, M. J. 33 David Seekell, D. A. 42 Edwards, B. 34 Foy, R. H. 37 Greer, M. L. 44 Davidson, E. G. 28 Edwards, C. R. 40 Francus, P. 35 Gregory-Eaves, I. 25, 30, 35, 38 Davidson, M. A. 29 Egener, M. 34 Fraser, L. 42 Grimm, J. 26 Davis, S. 38 Eglinton, T. I. 37 Frazer, G. 40 Groeger, A. 26, 35 Davis, S. L. 38 Eguiarte, L. 37 Fredrickson, J. K. 27, 32 Groeger, A. W. 26 Davis, T. W. 40 Ekholm, P. 43 Fretz, P. 34 Gröndahl, S. 42 De Carlo, E. H. 44 Elchyshyn, L. 25 Frey, K. 42 Gubbins, N. J. 35 Deemer, B. 39, 41 Eliassen, M. 44 Frisch, D. 36 Guildford, S. J. 36 Deemer, B. R. 41 Elkin, K. R. 37 Fritz, S. C. 27 Guillemette, F. 25, 40, 42 Deirmendjian, L. 28 Elmasri, M. 30 Frost, P. C. 44 Gulis, V. 39 Delesantro, J. M. 42 Elser, J. 38 Fujii, M. 44 Gundersen, D. 29 del Giorgio, P. A. 25, 27, 28, 29, 39, Elser, J. J. 38 Fukuda, F. 32 Guo, L. 38 40, 41, 42 Emanuel, R. E. 27 Fulweiler, R. W. 39 Gu, S. 34 DelSontro, T. 41 Emma Kritzberg, E. S. 44 Funk, C. 26 Gu, X. Z. 39 Delwiche, K. 35 Encalada, A. C. 38 Gu, Y. 29 Dempsey, C. 25 Engel, A. S. 42 G H deNoyelles, F. J. 32 Ensign, S. H. 27 Gaeta, J. W. 26 Derry, A. M. 30, 42 Erdner, D. 33 Gaiser, E. 31 Haddad, S. P. 42 de Silva, Jr., E. F. 42 Erratt, K. J. 43 Gaiz, K. 41 Haig, H. A. 28, 34, 39 De Stasio, B. T. 38 Esders, E. 25 Galloway, A. W. 36 Häkkilä, K. 43 DeVilbiss, S. 38 Eugster, W. 41 Gao, Y. 33 Halbur, J. 32 Dewey, M. 37 Evans, D. 43 Garand, G. 42 Halfman, J. D. 42 Diamond, S. 34 Evans, M. 24, 26 Garayburu-Caruso, V. 35, 44 Hall, E. K. 37

47 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

Hallett, S. J. 33 Hirst, A. G. 38 J Kennedy, C. 37 Hall, N. S. 24, 39 Hite, J. L. 38 Kennedy, D. W. 27, 32 Hall, S. R. 30, 36, 38 Hobmeier, M. M. 37 James, T. 30 Kerfoot, W. C. 37 Halsey, N. 37 Hochheimer, J. 37 Jane, S. F. 25 Kerschner, B. M. 26 Hamdan, L. K. 34 Hodder, K. R. 28 Jaramillo, L. V. 26 Khosh, M. S. 40 Hamed, A. A. 39 Hoellein, T. J. 43 Jean-Francois Lapierre, J. 42 Kido Soule, M. C. 40 Hamel, J. 32 Hoffman, D. 40 Jeffries, D. 26 Kikuchi, T. 44 Hamilton, S. K. 24 Hoffman, D. K. 40 Jeffries, K. M. 36 Kim, B. S. 33 Hamlet, A. F. 25, 42 Höhn, D. P. 24 Jenkins, J. D. 43 King, D. W. 33 Hampel, J. J. 43 Holdsworth, S. 37 Jennings, E. 45 King, S. E. 44 Hampton, S. E. 36 Holgerson, M. 27 Jenny, J. 35 King, S. S. 44 Hamre, K. D. 39, 40 Holguin, F. O. 30, 34 Jessup, B. 29 Kirsch, J. 45 Hanselmann, K. W. 32 Hollander, D. 37 Jeyasingh, P. D. 36 Kiyoko, Y. 28 Hanson, P. C. 25, 39 Hollister, J. W. 27 Jiang, H. S. 24 Kleinman, P. J. 37 Hanson, Z. 25, 42 Holmes, C. J. 30, 38 Jian, P. 40 Kling, G. W. 25, 41 Hanson, Z. J. 25 Holmes, R. M. 40 Jin, L. 34 Klobucar, S. 25 Hansson, L. A. 24 Holtgrieve, G. 29, 37, 41 Ji, X. 24 Klobucar, S. L. 25 Hardison, A. 34, 40 Holtgrieve, G. W. 29, 41 JI, X. 24 Klug, J. L. 45 Hardison, A. K. 34, 40 Hong, B. 32 Johengen, T. H. 24, 37, 43 Knoll, L. 24, 25, 30, 32 Härnström Aloisi, K. 30 Hong, H. 33 John, F. 29 Knoll, L. B. 24, 25 Harrison, J. A. 41 Hood, E. 43 Johnson, P. 25, 39 Koch, B. J. 34 Harris, S. L. 26 Hood, J. M. 39 Johnson, P. W. 39 Koch, C. R. 37 Harris, T. D. 28 Hossler, K. 37 Johnson, T. 32 Koch, H. 30 Hartmann, J. 29 Hou, L. 39 Johnson, W. C. 25 Kochtitzky, W. 34 Harvey, C. J. 30 Howarth, R. W. 29, 32 Johnston, M. K. 30 Koehl, M. 24 Hasenbein, S. 36 Howell, E. T. 44 Johnston, T. A. 32 Koester, M. 38 Hashimoto, S. 32, 33 Howeth, J. G. 27 Jojola, M. E. 34 Kohler, B. S. 38 Hastings, C. 28 Hoyle, J. 44 Jones, J. 26, 42 Kolka, R. K. 25, 33 Havens, K. 24 Hrabik, T. R. 37 Jones, J. R. 42 Kominoski, J. 31, 39 Hayes, N. 38, 39 Hrycik, A. R. 33 Jones, R. T. 28 Kominoski, J. S. 39 Hayes, N. M. 38, 39 Huang, H. M. 28 Jones, S. 25, 27, 30, 40, 41, 42 Komoroske, L. M. 36 Hayn, M. 32 Huang, W. 38 Jones, S. E. 25, 27, 40, 41, 42 Konopka, A. E. 32 Healy, B. 41 Huckins, C. J. 32 Joseph, S. 29 Konrad, C. P. 44 Heathcote, A. J. 25 Hudson, J. 33, 36, 43 Jotzy, J. 35 Koops, M. A. 44 Hebert, A. 26 Hudson, J. J. 36, 43 Joung, D. J. 36 Kopacek, J. 26 Hebert, A. S. 26 Hudson, J. M. 33 Joye, S. 37 Kormas, K. 36 Heffernan, J. B. 39 Huebner, E. 33 Joyner, A. R. 39 Kormas, K. A. 36 Hein, C. L. 30 Huebner, J. 33 Juneau, K. J. 32 Kortelainen, P. 43 Heinze, A. W. 39 Huebner, J. D. 33 Junker, J. R. 39 Korver, M. 40 Hell, K. 25 Huisman, J. 24, 44 Jurdi, R. 29 Korver, M. C. 40 Hellweger, F. L. 40 Huizenga, K. N. 38 Juteau, J. P. 37 Köster, M. 38 Helsel, D. R. 30, 44 Hunter, K. 43 Kothawala, D. N. 25, 40, 42 Helton, A. M. 27 Hupp, C. R. 27 K Kovarikova, M. 32 Hemond, H. 35 Huryn, A. D. 27, 39 Kahl, J. S. 26 Krabbenhoft, D. P. 26 Hendricks, S. 45 Hutchins, B. T. 42 Kamenir, Y. G. 36 Kraemer, B. M. 32 Hensgens, G. 29 Hutchins, R. H. 29 Kamjunke, N. 29 Kraft, M. 37 Herbert, E. R. 27, 31 Hu, W. 43 Kangabam, R. D. 36 Kralj, J. 44 Heres, A. 28 Hyatt, C. J. 44 Kaplan, D. 28 Kraus, T. 37 Herrington, C. 35 Karayanni, H. 36 Kreakie, B. J. 27 Hershey, R. 37 I Karlsson, J. 42 Kremp, A. 30 Herzsprung, P. 29 Iacarella, J. C. 38 Keating, J. 26 Kritzberg, E. 25, 43 Hesjedal, B. 26, 27 Iavorivska, L. 26 Keaveney, E. M. 37 Kritzberg, E. S. 25 Hesjedal, B. L. 27 Ichikawa, K. 32 Kehoe, M. 36 Kruger, B. R. 37 Hessen, D. O. 36 Inglett, P. W. 32 Kellerman, A. M. 25, 40 Kucharik, C. 39 Hetherington, A. L. 30 Irigoien, X. 28 Keller, W. 26 Kujawinski, E. B. 40 Hickman, A. 30 Ishikawa, N. F. 37 Kellogg, C. 40 Kumar, S. 35 Hicks, R. E. 27, 28 Isles, P. 36, 39 Kelly, K. 37 Kurobe, T. 24 Hillebrand, H. 38 Isles, P. D. 36, 39 Kelly, P. T. 27, 42 Kuztweil, J. T. 44 Hirani, C. 26 Ito, H. 40 Kelsey, M. K. 34 Kwasniewski, S. 44 Hirsch, J. K. 37 Kendra Cheruvelil, K. S. 42 Kwietniewski, E. J. 28

48 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

L Li, Y. 30 Mazzei, V. 31 Morris, J. J. 37 Loadman, N. 33 McCallister, S. L. 35 Mortazavi, B. 39 Laas, A. 45 Loadman, N. L. 33 McCarthy, M. J. 39, 40, 43 Mortensen, J. 35, 44 Labou, S. G. 36 Loewen, C. 29 McClelland, J. 34, 40 Mortensen, J. G. 44 laird, K. R. 28 Loftin, K. 24 McClelland, J. W. 34, 40 Moser, D. 37 Laird, K. R. 26, 27 Logares, R. 30 McClure, R. P. 39, 40 Motew, M. 39 Lamberti, G. A. 40 Loken, L. C. 35, 37 McCrackin, M. L. 29 Moulton, T. 42 Lammers, P. J. 30 Loney, L. L. 42 McCue, J. 38 Moulton, T. P. 42 Landom, K. 26 Longnecker, K. 40 McDermott, T. R. 28 Muduli, P. R. 35 Lang, J. 32 López, P. 25 McGinnis, D. F. 40 Muise, K. A. 32 Lapierre, J. F. 30, 33, 42 Lopez-Urrutia, A. 27 McGlathery, K. J. 32 Mukherjee, R. 35 Lapointe, F. 35 Lottig, N. R. 30, 36 McGlynn, B. L. 39 Müller, B. 43 Lara, E. 27 Lougheed, V. 34 McIntosh, H. 35, 37 Munawar, M. 24, 44 Larson, J. H. 24 Love, B. A. 42 McIntosh, H. A. 37 Munger, Z. W. 39, 40 Lash, K. 39 Lovvorn, J. R. 36 McIntyre, P. B. 32 Munisamy, G. 36 Lasi, M. A. 32 Lozier, J. D. 27 McIver, M. R. 38 Munn, M. D. 44 Latour, D. 36 Lucas, C. H. 24 McKinley, G. A. 44 Muñoz-Carpena, R. 28 Latzka, A. W. 25 Lucero, D. 29 McKnight, D. M. 25 Murphy, A. E. 43 Laudon, H. 41 Luek, A. 29 McLaskey, A. K. 30 Mushet, G. 26, 27 Lavery, P. S. 38 Lu, K. 40, 43 McManamay, R. A. 39 Mushet, G. R. 26 Lavrentyev, P. J. 40, 43 Luo, Y. W. 34 McMaster, H. A. 45 Musolff, A. 29 Layman, A. W. 35, 36 Lu, Z. 43 McNaughton, C. 40 Muss, J. 25 Leach, J. A. 41 Lynch, J. 26 McTigue, N. D. 29, 40 Myers, J. A. 40 Leach, T. H. 24 Lynch, L. 28 Meegahage, B. 26 Myers, J. T. 30 Learned, J. 38 Mehring, A. S. 39 Mzobe, P. N. 43 Leavitt, P. 26, 27, 28, 29, 39, 44 M Melack, J. M. 41 Leavitt, P. R. 26, 27, 28, 39, 44 Mackay, R. 40 Melles, S. J. 30 N Leduc, M. 36 Melton, S. 34 Leech, D. M. 38 MacKenzie, J. E. 44 Nagorski, S. 43 MacLennan, M. M. 29 Melton, S. M. 34 Nahas, R. 40 Lee, J. 34 Menel, I. A. 30 Lee, K. 42 MacNeill, K. L. 38 Natali, S. 25 Maerz, J. C. 39 Mette, E. M. 24 Ndimele, C. C. 42 Lee, P. 30 Meziti, A. 36 Lee, Y. P. 44 Maki, R. P. 37 Ndimele, P. E. 42 Mallin, M. A. 38 Michaud, A. B. 40 Needoba, J. A. 33 Lee, Z. 38 Milani, A. 38 Legendre, P. 30 Manary, T. 37 Neilson, B. T. 25 Mandal, S. 29 Miller, B. J. 41 Neitzey, M. 40 Lehman, P. W. 24 Miller, C. A. 42 Lehtoranta, J. 43 Manley, P. L. 37 Nelson, D. 39 Manley, T. O. 37 Miller, M. 44 Nelson, N. G. 28 Leiva, C. 38 Miller, R. 24, 37 Lenaker, P. 24 Manning, D. W. 39 Nelson, S. J. 26 Mann, P. J. 42 Miller, R. J. 24 Nelson, W. C. 32 Lesmeister, S. 24 Mills, J. L. 34, 35, 36 Leung, M. Y. 26 Maranger, R. 40 Neto, J. B. 41 Marcarelli, A. M. 32, 34 Minor, E. C. 37 Neveu, M. 38 Levin, L. A. 39 Mitchell, D. 28 Li, D. 33 Marcé, R. 25, 29, 40 Newell, S. E. 39, 40, 43 Marin, F. D. 44 Mix, K. 35 Niblock, H. 24, 44 Li, F. 31 Mizel, M. 24 Light, T. 34 Marino, J. 34 Niblock, H. A. 44 Marino, R. 32 Mladenov, N. 26 Nicholas Skaff, N. 42 Light, T. M. 34 Moen, S. 29 Li, L. 36 Mark, M. J. 43 Niederdorfer, R. T. 28 Martin, B. 32 Mohammed, I. 39 Nielsen, S. L. 30 Lilley, M. K. 38 Mohl, J. 26 Lima, R. F. 42 Martinez, E. 42 Nietch, C. T. 41 Martinez, G. 34 Molot, L. A. 43 Nilsson, M. B. 41 Li, M. F. 40 Monchy, S. 36 Lindsay, M. 32 Massana, R. 27 Niu, R. 30 Maszczyk, P. 43 Monroy, C. R. 32 Nizzoli, D. 43 Lin, W. 33 Montoya, E. 42 Lipson, D. 26 Mateo, M. A. 38 Noe, G. B. 27 Mattern, D. 26 Montoya, J. 37 Nojavan A., F. 27 Li, S. 41 Mooney, R. J. 32 Litchman, E. 30, 36 Matthijs, H. C. 24 Normandeau, A. 35 Mattsson, T. 43 Moore, M. V. 38 Noronha, J. P. 40 Little, J. C. 39 Morán, X. A. 27, 28 Liu, S. 39 Mausbach, W. E. 38 Northington, R. M. 38 Mayfield, S. P. 29 Moraska Lafrancois, B. 37 North, R. L. 32, 36 Liu, Z. 39, 40, 43 Moreno-Letelier, A. 37 Li, W. 33 May, L. 33 Novaczyk, Z. B. 41 Maynard, M. 45 Morling, K. 29 Nowlin, W. H. 42 Li, X. 34 Morris, E. L. 44

49 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

Nozais, C. 25 Pereira, R. 37 Razavi, N. R. 39, 42 Schladow, S. G. 24 Nzekwe, O. 35 Pérez-Alegria, L. 34 Read, J. S. 36 Schmid, M. 43 Pérez-Fuentetaja, A. 32 Reale, J. K. 26, 44 Schmiedeskamp, M. 25 O Perez-Reyes, O. 38 Reid, A. H. 24 Schonberg, S. V. 40 Obrador, B. 25, 29 Pernica, P. 36 Reimer, M. N. 41 Schrader, M. 36 Obrecht, D. 26 Pernice, M. C. 27 Reimer, P. J. 37 Schreiber, M. E. 39 O'Donnell, K. 37 Per Persson, P. 44 Rengefors, K. 30 Schroth, A. W. 36, 43 Ohkouchi, N. 37 Perrin, C. J. 26 Renwick, W. 39, 44 Schubauer-Berigan, J. P. 31 Okie, J. 38 Persson, A. 43 Renwick, W. H. 44 Schulz, K. L. 38 Okuda, Y. 33 Perzan, Z. M. 37 Resch, C. T. 27, 32 Schwartz, B. F. 42 Ólafsson, J. S. 39 Peter, H. M. 28 Reuman, D. C. 38 Scott, C. 30 Oldani, K. M. 26 Peterson, C. M. 29 Rhodes, B. 37 Scott, C. E. 30 Oleksy, I. 34 Peterson, E. 26 Richardson, D. 30, 45 Scott, D. C. 26 Oleksy, I. A. 34 Peterson, T. D. 33 Richardson, D. C. 45 Scott, J. T. 25, 33, 39 Oliver, A. A. 40 Pfrender, M. E. 30 Richardson, T. L. 33 Scott, K. A. 26, 27 Oliver, J. L. 29 Pham, S. V. 28 Richlen, M. 33 Scott, M. L. 25 Oliver, S. K. 30, 42 Phillips, L. 37 Rich, M. W. 25 Scott, W. C. 42 Olmedo, G. 37 Phlips, E. J. 28, 32 Riessen, H. P. 24 Scroth, A. W. 39 O'Malley, B. P. 27, 36 Pierson, D. 45 Rivas, J. A. 26 Seagle, D. E. 41 Omana Smith, E. 41 Pilcher, D. J. 44 Robertson, C. Y. 40 Sebestyen, S. D. 25, 33 Oosterwoud, M. R. 29 Pilesjö, P. 43 Robuck, A. R. 38 Seckar, D. 36 Opitz, M. 29 Pilla, R. 24, 30 Rock, A. M. 38 Seekell, D. A. 42 Öquist, M. G. 41 Pilla, R. M. 24 Rodgers, M. 39 Seger, M. 30 O'Reilly, C. M. 36, 45 Pinto, M. I. 40 Roger, J. 30 Segura, A. M. 27 Orihel, D. 36 Pittman, J. 34 Rogers, K. 37 Sejr, M. K. 42 Ortiz, J. E. 34 Plascencia, E. 34 Rohlf, M. L. 41 Selbie, D. T. 26 Osborne, C. 32 Plaza, D. O. 32 Rose, K. C. 25, 39, 45 Selle, B. 29 Ostaszewska, K. 24 Podgorski, D. C. 40 Rosemond, A. D. 39 Senegal, T. J. 41 Otten, T. 24 Poisot, T. 30 Rosenberg, B. 43 Sereda, J. 36 Overholt, E. P. 24 Poole, G. C. 27 Rosen, B. H. 24 Serrano, O. 38 Ozersky, T. 32, 36 Porcal, P. 32 Rosi-Marshall, E. 38 Servais, S. 31 Poret-Peterson, A. 38 Ross, A. J. 42 Seybold, E. C. 39 P Posch, M. 26 Rothharpt, P. 39 Sferra, C. S. 27 Poska, A. 29 Rothschild, H. T. 33 Shala, N. 36 Pace, M. L. 24, 28, 44 Powers, S. M. 36, 41 Roux, S. 36 Shapov, K. 36 Paerl, H. W. 24, 39, 40, 43 Prairie, Y. T. 25, 29, 40, 41 Rowland, J. C. 25 Sharma, S. 36 Paffenhofer, G. A. 38 Praise, S. 40 Roy Chowdhury, P. 36 Shaver, G. R. 41 Palladino, D. 24, 37 Prater, C. 44 Rozon, R. 24 Shaw, D. M. 37 Pang-Ning Tan, P. 42 Preston, D. 25 Ruberg, S. A. 24, 37 Shelef, E. 25 Panneer Selvam, B. 33 Priscu, J. C. 40 Runkel, R. L. 29 Sherk, T. E. 34 Pantel, J. H. 38 Prowse, T. D. 33 Rusak, J. A. 45 Sherman, B. 41 Papacek, J. R. 32 Purcell, H. 24, 37 Ryder, E. 45 Shibazaki, A. 33 Paquette, C. 33 Purcell, H. L. 24 Shi, D. 33 Parker, S. 30 S Shocket, M. S. 38 Park, G. 30 Q Sabater, S. 25 Shurin, J. B. 29 Parmenter, R. R. 44 Sickman, J. O. 29 Passow, U. 37 Qian, S. S. 27 Sadro, S. 29 Qin, B. 24, 28, 32, 39, 43 Sanborn, P. 40 Siefert, J. 38 Paterson, M. J. 26 Sierszen, M. E. 30 Patoine, A. 39 Qin, B. Q. 43 Sandrini, G. 24 Quesada, A. 24 Santos, M. A. 35 Silsbe, G. M. 36 Patterson, W. 37 Silva-Junior, E. F. 42 Paul, M. J. 29 Sarah Collins, S. M. 42 R Sarnelle, O. 24, 32, 43 Sime-Ngando, T. 36 Payn, R. A. 27 Simon David Herzog, S. D. 44 Peacor, S. D. 32 Rachic, S. 36 Saros, J. E. 25, 38 Sasaki, M. C. 37 Simpson, G. L. 26, 27, 28, 39 Pearce, P. 42 Rafalski, A. V. 32 Singer, G. A. 29 Penczykowski, R. M. 38 Rahel, F. J. 29 Savidge, W. B. 40 Schade, J. 25 Singer, J. 37 Pennings, S. C. 31 Räike, A. 43 Skaff, N. 30 Pepe-Ranney, C. 37 Ramcharitar, B. 36 Scharold, J. V. 32 Scheef, L. P. 44 Skidmore, M. 40 Pepper, R. 24 Ransohoff, R. 40 Sklar, F. 31 Perämäki, S. 29 Rasmussen, J. 29 Schelker, J. 29 Schindler, D. E. 37 Slemmons, K. E. 25 Pereira, J. P. 35 Raub, S. C. 28 Smith, B. 29, 41

50 PROGRAM BOOK ASLO

Smith, B. R. 41 Summers, B. M. 35, 44 U Watanabe, K. 40 Smith, L. K. 29 Sunagawa, S. 36 Watanabe, T. 40 Smith, V. H. 28, 39 Sutey, P. 43 Ulseth, A. 29, 38 Waterfield, H. A. 28 Smits, A. P. 37 Sutfin, N. A. 25, 28 Ulseth, A. J. 29 Waters, M. N. 24 Smol, J. P. 28 Suzanne, C. L. 33 Ulvi, T. 43 Watson, S. 40, 44 Smyth, R. 45 Swaney, D. P. 32 Uppgaard, A. 24 Watson, S. B. 44 Snyder, R. 32 Symons, C. 29, 34 Urban, D. L. 42 Wayne, G. S. 43 Snyder, R. J. 32 Symons, C. C. 29 Urmy, S. S. 24 Weathers, K. C. 44 Soares, A. 33 Szyjka, S. J. 29 Urrutia Cordero, P. 24 Weber, A. M. 37 Sokol, E. 25 Webster, D. R. 24 Solomon, C. 25, 27, 30, 42 T V Webster, K. 30, 42 Solomon, C. T. 25, 27, 42 Tamburri, M. 37 Vachon, D. 25 Webster, K. E. 42 Sommer, T. 36 Tanentzap, A. J. 45 Vadeboncoeur, Y. 32 Wehrli, B. 43 Song, B. 43 Tang, X. 40 Vähätalo, A. V. 29 Weider, L. J. 36 Sontag, G. 40 Tank, S. E. 40 Vale, C. 40 Weir, T. 26 Soranno, P. A. 30, 42 Tan, P. N. 30 Vance, J. 30 Weissburg, M. J. 24 Sotomayor, D. 34 Taranu, Z. E. 30, 35 Vanderploeg, H. A. 43 Wells, B. 28 Soulsby, D. 40 Taskinen, A. 43 Van Goethem, R. R. 32 Welter, J. R. 39 Souza, V. 28, 37, 38 Taub, F. B. 30, 33 Van Horn, D. 26, 44 Welti, N. 38 Sowles, J. P. 44 Tayasu, I. 37 Van Horn, D. J. 26, 44 Werne, J. P. 37 Spanbauer, T. L. 27 Teh, S. J. 24 Vanni, M. J. 38, 39, 44 Westbrook, C. 36 Spawn, S. A. 25 Tenorio, S. Y. 32 Vaqué, D. 27 West, W. E. 41 Spence Cheruvelil, K. 30 Terao, K. 44 Vaquè, D. 36 Westwood, N. E. 42 Spencer, R. G. 40, 42 Tfaily, M. 32 Veith, T. 37 Weyhenmeyer, G. 43 Sponberg, A. J. 29 Thatje, S. 24 Venkiteswaran, J. 36 Whenu, O. O. 42 Springborn, M. R. 41 The TARA Ocean Consortium, 36 Verhamme, E. 39 Whiteaker, T. L. 40 Sprules, W. G. 24 Thiede, G. 25 Vermilyea, A. 43 White, D. 45 Stanley, E. H. 24, 25, 30, 33, 35, Thomas, R. 25 Verspagen, J. 24 White, J. D. 24 36, 37, 42 Thomas, S. 28, 38, 42 Verspagen, J. M. 24 Whitesides, H. J. 41 Stauffer, B. A. 37 Thomas, S. A. 38, 42 Vicente Lopes, V. L. 29 Whyard, S. 33 Stauffer, S. 25 Thompson, C. 32 Vick-Majors, T. J. 40 Wichorowski, M. 24 Steele, R. 30 Thompson, V. F. 32 Viegas, M. 28 Wickland, K. P. 28 Steffen, M. M. 33, 40 Thom, T. A. 41 Villareal, T. A. 33 Wiegand, M. 32, 33 Stegen, J. C. 27, 32 Thoran, A. 38 Vinebrooke, R. D. 29 Wiegand, M. D. 32 Steger, L. 38 Thorp, J. H. 32, 38 Vinson, M. R. 30 Wiik, E. 28 Stelzer, E. A. 24 Thottathil, S. D. 41 Vizza, C. 40 Wilhelm, S. 40 Stets, E. G. 28 Thyrring, J. 42 Vlah, M. J. 29 Wilhelm, S. W. 40 Stewart, T. E. 38 Tiegs, S. D. 40 Vogt, R. J. 28, 39, 44 Wilkins, M. J. 32 St-Gelais, N. F. 27 Tietjen, T. E. 45 Volke, M. A. 25 Wilkinson, G. M. 28, 44 Stockwell, J. 27, 33, 34, 36 Tiirola, M. 29 von Fischer, J. C. 25 Williams, M. W. 26 Stockwell, J. D. 27, 33, 34, 36 Tittel, J. 29 Vonk, J. A. 41 Williamson, C. 24, 25, 30, 32 Stomp, M. 24, 44 Todgham, A. E. 36 von Schiller, D. 25 Williamson, C. E. 24, 25, 32 Stone, M. C. 26 Tominaga, K. 36 Voss, B. M. 28 Williamson, F. A. 32 Stow, C. A. 30, 42 Tomlinson, M. S. 44 Vuorio, K. 29 Williamson, T. J. 39 St-Pierre, J. D. 38 Torchin, M. E. 38 Wilson, B. J. 31 Strauss, A. T. 38 Townsend-Small, A. 40 W Wilson, C. 33 Strecker, A. 27, 29 Wincker, P. 36 Trammell, M. 41 Wagner, T. 30, 42 Strecker, A. L. 29 Windham-Myers, L. 41 Tran, C. H. 30, 33 Walker, D. B. 45 Strickler, J. R. 24 Winegardner, A. 30 Tranvik, L. J. 25, 40, 42 Wallace, R. L. 26, 33 Striebel, M. 38 Winslow, L. 25, 45 Trick, C. G. 43 Wallin, M. B. 41 Striegl, R. G. 28, 37 Winslow, L. A. 25 Tromboni, F. 42 Walsh, E. J. 26, 33, 34 Strock, K. E. 32, 34, 39 Winters, L. 25 Trottier, G. 25 Walsh, J. B. 29 Strohm, D. 25 Wissel, B. 26, 27, 28, 29, 39 Troxler, T. 31 Walters, A. W. 29 Strope, E. K. 40 Wohl, E. E. 28 Trudnowska, E. 24, 44 Wambach, E. J. 38 Stuart, D. 24, 37 Wojewodzic, M. 36 True, A. C. 24 Wang, z. d. 39 Stuart, D. G. 24 Wojewodzic, M. W. 36 Turgeon, K. 25 Ward, C. P. 25 Stubbins, A. 40 Wolfe, J. 26, 27 Turnbull, S. 39 Ward, D. 41 Sucec, R. 41 Wolfe, J. D. 27 Turner, M. G. 39 Warner, K. A. 25 Sullivan, M. B. 36 Woodland, R. 40 Tyler Wagner, T. 42 Warren, J. D. 24 Summers, B. 35, 44 Woo, K. H. 36

51 ASLO 2016 SUMMER MEETING

Wright, J. P. 27 Y Yousef, F. 37 Zhang, Y. 43 Wright, T. L. 33 Yuan, S. 30 Zhao, H. 44 Wrona, F. J. 33 Yackulic, C. B. 41 Yu, L. 28 Zhao, J. 36 Wuerz, M. 33 Yang, L. Y. 43 Yule, D. L. 30 Zhao, X. 27, 28 Wu, K. 34 Yang, S. A. 42 Zhou, L. J. 44 Wurtsbaugh, W. A. 43 Yan, J. 30 Z Zhou, X. 36 Yan, N. D. 26 Zandona, E. 42 Zhu, G. 24, 28, 39, 43 X Yan, X. 43 Zhu, L. 32 Yen, J. 24 Zandoná, E. 42 Xenopoulos, M. A. 42, 44 Zarnoch, C. B. 43 Zhu, M. 24, 28, 43 Yohn, C. B. 29 Zia, A. 39 Xiao, X. 28 Yoshimura, C. 44 Zhai, L. 31 Xu, H. 24, 28, 39, 43 Zhang, F. 33 Ziegler, S. E. 42 Young, J. 41, 42 Zigah, P. K. 37 XU, H. 43 Young, J. L. 41 Zhang, H. 24 Xu, Y. 36 Zhang, L. 43 Zwart, J. A. 25, 27, 30, 40, 42

52 Santa Fe Hotel Map FUTURE ASLO MEETINGS 2017 ASLO AQUATIC SCIENCES MEETING February 26 - March 3, 2017 Hawaii Convention Center Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

2018 OCEAN SCIENCES MEETING A joint meeting with ASLO, AGU, and TOS February 11-16, 2018 Oregon Convention Center Portland, Oregon, USA

2018 ASLO SUMMER MEETING June 10 -15, 2018 Victoria Convention Center Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

2019 ASLO AQUATIC SCIENCES MEETING February 24 - March 1, 2019 Puerto Rico Convention Center San Juan, Puerto Rico, USA

2020 ASLO SUMMER MEETING June 7 - 12, 2020 Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center Madison, Wisconsin, USA

For more information on the 2016 ASLO Summer Meeting, address all correspondence and questions regarding registration, conference logistics, and hotel accommodations to:

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