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Progress Since Taiwan 2 – 4 October 2006

Progress Since Taiwan 2 – 4 October 2006. GLEON 4 2 – 5 March 2007 Lammi Biological Station. Acknowledgements. Lammi Biological Station Häme Development Centre City of Hämeenlinna Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation National Science Foundation “Autoscaling” Award and Nordic Supplement

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Progress Since Taiwan 2 – 4 October 2006

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  1. Progress Since Taiwan2 – 4 October 2006 GLEON 4 2 – 5 March 2007 Lammi Biological Station

  2. Acknowledgements • Lammi Biological Station • Häme Development Centre • City of Hämeenlinna • Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation • National Science Foundation • “Autoscaling” Award and Nordic Supplement • RCN Award • North Temperate Lakes LTER project • PRAGMA and its Members for launching this activity, especially NCHC Lammi Biological Station Häme Development Centre and also (for the welcome drinks) from the City of Hämeenlinna Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation National Science Foundation Nordic Supplement to the "Autoscaling" award "Autoscaling" Award PRAGMA and its Members for launching this activity, especially NCHC

  3. Key Progress - Summary • Proposals: • Research Coordination Network (RCN) proposal funded by NSF • PRIME proposal submitted to NSF (funding for students to work on GLEON) • GLEON Response to NEON RFI: Submitted • Meetings: • Attended AGU (Fountain, Weathers) • Planned SIL Special Session (Kratz others) • Science • Diel Oxygen • Autoscaling: • Parallel system partial deployed • Developments in streaming data • Metadata and controlled vocabulary • Lake Sunapee: • Steps to deploy technology • GLEON Web Site • Progress on Lake Directory • New Design (yet to be implemented) • Other

  4. What is the “Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network?” A grassroots network of People: lake scientists, engineers, information technology experts Institutions: universities, national laboratories, agencies Programs: PRAGMA, AS-Forest Biogeochemistry,US-LTER, TERN, KING, EcoGrid, etc. Instruments Data Linked by a common purpose and cyberinfrastructure With a goal of understanding lake dynamics at local, regional, continental, and global scales

  5. Driving Rationale for GLEON Predict lake ecosystem responses to natural and anthropogenic mediated events • Build an international multi-disciplinary community of researchers to advance lake science through development of a global lake ecological observatory network (GLEON) • Develop new scientific insightsand paradigms through a global network of sensored lakes • Better integrate aquatic science with information technology and sensor development. Source: D. Hamilton

  6. Agreement on specific lake analysis Agreement on data collection from coral reef Demonstrations of technologies Agreement of future meetings Continued outreach Second GLEON and CREON Workshop: Townsville AU 28 – 29 March 2006

  7. 3rd GLEON and CREON Joint Workshop3-4 October 2006 Hsinchu • Science: • Qualitative explanation of diel oxygen dynamics • Understanding biological and physical influences on metabolism by modeling • Data Infrastructure: • Metadata about lakes; controlled vocabulary • Students: • Find funding • Next Meeting: GLEON • Finland, March 2-5 2007

  8. 15 People, groups in GLEON GLEON Existing sites = yellow New sites (RCN) = red • Research Coordination Network(NSF Award; PI P Hanson): • Includes a series of key science questions • Architectural design of coordinated global sensor network • Broaden involvement at all levels; new partners, outreach • and education

  9. Steering Committee Paul Hanson, U WI, USA Peter Arzberger, UCSD, USA Barbara Benson, U WI, USA David Hamilton U W, NZ Tim Kratz, U WI, NZ Fang-Pang Lin, NCHC, Taiwan Collaborators Lauri Arvola, Lammi, Finland Ken Chiu, SUNY-B, USA Chris Dallimore, WRC, AU Deborah Estrin, UCLA, USA Tony Fountain, UCSD, USA Evelyn Gaiser, FIU, FL Bomchul Kim, KangwonNU, KR Stephen Mabely, CEH, UK Sally MacIntyre, UCSB, USA Ami Nishri, Kinneret, Israel Boqing Qin, NIGLAS, China Keith Somers, Dorest, Canada Kathleen Weather, IES, USA Chin Wu, U WI, USA Steering Committee Carol Brewer, U Montana, USA Jon Cole, IES, USA Collaborators Chaitan Baru, UCSD, USA Jun-Hong Cui, U Conn, USA David da Motta-Marques, U Fed. Rio Grande do Sol, Brazil Catherine O’Reilly, Bard Col. USA Nathaniel Ostrom, MSU, USA Thorsten Bleckner, Uppsala, Sweden Yves Prairie, U Quebec a Montreal, Canada Fabio Roland, Juiz de Flora, Brazil Thomas Torgersen, U Conn, USA Yvonne Vadeboncoeur, Wright SU, USA Shengli Zhou, U Conn RCN Initial Participants RCN Expected to Evolve and Grow Community. NSF Review thought strength of proposal was the existing GLEON framework RCN Text at gleon.org

  10. US GLEON Team Response to NEON Request for Information • How do changes in climate, land-use, and invasive species alter lake metabolism and consequently ecosystem services through biogeochemical, biodiversity, and hydroecological responses? • Climate change alters lake metabolism and phenology by altering dissolved organic matter (DOM) loading, thermal structure, and extent of anoxia. • Changes in land use alter lake metabolism by changing nutrient, contaminant, sediment, and DOM loading. • Invasive species alter lake metabolism by changing plankton community structure and biomass and hence water transparency. available on gleon.org

  11. Lead Scientists Tim Kratz, U WI Key Collaborating Scientists P. Arzberger, UCSD B. Benson, U WI K. Chiu, SUNY – B T. Fountain, SDSC E. Gaiser, FIU P. Hanson, U WI S. MacIntyre, UCSB K. Weathers, IES Lead Scientists Craig Williamson, Miami U of Ohio Key Collaborating Scientists J. Cole, IES S. Hamilton, Mich SU G. Kling, U Mich J. Melack, UCSB N. Ostrom, Mich SU T. Torgersen, U Conn W. Wurtsbaugh, Utah SU US GLEON NEON RFI Response Team Submitted on 5 January 2007 Under review

  12. Nordic Supplement Update • Funding for Meeting and Students • Make linkages between • US and Nordic Countries • Limnology and IT • Sensor for Microbes: Autonomous Microbial Genosensors (AMG) • Key People • Trina McMahon • Thorsten Bleckner • Stefan Bertilsson • Eva Lindstrom • David Fries

  13. The Current Model Portable Lake Metabolism Buoy North Temperate Lakes LTER Wisconsin • Instrumented Platforms • make high frequency observations of key variables • send data to web-accessible database in near real time

  14. Scalable instrumentation and cyberfrastructure is critical We can do this scale now http://lakemetabolism.org

  15. Problematic, but possible with today’s cyberinfrastructure

  16. Not currently possible Scale needed to answer regional/continental questions

  17. Addressing the Scaling ChallengeNSF NEON Award • Collaborative Research: Automating Scaling and Data Processing in a Network of Sensors: Towards a Global Network for Lake Metabolism Research and Education • UCSD, UWI, IU, SUNY-BU • Automate • Instrument management • QA/QC and Event Detection • Modeling and analysis • Streaming Data Architecture • Web Services, workflows, portals • Streaming data middleware • Common software roll • Broaden Involvement of Students

  18. Planning the cyberinfrastructure Tony Fountain Sameer Tilak Ken Chiu et al.

  19. Lake SunapeeModel for Bringing Site into GLEON • Workshop Held 13 November 2006 • A Workshop to Explore Buoy Data as a Tool to Link Outreach, Education and Research • Organized by K Weathers and Lake Sunapee Association • Attended by B Benson • Working with students to transfer some technology from NSF “Autoscaling” Project • K Chiu involved on aspects of data streaming

  20. Special Session organized by GLEON : • The use of high-frequency data from sensor networks in limnology • Known Submissions • The Global Lakes Ecological Observatory Network: merging limnology and information technology to understand lake dynamics at multiple scales (T. Kratz et al) • The use of lake sensor data in student education (Pouwels, Hamilton, et al) • Typhoon Disturbances on the Ecosystems Metabolisms of a Subtropical Alpine Lake (D (JW) Tsai et al) • The mixing between hypolimnetic and epilimnetic water as reflected by continuous monitoring of DO & pH in a lake (A Nishri) • Near real-time assessment of net autotrophy/heterotrophy in a tropical constructed wetland (B. Sherman) • Analysis of anomalies in diel patterns of surface dissolved oxygen concentration in lakes worldwide (L. Choi et al.) • The NSF WATERS program (P. Brezonik) • Others? • GLEON Meeting on Saturday 12 August • Site TBD • GLEON informal session during week

  21. GLEON Lake Metadata Website • Goal for this meeting: • Controlled Vocabulary • Sensor Metadata Dave Balsiger Barbara Benson John Byrne

  22. Web Site Design

  23. Agenda Saturday • 0845 – 0900 Welcome and Introduction to Lammi Field Station: L Arvola • 0900 – 0945 Overview of Progress since GLEON 3 • Highlights of GLEON-wide activities: Tim Kratz, Wisconsin, USA and David Hamilton, New Zealand [15 minutes] • GLEON Site updates (latest news on deployments, data availability, data analysis, student activities, etc) • 0945 – 1100 Introduction of Researchers new to GLEON, and Students • New participants • Students: Research they are doing. • 1100 – 1130 Break • 1130 – 1230 Science: • Diel Oxygen, Review of Analysis, Next Steps: Tim Kratz, Laurence Choi, Others • 1230 – 1400 Lunch • 1400 – 1500 Plenary Talks: • European perspective: Glen George • Nordic perspective: Lars Tranvik • North America perspective: Craig Williamson • Asian perspective: Fang-Pang Lin • 1500 -1600 Modeling • Discussion of Next Steps: David Hamilton, Paul Hanson, Others • 1600 – 1630 Break • 1630 – 1730 Dissemination • SIL and other venues • Web site update (Metadata), Issues • Present plans for “fund raising” • 1730 – 1830 Presentations: Focus on Finnish Lakes • 1830 – 2100 Sauna • Dinner

  24. Agenda Sunday 4 March • 0800 – 0845 Breakfast • 0845 – 0930 Controlled Vocabulary/Metadata: Barbara Benson • 0930 – 1030 Report on progress on IT: Sameer Tilak and Tony Fountain, • 1030 – 1100 Break • 1100 – 1230 The Steps for people getting started with information management: Lake Sunapee as an Example: Kathie Weathers, Ken Chiu, Barbara Benson • 1230 – 1400 Lunch • 1400 – 1530 Other Topics • Other Science Activities • Funding • Student Exchanges • Education dialog • 1530 – 1630 Planning for GLEON X (x>4): • SIL and after SIL • Relation with RCN • Governance Issues • 1715 – 1800 Bus transportation to Hämeenlinna • 1800 – 2100 Dinner in the Castle of Hämeenlinna • 2100 Free Sauna Session Häme Castle: source Terho Aalto

  25. Agenda Monday 5 March • 0800 – 0900 Breakfast • 0900 – 1200 Field trip (optional) to Finnish GLEON site and an old growth Boreal Forest • 1200 – 1300 Lunch • Option A • 1300 Departure for Helsinki • 1500 Arrival at the Helsinki Airport • Option B • 1300 – 1700 Discuss more fully issues of • Relationship between GLEON, RCN, NEON • Governance Structures • Funding

  26. Goals of Meeting • Science -- ongoing and new GLEON activities • Cyberinfrastructure • Metadata • Streaming data • Community • New people, institutions • Governance • Next meetings

  27. Season´s Greetings Lake Pääjärvi Dec 18,2006 Source: L Arvola

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