SICCME_2013 - PICES WG27 North Pacific Climate Variability

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Transcript SICCME_2013 - PICES WG27 North Pacific Climate Variability

ICES/PICES Strategic Initiative/Section
on Climate Change effects on Marine
Ecosystems (SICCME/S-CCME)
S-CCME Meeting
PICES Annual Meeting
October 13, 2013
Co-chairs:
Anne Hollowed, Suam Kim (PICES),
Manuel Barange, Brian MacKenzie (ICES)
1
Agenda – SICCME Open Session
(2013 Annual Meeting)
•Welcome, introductions, opening remarks
•Changes to, adoption of, agenda and appointment of rapporteur
•Review of S-CCME and what we want to achieve
•Recent activities
1.Yeosu 2012 – Publication - ICES JMS Special Issue 70(5) (Kim)
2.2013 PICES/ICES Intersessional workshop (King)
3.S-CCME contributions to IPCC AR5 – (Kim)
4.2013 ICES Theme Session B, Reykjavik, Iceland (Cheung)
5.2013 ICES Theme Session M, Reykjavik, Iceland (Di Lorenzo)
6.2013 PICES W2, Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada (Di Lorenzo)
•Forthcoming S-CCME activities
*Brazil 2015 3rd International Symposium on Effects of Climate
Change on the World’s Oceans (King)
* 2014 FUTURE OSM Theme session and Workshops
(ICES and PICES) (Kim)
* 2014 Theme session proposals (ICES and PICES) (Kim)
2
Agenda – SICCME Open Session
(2013 Annual Meeting)
•Forward Planning
1. Progress report relative to Implementation Plan (King)
2. S-CCME related research programs – ICES update (King)
3. BEST-BSIERP (Bering Sea Ecosystem Study, Jeff Napp)
4. GOA-IERP (Gulf of Alaska Study, Jeff Napp)
5. IMBER (Franz Mueter)
6. ESSAS meeting January 2013
7. 6th China-Japan-Korea IMBER Symposium on Ocean Ecosystem
Dynamics and Integrated
8. Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Research (3-4 October 2013,
Tokyo, Japan)
9.IMBER Open Science Meeting (23-27 June 2014, Bergen, Norway)
Other New Programs
3
SICCME Vision
ICES and PICES will become the leading intl. organisation
providing science and advice related to the effects of climate
change and variability on marine resources and ecosystems.
4
SICCME and P/ICES Working Groups
SICCME builds on work done in various WG and SG
of ICES and PICES, and can stimulate work done in these
Groups.
e. g., WGs on
-oceanic hydrography
-integrated physical-biological modelling
-integrated ecosystem assessments
-fish stock assessments and forecasts
-species – specific groups (fish, zooplankton, benthos,…)
-etc.
5
Goals
1. Define, coordinate and integrate the research activities needed to
understand, assess and project climate change impacts on marine
ecosystems with sufficient spatial and temporal resolution to plan
strategies for sustaining the delivery of ecosystem goods and
services, and when possible predictions should include quantifying
estimations of uncertainty.
2. To build global ocean prediction frameworks, through international
collaborations and research, building on ICES and PICES monitoring
programs.
3. Define and quantify the vulnerability of marine ecosystems to
climate change, including the cumulative impacts and synergetic
effects of climate and marine resource use.
6
Objectives
 1. Advancing the scientific capacity on the three main challenges identified
above by engaging the PICES and ICES scientific community in focused
workshops, theme/topic sessions and symposia that target key uncertainties
and technical barriers that impact the predictive skill of ocean models used
to project the impacts of climate change.
 2. Effectively communicating this capacity to clients, Member Countries,
stakeholders and the broader scientific community.
 3. Facilitating an international effort to design data collection networks at the
spatial and temporal scales needed to monitor, assess and project climate
change impacts on marine ecosystems.
 4. Facilitating international collaboration to design and implement
comparative analysis of marine ecosystem responses to climate change
through modelling and coordinated process studies.
7
SICCME Activities
8
SICCME Contributions to Intl. Climate
Impact Assessments
UN Millennium
Climate Report
Human
Dimensions
IPCC
IPCC
IPCC
Earth System
Modeling &
Analysis
IPCC
Earth System
Modeling &
Analysis
Synthesis &
Reporting
Synthesis &
Reporting
Workshop
2012
2013
ICES JMS
68(6)
2015
2016
ICES JMS 70(5)
2ndECCWO
Yeosu
SICCME
Synthesis &
Comparative
Research
2014
Earth
Ecosystems
PICES WK1
SICCME
Marine
Ecosystem
Modeling &
Analysis
St. Petersburg
Spatial WKSHP
Synthesis Paper.
ICES JMS 70(5)
2017
Symposium
volume
3rd ECCWO
Brazil
SICCME
Model Update
& Revision
2018
Symposium
SICCME
Synthesis &
Comparative
Research
2019
2021
Northern
Hemisphere
Marine
Ecosystems
SICCME
Marine
Ecosystem
Modeling &
Analysis
Regional
Synthesis
Training
Simulation
Tools and Models
Ocean Monitoring Program
9
Time Plan of Activities 2012-2020
2012
2014
Phase 1
2016
Phase 2
2018
2020
Phase 3
10
Time Plan of Activities
Synthesis of existing
knowledge
Advancing science &
methodology
Comm. & integration
of science via intl. symp.
Training progr. for
capacity building &
knowledge sharing
2012
2014
Phase 1
2016
Phase 2
2018
2020
Phase 3
11
Agenda Item 2:
Report on Recent SICCME Activities
2.1 WKSICCME-Spatial workshop, St. Petersburg, Russia,
May 23-25, 2013. - Jackie
2.2 SICCME contributions to IPCC AR5 – Suam
2.3 ICES ASC Theme Sessions 2013 - Suam
12
What Has SICCME Done in 2013?
Activity
Goal
Objective
SICCME Joint synthesis manuscript (Projected impacts of climate change on
marine fish and fisheries; Hollowed et al. 2013; ICES JMS 70: 1023-30)
1
3,4
Contributions to IPCC reporting
1,2
2
Study groups, workshops, symposia:
ICES WG IPEM, Paris, Feb. 25 – Mar. 1, 2013.
1,2
1,2
WK-SICCME-spatial, St. Petersburg, Russia, May 2013
1,2,3
1,2,3,4
B. Responses of living marine resources to climate change and variability:
learning from the past and projecting the future (co-sponsored by PICES).
Convenors William W. L. Cheung, Canada, PICES, Myron A. Peck, Germany,
Vincent Saba, USA
1,2
1
D. Physico–chemical aspects of ocean acidification in the ICES area. Convenors:
David J. Hydes, UK; Jon Olafsson, Iceland; Alberto Vieria Borges, Belgium
1,2,3
1,3
L. Hydrographic processes, circulation, and water mass formation in the polar
and subpolar basins. Convenors: Stephen Dye, UK, Hedinn Valdimarsson,
Iceland, Igor Yashayaev, Canada
-
1,3
M. Identifying mechanisms linking physical climate and ecosystem change:
Observed indices, hypothesized processes, and "data dreams" for the future
(co-sponsored by PICES). Convenors: Emanuele Di Lorenzo, COVE-AP; USA,
PICES; Arthur J. Miller, USA, PICES; Marc Hufnagl, Germany, ICES
1
1,3
N. The pelagic fish complexes in the North Atlantic Ocean: Distribution,
productivity, and inter-specific competition during changing climate.
Convenors: Asta Gudmundsdottir, Iceland; David Miller, the Netherlands; Geir
Huse, Norway
1
1,3,4
PICES ASC Workshop W1. Comparison of size-based and species based
ecosystem models. Co-sponsored by ICES. Co-Convenors: Jeffrey Polovina
(USA), Anne Hollowed (USA), Shin-ichi Ito (Japan) , Myron Peck (Germany)
1
1,4
SICCME-led community publications, invited talks, leadership roles, etc.
2013 Theme and topic sessions
13
What Has SICCME Done in 2013?
PICES ASC Workshop W2: Identifying mechanisms linking physical climate and
ecosystem change: Observed indices, hypothesized processes, and "data
dreams" for the future. Co-sponsored by ICES. Co-Convenors: Jack Barth (USA),
Emanuele Di Lorenzo (USA), Marc Hufnagl (Germany), Jacquelynne King
(Canada), Arthur Miller (USA), Shoshiro Minobe (Japan), Ryan Rykaczewski
(USA) , Kazuaki Tadokoro (Japan)
1
1,3
ICES WG IPEM, Netherlands, March, 2014.
1,2
1,2
Physical and biological consequences of exchanges between the Atlantic
Subarctic and the Arctic; ICES ASC, Spain, 2014. Conveners: Olafur S.
Astthorsson (Iceland), Ken Drinkwater (Norway), and ??? (Canada).
2
1
Strategies for ecosystem management in a changing climate. PICES FUTURE
Open Science meeting, April 15-18, Hawaii. Co-conveners: Manuel Barange, A.
Hollowed, Suam Kim
1
1
Climate change and ecosystem-based management of living marine resources:
Appraising and Advancing key modelling tools, PICES FUTURE Open Science
meeting, April 15-18, Hawaii. Co-conveners: M. Peck (S-CCME, ICES), A.
Hollowed (S-CCME, PICES), T. Essington (University of Washington)
1,2
1
Recent Assessments of Climate Change Impacts on Marine Ecosystems. PICES
2014 Annual Science Meeting, Korea. Convenors: Anne B. Hollowed (USA), Jake
Rice (Canada), Sukgeun Jung (Korea), Hans Pörtner (Germany)
1,2
1,2,3
Dynamics of pelagic fish in the North Pacific under climate change; PICES 2014
Annual Science Meeting, Korea, 11 or 12 October. Convenors Gerard DiNardo
(ISC) and Suam Kim (PICES)
1,3
1
1,2,3
1,2,3,4
2014 Theme and topic sessions, working groups
2015 and beyond:
Co-planning and -organising 3rd Effects of Climate Change on the World’s
Oceans symposium, Brazil, 2015
-SICCME involved in identification of relevant topics for sessions.
Suggestions to be discussed at SCICOM Sept. 2013 meeting.
14
Workshop on Global Assessment of the Implications of Climate
Change on the Spatial Distribution of Fish and Fisheries
(1)
Hollowed1,
Peck2,
Kim1
Anne
Myron
Suam
May 22nd to 24th 2013, St. Petersburg, Russia
(2)
6 (Interactive) Sessions
1-2 keynotes→Breakout group questions→Plenary Summary
1) Analytical methods for detecting
changes in spatial distribution
2) Skill Assessment and model intercomparison
3) Quantifying uncertainty
4) Design specification for database of
observations of distribution of living
marine resources
5) Risk Assessment
6) Communicating outcomes to inform
decisions regarding management of
living marine resources under
changing climate
11 keynote speakers
18 breakout group leaders
Session 1: Analytical methods for detecting
changes in spatial distribution
William
Cheung: Projecting
climate change effects on the
distribution of global fish stocks
Franz
Mueter:
Quantifying
spatial variability in species
distributions: The roles of density,
temperature and advection
low density
6 Discussion Questions
e.g., “Can observed shifts be
attributed to climate variability and
/ or climate change? Is it possible to
disentangle the effect of fishing… ?”
Session 2: Skill Assessment and model
inter-comparison
Miranda Jones: Applying a
multi-model approach to
predicting
species'
distributions
Shin-ichi Ito: How to model
fish
migration
and
distribution under future
climate?
Discussion Questions
e.g., “Identify regions where more than
one projection modeling approach has
been conducted. How different were
the projections and why?”
Session 3: Quantifying uncertainty
Tatiana Pavlova: Climate
simulations and projections
over Russia and the adjacent
seas: a CMIP5 update
Grégoire Certain: Trying to
measure what we don’t
know: Examples in ecology
and management
6 Discussion Questions
e.g., “How should key uncertainties
be incorporated into projections?”
Session 4: Design specification for
database of observations of distribution of
living marine resources
William Sydeman:
Database considerations
for global meta-analyses
of climatic impacts on
distribution: the NCEASMarClim experience
7 Discussion Questions
e.g., “Do methods exist to allow
integration and synthesis of different
types of data (e.g., trawl, longline
and acoustic)?”
Session 5: Risk Assessment
Cassandra
de
Young:
Vulnerability assessments in
fisheries and aquaculture socioecological systems.
Gretta Pecl: Approaches for
assessing species vulnerability to
climate change in an ocean
warming hotspot
5 Discussion Questions
e.g., “What are the advantages and
disadvantages of qualitative and
quantitative risk assessment? ”
Session 6: Communicating outcomes to
inform decisions regarding management of
living marine resources under changing
climate
John Pinnegar: Answering the “so
what” question: communicating
with policy makers, members of the
public and the media
Motomitsu Takahashi: Approaches
for identifying ecosystem responses
to human activities and natural
stressors
5 Discussion Questions
“What form of information is needed
for decision making? (e.g., decision
tables, risk analyses, verbal models… )”
Outcomes…
• Key recommendations were produced in each of
the six sessions
• Report available at ICES and at PICES websites
• Work dovetails well with this year‘s ASC theme
sessions (B…)
• Manuscripts from this workshop and from theme
session B will compose a special volume in the
ICES Journal of Marine Science
• SICCME moving forward with inter-comparisons
(among models within same system and among
ecosystems across globe)
IPCC Linkages
 Some IPCC chapter authors are active members of the ICES and
PICES community.
 Working Group I
 Chapter 10: Detection and Attribution of Climate Change: Jim Overland (USA)
 Working Group II
 Chapter 5: Coastal Systems and Low Lying Areas Jean-Pierre Gattuso (France)
 Chapter 6: Ocean Systems Hans-O. Pörtner (Germany)
William Cheung (Canada)
 Chapter 7: Food Production Systems and Food Security Kevren Cochrane
(South Africa)
 Chapter 28 Polar Regions: Anne Hollowed (USA)
 Chapter 30 Oceans: Sukgeun Jung (Korea) and Svein Sundby (Norway)
 Working Group III
 Chapter 5 Jake Rice (Canada)
Goal to produce scientific literature relevant
to IPCC working groups
– Stimulated research through theme sessions, topic
session and intersessional workshops. Many resulted in
peer reviewed papers.
– ICES J. Mar. Sci. Special Volumes
•
•
Contributions from SICCME Theme Session prominent in
special volume of 2nd ICES/PICES/IOC Effects of Climate
Change on the World's Oceans, Volume 70 Issue 5 September
2013
Sendai Meeting: Climate Change Effects on Fish and Fisheries:
Forecasting Impacts, Assessing Ecosystem Responses, and
Evaluating Management Strategies Volume 68 Issue 6 July 2011
ICES ASC Theme Sessions 2013
B. Responses of living marine resources to climate change and variability: learning from
the past and projecting the future (co-sponsored by PICES). Convenors William W. L. Cheung,
Canada, PICES, Myron A. Peck, Germany, Vincent Saba, USA
D. Physico–chemical aspects of ocean acidification in the ICES area. Convenors: David J.
Hydes, UK; Jon Olafsson, Iceland; Alberto Vieria Borges, Belgium
L. Hydrographic processes, circulation, and water mass formation in the polar
and subpolar basins. Convenors: Stephen Dye, UK, Hedinn Valdimarsson, Iceland, Igor Yashayaev,
Canada
M. Identifying mechanisms linking physical climate and ecosystem change:
Observed indices, hypothesized processes, and "data dreams" for the future (cosponsored by PICES). Convenors: Emanuele Di Lorenzo, COVE-AP; USA, PICES; Arthur J. Miller, USA,
PICES; Marc Hufnagl, Germany, ICES
N. The pelagic fish complexes in the North Atlantic Ocean: Distribution, productivity,
and inter-specific competition during changing climate. Convenors: Asta Gudmundsdottir, Iceland;
David Miller, the Netherlands; Geir Huse, Norway
26
Agenda Item 3:
Forthcoming SICCME Activities
3.1 Workshops in PICES 2013 Annual Meeting
3.2 Third Intl. Symposium on Effects of Climate Change on
the World’s Oceans, Santos, Brazil, March 23-27, 2015.
3.3 Theme sessions/Workshops at PICES
FUTURE 2014 Open Science Meeting.
3.4 Presentation of new SICCME-related research programs
(2013 and 2014).
27
Workshops in PICES Annual Meeting 2013
(co-sponsored by ICES)
Workshop (W1). Comparison of size-based and species based
ecosystem models. Co-sponsored by ICES. Co-Convenors: Jeffrey
Polovina (USA), Anne Hollowed (USA), Shin-ichi Ito (Japan) , Myron Peck (Germany)
Workshop (W2). Identifying mechanisms linking physical climate
and ecosystem change: Observed indices, hypothesized
processes, and "data dreams" for the future. Co-sponsored by
ICES. Co-Convenors: Jack Barth (USA), Emanuele Di Lorenzo (USA), Marc
Hufnagl (Germany), Jacquelynne King (Canada), Arthur Miller (USA), Shoshiro
Minobe (Japan), Ryan Rykaczewski (USA) , Kazuaki Tadokoro (Japan)
28
Convenors:
Luis Valdes (IOC)
Manuel Barange (ICES)
Jacquelynne King (PICES)
Alex Turra (U San Paulo)
Scientific Steering Committee:
John Gunn (Australia)
Yunne-Jai Shin (S. Africa)
Nicholas Bates (Bermuda)
Maria deFatimaBorges (Portugal)
Silvana Birchenough (UK)
Brian MacKenzie (Demmark)
Shoshiro Minobe (Japan)
Angelica Pena (Canada)
Fangli Qiao (China)
Call for Session and Workshop Themes
Effects of Climate Change on the World’s Oceans
3rd International Symposium
March 23-27, 2015
Santos, Brazil
bring together experts from different disciplines to exchange observations, results,
models and ideas on the impacts of climate change on the world’s oceans

two previous symposia each attracted over 400 scientists from over 45 countries,
making the effort truly global in scale

combine paper Sessions and Workshops to provide a forum for topics on a globalscale and with regional comparisons

Effects of Climate Change on the World’s Oceans


Session and Workshop proposals by Sept 18, 2013:
 sea level rise, changes in thermo-haline ocean circulation,
acidification, oligotrophy of temperate seas, changes in
species abundance, distribution and phenology, loss of
biodiversity
PICES’ members of Scientific Steering Committee:
 Angelica Peña ([email protected])
 Shoshiro Minobe ([email protected])
 Fangli Qiao ([email protected])
Session and Workshop Proposals from ICES
1.
Present evidence of climate change in marine ecosystems
2.
Global and Regional projections of Climate Change impacts
3.
Long term chemical changes: Ocean Acidification and Hypoxia
4.
policy
13.
Climate change impacts on re-organisation and re-location of
food webs
Climate Change impacts on human societies: vulnerability and
adaptation strategies
14.
Climate change in the seasonal domain: impacts on the
phenology of marine ecosystems and their consequences
5.
Climate Change and food security
15.
Marine biodiversity
6.
Long-term observation and monitoring networks of CC
16.
Role of subsurface ocean
7.
Long-term assessments to understand climate driven changes
and variability in marine ecosystems: new techniques,
drawbacks and future applications
17.
Regional impacts of climate change
18.
Physiological impacts of climate change
19.
Model inter comparisons across regions
20.
Mitigation
21.
Risk assessment of adaptation options
22.
Predictive skills
23.
Economics of climate change
24.
Earth Systems Model tools in preparation for AR6
8.
Physico-chemical effects of Ocean acidification
9.
Linking Climate Change to Marine Management Objectives
10.
Taking a long-term view: the use of historical data to
understand the impact of climate change on marine fish,
fisheries, and ecosystems
11.
Consequences of Ocean acidification for commercial fish and
shellfish species (to be considered as a Workshop)
12.
Public understanding of climate change impacts: from science to
Agenda item 3.3
Presentation of new SICCME-related research programs
that started in 2013 or will start in 2014
33
<5m
<3m
Assessing Health,
Livelihoods, Ecosystem
Services And Poverty
Alleviation In Populous
Deltas
<1m
Lecture 4. Climate change and the
Manuel Barange,
Plymouth
Marine
Laboratory, UK
integrated
coastal system.
Wednesday
[email protected];
25 Julywww.espadelta.net
2007
UKMO Regional
Climate Projections
FVCOM Delta
Model
ERSEM-POLCOMS
Shelf Model
Bioclimate
Envelope Model
(Cheung et al.)
Size-based metabolic
Model (Jennings et al
2008)
+
Sampling for spp., catch, weight, price, sales @
3 ports (commercial, artisanal, Inland-based)
Long-term scenarios of catch potential based on targeted,
MSY, PA, overexploitation management targets
Manuel Barange, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK
[email protected]; www.espadelta.net
Changes in marine climatic and oceanographic conditions
in the waters between the Faroes and Greenland,
and their effects on plankton and fish
A research programme (2013-2016) in
collaboration between Danish, Faroese and
Greenlandic research institutes.
Funded by the Danish government
North Pacific
Research Board, Gulf
of Alaska Integrated
Research Program
http://goaierp.nprb.org/
Agenda Item 4: Forward Planning
How do past and present activities contribute to SICCME
Goals and Objectives?
-program has only recently begun
-but can make a preliminary evaluation of which goals
and objectives have received most activity so far…
38
Goals
1. Define, coordinate and integrate the research activities needed to
understand, assess and project climate change impacts on marine
ecosystems with sufficient spatial and temporal resolution to plan
strategies for sustaining the delivery of ecosystem goods and
services, and when possible predictions should include quantifying
estimations of uncertainty.
2. To build global ocean prediction frameworks, through international
collaborations and research, building on ICES and PICES monitoring
programs.
3. Define and quantify the vulnerability of marine ecosystems to
climate change, including the cumulative impacts and synergetic
effects of climate and marine resource use.
39
Objectives
 1. Advancing the scientific capacity on the three main challenges identified
above by engaging the PICES and ICES scientific community in focused
workshops, theme/topic sessions and symposia that target key uncertainties
and technical barriers that impact the predictive skill of ocean models used
to project the impacts of climate change.
 2. Effectively communicating this capacity to clients, Member Countries,
stakeholders and the broader scientific community.
 3. Facilitating an international effort to design data collection networks at the
spatial and temporal scales needed to monitor, assess and project climate
change impacts on marine ecosystems.
 4. Facilitating international collaboration to design and implement
comparative analysis of marine ecosystem responses to climate change
through modelling and coordinated process studies.
40
SICCME 2013 Activities towards
Goals and Objectives
18
18
16
16
14
14
No. of activities
No. of activities
-an initial evaluation…
12
10
8
6
12
10
8
6
4
4
2
2
0
0
1
2
SICCME Goal
3
1
2
3
4
SICCME Objective
41
18
18
16
16
14
14
No. of activities
Gaps are evident.
Need more activities, for example,
to…
No. of activities
SICCME 2013 Activities towards
Goals and Objectives
12
10
8
6
4
12
10
8
6
4
2
2
0
0
1
2
3
1
SICCME Goal
2
3
4
SICCME Objective
-link proposed research activities to strategies for sustainable delivery
of ecosystem goods and services and biodiversity preservation
-building global prediction networks
-address how predictive skill of ocean models can be improved for projecting
climate change impacts.
-communicate results to clients and stakeholders, and develop new ways of
doing so
-conduct comparative analyses in an international collaboration
42
Agenda Item 4: Forward Planning
Planned theme/topic sessions and workshops in 2014:
Physical and biological consequences of exchanges between the Atlantic
Subarctic and the Arctic; ICES ASC, Spain, 2014. Conveners: Olafur S.
Astthorsson (Iceland), Ken Drinkwater (Norway), and ??? (Canada).
Strategies for ecosystem management in a changing climate. PICES FUTURE
Open Science meeting, April 15-18, Hawaii. Co-conveners: Manuel Barange,
A. Hollowed, Suam Kim
Climate change and ecosystem-based management of living marine resources:
Appraising and Advancing key modelling tools, PICES FUTURE Open Science meeting,
April 15-18, Hawaii. Co-conveners: M. Peck (S-CCME, ICES), A. Hollowed (S-CCME,
PICES), T. Essington (University of Washington)
43
Agenda Item 4: Forward Planning
Recent Assessments of Climate Change Impacts on Marine Ecosystems. PICES
2014 Annual Science Meeting, Korea. Convenors: Anne B. Hollowed (USA), Jake
Rice (Canada), Sukgeun Jung (Korea), Hans Pörtner (Germany)
Dynamics of pelagic fish in the North Pacific under climate change; PICES 2014 Annual
Science Meeting, Korea, 11 or 12 October. Convenors Gerard DiNardo (ISC), Suam Kim
(PICES), and Sei-Ichi Saitoh (PICES)
44
Any other suggestions?
45
Have a Good Annual Meeting
2013!
46
Extra Slides after here…
47
SICCME Membership
Alexander Bychkov
Anne B. Hollowed (co-chair)
Brian R. MacKenzie (co-chair)
Cisco Werner
Franz J. Mueter
Guimei Liu
Harald Loeng
Helen Joseph
Hyunsoo Rho
Jacquelynne R. King
Jason Holt
Jeffrey J. Polovina
Jonathan A. Hare
Jürgen Alheit
Keith Brander
Ken F. Drinkwater
Manuel Barange (co-chair)
Michael G. Foreman
Motomitsu Takahashi
Myron Peck
Shin-ichi Ito
Suam Kim (co-chair)
Sukgeun Jung
Sukyung Kang
Svein Sundby
Vivian Piil
Xiujuan Shan
Xuelei Zhang
Yury I. Zuenko
48