We will have an EES seminar on May 9, 2025, from 13:10 to 14:10. The speaker will introduce his thoughts on how he has developed the materials chemistry of porous coordination polymers (MOF/PCP) through his career in quantum chemistry, physical chemistry magnetic resonance, and coordination chemistry. We look forward to your participation.
日時:5月9日(金) 13:10~14:10 会場:D201室 演者:北川 進 特別教授 (京都大学高等研究院) Prof. Susumu Kitagawa (Institute for Advanced Study, Kyoto University) 題目:The Magic of Small Spaces―ナノ空間と材料化学が紡ぐ物語― The Magic of Small Spaces – A Story Spun by Nanospace and Materials Chemistry –
*北川先生のスケジュールがタイトなため、開始時間が遅れる可能性があります。ご了承ください。 *Due to the tight schedule of Prof. Kitagawa, the start time may be delayed. Please understand.
下記の通り、2025年3月19日(水)13:30~16:20にEESセミナーを開催します。 お二人の講演の後にはStephens博士との自由な対話・交流の場も設けます。 Trends in Ecology & Evolutionに対するニーズや要望、ジャーナルに対する質疑応答を自由にできる場となります。 ご参加をお待ちしております。 We will have an EES seminar on March 19, 2025, from 13:30 to 16:20. After the two talks, we will have an opportunity for an informal discussion and networking session with Dr. Stephens. This will be a valuable chance to freely share your thoughts, needs, and requests regarding Trends in Ecology & Evolution and ask any questions about the journal. We look forward to your participation.
日時:3月19日(水) 13:30~16:20 会場:D201室 ・講演1(13:30~14:30) 演者:Samuel R.P-J. Ross, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University 題目:Microphones, models, and mesocosms for understanding ecological stability across scales 要旨:Understanding the biological processes that promote the invariable and resilient ecosystem services on which humanity depends has been a core focus of ecology for decades. Using randomly structured community models, Robert May showed that diversity is destabilising, so what then explains the vast biodiversity we observe in the real world? There have been many answers from different study systems, often resulting in the classical ecological observation: “it depends”. To distil general understanding from a sea of idiosyncrasy, we need to consider a variety of systems and scales. Here, I present experiments using freshwater mesocosms (buckets), data collected on typhoon disturbance in the field using passive acoustic monitoring (microphones), and models of “response diversity” to describe patterns and drivers of ecological stability across scales. I propose that systems that exhibit a diversity of environmental responses across different organisms (response diversity) or different sites (spatial insurance) should be more stable. Finally, I introduce recent efforts to coordinate international research on the drivers of stability through the nascent Response Diversity Network.
・講演2(14:40~15:20) 演者:Andrea Stephens, Editor-in-Chief, Trends in Ecology & Evolution 題目:Editor’s guide to writing a review article 要旨:With the increasing rates of scientific publications, many researchers are increasingly using reviews to keep themselves updated. As such reviews are valuable resources for the scientific community. But what makes a good review article? In this short talk, I will talk about how this from the perspective of an editor of a reviews journal. We will also discuss some key points regarding getting your review published.
We will have an EES seminar on 12th November at 16:30-18:00 as follows. We look forward to your participation.
Date&time: 11/12(Tue) 16:30-18:00 Room: EES/GES D-102 Presenter: Dr. Alton C. BYERS (INSTAAR, University of Colorado at Boulder) Talk title: Notes from the Field: Recent Glacier-Related Flood Events in High Mountain Environments ※This lecture will be conducted in English
Talk summary: The development of glacial lakes from receding glaciers, contained by either terminal moraines or bedrock, is commonly linked with global warming trends that have occurred since the end of the Little Ice Age (LIA). Such lakes are prone to sudden and catastrophic drainage, popularly known as glacial lake outburst floods (GLOF), that is most commonly initiated by snow and ice avalanches. AlthoughGLOFs continue to dominate the focus of both peer reviewed and popular media articles alike, a range of other cryospheric processes and hazards exist that are in need of further research attention and mitigation technologies. Those discussed in the multi-media presentation include (a) englacial conduit floods, (b) permafrost-linked rockfall that can initiate floods, and (c) earthquake-linked glacial lake floods. It is suggested that our understanding of these hazards could be strengthened through the use of more field-based studies; the investigation of glacier flood events as soon after their occurrence as possible; and incorporation of the insights and experiences of local people. How scientists can more quickly and effectively share the results of their high mountain hazards research with decision-makers; and how decision-makers and governments can deliver more timely mitigation programs, are areas that are also suggested as being in need of further strengthening.
We will have an EES seminar on 28th October at 16:30-18:00 as follows. We look forward to your participation.
Date&time: 10/28(Mon) 16:30~18:00 Room: D201 Presenter: Dr. Roman SELYANCHYN (International Institute for Carbon-Neutral Energy Research, Kyushu University) Talk title: Development of gas separation membranes for direct air capture of CO2 ※This lecture will be conducted in English
Talk summary: Gas separation by membranes is a cost- and energy-efficient process for conventional carbon capture at mass emission points (e.g., fossil-fueled power plants). However, unlike conventional technology, DAC processes built on membrane-based gas separation have yet to be developed and optimized. The main obstacle for DAC applications until recently was poor membrane separation performance, especially low permeances of CO2. Nevertheless, recent developments have allowed specific membrane processes to be considered for DAC. In the most likely process, several membrane separation stages are needed to achieve sufficient preconcentration of CO2 from the air. In addition, a specific combination of membrane properties (permeance and selectivity to CO2) and process parameters (e.g., permeate pressures) are needed to achieve cost-efficient separation. In this presentation, we will discuss the membrane technologies’ potential for DAC from the process simulation point of view, describe our efforts in developing and scaling up the ultrathin membranes, assembly of the practical-size membrane modules, and the overall future potential for the new m-DAC technology’s broad deployment in society and industry.
2024-07-26
下記の通り、2024年8月9日(金)15:00~16:00にEESセミナーを開催します。ご参加をお待ちしております。
We will have an EES seminar on August 9, 2024, from 15:00–16:00. We look forward to your participation.
日時:8月9日(金) 15:00~16:00 会場:D101室 講演者:Shunyan Cheung, Assistant Professor, Institute of Marine Biology, National Taiwan Ocean University タイトル:Responses of nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria in the changing ocean
要旨: Marine nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria reduce dinitrogen to bioavailable forms of nitrogen, which play critical roles in supporting primary productivity, carbon sequestration and fertility in the ocean. In the context of global climate change, marine nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria were predicted to be an increasingly important source of nitrogen in the ocean. After decades of research, diverse nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria have been discovered in the ocean, while our understanding of these organisms remains limited. A comprehensive understanding about the biogeography, ecophysiology and environmental control mechanisms of marine nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria is essential for a better prediction of the fates of ecosystem and biogeochemical cycling in the future ocean. In this presentation, I will use case studies to demonstrate how we study the impacts of global change stressors on the marine nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria in field and laboratory. I will also introduce our on-going projects about the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria in the Kuroshio east of Taiwan and the vast North Pacific Ocean.
下記の通り、2024年5月14日16:30~18:00にEESセミナーを開催します。ご参加をお待ちしております。 We will have an EES seminar on May 14, 2024, from 16:30–18:00. We look forward to your participation.
We will have an EES seminar on February 15, 2024, from 15:00–16:00. We look forward to your participation.
開催日時:2024年2月15日(木)15時〜16時頃(予定) 場所:環境科学院A301室 形式:約30分程度の対面講義と質疑応答、意見交換 講演者:小口 高(東京大学空間情報科学研究センター) https://researchmap.jp/read0007832/ https://twitter.com/ogugeo タイトル:Human Impacts on Landforms in Japan and the Resultant Increase in Disaster Risks 要旨: Prof. Takashi Oguchi is a distinguished researcher specializing in the fields of geomorphology and geographic information science (GIS). His extensive research encompasses a wide range of topics within geomorphology and physical geography, where he leverages cutting-edge digital technologies, including GIS and artificial intelligence (AI). With a notable and longstanding role as the editor-in-chief of the international journal Geomorphology, he has played a pivotal role in shaping the discourse in these fields. Beyond his scholarly contributions, he also actively promotes international exchange by delivering lectures and participating in activities within both national and international academic organizations, currently acting as the vice president of the International Association of Geomorphologists. His commitment to enhancing collaboration and knowledge-sharing transcends geographical boundaries. In this forthcoming presentation, Prof. Oguchi will introduce some examples of human impacts on landforms in Japan that increased disaster risks. The presentation aims to provide insights into the practical implications of geomorphology related to human activities and thinking, and addresses contemporary challenges in the realms of hazards and disaster mitigation.
下記の通り、2024年1月9日16:30~18:00にEESセミナーを開催します。ご参加をお待ちしております。We will have an EES seminar on January 9, 2023, from 16:30–18:00. We look forward to your participation.
日時(Date & time): January 9, 2023, from 16:30–18:00
場所(Venue): D201 of Faculty of Environmental Earth Science
演者(Presenter): Professor Roy C. Sidle(Mountain Societies Research Institute, University of Central Asia / Yamano Bosai, Akiruno, Japan)
講演タイトル(Talk title): Challenges to Sustainable Development and Livelihoods in and Around the Water Towers
要旨(Talk summary):
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan rank among the most mountainous nations worldwide, both with more than 90% of the land area in mountains. The Pamir with the highest peak in the region (7495 m a.s.l.) are the dominant mountains in Tajikistan and the Tien Shan (up to 7439 m a.s.l.) occupy much of Kyrgyzstan. These mountains bound the vast Fergana Valley that extends from southern Kyrgyzstan into Uzbekistan and contains unstable hills along the valley fringes with deep loess deposits presenting unique mass wasting challenges. Due to the complex orography, Central Asia has a very dynamic and spatially variable climate that affects water delivery from the Water Towers to streams that provide irrigation supplies during the dry summer months. Water is critical to support food production; runoff is supplied to upland valleys by a combination of snowmelt, glacial melt, and permafrost thaw, together with periodic rainfall. Spring and summer discharge is derived mostly from snowmelt with a lesser amount from glacier melt depending on the extent of glaciation in particular catchments. The interannual variability in snow water poses the greatest challenge for irrigation and domestic supplies, as well as hydropower production.
These mountain areas represent some of the most formidable challenges worldwide in dealing with natural hazard risks and adapting to climate change and anomalies. Hazards that frequently affect mountain communities and their agrarian livelihoods include landslides, debris flows, snow avalanches, rockfall, drought, severe erosion, and flooding; these can be exacerbated by human activities, such as overgrazing, poorly located roads and trails, fuelwood gathering in dry alpine regions, poorly located villages and farms, and unsustainable farming practices. Less frequent hazards include potentially disastrous glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) and permafrost hazards.
To characterize climate trends affecting water supplies, glacier melt, and food security, we used remotely sensed precipitation and temperature data due to the sparse network of climate stations. In the Pamir, most areas are experiencing a warming trend, but not at the same rate. Temperatures increased across the east-central Panj and eastern Vakhsh River basins. Warmer temperatures in central Panj basin and the Wakhan corridor coupled with minor declines in snow water will likely induce water stress in local communities during dry years. In contrast, more stable temperatures in lower elevations of western Panj and Vakhsh basins together with increasing precipitation, especially in spring, will benefit agriculture and community water supplies. Varying spatial and temporal patterns of rain and snowfall occur throughout the region, often evident at granular scales. We assessed snow and temperature trends over eight glaciated regions of the Pamir and found diverse tendencies. While most sub-basins experienced some warming, this was offset in some areas by increases in snow. As such, unlike many other high mountain regions, many glaciers of the Pamir are not losing significant mass. Because of high interannual and spatial variability of precipitation throughout the area, regional climate change scenarios cannot inform adaptation measures for mountain communities and other users, and more granular-scale data are needed.
演者略歴(Biography): Professor Roy Sidle has over 40 years of research, teaching, outreach and leadership experience in hydrology, earth sciences, environmental science, sustainability, and natural resources management in four continents — North America, Europe, Asia and Australia. Prior to joining UCA, he served as a Director of the Sustainability Research Centre, at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia, where he supervised numerous faculty members, post-doctoral researchers, PhD candidates, and honours students. He has held other leadership positions including the Director of Ecosystems Research Division with National Exposure Research Laboratory at the United States Environmental Protection Agency; Professor of Geology and Director of the Environmental Science Programme, Appalachian State University, United States ; Professor and Head of the Slope Conservation Section, Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University, Japan; Professor of Geography, National University of Singapore, and Executive Officer of Land-Ocean Interactions in the Coastal Zone Project, Netherlands. Professor Sidle holds a PhD. in Soils/Civil Engineering /Hydrology from the Pennsylvania State University and a master’s from the University of Arizona, both in the United States. He is a Fellow in the American Geophysical Union and recently received the International Award for “significant contributions to progress in the field of hydrology and water resources and valuable devotion to collaboration with Japanese and Asian researchers” from Japan Society of Hydrology and Water Resources.
Date&time: October 30, 2023, 10:30~16:00 Room: D101
Lecturer: Dr. Jonathan Lefcheck (University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science)
Workshop Title: Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) in R
Structural equation modeling (SEM) is a technique that unites traditional inferential statistics, such as generalized linear modeling, and causal theory to test multivariate hypotheses of cause-and-effect. It translates a simple “box-and-arrow” diagram to a series of mathematical equations, which can be solved to test the magnitude, direction, and significance of causal relationships.
In this short course, I will review the history and philosophy of structural equation modeling and provide a short description of both the “global” and “local estimation” methods. In the afternoon workshop, we will use the software R to apply both methods to an example dataset. I will be available after the workshop to answer specific questions about SEM.
Experience in fitting linear regression (`lm`) in R is required. Please install R (https://cran.r-project.org/) and Rstudio (https://posit.co/downloads/) before the afternoon workshop, if you wish to follow the live coding demonstration.
Schedule:
10:30-12:00 General lecture on piecewise SEM and its application in ecological study
13:00-16:00 Practice of data analyses using piecewise SEM on R
Biography:
Jon is a Research Scientist at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. He is a marine community ecologist, biodiversity scientist, and biostatistician with a love for seagrasses. He has also studied coral reefs, mangroves, oyster reefs and even terrestrial systems, like grasslands and agriculture. He regularly works with scientists, managers, and volunteers around the world to understand, monitor, conserve, and restore coastal ecosystems for the benefit of nature and of people. His work has been published in top-ranking journals like Science and Nature and regularly covered by popular media. He received his PhD in Marine Science from the College of William & Mary in 2015, was a post-doctoral researcher at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences. Before his current position, he served as the Coordinating Scientist for the MarineGEO program at the Smithsonian Institution.
Graduate School of Environmental Science, Hokkaido University will offer ONLINE Information Session on October 15 (Sun).
The Session will start from “General Explanation” by Dean of the graduate school at 10:00 and 13:00 (It takes 20 minutes and content is the same in both times) then each division will have briefing.
Session schedule and Contact Information is following.
Regarding how to attend the session, please contact each division through email.
The division you chose will send you the detailed information.
We will have an EES seminar on 5/30 as follows. We look forward to your participation.
Date&Room: 5/30 16:30~18:00 D201 (free talk between 13:00~16:30 at A809)
Presenter: Sork, Victoria L. (Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of California Los Angeles)
Talk title: Genomic and epigenetic approaches to plastic and evolutionary adaptation of oak trees
Summary: Whole genome sequences and gene annotations of a California endemic white oak, Quercus lobata, have been published recently. This genomic and epigenetic information indicates tandem repeats of disease resistance genes and epigenetic patterns consistent with grasses. These findings facilitate to understand the genetic basis of adaptive evolution that has been demonstrated by landscape genetics, phylogeography with regard to introgression, ecophysiological and gene expression studies, and provenance trials, which may help oaks survive climate change.
We will have an EES seminar on 5/16 at 10:30~12:00 as follows. We look forward to your participation.
Date&time : 5/16 10:30~12:00
Room : D201
Presenter : Dr Andrea S. Griffin(University of Newcastle, Australia)
Talk title: Shorebirds of the Hunter and Port Stephens Estuaries: Using automated telemetry, stable isotopes and e-DNA to quantify movement and food chains in overwintering shorebirds
Talk summary : Migratory shorebirds are the world’s most endangered group of bird species. Australia’s estuaries provide overwintering habitat for some 2.5 million individuals each year. The Hunter and Port Stephens estuaries are two of just four in New South Wales of international significance to protecting Australia’s migratory shorebirds. They are also amongst the regions that are losing multiple shorebird species the fastest nationally. Unfortunately, these estuaries have little to no history of shorebird research and critical knowledge gaps are impeding effective management. In this talk, I will explain how our group is using multiple traditional and emerging technologies to identify patterns of local and regional movement and habitat use and to quantify the flow and diversity of nutrients from different estuarine habitats that fuel shorebird diets. Our interdisciplinary work is dependent upon key partnerships with government and community agencies, a feature that will ensure that our findings will serve to prioritize protection and restoration of shorebird habitat now and into a future.
Biography : Dr Andrea Griffin is a zoologist with core expertise in animal behaviour. Her research interests lie in understanding how animals respond and adjust to environmental change and in finding ways of applying this knowledge to better manage and conserve species. She readily embraces interdisciplinary approaches to answer her research questions. She has studied the behaviour and ecology of invasive and native birds and more recently estuarine birds. She is currently leading two large collaborative research projects, one on the movement and foraging ecology of shorebirds, the other developing new approaches to applying artificial intelligence to acoustic wildlife monitoring. She is trained in biology, animal behaviour and ecology at the Universities of Lausanne, Geneva and Zurich in Switzerland and completed her PhD at Macquarie University followed by a Swiss National Postdoctoral Fellowship at McGill University in Canada. She joined the University of Newcastle in 2005 as Australian Research Council post-doctoral fellow and earned a lectureship in 2009. She is currently a Senior Lecturer in the School of Environmental Science where she co-leads the Conservation Science Research Group, a member of the Australian National Environmental Science Program (NESP, Resilient Landscapes Hub). She teaches Animal Behaviour and Conservation Biology to final year undergraduate students in Environmental Science and Management. The University of Newcastle has recognised her work through a 2019 Women in Leadership Award, a 2020 Women in Research Fellowship, and a 2022 CESE College Award for Excellence in Research Higher Degree student training. https://www.newcastle.edu.au/profile/andrea-griffin
Dr. Liu, who joined our faculty this summer, will present her research at the Environmental Earth Science seminar.
Date and time: 16:45-18:00 on October 17th (Mon) 2022
Place: D201 in GSES
Speaker: Dr. LIU Tong (本研究院・統合環境科学部門・環境適応科学分野・助教) Assistant Professor, Group of Environmental Adaptation Science,
Section of Integrated Environmental Science,
Faculty of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University
Title: Occurrence and risk assessment of emerging micropollutants
in a water diversion project (分水嶺事業における新興微量汚染物質の発生とリスク評価) Language: English
Chair: OKINO Tatsufumi(統合環境科学部門)
要旨(Abstract)
Abstract: Water diversion is increasingly utilized for water supply, flood control, irrigation, and water quality improvement in many water bodies globally. Micropollutants such as perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) can be transported via dual-source water diversion projects during water diversion and flood discharge, which may negatively impact both receiving water bodies. However, the sources, spatiotemporal variations, and fluxes of PFAAs under water diversion projects remain unclear. Here, we quantified 18 PFAA compounds in the surface water of the Wangyu River in eastern China, which transfers water between the Yangtze River and Taihu Lake during water diversion (January 2020) and flooding periods (July 2020) for the following objectives: (1) to investigate the occurrence and sources of signature PFAAs in both flow directions in this highly urbanized and populated region; (2) to characterize the relative contribution of individual PFAAs and explore how water diversion and flooding impacts the PFAA pollution; and (3) to estimate the flux of PFAAs (kg month-1) diverted into or discharged from Taihu Lake via the Wangyu River, to provide a reference value for the ecological safety of a dual-source water diversion project and its receiving water bodies.
Contact: TOYODA Kazuhiro (kazuhiro@ees.hokudai.ac.jp) (統合環境科学部門)
Evolutionary ecology of sexual reproduction: sexual selection, reproductive interference, and community structure
Daisuke Kyogoku (The Museum of Nature and Human Activities)
In sexually reproducing organisms, mating with individuals of the opposite sex is necessary to produce offspring. Mating process raises competition for mating opportunities among same-sex individuals (i.e. sexual selection) and the conflict of evolutionary interest between the sexes (sexual conflict), which drive the evolution of reproductive traits. Because reproductive traits can mediate interspecific interactions (e.g. reproductive interference), reproductive trait evolution can eventually influence the community structure. In this talk, I present three different studies that are related to the evolutionary ecology of sexual reproduction, and by doing so I discuss ways in which sexual reproduction is relevant to the origin and/or maintenance of biodiversity. First, I show a likely case of sexual conflict in a sexually reproducing dandelion, where the timing of flower closure is influenced by the identity of the pollen deposited on the stigma. Second, I present a case study of how reproductive trait evolution due to within-species sexual selection can mediate the strength of reproductive interference in a pair of seed beetle species. Third, I present a simulation model of secondary contact with genetically incompatible hybridization. This model suggests that habitat segregation can evolve without tradeoff in resource use ability and that habitat segregation is more likely to be found in nature than species recognition divergence, which has historically been more appreciated than habitat segregation in this context. I will also briefly present some of my ongoing projects and discuss future research plans.
Dr. Theodore Muth (Brooklyn College, City University of New York)
Title:
Agrobacterium tumefaciens Attachment and T-DNA Integration – understanding the “root” to infection of host plants
Summary:
While several aspects of A. tumefaciens infection and transformation of plants are well understood, there are questions that remain concerning the attachment of the bacteria to host plants and the integration of T- DNA into the host cell genome. Work from our lab has focused on these questions and has applied novel approaches in an attempt to gain a more thorough understanding of these steps in the infection.
The standard approach to genetically modify plants relies on Agrobacterium tumefaciens to transfer foreign DNA (T-DNA) into plant cells where it can become a permanent part of the plant cell’s genome and express engineered traits. While A. tumefaciens transformation of plants has been used extensively, there are aspects of the process that are incompletely understood. To study the timing and factors influencing the location of T-DNA insertions, we used a modified adapter ligation- mediated PCR strategy, coupled with next generation sequencing, to identify T-DNA integration sites into the genome of Arabidopsis.
Previous reports examining T-DNA integration have relied on selective conditions, floral dip transformation, artificial virulence induction or use of cultured suspension plant cells. Our approach attempts to closely match natural infection conditions by using cut Arabidopsis root segments infected with uninduced A. tumefaciens and no selection for T- DNA integration events. A more thorough understanding of T-DNA integration will guide future experiments to develop the techniques to engineer plants more efficiently than is currently possible.
Date/Time & Venue:
2019年7月25日(木)10:00 – 11:00
地球環境科学研究院 管理棟2階会議室
10:00-11:00, 25th July, 2019
Graduate School of Environmental Science, Room E206
世話人:三輪
<< Part 2>>
Speaker:
Dr. Theodore Muth (Brooklyn College, City University of New York)
Title:
The Urban Microbiome ? a new census of the city
Abstract:
Our recent work using culture-independent (metagenomic) based strategies to study microbial communities shows an unexpectedly high level of biodiversity in urban microbiomes in a number of sites including parks, waterways, subway systems, and green infrastructure installations. The factors underlying the establishment of these diverse communities are not well understood, but it suggests that urban microbial communities represent a significant unknown element of phylogenetic, genetic, and functional biodiversity. A better understanding of these influences on multiple aspects of biodiversity will inform the design, construction, placement, and maintenance of urban environmental elements (such as green infrastructure) to maximize their ecosystem services. More fundamentally, our work offers a novel platform for exploration of basic science aspects of dimensions of biodiversity.
Date/Time & Venue:
2019年7月25日(木)16:00 – 17:00
地球環境科学研究院 管理棟2階会議室
16:00-17:00, 25th July, 2019
Graduate School of Environmental Science, Room E206
Date and Time: Friday, 28 September 2018, 14:00–14:50
Venue: Room C202
Title: Quality Requirements for Acquiring Optical Data to Support Calibration, Validation, and Research (CVR) Exercises
Speaker: Dr. Stanford. B. Hooker (NASA/ Goddard Space Flight Center)
Chair: Koji Suzuki
Abstract: Above- and in-water observations of the apparent optical properties (AOPs) of water masses are collected to support vicarious calibration, algorithm validation, and basic research — hereafter, calibration, validation, and research (CVR) — exercises for remote sensing missions. Although it is perhaps appealing to imagine these activities can be considered distinct and separate, especially from a legacy perspective (e.g., SeaWiFS and OCTS), there are two significant reasons why CVR activities require the same quality metrics during data acquisition for next-generation missions (e.g., PACE and SGLI): a) the underlying NASA Ocean Optics Protocols are essentially the same and are expected to be strictly adhered to; and b) the data is submitted to databases (e.g., SeaBASS) that do not make a distinction as to the original objectives for acquiring the data. Consequently, all optical data are ultimately applied to all three activities and noncompliance to the quality requirements degrades the capabilities of all future users of the data within the global community of practice. This presentation provides the quantitative lessons established by the author who has personally made more than 13,000 above- and in-water discrete optical measurements in the world ocean, and who has designed and co-developed state-of-the-art instruments, as well as data acquisition and processing software.
This is to announce seminar by Prof. Zhang from Lanzhou University. He
has been working on permafrost, snow, and glaciers in U.S. (Alaska and
Colorado), and recently moved to Lanzhou to continue his research on
cryosphere.
Date: October 7
Time: 10:00-12:00
Venue: ILTS 2F conference room
Title: Changes and variations of snow cover over the Eurasian Continent
from 1950 through 2012
Speaker:
Prof. Tingjun Zhang
College of Earth and Environmental Sciences (CEES)
Lanzhou University
http://wel.lzu.edu.cn/fh/15/ixnxuem.htm
Satellite session “Future and risk of our environment” of 15th HU-SNU joint symposium will be held at D201 of Graduate School of Environmental Science, HU from 9 am till 3:30 pm on December 7, 2012. In addition to two plenary talks by SNU professors, graduate students for both universities
will present their recent research activities related to the Earth Science. We welcome all of you. Let’s participate in this session !
【Program PDF】
IFES-GCOE, EES, Hokkaido University and NPO Mongol Eco Forum
will organize “Japan Mongolia Environmental Day” on 3 September
(Saturday) at Sapporo and at Ulaanbaar in Mongolia
Date and time: 10:30-18:30 on Saturday, 3 September 2011
Venue: A102, Graduate School of Environmental Science
(We will connect to the venue at Mongolia Japan Center
at Ulaanbaatar in Mongolia through internet TV conference
system.)
Organizer: IFES-GCOE, Graduate School of Environmental Science,
Hokkaido University
Languages: Japanese and Mongolian (consecutive interpretation provided)
Registration Fee: Free ( no pre-registration required)
Capacity: About 15
Theme:”Life quality and style – reconsideration
based on scientific outcome-”
We will invite two keynote speakers. Prof. Eitaro Wada who is
emeritus professor at Kyoto University and Research Institute of
Humanity and Nature will talk “21st century in Mongolia
– Can we show the sustainability of food chain as linear line?-“.
Prof. Sentdenjab Dulam who is the professor and director of center
for Nomadic culture and civilization, National University of Mongolia
will talk “The change of life style with moving from the countryside
to the city in Mongolia”.
The other talk will be regarding the air pollution, environmental
literacy, environmental awareness and capacity building.
Finally, we will have a panel discussion with panelists from all
speaker and some other panelists.
If you are interested in joining to and presenting your research at Hokkaido University-Seoul National University Joint Symposium held in Sapporo in 6-7 November, please ask either of Prof. Iwakuma, Prof. Yoshikawa or your supervisor. If you will participate in the Joint Symposium, please send your name/divisions to the GCOE office (gcoe at ees.hokudai.ac.jp) by 10 October.
Toshio Iwakuma
Dean
Graduate School of Environmental Science
Contact to office
Graduate School of Env.Science /
Faculty of Env.Earth Science
Hokkaido University
N10W5 Sapporo
Hokkaido 060-0810
Contact/Counsel