Dear colleagues:

The EGU General Assembly 2011 is being held April 3-8, Vienna 
(<http://meetings.copernicus.org/egu2011/home.html>) and abstract submission is 
now open.

Please consider submitting an abstract to session CL2.13 
Seasons and phenology: Evidence from observations, reconstructions, 
measurements and models (co-sponsored by USA-NPN, PAGES & ILEAPS)
Link: <http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2011/session/6424>. 
The description of the session is attached below.

We would appreciate if you could also bring this session to the attention of 
researchers and students who are likely to be interested in this topic.

You may submit an abstract at
<http://meetings.copernicus.org/egu2011/abstract_management/how_to_submit_an_abstract.html>.
While there is an abstract processing charge of EUR 40 per abstract, please 
note that the registration fees will be reduced to take into account the 
abstract fee.

The deadline for submission of abstracts is fast approaching---
MONDAY 10th JANUARY 2011.

Looking forward to seeing you in Vienna!
This Rutishauser ([email protected]), 
Annette Menzel (TU München, Germany, [email protected]), 
Jake Weltzin (USA National Phenology Network,[email protected]), 
Alison Donnelly (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, [email protected])


Session abstract:
Observations of plant and animal phenological records, remote sensing 
observations and the timing of snow and ice cover from all continents and 
several oceans show that many physical and biological natural systems are 
changing their seasonal timing, particularly due to increases in temperature.

We invite contributions with cross-disciplinary perspectives that present 
seasonality changes based on recent plant and animal phenological observations, 
historical documentary sources, or seasonality measurements using climate data, 
remote sensing, flux measurements or modelling studies. We seek contributions 
across all spatial and temporal scales that compare and integrate seasonality 
changes, emphasize applications, discuss species interactions and decoupling 
and that advance our understanding of seasonality response to long-term climate 
change and single extreme events.


***************************************************
This Rutishauser

University of Bern, Institute of Geography
Research Groups in Climatology & Meteorology (Klimet)
and Phenology & Topoclimatology (Phenotop)
Hallerstrasse 12, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
Phone: +41 (0)31 631'88'83, Fax: +41 (0)31 631'85'11
[email protected], http://www.geography.unibe.ch/

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Unitat d’Ecofisiologia CSIC-CREAF
CREAF (Center for Ecological Research and Forestry Applications)
[email protected], http://www.creaf.uab.es/

http://www.giub.unibe.ch/~rutis/

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