Dear Colleagues, 

We would like to remind you to consider submitting an abstract for the session 
on human effects on 
inland freshwater biogeochemistry at the 2014 Joint Aquatic Sciences Meeting in 
Portland 
(http://www.freshwater-science.org/Annual-Meeting/2014-Portland---JASM.aspx).  
The description 
for our session is below, abstract deadline is Feb 7, 2014, THIS FRIDAY!.  
Please pass along to anyone 
you think would be interested.

Thanks again!

Rebecca Barnes (Rutgers)
Henry Wilson (Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada)
David Butman (U.S. Geological Survey / Yale University / University of 
Washington)


29 Anthropogenic Influences on Watershed Biogeochemistry: New Findings and 
Methods
 
Anthropogenic sources of dissolved and particulate nutrients have profoundly 
impacted aquatic 
ecosystems and water quality over the entire planet. Agricultural and urban 
areas occupy 
approximately 45% of the terrestrial landscape and affect biogeochemical 
cycling – locally and 
globally. Human dominated watersheds are often characterized by land clearing, 
soil disturbance, 
increased nutrient loading, and hydrological alteration (e.g. storm and tile 
drains). These changes that 
characterize impacted landscapes alter how nutrients are transported and cycled 
at the watershed 
scale, water clarity, oxygen levels, community composition, trophic 
interactions, and contaminant 
bioaccumulation pathways within food webs. We seek presentations aimed at a 
fundamental 
understanding of how anthropogenic landscape alterations impact aquatic 
biogeochemistry (sources, 
transport, transformations, and metabolism). We are particularly interested in 
highlighting work that 
utilizes novel methods to identify and trace the sources and fate of nutrients 
(including carbon) and 
field or modeling studies that seek to understand the processing of nutrients 
in the context of the 
coupled nature of the hydrologic and biogeochemical cycles in watersheds. All 
freshwater 
environments are of interest, including wetlands, groundwater, rivers, lakes, 
and streams.

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