Meeting:Abstract 2011 CSDMS meeting-021: Difference between revisions

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|CSDMS meeting first name=Donald
|CSDMS meeting first name=Donald
|CSDMS meeting last name=Potts
|CSDMS meeting last name=Potts
|CSDMS meeting institute=University California, Santa Cruz
|CSDMS meeting institute=University of California, Santa Cruz
|CSDMS meeting city=Santa Cruz
|CSDMS meeting city=Santa Cruz
|CSDMS meeting state=California
|CSDMS meeting state=California
|CSDMS meeting country=US
|CSDMS meeting country=USA
|CSDMS meeting email address=potts@biology.ucsc.edu
|CSDMS meeting email address=potts@biology.ucsc.edu
|CSDMS meeting phone=(831) 459-4417
|CSDMS meeting phone=(831) 459-4417
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|CSDMS meeting coauthor first name abstract=Peter
|CSDMS meeting coauthor first name abstract=Peter
|CSDMS meeting coauthor last name abstract=Burgess
|CSDMS meeting coauthor last name abstract=Burgess
|CSDMS meeting coauthor institute / Organization=Royal Holloway
|CSDMS meeting coauthor institute / Organization=Royal Holloway, University of London
|CSDMS meeting coauthor town-city=London
|CSDMS meeting coauthor town-city=London
|State=NO STATE
|State=NO STATE
|CSDMS meeting coauthor country=UK
|CSDMS meeting coauthor country=UK
|CSDMS meeting coauthor email address=burgess@hotmail.com
|CSDMS meeting coauthor email address=burgess@hotmail.com
}}
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|CSDMS meeting coauthor first name abstract=Rachel
|CSDMS meeting coauthor last name abstract=Fabian
|CSDMS meeting coauthor institute / Organization=University of California, Santa Cruz
|CSDMS meeting coauthor town-city=Santa Cruz
|State=California
|CSDMS meeting coauthor country=USA
|CSDMS meeting coauthor email address=rfabian@ucsc.edu
}}
{{CSDMS meeting authors template
|CSDMS meeting coauthor first name abstract=Helen
|CSDMS meeting coauthor last name abstract=O'Brien
|CSDMS meeting coauthor institute / Organization=University of California, Santa Cruz
|CSDMS meeting coauthor town-city=Santa Cruz
|State=California
|CSDMS meeting coauthor country=USA
|CSDMS meeting coauthor email address=obrien@biology.ucsc.edu
}}
}}
{{CSDMS meeting abstract template
{{CSDMS meeting abstract template
|CSDMS meeting abstract=TBA
|CSDMS meeting abstract=Marine carbonates are created by the metabolism, growth, death and skeletal accumulations of a diverse array of benthic organisms (e.g. corals, bryozoa, molluscs, foraminifera, calcareous algae, and micro-organisms), but carbonate accretion requires a positive net balance among biological growth processes, processes of biological erosion (mainly by fishes, urchins, polychaetes, molluscs, sponges, algae and micro-organisms), and physical processes of destruction, suspension, transport, deposition and cementation. We are creating a knowledge base (KB) containing empirical quantitative data about individual, population and community properties of major calcifying and bio-eroding species to capture the ecological variation inherent in all biological processes, both spatial (e.g. latitude, longitude, habitat, climate, oceanography, depth) and temporal (e.g. diurnal, seasonal, interannual). The KB will provide realistic values for input to a “virtual aquarium” of characteristic organisms at the center of biologically-based carbonate models describing the initiation, growth and maturation through ecological to geological timescales of such formations as shallow and deep-sea coral reefs, Halimeda beds, bryozoan reefs, and maerl deposits.
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Revision as of 14:19, 9 October 2011

"USA" is not in the list (Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, ...) of allowed values for the "Country member" property.

Browse  abstracts

CSDMS all hands meeting 2011

A Knowledge Base Supporting Biologically-Based Carbonate Modeling

Donald Potts, University of California, Santa Cruz Santa Cruz California, . potts@biology.ucsc.edu
Chris Jenkins, INSTAAR Boulder Colorado, USA"USA" is not in the list (Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, ...) of allowed values for the "CSDMS meeting coauthor country" property.. chris.jenkins@colorado.edu
Peter Burgess, Royal Holloway, University of London London NO STATE, UK"UK" is not in the list (Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, ...) of allowed values for the "CSDMS meeting coauthor country" property.. burgess@hotmail.com
Rachel Fabian, University of California, Santa Cruz Santa Cruz California, USA"USA" is not in the list (Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, ...) of allowed values for the "CSDMS meeting coauthor country" property.. rfabian@ucsc.edu
Helen O'Brien, University of California, Santa Cruz Santa Cruz California, USA"USA" is not in the list (Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, ...) of allowed values for the "CSDMS meeting coauthor country" property.. obrien@biology.ucsc.edu


[[Image:|300px|right|link=File:]]Marine carbonates are created by the metabolism, growth, death and skeletal accumulations of a diverse array of benthic organisms (e.g. corals, bryozoa, molluscs, foraminifera, calcareous algae, and micro-organisms), but carbonate accretion requires a positive net balance among biological growth processes, processes of biological erosion (mainly by fishes, urchins, polychaetes, molluscs, sponges, algae and micro-organisms), and physical processes of destruction, suspension, transport, deposition and cementation. We are creating a knowledge base (KB) containing empirical quantitative data about individual, population and community properties of major calcifying and bio-eroding species to capture the ecological variation inherent in all biological processes, both spatial (e.g. latitude, longitude, habitat, climate, oceanography, depth) and temporal (e.g. diurnal, seasonal, interannual). The KB will provide realistic values for input to a “virtual aquarium” of characteristic organisms at the center of biologically-based carbonate models describing the initiation, growth and maturation through ecological to geological timescales of such formations as shallow and deep-sea coral reefs, Halimeda beds, bryozoan reefs, and maerl deposits.