Projects

Project Profile: RACArctic

Resilience and Adaptive Capacity of ARCTIC Marine Systems Under a Changing Climate

Who?

Principal Investigators: Sei-Ichi Saitoh, Hokkaido University, Japan
Partners: Melissa Chierici, Institute of Marine Research, Norway
Kenneth Drinkwater, Institute of Marine Research, Norway
Arne Eide, University of Tromsø, Norway
Naomi Harada, Japan Agency for Marine Earth-Science and Technology, Japan
Alan Haynie, Resource Ecology and Fisheries Management Division, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, United States
Toru Hirawake, Hokkaido University, Japan
Alf Håkon Hoel, Institute of Marine Research, Norway
George Hunt, University of Washington, United States
Henry Huntington, Huntington Consulting, United States
Randi Ingvaldsen, Institute of Marine Research, Norway
Takashi Kikuchi, Japan Agency for Marine Earth-Science and Technology, Japan
Makino Mitsutaku, Fisheries Research Agency, Japan
Franz Mueter, University of Alaska-Fairbanks, United States
Benjamin Planque, Institute of Marine Research, Norway
Mike Sigler, Ted Stevens Marine Research Institute, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, United States
Jan Erik Stiansen, Institute of Marine Research, Norway
Hiroki Takakura, Tohoku University, Japan
Yutaka Watanuki, Hokkaido University, Japan
Sponsors: Japan Science and Technology Agency, Japan
Research Council of Norway, Norway
National Science Foundation, United States

What?

Full Project Title: Resilience and Adaptive Capacity of ARCTIC Marine Systems Under a Changing Climate
Full Call Title: Arctic2014
Website: https://www.uaf.edu/sfos/research/projects/resilience-and-adaptive-c/

Why?

Project Objective: The RACArctic team will synthesize information from completed and ongoing regional studies conducted by Japan, United States, and Norway to examine how variability and trends in advection, temperature, sea-ice dynamics, and ocean acidification in the Subarctic to Arctic transition zone may affect future marine ecosystems of the Pacific and Atlantic Arctic, their resource management, and socio-economics.
Call Objective: Through this Call for Proposals on Arctic Observing and Research for Sustainability, the Belmont Forum seeks to bring together integrated teams of natural scientists, social scientists, and stakeholders to develop projects that utilize existing Arctic observing systems, data sets and models to evaluate key sustainability challenges and opportunities in the Arctic region across one or more of four possible themes.

Where?

Regions: Arctic
Countries:

When?

Duration: 36 months
Call Date: May 1, 2014
Project Award Date: 2014