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BEST-BSIERP Scientists: M

 

 

 

 

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marc mangelMarc Mangel

University of California Santa Cruz

msmangel@ucsc. edu

 

 

 

ann matareseAnn Matarese

NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center

ann. matarese@noaa. gov

 

 

 

binary codeJames Moore

National Center for Atmospheric Research

jmoore@ucar. edu

 

sue mooreSue Moore

NOAA National Marine Mammal Laboratory

sue. moore@noaa. gov

 

 

 

brad moranS. Bradley Moran

University of Rhode Island

moran@gso. uri. edu | Research: Application of uranium-series and artificial radionuclides as tracers of particle/carbon dynamics, water mass circulation/age, and coastal groundwater transport; Arctic oceanography. Teaching: Development of new MBA in Ocean and Climate Sciences (MBA/MO dual degree); OCG 6XX The Business of Ocean and Climate Sciences (in development); OCG 640 Marine Particles; OCG 694F Radionuclides in the Ocean; OCG 451 Oceanographic Science (w/ Prof. D. Smith).

Outreach: Invited science panelist and workshop participant; sponsor for high-school teachers at sea; advisor to local and national environmental organizations.

calvin mordyCalvin Mordy

NOAA

calvin. w. mordy@noaa. gov

 

 

 

franz mueterFranz Mueter

University of Alaska Fairbanks

fmueter@alaska. net | I currently work as a statistical and fisheries consultant in Fairbanks, Alaska, but will be moving to Juneau in August 2008 to take a faculty position as a fishery biometrician at the Juneau Center, School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Born and raised in northern Germany, I began biological studies at the Rhino-Westphalian Technical Institute in Aachen before moving to Fairbanks in 1988 to pursue graduate degrees in biological (MS) and fisheries oceanography (PhD), as well as biostatistics (MS). My research initially focused on the early life history of pollock and flatfishes in nearshore waters of the Gulf of Alaska, and gradually expanded to include adult groundfish communities throughout the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea. I have also modeled recruitment processes of salmon throughout the Northeast Pacific and have worked on other anadromous species in Alaskan waters, including the Beaufort Sea. My research interests focus on the effects of environmental variability on the distribution, abundance, recruitment, and survival of fishes in subarctic and arctic waters. I am particularly interested in the applied aspects of my research, particularly as they relate to the management of fisheries resources. This includes the development of ecosystem indicators and improved models to advance an ecosystem-based approach to fisheries management.

I came to BSIERP through my interest in the effects of climate change on Bering Sea groundfish and on the Bering Sea ecosystem in general. I look forward to participating in and contributing to a truly integrated project.