---Apologies in advance for cross-postings--- (I am new to this e-mail list, so please let me know if this type of post is not appropriate)
Dear fellow ecologists, Are you interested in Arctic or high latitude ecosystems during the cold season? This spring, we will have a session on Winter Ecology at EGU 2025 – please consider joining! The session will focus on winter and cold season ecology in Arctic and high latitude ecosystems – plants, microorganisms, biogeochemical cycling, seasonality, responses to climate change. We welcome a wide range of topics and study types – from field studies and experiments to monitoring and modelling. Please see full description here<https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU25/session/52246>. We hope to make this session as interactive as possible, with lots of opportunities to network and connect. I would like to especially encourage PhDs, postdocs and early career researchers. Together, we will shape this session! The call for abstracts is now open, deadline January 15, 2025, 13:00 CET. For travel support, the deadline for early abstract submission applies, December 2. EGU takes place in Vienna, Austria, and online, April 27-May 2, 2025. Please do not hesitate to reach out if you want to hear more about this session. Best wishes, Emily, on behalf of the convener team, Laura Helene Rasmussen, University of Copenhagen, and James Bradley, Mediterranean Institute for Oceanography Emily Pickering Pedersen, PhD Postdoctoral researcher | emily.pickering.peder...@umu.se<mailto:emily.pickering.peder...@umu.se> Climate Impacts Research Centre | Department of Ecology and Environmental Science Umeå University Abisko Scientific Research Station, Abisko, Sweden [signature_282076573] I respectfully acknowledge that the Abisko Scientific Research Station is located on the traditional lands of Sápmi EGU session description: Biogeosciences – Terrestrial Biogeosciences – BG3.19 – https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU25/session/52246 The cold season dominates most of the year in Arctic and high latitude regions but is understudied due to difficult access and challenging working conditions. Nonetheless, plant and microbial activity and biogeochemical turnover continues during the non-growing season under snow cover and sub-zero temperatures. Such activity is likely to play an important role in year-round biological activity and ecosystem functioning, greenhouse gas fluxes, and nutrient cycling. High latitude climate change is particularly pronounced during winter - where changing weather including extreme winter warming events, rain-on-snow events, and variable snow melt dates may substantially alter the physical, chemical and biological characteristics of terrestrial ecosystems and ecosystem interactions. However, there is a lack of data and understanding of the disruptions to soil-microbe-plant-snow-atmosphere interactions and ecosystem functioning resulting from changing winter conditions. Addressing the cold-season knowledge gap will bring us closer to a more comprehensive understanding of high latitude ecosystems and responses to seasonal and climatic changes. In this interdisciplinary session, we aim to attract researchers working on the themes of Arctic and high latitude cold season biogeochemistry, microbiology and plant-soil processes. We want to bring multiple varied perspectives from different ecosystem constituents together, forming an integrated ecosystem approach that considers drivers, transformations, feedbacks, and interdependencies. We welcome studies focusing on experimental and modelling approaches to understand Arctic winter plant and microbial functioning, biogeochemical cycling, and associated impacts on the growing season, responses to changing Arctic seasonality, and winter climate regimes. To unsubscribe from this list please go to https://community.esa.org/confirm/?u=RhPWqPxFwODKvbkiT32nkIqRrsiSgulp