Posters and their authors

 Poster guidelines: Posters should not exceed 40 inches x 60 inches (100 cm x 150 cm). We will provide pins to attach your posters to the foam-core display board. Posters will be displayed on easles and these can be easily rearranged and relocated within the poster area. The poster area will be immediately outside of the lecture room and will be where we gather during coffee breaks. Friday evening (5:00 -7:00 pm) will be set aside for formal discussions of the posters. If you can, please bring sheet-sized copies of your poster because participants are usually interested in bring home details of your poster.

 Linda Ayliffe Implications of 13C signatures recorded in the enamel of Australian marsupials for the causes for the global expansion of C4 vegetation in the Neogene
 David Bowling 13C content of ecosystem respiration is linked to precipitation and vapor pressure deficit
Zewdu Eshetu Patterns of 13C and 15N natural abundances in soil profiles have proven suitable for studying impacts of long-term land use changes on soil conditions
 Cath Ficken Did CO2 control glacial / interglacial changes in South American ecosystems? - isotopic evidence
 Miquel Gonzales-Meler Latitudinal differential response of the land plant ecosystem to the Cenomanian/Turonian Oceanic Anoxic Event: implications for the global carbon budget
 Miquel Gonzales-Meler Root-rhizosphere respiration limits carbon accumulation in forests exposed to elevated CO2
Gerhard Helle On Corrections of d13C in tree-ring proxy records due to the atmospheric changes of CO2 concentration and d13CCO2
 George Hoffman The global budget of 18O in CO2 and O2: a modeling study with the ECHAM/GCM
 Christine Janis Indicators of primary productivity from mammalian communities: Implications for elevated levels of CO2 in the early Miocene
Chun-Ta Lai Understanding the influences of seasonality and land-use history on biosphere-atmosphere 13CO2 exchange
Zheng-hua Li C3/C4 vegetation response to atmospheric CO2 levels during the last 150 ka BP: Stable carbon isotopic evidence from soil carbonate
Zheng-Hua Li Holocene high resolution cold events recorded by d13C of soil organic matter from a climate sensitive zone in the Chinese loess plateau: A hint of La Nina?
 Guanghui Lin Effects of atmospheric [CO2] on carbon isotope discrimination and time-integrated Ci/Ca ratios in C3 plants: a synthesis
 John Marshall Tree-ring record of the gas-exchange response to a step-change in CO2 concentration
Amy Markeson Stable isotope determination of diet in montane voles (Microtus montanus)
Roser Matamala The use of stable isotopes to study carbon cycling in a restored tall grass prairie chronosequence
 Jennifer McElwain Stomatal evidence for a decline in atmospheric CO2 concentration during the Younger Dryas stadial: A comparison with Antarctic ice core records
 Claudia Mora Stable isotope compositions in modern vertisols: The influence of microtopography and climate
Behzad Mortazavi Carbon isotopic discrimination and control of nighttime canopy C18O16O in a pine forest in the southeastern United States (Powerpoint)
Wolfgang Peters-Kottig A carbon isotope study of Late Paleozoic terrestrial organic matter
 Diane Pataki The carbon isotope composition of ecosystem respiration in North and South America
 Jorge Sanchez-Sesma Global temperatures and carbon dioxide reconstructed for the past 10,000 years
Francesca Smith The Neogene record of grass photosynthetic pathway from the carbon isotope signature of fossil phytoliths
 Matthew Sponheimer Mammalian evolution and biodiversity in a C4 world
 Matthew Sponheimer Tastes good to me: African antelopes and C4 grass
Chris Still Atmospheric constraints on physiological processes from CO2 inversions
 Joy Ward Comparisons of the physiological responses of trees from the Ranch La Brea tar pits during glacial periods relative to the present
 Matthew Wooler Late Quaternary environmental change in Western Australia: Evidence from stable carbon isotopes in longitudinal dunes
 Matthew Wooler C3 - C4 vegetation composition of Wolfe Creek Meteorite Crater, Western Australia: implications for a paleoecological reconstruction