Workshop | First Announcement The biosphere-atmosphere exchange and global budget of carbonyl sulfide Dates: 5-9 September, 2016 Location: Hyytiälä Forestry Field Station, Finland Funding: Local travel costs (bus Helsinki-Hyytiälä-Helsinki) are funded by ICOS-Finland. Most participants will meet their own flight and accommodation costs (ca. €110 per night for a single / € 100 for a shared room, including all meals and saunas, and a boreal dinner). Also, if your schedule does not match with the organized bus transport, you are asked to cover the local transport by yourself. You should plan your schedule to arrive in Helsinki on Mon 5 Sept in the afternoon and you can book your departure flights from Helsinki later than early Friday evening, 5 pm onwards. Goals of the workshop: 1. Consolidate the international community of scientists working on all aspects of carbonyl sulfide 2. Discuss protocols and develop consensus around calibration, standards, and measurement techniques 3. Evaluate the current state of the art of: a. The global COS budget: natural and anthropogenic sources and sinks b. Using COS to estimate GPP c. Implementation of COS in biosphere-atmosphere exchange models d. Drivers and controls of COS fluxes Abstract: The coupled vegetation uptake of carbonyl sulfide (COS) and CO2, and the potential to use this coupling to study large-scale photosynthesis, has prompted exciting new research into the biosphere-atmosphere exchange of COS recently. Aided by new measurement capabilities, information on leaf, soil and ecosystem COS fluxes is now being collected in order to develop COS-based estimates of gross primary production (GPP). These recent investigations complement more established research on the role of COS in atmospheric chemistry and the sulfur cycle, signifying the importance of COS across Earth system processes and highlighting the value of establishing strong inter-community dialogue. For COS to provide improved constraints on GPP estimates requires a more complete understanding of COS consumption and production processes in soils and the kinetics of plant COS-CO2 uptake across ecosystems. Extending ecosystem scale information to regional, continental and global scale GPP and to refine tropospheric COS budgets requires addressing uncertainties in COS production from the ocean, biomass burning and anthropogenic activities. In parallel, it is essential we bring the information from laboratory and field measurements to models that can be tested against field data and atmospheric and satellite COS observations. This workshop will bring together researchers working on all aspects of COS to evaluate the current state of the art in our understanding, measurement, modeling and application of COS and to facilitate a synergistic progression of this exciting field. 1 If you do not know Hyytiälä Forestry Field station, in short: we have organized several international workshops and summer schools here over the years. We always create a relaxing but inspiring spirit in the meetings. The closest entertainment (pubs etc.) are kilometers away, which guarantees that we are together all the time, but we have enough beer etc. in the station. The workshop also includes the excursion to the SMEAR II field station, which is an ICOS Class 1 atmospheric tall tower and ecosystem flux tower site (see http://www.atm.helsinki.fi/SMEAR/ and https://www.icos-ri.eu/ ). Agenda: Preliminary agenda to be announced by mid-April 2016. The final registration is requested by end May. Registration and all questions: Please contact MSc Kukka-Maaria Erkkilä, Department of Physics, University of Helsinki (kukka-maaria.erkkila@helsinki.fi) and Cc Timo Vesala timo.vesala@helsinki.fi. **** Please register by 29 Feb. **** Please register with the following details: Name: Affiliation: Telephone number: Email: Potential speaker (YES/NO) and a tentative title: Prepared to share the room: Additional information (vegetarian, allergies etc.): For updates, check the COSANOVA website of the Carbonyl Sulfide Biosphere-Atmosphere Research Group (http://www.cosanova.org/) Scientific Organizing Committee: Timo Vesala, University of Helsinki, Finland. timo.vesala@helsinki.fi Ulli Seibt, University of California, Los Angeles, USA. useibt@ucla.edu Kadmiel Maseyk, The Open University, UK. kadmiel.maseyk@open.ac.uk Huilin Chen, University of Groningen, Netherlands. huilin.chen@rug.nl Mary Whelan, University of California, Merced, USA. mwhelan2@ucmerced.edu Ivan Mammarella, University of Helsinki, Finland. ivan.mammarella@helsinki.fi Linda Kooijmans, University of Groningen, Netherlands. l.m.j.kooijmans@rug.nl Local Organizing Committee: Kukka-Maaria Erkkilä, University of Helsinki, Finland. kukka-maaria.erkkila@helsinki.fi Timo Vesala, University of Helsinki, Finland. timo.vesala@helsinki.fi 2