Auckland Freshwater Ecosystems Lab
Often streams are damaged during development and this is allowed to be 'offset' by 'restoring' other streams. Does it actually work? Check out Chloe's paper from her Masters research to find out. (spoiler alert - it's not good news for our streams...) https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00288330.2022.2147201 School of Environment, The University of Auckland Faculty of Science, University of Auckland
Destruction and reconstruction: is freshwater offsetting achieving No Net Loss? ‘Biodiversity offsetting’ aims to address the residual negative environmental impacts of human development. It’s goal is to achieve No Net Loss (NNL), and preferably a Net Gain of biodiversity attr...
15/11/2022
Rose Gregersen describes a 500 year history of Lake Rototoa in her new paper https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.2c06835 School of Environment, The University of Auckland Faculty of Science, University of Auckland Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment
Resolving 500 Years of Anthropogenic Impacts in a Mesotrophic Lake: Nutrients Outweigh Other Drivers of Lake Change Interactions among multiple stressors, legacies of past perturbations, and the lack of historical information make it difficult to determine the influence of individual anthropogenic impacts on lakes and separate them from natural ecosystem variability. In the present study, we coupled paleolimnolog...
08/08/2022
We have funding available for a PhD student interested in studying the ecological effects of micro- and nanoplastics!
Ecological effects of micro- and nanoplatics at University of Auckland on FindAPhD.com PhD Project - Ecological effects of micro- and nanoplatics at University of Auckland, listed on FindAPhD.com
Congratulations to Amy Ockenden for another paper published from her PhD research! Microplastic alone has little ecological effect on food web interactions in streams, but when chemical additives enter the mix it's a different story...
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119558
School of Environment, The University of Auckland
06/04/2022
What's the best way to simulate a river network for modelling?Finnbar Lee has a new paper out from his PhD thesis that will tell you! School of Environment, The University of Auckland Faculty of Science, University of Auckland
River networks: An analysis of simulating algorithms and graph metrics used to quantify topology River networks are frequently simulated for use in the development and testing of ecological theory. Currently, two main algorithms are used, stochastic branching networks (SBNs) and optimal chann...
21/02/2022
Contemporary evolution and phenotypic plasticity combine to shape fish response to warming. New paper out by Jopi Benavente Paredes and the geothermal Gambusia team - Dave Frxl, Eric Palkovacs, Michael Kinnison. Thanks Marsden Fund! School of Environment, The University of Auckland; Faculty of Science, University of Auckland
Plasticity and evolution shape the scaling of metabolism and excretion along a geothermal temperature gradient Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
01/02/2022
You can learn quite a bit from analyzing DNA in lake sediments, but you need to know how to do it. Katie tells you how in her new paper!
Shifts in DNA yield and biological community composition in stored sediment: implications for paleogenomic studies Lake sediments hold a wealth of information from past environments that is highly valuable for paleolimnological reconstructions. These studies increasingly apply modern molecular tools targeting sedimentary DNA (sedDNA). However, sediment core sampling can be logistically difficult, making immediat...
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Website
Address
School Of Environment, University Of Auckland
Auckland
1142