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Cliff LawContact details

Email cliff.law@niwa.co.nz

Research

Cliff is the Co-Director of the Research Centre for Oceanography, Leader of the NIWA Oceanic Control of Atmospheric Composition Programme, and a Professor in the Department of Marine Chemistry, University of Otago.

Cliff Law NIWA profile

Cliff is also a member of the Coastal People: Southern Skies collaboration that connects communities with world-leading, cross-discipline research to rebuild coastal ecosystems.

Coastal People: Southern Skies

His research focuses on the interaction between the ocean and the atmosphere; how biogeochemical cycling in the surface ocean influences atmospheric composition, and how climate variability feedbacks to ocean biogeochemistry. Specific research areas include the production and exchange of trace gases, controls of phytoplankton productivity and biodiversity, and the impact of ocean acidification and climate variability on the structure and functioning of pelagic ecosystems.

He was a member of the International SOLAS Steering Committee for six years, the NZ delegate on the IMO Working Group on Ocean Fertilization for the London Convention, and was awarded the Hutchinson Medal by the Institute of Chemical Engineers in 2013.

Courses

Postgraduate students

  • Wayne Dillon, PhD: Advancing analytical approaches for marine calcium carbonate saturation state characteristics
  • Alexander Hayward, PhD: Next-generation observation, modelling and forecasting of microbial community composition and function in the Southern Ocean
  • Habibeh Hashimi, PhD: Development of new sensors to measure dimethyl sulfide (DMS) gas in marine surface water

Completed Postgraduate students

  • Antonia Cristi, PhD: Phytoplankton diversity and contribution to elemental and trophic cycling in the Southern Ocean
  • Fenella Deans, PhD: The influence of climate change on marine bacterioplankton communities and greenhouse gases in New Zealand waters
  • Alexia Saint-Macary, PhD: Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) and dimethyl sulfide (DMS) dynamics in the surface ocean
  • Jesse Vance, PhD: Examining the drivers of co2 exchange and ocean acidification in coastal and shelf waters around new Zealand

Publications

Publications

Seabrook, S., Law, C., Thurber, A., Ladroit, Y., Cummings, V., & Tait, L. (2024). Cryospheric cap degradation as a mechanism for Antarctic seep emergence. Proceedings of the XI Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) Open Science Conference. 801. Retrieved from http://www.scar2024.org Conference Contribution - Published proceedings: Abstract

Vance, J. M., Currie, K., Suanda, S. H., & Law, C. S. (2024). Drivers of seasonal to decadal mixed layer carbon cycle variability in subantarctic water in the Munida Time Series. Frontiers in Marine Science, 11, 1309560. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2024.1309560 Journal - Research Article

Bach, L. T., Vaughan, N. E., Law, C. S., & Williamson, P. (2024). Implementation of marine CO2 removal for climate mitigation: The challenges of additionality, predictability, and governability. Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene, 12(1), 00034. doi: 10.1525/elementa.2023.00034 Journal - Research Other

Law, C. S., Collins, C., Marriner, A., Bury, S. J., Brown, J. C. S., & Rickards, G. (2024). Dispersion and fate of methane emissions from cold seeps on Hikurangi Margin, New Zealand. Frontiers in Earth Science, 12, 1354388. doi: 10.3389/feart.2024.1354388 Journal - Research Article

Seabrook, S., Thurber, A., Ladroit, Y., Cummings, V., Tait, L., Maurice, A., & Law, C. (2024). Cryospheric change as a driver of Antarctic seep emergence. Proceedings of the European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly. EGU24-16511. doi: 10.5194/egusphere-egu24-16511 Conference Contribution - Published proceedings: Abstract

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