Otago Honours Ocean Research Group’s Achievements
Otago Honours Ocean Research Group’s
Achievements
A world-leading team of ocean
chemistry scientists has been selected as the inaugural
recipients of the University of Otago’s Research Group
Award.
The new award, which goes to the
collaborative NIWA-University of Otago Centre for Chemical
and Physical Oceanography, recognises outstanding research
performance at a high international level by a research
group led from the University.
The Centre is a
recognised world leader in the field of understanding of the
chemistry of the oceans’ interactions with carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere. Its internationally influential
contributions include undertaking large-scale ocean
fertilisation experiments in which iron triggered vast
phytoplankton blooms that take up CO from the air.
Findings from the Centre’s ground-breaking
investigations into iron fertilisation have been published
in numerous international peer-reviewed journals. Their
analysis of the pitfalls of this and other forms of
geo-engineering has also fed into international conferences
on the subject and government decision making.
The
Research Group Award is the latest accolade for the Centre,
which last year received the Prime Minister’s Science
Prize in recognition of the far-reaching impact of its work.
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research & Enterprise)
Professor Richard Blaikie says he is delighted that the
University now has a means to formally honour the
distinguished collective achievements of the Centre members
and other leading research groups at the
University.
“This award helps recognise that
achieving sustained research excellence, which the
NIWA-Otago Centre has so clearly done, is often the result
of good teamwork over a long period,” he
says.
The Centre, which was established in 1996 and
is based in the University’s Department of Chemistry, has
been awarded 11 grants from the highly competitive Marsden
Fund, the first in 1999, with four grants currently
operating. It has also received significant multi-year
funding from the former Foundation for Research, Science and
Technology and continues to do so through the Ministry of
Science and Innovation.
The Co-Directors of the
Centre are Otago Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Sciences, Professor
Keith Hunter and NIWA’s Dr Rob Murdoch. Other leading
members are Professor Philip Boyd, Dr Cliff Law and Dr Kim
Currie of NIWA and the Department of Chemistry’s Associate
Professor Russell Frew, Dr Robert Strzepek, Dr Sylvia
Sander, Dr Claudine Stirling and Dr Evelyn Armstrong. In
addition, dozens of Masters and PhD students and
postdoctoral fellows have contributed to the activities of
the Centre.
The Centre is also responsible for the
establishment of the Community Trust of Otago Centre for
Trace Element Analysis, which is one of the most significant
and internationally competitive high-resolution trace
element analysis facilities in the world.
Professor
Keith Hunter says the success of the Centre owes much to the
collaborative relationship between NIWA and the Department
of Chemistry, which enabled the establishment of a critical
mass of researchers in chemistry, physics and plankton
biology.
“This has provided access to key
facilities such as NIWA’s and the University’s
respective research vessels Tangaroa and Polaris
II. The important contributions of the many postgraduate
students and post-doctoral researchers from the Centre over
the last 16 years must also be acknowledged.
“Finally, we are lucky to live in an almost
unique oceanic location here in the Southern Ocean – for
once, the tyranny of distance becomes a
blessing.”
The University will support the Centre
to hold a one-day symposium later this year to showcase
their research and the Research Group Award will be
presented at this
event.
ENDS