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Primary Supervisor - Dr Lidong Be Scientific Background One of the key challenges in volcanology is understanding changes in volcanic activities during crises, such as transitions from effusive
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ecosystems, seabirds are also particularly threatened by human activity. To design effective conservation strategies, it is crucial to know how seabirds connect marine sites through their movement along marine
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Primary supervisor - Dr Rebecca Taylor This project is recruiting to a 1st February 2026 start date. Ageing is associated with increased rates of disease, including neurodegenerative conditions
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have found that microbial interactions shape the temporal dynamics of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in the Arctic. Moreover, there is emerging evidence from terrestrial ecosystems that antibiotics and
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interactions. Atmosphere-ocean surface heat exchange is highest during cold-air outbreaks and high surface wind speeds and thus often associated with mesoscale weather systems such as barrier winds, polar lows
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Primary Supervisor - Prof Diane Saunders Scientific background Bhutan is well-known for its extraordinarily high species richness and endemism rate. With only ~8% of Bhutan’s land being arable
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Primary Supervisor -Prof Michal Mackiewicz Scientific background Marine litter is a key threat to the oceans health and the livelihoods. Hence, new scalable automated methods to collect and analyse
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Primary supervisor - Prof Colin Cooper It is well established that bacteria can cause human cancer, with, for example, Helicobacter pylori implicated in the development of gastric cancer and
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Primary Supervisor - Dr Stefan Bidula Scientific background Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) is a stress molecule produced by marine organisms such as phytoplankton, algae, corals, and some plants
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Primary Supervisor - Prof David S Richardson Scientific Background Genetic variation within populations is essential to their ability to adapt and survive, but most mutations that change function