Media

Future Science Talks – Comedy Edition

Ocean Alkalinity Stand Up

  • Tyler Rohr, University of Tasmania

EOS Magazine – Research Spotlight

Forecasting the Future of Southern Ocean Ecosystems

  • Rebecca Owen, Science Writer

ABC Hobart Radio

Australian Antarctic Research Conference Interview

  • Joel Rheinberger, ABC Hobart

SBS Interview: Climate Innovators

Could our oceans hold the key to carbon capture?

  • Alex Hyndman Hill, APAC Network Anchor
  • Tyler Rohr, University of Tasmania

The Conversation

Marine CO₂ removal technologies could depend on the appetite of the ocean’s tiniest animals

  • Tyler Rohr, University of Tasmania;
  • Ali Mashayek, University of Cambridge;
  • Sophie Meyjes, University of Cambridge


The Conversation

Oceans absorb 30% of our emissions, driven by a huge carbon pump. Tiny marine animals are key to working out its climate impacts

  • Tyler Rohr, University of Tasmania
  • Anthony Richardson, The Univ. of Queensland
  • Elizabeth Shadwick, CSIRO

Research Communities: Earth & Evironment

Behind the Paper: Are zooplankton the key to climate models?

  • Tyler Rohr, University of Tasmania



EOS Magazine: Editor Highlight

The Long-Lasting Impact of a Nuclear War on the Ocean

  • Nicholas Gruber, Editor of AGU Advances

Nautilus Magazine

What Nuclear War Means for the Ocean

  • Haley Weiss, Staff Writes at TIME

OCB Highlight

A new ocean state after a nuclear war

  • Tyler Rohr, AAPP

The Conversation

Even a limited nuclear war could devastate the world’s oceans: here’s what our modelling shows

  • Tyler Rohr, University of Tasmania
  • Cheryl Harrison, Louisiana State University
  • Kim Scherrer, University of Bergen
  • Ryan Heneghan, Griffith University

EOS Magazine

Nuclear War Would Spawn a “Nuclear” El Niño

  • Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer EOS Magazine

OCB Highlight

A close-up view of biomass controls in Southern Ocean eddies

  • Tyler Rohr, MIT/WHOI Joint Program