

EOS Magazine – Research Spotlight
Forecasting the Future of Southern Ocean Ecosystems
- Rebecca Owen, Science Writer


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

OCB Highlight
The fate of the 21st century marine carbon cycle could hinge on zooplankton’s appetite
- Tyler Rohr, University of Tasmania

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

OCB Highlight
New evidence suggests that tiny zooplankton might be the biggest problem with carbon cycling in IPCC 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



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

OCB Highlight
Ocean iron fertilization commercialization: bad idea; Continued research: good idea
- Tyler Rohr, MIT/WHOI Joint Program