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Department of Computer Science and Technology

Date: 
Thursday, 3 July, 2025 - 13:00 to 14:00
Speaker: 
Orlando Timmerman, University of Cambridge
Venue: 
Room GS15 at the William Gates Building and on Zoom: https://cl-cam-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/4361570789?pwd=Nkl2T3ZLaTZwRm05bzRTOUUxY3Q4QT09&from=addon

*Abstract* Coral reefs are experiencing increasing stress as climate change warms and acidifies the oceans. This is causing mortality events in the least-suitable places, while areas at higher latitudes may become suitable for future growth of reefs and the biodiversity and ecosystem services they provide. Present-day conservation measures currently do not account for this biogeographical shift. This project looks for suitability signals in long-term historic and forecast climatological data in an effort to contextualise future conservations efforts. In the meantime, a number of side-quests will be explored, ranging from a quantitative meta-analysis of species' responses to climatological shifts to a foray into remote sensing of shallow water habitats. This talk is an informal update of my thought processes so far, an invited sanity-check from anyone kind enough to provide it, and a search for future directions of exploration. Questions, criticisms, and suggestions highly desired! *Bio* Orlando is a second-year PhD student with the AI4ER CDT. Supervised by Oscar Branson (Earth Sciences), he is interested in the opportunities and limitations for modelling marine ecosystems – particularly coral reefs – posed by the data available today.

Seminar series: 
Energy and Environment Group

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