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Ove Hoegh-Guldberg is currently Foundation Professor and Director of the Centre for Marine Studies at The University of Queensland. Hoegh-Guldberg has held academic positions at UCLA, Stanford University, The University of Sydney and The University of Queensland and is currently a member of the Australian Climate Group; the Royal Society (London) Marine Advisory Network; and the Board of Editing Reviewers at Science Magazine. He also heads a large research laboratory (over 30 researchers & students) that focuses on how global warming and ocean acidification are affecting and will affect coral reefs now and into the future.

He completed his BSc Hons at the University of Sydney and PhD at UCLA in 1989, and has spent the past 20 years working on climate change issues within marine ecosystems. He was recognised in 1999 with the Eureka Prize in 1999 for “ground-breaking research into the physiological basis of coral bleaching”. His published works include over 160 refereed publications and book chapters.  Three of his publications are now the 1st, 4th and 6th most cited works over the past 10 years in the area of “climate change”. Two of these papers are also the 1st and 2nd most cited papers over the past 10 years in the area of “coral reefs”: 649 (Hoegh-Guldberg 1999) and 426 (Hughes et al. 2003). His recent Science paper in Dec 2007 is now ISI’s hottest paper (most cited over the past two years) in the both the area of “climate change” and “ocean acidification” (cited 81 times in <18 months). In 2008, he became a Queensland Smart State Premier’s Fellow.

Hoegh-Guldberg is also a regular contributor to the media, with his work over the past 12 months featuring in the ABC (Catalyst), BBC (with Sir David Attenborough) and NBC (with Tom Brokaw), reaching over 15 million people in Australia, the UK and the USA. In his role as Deputy Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, and as Coordinator for the Australasian Centre for Excellence and Chair of the Bleaching Working Group within the World Bank-Global Environment Facility Coral Reef Targeted Research project. Hoegh-Guldberg interacts with a wide array of national and international scientific networks that focus on the challenges that climate change poses to the health of the world’s oceans.

In addition to his work as a university academic, Hoegh-Guldberg has been advisor to numerous organisations including the Royal Society (London), Greenpeace, World Fund for Nature, Rio Tinto Aluminium, the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, The World Bank, UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, NOAA and the Australian Government on the issue of coral reefs and climate change.

 

4 Responses to Ove Hoegh-Guldberg

  1. WILLIAM maxwell says:

    Ove,
    I meet you last Friday @ UQ Climate for Change.
    Various sources I have read recently (& geology 101 in 1979)allude to the world being ice free at 5°C warmer with sea levels up to 70 metres higher than current including a 20m ‘fall’ for calthrates from the sea bed.
    I am seeking reputable information source(s) for geological data that shows historical sea levels / temperature relationships
    As well, I would like to source information on the level of CO₂ concentrations that trigger an Oceanic anoxic event and the corresponding decreases in surface oxygen levels.
    Thanks
    WILLIAM maxwell (future foreshore property owner)

  2. Don Gaddes says:

    I recommend both you and Ove read ‘Tomorrows Weather’(Alex S Gaddes,1990)
    This book has now been updated and republished as a free pdf, and is available from
    dongaddes93@gmail.com.

  3. [...] Hoegh-Guldberg on the state of the GBR Author: John Bruno on July 6, 2011 Dr. Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, Director of the Global Change Institute at the University of Queensland, has responded to Bob [...]

  4. Ricki says:

    Ove, what can you say about the recent CSIRO report on the reef? Please put up a post. I was there only a 2 weeks ago (off the Whitsundays). I have to admit the coral looked a bit sparse, but I am surprised by the 50% figure.

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