Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
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
-
Primary supervisor – Prof Parvadha Suntharalingham BACKGROUND The ocean plays a key role in controlling atmospheric greenhouse-gas levels. It removes a significant fraction of anthropogenic carbon
-
) Determining its involvement in pathways that promote healthy ageing In addition, we will collaborate with the lab of Prof. Tom Wileman to determine the conservation of these mechanisms in mammalian cells
-
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
-
Primary supervisor - Prof Mark Banfield Like animals, plants get sick, but they have an immune system to fight back against infection. Plant diseases are a threat to food production and a constraint
-
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
-
Primary Supervisor - Prof Ian Renfrew Scientific background Arctic climate change and the associated sea-ice retreat are having significant impacts on both the atmosphere, the ocean and their
-
Primary Supervisor: Prof Thomas Mock Scientific background Microbial rhodopsins (RHOs) are common in eukaryotic plankton including diatoms, which contribute ca. 45% of annual oceanic primary
-
Primary Supervisor - Prof Kate Kemsley Scientific Background Deforestation is a major global issue, destroying biodiversity and accelerating climate change by removing vital carbon sinks. The newly