Emma Cavan

Emma Cavan

Imperial College London

H-index: 17

Europe-United Kingdom

About Emma Cavan

Emma Cavan, With an exceptional h-index of 17 and a recent h-index of 17 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Imperial College London, specializes in the field of Biogeochemistry, Ecology, Carbon cycle, Warming.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Workshop on Assessing the Impact of Fishing on Oceanic Carbon (WKFISHCARBON; outputs from 2023 meeting)

Climate change impacts on Antarctic krill behaviour and population dynamics

Good fisheries management is good carbon management

Observational and numerical modeling constraints on the global ocean biological carbon pump

Concepts toward a global mechanistic mapping of ocean carbon export

Bacteria and archaea regulate particulate organic matter export in suspended and sinking marine particle fractions

Valuing carbon sequestration by Antarctic krill faecal pellets

What the flux? Uncertain response of ocean biological carbon export in a changing world

Emma Cavan Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

1219

Citations(since 2020)

1085

Cited By

381

hIndex(all)

17

hIndex(since 2020)

17

i10Index(all)

19

i10Index(since 2020)

19

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Emma Cavan Skills & Research Interests

Biogeochemistry

Ecology

Carbon cycle

Warming

Top articles of Emma Cavan

Workshop on Assessing the Impact of Fishing on Oceanic Carbon (WKFISHCARBON; outputs from 2023 meeting)

ICES Scientific Reports

2024

Climate change impacts on Antarctic krill behaviour and population dynamics

2024/1

Good fisheries management is good carbon management

2024/3/21

Observational and numerical modeling constraints on the global ocean biological carbon pump

Authorea Preprints

2024/3/7

Concepts toward a global mechanistic mapping of ocean carbon export

Global Biogeochemical Cycles

2023/9

Bacteria and archaea regulate particulate organic matter export in suspended and sinking marine particle fractions

Msphere

2023/6/22

Valuing carbon sequestration by Antarctic krill faecal pellets

bioRxiv

2023

What the flux? Uncertain response of ocean biological carbon export in a changing world

Authorea Preprints

2022/11/30

Uncertain response of ocean biological carbon export in a changing world

2022/4

Disentangling the role of prokaryotes in regulating export flux via suspended and sinking organic matter in the Southern Ocean

2022 Goldschmidt Conference

2022/3/24

Commercial fishery disturbance of the global ocean biological carbon sink

Global Change Biology

2022/2

“Sinking dead”—how zooplankton carcasses contribute to particulate organic carbon flux in the subantarctic Southern Ocean

Limnology and Oceanography

2021/11/7

Special Feature: Nature based solutions for a changing world.

2021/12/22

Nature‐based Solutions to tackle climate change and restore biodiversity

2021/11

Robust model-based indicators of regional differences in food-web structure in the Southern Ocean

Journal of Marine Systems

2021/8/1

Reconciling the size‐dependence of marine particle sinking speed

Geophysical Research Letters

2021/3/16

Implications for the mesopelagic microbial gardening hypothesis as determined by experimental fragmentation of Antarctic krill fecal pellets

Ecology and Evolution

2021

Why krill swarms are important to the global climate

Frontiers for Young Minds

2020/10/19

The role of zooplankton in establishing carbon export regimes in the southern ocean–a comparison of two representative case studies in the subantarctic region

2020

See List of Professors in Emma Cavan University(Imperial College London)