Posted on 15 November 2022
Sustainable Seas at Waitī Waitā 2022
- News
- 2 Minutes to read
We’re proud to be sponsors of Waitī Waitā – The NZMSS & NZFSS Joint Conference, 21 – 24 November 2022.
The combined meeting of the New Zealand Marine and Freshwater Science Societies acknowledges the connectivity between marine and freshwater ecosystems – a critical relationship to understand, especially when it comes to managing our estuaries.
We’ve got a number of researchers involved in our mahi speaking at the conference.
Degradation and recovery theme leader Conrad Pilditch will be chairing a session on Cumulative effects of multiple stressor impacts and management in the coastal zone, involving talks from a number of researchers involved in Sustainable Seas.
Included in this session:
- Simon Thrush – Ecological consequences of cumulative effects
- Jasmine Low – Using ecological response footprints to understand and manage cumulative effects
- Rebecca Gladstone-Gallagher – Frameworks to manage for marine ecosystem recovery
- Joanne Ellis – Risk assessment frameworks to guide cumulative effects management in marine spaces
- Drew Lohrer – A multi-partner initiative to turn the tide in estuaries: project description and initial results
- Judi Hewitt – Improving estuarine health: why can’t we get it right
You'll also hear about Sustainable Seas linked research from the following speakers throughout the conference:
- Elizabeth Harrison – Predicting changes in the ecosystem service provision of estuarine bivalves in response to cumulative stressor effects
- Lolita Rynkowski – A systematic review and meta-analysis of the cumulative effects of multiple stressors on marine bivalves
- Fabrice Stephenson – Conservation of deep-water corals in the face of multiple stressors in the New Zealand region
- Zhanchao Shao – Monitoring estuarine water quality with remotely-sensed parameters in Tauranga Harbour
- Karin Bryan – Using simplified bio-physical numerical modelling to manage the effects of nutrients in estuaries: case studies from Tauranga Harbour
- Natalie Prinz – Large bivalves as potential bioremediators of degraded soft-sediment ecosystem multifunctionality
- Vera Rullens – Understanding the consequences of sea level rise: the ecological implications of losing intertidal habitat
- Kelsey Miller – Large-scale sea urchin removal as a tool for restoring kelp forests in northeastern New Zealand
- Ethan Russell – Feeding ecology of toheroa and implications for aquaculture
- Marieka van der Lee – The dynamics of toheroa recruitment and implications for aquaculture
- Megan Ranapia – Pātangaroa: Co-developing management strategies for the eleven-armed starfish outbreak in Ōhiwa Harbour
- Kiri Reihana – Mātauranga Māori used to lead the transdisciplinary knowledge systems approach informing co-management practices of Tuangi populations in Ōhiwa harbour
- Carolyn Lundquist – Development of a seafloor model of disturbance impacts on benthic structure in the Hawke’s Bay
Keep an eye out for these posters as well:
- Brooke Ellis-Smith – Developing a methodology for induced reproduction in a novel aquaculture candidate, yellowbelly flounder (Rhombosolea leporina)
- Alexander West – Cumulative effects research is challenging: a roadmap to empirically understand them