Climate & Environment

    Marine Biodiversity

    Climate Change

Post-Doctoral Fellowships

Denmark

Investigating the effects of climate change on habitat connectivity and gene flow between populations of marine top predators using landscape genetics

Climate change affects biodiversity. Species migrate to areas where the climate suits them, which may isolate groups of populations, reduce their genetic diversity and ultimately lead to their extinction. Negative effects on biodiversity could in turn have economic consequences. In marine zones, cetaceans, which control the distribution of many fish species, seem particularly at risk. To what extent will they be affected? During her postdoctoral research, Dr. Ruth Fernández-García will focus on the fate of two cold-water species of dolphins living in different environments. She will try to predict their future distribution by combining climate and habitat modeling and will investigate genetic variations caused by environmental change. Her research may then be extended to other species, including fish species of commercial importance.

DOLPHINS IN DANGER

To add or modify information on this page, please contact us at the following address: community.research@axa.com

Ruth
FERNÁNDEZ-GARCÍA

Institution

University of Copenhagen

Country

Denmark

Nationality

Spanish

ORCID Open Researcher and Contributor ID, a unique and persistent identifier to researchers