Professor Philip Barker
ProfessorResearch Overview
Phil addresses big environmental questions using the ecology and chemistry of microscopic organisms. His focus is on using diatoms and stable isotope methods to explore changes in climate, biogeochemical cycling and water quality changes.
He has spent much of the last 25 years working in Africa investigating long term climate change from lake sediment archives. Parallel studies have been conducted in the Lake District examining water quality and ecological changes in lakes and rivers.
Published Research
Phil has published more than including six in Nature and Science.
His most recent work explores the using oxygen, silicon and carbon isotopes from the remains of diatoms in the sediments of Lake Challa, a 97m deep volcanic crater. He is also investigating changes in the carbon cycle of freshwater ecosystems using carbon isotopes from contemporary biofilms in lakes and rivers.
Phil has received funding for his work from:
- Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC)
- Engineering and Physical Sciences research Council (EPSRC)
- International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP)
- Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)
Current research
Phil’s current research projects include:
- A Defra-funded project aiming to mitigate the effects of diffuse pollution from farms
- ICDP funded
He co-leads the with particular responsibility for
Phil’s are using diatoms and isotope methods in biomonitoring and studies of environmental change. Current projects include: land use and climate variability in the Lake District; biomonitoring of UK rivers; climate change from Iberian speleothem; and carbon release from Icelandic glaciers.
Roles
Phil is currently:
- Director of
- Visiting Researcher at the British Geological Survey
- Convenor of the Isotopes and biogenic silica (IBiS) working group
- Member of the NERC peer review college
- Editorial board member of the Journal of Quaternary Science
Teaching
Phil’s current teaching roles include:
- Lecturing on various aspects of environmental change to , , , and students
- Leading a
- Leading a masters module on Lake Ecology in collaboration with
- Acting as an external examiner and assessor of undergraduate schemes at other major UK universities
He has examined more than 25 PhD students from different UK and international universities.
PhD Supervision Interests
Opportunites may be available in palaeolimnology, diatom ecology and the development of stable isotope methods
01/05/2024 → 30/04/2026
Research
01/10/2019 → 31/12/2021
Research
13/02/2019 → 30/09/2024
Research
01/04/2018 → 31/05/2025
Research
01/06/2017 → 31/05/2021
Research
22/03/2013 → 31/03/2020
Research
Oral presentation
Member of an organisation
Membership of committee
Editorial activity
Membership of committee
Editorial activity
Visiting an external academic institution
Membership of committee
- Environmental and Biogeochemistry
- Improving global stewardship
- Innovation for a better environment
- Sustainable Catchments
- Understanding a changing planet