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Sonya Fiddes

ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science
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Sonya is a PhD student with the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science based at the University of Melbourne. 

Sonya completed a Masters of Atmospheric Science at the University of Melbourne, where she investigated changes in alpine Australia’s winter rain and snowfall events. She has worked for both the University of Melbourne and the Australian Bureau of Meteorology as a research assistant focusing respectively on synoptic weather patterns for extreme weather events and air pollution and using statistical methods to project Victorian streamflows to the end of the century using downscaled CMIP5 global climate models.

PhD Project: Local and remote climate impacts of dimethyl sulfide produced by the Great Barrier Reef

Marine algae are the largest natural source of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) globally. Once released in to the atmosphere, DMS oxidises to form sulfate aerosols, which can then aid the formation of cloud condensation nuclei and subsequently affect cloud formation and surface temperatures. The role of marine algae, and the production of DMS, in climate regulation has long been debated, with no conclusive argument for or against. Algae that live in symbiosis with coral reefs are thought to be some of the largest producers of DMS and are spatially stationary, making the Great Barrier Reef the ideal natural laboratory to study this process. This project aims to use a combination of field work and modelling to help understand this complex feedback process and determine if there will be a climatic impact due to the degradation of the Great Barrier Reef.

144.96117,-37.79637

144.961174,-37.796369

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sonya.fiddes@climate-energy-college.org