John Coll
Professor
Geography
National University of Maynooth
Ireland
Biography
I graduated from the University of Stirling with an Honours degree in Environmental Science and Biology in 1996. After a few years back in the workplace, a PhD followed at the University of the Highlands and Islands: Local scale assessment of climate change and its impacts in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland (2007). Since May 2008 I have been employed as a researcher with the Irish Climate Analysis and Research Units (ICARUS) at Maynooth University. I am a climatologist with interests in climate change impacts and adaptation and biogeography. I have a particular interest and significant expertise in statistical and applied probability modelling for spatial binary data, and in applying this to explore the impacts of climate change on natural systems. While a strong interdisciplinary approach and broad understanding of climate change research has been developed, current areas of core research activity are; Homogeneity assessment of climate data. Application of the HOMER relative homogenisation programme (R-based) to multiple station time series. Bioclimatic envelope modelling: the application of techniques including Generalised Linear Models (GLMs), Generalized Additive Models (GAMs) and the use of Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs). Applying model ensemble approaches in the BIOMOD library (R-based).
Research Interest
Geography.
Publications
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2016 'Projected climate change impacts on upland heaths in Ireland' Coll J, Bourke D, Hodd RL, Sheehy Skeffington M, and others (2016) 'Projected climate change impacts on upland heaths in Ireland'. Climate Research, 69 :177-191
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2016 'The diversity and composition of moth assemblages of protected and degraded raised bogs in Ireland' Flynn C, Griffin C, Coll J, Williams C (2016) 'The diversity and composition of moth assemblages of protected and degraded raised bogs in Ireland'. Insect Conservation and Diversity, 9 (4):302-319
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2010 'Climate change and Europe's mountains' Coll J (2010) 'Climate change and Europe's mountains' In: Europe's ecological backbone: recognising the true value of our mountains. Copenhagen: European Environment Agency.