Craig Smith
Professor
Department of Oceanography
University of Hawaii
United States of America
Biography
Craig Smith obtained his Ph.D. from Scripp’s Institution of Oceanography in 1983 and is currently a Professor of Oceanography at the University of Hawai’i. He has strong interests in biodiversity, disturbance ecology, and human impacts in seafloor ecosystems. Craig has conducted research in Antarctica, mangroves, submarine canyons, organic-fall communities, cold seeps, continental slopes, and abyssal plains to obtain a broad perspective of natural and stressed marine ecosystems. He has lead over 50 research expeditions from the equator to Antarctica, and has conducted over 100 HOV, ROV and AUV dives. Craig has also published over 140 papers in the scientific literature on seafloor ecology, biodiversity, climate-change impacts, and the design of marine protected areas.
Research Interest
Ecology of marine sediments (including disturbance, recruitment, succession, deposit feeding)
Publications
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Smith, Craig R. Organic Falls on the Ocean Floor. 2009. In: The Encyclopedia of Islands, R. Gillespie and D. Clague, eds., University of California Press, in press.
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Treude, T., C. R. Smith, F. Wenzhöfer, E. Carney, A. F. Bernardino, A. K. Hannides, M. Krüger, A. Boetius. 2009. Biogeochemistry of a deep-sea chemosynthetic whale fall: rates and patterns of microbial sulfur and carbon metabolism. Marine Ecology Progress Series, in press.
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Treude, T., C. R. Smith, F. Wenzhöfer, E. Carney, A. F. Bernardino, A. K. Hannides, M. Krüger, A. Boetius. 2009. Biogeochemistry of a deep-sea chemosynthetic whale fall: rates and patterns of microbial sulfur and carbon metabolism. Marine Ecology Progress Series, in press.