PhD defence and trial lecture: Griffin Goldstein Hill

PhD defence and trial lecture: Griffin Goldstein Hill
Doctoral candidate Griffin Goldstein Hill will hold a trial lecture and defend his thesis for the degree Philosophiae Doctor (PhD) at the Faculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture, Nord University.
Griffin Hill photo
PhD candidate Griffin Hill

Thesis title​​​:

From macro-models to macroalgae: assessing the impacts of climate change on farmed and wild populations in the marine environment

Trial lecture topic:

Effects of global warming on physiology and ecological interactions of kelps

Evaluation Committee:

  • Professor Celia Olabarria, Ecology and animal biology department, University of Vigo, Spain 
  • Researcher Franz Ronald Saavedra Goecke, Faculty of Biosciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU), Norway 
  • Associate Professor Terhi Hannele Kärpänen, Faculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture, Nord University, Norway

Supervisory Committee:

  • Main supervisor: Associate professor Alexander Jüterbock, Faculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture, Nord University, Norway
  • Co-supervisor: Professor Mark John Costello, Faculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture, Nord University, Norway
  • Co-supervisor: Professor Joost André Maria Raeymaekers, Faculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture, Nord University, Norway
  • Co-supervisor: Professor Jorge Manuel Ferreira de Assis, Faculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture, Nord University, Norway

Thesis summary​:

This thesis identified risks posed to aquaculture species by climate change, analyzed the potential of proposed interventions to reduce this risk, and assessed the impact of ongoing mitigation measures within Norwegian kelp aquaculture.

At a global scale, climate dissimilarity analysis reveals that aquaculture production remains stable under the Paris Agreement but faces disruptions under high-emissions pathways. While relocation may mitigate risks in some Exclusive Economic Zones, emerging industries in enclosed seas face significant challenges.

Focusing on cold-adapted kelp in the North Atlantic, species distribution models suggest that boosting thermal tolerance by 1-2°C could halve habitat losses across species and climate change scenarios, yet key regions may require greater adaptation.

At the local scale, whole genome sequencing of Saccharina latissima along Norway’s coastline revealed that cultivation approaches utilizing prolonged growth as vegetative cultures drives genetic differentiation to the same extent as geographic separation. These results inform best practices for strain enhancement while safeguarding wild populations.

From global projections to molecular insights, this work highlights that while mitigation and adaptive management are vital to enhance existing resilience, they cannot replace the urgent need for global emissions reductions to secure the future of farmed and wild marine populations.

Calendar

See all events
Research data café (digital)
Library course
Research
Webinar
28. April 2026

Research data café (digital)

Teams
12:00
13:00
The café lets you ask questions about research data.
PhD Essentials – Spring 2026, Levanger
Library course
Research
Conference/seminar
PhD course
4.7. May 2026

PhD Essentials – Spring 2026, Levanger

Levanger
09:00
15:15
Crucial scholarly skills for a good start on your PhD 
23rd Nordic Conference on Small Business Research (NCSB)
Conference/seminar
18.20. May 2026

23rd Nordic Conference on Small Business Research (NCSB)

Nord University, Bodø, Norway
10:00
13:30
The 23rd Nordic Conference on Small Business Research (NCSB) will be organised in Bodø, Norway from 18th to 20th May 2026.