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Department of Zoology

 

Catharine Horswill is a marine predator population ecologist interested in understanding how environmental change and human activity shape life in our oceans. Her research combines advanced quantitative methods with applied conservation science to produce robust evidence that supports sustainable ocean management and the protection of marine biodiversity.

Catharine began her academic career with a BSc in Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, followed by an MSc at the University of Oxford in collaboration with the British Antarctic Survey, where she studied links between prey availability and penguin demography. After gaining experience in industry as a project manager leading a marine predator research programme, she returned to academia to complete a PhD with the British Antarctic Survey and the University of Glasgow on the drivers of penguin population change.

She has held research positions at the British Trust for Ornithology, the University of Glasgow, and a jointly appointed fellowship at University College London and the Zoological Society of London Institute of Zoology. She currently holds a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship to develop mechanistic models that predict how seabirds and other marine bioindicator species respond to environmental change.

Publications:

An up-to-date list of Catharine's publications is available on her Google Scholar profile. Please contact her if you would like copies of any papers that are not available open access.

Research Areas:

  • Marine ecology
  • Conservation biology
  • Population dynamics
  • Marine predators
  • Sustainable ocean management