Archived Events 2019-2022

Please note that this webpage was created before accessibility was improved on the website as a whole.

October 2019

  • SUPER DTP Cohort 1 Student Induction Event
    • Date: Tuesday 1st October 2019
    • Time: 13:00 – 18:30
    • Location: Conference Room 6/7 at the Technology & Innovation Centre, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes: Cohort Development
    • Registration details/further information:
      • Will include topics such as SUPER management; peer engagement; PGCert  registration; and introduction to Training Needs Analysis
      • Attendance is compulsory
      • Students will be pre-registered
  • Annual Science Meeting; Science-Policy workshop; and Leader Conversations
  • Lunch with a Leader
    • Date: Wed 2nd Oct 2019
    • Time: 1315-1400
    • Location: Conference Room 6/7 at the Technology & Innovation Centre, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes: Networking; Personal skills and career development.
    • Registration details/further information:
      • The idea is to provide opportunities for MASTS and SUPER PGRs to talk openly with Leaders and Influencers from marine and environmental areas, including academia, business and industry, policy, government, charity and other sectors.
      • If you would be interested in having lunch with one of our speakers, please let Jess know by email to [email protected] as places are limited. If you have a particular preference for a leader to talk to, please also let her know this, otherwise places will simply be allocated amongst interested parties.
  • MEDIN Data Management Training for new Scientists and Surveyors
    • Date: Fri 4th Oct 2019
    • Time: 09:30-16:30
    • Location: Conference Room 2 at the Technology & Innovation Centre, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes: Management and comprehension of data issues.
    • Registration details/further information:
      • All students are expected to attend this workshop (unless they are attending the modelling workshop) and should register for this workshop under their ASM registration (as detailed above).
  • An Introduction to Modelling in Scottish Waters
    • Date: Fri 4th Oct 2019
    • Time: 09:30-13:00
    • Location: Conference Room 4/5 at the Technology & Innovation Centre, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes:
      • Research knowledge base and methods
      • Practical modelling experience
      • Model interpretation
    • Registration details/further information:
      • Student attendance at this workshop is optional. Registration for this workshop is via the ASM registration (as detailed above).
  • Intellectual Property – Perspectives from Innovators and Industry
    • Date: Thur 24th Oct 2019
    • Time: 14.00-18.00
    • Location: Scottish Universities Insight Institute at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes: IP strategy and management; business; networking
    • Registration details/further information:
      • This event is being delivered by IBioIC in collaboration with IBioIC Member, Marks and Clerk (https://www.marks-clerk.com/), entirely free of charge.  This event is for those who are interested about learning how to deal with IP across innovation journeys.
      • This event is perfect for innovation active companies who would like to get a better understanding of business commercialisation, at a variety of stages. You will leave with practical tips and hints, as well as inspiration from success stories shared by our excellent speakers who have or are currently going through this journey. We also have an investor speaking at this event who will discuss what investors look for and the processes for vetting potential companies, with a bit of a slant towards IP and the chemistry/bio industries.
      • This event aims:
        • To increase awareness and understanding of IP as a tool to grow your business
        • To promote the support, services and benefits that the Industrial Biotechnology Innovation Centre can offer the membership
        • To inform attendees of the various expertise that exists within the membership
        • To create a sense of community for IB in Scotland
      • Register here to attend for free: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/intellectual-property-perspectives-from-innovators-and-industry-tickets-69168969249

November 2019

  • SNH Policy & Advice Seminar for Graduate Students
    • Date: Wed 20th Nov 2019
    • Time: 12:30-17:30
    • Location: Edinburgh (venue TBC)
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes:
      • Translating and operationalising research
      • Understanding end-user needs and societal impact
      • Regulator networking
    • Registration details/Further information:
      • All SUPER students are encouraged to attend.

January 2020

  • Maritime Roadshow for Girls – Volunteering Opportunity
    • Date: 23rd January 2020
    • Location: Rosyth
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes:
      • Public Outreach
      • Volunteering
      • Mentorship
    • Registration details/Further information:
      • Recruitment of Maritime Ambassadors, particularly female STEM representatives for an event in Rosyth on the 23rd January. In line with the Maritime 2050 strategy, there is a particular interest in shoreside roles as they are looking to showcase the range of careers in maritime that young people wouldn’t necessarily already be informed about.
      • Refreshments and lunches are provided for all volunteers across the day, and a briefing conference call will be conducted one week prior to the event. Call time is 08:30 for an on-site briefing and venue walk through, then they’ll be free to leave by 3pm.
      • A short blurb is required (100 words fine) from each ambassador that signs up, this helps assign roles on the day (general ambassador, workshop specific linked with their background, role model for networking, interviewed for panel)
      • There is a particular push for female representatives as we need to fill 15x spaces at each event for the face to face speed networking where industry role models engage on rotation with the students as a session. However, male ambassadors are also invaluable and more than welcome to attend and add value – so please do note that it is open to all!
      • Maritime-Roadshow-for-Girls-Volunteer-brief

March 2020

  • POSTPONED DUE TO TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS – Grad School Retreat
    • Date: TBD – Postponed
    • Time: Three day residential retreat
    • Location: Loch Insh Outdoor Centre, near Aviemore
    • Strategic Learning Outcomes:
      • Networking and cohort development
      • Research knowledge base
      • Career development
    • Registration details/Further information:
      • The retreat will include speakers, presentations, networking, and various training courses
  • Advanced Scripting and Computing Techniques: Become More Efficient and Productive
    • Date: 30th March – 3rd April 2020
    • Week long course
    • Location: The University of Manchester
    • Staff from the University of Manchester and some external guests will provide instruction in industrial applications, specifically these topics:
      • Cloud computing
      • Advanced UNIX shell scripting
      • Automation of numerical modeling
      • Big-data analysis techniques with guided examples
    • For more information please see the attached flyer for the event
    • Applications are due 1st March 2020 and the application form can be downloaded here

May 2020

  • Online Webinar: IBiolC are hosting a webinar which we have circulated to students for information:
  • Date & Time: 6th of May 2020 at 10:00am
  • Hosted by IBioIC Member, Maucher Jenkins, this event will cover a summary of the importance of IP, the rights available, and guidance on filing strategies and funding opportunities.
  • Wherever you are in your IP journey, this IP seminar will give you the chance to learn about the opportunities open to you, especially in these challenging times. There will also be time to ask questions should you have anything specific you need direction on.
  • If you are interested in joining, please do so by registering for the Webinar here and instructions for access to the Webinar will follow – https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/how-to-manage-my-ip-in-the-current-climate-registration-103126333640
  • Online Webinar: Having an Impact on Policy: A Practical Guide
  • Date: 12th May 2020, 2pm
  • Researchers have an opportunity to influence the world of government policy in a number of ways but often it seems as if doing so is restricted to a select few. This session will scotch a few myths and offer a few suggestions on how to get you research noticed by policymakers. The discussion will be led by Nick Bibby, director of the Scottish Policy & Research Exchange (www.spre.scot). 
  • I’m a scientist, stay at home! Project
    • UK Research and Innovation is excited to be funding  I’m a Scientist, Stay at Home! which is running throughout the summer term until 20 July. The project is enabling school pupils to engage with active researchers and staff to provide inspiring STEM lessons for pupils as they are taught at home during the school closures. Pupils engage in online text chats where they can ask scientists questions and find out about their work. Pupils then vote for their favourite researcher at the end. UKRI funding is enabling I’m a Scientist to expand its online platform to reach over 1,200 schools and 140,000 pupils over the summer term
    • We’re looking for UKRI-funded researchers and staff to take part. It’s a great way for you to hone your communication skills and inspire the next generation about research. If you would like to find out more and sign up to take part, please visit here.

January 2021

  • Foundation online statistics course
    • Starts Wednesday 13th January 2021
    • This is a foundation stats course and might be the kind of thing some of you are looking for, and can provide a good refresher on the foundations of stats. This course introduces some of the key ideas and concepts of statistics, the discipline that allows us to analyse and interpret the data that underpins modern society. In this course, you will explore the key principles of statistics for yourself, using interactive applets, and you will learn to interpret and evaluate the data you encounter in everyday life.
    • Register here
  • Vitae Effective Researcher: The next 90 days
    • Two on-line sessions via zoom (0930-1300), Tue 19th & Wed 20th January, 2021
    • Recognizing the challenges presented by the current social distancing situation, you are invited to take part in two Effective Researcher training sessions. These two on-line sessions offers participants in the first year of their doctorate a chance to develop the skills required to manage this phase of their doctorate during these unprecedented times and to action plan accordingly.
  • Grad School Teabreak
    • Monday 25th January (1530-1630) via Zoom
    • 1530-1600 will be a general/informal chat session, and 1600-1630 will focus on any questions people have around TNA (training needs analysis).
  • Homestretch: creative workshops for social, recuperative space during Lockdown
    • 2:00-2:45 every Wednesday until 10 March 2021 – come to as many or as few as you can manage.
    • This winter with increased lockdown measures, research and studies can begin to feel like a marathon. The natural breaks we could often take that re-energised the focussed work we do occur less frequently in our current circumstances and this can take a toll. These sessions are designed to help get you through the homestretch. They are an opportunity for some creative playful time off task that can bring us back better in mind and body and even inspired.
    • We are very grateful to the Scottish Graduate School for Arts & Humanities who have opened up these sessions to MASTS PhD students. Find out more and get joining details here.

February 2021

  • Effective Researcher: Effective Progress
    • Two on-line sessions via zoom (0930-1300), Tue 2nd & Wed 3rd February, 2021
    • This programme offers participants in the second year of their doctorate, a chance to focus on the detailed critical success factors and management skills required to successfully complete their doctorate. The course addresses the requirements of a doctorate, including the hypothesis, the thesis structure, the assessment criteria and to action plan accordingly. It will also help you to plan for the coming year and give you perspective to think beyond your PhD.
  • Grad School Networking
    • Monday 17th February 2021 (1030-1130)
    • Using the networking function within HopIn, we will use different themed sessions in order to get to know one another a little better, both on a personal and professional basis. If you would like to participate, please accept the calendar invitation and register for the event on HopIn here – (if you didn’t join us for the ASM, you will need to create a HopIn account too).

March 2021

  • Leader Conversation with Luc Bas
    • 1300 on Thursday 11th March, 2021
    • These informal discussion are organised to help you meet people from various walks of life, including research, industry, and policy, who are in the position to influence and make a difference. The event will take place on-line, using Zoom, and is facilitated by two students (so please let us know if you would like to volunteer to lead such a conversation).
    • At this event, chat with Luc Bas. Currently Luc is the European Regional Director for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature(IUCN)
    • Set the context by watching this short video.
  • Grad School online Retreat
    • This event will be spread out over four half day sessions (Wed 17th March, 0855-1300; Fri 19th March, 1400-1700; Tue 23rd March, 0855-1300; & Thurs 25th March, 1400-1700).
    • The retreat will include optional social activities too.

April 2021

  • An introduction to mapping in R
    • Friday 9th April (0930-1130) – online via zoom
    • Learn what’s possible when it comes to creating maps in the (FREE) R programming environment. No experience of coding required! This 2 hour workshop will cover:
      • How to describe different types of maps.
      • Map projections.
      • Map objectives.
      • The benefits of using R.
      • Useful R packages.
    • At the end of the workshop you will have access to the teaching materials. This includes the code used to create examples of different types of maps. There will also be a chance to discuss any plans you might have for making maps in the future.
    • Sign up to attend this course here
  • Grad School Teabreak
    • Wednesday 7th April (1500-1600) via Zoom
  • Virtual Community Science Camp (19 April – 24 May 2021)
    • Are you an early career researcher in environmental science? Are you interested in public engagement especially working with people affected by climate change and ecological crises? Would you like to work toward social and sustainability goals?
    • Virtual Community Science Camp is a 5 week interactive online learning programme exploring the concept and practice of community-centred approaches to research as seen through a diverse set of case study examples.
    • Applications open 9 February and the deadline for applications is 5pm, 8 March.
    • We highly recommend you sign up to the introduction event on 8 February (2.30pm-4pm), which will give you an opportunity to ask questions and gain insight into how the course can support your professional and personal development.
    • Please join us for NERC’s Virtual Community Science Camp
  • Grad School Teabreak including discussion topic
    • Wednesday 28th April (1500-1630) via Zoom
    • An informal chat for the first half hour and then a bite sized look and discussion about Imposter Syndrome.

2021 Two Golden Hours – writing retreats

14th May; 10thJune; 7th July; 3rd August; 2nd September; 13th October; 9th November & 10th December 2021. These online sessions will provide some dedicated time to spend on writing, supported by your colleagues.

May 2021

  • MEDDLE training
    • This event will be spread out over two half day sessions (Thurs 6th May, 0900-1230 & Fri 7th May, 0900-1230) and will be on zoom.
    • Multiple Environmental Driver Design Lab for Experiments
    • This course will help you define research questions, identify responses and drivers and help you to design a great experiment!
  • Leader Conversation with Anna Metaxas
    • Friday 14th May (13:00-14:00)
    • These informal discussion are organised to help you meet people from various walks of life, including research, industry, and policy, who are in the position to influence and make a difference. The events also offer the opportunity for one or two students to act as hosts and to gain experience in facilitating.
    • At this event chat with Anna Metaxas, Professor in the Dept of Oceanography at Dalhousie University, Canada. View video here.
  • Climate Exp0
    • Organised by the COP26 Universities Network, this Climate Exp0 event is taking place virtually between 17th and 21st May.
    • Each day is dedicated to one of five conference themes: Green Recovery; Mitigation Solutions; Adaptation & Resilience; Finance; and Nature & Nature-based Solutions.
    • The conference will focus on three audience groups, with separate strands of activity geared towards each one over the duration of the conference: policy, academics and students.
  • Grad School Teabreak
    • Wednesday 26th May (11:00-12:00) via Zoom

June 2021

  • Grad School Teabreak, including discussion topic (Having an online presence)
  • Tuesday 29th June (11:00-12:00) via Zoom

August 2021

  • SGSAH GREEN / GRADUATE Hackathon
    • Tuesday 24th August (afternoon), Wednesday 25th August (morning), and Thursday 26th August (morning), via Zoom
    • In the build-up to COP26 in November, the SGSAH (Scottish Graduate School for Arts & Humanities) is seeking participation from PhD students, whose research or general interests intersect with climate change, for its interdisciplinary hackathon event. The event will introduce three ‘Climate Challenges’ set by ‘Challenge Leads’ as the basis for participatory breakout sessions using a range of approaches.
    • More information here.
  • NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) bioinformatics course
    • ‘Bacterial genome assembly and annotation’
    • Tuesday 24th & Thursday 26th August (register by Monday 8th August)

September 2021

  • Youth Climate Summit: Let’s Talk COP26
    • Saturday 4th September (10:00-15:15)
    • 2050 Climate Group’s Youth Climate Summit is a free online event, open to all young people aged 18-35 from across Scotland and beyond.
    • An opportunity to hear from inspiring speakers and participate in workshops covering a range of climate change and sustainability topics; led by youth activists, community groups, and industry leaders from organisations such as Friends of the Earth, the Black Environmental Network, and Loss and Damage Youth Coalition.
    • More information and registration here.
  • Scottish Energy Innovation Emporium webinar- marine renewables
    • Monday 20th September (13:00 – 14:30)
    • This online webinar ‘The importance of environmental science for marine renewables’ is part of the Scottish Energy Innovation Emporium COP26 series and will be showcasing marine renewable energy research being carried out across MASTS; hearing the perspectives of MASTS ecological researchers, industry engineers, and a range of international collaborators.
    • More information here.
  • Women in STEM, Reimagined
    • Monday 20th – Sunday 26th September
    • A free, online masterclass series.
    • More information and registration here.
  • NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) bioinformatics course
    • ‘RNA-seq gene expression and pathway analysis’
    • Tuesday 21st & Thursday 23rd September (register by Monday 6th September)
    • More information and sign up here.
  • NERC digital technologies hackathon
    • A three-week online ‘hackathon’ event, 20th September – 15th October (teams to register by 15th September)
    • Teams will develop solutions using digital technologies to improve equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) in the environmental sciences. At the end of the event, teams can then apply for pilot project funding to develop their idea.
    • More details (including a forum to help form teams under ‘how to apply’) here.
  • Demystifying Policy
    • Wednesday 22nd September 09:30–12:30 (register by 15th Sept, 17:00)
    • This free, half day online training session, hosted by the British Ecological Society and SPRE, will provide an introduction to policy and how to communicate your research effectively.
    • More information and sign up here.
  • Royal Academy of Engineering, Frontiers symposium
    • Monday 27th September to Friday 8th October
    • This symposium ‘From seeds to needs: Regenerating ecosystems services to halt the biodiversity crisis’will scope out global biodiversity challenges that would most benefit from engineering solutions, as part of interdisciplinary collaborations, and will explore this within the context of 1) Marine, 2) Freshwater and 3) Terrestrial environments.
    • More information and sign up here.
  • The Super Year for Nature?
    • Tuesday 28th September 17:00–19:00
    • This virtual ‘Pie and a Pint’ session, hosted by the British Ecological Society and CIEEM, is free and targeted towards students and ECRs; exploring what ‘COP’ is, the effect it has on the science policy interface in Scotland and how it will be implemented in practice.
    • Find out more and register here.
  • SeaTember
    • A collaboration between MASTS, the Scottish Alliance for Geoscience, Environment and Society (SAGES), and Dynamic Earth, SeaTember offers a jam-packed month of marine-themed activities.
    • The events programme is available at the SeaTember webpage.

October 2021

  • SUPER DTP induction (online)
    • Monday 4th October (13:30-16:30)
    • Welcome and orientation event for the new cohort of SUPER DTP students
    • A user guide for video chat platform Gather Town, for the evening social event, can be found here.
  •  MASTS Annual Science Meeting (online)
    • Tuesday 5th – Thursday 7th October
    • The ASM is the largest marine science conference in the UK; a key date in the Grad School calendar and a core element of the PG Cert programmeUnder this year’s theme of ‘Working to reverse the tide on climate and global change’, the ASM will include plenary talks, presentations, workshops, and e-posters, with the chance to present your research and engage with industry, government and NGOs.
    • Deadline for submission of abstracts is 16:00, 23rd August.
    • More information on the ASM here.
  • Grad School: Two golden hours online writing retreat
    • Wednesday 13th October (14:30-17:00)
    • These online sessions will provide some dedicated time to spend on writing, supported by your colleagues.
    • Sign up to attend here.
  • Grad School leadership event
    • 3 half-day online sessions exploring ‘Leadership for environmental challenges’.
    • Monday 25th October, 09:15-13:00 – First steps into leadership
    • Wednesday 27th October, 09:15-13:00 – Complex challenges and nature-based solutions View video
    • Friday 29th October, 09:15-13:00 – Meet the leaders View video
    • Sign up to attend individual/all sessions here
  • NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) bioinformatics course
    • Introduction to Command Line Bioinformatics (1 day)
    • Tuesday 26th October
    • More information and sign up here.

November 2021

  • Grad School: Two golden hours online writing retreat
    • Tuesday 9th November (14:30-17:00)
    • These online sessions will provide some dedicated time to spend on writing, supported by your colleagues.
    • Sign up to attend here.
  • NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) bioinformatics course
    • Introduction to R (4 days over 2 weeks)
    • 9th, 11th, 16th, and 18th November
    • More information and sign up here.
  • SUPER DTP PG Cert induction/ refresher (online)
    • Monday 15th November (14:00-16:00)
  • NatureScot and MASTS Policy Day for Grad Students
    • Wednesday 24th November, online via Zoom
    • Graduate students (MSc students, MASTS/SUPER PGRs) are invited to spend the afternoon with NatureScot policy & advice colleagues who will deliver a number of interactive sessions.
    • More details to follow soon.
  • CIEEM webinar- social media for career development
    • Wednesday 24th November (12:00–13:00)
    • Members of CIEEM’s (Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management) Student and Careers Working Group will be discussing the importance of social media for early careers and top tips on how to use social media for your career development.
    • More information and registration here.
  • CIEEM webinar- STEM ambassadors: Inspiring the next generation
    • Thursday 25th November (12:00–13:00)
    • CIEEM are seeking STEM Ambassadors to help increase the representation of ecologists and environmental managers and also to help develop some curriculum linked resources and activities that can be used when engaging with schools.
    • The free webinar will provide an overview of the STEM Ambassador programme and explain how you can become involved.
    • More information and registration here.
  • NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) bioinformatics course
    • Introduction to sequencing data and quality control (held over 2 days)
    • Tuesday 30th November and Thursday 2nd December
    • More information and sign up here.

December 2021

  • Grad School: Two golden hours online writing retreat
    • Friday 10th December (09:30-12:00)
    • These online sessions will provide some dedicated time to spend on writing, supported by your colleagues.
    • Sign up to attend here.
  • NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) bioinformatics course
    • A workshop on eDNA metabarcoding, offered through the British Ecological Society annual meeting.
    • Sunday 12th December
    • Register via the BES website

January 2022

  • Vitae Effective Researcher: The Next 90 Days
    • Tuesday 11 January, 1.00 pm-5.00 pm, and Wednesday 12 January, 9.00 am-1.00 pm
    • These two online sessions offer participants in the first year of their doctorate a chance to develop the skills required to manage this phase of their doctorate during these unprecedented times and to action plan accordingly
    • The learning outcomes of the course are to enable researchers to:
      • acknowledge the progress they have made to date and recognise the skills they have developed
      • identify people who can contribute to the success of their doctorate
      • develop techniques to effectively communicate with their supervisor and develop this relationship now and in the future
      • explore the importance of communicating their research and its impact
      • practice communication techniques to a range of audiences
      • develop their individual plan for the coming year and recognise that there are things they need to and can do now in order to secure the job they want
  • Introduction to R: 3 day online course 
    • Wednesday 26 January – Friday 28 January, 9.00 am-5.00 pm daily
    • This course is primarily aimed at PGRs who require a practical introduction to R, and will provide you with the opportunity and support to start learning R at your own pace. By the end of this course, you will have sufficient confidence and familiarity with the basics of the R programming language for:
      – Manipulating and exploring different types of data
      – Importing and summarising your own data in R
      – Producing exploratory and publication quality graphics
      – Performing your own statistical analyses
      – Writing your own functions in R (optional)
    • Sign up to attend here. By signing up via this form you commit to attending all three days of the course and paying the maximum sum of £336 from your SUPER Training Support Grant. The course will only run if we have a minimum of 10 PGRs interested in attending
  • Graduate School Tea Break 
    • Thursday 27 January, 10.30-11.30 am
    • Socialise with fellow SUPER students on Zoom
    • Sign up by email via [email protected]

February 2022

  • Vitae Effective Researcher: Effective Progress
    • Tuesday 1 February and Wednesday 2 February, 9.30 am-1.00 pm daily
    • This programme offers participants in the second year of their doctorate, a chance to focus on the detailed critical success factors and management skills required to successfully complete their doctorate. The course addresses the requirements of a doctorate, including the hypothesis, the thesis structure, the assessment criteria and to action plan accordingly. It will also help you to plan for the coming year and give you perspective to think beyond your PhD
    • Sign up by email via [email protected]
  • Evidence Synthesis to Inform Policy and Business Decision-Making, a UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH) Online Training Course 
    • Tuesday 15 February.
    • This one-day course will introduce you to evidence synthesis, evidence review, systematic reviews, and rapid evidence assessment. It will give you the knowledge, skills, and confidence to carry out an evidence review synthesis for an area of natural environment research of your personal interest.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Whales, their song, their culture: another intelligence on Earth, a SETI Talk 
    • Tuesday 15 February, 7.00 pm.
    • Two renowned whale biologists describe their research and discuss the culture of whales, the understanding of their song, and the ambitious Project Cetacean Translation Initiative (CETI).
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • More Than Just Fish Food: The Ecosystem Services Provided by Aquatic Insects, part of the Natural History Live webinars collection by The Field Studies Council 
    • Friday 18 February, 1.00 pm.
    • The ecosystem services and benefits provided by freshwater insects are diverse and unexpectedly wide-ranging including decomposition and nutrient cycling, food for a wider range of species including humans, and the inspiration for art, music, and literature. This talk will explore some of these services and benefits with examples from around the world.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Biodiversity from a Systems Perspective, an International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) Webinar with NERC 
    • Monday 21 February 2022, 3.00 pm.
    • This webinar brings together researchers to exchange perspectives on biodiversity research and highlight how this research could benefit from systems thinking, the process of understanding how systems influence one another within a whole.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • The Foundations of Financial Wellbeing and Financial Futures, two Money Advice Scotland (MAS) Webinars
    • Tuesday 22 and Wednesday 23 February, 3.00 pm daily.
    • For National Student Money Week, MAS are running two webinars to help with your financial wellbeing, including topics such as budgeting, mortgages, and pensions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Combatting Scotland’s regional climate change challenges, a The Royal Society of Edinburgh Webinar
    • Tuesday 22 February, 4.30 pm.
    • This panel event will look at the effects of climate change in Scotland with a view to providing possible solutions to tackle them in future.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Seagrass at risk: Historical declines predict global hotspots of future risks, a Global Wetlands Project Webinar
    • Tuesday 22 February, 7.00 pm.
    • Coastal development and water quality have been identified as the top two drivers of seagrass loss. Through mapping seagrass and quantifying human threats, vulnerable sites and regions likely to be undergoing declines can be identified and subsequently managed. Marine managers, scientists, and policy makers can use global risk mapping of seagrass meadows to improve outcomes for this important coastal habitat.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Beginners QGIS for Ecologists and Conservation Practitioners, a Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management (CIEEM) Online Training Course 
    • Tuesday 22 February 2022 to Friday 25 February, 9.00 am-12.30 pm daily.
    • The course is designed to enable you to become a competent GIS operator with a practical focus on producing survey maps and analysing data derived from your surveys.
    • Find out more and join the waiting list here.
  • Intellectual Property (IP) for Research Live Lecture, a Vitae event with the Intellectual Property Office (IPO)
    • Thursday 24 February, 10.00-11.30 am.
    • This event aims to increase the IP knowledge and skills of doctoral and early career researchers, help researchers create greater impact through the IP generated in their research, and clarify how, why, and when researchers should engage with their institution about IP.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Shining a Light on Deep-Sea Mining, an International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Webinar
    • Thursday 24 February, 2.00 pm and repeated at 8.00 pm.
    • In preparation for Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) COP15, the upcoming CBD Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice meeting and other Deep-Sea Mining-related events in 2022, the discussion will cover the latest updates on the science, legal context, governance, social license, and alternatives for a decarbonised future as they relate to the debate around deep seabed mining.
    • Find out more and sign up here (2.00 pm) and here (8.00 pm).

March 2022

  • Soft Skills for Career Development, a The Data Lab Community Event
    • Tuesday 1 March, 3.00 pm. 
    • Soft skills help you stand out at job interviews, you are more likely to succeed and thrive in your role if you possess the correct communication and teamwork skills, and these types of skill are fundamental if you are to be considered for a leadership positions. With this in mind, a panel of experts will be discussing the importance of soft skills, how you can develop them to your benefit your career, and their top tips from their careers so far.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • How to write highly cited papers, a UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH) Online Training Course  
    • Tuesday 1 and Wednesday 2 March.
    • This interactive online workshop will boost your confidence and ability to write a great science paper that will be cited again and again. There is currently a last-minute discount.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • How Technology can Support the Marine Community to Deliver FAIR Data, a Marine Environmental Data and Information Network (MEDIN) Open Meeting
    • Thursday 3 March, 9.00 am.
    • MEDIN is a partnership of UK organisations committed to improving access to marine data. By providing a standardised way to find marine data and specialist data archives to store it, MEDIN has opened up access to large volumes of previously unavailable data from both the private and public sectors. MEDIN wants to ensure the marine community can harness appropriate technology to achieve their vision of all UK marine data being Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR). 
    • Find out more and sign up here by Friday 18 February.
  • Ecological Science Communication Conference, hosted by Diversity of Nature and the Marine Environmental Observation, Prediction and Response Network (MEOPAR)
    • Saturday 5 March, 2.00 pm-8.45 pm (10.00 am-4.45 pm AST).
    • EcoSciComCon 2022 provides a free and interactive virtual conference to connect you with ecologists who are also experts in science communication and outreach. Learn directly from early-career and diverse scholars, grow your network, and gain skills to facilitate your own scicom initiatives.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Students Futures & Research Conference, hosted by the Linnean Society of London and the British Ecological Society
    • Monday 7 March to Friday 11 March.
    • The conference will provide up to 3 hours daily live content each day, as well as pre-recorded content, competitions, reflective exercises, and opportunities for sharing. Full programme to come.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Friday 4 March.
  • Climate change: lessons from Earth’s past for our future, a Centre for Energy Ethics Webinar
    • Tuesday 8 March, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • This webinar will discuss how the chemistry of sediments, ice, and fossils are used to investigate long-term changes in the earth’s CO2 levels.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • FathomNet: an open-source image database for understanding our ocean and its inhabitants, a NOAA Science Seminar
    • Tuesday 8 March, 8.00 pm-9.00 pm. 
    • NOAA demonstrate how machine learning models trained on FathomNet data can be applied to other institutional video data, and enable automated acquisition and tracking of midwater animals by underwater vehicles.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
    • A two day course on FathomNet will be held at the end of March, see details below. 
  • PEPtalk: Receiving and engaging with research evidence, a Centre for Energy Ethics Webinar
    • Wednesday 9 March, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm. 
    • In this PEPtalk, two speakers will address their experience of engaging with research evidence from their respective positions within the Scottish Government. How do they identify, receive, and engage with research evidence in the policy development process?
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • A Healthy and Resilient Ocean, a UN Ocean Decade ‘Laboratory’
    • Wednesday 9 March from 3.00 pm to Friday 11 March at 4.30 pm UTC. 
    • The Ocean Laboratory aims to catalyze action for the Ocean Decade and to strengthen dialogue and outreach. It will cover topics related to challenges to a healthy and resilient ocean, and will explore the key elements required for the change we need to see over the course of the Decade.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • The UK’s Net Zero Journey – A Marine Perspective, a Crown Estate Hybrid Event
    • Wednesday 9 March, 6.00 pm-7.00 pm. 
    • Institution of Civil Engineers, One Great George Street, London, SW1P 3AA and online.
    • This lecture will outline the UK’s achievements to date in developing what is one of the world’s largest offshore wind markets. It will share the journey that the UK is taking towards achieving its 2050 net zero target, and outline some of the existing and future challenges and opportunities that this journey presents, for policy and planning, technology and supply chain, habitat and environment.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Getting the most out of your Network, an Equate Scotland Workshop 
    • Thursday 10 March, 5.30 pm-6.30 pm. 
    • For those who identify as women in STEM, this event will help you to explore the benefits of a network, compare networking pre and post-Covid, evaluate your current network, and understand the benefits of LinkedIn.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Amplifying Women’s Voices for Climate Change, a University of Aberdeen Hybrid Event
    • Thursday 10 March, 6.00 pm-7.30 pm.
    • A panel discussion as part of the University of Aberdeen’s International Women’s Day and British Science Week programme. This panel will discuss and offer ideas on how women’s voices can be amplified in the climate emergency arena.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Metabarcoding for Diet Analysis and Environmental DNA, a NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) Bioinformatics Course
    • Tuesday 15 and Thursday 17 March, 9.00 am-4.00 pm daily.
    • Sequencing DNA barcodes from mixed sources of DNA is an increasingly used way to survey biodiversity, whether analysing dietary content from faecal-derived DNA or monitoring aquatic species from water-derived DNA. This course will give an overview of metabarcoding with different barcoding genes to target particular taxa. Using an example data set we will go from raw sequence data through to assigning taxonomy to the sequence variants.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 28 February.
  • Energy Café, a Centre for Energy Ethics Webinar
    • Tuesday 15 March, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • This Café will discuss critical element deposits in rift-related magmatism – elements vital to renewable energy technologies. Including how to find these elements, how they form, and how they are modified by geological processes.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • From individual variation in behaviour to inference on personality, a Centre for Biological Diversity Webinar
    • Tuesday 15 March, 1.00 pm-2.00 pm.
    • The relatively recent advent of aquatic animal tracking has resulted in a hurdle in the knowledge on movement of marine animals over multiple scales. This talk will present results and anecdotes from movement studies on European lobster, Atlantic cod, and anadromous brown trout.
    • Contact [email protected] for the meeting link.
  • Graduate School 11th Annual Postgraduate Retreat (online)
    • Wednesday 16 March from 2.00 pm to Friday 18 March at 1.00 pm.
    • The Retreat will include speakers, presentations, networking, skill sessions, and various training courses. This is a key event in the Graduate School calendar and a core element of the PG Cert programme. View the full programme via the link above. 
    • All SUPER students are expected to attend, sign up here.
    • Join an optional bowling social event in Aberdeen on Friday 18 March at 7.30 pm, or a morning hill walk in Oban or Edinburgh on Saturday 19 March! Email [email protected] for all the details. 
  • Verra Standards for Sustainability, Resilience, and Carbon (including Blue Carbon, Coastal Resilience, and Plastic Waste Reduction), an Open Communications for the Ocean (OCTO) Webinar
    • Wednesday 16 March, 5.00 pm.
    • Verra is a nonprofit organisation that develops and provides standards that drive investment toward high-impact activities addressing environmental and social challenges across the globe. The rigorous process to meet Verra’s standards include independent verification and issuance of claims and credits. Verra’s standards are employed by a broad variety of governments, corporations and other private actors, and NGOs around the world.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • What Can We Learn From Strandings?, a Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust Webinar
    • Wednesday 16 March, 7.00 pm.
    • This talk will take a closer look at cetacean strandings with the Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme, and explain more about why it is important to look at stranded animals.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • An insight into INSITE (INfluence of Structures In The Ecosystem), a European Marine Board Webinar
    • Thursday 17 March, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • This webinar will build on the science presented in EMB’s Policy Brief No. 2 on ‘Decommissioning of offshore man-made installations: taking an ecosystem approach’, and will include a presentation and discussion session with Prof. Dickon Howell, INSITE Programme Director.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Environmental DNA: New possibilities and challenges for biodiversity monitoring, a GW4 Water Security Alliance Webinar
    • Thursday 17 March, 1.00 pm-2.00 pm.
    • Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis is transforming biodiversity monitoring in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems with immense potential to inform their conservation and management. This talk will present possibilities and challenges associated with eDNA analysis for biodiversity monitoring.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Realising the benefits of Scotland’s waters, a World Water Day Hybrid Event hosted by the Hydro Nation International Centre
    • Tuesday 22 March, 9.30 am-4.00 pm with optional evening event, 5.00-7.00 pm.
    • Dynamic Earth, 112 Holyrood Road, Edinburgh, EH8 8AS and online.
    • This event will bring together Scotland’s water sector and water users in their various forms to understand the benefits of Scotland’s water as a resource and the key issues in its management.
    • Find out more and sign up here. Sign up for the optional evening event here
  • Integrated Land Use Conference
    • Wednesday 23 March from 6.30 pm to Thursday 24 March at 2.00 pm.
    • The theme of this year’s conference is ‘The Road to Net-Zero’. The event will include an online screening of the documentary ‘Scotland: Our climate journey’ presented by the Royal Scottish Geographical Society. Followed by a range of talks around the theme including UNESCO and the Flow Country, Wild Affric and Rewilding Centre in the north-west of Scotland, Nature-based solutions laboratories, sustainable meat initiatives and more.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Spot that boat! Studying Ships and Whales, a Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust Webinar
    • Wednesday 23 March, 7.00 pm.
    • Find out how you can help our understanding of the interactions between vessels and marine mammals around Scotland’s coast.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Closing the Climate Adaptation Gap and Unlocking Transformative Change Virtual Conference
    • Thursday 24 March from 9.00 am to Friday 25 March at 3.30 pm.
    • To effectively adapt and keep pace with the rising impacts of climate change we cannot maintain business-as-usual. This free conference will bridge the gap between research and practice as we collectively try to accelerate adaptation to climate change. 
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Test the Virtual Labs – Zoo & Phytoplankton EOV Products, a Blue-Cloud Webinar
    • Thursday 24 March, 10.30 am-11.30 am UTC.
    • This webinar invites the marine research community to test the Blue-Cloud Virtual Labs, developed by the Flanders Marine Institute in collaboration with the University of Liège. The Virtual Lab provides a description of the current state of the plankton communities and forecasts their evolution, representing valuable information for the modelling, assessment and management of the marine ecosystem.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • British Intertidal Marine Isopods, part of the Natural History Live Webinars Collection by The Field Studies Council 
    • Friday 25 March, 7.00 pm.
    • Intertidal marine isopods are an extremely under-recorded group in Britain and Ireland. This talk will cover some of the species you can find, how to find them, and how to go about identifying and recording them. The new British Myriapod & Isopod Group Intertidal Marine Isopod recording scheme is also introduced.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Thinking Careers Course
    • Monday 28 March to Friday 1 April – rescheduled to Autumn 2022
    • Fully residential at a hotel TBD in Glasgow, including meals and accommodation.
    • The QUADRAT DTP have kindly offered SUPER third year students the chance to join this course at a subsidised cost. You will come away with an understanding the key elements of a career and identifying what it is that you want from your own career, improving your CV and interview skills, and much more. View more information via the link above.
    • Sign up to attend here by Monday 14 March at 5 pm. Only 25 spaces available!
  • The Politics of Science, a University of New South Wales Webinar
    • Tuesday 29 March, 8.30 am.
    • This talk will explore the enduring challenge of what scientists can do to maintain public trust in their work, and how the community can be more discerning about what they choose to believe. 
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Critical Case for Reforming Land-Based Carbon Accounting, an Oxford Biodiversity Network Event
    • Tuesday 29 March, 4.00 pm-5.30 pm.
    • Oxford and online.
    • This talk will argue that in various ways standard national IPCC reporting guidance, national laws, carbon offset rules and lifecycle approaches all fail to count or fully count opportunity costs.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Early Career Ocean Professionals (ECOPs), a European Marine Board Networking Event
    • Wednesday 30 March, 8.30 am to 10.00 am UTC.
    • Through this event, ECOPs will have an opportunity to meet each other, find out who EMB are and what they do, how to engage with EMB, find out what is being proposed for the EMB ECOP network, and propose ideas for activities for the network.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Long-term studies of coastal minke whales in the Moray Firth, a University of Exeter Webinar
    • Wednesday 30 March, 3.00 pm-4.00 pm.
    • Join on the day here.
  • Exploring Narratives in Environmental Challenges, a York Environmental Sustainability Institute Workshop
    • Thursday 31 March, 2.00 pm-4.00 pm.
    • BS/104 Meeting Room (Tree House), Berrick Saul Building, University of York, and online.
    • This hybrid workshop builds on a previous webinar (watch here) and will explore ideas introduced, using case studies to demonstrate an approach from literary studies to help incorporate critical awareness of the limitations of narratives into our communicative strategies.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Invertebrates Modify Soil Microbial Processes in Managed Grass Systems, a Cary Institute of Ecosystem StudiesWebinar
    • Thursday 31 March, 4.00 pm-5.00 pm.
    • This seminar will discuss ongoing research examining the impacts that soil invertebrates have on microbial activity and organic matter cycling in residential lawns and other managed grasses.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Microplastics in our marine environment: Prevalence, problems & solutions, a University of Exeter Webinar
    • Thursday 31 March, 1.00 pm
    • Join on the day here.
  • The Joy of Birds, a National Museum of Scotland Webinar
    • Thursday 31 March, 7.30 pm-8.30 pm.
    • Celebrate birds with this online discussion on the threats they face and the work being done to protect them.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • FathomNet, a NOAA Workshop
    • Thursday 31 March and Friday 1 April, 11.00 am daily.
    • FathomNet is an open-source image database that can be used to train, test, and validate state-of-the-art AI algorithms to help understand our ocean and its inhabitants. This workshop will show how you can contribute to and benefit from the FathomNet ecosystem.
    • Find out more and sign up here.

April 2022

  • Wind energy and Wildlife impacts Conference
    • Monday 4 to Friday 8 April.
    • Hotel Zuiderduin, Egmond aan Zee, The Netherlands, 1931 VL and online.
    • For this 6th conference, the programme will stress the importance of scientific knowledge for policy and wildlife management related to wind farms.
    • Registration fees cover the welcome reception, beach BBQ, attendance of scientific program and information market, conference materials, coffee and lunch on conference days and a field excursion. The fee for the conference dinner is an additional cost. 
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • ORCA OceanWatchers, a Field Studies Council Training Course
    • Monday 4 to Monday 25 April. Repeated in May and June.
    • During this course, you will learn how to identify over 25 different species of whale, dolphin, and porpoise, plus learn the skills to be able to survey for these animals from land or at sea.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Climate change: lessons from Earth’s past for our future, an Energy Café by The Centre for Energy Ethics
    • Tuesday 5 April, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • This Café will discuss some lessons provided by paleoclimatology about the ways our climate system works, and the governing role of CO2 in climates both past and future.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Career Changers: Planning and Exploration, an Equate Scotland Webinar
    • Tuesday 5 April, 2.00 pm-4.00 pm.
    • This workshop is for those who identify as women in STEM who are considering a career change and want to build confidence in their strengths and plans.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Coastal and Marine GIS, an ABPmer Training Course
    • Tuesday 5 to Thursday 7 April. Repeated in October.
    • Online or in Southampton.
    • Using ArcGIS v10.x, the course is structured around 11 modules that cover various GIS concepts and techniques. As well as introducing marine data and GIS, the course considers common problems faced when mapping coastal and offshore environments.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • A Safe Ocean, a UN Ocean Decade ‘Laboratory’
    • Tuesday 5 to Thursday 7 April. 
    • The Ocean Laboratory aims to catalyze action for the Ocean Decade and to strengthen dialogue and outreach. It will cover topics related to challenges to a safe ocean, and will explore the key elements required for the change we need to see over the course of the Decade.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • 33rd Conference of the European Cetacean Society
    • Tuesday 5 to Thursday 7 April.
    • Ashdod Youth Centre, Ha-Tsiyonut St 4, Ashdod, Israel and online.
    • The theme is ‘Marine mammal research and conservation effort – Are we on the right path?’. In this conference, the conventional approach to marine mammal science will be challenged, and critical questions on the past, present, and future will be asked to ensure that the shared goal – marine mammal conservation – is being aptly pursued.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Zoom into Soil: Peatlands of Scotland, a British Society of Soil Science Webinar
    • Wednesday 6 April, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • With strong Government backing, peatland restoration in Scotland has made major progress in the last decade. This presentation will consider what we can learn from this and with Climate Change impacts increasing, what we can do to respond more quickly in the future.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Imposter Syndrome, an Equate Scotland Workshop
    • Wednesday 6 April, 4.00 pm-5.00 pm.
    • For those who identify as women in STEM, this workshop offers the chance to find out more about Imposter Syndrome, how it holds us back, and what we can do to address it.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Role of Aquatic Food Webs in Contaminant Cycling, Transport, & Toxicity, a Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Webinar
    • Thursday 7 April, 4.00 pm-5.00 pm.
    • This presentation will explore the influence of biota on contaminant dynamics in aquatic ecosystems through an overview of two recent projects: 1) the spatial and temporal patterns of selenium cycling in the Gunnison River, Colorado, and 2) spawning migrations of Pacific salmon as biological pumps of nutrient and contaminant subsidies.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • What does the IPCC say about carbon dioxide removal?, a Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment Webinar
    • Tuesday 12 April, 2.00 pm-3.00 pm.
    • A chance to hear the key messages from the latest IPCC report directly from the authors themselves, and ask them your questions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • From micro- to nanoplastics: what we don’t know but should, a Persistent, Emerging, and Organic Pollution in the Environment Network Webinar
    • Wednesday 13 April, 4.30 pm-5.20 pm.
    • This seminar will share recent findings on the environmental occurrence, exposures, biological effects, and toxicity mechanisms of ubiquitous micro-and nanoplastics, highlighting what is not but should be known to stimulate research in this field.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Bird Surveying: talk by British Trust for Ornithology, a RSPB Webinar
    • Wednesday 13 April, 6.50 pm-9.00 pm.
    • Why do we need to track population changes and how is this information used to make a real difference to the birds we treasure? Find out, with a tour of the BTO/JNCC/RSPB Breeding Bird Survey and Wetland Bird Survey(WeBS).
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Amphibians, an Alberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute Webinar
    • Wednesday 13 April, 7.00 pm-8.00 pm.
    • This talk will discuss new model results that describe habitat associations for four species based on acoustic recordings. It will also highlight a recent collaboration that explored using eDNA to detect amphibians.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Mourning Nature: Hope at the Heart of Ecological Grief and Loss, a Sustainability Council (University of Alberta) Webinar
    • Wednesday 13 April, 7.00 pm-8.00 pm.
    • This webinar will discuss the rationality of feeling climate grief, and explore its political and ethical ramifications.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Examining Scotland’s marine habitats through a camera lens: uncertainty and change, a Scottish Seabird Centre Webinar
    • Wednesday 13 April, 7.00 pm-8.00 pm.
    • Using underwater images to reflect on studying and conserving Scottish marine habitats and species.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Wildlife of our peatlands: birds, botany and beasts!, an Ulster Wildlife Webinar
    • Wednesday 13 April, 7.00 pm-8.00 pm.
    • Find out more about the rare and iconic species found on our peatlands.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Eco-Anxious in St Andrews: Comparing climate anxiety in university and community populations, a St Andrews Network for Climate, Energy, Environment and Sustainability Webinar
    • Thursday 14 April, 11.00 am-12.00 pm.
    • This event presents findings from two studies, allowing for comparative cross-disciplinary dialogue regarding approaches, and methods, in addition to comparisons between University and community populations on the topic of climate anxiety.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • River stories: Using aquatic signals to detect change in Arctic watersheds, a Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Webinar
    • Thursday 14 April, 4.00 pm-5.00 pm.
    • The Arctic region is warming at twice the rate of the rest of the planet, releasing terrestrially-stored carbon and nutrients that were previously frozen in permafrost soils and leading to an enhanced delivery of nutrients and carbon from land to water. This webinar will explain how using changes in river chemistry can be a major indicator of broad ecosystem-level change.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Stakeholder Engagement for Wildlife Conservation, a WildTeams Training Course
    • Every Tuesday from Tuesday 19 April to Tuesday 17 May, 10.30 am or 6.00 pm BST.
    • Learn how to engage stakeholders to enhance your conservation work by:
      • Applying key principles to ensure you engage with stakeholders effectively and ethically.
      • Initiating the relationship to build trust and understanding and set expectations.
      • Managing the relationship to progress the project and adapt to changing conditions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Marine Biological Association (MBA) Postgraduate Conference
    • Wednesday 20 to Friday 22 April.
    • Liverpool John Moores University, Byrom St, Liverpool, L1 2SF and online.
    • The MBA‘s upcoming postgraduate conference titled ‘Turn of the Tide; Marine organisms in an ocean of change’ focuses on the past, present, and future change at the species level (e.g. genetic, behavioural) and/or ecosystem level (e.g. trophic ecology, hydrology). There are also some talks on media presence and citizen science.
    • The conference will be the first hybrid MBA conference offering both in-person and online access to all three days of the event. Online access registration is free and in-person tickets are now available. You can become an MBA member to get a discount, and apply for financial help with travel costs to attend in-person.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Do We Need to Remove Carbon Dioxide from the Atmosphere to Meet our Climate Targets?, a University of Aberdeen Webinar
    • Thursday 21 April, 4.00 pm-5.15 pm.
    • This webinar will present some of the options available now, or in development, that can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and will discuss how this fits with our “net zero” ambitions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Raising your Game: Developing Mathematical Modelling Skills Summer School
    • Monday 25 April from midday to Friday 29 April at midday.
    • Fully residential at the University of Strathclyde’s Ross Priory Conference Centre, including meals, travel, and accommodation. 
    • This Summer School will help you develop core skills in model development and numerical implementation in ecological modelling. Run by our partner, the University of Strathclyde, you will leave the course equipped with worked examples and the knowledge to apply these methods to your own research. View more information via the link above. 
    • Sign up to attend here.
  • Seaweed Academy Official Launch, a Scottish Association for Marine Science (SAMS) Hybrid Event
    • Tuesday 26 April, 9.30 am-5.30 pm.
    • SAMS, Oban, and online.
    • The official launch of the new UK Government-funded Seaweed Academy which will support a developing seaweed industry in the UK and beyond.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Science advice under pressure, a European Commission Conference
    • Wednesday 27 to Thursday 28 April.
    • Brussels and online.
    • The European Commission’s Scientific Advice Mechanism invites those at the science-policy interface to explore the key challenges of delivery science advice under pressure through a series of panel debates, interactive sessions, and networking opportunities.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Changing the system – a new approach for ocean conservation, a Zoological Society of London Symposium
    • Wednesday 27 to Thursday 28 April.
    • Thinking systemically about how to tackle a global environmental threat and major conservation challenge, this event will explore the much talked about, much researched, and often polarising topic of ocean plastic pollution.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Using Regulatory Data to Inform Marine Spatial Planning Efforts, an Open Communications for the Ocean (OCTO) Webinar
    • Thursday 28 April, 5.00 pm.
    • The ProtectedSeas Navigator mapping project is a one-stop resource to find out where MPAs are located as well as discover the existing regulations and evaluate their various levels of protection. This regulations-based tool can be used to inform protection analyses and aid in forecasting other areas that need protection. This webinar will be of special interest to those interested in assessing ocean conservation regulations and protection metrics.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Conservation of Marine Mammals, a Field Studies Council Training Course
    • Thursday 28 April to Thursday 9 June.
    • During this course, you will learn about the important role marine mammals play within the ecosystem and how we are now trying to protect them for future generations.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Can you use earthworms to indicate healthy soil?, a Natural History Live Webinar by the Field Studies Council
    • Friday 29 April, 1.00 pm-2.00 pm.
    • This talk will discuss whether finding earthworms in soil is a good indicator of a healthy soil, and what factors control the presence of earthworms.
    • Find out more and sign up here.

May 2022

  • Population Modelling for Wildlife Conservation and Management Workshop
    • Monday 2 to Friday 6 May.
    • The Sir Duncan Rice Library, Bedford Road, Aberdeen, AB24 3AA, and online.
    • Run by our partner, the University of Aberdeen, this free hybrid workshop will review simple models of population dynamics, but the primary focus will be on the construction and analysis of discrete-time stage-structured matrix population models (based on age classes, size, location, or life history stage). View more information via the link above.
    • Sign up to attend here by Friday 15 April. Limited spaces available.
  • ORCA OceanWatchers, a Field Studies Council Training Course
    • Monday 2 to Monday 23 May. Repeated in June.
    • During this course, you will learn how to identify over 25 different species of whale, dolphin, and porpoise, plus learn the skills to be able to survey for these animals from land or at sea.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Aquaculture UK, a Tradeshow 
    • Tuesday 3 to Thursday 5 May. 
    • MacDonald Aviemore Resort, Aviemore, Scotland, PH22 1PN.
    • Discover the latest advancements in robotics, machine learning, artificial intelligence, smart fish farming systems, and biomass counting by connecting with over 200 global companies. Hear from experts at the new free innovation and sustainability conference and learn about recent scientific breakthroughs in fish health and welfare, genetic selection, cleaner fish breedings, and more.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Conservation in the Climate Emergency, an Oxford Biodiversity Network Event
    • Wednesday 4 May, 4.00 pm-5.00 pm.
    • Oxford and online.
    • This talk makes the case that climate change is, or soon will, be the greatest threat to biodiversity, and consequently that conservation will be unable to meet its goal of maintaining biodiversity unless the climate threat is addressed.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Strategy Development for Wildlife Conservation, a WildTeams Training Course
    • Every Wednesday from Wednesday 4 May to Wednesday 8 June, 9.30 am or 5.30 pm BST.
    • Learn how to develop a stronger conservation strategy by:
      • Assessing the current situation to better understand and document the situation you are trying to change.
      • Planning the impact you want to achieve and the work you will carry out to achieve that impact.
      • Adapting your strategy to your needs and situation.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Postdoctoral Fellowship Applications, a Challenger Society for Marine Science Webinar
    • Thursday 5 May, 1.00 pm-2.30 pm.
    • Fellowships help ECRs build their research profile and independence. Whether you’re planning to apply to a fellowship scheme, or just want to learn about what fellowship opportunities might be available in the future, join this webinar to discuss some of the main UK schemes, gain advice for developing an application, and a Q&A.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Sustainable Management of UK Marine Resources (SMMR) 1st Annual Conference
    • Monday 9 to Wednesday 11 May.
    • Mercure Hotel, Bristol and online.
    • This transdisciplinary conference brings together members of the UK marine science community, with the aim of promoting and communicating research and policy excellence.
    • Three interdisciplinary workshops, Transdisciplinary Use of Coastal Data, Behavioural change (Pyramids of Life), and Quest – A Digital Storytelling Scavenger Hunt (Diverse Values), will be held on the Wednesday.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Project Management for Wildlife Conservation, a WildTeams Training Course
    • Every Monday from Monday 9 May to Monday 13 June, 10.00 am or 6.00 pm BST.
    • Learn how to manage any conservation project by:
      • Applying a set of practical and ethical principles to guide your project.
      • Defining roles to clarify decision-making.
      • Splitting the project into clear phases.
      • Setting up effective administrative processes.
      • Adapting the project to changing conditions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Aquaculture Careers Event 2022
    • Tuesday 10 to Wednesday 11 May, 9.00 am-5.00 pm.
    • Pathfoot Lecture Theatre, Institute of Aquaculture, University of Stirling.
    • Hear direct from industry, make important connections, and explore different career paths.
    • There are up to 30 travel bursaries for students based across the UK.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • An Accessible Ocean, a UN Ocean Decade ‘Laboratory’
    • Tuesday 10 to Thursday 12 May. 
    • The Ocean Laboratory aims to catalyze action for the Ocean Decade and to strengthen dialogue and outreach. It will cover topics related to an accessible ocean with good governance, open access to data, information and technologies, and will explore the key elements required for the change we need to see over the course of the Decade.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Rebalancing Climate Finance, a Centre for Energy Ethics Webinar
    • Tuesday 10 May, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm
    • This webinar will discuss the transition towards a low-carbon economy and how it requires the fundamental reallocation of financial capital from current technologies towards green innovation.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Symposium on Marine Carbon Sequestration
    • Wednesday 11 May, 9.15 am-4.00 pm.
    • Ostend Science Park, Bluebridge, Belgium.
    • By bringing scientists, political, industrial, and non-governmental parties together the symposium aims to identify the potential of negative emission technologies and the required knowledge development that is still needed.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Climate change and great ape conservation, a Leadership for Conservation in Africa Webinar
    • Thursday 12 May, 6.00 pm BST
    • Conservation managers need to integrate climate change mitigation and adaption measures in conservation and land use planning to protect the already endangered great apes.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Introduction to Python, a Code Labs Academy Workshop
    • Tuesday 17 May, 5.00 pm-6.30 pm.
    • Eager to learn about programming, but don’t know where to start? This workshop will teach you Python fundamentals as well as go over some practical exercises.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Florida Manatees, a University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Webinar
    • Tuesday 17 May, 9.00 pm-10.00 pm.
    • This presentation will cover some interesting facts about the Florida manatees, evolutionary adaptations of this magnificent aquatic herbivore, their present conservation status, and what you can do to help this marine mammal.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Introduction to R, a NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) Bioinformatics Course
    • Tuesday 17, Thursday 19, Tuesday 24 and Thursday 26 May, 10.00 am-4.00 pm daily.
    • R is a highly-used programming language for visualisation of data and statistical analysis. There are many R packages for the analysis of biological datasets. This course is aimed at beginners and novices to R. It will give an in depth overview of the foundations of R and Rstudio plus introduce data sorting, visualisation and statistical analysis.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Friday 29 April.
  • Invasive River Species with the Environment Agency, a Groundwork East Webinar
    • Wednesday 18 May, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • By taking part in this webinar you will learn about the invasive river species of the UK and find out how they impact our local wildlife and what you can do to help.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • A traveller’s tales: From Kolkata to the deep-sea, a SAMS Seminar
    • Thursday 19 May, 5.30 pm-7.00 pm.
    • Scottish Association for Marine Science, Scottish Marine Institute, Oban, PA37 1QA, or online.
    • This lecture will take us on a journey providing insights into various elements of fundamental research from understanding how biodiversity changes in various areas of the deep-sea from our own doorstep of the Faroe-Shetland Channel, the North-east Atlantic through to the polar realms of the Weddell Sea and Barents Sea.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Citizen Science, the smart way to Biodiversity Conservation, a Leadership for Conservation in Africa Webinar
    • Thursday 19 May, 6.00 pm BST.
    • Can ordinary people participate in conservation and research?
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Riverwoods, a The Big Picture Documentary
    • Various dates until Friday 20 May.
    • Various theatres in Scotland.
    • Three years in the making, Riverwoods is a feature-length documentary that shines a light on the perilous state of Scotland’s salmon and tells the compelling story of an inextricable relationship between fish and forest. This documentary is a rallying call for restoring more of Scotland’s river catchments and all the life they support.
    • Find out more and order your free tickets here.
  • Standing up for Science, a NERC Workshop
    • Friday 20 May, 5.00 pm.
    • Norwich Research Park, Norfolk, England.
    • Join us to find out how to contribute research findings to public discussions and engage effectively with journalists and policymakers.
    • Find out more here and sign up here by Monday 18 April.
  • From a Meme to a Movement: 25 Years of Biomimicry, a Biomimicry Institute Webinar
    • Friday 20 May, 6.00 pm-7.00 pm.
    • Biomimicry, an emerging discipline that emulates nature’s designs and processes (e.g., solar cells that mimic leaves) to create a healthier, more sustainable planet.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • EU4OCEAN Summit Ocean Literacy Festival
    • Saturday 21 May.
    • This Ocean literacy festival will take place following the EU4Ocean coalition Ocean Literacy Summit ‘Let’s Make Europe Blue!’ at the EU Maritime Day conference (19-20 May), and will be part of its SeaSide festival in Ravenna (21-22 May). 
    • If you have an idea for an activity/event to raise awareness about our oceans during the time of the festival: it can be onsite in Ravenna, onsite in your area, or online. Deadline to apply for onsite activities in Ravenna is Friday 15 April and onsite activities elsewhere or online activities Sunday 1 May.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Career Development Workshop: Preparing Scientists for Industry Careers
    • Monday 23, Wednesday 25, Friday 27 and Tuesday 31 May, 9.00 pm-1.00 am BST daily (contact [email protected] to discuss alternative times due to time zone).
    • SciPhD provides training for scientists who want to transition from academia to non-academic careers.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Environmental Engagement in Practice: Public engagement skills, part of a National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Engagement Training Course Series
    • Wednesday 25 May, 10.00 am-4.00 pm.
    • This event is intended for anyone working in environmental research with an interest in engagement and knowledge exchange.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 23 May.
  • The Baltic Harbour Porpoise, an EMSEA Online Meeting
    • Wednesday 25 May, 11.00 am-12.00 pm BST.
    • Estimated at 500 animals, the Baltic population of the harbour porpoise is categorized as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List. Join this event to learn more about the Baltic harbour education and conservation challenges.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • A (clumsy) Journey of a Biologist in the World of Mathematics, a Linnean Society of London Webinar
    • Wednesday 25 May, 12.30 pm-1.00 pm.
    • Do you need be a whiz at math to win at biology? Many biologists are tripped by numbers in their academic paths. Here some lessons from a veteran.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Plymouth Marine Science & Education Foundation (PlyMSEF) Annual Spring Public Lecture
    • Wednesday 25 May, 6.00 pm.
    • National Marine Aquarium, Plymouth.
    • The event features a series of mini-lectures from Plymouth’s marine institutes, showcasing current research in Plymouth Sound, the home of the UK’s first National Marine Park.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • How do butterflies help us understand climate change?, a Museum of Zoology Webinar
    • Wednesday 25 May, 7.00 pm-8.00 pm.
    • This webinar will explain how well recorded butterfly data can be used to reveal the ‘fingerprint’ of climate change – that species are disappearing from some sites but colonising others, and that range shifts northwards and uphill are slowed or halted in highly-transformed landscapes.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Nature-based Solutions to address societal challenges, a CIEEM Webinar
    • Thursday 26 May, 11.00 am-12.00 pm.
    • This webinar will introduce what Nature-based Solutions are, provide a range of successful UK based examples, explore some of the barriers to their widespread implementation, and consider solutions to addressing these obstacles.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Behaviour Change Principles for Environmental & Climate Changemakers, a Sustainable Sidekicks Webinar
    • Thursday 26 May, 12.30 pm-2.00 pm and repeated at 5.00 pm-6.30 pm.
    • Engage people outside the eco echo-chamber!
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Discovering UK Seals: Identification, Ecology and Conservation, a Field Studies Council Training Course
    • Friday 27 May to Friday 8 July.
    • From this course you will learn valuable observational field identification tips, life history characteristics, and general ecology of the different seal species found around the British coastline plus some of our more obscure visitors.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • UNI-Versal: Showcase – Living and working in an AI world, a University of Aberdeen Event
    • Saturday 28 May, 11.30 am-3.00 pm.
    • King’s College Conference Centre, Aberdeen.
    • Join researchers as they showcase some of the innovative projects making use of artificial intelligence to benefit society with hands-on activities and demonstrations, including dolphin calls.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Bringing together marine biodiversity, environmental and maritime boundaries data in R, a Workshop as part of the Empowering Biodiversity Research Conference
    • Monday 30 May, 1.30 pm-4.30 pm.
    • VAC Herman Teirlinck, Brussels, Belgium, or online.
    • In this workshop you will learn different steps in a workflow to query and combine data from European marine databases, visualise, and get them ready for further analysis. You can also apply the workflow to your own datasets or research questions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • A Productive Ocean, a UN Ocean Decade ‘Laboratory’
    • Tuesday 31 May to Thursday 2 June. 
    • The Ocean Laboratory aims to catalyze action for the Ocean Decade and to strengthen dialogue and outreach. It will cover topics related to a productive ocean where global food supply, source of livelihood, and societal needs are sustainably managed, and will explore the key elements required for the change we need to see over the course of the Decade.
    • Find out more and sign up here

June 2022

  • Engineering Coffee Chat, a University of St Andrews Event
    • Wednesday 1 June, 11.00 am-12.00 pm.
    • Room 222, School of Physics and Astronomy, North Haugh, St Andrews.
    • Join Doug Gillespie from the School of Biology who has recently had sea faring adventures with tidal turbines.
    • No need to sign up, turn up on the day.
  • Negotiation and Financial Management, a SULSA Training Course
    • Wednesday 1 June, 1.00 pm-4.00 pm.
    • In this half day workshop participants will have a short masterclass on negotiation skills followed by panel and speaker sessions, where you can hear from PhD’s who have moved into the world of work to learn from their experiences of negotiating salary and managing financial change.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Seaweed Around the Clock
    • Thursday 2 June, all day.
    • A 24hr event, Seaweed Around the Clock raises awareness of, showcases innovations in, and funds organic seaweed farming. You will able to watch recordings of live sessions up to 30 days after the event if they’re held at night.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Studying the past to conserve the future: Palaeoecological research in the Cape Floristic Region, a Leadership for Conservation in Africa Webinar
    • Thursday 2 June, 6.00 pm BST.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • COAST Exhibition
    • Thursday 2 June, 6.00 pm-8.30 pm.
    • The Rockfield Centre, Stevenson Street, Oban, PA34 5DE.
    • COAST is a gathering of stories, histories, and people. Explore and understand the coastline, landscape, heritage, and culture of the west coast of Scotland.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Orca Watch Workshop
    • Saturday 4 June, 10.00 am-1.00 pm.
    • Lyth Arts Centre, Wick, Scotland, KW1 4UD.
    • Join artist Jennifer Argo and marine biologists from the University of Strathclyde on a wildlife tour to explore connections that bridge marine wildlife between Scotland and the Arctic Ocean. Followed by a workshop, see below.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Mapping Ocean Change, an Orca Watch Workshop
    • Saturday 4 June, 1.00 pm-2.30 pm.
    • Lyth Arts Centre, Wick, Scotland, KW1 4UD.
    • Map food chain connections and migration routes between marine life species from the north coast up to the Arctic Ocean, from the smallest organisms up to megafauna, and discuss climate-driven impacts to local and international marine ecosystems.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 6th Annual World Oceans Week, The Explorers Club Events
    • Monday 6 to Friday 10 June.
    • Stream the Explorers Club programme of art exhibits, presentations, and more.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • PRIMER 7, a PRIMER-e Online Course
    • Monday 6 to Friday 10 June. Repeated in October.
    • This course will provide an intensive and extensive overview of statistical methods in non-parametric analysis of multivariate data, encapsulated in PRIMER version 7. Suitable for beginners and experienced users.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Saturday 28 May.
  • ORCA OceanWatchers, a Field Studies Council Training Course
    • Monday 6 to Monday 27 June.
    • During this course, you will learn how to identify over 25 different species of whale, dolphin, and porpoise, plus learn the skills to be able to survey for these animals from land or at sea.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Structures in the Marine Environment Conference
    • Tuesday 7 June, 9.30 am-5.30 pm.
    • Interested parties are invited to come together for talks, posters, networking, and discussion about artificial structures already within the marine ecosystem, and new infrastructures that will be put in place over the coming decades.
    • Submission of abstracts are invited for posters or presentations until midday on Friday 6 May.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Moral or Pragmatic? The Case of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG), an Energy Café by The Centre for Energy Ethics
    • Tuesday 7 June, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • This Café will discuss the promise and appeal of ESG, the problems and confusion plaguing the ESG space, and the unresolved conflict between morality and pragmatism deep at the heart of the ESG finance revolution.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Climate Change and Climate Enigmas, Do we understand climate or don’t we?, a Carnegie Trust Seminar
    • Tuesday 7 June, 6.00 pm-7.00 pm.
    • School II, St Salvator’s Quad, University of St Andrews.
    • This Seminar will review the long history of climate science, and how we can be confident we have “settled” a few crucial matters. 
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Aqua-healing: can marine ingredients fix our wounds? A JPI Oceans Webinar
    • Wednesday 8 June, 12.30 pm BST.
    • In celebration of World Oceans Day, this session will focus on the potential of ingredients sourced from the sea to heal wounds. The event will welcome guest speaker Dr Karin Gilljam, coordinator of the project AquaHeal3D.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 2022 United Nations World Oceans Day Event
    • Wednesday 8 June, 3.00 pm-6.00 pm.
    • This year’s celebration will be around the theme Revitalization: Collective Action for the Ocean. The programme will shed light on the communities, ideas, and solutions that are working together to protect and revitalize the ocean and everything it sustains.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Linking occurrence data with environmental variables from the ecotopes, a Workshop as part of the Empowering Biodiversity Research Conference
    • Thursday 9 June, 9.30 am-4.30 pm.
    • Louvain-la-Neuve, Croix du Sud, Belgium.
    • Remote sensing image analysis brings us to the macroscale that is necessary to study the distribution patterns of a large number of vertebrate species. Remote sensing is however limited in its description of the ecosystems, therefore an integrated database of other biotic and abiotic variables is necessary.
    • Find out more here and sign up here.
  • NERC Climate Linked Atlantic Sector Science (CLASS) Programme, a Challenger Society for Marine Science ECR Webinar
    • Monday 13 June, 2.00 pm-3.00 pm.
    • Discover the ways in which ECRs can make use of CLASS cruises and research centres to design opportunities for career development. There will be previous examples with the view of inspiring ECRs to think about how they can benefit.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Connectivity, climate change and their implications for ABMTs and EIAs/SEAs, an IUCN Webinar
    • Monday 13 June, 2.00 pm-3.00 pm.
    • Join the discussion about the central role of connectivity to advancing conservation and sustainable
      use in ABNJ, the link between connectivity and MPAs/ ABMTs, the policy and legal perspectives, the importance of SEAs and associated cross-sectoral collaboration, and the importance of consensus & common interest building as part of SEAs.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Mission “Restore our Ocean and Waters by 2030” Conference
    • Monday 13 to Tuesday 14 June.
    • Aix-Marseille University, France, and online.
    • This event will focus on Mission implementation and planned actions to accelerate the transition to zero pollution in the Mediterranean Sea.
    • Find out more here and sign up here.
  • The Surface Ocean Lower Atmosphere Study (SOLAS) Summer School
    • Monday 13 to Friday 17 June.
    • The SOLAS Summer School is a regular, international event with the goal to provide the needed multidisciplinary air-sea interaction background to the next generation of Earth System scientists. In 2022, they offer a virtual version. (The in-person school on Cape Verde will take place in summer 2023.)
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • “Why’d you have to go and make things so complicated?” Non-Darwinian routes to the evolution of life’s complexity, a The Royal Institution Hybrid Seminar
    • Tuesday 14 June, 7.00 pm-8.30 pm.
    • The Royal Institution, 21 Albemarle Street, London, W1S 4BS, and online.
    • Free!
    • This talk will explain how living systems tend to make simple mechanisms more complicated than they need to be, and this ‘unnecessary complexity’ can both restrict and expand an organism’s evolutionary potential.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Scottish Universities Life Sciences Alliance (SULSA) Recruitment Event
    • Wednesday 15 June, 9.30 am-2.30 pm.
    • Technology and Innovation Centre, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, G1 1RD.
    • Free!
    • Meet Scottish life sciences companies, discover career paths, and understand your own skill set.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • ‘Getting the dream job: The (not so subtle) art of marketing yourself’ Hybrid Workshop
    • Wednesday 15 June, 9.30 am-3.30 pm. RESCHEDULED FOR ASM.
    • Lanarkshire campus, University of the West of Scotland, and online.
    • This one-day workshop will bring individuals from academia and industry to help you start your career journey. 
    • Find more information and sign up here.
  • UK Acoustics Network Monitoring UK Biodiversity Symposium
    • Wednesday 15 to Thursday 16 June.
    • Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, and online.
    • £15 in-person, £5 online with ECR discount. Travel-bursaries are available.
    • A symposium on the use of acoustics for long-term monitoring of biodiversity in the UK.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Sea Scotland Conference 2022
    • Wednesday 15 to Thursday 16 June.
    • The Studio, Glasgow, and online.
    • £120 in-person 2-days, £15 online.
    • For its 7th edition, the theme for this year’s conference is “Scotland’s Place in the Global Ocean”. How Scotland’s marine management compares to other maritime nations, and what we can learn from the successes of other nations will be explored.
    • Early bird discount ends on Wednesday 15 June, or when sold out.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Best practices for biogeochemical ocean observation: instrumentation, operation, quality control, a Scottish Association for Marine Science (SAMS) Hybrid Event
    • Wednesday 15 to Friday 17 June, 9.00 am-5.00 pm daily.
    • SAMS, Oban, Scotland, PA37 1QA and online.
    • Free!
    • Biogeochemical measurements in ocean observing systems allow for assessment and sustainable management of oceanic ecosystems, yet they are underrepresented and underutilised. This observational training aims to increase utilisation of biogeochemical data sets.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Thursday 31 March.  
  • How to Champion Yourself, a jobs.ac.uk Webinar
    • Thursday 16 June, 2.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • A panel of leaders in HE will provide insight into how you can claim your space, without sounding boastful. For those who identify as a woman.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 2022 International Cetacean Symposium
    • Friday 17 June, 2.00 am-10.00 am BST.
    • Free!
    • This year’s symposium with the theme of “Resilience” will host conservationists, biologists, scientists, veterinarians and PhD students from 6 different countries to share their research in cetacean-vessel interaction and related conservation topics.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Quality and Peer Review, a Sense about Science Workshop
    • Friday 17 June, 2.30 pm-5.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • The workshop will explore how peer review works, how to get involved, the challenges to the system, and the role of peer review in helping the public to evaluate research claims.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Wednesday 18 May at 5.00 pm.
  • The Dandelion Project x Mapping Ocean Change
    • Saturday 18 June, 11.00 am-3.00 pm.
    • The Centre, Broomieknowe, Leven, KY8 4QP.
    • Free!
    • A guided walk along the River Leven and workshop to discuss the effects climate change is having on marine and coastal ecosystems.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Addressing the Nature Crisis in Scotland, a Holyrood Event
    • Tuesday 21 June, 10.00 am-3.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • This event will look at the multi-faceted issue of the nature crisis and biodiversity loss across Scotland. Then, explore potential solutions and what Scotland’s biodiversity strategy contributes to delivering these.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Marine Data for Policies, a Mercator Ocean International Webinar
    • Tuesday 21 June, 11.00 am-1.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • This event aims to gather and engage marine policy community in order to provide the view on the Copernicus Marine Service offer and bring its knowledge and capacities to EU Member States.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • MATLAB Day for Marine Robotics & Autonomous Systems
    • Tuesday 21 June, 1.00 pm-3.30 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • This event addresses graduate students, researchers, professors, and engineers in the field of autonomous maritime robotic systems.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • First Steps Into a Green Career, a Field Studies Council Workshop Series
    • Every Tuesday from Tuesday 21 June to Tuesday 19 July, 6.00 pm-7.30 pm daily. Repeated in August and October.
    • £30.
    • This 5-week series is an opportunity for individuals either interested in a career in the environmental sector or those thinking about their next steps. These engaging and interactive online workshops have been developed and will be delivered by FSC staff from a range of backgrounds and experiences.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Early Careers Webinar: Top tips on applying for a job in the sector, a Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management (CIEEM) Webinar
    • Wednesday 22 June, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • This webinar will discuss the importance of a covering letter when applying for jobs, and how to write an effective one to put alongside a CV or application. It will also include top tips from recruiters within the ecology sector.
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Managing Imposter Syndrome in Academic-Policy Engagement, a University of St Andrews School of Biology EDI Webinar
    • Wednesday 22 June, 12.30 pm-1.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • This workshop will explore how through learning and developing areas of socio-emotional intelligence we can reduce some of the barriers imposed by our imposter syndrome, which you may experience during your academic or professional career, and within academic-policy engagement opportunities.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Presentation Skills for Researchers, a Vitae/jobs.ac.uk Webinar
    • Wednesday 22 June, 2.00 pm-3.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • As ECRs, you will likely face a blend of environments in the future, this webinar will help you to prepare for presenting and building your network in a range of scenarios, both online and in person.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Strategic Foresight (Futurism) and the jobs/skills of the future, a Graduate Mentor Webinar
    • Wednesday 22 June, 1.00 pm-1.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • Do you have the skillset for the future jobs market?
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Geospatial Analysis: An Introduction for Business Analytics in R, a Learning Labs Course
    • Wednesday 22 June, 7.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • 99% of data scientists don’t know how to use geospatial data, and it can help machine learning models. This training is focused on business but it might give you a head start of GIS in R.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The ocean’s role in combatting climate change, a Marine Conservation Society ‘Beneath the Waves’ Webinar
    • Wednesday 22 June, 7.00 pm-8.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • The event will address the ocean’s role in storing carbon and how rewilding our seas can increase biodiversity and help us deal with the climate crisis.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Focusing on seafood in the UK diet: Nurturing individual, community & planetary health, an Aquaculture Research Collaborative Hub UK Workshop
    • Thursday 23 June at 10.00 am to Friday 24 June at 3.00 pm.
    • University of Stirling, Stirling, FK9 4LA.
    • Free!
    • A workshop to explore the key issues emerging from the Blue Food Assessment which identified seafood products have a relatively low environmental impact and high nutritional quality and illuminating opportunities for seafood to support more sustainable and nutritious diets.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Disability inclusion in science careers, an EnDISC Webinar
    • Monday 27 June, 2.00-5.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Join panelists for a thought-provoking discussion about enabling the inclusion of disabled scientists in science careers.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • UN Ocean Conference
    • Monday 27 June to Friday 1 July.
    • Lisbon Altice Arena Convention Center, Parque das Nações, Rossio dos Olivais, Lisbon. Lots of side events online.
    • Free!
    • To mobilize action, the Conference will seek to propel much needed science-based innovative solutions aimed at starting a new chapter of global ocean action.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Evolution of Enzymes and Metabolic Pathways in Marine Organisms: analysis, understanding and implications for biotechnology Summer School
    • Tuesday 28 to Thursday 30 June.
    • Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Naples.
    • 180€ (~£153.60).
    • The program will include theoretic lectures on function and evolution of enzymes and metabolic pathways integrated with practical tutorials on the use of public databases and softwares, as well as high-throughput analyses.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • ialeUK Postgraduate Workshop 2022
    • Thursday 30 June to Friday 1 July.
    • Whiteknights Campus, University of Reading, Reading.
    • Free for members. Membership £15/yr.
    • A two-day workshop for students with an interest in habitat creation, restoration and conservation, or a general interest in environmental policy.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Wednesday 22 June.
  • Discovering Tracks and Signs, a Field Studies Council Training Course
    • Thursday 30 June to Thursday 28 July.
    • £30.
    • This introductory online course will introduce the skills needed to confidently identify a variety of mammal and bird activities when you are out in the field. Wildlife tracking is a crucial skill within conservation management and key for species identification.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Discovering Seabirds: Identification, Ecology, and Conservation, a Field Studies Council Training Course
    • Thursday 30 June to Thursday 4 August.
    • £45.
    • This beginner/intermediate course is a starting guide to the skills required to begin identifying and observing native seabirds in the field. You will learn observational field identification tips, life history characteristics, and general ecology of the different groups of seabirds found around the British coast.
    • Find out more and sign up here.

July 2022

  • Mapping Ocean Change, an Orca Watch Workshop
    • Friday 1 July, 1.00 pm-2.30 pm.
    • Scottish Oceans Institute, St Andrews.
    • Free!
    • Collect micro-organism samples at East Sands Beach before drawing them under the microscope with artist Jennifer Argo, marine biologists from Strathclyde University and the SOI. Then you will discuss and piece together observations of changes to local marine and coastal wildlife, and create ecosystem collages with our shared knowledge.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Economics, Policies and legal framework on Marine Renewable Energy, a University of Plymouth Training Course
    • Monday 4 to Wednesday 6 July.
    • Free!
    • This course aims to introduce participants to the existing economics, policies, and legal framework in the MRE field.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Thursday 30 June.
  • IMarEST Annual Conference 2022
    • Monday 4 to Friday 8 July.
    • £210 in-person, free online.
    • The conference will explore key topics across marine engineering, science & technology, and will provide delegates with an opportunity to participate in debates, to learn about subjects outside their day-to-day work, and to make new professional connections.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Visual Storytelling with Infographics, a Sustainable Management of UK Marine Resources (SMMR) Online Training Course
    • Tuesday 5 July, 9.30 am-4.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • Nigel Hawtin was the graphics editor at New Scientist for 20 years and companies including BBC, the UN, the NHS and many more have all been clients of his infographic content. In this training, Nigel will help you to learn how to take your own research and tell a story and how to visualise you research from a brief to finished graphic.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Grant Writing for Wildlife Conservation, a WildTeams Training Course
    • Every Wednesday from Wednesday 6 July to Wednesday 17 August, 10.30 am or 6.00 pm BST.
    • £195
    • Learn how to raise more funds for your conservation work by:
      • Selecting the right grant.
      • Preparing a well written, well presented, high-impact, evidence-based grant application. 
      • Creating log frames that match donor criteria. 
      • Processing your grant application effectively.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Marine Natural Capital Accounting: Impacts of the Sandeel Fishery in the North Sea, a UK Network of Environmental Economists Webinar
    • Wednesday 6 July, 12.15 pm-1.15 pm.
    • Free!
    • Enhancing natural capital is a core element of the UK Government 25 Year Environment Plan (YEP). As such, we need to understand how we can enhance natural capital to achieve the ambition of providing multiple benefits to people and wildlife. This webinar will demonstrate how the presenters conducted a practical exploration of integrating ecological and economic evidence.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Hidden World of Parasites, a Linnean Society of London Webinar
    • Thursday 7 July, 6.00 pm-7.15 pm.
    • Free!
    • This talk will discuss the challenges in understanding parasite diversity, life history, distribution, and evolution.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Wild Coast Conservation: Enhancing stewardship of local communities, a Leadership for Conservation in Africa Webinar
    • Thursday 7 July, 6.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • The South African Wild Coast has a very unique environment. Yet, often a place as rich as the Wild Coast is faced with serious conflict – which makes it very difficult to preserve.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Marine Robotics Summer School
    • Monday 11 to Friday 22 July.
    • Faial Island, The Azores.
    • A travel and accommodation sponsorship can be applied for.
    • Attendees will acquire expertise in marine robotics and oceanography, more specifically in applications for ocean observation, archaeology, and mapping of ecosystems.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 18 April. Only 20 spaces available.
  • Constructing a Digital Environment Conference
    • Monday 11 to Tuesday 12 July.
    • The Gisbert Kapp Building, Pritchatts Rd, Birmingham, B15 2SA, and online.
    • Free!
    • The conference aims to bring together the NERC research community to highlight the increasing role of digital technologies in environmental research, including spotlighting the outcomes from the Digital Environment Projects, which explored methodologies and tools for assessing, analysing, monitoring and forecasting the state of the natural environment at higher spatial and temporal resolutions than previously possible, and the activities of the Digital Environment Expert network
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • RNA-seq gene expression and pathway analysis, a NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) Training Course
    • Tuesday 12 to Thursday 14 July.
    • Free!
    • At the end of this course you will be able to align the transcriptomes of samples to a reference genome to determine gene expression levels.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 27 June.
  • NERC Student Careers Intensive
    • Wednesday 13 to Thursday 14 July.
    • Conference Aston, Birmingham, and online.
    • Free for SUPER DTP students! Accommodation included for in-person.
    • NERC are bringing together employer organisations, skills specialists, and experienced alumni to deliver an exciting, informative two-day careers event for PhD students and recent graduates.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Experiences of Women in Marine Mammal Science, a Women in Marine Mammal Science (WIMMS) Webinar
    • Thursday 14 July, 4.00 pm to 6.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • This webinar will consist of presentations by speakers from a diversity of backgrounds, career stages and sectors, and family considerations followed by a Q&A discussion with the speakers.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Diversity, Natural History and Conservation of Chameleons, a Leadership for Conservation in Africa Webinar
    • Thursday 14 July, 6.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Integrating Environmental, Organismal and Community Complexity into Ocean Global Change Research Conference
    • Sunday 17 to Friday 22 July.
    • 56 Packard’s Road, Waterville Valley, NH, United States.
    • From $755 (~£610.53).
    • Key goals of the conference are to stimulate discussions on how to integrate the inherent complexity of biology into ocean global change research, by highlighting challenging topics such as life histories, intraspecific diversity, and top-down effects on marine populations.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Sunday 19 June.
  • Introduction to Python for Biologists, an Edinburgh Genomics Training Course
    • Monday 18 to Friday 22 July, 9.00 am to 5.00 pm daily.
    • James Clerk Maxwell Building, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh.
    • £535.
    • This workshop is aimed at complete beginners and assumes no prior programming experience. It gives an overview of the language with an emphasis on practical problem-solving, using examples and exercises drawn from various aspects of bioinformatics work.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • CIEEM 2022 Summer Conference: Facilitating Nature’s Recovery through Environmentally-friendly Land Management
    • Tuesday 19 July.
    • £50.
    • This online conference examines the role of the farm environment adviser and how it is evolving in line with emerging national and regional environmental and agricultural policies, priorities and funding opportunities.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Meet & Greet for Early Career Researchers, a Zinc Venture Builder Event
    • Thursday 21 July.
    • Hear from academics and researchers who have channeled their academic expertise into the world of startups as an alternative career pathway.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Foraging Workshop and Climate Fresk Workshop, a Mapping Ocean Change through Art Event
    • Saturday 23 July, 10.30 am-4.30 pm.
    • Isle of Harris.
    • Free!
    • Join foragers from Temple Cafe, artist Jennifer Argo, and marine biologists from Strathclyde University to forage for and learn about local edible plant life and seaweed, discuss climate-driven changes to marine and coastal ecosystems, and explore food-chain and migration connections that bridge marine wildlife between Scotland and the Arctic Ocean.
    • Find out more and sign up here and here.
  • Machine Learning in Science Conference
    • Wednesday 27 July, 9.30 am-5.30 pm.
    • Advanced Research Centre, University of Glasgow, Off Church Street, Glasgow.
    • Free!
    • The aim is to bring scientists and programmers to the same table and encourage free discussion about how ML is being used for scientific discovery and how science can shape the future of artificial intelligence with scientific informed models.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Policy Engagement for Researchers, a Sense about Science Online Workshop
    • Friday 29 July.
    • Free!
    • Meet researchers who have engaged with politicians, find out how researchers can inform policymakers and get hints and tips from policy experts.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 4 July at 5.00 pm.
  • The World Congress of Soil Science 2022
    • Sunday 31 July to Friday 5 August.
    • Pricing TBD.
    • The Congress theme, ‘Soil Science – crossing boundaries, changing society’ will focus on the link between soil and society, with sessions covering soil systems, soil processes, soil management and how we interact with and use soils around the world.
    • Find out more and sign up here.

August 2022

  • Skills for Collaborative Interdisciplinary Research, a Sustainable Management of UK Marine Resources (SMMR) Training Course
    • Monday 1 to Tuesday 2 August, 1.00 pm-4.30 pm daily.
    • Free!
    • The course will cover 4 main sections: Disciplines and interdisciplinarity, Understanding drivers of, and barriers to, IDR, and IDR practices and skills.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 24th Biennial Conference on the Biology of Marine Mammals
    • Monday 1 to Friday 5 August with workshops being held on Saturday 30 July and Sunday 31 July.
    • Palm Beach Convention Centre, 650 Okeechobee Blvd, West Palm Beach, Florida, USA and online.
    • $270 (~£215.92) in-person until Sunday 31 July, $145 (~£115.15) for online access.
    • The conference theme, “A Sea Change: Transforming Science into Stewardship”, will highlight the value of diversity in marine mammal science, from multidisciplinary approaches to the improvement of diversity in the field.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The World Congress of Malacology in 2022
    • Monday 1 to Friday 5 August.
    • Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (Faculties of Biology and Medicine, Campus Martinsried), Germany.
    • 344€ (~£289.15).
    • The theme of WCM 2022 is all aspects of diversity, function, ecology, evolution, and conservation of extant and fossil Mollusca.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Stakeholder Engagement for Wildlife Conservation, a WildTeams Training Course
    • Every Tuesday from Tuesday 2 August to Tuesday 6 September, 10.30 am or 6.00 pm BST.
    • £195.
    • Learn how to engage stakeholders to enhance your conservation work by:
      • Applying key principles to ensure you engage with stakeholders effectively and ethically.
      • Initiating the relationship to build trust and understanding and set expectations.
      • Managing the relationship to progress the project and adapt to changing conditions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Power of AdvocaSEA, EarthEcho 2022 Youth Leadership Virtual Summit
    • Friday 5 to Saturday 6 August, 3.00 pm to 10.30 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • If you are a young person (<25), you can attend two days of learning, networking, and collaboration focused on taking collective action to restore and protect our ocean planet.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • R for Biologists, an Edinburgh Genomics Training Course
    • Monday 8 to Wednesday 10 August, 9.00am to 5.00 pm daily.
    • Murchison House, 10 Max Born Cres, Edinburgh.
    • £375.
    • The aim of this course is to introduce participants to the statistical computing language ‘R’ using examples and skills relevant to biological data science. By the end of the workshop, you will be comfortable with the basics of the R and R Studio environments, learning about the rules of the language and how R works with different data types and structures.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Marine Data Management, Governance and the MEDIN toolset, a Marine Environmental Data and Information Network (MEDIN) and OceanWise Training Course
    • Monday 8 to Friday 12 August. Repeated in November and February.
    • Free!
    • This course is suitable for anyone responsible for collecting or managing marine environmental data. There will be live lessons in the morning and independent learning in the afternoons, featuring interactive training and discussion sessions, quizzes, and assignments. The course can be taken as a whole, or attendees can select modules in two streams: Marine Data Governance or Practical MEDIN.
    • Find out more and sign up here (enrolment key: Medin774).
  • First Steps Into a Green Career, a Field Studies Council Workshop Series
    • Every Wednesday from Wednesday 10 August to Wednesday 7 September, 6.00 pm-7.30 pm daily. Repeated in October.
    • £30.
    • This 5-week series is an opportunity for individuals either interested in a career in the environmental sector or those thinking about their next steps. These engaging and interactive online workshops have been developed and will be delivered by FSC staff from a range of backgrounds and experiences.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Landscape genetic data analysis using R, a PR Statistics Training Course
    • Monday 15 to Friday 19 August, 2.30 pm-10.30 pm BST daily.
    • £480.
    • This live online course will cover the basics of both quantitative landscape ecology and population genetics, focusing on how we develop and evaluate spatial/genetic analyses using the R platform.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Project Management for Wildlife Conservation, a WildTeams Training Course
    • Every Wednesday from Wednesday 17 August to Wednesday 28 September, 10.30 am or 6.00 pm BST.
    • £195.
    • Learn how to manage any conservation project by:
      • Applying a set of practical and ethical principles to guide your project.
      • Defining roles to clarify decision-making.
      • Splitting the project into clear phases.
      • Setting up effective administrative processes.
      • Adapting the project to changing conditions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • International Seabird Group Conference 2022
    • Monday 22 to Thursday 25 August.
    • University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
    • €185 (~£158.73) until 31 July, €295 (~£253.11) thereafter.
    • Promoting the study & conservation of seabirds.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • GIS in R: Fundamentals and applications for ecologists, a Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation Training Course
    • Monday 22 August to Sunday 16 October.
    • $500 (~£405.92).
    • This asynchronous online course aims to provide an introduction to the powerful and flexible range of tools for working with spatial data in the R environment. The course will review core GIS concepts and the basics of R programming and build skills in raster and vector import and manipulation.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 27 June.
  • An Introduction to Machine Learning with Python, an Ed-DaSH Workshop
    • Tuesday 23 to Friday 26 August, 1.00 pm-4.00 pm daily.
    • Free!
    • This workshop comprises four lessons on applied machine learning in Python using health data. Lessons take participants through a typical pipeline for prediction, covering key concepts in preparing data, training models, and evaluating performance. Models are introduced, including decision trees and neural networks and highlight key issues in their responsible use.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Strategy Development for Wildlife Conservation, a WildTeams Training Course
    • Every Thursday from Thursday 25 August to Thursday 6 October, 10.00 am or 5.30 pm BST.
    • £195.
    • Learn how to develop a stronger conservation strategy by:
      • Assessing the current situation to better understand and document the situation you are trying to change.
      • Planning the impact you want to achieve and the work you will carry out to achieve that impact.
      • Adapting your strategy to your needs and situation.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Introduction To Multivariate Analysis In Ecology And Evolutionary Biology, a PR Statistics Training Course
    • Monday 29 to Wednesday 31 August, 9.00 am-5.00 pm BST daily.
    • £325.
    • During this three-day live online course, you will cover the basic concepts of multivariate analysis and their implementation in R using real world examples.
    • Find out more and sign up here.

September 2022

  • Estuarine & Coastal Sciences Association (ECSA) Conference
    • Monday 5 to Thursday 8 September.
    • Kursaal Congress Centre, San Sebastian, Spain.
    • 338.80€ (~£291.04)
    • ‘ECSA 59: Using the best scientific knowledge for the sustainable management of estuaries and coastal seas’ will bring together a global multi-disciplinary community of researchers, educators, and practitioners to address issues of outstanding importance in the science (both natural and social) and management of estuaries and coastal seas.
    • The deadline for submission of abstracts is Friday 1 April. Early bird registration closes on Friday 24 June. 
    • Find out more and sign up here.
    • The AZTI Summer School 2022 will be held in conjunction with the conference, addressing the cumulative impacts of multiple human pressures in marine systems. Thursday 8 to Friday 9 September. Aquarium of San Sebastian, Spain. Additional 96.80€ (~£83.15).
    • Find out more and sign up here
  • Environmental Engagement in Practice: Ethics of engagement and dealing with controversy, part of a National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Engagement Training Course Series
    • Tuesday 6 September, 10.00 am-4.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Through case studies and discussion, delegates will have the opportunity to explore the nature of controversy, and how these can be managed in an appropriate way.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Challenger Society Conference 2022
    • Tuesday 6 to Thursday 8 September.
    • Royal Geographical Society, Natural History Museum and Imperial College in South Kensington, London.
    • £220 for non-members with banquet.
    • The conference will cover the latest research in physical, biological and chemical oceanography, marine conservation and biodiversity, and marine geology and geophysics.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Movement Ecology 2022: Understanding animal movement in human-altered landscapes, a British Ecological Society (BES) Meeting
    • Wednesday 7 to Thursday 8 September.
    • University of Glasgow.
    • £90.
    • The BES Movement Ecology Special Interest Group will be holding its annual meeting with the theme of understanding animal movement in human-altered landscapes, discussing general issues with movement ecology and the effects of anthropogenic disturbance.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Wednesday 24 August.
  • Discovering QGIS, a Field Studies Council Online Training Course
    • Thursday 8 September to Thursday 20 October.
    • £75.
    • This beginner course will teach you how to use the QGIS interface and begin to build, style, and present maps.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 5 September.
  • 4th World Small-Scale Fisheries Congress Series, Europe
    • Monday 12 to Wednesday 14 September.
    • Malta, and online.
    • 75€ (~£64.42), free virtual attendance.
    • Under the theme ‘Imagine the (Un)Imaginable’, the congress provides a platform for an open and forward-looking discussion about the options and opportunities for small-scale fisheries in Europe, including those that may seem unlikely or inconceivable.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Monday 15 August.
  • Multivariate Analysis Of Ecological Communities Using R With The VEGAN package, a PR Statistics Training Course
    • Monday 12 to Friday 16 September, 10.00 am-5.00 pm daily.
    • £480.
    • This 5-day live online course will cover R concepts, methods, and tools that can be used to analyze community ecology data. The course will review data processing techniques relevant to multivariate data sets, covering diversity indices, distance measures and distance-based multivariate methods, clustering, classification and ordination techniques using the R package VEGAN.
    • Find out more and sign up here. Sign up for an information seminar about the course here.
  • Social Media Training – What’s Your Story? Communicating your research to the world, a Sustainable Management of UK Marine Resources (SMMR) Training Course
    • Tuesday 13 September, 9.00 am-12.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • This workshop will develop participants’ confidence and skills in communicating about their work as professional scientists — with a particular focus on the professional use of social media for networking and public engagement.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Integrated Carbon Observation System Science Conference
    • Tuesday 13 to Thursday 15 September.
    • Utrecht, The Netherlands, and online.
    • 370€ (~£315.72), or 190€ (~£163.53) for virtual attendance.
    • The overall, overarching theme of the conference is “Tracking progress to carbon neutrality”.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The International Conference for Young Marine Researchers
    • Tuesday 13 to Thursday 15 September.
    • Bremerhaven, Germany.
    • Pricing TBD.
    • ICYMARE is a bottom-up initiative completely organised by volunteers and offers an international networking opportunity, and perhaps some first conference experience for ECRs.
    • Deadline to submit an abstract is Tuesday 31 May, or to propose a workshop is Wednesday 15 June.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Climate Change Genomics: Vulnerability, adaptations & applications, a British Ecological Society Workshop
    • Tuesday 13 to Thursday 15 September.
    • £20 for BES student members, otherwise £40.
    • Join this international online workshop on using the methodologies, evidence, and applications of genomics for investigating the impacts of climate change.
    • If you would like to present the deadline for abstracts is Friday 26 August.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Friday 2 September.
  • Metabarcoding for diet analysis and environmental DNA, a NERC Environmental Omics Facility (NEOF) Training Course
    • Wednesday 14 to Friday 16 September.
    • University of Sheffield.
    • Free!
    • This course will give an overview of metabarcoding with different barcoding genes to target particular taxa. Using an example data set you will go from raw sequence data through to assigning taxonomy to the sequence variants.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Wednesday 3 August.
  • Introducing Mapping, Spatial Data and GIS, a University of Oxford Online Training Course
    • Wednesday 14 September to Friday 25 November. Repeated in January.
    • £324.
    • Investigate the power of maps and spatial data to document and illustrate local and global issues. Learn how to use Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to explore the world around you and share ideas. Apply GIS principles and tools to create your own maps from freely-available online spatial data.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Consideration of Underwater Sound During Offshore Wind Developments, a Discovery of Sound in The Sea Webinar
    • Wednesday 14 September, 5.00 pm-6.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 55 European Marine Biology Symposium
    • Monday 19 to Friday 23 September.
    • University of Gdańsk, Gdynia, Poland.
    • 330€ (~£281.59).
    • The main topics of the symposium are main stressors and their impact on ecosystem health, marine molecular ecology – new tools and new findings, diversity and physiology of marine organisms – is there still anything to discover?, and marine living resources – environmental significance.
    • The deadline for submission of abstracts is Friday 15 July. There is also a student and early bird discount running until Friday 15 July.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Introduction to Statistics in R for Biologists and Ecologists, a Physalia Training Course
    • Monday 19 September from 2.00 pm to Thursday 22 September at 8.00 pm.
    • 450€ (~£384.78).
    • The course is for beginners with no prior knowledge in statistics, programming, and R language, but with a keen interest in using R as a platform for statistical analyses.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Ocean Governance for Sustainable Marine Ecosystems, an International Ocean Institute Online Summer School
    • Monday 19 to Friday 30 September, 12.00 pm-3.30 pm daily.
    • Free!
    • An intensive academic program from leading experts providing a scientific basis from different disciplines to enable you to engage in marine governance.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • International Summer School on Marine Biotechnology
    • Wednesday 21 to Friday 23 September.
    • Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Naples.
    • 230€ (~£197.43).
    • A combination of lectures, short communications, practical afternoon sessions, and visits to laboratories of a marine biotechnology company will create a stimulating environment for participants.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Wednesday 27 July.
  • Virtual International Networking Connector with MEOPAR, IMBeR AND OFI
    • Thursday 22 September, 4.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • Join MEOPAR, IMBeR and OFI for a virtual networking opportunity to meet new peers, grow collaborations and partnerships, share information and knowledge about projects and initiatives. This session is an endorsed UN Ocean Decade Activity and open to all researchers and ocean professionals interested in growing their networks.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Species Distribution Modelling With Bayesian Statistics Using R, a PR Statistics Training Course
    • Monday 26 to Friday 30 September, 2.30 pm-5.30 pm daily.
    • £500.
    • This live online course will include 1) an introduction or refresher on the essentials of the R language; 2) an introduction or refresher on species distribution modelling; 3) an overview of species distribution modelling methods of different complexity, including regression-based and machine-learning (both Bayesian and non-Bayesian) methods; 4) species distribution modelling building and block cross-validation focused on different aspects of model performance, including discrimination and calibration or reliability.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Aquaculture Europe 2022
    • Tuesday 27 to Friday 30 September.
    • Rimini, Italy.
    • 125€ (~£107.30) until Monday 1 August, 170-225€ thereafter.
    • This year’s theme is ‘Innovative Solutions to a Changing World’ and will address the aquaculture solutions put in place to develop a sustainable, responsible, productive, and climate-neutral European sector for key marine and freshwater fish, shellfish, and algal species.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • High-Dimensional Statistics with R, an Ed-DaSH Workshop
    • Tuesday 27 to Friday 30 September, 9.30 am-1.00 pm daily.
    • Free!
    • This is a short course aimed at familiarising learners with statistical and computational methods for the extremely high-dimensional data commonly found in biomedical and health sciences (e.g., gene expression, DNA methylation, health records).
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Field Electronics and Sensors, a UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology Training Course
    • Wednesday 28 to Thursday 29 September, 9.00 am-5.00 pm daily.
    • UKCEH Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 8BB.
    • £239.
    • This course will give you an introduction to electronics as applied to environmental sensors in the field.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • An Introduction to the Climate Emergency, a Keep Scotland Beautiful Webinar
    • Thursday 29 September, 2.00 pm-3.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Join this event to learn what the climate emergency means for Scotland, and what climate action is taking place.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Looking North Through Art, an Energy Ethics Webinar
    • Monday 3 October, 5.15 pm-6.15 pm.
    • Free!
    • “Drawn to the Land” is a project that has been ongoing and evolving for the past 10 years. It aims to look at “Scottish landscape” through the perspective of six female farmers ‘who are working, forming and shaping it’.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • International Conference in Marine Biotechnology (i-CoMB) 2022
    • Monday 3 to Tuesday 4 October.
    • $100 early-bird student tickets (~£81.54), $150 after Friday 1 July (~£122.30).
    • i-CoMB 2022 provides a platform to exchange knowledge in marine biotechnology to address the betterment of marine ecosystems and societal well beings.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Introduction to Aquatic Acoustic Telemetry, a PR Statistics Training Course
    • Monday 3 to Friday 7 October, 1.30 pm-9.30 pm GMT daily.
    • £300.
    • In this live online course you will learn about the different types of acoustic telemetry technologies and their applications in different study environments and for answering different research questions.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 4th Marine Imaging Workshop
    • Monday 3 to Friday 7 October.
    • Océanopolis, Brest, France and online.
    • 285€ (~£242.34) until Thursday 25 August, 335€ (~£285.86) thereafter. 55€ (~£45.53), 105€ (~£89.60) for online attendance.
    • The International Marine Imaging Workshops assemble scientists and engineers from different disciplines to push the boundaries of marine imaging. Topics will cover the start to finish of marine image analysis: image collection, processing of images prior to annotation, still/video annotation, automation of annotation, FAIR image data management and much more.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • International Year of Salmon Synthesis Symposium
    • Tuesday 4 to Thursday 6 October.
    • The Westin Bayshore, Vancouver, Canada, and online.
    • $325 CAD (~£198) to attend in person, free online.
    • This symposium will have a strong focus on forward-looking perspectives, with the ultimate goal of developing a Roadmap for the resilience of salmon and people through to 2030. Presentations will be organized under five themes: Status of Salmon, Information Systems, Salmon in a Changing Salmosphere, New Frontiers, and Human Dimensions.
    • Find out more and sign up here. Registration closes Friday 15 July.
  • The International Conference on the Environmental Interactions of Marine Renewables (EIMR)
    • Tuesday 4 to Thursday 6 October.
    • £10.
    • EIMR is a major forum to come together and present the latest research, results, and ideas. EIMR aims to strengthen relationships between the emerging marine renewable energy industry, research centres, universities, government agencies, and other stakeholders.
    • Deadline for abstracts is Monday 23 May.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Ocean Best Practice System Workshop VI
    • Wednesday 5 to Wednesday 19 October.
    • Free!
    • The online workshop goal is to guide the development of best practices and operating practices, to promote their documentation, and to share them widely using the Ocean Best Practices System.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Seismic Data Acquisition and Processing, two EUROFLEETS+ Workshops
    • Monday 10 to Wednesday 12 October, with borehole specific workshop Thursday 13 to Friday 14 October.
    • National Institute of Oceanography and applied Geophysics, Trieste, Italy.
    • Free! Travel and accommodation reimbursement available.
    • The Seismic Lab workshops are organised as part of the Eurofleets+ training programme. The three-day workshop is offered to researchers in the field of marine science who have no or basic experience and knowledge in the acquisition and processing of seismic data.
    • Find out more and sign up here and here for the borehole specific workshop.
  • PRIMER 7, a PRIMER-e Online Course
    • Monday 10 to Friday 14 October.
    • $580 with 10.31% discount for UK residents, $520.20 (~£428.18).
    • This course will provide an intensive and extensive overview of statistical methods in non-parametric analysis of multivariate data, encapsulated in PRIMER version 7. Suitable for beginners and experienced users.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Energy Cafe: Mixing Art & Oil, a Centre for Energy Ethics Webinar
    • Tuesday 11 October, 12.00 pm-1.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Callum Kellie is an artist and educator based in Aberdeen Scotland. His personal artistic practice explores the social impact of the North Sea Oil Industry and the perceptions of landscape and land use relating to Scottish national identity.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Coastal and Marine GIS, an ABPmer Training Course
    • Tuesday 11 to Thursday 13 October.
    • Online or in Southampton.
    • £695.
    • Using ArcGIS v10.x, the course is structured around 11 modules that cover various GIS concepts and techniques. As well as introducing marine data and GIS, the course considers common problems faced when mapping coastal and offshore environments.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • YouMares 2022
    • Tuesday 11 to Friday 14 October.
    • Berlin.
    • 20€ (~£17.36), or 5€ (4.34) for virtual attendance.
    • Bringing together participants from all over the world, YouMares provides the stage for an interdisciplinary community of young early career marine researchers – bachelor, master and PhD students. This year’s theme is ‘Science for resilient marine ecosystems’.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Signal Processing 101 & Soundscapes, a Discovery of Sound in The Sea Webinar
    • Wednesday 12 October, 5.00 pm-6.00 pm BST.
    • Free!
    • Find out more here.
  • First Steps Into a Green Career, a Field Studies Council Workshop Series
    • Every Wednesday from Wednesday 12 October to Wednesday 9 November, 6.00 pm-7.30 pm daily.
    • £30.
    • This 5-week series is an opportunity for individuals either interested in a career in the environmental sector or those thinking about their next steps. These engaging and interactive online workshops have been developed and will be delivered by FSC staff from a range of backgrounds and experiences.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Scottish Research Showcase
    • Friday 14 October, 9.00 am-9.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Take over Twitter with the Global Science Show, share your research as well as a skill or a hobby that you enjoy outside work. This could be in the form of videos, photos, memes, GIFs; the choice is entirely up to you.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Volunteer Seabirds At Sea Mentor Course, a JNCC Training Course
    • Friday 14 to Sunday 16 October.
    • Tarbert, Argyll and Bute, PA29 6UJ.
    • Free! Accommodation and food included.
    • Learn how to undertake seabird surveys using industry standard methods. One classroom based day followed by two at sea.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Sea Level Rise Conference 2022
    • Monday 17 to Tuesday 18 October.
    • Venice, Italy and online.
    • Free online!
    • The conference will bring together researchers, stakeholders and policy professionals to exchange on regional to local sea level change in Europe.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • WorkFair – A Global Virtual Career Fair for the LGBTQ+ Community
    • Wednesday 19 October, 11.00 am.
    • Free!
    • Over the last three years, WorkFair has helped thousands of LGBTQ+ talent from all over the world engage, interact, and apply for job opportunities with LGBTQ+ friendly employers.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Citizen Science for Policy and Practice, a UKRI Webinar
    • Thursday 20 October, 10.00 am-3.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • Participatory research, citizen science and its impact on policy and practice. Includes international speakers, case studies and networking.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Size-based multi-species fisheries modelling with mizer: a practical introduction, a SMMR Webinar
    • Thursday 20 October, 1.00 pm-2.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • This workshop will show in a hands-on manner how to use the mizer R package (https://sizespectrum.org/mizer/) to set up a size-based multi-species model of a fished marine ecosystem and how to use it to explore the ecosystem consequences of different fishing scenarios.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Conservation Project Management & Design, a Conservation Careers Online Training Course
    • A year of self-led learning from Friday 21 October.
    • £295.
    • Gain skills in managing and designing conservation projects using Conservation Standards – the leading approach within the sector. A key to success is the ability to design and implement projects to better protect species, habitats and sites.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • IndAc 2022: Industry-Academia Networking
    • Tuesday 25 October, 10.30 am-3.00 pm.
    • Pollocks Hall Campus, Holyrood Park Road, Edinburgh, EH16 5AY.
    • Free!
    • Hear pitches from industry on their collaborative needs, learn about successful collaborations, and get useful advice on how to drive research & innovation across life sciences.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Blue Speeds: A win-win solution for shipping companies, European citizens and marine life, an International Fund for Animal Welfare Seminar
    • Tuesday 25 October, 11.00 am-1.00 pm BST.
    • European Parliament, Rue Wiertz, Bruxelles, Belgium.
    • Free!
    • This event will address EU solutions for the shipping industry to reduce underwater noise pollution and collision risk with whales (ship strikes). Experts from CE Delft, an independent research firm on environment and sustainability, will present a new study on the economic and environmental cost/benefits of reducing ship speeds in EU waters to protect marine biodiversity.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Mapping Ocean Change: Exhibition Opening
    • Wednesday 26 October, 6.00 pm-8.00 pm.
    • New Glasgow Society, 1307 Argyle Street, Glasgow, G3 8TL.
    • Free!
    • MOC is a project that bridges scientific research into climate-driven changes between Scotland and the Arctic, with lived-experience insights into environmental changes that are currently taking place in marine environments and coastal areas. This exhibition brings together insights from marine biologists, interviews with people who live and work in marine and coastal environments around Scotland, artwork by artist Jennifer Argo and portraits by photographer Daniel Tulloch.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Can amplified Arctic ice loss tip the North Atlantic freshwater cycle?, a ECRA & Blue Action Climate Coffee
    • Thursday 27 October, 10.00 am-10.40 am BST.
    • Free!
    • Freshwater plays a key role in the Arctic–North Atlantic climate system. This talk will review the influence of FW events on medium-term climate trajectories, then focus on the drivers and underlying dynamics of North Atlantic FW variations. Lastly, it will demonstrate new Arctic feedbacks through atmospheric teleconnections and discuss their potential to trigger a nonlinear, or disruptive, change in the North Atlantic climate.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The Blue Economy, an ECOP Programme Webinar
    • Thursday 27 October, 4.30 pm-6.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Join the ECOP Programme team and special guests for an insightful webinar about navigating the Blue Economy as an Early Career Ocean Professional.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • African Cheetahs in India: What does it mean for wildlife conservation?, a Leadership Conservation for Africa Webinar
    • Thursday 27 October, 6.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • In September 2022, eight cheetahs from Namibia arrived in Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno National Park, with more destined to arrive soon. Hear discussion around the controversies of translocating cheetahs from Africa to India.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Pint & A Plan, a 2050 Climate Group Event
    • Thursday 27 October, 6.30 pm-9.00 pm.
    • Wellpark Brewery, 161 Duke Street, Glasgow, G31 1JD.
    • Free!
    • This event is for anyone who would like to learn more about how they can take climate action, in a casual and friendly environment.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Commercialising Research Opportunities and Engaging with Industry, an Interface Webinar
    • Monday 31 October, 11.00 am-12.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Scottish Enterprise’s High-Growth Company Creation Team will share how they can support you with technology readiness, scoping, validation and market understanding of your idea. You will also hear from Interface with insights into academic – industry collaboration, the perspective of SMEs and routes to engagement.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • PERMANOVA+, a PRIMER-e Online Course
    • Monday 31 October to Friday 4 November.
    • $580 with 10.31% discount for UK residents, $520.20 (~£428.18).
    • PERMANOVA+ allows analysis of multivariate data in response to complex designs, partitioning variation in multivariate data on the basis of a resemblance measure of choice, with rigorous inferences via permutation methods. The tools in PERMANOVA+ provide formal models, tests and predictions for multivariate (or univariate) ecological (and other) systems that are over-parameterised (i.e., have too many variables) or that demonstrate substantial non-normality.
    • Find out more and sign up here.

November 2022

  • Data Summit, by Data Fest
    • Thursday 3 to Friday 4 November.
    • EICC, Edinburgh.
    • £300-£450. Earlier you buy a ticket, the cheaper they are.
    • The summit welcomes quantum computing professors, nanotechnologists, entrepreneurs, data ethicists, philosophers, musicians and artists, and many more, to talk on the overarching theme of ‘hope’ – focusing on how data and AI can be used to create a better world and society.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • An innovation strategy for Scotland, The Foundation for Science and Technology Event
    • Monday 7 November, 12.30 pm-4.00 pm.
    • Technology & Innovation Centre, 99 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1RD, and online.
    • Free!
    • The Scottish Government is shortly to publish an innovation strategy. What are the key contributions needed from the Scottish Government, industry, higher education and others? In this discussion event, explore questions like these, and look forward to the new Scottish innovation strategy.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Economics of Biodiversity Programme Launch, a NERC Event
    • Tuesday 8 November, 11.00 am-3.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • Join this online event where synthesis grant holders will disseminate the findings from the first round of projects, and research grant holders will introduce their new projects to the research community and stakeholders.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Friday 28 October.
  • 3rd Coastal Symposium 2022
    • Wednesday 9 to Friday 11 November.
    • Hamburg, Germany.
    • 150€ (~£128) until Thursday 15 September, 200€ (~£171.62) thereafter.
    • This year’s theme ‘Coast in Transition’ brings together scientists and practitioners for exchange on the research topics of nature-based coastal adaptation, sustainable fisheries, and multiple stressors.
    • Deadline for abstracts is Sunday 31 July.
    • Find out more and sign up here by Saturday 15 October.
  • Navigating change in coastal livelihoods: a multi-stakeholder dialogue between fishing and tourism, a University of Surrey Webinar
    • Thursday 10 November, 12.00 pm-1.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • An expert panel of researchers and practitioners will share their experiences and insights about the fishing industry, social change, marine tourism diversification and how this relates to local people’s lives and the wider Blue Economy.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Seagrasses, a Perthshire Society of Natural Science Seminar
    • Friday 11 November, 7.30 pm.
    • Sandeman Room, AK Bell Library, Perth.
    • Free!
    • Hear from Richard Lilley, Project Seagrass.
    • Find out more here.
  • Short Talk, Lasting Impression, a SULSA Workshop
    • Tuesday 15 November, 9.30 am-12.30 pm.
    • Being able to describe what you do and why is an essential skill for any researcher and this workshop will help you take your communication to the next level. Science Communicator and previous international 3MT winner Dr Jamie Gallagher will show you how to turn your research into the most interesting, engaging and memorable presentation possible.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Exploring the Saltmarsh Carbon Code, an IUCN Webinar
    • Tuesday 15 November, 10.00 am-4.00 pm.
    • A meeting for those interested in green finance and saltmarsh carbon. The meeting will showcase the development of the draft Saltmarsh Carbon Code for the UK, followed by a workshop for those working on measuring and monitoring carbon.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Crab & Lobster Online Symposium
    • Wednesday 16 November, 10.00 am-6.00 pm.
    • This event aims to share current knowledge and inform actions needed to support sustainable UK crab and lobster fisheries.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The PhD Viva Workshop
    • Saturday 19 November, 9.00 am-4.00 pm.
    • £40.
    • The range of sessions will give you an insight into the viva experience, preparing, debunk some myths and give you the opportunity to practice some key skills.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • UK Wildlife & The Law, a Species Recovery Trust Webinar
    • Monday 21 November, 9.30 am-1.00 pm.
    • £45.
    • This course introduces participants to UK wildlife legislation and policy.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • What Next? Career Planning for Researchers, a SULSA Workshop
    • Monday 21 November, 1.00 pm-4.00 pm.
    • You’re finishing your PhD – what will be next? This workshop will consider the current job market and provide advice on how to keep up-to-date with relevant labour market intelligence to support career progression.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • ​​5th Fortaleza Austral Spring School
    • Monday 21 to Tuesday 22 November.
    • Free!
    • Marine ecosystems under pressure: current issues and future challenges in pollution science. The course will present a comprehensive overview of the problem and provide best practices and harmonized methodologies for developing research to quantify and assess the level of pollution as a response to incidents and disasters. The two main topics will be plastics and oil spills.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Interactive Maps in R, a Physalia Training Course
    • Monday 21 to Wednesday 23 November.
    • 350€ (~£297.61).
    • This course is aimed at anyone with an interest in representing spatial information in interactive maps, and in making these maps available.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 3rd International Conference on Marine/Maritime Spatial Planning
    • Tuesday 22 to Wednesday 23 November.
    • Barcelona, Spain, and online.
    • Free virtual attendance!
    • The conference aims to assess the state-of-the-art implementation of MSP and discuss challenges and opportunities to achieve the MSP roadmap priority areas and target (cover at least 1/3 of the global maritime areas under national jurisdictions with marine spatial plans by 2030).
    • Find out more here, no need to sign up for virtual attendance.
  • Progressing your Career Within Academia, a SULSA Workshop
    • Wednesday 23 November, 1.30 pm-4.30 pm.
    • This workshop will explore:
      • How to tailor the activities you undertake to productively develop your academic career.
      • Think strategically beyond the end of the current contract to ensure progress.
      • How to shape your career narrative so that you are better placed to obtain a fellowship or academic role.
      • Maintaining your work-life balance as you progress towards an academic career.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • CIEEM 2022 Autumn Conference: Delivering a nature positive, carbon negative future
    • Wednesday 23 to Thursday 24 November.
    • £70.
    • This conference will explore how the work we do is changing (must change) in response both to the need to make sure we are contributing to addressing environmental imperatives and the opportunities we have to do so because of the greater political, social, and economic awareness of those we work with. 
    • Find out more here.
  • Pint & A Plan, a 2050 Climate Group Event
    • Thursday 24 November, 6.30 pm-9.00 pm.
    • The Voodoo Rooms, 19a West Register Street, Edinburgh, EH2 2AA.
    • Free!
    • This event is for anyone who would like to learn more about how they can take climate action, in a casual and friendly environment.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Was 2022 truly the Ocean Super Year we hoped for?, an ECOP Programme Webinar
    • Friday 25 November, 1.00 pm-2.30 pm UTC.
    • Free!
    • Join this webinar hosted by the International Ocean Institute and the ECOP Programme, to learn more about and debate with ECOPs and Ocean experts on whether 2022 truly was the Ocean Super Year we hoped for.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Getting academics to engage with mental and physical health issues, a Fast Track Impact Webinar
    • Tuesday 29 November, 9.30-11.00 am.
    • Free!
    • This webinar shares some of the most common challenges driving researchers to the brink of burnout, and how you can turn things around to get better work-home balance and make changes to your diet and lifestyle that can transform both your wellbeing and your productivity.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • 5th International Marine Science Communication Conference
    • Wednesday 30 November to Thursday 1 December.
    • Sète, France and online.
    • 150€ (~£128), or 30€ (~£26.33) for virtual attendance.
    • The conference combines hands-on exercises in current science communication skills for disseminating ocean research and technology, with plenty of expertise-sharing, social interaction and marine science along the way.
    • Find out more and sign up here.

December 2022

  • Speed Networking: ‘Ideas for interdisciplinary collaboration to enhance marine research’, an Ocean Partnership (OP) Tool Launch Event
    • Thursday 1 December, 1.00 pm-2.00 pm.
    • OP recognises the need for practitioners from different disciplines to interact, exchange experiences and ideas. Based on key marine-related themes, OP will run monthly online speed networking events designed to provide opportunities for people from the sciences, arts, policy, private and public organisations to meet to discuss topics of interest and develop contact networks and possible collaborations.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Law of the Sea, a BIICL Intensive Course
    • Thursday 1 to Friday 2 December, 9.30 am-5.00 pm daily.
    • £700. 15% discount for members.
    • This course offers an informative overview of the international law of the sea and current challenges facing the world’s oceans and seas.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • How to write highly cited papers, a UKCEH Training Course
    • Tuesday 6 to Wednesday 7 December.
    • UKCEH Office, Wallingford, Crowmarsh Gifford, Oxfordshire.
    • £209.
    • This interactive workshop will boost your confidence and ability to write a great science paper that will be cited again and again. 
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • User driven ocean information services: Core and downstream services, an Ocean Decade Action Workshop
    • Wednesday 7 December, 2.00 pm UTC.
    • Free!
    • The goal of the dialogue is to develop actionable recommendations, through interaction between new and established companies, academia, and government, on how the public and private sectors can evolve an expanded and multi-sectoral Global Ocean Observing System, to meet the needs of science, society and the Blue Economy.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • The birds and the Tay Estuary Low Tide Count of last winter, a Perthshire Society of Natural Science Webinar
    • Wednesday 7 December, 7.30 pm.
    • Free!
    • Hear from Norman Elkins, SOC.
    • Find out more here.
  • Public engagement in science and international connections, an EURAXESS Webinar
    • Thursday 8 December, 2.30 pm-4.00 pm.
    • Free!
    • Open to all international researchers, those working in Higher Education and anyone with an interest in global science communication/public engagement.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Environmental variables: how to download and process them with R, a Transmitting Science Training Course
    • Monday 12 to Tuesday 13 December.
    • 196€ (~£170.94).
    • Georeferenced maps of environmental variables are essential for a range of ecological and biogeographical analyses, from species distribution and ecological niche models to global biodiversity trends.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Deer of the United Kingdom, a Mammal Society Webinar
    • Wednesday 14 December, 7.30 pm-9.00 pm.
    • £5.
    • From roe to sika, this webinar will delve into each species’ ecology, habitat, distribution and human conflicts.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Solutions to the nature-climate crisis in Scotland, a NatureScot Event
    • Friday 16 December, 10.30 am-4.00 pm.
    • National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh.
    • Free!
    • A special showcase event where outstanding examples of work in Scotland to overcome the nature-climate crisis are presented.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • Making the economy work for nature, a NatureScot Event
    • Friday 16 December, 5.00 pm-7.30 pm.
    • The University of Edinburgh.
    • Free!
    • A lively panel discussion on how Scotland can ensure the economy works to revive and sustain nature.
    • Find out more and sign up here.
  • British Ecological Society (BES) Annual Meeting 2022
    • Sunday 18 to Wednesday 21 December.
    • EICC, Edinburgh, or online.
    • Join ecologists from around the world at Europe’s largest and most welcoming conference dedicated to ecology, offering an exciting programme of internationally renowned plenary speakers, diverse thematic sessions, engaging workshops, and a variety of networking events.
    • Find out more and sign up here.