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Ginnie Panizzo

Associate Professor in Environmental Change, Faculty of Social Sciences

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Expertise Summary

Ginnie is a freshwater ecologist and stable isotope geochemist whose work focuses on environmental change and biogeochemical cycling in aquatic ecosystems. In tandem with her research on algal proxies, she is interested in reconstructing the impact that humans and climate change have had on freshwater environments over the past c. 2000 years.

Ginnie works very closely with the British Geological Survey of which she is a Visiting Research Associate, sitting on the board of the Centre for Environmental Geochemistry. She is also the Vice Chair of the International Paleolimnological Association.

Ginnie's research focuses on:

  • Reconstructing and quantifying human impacts (pollution and nutrient enrichment) on freshwater systems
  • Understanding aquatic ecosystem functioning (diatoms and algal biomarkers) and its relationship with climate change and human disturbance
  • Constraining biogeochemical cycling of silica and carbon in freshwater ecosystems
  • Developing and applying diatom isotope geochemistry δ13C, δ15N, δ18O and δ30Si in environmental reconstructions

Teaching Summary

Ginnie's teaching reflects her research experience, being focused on disentangling human versus natural climate change impacts on freshwater ecosystems. Ginnie's teaching covers both in the field… read more

Research Summary

Current research grants:

2019-2024: Co-I on a GCRF Hub entitled "Living Deltas" (PI Newcastle). The Hub brings £1.2 million of funding to Nottingham (of a total of £15,287,248). Nottingham Lead Panizzo.

2020-2022: UKIERI-DST Partnership Development Workshop Call "Water for all: Addressing issues surrounding water quality, quantity and waste water treatment in India." c. £10,000 to Nottingham. UK PI Panizzo and Indian PI Barooah (Assam Agricultural University).

2019-2022: National Geographic Explorer Grant: The origins and history of Lake Linumunsut, Maliau Basin, Borneo ($28,853). PI Panizzo, Co-I Frings (GFZ), Suhaimi and Pounsin (Maliau Basin).

2018-2020: NERC Isotope Geosciences Facilities Steering Committee "Understanding human-driven ecosystem change in tropical Southeast Asia" (IP-1815-0618), £46,000 Co-I Panizzo

Consult the research tab above for further details.

Selected Publications

Current research grants:

2019-2024: Co-I on a GCRF Hub entitled "Living Deltas" (PI Newcastle). The Hub brings £1.2 million of funding to Nottingham (of a total of £15,287,248). Nottingham Lead Panizzo.

Previous research grants:

2020-2022: UKIERI-DST Partnership Development Workshop Call "Water for all: Addressing issues surrounding water quality, quantity and waste water treatment in India." c. £10,000 to Nottingham. UK PI Panizzo and Indian PI Barooah(Assam Agricultural University).

2019-2022: National Geographic Explorer Grant: The origins and history of Lake Linumunsut, Maliau Basin, Borneo ($28,853). PI Panizzo, Co-I Frings (GFZ), Suhaimi and Pounsin (Maliau Basin).

2017-2020: Newton Research Partnership NERC-NAFOSTED (total 447K with 337k from NERC): "Assessing human impacts on the Red River system, Vietnam, to enable sustainable management". The project has partners at BGS (CEG linkages) and the Vietnamese Academy of Science and Technology. PI McGowan with Co-Is Panizzo (Nottingham), Leng (NIGL), Vane (BGS) (NE/P014577)

2015-2018: Anne McLaren Research Fellowship (PI Panizzo) entitled "Silicon cycling in mangrove systems". Awarded £89,000 from the University with additional matched funding (c. £15,000) from the BGS

2012-2015: NERC Standard Grant entitled "Silicon isotope records of recent environmental change and anthropogenic pollution from Lake Baikal, Siberia" NE/J00829X/1 (PI Swann, with Dr. McGowan and Research Co-I Panizzo [Nottingham], Dr Priestnall [Nottingham], Dr. Mackay [UCL], Dr. Horstwood [NIGL] and Prof. Leng [NIGL]).

Facilities funding:

2024: NEIF 2736.1023 - Assessing anthropogenic impacts to biogeochemical cycling at a protected tropical wetland (Loktak Lake, India) - Awarded £32,550. PI Panizzo

2018-2020: NIGFSC: IP-1815-0618: Understanding human-driven ecosystem change in tropical Southeast Asia. Awarded £46,000 Co-I Panizzo

2017-2019: NIGFSC: IP-1731-0517: Biogeochemical cycling in a tropical, wetland lake: addressing missing links in the global Si cycle. Awarded £41,250. Panizzo (PI), Engels, McGowan (Nottingham), Pashley and Horstwood (BGS).

2016-2019: NIGFSC: IP-1586-1115: Understanding the Si isotope systematics of mangrove forests: quantifying their ready supply to tropical, coastal ocean regions and their impact on global CO2 budgets. Awarded £15,750. Panizzo (PI), Pashley and Horstwood (BGS).

Ginnie's teaching reflects her research experience, being focused on disentangling human versus natural climate change impacts on freshwater ecosystems. Ginnie's teaching covers both in the field experience as well as in the lab and classroom. Ginnie actively teaches in the following modules in the School of Geography:

  • Planet Earth: Exploring the Physical Environment
  • Geographical Field Course
  • The Changing Environment (Convenor)
  • Third Year Fieldcourse (Convenor)
  • Tropical Enviornments in the Anthropocene
  • Research tutorial
  • First year tutorials
  • Dissertation supervision
  • MSc Environmental Leadership and Management (dissertation supervisor)

Current PhD students

Hamish Duncalf-Youngson: "Assessing the impacts of aquaculture and pesticide use in a protected tropical wetland (Loktak Lake, India)"

Mingjie Sun: "Reconstructing cultural eutrophication and 20th Century land use impacts on the ecology of the Winum Gulf, Lake Victoria"

Centre for Cancer Sciences

The University of Nottingham
Centre for Biomolecular Sciences
Nottingham, NG7 2RD


telephone: +44 (0) 115 823 1546
email: MS-CCS@nottingham.ac.uk